3 hours ago3 hr 55 minutes ago, nrockway said:The City should make them. They already have a perfect site for innumerable reasons. If the federal government was still following normal procedures, Ishbia would not have been in a position to purchase that Amtrak site without a public review. For some reason, my friends at the UTC are carrying water for this guy."Make them"? Why? They obviously don't want to be there.
3 hours ago3 hr 1 hour ago, nrockway said:The City should make them. They already have a perfect site for innumerable reasons. If the federal government was still following normal procedures, Ishbia would not have been in a position to purchase that Amtrak site without a public review. For some reason, my friends at the UTC are carrying water for this guy.People like this are the reason nothing gets done in the U.S. anymore and every project is so expensive.
2 hours ago2 hr 1 hour ago, nrockway said:The City should make them. They already have a perfect site for innumerable reasons. If the federal government was still following normal procedures, Ishbia would not have been in a position to purchase that Amtrak site without a public review. For some reason, my friends at the UTC are carrying water for this guy.Just like last time in the late 80s when the City told the Sox the only stadium site they'd support is across from the existing ballpark? Look at how well that turned out for them. They have such a perfect site that people will only show up if the Sox are making a serious pennant run. Now the city should "make them" again?
2 hours ago2 hr I found this part interesting here, but lots info in the piece.Included in the presentation were two slides depicting a riverfront ballpark, but the renderings are not up to date or representative of Ishbia’s vision, according to two sources.But a new ballpark at the Amtrak site could come in a later phase if Ishbia takes control of the site, according to other sources familiar with his plans.That ballpark would be positioned with a view of The Loop from home plate, placing the right field wall adjacent with the river. The right field area would have little to no seating because of the tight dimensions of the site, potentially allowing well-hit baseballs to find a new home in the Chicago River. Edited 2 hours ago2 hr by Sleepy Harold
2 hours ago2 hr 9 minutes ago, 77 Hitmen said:Just like last time in the late 80s when the City told the Sox the only stadium site they'd support is across from the existing ballpark? Look at how well that turned out for them. They have such a perfect site that people will only show up if the Sox are making a serious pennant run. Now the city should "make them" again?The Sox have a chance to fix literally everything they screwed up in the late 80's. Stadium design, stadium location, activities around the stadium, stadium views, etc. Let's do this right.
2 hours ago2 hr 6 minutes ago, Sleepy Harold said:I found this part interesting here, but lots info in the piece.
1 hour ago1 hr “It sounded like the stadium stuff, even if it were to come to fruition, would be eight to 10 years out,” he said.I know projects of this size take time, but damn, wish it were quicker. Edited 1 hour ago1 hr by DoUEvenShift
1 hour ago1 hr 37 minutes ago, Sleepy Harold said:I found this part interesting here, but lots info in the piece.This is something I was really hoping for - home runs into the Chicago river. Seeing Bonds hit home runs into McCovey Cove was awesome. Edited 1 hour ago1 hr by ron883
1 hour ago1 hr 59 minutes ago, Sleepy Harold said:I found this part interesting here, but lots info in the piece.From the Crain's article:The unexpected, and ultimately inaccurate, disclosure of those renderings is evidence of the delicate dance Ishbia must perform as he closes in on a property that could be anchored by the Chicago White Sox’s future home while the team’s current chairman, Jerry Reinsdorf, remains in control for another eight years and is pursuing his own stadium dreams across the river.Wait, what? Ishbia and Reinsdorf are pursuing their own separate stadium plans?And the following is bad news for many Sox fans, but short-term good news for our resident soil/ingress/bridge expert and self-appointed representative of the entire Sox fanbase:Ald. Jason Ervin, 28th, said he met with Ishbia’s representatives and Amtrak about the plans, but the presentation was focused on an initial phase near Roosevelt Road centered around a Northwestern Medicine facility.“It sounded like the stadium stuff, even if it were to come to fruition, would be eight to 10 years out,” he said.
1 hour ago1 hr 6 minutes ago, 77 Hitmen said:From the Crain's article:Wait, what? Ishbia and Reinsdorf are pursuing their own separate stadium plans?And the following is bad news for many Sox fans, but short-term good news for our resident soil/ingress/bridge expert and self-appointed representative of the entire Sox fanbase:Again, I think this is keeping up the show of "Jerry is in charge". Obviously we can see what is happening here.
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