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Major professional teams; Club Sport League Founded Note Chicago Cubs: Baseball: Major League Baseball: 1875 Chicago White Sox: Baseball Major League Baseball 1894 Based in Chicago since 1900 Chicago Bulls: Basketball: National Basketball Association: 1966 [1] Chicago Sky: Basketball Women's National Basketball Association: 2005 Chicago Bears ...
The new Chicago Bears Stadium is a planned fixed-roof stadium to be constructed on the Museum Campus in Chicago, Illinois that would be the home of the Chicago Bears of the National Football League (NFL). Construction is scheduled for 2025 and is planned to open in 2028.
Location Surface Team Opening Roof type New Royals Stadium: 34,000 Kansas City, Missouri: Grass Kansas City Royals: 2028 Open New White Sox Stadium: 35,000–38,000 [29] Chicago, Illinois: Grass [30] Chicago White Sox: 2030 [31] Open [32]
Sports in Chicago include many professional sports teams. Chicago is one of eleven U.S. cities to have teams from the five major American professional team sports (baseball, football, basketball, hockey, and soccer). Chicago has been named as the "Best Sports City" by Sporting News three times: 1993, 2006, and 2010.
Team Location Venue American East: ... Boston Red Sox: Boston, Massachusetts: Fenway Park: New York Yankees: The Bronx, New York ... Teams Location Venue East Chicago ...
Wintrust Arena interior. Wintrust Arena at McCormick Square, previously referred to as DePaul Arena or McCormick Place Events Center, [6] is a 10,387-seat sports venue in the Near South Side community area of Chicago that opened in 2017.
It is located near O'Hare International Airport, as well as Allstate Arena, the Donald E. Stephens Convention Center, and the Fashion Outlets of Chicago. In 2013, Bradley Stephens, the mayor of Rosemont, proposed the area of where Impact Field is now located as a possible site for a new Chicago Cubs stadium. [2]
In 1998, the league expanded for the first time, rising from 10 teams to 12. The new teams were the Chicago Fire SC (now Chicago Fire FC) and Miami Fusion. Miami owner Ken Horowitz paid a $20 million expansion fee to join MLS, while the expansion fee for the Chicago team was $5 million. [18] [19]