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Front Office Sports - The Memo

Afternoon Edition

June 5, 2026


The Bears are formally moving ahead with a planned $5 billion stadium in Hammond, Ind. Owner George McCaskey and president and CEO Kevin Warren said Friday that the team’s board of directors has voted to advance the project. An exact stadium site within Hammond is still “to be selected,” McCaskey and Warren said in a joint statement. 

—Eric Fisher

First Up

  • The Yankees and MLB are set to suffer a sizable blow as megastar Aaron Judge will have his longest absence from play since at least 2019. Read the story.
  • Three Argentine fans cycled all the way to Kansas City, but they still don’t have World Cup tickets. Read the story.
  • Eli Manning talks to FOS about his firm’s move to buy RCX Sports, a youth sports league operator, and his thoughts on the Giants’ new coach. Read the story.
  • The bulk of Shedeur Sanders’s record-smashing NFLPA income didn’t come from jerseys—he also has a lucrative personal deal with Panini. Read the story.

Bears Taking New $5B Stadium Plans Across State Line to Indiana

Jeff Hanisch-Imagn Images

The Bears are formally moving ahead with a planned $5 billion domed stadium and mixed-use development in Hammond, Ind., with the NFL franchise pivoting quickly in the wake of political inaction earlier this week in Illinois. 

Owner George McCaskey and president and CEO Kevin Warren said Friday that the team’s board of directors has voted to advance the Hammond project. The move marked the first time the team has made a definitive statement in a long-running site deliberation between that option and one in Arlington Heights, Ill. 

The decision also puts to rest suggestions that had circulated in Illinois political circles in recent months that the Indiana consideration was merely a bluff by the Bears.

“We believe a world-class stadium project in Hammond will transform the region, connecting Northwest Indiana to the South Side of Chicago through the Loop and across neighborhoods and suburbs stretching nothing of the city,” McCaskey and Warren said in a joint statement. “It will bring Chicagoland together and deliver new opportunities to its residents and businesses.”

An exact stadium site within Hammond is still “to be selected.”

The selection of Hammond arrived four days after the end of the spring legislative session in Illinois, during which state leaders failed to advance a bill to help the Bears build the stadium and mixed-development on team-owned property in Arlington Heights. 

Instead, the Bears are moving forward with the plan from Indiana that received political approval in February and will fund about 60% of the stadium cost.

“Hoosiers, help me welcome the Chicago Bears to our great state!” Indiana Gov. Mike Braun said in a social media post. “We look forward to building a partnership as strong as the ’85 Bears defense, creating opportunities and economic growth that will benefit our state and the Bears organization for decades to come. An NFL franchise in Northwest Indiana will be an economic boost to the entire region like we haven’t seen before.”

Since beginning as the Decatur Staleys in 1920, the Bears have never been based anywhere but Illinois.

Long and Winding Road

The commitment to Hammond, though still not definitively final or legally binding, marks a key point in a stadium saga that has gone on for more than three years. After canvassing all over the Chicago area, the team originally sought to build a domed stadium on the city’s lakefront, right next to its current home of Soldier Field.

The team then pivoted to the suburban land it owns in Arlington Heights, but that’s when political troubles began to mount for the Bears. 

Legislative consideration in Illinois originally centered on a “megaprojects” bill that would give the Bears much-desired property tax certainty while building in Arlington Heights. That effort passed in the state House of Representatives in April, but it stalled in the Senate. 

Last weekend, frenetic overnight negotiations then pivoted toward a more narrowly targeted proposal in which certain Cook County cities could create stadium authorities to help support a new venue. That measure passed in the Senate in a 3:40 a.m. CT vote early Monday, but the House then declined to take up the bill and continued with the planned adjournment of the session.

That put the onus back on the Bears, who originally said they intended to stick to their planned timetable of making a stadium decision by the early summer at the latest. That has now held true with the decision to go to Hammond.

Illinois legislators theoretically still have a chance to revive the stadium situation in their state. That would most likely require a special session this summer to advance a venue bill, and that is almost certainly not going to happen.

“While Indiana is willing to raise taxes and promise $1 billion in taxpayer funds, Illinois has focused on the needs of working families who want relief at the gas pump, at the store, and on their insurance bills—not taxpayer-funded stadiums,” said Illinois House Speaker Chris Welch. “Illinois remains open to ongoing efforts to secure the Bears in Illinois. However, it will take time to get it right.”

The NFL, meanwhile, has been eager for the Bears to join an accelerating stadium development wave across the league that includes the Bills, Titans, Browns, Commanders, Chiefs, and Broncos.

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ONE BIG FIG

Big Stanley Cup Opener

Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images

4.8 million

That’s the number of viewers who tuned in to Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final on Tuesday on ABC, up a whopping 98% from last year on TNT Sports. Viewership peaked late in the third period at 5.5 million viewers as the Golden Knights scored on the Hurricanes with less than four minutes remaining to claim the opener, 5–4. Read the story. 

LOUD AND CLEAR

Staying in the Booth

Apr 18, 2026; Los Angeles, California, USA; ESPN analysts Richard Jefferson (left) and Tim Legler (center) and play-by-play announcer Mike Breen during game one of the first round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs between the Los Angeles Lakers and the Houston Rockets at Crypto.com Arena.

Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

“Feels like this is the path that I was destined to be on and I’m really grateful. And I don’t really put much thought into coaching at all anymore.”

—NBA broadcaster Tim Legler, in an interview with Front Office Sports, about the prospect of shifting to a coaching job. The 10-year NBA veteran is making his NBA Finals broadcasting debut for ABC/ESPN alongside Richard Jefferson and Hall of Famer Mike Breen. Years ago, Legler pursued NCAA Division I coaching opportunities, even interviewing with schools like Duquesne, South Florida, and La Salle, his alma mater. He said he didn’t receive any offers, which maybe “was the biggest blessing because I love what I’m doing.” Read the story.

STATUS REPORT

Two Up, One Down, One Push

Jun 4, 2026; Oklahoma City, OK, USA; Texas Longhorns pitcher Teagan Kavan (17) reacts after receiving the most outstanding player trophy for the NCAA WomenÕs College World Series championship series at Devon Park.

Brett Rojo-Imagn Images

Texas softball ⬆ For the second year in a row, the Longhorns are Women’s College World Series champions, once again defeating Texas Tech—which has a seven-figure roster that’s made headlines throughout the tournament. Unlike last year, Texas needed only two games to get the job done, defeating the Red Raiders 4–1 in Thursday night’s Game 2. Longhorns ace Teagan Kavan was named WCWS Most Outstanding Player, becoming the first player in the competition’s history to earn the honor multiple times.

Lululemon ⬇ In its first-quarter earnings report Thursday, Lululemon lowered its full-year outlook and projected second-quarter earnings below Wall Street estimates. The athleisure wear company, which recently appointed a new CEO, said it now expects 2026 sales to be between $11 billion and $11.5 billion, down from between $11.35 billion and $11.5 billion. The company’s sales have been trending lower amid increased competition from upstarts like Alo Yoga and Vuori. Meghan Frank, co-CEO and CFO, said on the earnings call that the brand experienced a “slowing of momentum towards the end of Q1 as we saw spikes of negative commentary, which has now subsided.”

Quinnipiac women’s rugby ⬆⬇ The three-time NIRA national champion, which was eliminated from Division I varsity status in April, filed a federal lawsuit on Friday against Quinnipiac and its athletics department, alleging Title IX violations. The suit also includes an order against the university restraining it from eliminating the program. Not only does the lawsuit claim that cutting varsity rugby is discriminatory, but it also alleges that the private university spends significantly less on several women’s sports teams compared to their male counterparts. 

Fernando Mendoza ⬆ The No. 1 overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft could make his professional debut Aug. 13, when the Raiders host the Cardinals in Week 1 of the 2026 preseason. The NFL released the full preseason schedule this week. The regular season kicks off Sept. 9 with a Super Bowl rematch between the defending champion Seahawks and the Patriots.

ONE FUN THING

Subway Celebrations

A New York Knicks fan walks at the 34th Street Penn Station subway entrance after the Metropolitan Transit Authority (MTA) painted it in orange and blue in honour of the hometown team's first championship finals in 27 years, in New York City, U.S., June 2, 2026.

REUTERS/David ‘Dee’ Delgado

The MTA painted a Manhattan subway station orange and blue in honor of the Knicks’ first NBA Finals appearance in 27 years this week. Fans used the backdrop—which is outside Madison Square Garden at 34th Street and 8th Avenue—to pose for pictures. At one point this week, fans hung two pairs of Timberland boots at the entrance, but MTA workers reportedly removed them less than 24 hours later.

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Events Video Games Shop
Written by Eric Fisher
Edited by Lisa Scherzer, Matthew Tabeek, Catherine Chen

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