Bears interview Big Ten commissioner Kevin Warren for president job - Chicago News Weekly

Thursday, December 29, 2022

Bears interview Big Ten commissioner Kevin Warren for president job

Big Ten Men’s Basketball Tournament - Second Round

Big Ten commissioner Kevin Warren speaks in 2020.

Photo by Joe Robbins/Getty Images

The Bears have interviewed Big Ten president Kevin Warren, who is considered a finalist for their soon-to-be vacant president/CEO position, a source confirmed Thursday afternoon.

Before joining the Big Ten in 2020, Warren served as the Vikings’ chief operating officer when they built U.S. Bank Stadium. Some inside Halas Hall consider the Vikings’ stadium to be the ideal blueprint for a possible new stadium in Arlington Heights.

The Bears are in escrow on the 326-acre former Arlington International Racecourse   property and hope to close on it in early 2023, right around the time president/CEO Ted Phillips’ tenure ends. They want to build a stadium on the land, alongside hotels, restaurants and shops.

Phillips announced in September that he planned on retiring at the end of the season — on Feb. 28 — after 23 years in his role. The Bears are expected to hire his replacement before then, perhaps to allow Phillips to help with the transition.

Phillips himself has been involved in the search for his replacement. McCaskey, Phillips and Tanesha Wade, the Bears’ senior vice president of diversity, equity and inclusion, have been interviewing candidates for the job.

Warren — the first African-American to be named a Power 5 college commissioner — led a paradigm-shifting expansion of the league. UCLA and USC will leave the Pac-12 for the Big Ten, which is based in Rosemont, in 2024.

Warren would represent a considerable shift in philosophy for the Bears, in that he came from outside Halas Hall. Phillips is only the fourth president in Bears history — and the first that wasn’t related to founder George Halas.

His son “Mugs” Halas held the job after “Papa Bear,” followed by grandson Michael McCaskey. Phillips replaced McCaskey after serving as vice president of operations from 1993-99, finance director from 1987-93 and controller from 1983-87.

Phillips said in September he was open to sticking around in a consulting role after retirement.

“It’s hard to say no when you’ve been somewhere for 40 years,” he said.

Warren began his NFL career as a legal counsel for the St. Louis Rams in 1997. He was named the Lions’ senior vice president of business operations and general counsel in 2001. In 2005, after a two-year stint with a law firm, he joined the Vikings, where he stayed for 14 years. He was named COO in 2015.

McCaskey said then that the Bears had no plans to restructure their front office with a football czar. Rather, they wanted someone to do what Phillips did — run business operations.

McCaskey said in September he didn’t need a president with experience building a stadium, hoping that they would be able to hire someone “with that expertise” to work underneath them. McCaskey said the Bears didn’t want to “get locked into a quote-unquote football person or a quote-unquote businessperson.” Rather, he detailed the traits he was looking for in a new president.

“Leadership, vision, humility, consensus-building,” McCaskey said. “You look at the qualities of outstanding leaders, and we think we’re going to be able to bring in an exceptional candidate to succeed Ted and lead the Bears.”



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