St. Paul appears to be the choice of Minnesota United team officials as the home for a new Major League Soccer team and stadium, sources told the Star Tribune Wednesday.
If the city's proposed stadium site wins the approval of MLS officials, the $150 million venue — to be paid for by an ownership group led by Bill McGuire — would be built on a vacant and transit-friendly tract on Snelling Avenue between University Avenue and Interstate 94 in the Midway district.
Several sources with knowledge of the situation said an announcement could come this week. The sources declined to be publicly identified because they weren't authorized to discuss the deal.
The team and MLS had no comment Wednesday.
The deal also is expected to include the establishment of a practice facility at the National Sports Center in Blaine, where the team now plays in a minor league capacity.
A Sports Center spokesman confirmed Wednesday that the center is talking with Minnesota United officials to become the team's training facility.
An 18,000-seat soccer stadium in the heart of St. Paul would be a remarkable turnabout for the city, which originally was given little chance to land the facility.
St. Paul's prospects got a series of boosts in recent weeks, starting with MLS Deputy Commissioner Mark Abbott's Aug. 12 visit to the 10-acre site once used by Metro Transit to store buses.