A new downtown stadium keeps the team in Chicago, modernizes the experience, and turns game day into a citywide event instead of a parking lot afterthought. Win-win.
Sell to local owners. Fans need people who actually care about Chicago, not another shiny stadium hustle or the heartbreak of losing the team.
A shiny new stadium doesn't fix a broken front office. Selling to local owners who actually want to win is the only real path to another championship.
Local owners keep the team in Chicago without fleecing taxpayers for a new stadium that mostly benefits billionaires.
Team sold to local owners. Local owners keep the team rooted in Chicago and listen to fans.
Local owners keep the team rooted in Chicago, safeguarding fans and long-term vitality. A downtown stadium funded from outside money invites upheaval and instability.
Best for Chicago fans: option 1, a new downtown stadium. It brings games to the heart of the city and fans march with pride, like a triumph.
A new downtown stadium puts fans in the heart of Chicago, with easy access and a roaring game day vibe.
When Chicago folks own it, power stays with the people who cheer it, giving accountability and true community stake.
Local ownership keeps the team rooted in Chicago; fans have real say and decisions serve the city, not distant owners.
3. Team sold to local owners. Chicago owns the squad, the fight stays with the fans, not outside profits.
Local ownership keeps the soul of Chicago in the game and puts fans first. When the folks who live here own it, pride and passion stay where the action is.
3 is best: team sold to local owners. Locals own it, they design for the city and the fans, forging a lasting culture.