The U.S. national men's soccer team is coming to new Allianz Field in St. Paul to open CONCACAF Gold Cup play June 18.
It's the first time here since, well, Minnesota United Sporting Director Manny Lagos remembers when the Americans played a Russian club team in 1990 at the little National Sports Center stadium in Blaine.
"Things have changed massively since then," Lagos said. "The stadiums they play, the teams, the competition."
The CONCACAF Gold Cup is soccer's national-team championship for the North America, Central America and Caribbean regions. The confederation announced Tuesday that Allianz Field will be the site of two games on opening day of Group D play.
The soccer-specific, 19,400-capacity stadium is expected to hold its first MLS games in April, after the NCAA's Final Four has left town.
The Gold Cup's arrival will put Allianz Field on an international stage for a 16-team tournament that is growing by four more nations for the first time.
"It gives our club an opportunity to showcase a new stadium we're all going to be really proud of," Loons coach Adrian Heath said.
Complete groups and schedules will be announced early in 2019, after all nations have qualified. Those qualifying rounds will be played this month, in November and March 2019 as well.