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Front Office Sports - The Memo

Morning Edition

April 22, 2026

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With time almost up to keep the Bears in Illinois, state legislators are potentially coalescing on a bill that would help support a $5 billion domed stadium in the suburbs. An amendment to a long-discussed “megaprojects” bill, which the Bears view as vital to any plan to stay in Illinois, would add property-tax relief for homeowners. 

—Eric Fisher

First Up

  • This week, the Bulls became the third NBA team with a head coach opening. The NBA’s coaching carousel could reignite college basketball’s own cycle. Read the story.
  • The LPGA Tour’s first major championship of the year tees off at a new course with record prize money—and an expensive addition to the 18th green. Read the story.
  • The French Open is limiting backstage cameras. Players complained about cameras at the Australian Open after Coco Gauff was caught smashing her racket. Read the story.
  • ESPN is defending its broadcast of the 2026 NCAA gymnastics championships after the Minnesota women’s team blasted the network on social media. Read the story.

Illinois Lawmakers Race to Advance $5B Bears Stadium Plan

Jeffrey Becker-Imagn Images

With time almost up to keep the Bears in Illinois, state legislators are potentially coalescing on a bill that would help support a $5 billion domed stadium in suburban Arlington Heights. 

State Rep. Kam Buckner, a key legislative figure in the stadium debate, is developing a bill amendment that would add property-tax relief for homeowners to a long-discussed “megaprojects” bill. The structure of Buckner’s proposal expands the scope of the legislation beyond its original focus on large-scale developers.

The Bears view the megaprojects bill as vital to any plan to stay in Illinois, as it will give the team certainty over local taxation, and, in turn, provide needed clarity for the team to gain the private financing that will fund nearly all of the proposed stadium. If the team does build a stadium in Arlington Heights, it would be on land the team already owns. 

In February, a narrower version of this bill cleared an Illinois House of Representatives committee, but went no further—in large part due to political divisions among legislators. Emanuel Welch, the state’s Democrat Speaker of the House, has an unofficial rule of not bringing any vote to the full floor unless he has sufficient votes within his own party for passage. 

That stance has run up against some members of the Chicago delegation, as well as Mayor Brandon Johnson, who have been angling to keep the Bears in the city—despite the lack of a viable stadium option there. 

The latest effort, however, is aimed at having broader bipartisan appeal across the state, while also remaining mindful of the minimal time the state has left to do a deal. A House vote could arrive as soon as Wednesday. 

“It’ll do something that the state has not done, that other states have not done in megaprojects legislation,” Buckner told the Chicago Sun-Times. “It’ll actually consider how these things should be able to help regular taxpayers as well.”

David Banks-Imagn Images

Broader Dynamics 

The renewed political push in Illinois as the Bears have several other forces converging that are helping accelerate a long-awaited decision on the stadium plans. Among them:

  • The NFL’s stadium committee is set to meet next week, with the Bears’ situation the only item on the agenda. That panel, including several other team owners, is increasingly eager to see tangible progress by the Bears after several years of political detours. That’s particularly true amid an ongoing stadium development boom elsewhere in the league, including in Buffalo, Tennessee, Cleveland, Washington, Kansas City, and Denver. 
  • The Illinois spring legislative session ends May 31, roughly lining up with the team’s loose target to finalize a stadium choice by the late spring or early summer. 
  • The Bears still have a standing offer to move to Hammond, Ind., as state leaders have already approved a stadium bill there. Team owner George McCaskey and president and CEO Kevin Warren met with Hammond officials last Friday “to finish the necessary due diligence” on the stadium site there. 

NFL commissioner Roger Goodell has already toured potential Bears stadium sites in both Indiana and Illinois, and remains keenly focused on the matter as well.

“I think it’s really important they come to a resolution on this relatively soon,” Goodell said recently. “This is an important time to get this resolved sooner rather than later.”

SPONSORED BY E*TRADE

Brandon Marshall's Second Act in Media

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In Season 3, Episode 7 of Portfolio Players, presented by E*TRADE from Morgan Stanley, former NFL All-Pro Brandon Marshall explains why athletes can no longer wait until retirement to build their media presence.

Marshall breaks down the rise of athlete-owned platforms like his own I AM ATHLETE, why they are competing directly with traditional networks, and how control over content is reshaping the industry. He also shares why he stepped away from sports TV, the challenges athletes face after retirement, and how he is building for the next phase of his career across media and talent representation.

👉 Watch the full episode now.

ONE BIG FIG

Big Bucks in Columbus

The Columbus Dispatch

$205 million

The expansion fee reportedly paid by the billionaire Haslam family to bring a NWSL team to Columbus. The Haslams also own the Cleveland Browns and a stake in the Milwaukee Bucks.

The NWSL announced its 18th expansion team on Tuesday, less than 24 hours after Columbus and Franklin County approved $50 million in public funding for a new training facility and stadium improvements.

Read the story.

Can you rank the top five NBA teams with the most regular season wins this year?

Play Factle Sports
FOS NEWS

Joe Flacco Gets Candid

FOS Graphic

Joe Flacco is heading into his 19th NFL season at 41 years old, coming off his first Pro Bowl selection, and he still thinks some teams made a mistake by not giving him a starting job. He joins Front Office Sports and explains why he went back to Cincinnati over other choices.

He also discusses his business ventures, how extra games impact the quality of playoff football, and whether a TV career is something he has actually started exploring.

Watch the full interview.

FRONT OFFICE SPORTS LIVE

Hang Out in the Hamptons

Huddle in the Hamptons has earned its place as the season’s most coveted invitation: a sun-soaked gathering where the people shaping sports come to think, compete, and connect.

This July, Front Office Sports returns to the Hamptons for another quintessential summer Friday with official partner UBS.

Set against one of the East Coast’s most storied summer backdrops, the day blends wellness, candid thought leadership, and the kind of unhurried relationship-building no formal meeting can replicate.

Because some of the most important deals in sports don’t start in the boardroom—they start here.

Want to join us out East? Request to attend.

Editors’ Picks

Vrabel: Russini Photos Led to ‘Difficult Conversations’

by Michael McCarthy
Vrabel previously called the interactions ”completely innocent.”

NBC, Amazon Make Crucial Scorebug Errors in NBA Postseason

by Colin Salao
Both blunders involved non-existent timeouts.

Joe Buck Expected To Host ‘ESPN Jeopardy!’

by Ryan Glasspiegel
Celebrities and ESPN talent are expected to be contestants.

Question of the Day

Do you think the Bears will stay in Illinois?

 YES   NO 

Tuesday’s result: 52% of respondents do not think Arsenal will be able to maintain their lead over Manchester City for the Premier League title.

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Written by Eric Fisher
Edited by Katie Krzaczek, Matthew Tabeek

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