Likely site beside Minneapolis Farmers Market emerges, but financing details unclear.
Within minutes of Wednesday’s raucous public celebration of Major League Soccer’s move into Minnesota, the league’s commissioner said the expansion decision isn’t final until a plan for a dedicated soccer stadium is secure.
“We all know they’ve got to get a project done,” said MLS Commissioner Don Garber. “And if not, then we’ll have to take a step back, mutually, and assess whether or not it makes sense.”
Former UnitedHealth Group head Dr. Bill McGuire and his powerful partners want to build a stadium — and perhaps much more, as they signaled this week in meetings with local groups — in an area just outside downtown, beside the Minneapolis Farmers Market. McGuire, while fully embracing the Farmers Market location Wednesday, declined to say if his group would seek a public subsidy for a stadium there.
Garber did not give the United a timeline to get its stadium plan finalized. An MLS release, however, said, “The club is working to finalize the plan for the new stadium by July 1.” McGuire told reporters he expects to release details of his plan “in the next month.”
McGuire’s investment partners include Robert and Jim Pohlad, Wendy Carlson Nelson and Glen Taylor. Carlson Nelson is on the board of the Carlson company, the travel and hospitality giant; the Pohlads own the Minnesota Twins, among other entities; and Taylor owns the Timberwolves, the Star Tribune and other ventures.
Owners of the Minnesota Vikings sought to have the franchise at their new $1 billion stadium on the other side of downtown, but Garber said McGuire’s plan better fit a model that has worked elsewhere in the country. “And that’s to have a downtown, outdoor, soccer-specific stadium, 20,000 seats, playing on grass,” he said.
Vikings spokesman Lester Bagley indicated, however, that the football team may not be entirely out of the running. “We have been and continue to be in discussion — ongoing dialogue — with the MLS,” he said. “We’re monitoring and watching the situation. But we congratulate United.”
Futbol — and food?
McGuire and his representatives have quietly shopped a more detailed vision for the proposed stadium area to two groups this week. It involves not just a stadium, but a modernized Farmers Market that would feed into a unique dining facility.
“We love the Farmers Market, and we think there’s an inherent tie of the multicultural nature of that Farmers Market and soccer,” McGuire said Wednesday.
State and city leaders have already closed the door on direct public subsidies for the stadium, which is expected to cost about $150 million. Hennepin County commissioner Mike Opat, who has aided the effort to win the franchise, said those reactions have been premature.
“Some of the comments from other public officials are disappointing in that there hasn’t even been an ask yet and people are already suggesting that they’re unwilling to listen, which I think is unfortunate,” said Opat, who has had preliminary discussions about how the county could support the project.
Asked if the stadium could be privately financed, Bob Pohlad was confident.
“We didn’t come this far not to see it through,” Pohlad said. “It’s a great sport. … Bill [McGuire has] done a great job and we’ve got a great location we think we can make work.”
That would avoid the sort of troubles the league has had in Miami, where a new team has been sidelined by the lack of political interest in building a stadium.
Public help could materialize in other forms, however, including street reconfigurations or improvements to the city-owned Farmers Market. Gov. Mark Dayton said Wednesday that he would not oppose ancillary support.
“If there’s an exit ramp or something like that, it fits within our normal, or usual projects,” Dayton said. “… I don’t rule out something like that. If Hennepin County wants to support the infrastructure with its own tax resources for improvements, I don’t rule something like that out.”
An attorney for McGuire, Ralph Strangis, nodded to some public commitment before a North Loop development group Tuesday night. “He did say all the other stadiums [in Minnesota] have been assisted in some way, be it infrastructure or direct subsidy,” said David Frank, chairman of the group known as 2020 Partners.
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