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Front Office Sports - The Memo

Afternoon Edition

February 11, 2026

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Iowa has become the latest state to pursue the Chicago Bears, with lawmakers proposing a bill to offer stadium incentives as the NFL team weighs options in Illinois and Indiana.

—David Rumsey and Ryan Glasspiegel

Iowa Bears? Lawmakers Propose Bill for NFL Team

Matt Marton-Imagn Images

A third state has entered the Bears stadium sweepstakes.

As the NFL franchise continues to entertain proposals for a new venue in Indiana and a number of cities in Illinois, Iowa politicians are making a push to entice the team to move west.

Senate File 2252, a new bill in the Iowa Legislature filed by seven state senators, aims to modify Iowa’s MEGA (major economic growth attraction) program to “include incentivizing the building of a professional sports stadium by a National Football League franchise in the state.” 

Currently, MEGA provides economic development incentives designed to attract capital investments from businesses that invest at least $1 billion in the state and are primarily engaged in advanced manufacturing, biosciences, or research and development.

Sen. Kerry Gruenhagen (R., Iowa), in a statement, said the bill was filed to “show a team in our neighboring state that we are ready for them if their home state doesn’t want them. While Illinois and Indiana squabble over this issue, we are ready to get off the sidelines and into the game.”

Sen. Scott Webster (R., Iowa) said, “After years of Bears fans seeking refuge across the Mississippi River from the incompetence, corruption, and punitive tax and regulatory climate in the state of Illinois, it is time for the team to join their fans on the west side of the river.”

Des Moines is the biggest city in Iowa, with a population of roughly 750,000 in its greater metropolitan area. But the 470,000-person Quad Cities on the Iowa-Illinois border is the state’s closest major metropolitan area to the Bears’ current home in downtown Chicago. Davenport, Iowa—the largest of the Quad Cities—is about 175 miles from Soldier Field.

Iowa does not have a major men’s or women’s professional sports team, but it does have minor league clubs in baseball, hockey, basketball, and soccer. 

Stadium Tour

Iowa’s push to lure the Bears across state lines comes after the city of Gary, Ind., last month released renderings of potential stadium concepts described as “plug-and-play” locales for a new, domed stadium and a mixed-use development. Gary, situated in Northwest Indiana, is about 30 miles away from Soldier Field.

In Illinois, the Bears have had serious discussions about a new stadium downtown and in the Chicago suburb of Arlington Heights. Other in-state bids have come from Aurora, Naperville, Richton Park, and Waukegan.

The long-standing issue at hand for the Bears has been the team’s desire for public funding. Before the recent developments in Indiana, the Bears had reduced their ask of public-sector help from roughly half of the total project cost of more than $5 billion to $855 million for infrastructure.

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Bad Bunny Halftime Viewership Fell 7% From Super Bowl Peak

Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

Super Bowl viewers turned off Bad Bunny’s halftime show in somewhat significant numbers, quarter-hour ratings data from Nielsen show. 

The quarter-hour viewership numbers were as follows:

  • 7:45–7:59 p.m. ET: 137.9 million (134.3M on NBC, 3.6M on Telemundo)
  • 8–8:14 p.m. ET: 135.9 million (132.1M on NBC, 3.8M on Telemundo)
  • 8:15–8:29 p.m. ET: 128.2 million (123.4M on NBC, 4.8M on Telemundo)

Bad Bunny’s performance occurred during the latter window. This was a decline of 7% from the game’s peak viewership of 137.9 million in the second quarter, and 5.7% from the immediately preceding quarter-hour. Bad Bunny’s performance was entirely in Spanish; as the numbers show, the viewership on Telemundo went up during his performance. (The international numbers for the game and halftime show are not out yet.)

Most years, the audience grows from the end of the second quarter into the halftime show, but last year’s Kendrick Lamar performance also lost about 4% from the end-of-game action at the half. 

Bad Bunny is in the conversation with Taylor Swift as being the most popular global recording artist right now, but he is polarizing with conservative audiences. U.S. President Donald Trump ripped the NFL for booking Bad Bunny at halftime, and Turning Point USA put on an alternative halftime show starring Kid Rock that peaked at more than five million concurrent viewers across several YouTube and Rumble accounts (a number that would grow with multiple users per screen). 

The Super Bowl halftime show is booked by Apple, Jay-Z’s Roc Nation, and the NFL. 

It bears mentioning that both this year and last year had two-score leads at halftime, and viewers are more apt to stay tuned for close games. The NFL said the Bad Bunny performance set social media records, with more than 4 billion views within 24 hours.

Ultimately, Super Bowl LX averaged 124.9 million viewers, the second-highest number ever, but down 2% from last year. This Super Bowl’s peak viewership was an all-time record, however.

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STATUS REPORT

One Up, Three Down

Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

Solomon Tuliaupupu ⬆ The Montana linebacker announced his return to the Grizzlies after being granted a ninth year of eligibility by the NCAA. Tuliaupupu began his college career at USC in 2018, but did not play until the 2022 season due to foot and knee surgeries. He returns to Montana after starting all 14 games last season and will be 26 when the season kicks off Aug. 29. 

LeBron James ⬇ The NBA star is officially ineligible for any end-of-season awards, ending his 21-year streak of making an All-NBA team. Tuesday’s game against the Spurs was the 18th game that James did not play in, which means that he will fail to reach the 65-game threshold needed to qualify for awards. It is the first time since his rookie year that he will not earn All-NBA honors. 

Hamate bones ⬇ Three MLB stars are all in jeopardy of missing Opening Day after sustaining hand injuries. Mets shortstop Francisco Lindor has a stress reaction in his left hamate bone, while Orioles second baseman Jackson Holliday and Diamondbacks outfielder Corbin Carroll both broke the hamate bone in their right hands. Carroll was committed to play for Team USA in the World Baseball Classic, but will now miss the tournament.

Detroit ⬇ The city’s 29-year-run hosting a bowl game is over, as the GameAbove Sports Bowl has been canceled. The bowl game, which has been played at Ford Field since 2002, is the third to be canceled in the last year, joining the LA Bowl and Bahamas Bowl. Northwestern defeated Central Michigan 34–7 on Dec. 26 in the final edition of the game. 

Editors’ Picks

TaylorMade’s ‘Mud Ball’ Feud With Callaway Takes Twist Over Paint

by David Rumsey
The paint on TaylorMade’s new golf balls uses “microcoating” technology.

How Olympic Figure Skating Music Ended Up in a Copyright Quagmire

by Margaret Fleming
Copyright issues are causing chaos for several skaters in Milan.

NCAA Refuses Settlement Talks in Athlete Employment Lawsuit

by Amanda Christovich
The NCAA and defendant schools have tried several times to get the case thrown out.
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Can you rank the top five Formula One drivers by the most career pole positions?

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Written by David Rumsey, Ryan Glasspiegel
Edited by Matthew Tabeek, Lisa Scherzer, Catherine Chen

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