Commanders tease return to Washington, D.C. with new field at RFK Stadium site
The Washington Commanders are coming home. The team teased a return to Washington, D.C. on Monday in a video narrated by Joe Theismann, who said it was "time to revive that legacy."
The video teased a return to the RFK Stadium site. The Commanders played home games at RFK Stadium from 1961 to 1996 before moving to Northwest Stadium in Landover, MD.
Let's bring this franchise back to DC pic.twitter.com/iGb7u6dbvB
— Washington Commanders (@Commanders) April 28, 2025
The Commanders have eyed a return to the RFK site for some time. The stadium has not been in use since 2017. In December, D.C. gained greater control of the land, and that led to increased negotiations with the Commanders about a return.
Washington, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser is expected to officially announce the Commanders' return to that site Monday, per the Washington Post. Bowser shared the same video the Commanders released Monday morning, essentially confirming the news.
The Commanders' return to D.C. still needs to be approved by the D.C. City Council.
With RFK Stadium out of use the past few years, it's become a derelict site. Bowser's announcement is expected to announce a new stadium at the RFK site, with hopes it will be completed by 2030, per the Post.
The Commanders experienced their greatest period of success at RFK Stadium. The team won three Super Bowl titles between 1982 and 1991. Just a few years later, then-owner Jack Kent Cooke moved the team to Landover, MD.
Daniel Snyder obtained ownership of the Commanders in 2008, and started talking to Washington, D.C. about bringing the team back. Negotiations went back and forth for years, but nothing materialized. Snyder sold the Commanders to a group led by Josh Harris in 2023.
Harris — who grew up a Commanders fan — continued to push for a new stadium, and the team remained hopeful it would be at the RFK site.
The team scored a major win in that pursuit in Dec. 2024, when Congress transferred ownership of the RFK Stadium land from the federal government to Washington, D.C. That paved the way for Monday's expected announcement.
This story will be updated.

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