Los Angeles Times

LAFC to start MLS journey

Team has rich ownership, but history is against a winning expansion season.

- KEVIN BAXTER ON SOCCER kevin.baxter@latimes.com Twitter: @kbaxter11

Club debuts Sunday, but history is against a winning season in first year.

SEATTLE — Forty months ago, MLS commission­er Don Garber walked down a red carpet laid across a Sunset Boulevard sidewalk and into a small movie studio, where the newest team to join his soccer league was being introduced.

The Los Angeles Football Club will play its first game on another carpet Sunday, the artificial turf covering Seattle’s CenturyLin­k Field. And Garber acknowledg­es after the longest rollout in MLS history that he can’t wait.

“I’m very excited about it,” he said. “I’m very confident they’ll be successful.”

Garber has said that before, of course. He said it when Chivas USA and Real Salt Lake joined the league, then again when MLS spread to Vancouver and Portland, Ore., and Montreal. No other commission­er in the history of U.S. profession­al sports has welcomed more expansion franchises than Garber, who has seen his league more than double, to 23 teams, since 2004.

“I have birthed a lot of babies in my 19 years as MLS commission­er,” he said. “And they are all very special in their own way.”

LAFC might be extra special, though. Its ownership group is among the largest and most diverse in U.S. profession­al sports, with 30 members from five countries — though just one of those owners, former World Cup and Olympic champion Mia Hamm, is a woman.

It’s among the richest ownership groups in MLS history too, having paid a record $110-million fee just to join, then sinking $350 million into a stadium. What separates this franchise from those that have gone before is the 31⁄2-year gestation period.

LAFC has used its extra time well, methodical­ly rolling out a brand, engaging its fans and building a culture. That worked so well when the team asked for season-ticket deposits, more than 20,000 people signed up.

Next the team hired a big-name manager in Bob Bradley, who led the U.S. to a World Cup, and signed bigname players in Mexico’s Carlos Vela, Belgium’s Laurent Ciman, Costa Rica’s Marcos Ureña and Uruguay’s Diego Rossi.

Yet none of that guarantees success on the field. In fact, history argues against it.

Until hockey’s Vegas Golden Knights this year, no team in the top four major U.S. sports leagues — the NBA, NHL, NFL and Major League Baseball — had a winning record in its first season. And only one — the 1966-67 Chicago Bulls — made the playoffs. First-year MLS teams have had more success, with the Chicago Fire winning 20 games, a league title and the U.S. Open Cup in its inaugural season in 1998.

But only two other teams — the Seattle Sounders in 2009 and Atlanta United last year — won more often than they lost in their expansion year.

LAFC need look no further than its own staff for experience about possibilit­ies and pitfalls for a first-year team. John Thorringto­n, the executive vice president for soccer operations, played for the Vancouver Whitecaps, who entered MLS in 2011 by losing a league-high 18 games. Bradley, meanwhile, coached the Fire in 1998 when it won the MLS Cup.

“With a new team, a new club, that first match is so important in all ways,” Bradley said. “You can make a strong first impression.”

Thorringto­n, meanwhile, favors a slow, steady approach, tamping down the kind of expectatio­ns that naturally follow a team that rolls out a red carpet to introduce itself.

“Our goal here is not to be good year one,” he said. “For sure we want to be competitiv­e year one. But our goal is to be sustainabl­y successful, which is much harder in MLS.”

It’s uncertain how that will play with owners who have known little but winning. Aside from Hamm, the group includes Magic Johnson, a five-time NBA champion and three-time MVP; baseball’s Nomar Garciaparr­a, a former rookie of the year and twotime batting champion; YouTube co-founder Chad Hurley; and Hollywood heavyweigh­t Peter Guber, whose films have earned more than 50 Academy Awards.

The group came together quickly and almost accidental­ly after Henry Nguyen, a Vietnamese American venture capitalist, approached Garber in 2012 with interest in investing in an MLS franchise. Nguyen talked up the idea with Tom Penn, a former criminal defense attorney and onetime NBA executive, and Penn brought in Guber, a part owner of the Dodgers and NBA’s Golden State Warriors.

Guber had long been interested in MLS, once trying to buy the Galaxy from AEG. With him on board, the ownership group kept growing, taking on bankers, businessme­n — even actor Will Ferrell, whose wife played college soccer.

“This is a fabulous ownership group,” Garber said. “The minute this team was launched, they were laserfocus­ed on building a good brand, connecting in the community, understand­ing the environmen­t they were getting themselves into.”

They’ve done their homework and their team will take its first test Sunday. Bradley, however, cautions patience because even after 31⁄2 years, there’s still work to be done.

“We’ve done a number of things that we’re very excited about,” he said. “But I don’t think we’re finished.”

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