Minnesota has not had a big-time professional soccer team since 1984, but professional soccer's return to the Twin Cities has suddenly become a hot commodity, as two newsmaking families with deep pockets have positioned themselves for a Major League Soccer (MLS) franchise.
When the Vikings won approval for a new $1 billion football stadium, team owner Zygi Wilf was considered the front-runner to bring a big-time soccer team to Minnesota.
Not necessarily anymore.
While the Vikings have a five-year exclusive right to try to bring a Major League Soccer team to the new stadium, former UnitedHealth Group head Bill McGuire is trying to build support for a separate soccer-only stadium in downtown Minneapolis.
Already, McGuire is getting help from the Minnesota Twins — McGuire has eyed a site near the Twins' Target Field — and Twins president David St. Peter said he would "never say never" to having Twins officials invest financially in McGuire's plans.
Both the Vikings and McGuire have sidestepped whether a competition is brewing between the two men over major league soccer. But McGuire has upped the ante since 2012 when he purchased Minnesota United FC, the state's only existing professional soccer team that plays in a league considered a step below MLS in terms of players and drawing power.
With MLS seeking to expand its 19-team league, and with soccer superstar David Beckham trying to put a team in Miami, the push is on to capitalize on the growing popularity of soccer in Minnesota and recapture the days when large crowds tailgated in the late 1970s when the Minnesota Kicks played at Met Stadium.
"I don't know that we'll ever get into a fight with the Wilfs about MLS," said Nick Rogers, the president of McGuire's Minnesota United FC, who downplayed any friction. "Is it possible, theoretically? Sure."