Build it and they will come.
Major League Soccer made that perfectly clear Monday when Commissioner Don Garber confirmed that the league was in "advanced discussions" with former UnitedHealth Group executive Bill McGuire and his ownership partners to bring an MLS expansion team to Minnesota.
That's the clearest indication yet that the league has chosen Minnesota for its next expansion franchise, although Garber said in a statement Monday that the official announcement won't be made for another 35 to 40 days. The team likely would not play until the 2018 season.
The remaining hurdle for Minnesota is finalizing plans for "it" — a new downtown outdoor soccer stadium, as preferred by the league.
Whether it's funded privately by McGuire's group or with public funding help is the big unknown.
McGuire — who is partnered with the Pohlad family, owners of the Minnesota Twins, and Glen Taylor, owner of the Minnesota Timberwolves and the Star Tribune — has yet to reveal his plans publicly. That didn't change Monday.
McGuire and Nick Rogers, president of the McGuire-owned Minnesota United FC soccer club of the North American Soccer League, declined to comment beyond a statement issued by the United that said MLS officials are aware of the "passionate soccer fans in Minnesota combined with a world-class soccer-specific stadium …"
McGuire had been in a two-pronged race for a team with officials in Sacramento, Calif., and another prospective Minnesota ownership group headed by the Wilf family, owners of the Minnesota Vikings. The Wilfs' pitch included playing games in the Vikings' new $1 billion stadium that will be ready in 2016, but the league has said it favors outdoor soccer-specific stadiums designed to hold about 20,000 fans.