Disappointed fans leaving the Minnesota United FC's worst loss in four years Saturday night in Blaine had their spirits lifted as they received save-the-date cards that point to a long-awaited announcement set for Aug. 19:
The team will move to Major League Soccer in 2017.
One side of the card included an MLS shield, the date, the letters "STP" and the words "Be there." The other side featured the hashtag "#NextStopMLS."
The event, to be held at a St. Paul venue likely to be announced this week, will include team owner Bill McGuire, St. Paul Mayor Chris Coleman and MLS Commissioner Don Garber. Team and league officials did not grant interview requests Sunday.
Garber said during the recent MLS All-Star Game that the league will add Atlanta United FC as a franchise in 2017. He said "another expansion announcement" for next season will be made "in a couple of weeks."
Minnesota landed a franchise in 2015, with Garber saying the timing of the move hinged on the team's getting a stadium. A $150 million, approximately 20,000-seat stadium for the club would be at the heart of redevelopment planned at Snelling and University avenues in the Midway neighborhood.
That project includes tax breaks that passed through the State Legislature in the spring with little opposition but got hung up in a post-session veto — unrelated to the stadium — by Gov. Mark Dayton.
If Minnesota joins MLS for next season as expected, a flurry of activity will follow. Players must be signed to new contracts. The fate of first-year coach Carl Craig must be decided. MLS scheduling begins in September. The league likely would announce 2017 home opening matches in December with full schedules to follow in January. The MLS season begins next March.