Chicago Sun-Times

INSIGHTFUL DOC ABOUT AN UNSIGHTLY STADIUM

‘Bear Down & Out’ sums up why Chicago is on the verge of losing its football team

- RICHARD ROEPER MOVIE COLUMNIST rroeper@suntimes.com | @RichardERo­eper

When USA Today ranked the 30 NFL stadiums last year from worst to first, Soldier Field was 29th, ahead of only FedEx Field. Compared to 21st-century, multibilli­on-dollar stationary spaceships such as SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, California, Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas and AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, the Bears’ home field is an anachronis­tic and ungainly blending of the past and the recent past, with the 2002 renovation­s gleaming awkwardly atop the iconic base, like a giant, shiny party hat plunked atop Lincoln on Mount Rushmore.

It is more than probable now that the ship has sailed on any reboot or expansion or upgrade to Soldier Field, with the Bears having plunked down $197 million to purchase the 326-acre Arlington Park property in the hopes of constructi­ng a state-of-the-art stadium that would be home not only to Chicago’s NFL team but host top-tier events such as the Super Bowl and the NCAA Final Four, with an ambitious entertainm­ent complex and residentia­l developmen­t also in the mix.

How did we get there? Who’s responsibl­e for what could be one of the most egregious fumbles in Chicago sports and cultural history, with the Bears increasing­ly likely to relocate to Arlington Heights? This is the subject tackled in “Bear Down & Out: Chicago’s Team Moves to the Suburbs,” an insightful and journalist­ically sound documentar­y premiering Wednesday on NBC Sports Chicago and airing on WMAQ-Ch. 5 starting March 12. Clocking in at a brisk but thorough 50 minutes, “Bear Down & Out” is a timely, valuable piece of work — must-see TV for hard-core Bears fans and for anyone in the Chicago area.

The doc is parceled out in six easily digestible chapters, with NBC 5 reporter Phil Rogers taking the lead and keen insights offered by NBC sports anchor Leila Rahimi, 670 The Score host and Sun-Times columnist Laurence Holmes, former Bears Jerry Azumah and Tom Waddle and former Bears coach Dave Wannstedt among others.

In the opening chapter, titled “The Stadium,” Rogers reminds us that “in Daniel Burnham’s original plan of Chicago, there was a stadium on the lakefront. It was originally intended as a municipal gathering place . . .” and that the Bears didn’t move to Soldier Field until 1971.

Next, we visit SoFi Stadium, home of the Rams and Chargers, which was built on the site of the old Hollywood Park Racetrack (hmm), with sports mogul Stan Kroenke putting up about $5 billion to make it happen. The contrast between SoFi Stadium and Soldier Field is like the difference in animation technology between “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs” and “Avatar: The Way of Water.” Bears fans might not know what they’re missing — but they’re missing a LOT.

‘‘BEAR DOWN & OUT: CHICAGO’S TEAM MOVES TO THE SUBURBS” ★★★✩ Premieres Wednesday on NBC Sports Chicago

“Bear Down & Out” walks us through the ill-conceived renovation from 2002 (Chicago taxpayers still owe $640 million on that deal) and highlights the contentiou­s relationsh­ip between the city of Chicago and the Bears in recent years.

When the Bears started discussing the possibilit­y of moving to Arlington Heights, Mayor Lori Lightfoot issued a caustic statement that read in part, “This is clearly a negotiatin­g tactic . . . . Like most Bears fans, we want the organizati­on to focus on putting a winning football team on the field, beating the Packers finally and being relevant past October. Everything else is just noise.” In April 2020, the Bears sent a letter to the Chicago Park District, outlining a plan for sports wagering; it was seven months until they received a response saying it wouldn’t be productive to pursue such an opportunit­y. As the kids say: SMH.

In July 2022, Lightfoot made a pitch to keep the Bears at Soldier Field, with a proposed $2.2 billion renovation that would include plunking a dome on a 100-yearold facility. Says seasoned and respected Chicago sports host David Kaplan: “Soldier Field is a dump. To put a dome on top of it means we’ve got a domed dump.”

There are still hurdles to clear before the Bears pack up their shoulder pads and make the move to the burbs. But just as the Dallas Cowboys play in Arlington, Texas, and the New York Giants and New York Jets play in East Rutherford, New Jersey, and the San Francisco 49ers play in Santa Clara, California, it seems all but certain the Bears one day will be holding their home games in Arlington Heights.

 ?? ??
 ?? MICHAEL REAVES/GETTY IMAGES ?? Soldier Field, the Bears’ home stadium for now, is an anachronis­tic and ungainly blending of the past and the recent past.
MICHAEL REAVES/GETTY IMAGES Soldier Field, the Bears’ home stadium for now, is an anachronis­tic and ungainly blending of the past and the recent past.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States