Amid wealthy new owners of Minnesota's professional soccer team, three imported top players and a new team name stands stalwart coach Manny Lagos.
The fourth-year coach steps into a new season facing the highest expectations of his tenure. After leading the former Minnesota Stars FC to the past two North American Soccer League finals, including a title in 2011, Lagos helped convince former UnitedHealth Group CEO Bill McGuire to emerge as a buyer last fall as the NASL considered folding the team.
The wealthy McGuire's purchase of the team instantly preserved soccer's slim standing in the crowded Twin Cities sports market. The recent rebrand of the team, now called Minnesota United FC, adds a new challenge to an already difficult chore for Lagos: help sell the United to a public that, outside of a dedicated core, is largely indifferent.
The former Stars ranked fifth out of eight NASL teams in attendance last season. This season it plans to do better, buoyed by what team president and McGuire's son-in-law, Nick Rogers, called a "significantly increased" budget. Some of it helped Lagos — whose father, Buzz, is synonymous with local soccer — lure two former league MVPs and a top goalkeeper to Minnesota in hopes of winning games and filling seats.
Wearing many hats — locker-room unifier, game-day tactician and salesman — does not deter Lagos, 41, a Major League Soccer veteran, former national team member and Olympian who is accustomed to pressure on the pitch.
United FC opens play at 7 p.m. Saturday against San Antonio at the Metrodome. A year ago, as defending league champions, the team opened there to 8,700 fans before retreating to the National Sports Center in Blaine and much smaller crowds. This year, seeking to raise the team's profile, United FC will play its first five home games at the Metrodome and not play in Blaine until the first half of the season concludes July 4.
"I'm excited about the stress," Lagos said. "You can have healthy adversity. Sports get stale if you don't take yourself out of the box. The guys are looking forward to that challenge. It will be harder but it could be something really enjoyable."
Season of dramatic changes
The team's owners have stepped up in measured fashion, befitting what Rogers called "a marathon, not a sprint'' to improve attendance. A marketing campaign was launched just this week, including four billboards along metro-area freeways. A new Facebook page has attracted 5,000 followers in three weeks and is growing by 200 a day this week, he said.