San Antonio Express-News

St. Louis receives expansion team for 2022 debut

- By Dave Skretta

The prospects of a Major League Soccer franchise ever calling St. Louis home appeared to have died two years ago when voters turned down the use of a business tax to finance a new downtown stadium.

Then a new potential ownership group came along.

Led by members of the founding family of car rental giant Enterprise, the city began to work anew last fall on its pitch for a profession­al soccer team. On Tuesday, the league officially announced that St. Louis would become its 28th club when it begins play for the 2022 season.

“Our ownership group has come a long way since we first announced our bid last October at MathewsDic­key Boys and Girls Club, and it’s an incredible feeling to now be able to say, ‘St. Louis is home to the first official majority female-led ownership group in MLS,’ ” said Carolyn Kindle Betz, granddaugh­ter of Enterprise founder Jack Taylor and the president of Enterprise Holdings Foundation.

“Our MLS team and stadium will only add to St. Louis’ renaissanc­e currently under way,” Kindle Betz said, “and will provide us with a great opportunit­y to bring together many different segments of the community, uniting people in their love for the game.”

Six other female members of the Taylor family are part of the ownership group, along with businessme­n Andy Taylor and Jim Kavanaugh, a soccer insider who was part of the first failed ownership team.

The new soccer stadium will be the centerpiec­e of a major developmen­t project in the city’s Downtown West district. It is expected to continue a downtown revitaliza­tion effort that includes Busch Stadium — home of the Cardinals — and the Enterprise Center, the home of the Stanley Cup champion Blues.

As proof the city is all-in on the project, the St. Louis Board of Aldermen easily approved a resolution last November to provide tax exemptions and other incentives to help with the constructi­on.

“St. Louis is a city with a rich soccer tradition,” MLS commission­er Don Garber said, “and it is a market we have considered since the league’s inception. Our league becomes stronger with the addition of the city’s deeply dedicated soccer fans and the committed and innovative local ownership group.”

St. Louis has long been a hotbed for youth soccer. In 1950, five immigrants from “The Hill” neighborho­od helped the U.S. upset England in the World Cup. Saint Louis University has won 10 national titles in men’s soccer, and the Hermann Trophy given to the top college player in the country is awarded annually at the Missouri Athletic Club.

The new St. Louis franchise continues explosive growth for MLS that has seen 15 new clubs join the league since 2005. That includes a handful that have recently been awarded: FC Cincinnati is playing its inaugural season this year, David Beckham’s Inter Miami FC and Nashville SC will begin play next season, Austin FC begins play in 2021, and the St. Louis club will follow the next year.

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