Dallas, TX
FC Dallas President Dan Hunt: “This could still be the epicenter of the 2026 World Cup” | FC Dallas
The footprint of the World Cup goes much further than just the matches, of course. Dallas/Fort-Worth hopes to be the base camp for visiting national team squads, as well as the home of the International Broadcast Center and the Referee Headquarters for the duration of the tournament.
“The benefit of having nine matches is that we believe there will be more visiting national teams that pick the Metroplex as their home training center, with the probability of having elimination round matches here,” Hunt explained. “We’re also waiting on the Referee Headquarters to be designated. If we’re so fortunate to have it at Toyota Stadium, it’s my belief that we’d only have one visiting national team. If we don’t have (the Referee Headquarters), we could have two visiting national teams at Toyota Stadium. But the Metroplex is right to have many visiting national teams pick this area and use facilities like MoneyGram Soccer Park (in Dallas), Toyota Soccer Center (in Frisco), SMU, UTD, there’s a litany of them.
“We’re waiting on the International Broadcast Center announcement, hopefully that will be coming in the next few weeks. There are so many things coming to the Metroplex and we’re in the final running. This could still be the epicenter of the World Cup. The opportunity to have all of these visiting national teams, the International Broadcast Center, the Referee Headquarters, it just goes on and on. Our legacy of this 2026 World Cup will last not just generations, but much further than that.”
Dallas, TX
Dallas City Council, don’t revive short-term rentals fight
There’s a move afoot at Dallas City Hall to reopen the painful wound over short-term rentals, to bring it all back for public debate.
Some Dallas City Council members who were against the city’s ban, passed more than a year ago, are pointing to an ongoing temporary injunction barring its enforcement as evidence it should be revisited.
They say more legally bulletproof restrictions should be hashed out and approved so the city can get on with reaping millions of dollars in revenue it’s losing while waiting for a protracted legal battle to play out.
We disagree. Even as we reiterate our concerns about the legality of Dallas’ short-term rental restrictions, we haven’t forgotten the fight over them was one of the ugliest seen at City Hall in recent memory — and dragged on for years.
The City Council knew full well in June 2023 that the short-term rental rules they were adopting would land them in court, and opponents quickly sued. But the council was willing to take that risk on behalf of the thousands of homeowners pleading for relief from the citywide smattering of properties they said were harming their neighborhoods. The city shouldn’t abandon them now.
There’s another good reason to let the legal fight continue, at least for now. The city will glean valuable insight from the various trial and appellate court rulings along the way to help it devise a more legally sound set of restrictions going forward if necessary. The 5th District Court of Appeals is mulling a request by the city to lift the temporary injunction, and its ruling will serve as a guidepost.
In any event, we’re loath to see this highly emotional issue go back before the City Plan Commission and the Dallas City Council for rounds of heated public hearings, which may be necessary if the city starts over.
Dallas City Council member Chad West made a compelling case for reviving the short-term rentals debate earlier this month at the council’s Government Performance and Financial Management Committee meeting.
While the city remains handcuffed from enforcing its registration fee program and zoning restrictions limiting short-term rentals in nonresidential areas, these properties continue to operate citywide, West noted. City staff estimated that there are about 3,500 short-term rentals in the city, but less than half of them have registered to pay the 9% hotel occupancy taxes as required.
West said the city also stands to lose millions more if the issue isn’t resolved before the FIFA World Cup games in 2026. Meanwhile, the city spends nearly $1 million on its new short-term rental enforcement team, which for the time being has been diverted to other code enforcement matters.
“I think we admit we got it wrong and we go back,” West told the committee. But that brought a sharp rebuke from council member Cara Mendelsohn: “We debated this ad nauseam. I can’t believe that you are wanting to do this again.”
Council member Paula Blackmon also resisted: “It is not a good public policy approach. I just don’t think there is a clear reason to bring it back.”
Not deterred, West said he’d consider asking that the matter be briefed by the city’s lawyers in a council executive session. For now, that’s where it belongs. Behind closed doors.
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Dallas, TX
Cowboys’ home incompetence is so bad no other sports fan can relate
Mike Tyson isn’t the only Mike who has failed to come out of AT&T Stadium with a win in 2024. Mike McCarthy’s Dallas Cowboys have yet to win a home game during the NFL season, so it has been a year of misery for Cowboys Nation.
Even the Jake Paul vs. Mike Tyson organizers proved to have more competence at home than Jerry Jones by simply closing some curtains.
But, back to the home losses.
MORE: Dallas Cowboys roasted by ESPN College GameDay for being ‘train wreck’
The Cowboys are the only team across the four major American sports league that have not won a home game in 2024. Yes, out of all of the MLB, NBA, NFL, and NHL teams in North America, the Cowboys are the only winless team of the year with one-and-a-half months to go.
Now, before we get too carried away, it is important to put things into perspective. With the amount of games played in MLB, the NBA, and NHL, it would be virtually impossible to go winless at home.
MORE: Jerry Jones takes harder hits than Jake Paul after underwhelming fight
But it certainly rubs salt into wounds of every Cowboys fan.
Dallas’ first opportunity to break their 2024 curse comes on Monday, November 18, against the Houston Texans.
If they fail, there will only be three more opportunities: against the lowly division rival New York Giants on Thanksgiving, the Cincinnati Bengals on Monday Night Football on December 9, or the Tampa Bay Buccaneers on December 22, which is also currently set to be a primetime showdown on Sunday Night Football.
So buckle up, Cowboys fans.
— Enjoy free coverage of the Cowboys from Dallas Cowboys on SI —
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Dallas, TX
Dallas Cowboys roasted by ESPN College GameDay for being ‘train wreck’
Dallas Cowboys fans can’t catch a break, especially this weekend. After the Jake Paul vs. Mike Tyson circus at AT&T Stadium, Jerry Jones was the butt of every joke on social media, and, of course, everyone had something to say about the curtains finally being closed at the venue.
Then, Saturday morning, while preparing to enjoy a relaxing afternoon of college football, ESPN had another stray in store for the ‘Boys.
ESPN College GameDay co-host Kirk Herbstreit roasted the Cowboys during a promo for Monday Night Football, calling the team a “train wreck.”
MORE: Former Dallas Cowboys star arrested after Jake Paul-Mike Tyson fight
“Just keep putting Dallas in those high-profile windows,” Herbie said. “They just keep losing games. That is a train wreck…”
Yes, that’s just the kind of year it has been for the Cowboys. Shouldn’t Jerry Jones be embarrassed by now?
At the end of the day, as long as his pockets are getting fatter, his job has been done.
We’ll see whether Dallas gives people more to laugh about on Monday night when they host the Houston Texans in primetime.
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