The Miami MLS team is a professional soccer team in planning for Miami, Florida. The year the team is scheduled to join Major League Soccer (MLS) is pending negotiations over stadium financing and location.
The ownership group, formed in 2013 as Miami Beckham United, now works through Miami Freedom Park LLC. The group is led by David Beckham, his business partner Simon Fuller, and Miami-based Bolivian businessman Marcelo Claure. On December 14, 2017, Masayoshi Son and brothers Jorge and Jose Mas were added to the ownership group. The effort originated in a contract Beckham signed with Major League Soccer in 2007: he joined the Los Angeles Galaxy and negotiated an option to own an expansion team at a discounted franchise fee.
MLS officially awarded the group an expansion team on January 29, 2018. The award represented part of a larger expansion of MLS that would increase its number of teams to 24 by 2020 and 28 after that. Since Beckham's original announcement of his intention to place a team in Miami, Los Angeles FC, Minnesota United FC, and Atlanta United FC have begun MLS play.
Stadium plans remain unsettled. MLS and the team's ownership group announced in December 2015 that a new stadium would be built in the Overtown neighborhood of Miami, but a newer proposal to build a stadium near Miami International Airport is currently under discussion. Which plans go forward will depend largely on the results of a public referendum to be held in November 2018.
The name of the team has not yet been announced. "Miami Vice" and "Miami Current" were used by the ownership group in 2014 presentations for city officials and potential investors.
Video Miami MLS team
History
In November 2012, MLS commissioner Don Garber confirmed the league's renewed interest in placing an expansion franchise in Miami, after the Miami Fusion folded following the 2001 season and an expansion bid led by Claure and FC Barcelona failed in 2009.
When Beckham, who had received an option to purchase an expansion team at a price of $25 million when he joined the league in 2007, ended his playing career in April 2013, the league held preliminary discussions with Beckham's advisers about several expansion targets, including Miami. That same year, other investors, including Italian financier Alessandro Butini and Miami Dolphins owner Stephen M. Ross expressed interest in owning a Miami franchise as well.
In his December 2013 state of the League address, Garber identified Beckham and Simon Fuller as potential owners in Miami. Later that month, on December 17, Miami-Dade County commissioners voted unanimously to allow Mayor Carlos A. Giménez to negotiate with the Beckham-led group on a new stadium in downtown Miami.
The league announced that Beckham exercised his option on February 5, 2014, and that Miami Beckham United, the investment group led by Beckham, Fuller and Claure, would own an expansion franchise in Miami, assuming that financing for a stadium could be agreed upon.
After its initial stadium proposals fell through, Commissioner Garber reiterated in August 2014 that the expansion would not be approved until a downtown stadium plan was secured.
On January 29, 2018, the Miami Beckham United group, four years after the ownerships' original announcement of pursuing a team, was officially awarded the twenty-fifth MLS franchise and will launch in the 2020 season. Paul McDonough was hired as sporting director effective August 4.
The team's ownership now operates through Miami Freedom Park LLC. Some graphics used by the group have evoked the city's landmark: Freedom Tower.
Maps Miami MLS team
Stadium
Current plans are for the team to begin play by 2020 and to open its 2021 season in a new stadium. The current proposal is for a 25,000-seat stadium that would form part of Freedom Park, a mixed-use complex on the present site of the city-owned Melreese Country Club near the Miami International Airport. Approval for construction of the stadium depends on the outcome of a public referendum to be held in November 2018.
The proposed development, to be built on 131-acre (53 ha) public land, would include 1,000,000 square feet (93,000 m2) of office, retail and commercial space, 750 hotel rooms, 23 acres (9.3 ha) of public soccer fields in addition to the 10.5-acre (4.2 ha) stadium, and the remaining 58 acres (23 ha) would be a public park. The owners would also make annual installments of $20 million for 30 years for improvements to public parks across the city. City commissioners voted to approve a referendum on the November 2018 ballot that would ask if the city should negotiate a no-bid lease with the investors. If the measure passes, the agreement would then require the approval by a four-vote supermajority of the five City of Miami commissioners. The plan faces opposition from supporters of the golf club and many details, such as fiscal responsibility for toxic incinerator ash in the soil, remain to be worked out.
The proposal follows a lengthy exploration of options, some of which remain fallback positions for the city and the club. Other locations which have been considered include: Dodge Island at PortMiami (2013), the Downtown Miami waterfront at Museum Park (2014),, a site adjacent to MLB's Marlins Park (2015), and a privately-owned site in Miami's Overtown (2015-16). The possibility of the team opening its inaugural season in FIU Stadium at Florida International University while the permanent stadium is constructed near the airport or at the Overtown site remains open. The latter was endorsed as a temporary option in a February 2015 vote by the Miami-Dade County commissioners.
Supporters
A 200-member supporters group named Southern Legion was formed after the Fusion folded. Members of the Southern Legion were on hand for the announcement that Beckham was exercising his option, presenting him with a scarf.
References
External links
- Official website
Source of article : Wikipedia