No one can accuse Matt Privratsky of overreaching. The co-founder of Minnesota Aurora FC didn't know how the Twin Cities would respond to a new women's soccer team, so he approached its inaugural season with modest ambitions.
"It was as simple as, this club needed to have women coaches, and to not charge players for being on the team,'' Privratsky said. "As it turned out, that vision was incredibly small. I've never been so happy to be so wrong.''
Privratsky could laugh at himself last week, while basking in the afterglow of a season that blew past every expectation. It ended July 23 with a 2-1 overtime loss to South Georgia Tormenta FC in the championship game of the USL W League, in a sold-out TCO Stadium, as a crowd announced at 6,489 watched the Aurora finish with a 13-1-1 record.
The club became an instant hit by nearly every measure, leaving its nine co-founders giddy and a little stunned. The Aurora averaged a league-high 5,626 fans per game, twice increasing stadium capacity to accommodate demand. Media coverage, webstream viewers, volunteers and sponsors all surged higher than anticipated.
Aurora President and co-founder Andrea Yoch said the team will turn a profit in its first year. Merchandise sales ran five times higher than projected, sponsorship revenue was three times higher and ticket sales were more than double what the club estimated.
Internal staff will grow
While the Aurora's on- and off-field success ensured the dreams will be bigger next year, club founders aren't losing sight of their original goals. Yoch said the organization remains "very committed'' to USL W, a pre-professional league that does not pay players, and expects to stay there in 2023. There are no immediate plans to pursue membership in the National Women's Soccer League (NWSL) or the USL Super League, a second-division pro league launching next year.
In the coming months, the Aurora will hire more full-time employees, introduce a mascot at the Minnesota State Fair and plan more community activities. All those tasks will be made a little lighter by an unforgettable first season.