Minnesota United FC will be playing the fourth home game of its second season in Major League Soccer on Saturday. The opponent will be Vancouver. There will be holes to fill in the lineup due to injuries.
The latest player to fall was Christian Ramirez. I was discussing that with a radio guest this week and tossed in this aside: "He's the guy that will be playing for Costa Rica in the World Cup, right?"
The guest paused and said: "No, that's Francisco Calvo, and he's also hurt."
Shucks.
I try to maintain a loose knowledge of what's happening with our soccer club; obviously, I'm not trying hard enough.
In my defense, it's too dang complicated. Transfer openings and closings; endless roster gobbledygook that gives we nonexperts no chance to know who's who from who knows where.
It was so much simpler when Minnesota first tried an excursion into the North American version of big-league soccer in 1976. First of all, they were the Kicks, and there weren't two other teams in the NASL called the Kicks, as there are two other teams in the MLS called United.
"Are the Loons and United the same team?" a Bloomington resident said to me this week. "If you want to be called the Loons, then call yourself the Minnesota Loons."