2017 General MLS Transfer Rumors

Agreed. Good luck offloading that team with the horrible 30 year stadium lease they signed in 2005. Unless the new owner is buying only to relocate the team to another city which would be a shame. Aside from being in a terrible location with crappy access from the city, highlights of the lease include:
  • The Fire pay an annual Facility Fee originally set at $300,000.00 that increases at 2% every year. They also cover event expenses for each use of the facility.
  • Naming rights are owned by the Village, along with marketing and advertising rights for the stadium.
  • The Fire have to reimburse the Village for any home games held outside of the facility. International friendlies included.
  • No MLS team can play in the Chicago market area in any stadium other than Toyota Park, even if the Fire cease operations.
  • The team is responsible for reimbursing the Village for use of ancillary facilities, including the main field for practice sessions.
  • Concessions and box office are controlled by the Village, although there are shared revenues: Team at 92% of gross ticket revenue; 50% split of net parking and net concession revenue; Team receives 30% net license, net event suite revenue, and net sponsorship revenue. Team receives 22.5% of gross merchandise revenue.
Source: http://www.chicagonow.com/fire-confidential/2016/08/fire-sale-at-least-three-groups-interested/

I don't think NYCFC/CFG would ever be foolish enough to agree to anything this ridiculous but it's a good cautionary tale as we all hope for a stadium.

Wait, re: point 3, the Fire have to reimburse "The Village" (a term I literally cannot read without picturing it in the terms of the M. Night Shyamalan film) if the USMNT plays games in the Chicago market area without using Toyota Park? Even if the Fire have no involvement in the venue selection? So the USMNT could theoretically (assuming they actually had a reason to) stage a whole ton of friendlies just out of town and slowly financially kill the Fire by death from a thousand cuts?
 
Wait, re: point 3, the Fire have to reimburse "The Village" (a term I literally cannot read without picturing it in the terms of the M. Night Shyamalan film) if the USMNT plays games in the Chicago market area without using Toyota Park? Even if the Fire have no involvement in the venue selection? So the USMNT could theoretically (assuming they actually had a reason to) stage a whole ton of friendlies just out of town and slowly financially kill the Fire by death from a thousand cuts?
I doubt we can answer without the actual contract or a more specific description from a trusted source, but that won't stop me...
I read the above to mean only Chicago Fire home games. That would not include the All-Star game, as someone suggested, or USMNT games, and would only include international friendlies hosted by the Fire. So if the Fire brought in a top European team to play and wanted to play in Soldier Field to host a big crowd, they would have to pay the Village
 
I doubt we can answer without the actual contract or a more specific description from a trusted source, but that won't stop me...
I read the above to mean only Chicago Fire home games. That would not include the All-Star game, as someone suggested, or USMNT games, and would only include international friendlies hosted by the Fire. So if the Fire brought in a top European team to play and wanted to play in Soldier Field to host a big crowd, they would have to pay the Village

Stupid as it seems now, that idea didn't actually occur to me. That makes far more sense than my interpretation.
 
Schweini to Chicago is official. He's coming.

There are a ton of places to build a stadium in Chicago proper. Just a question as to whether or not those are places you want to go
 
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Saying that though, RSL play in Sandy Utah and SKC play far from downtown Kansas City,yet both don't have problems with crowds.

Ownership groups are just as important as location.

Anyway, will be interesting to see how schweinsteiger goes
 
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Saying that though, RSL play in Sandy Utah and SKC play far from downtown Kansas City,yet both don't have problems with crowds.

Ownership groups are just as important as location.

Anyway, will be interesting to see how schweinsteiger goes
True, but I would argue that those two markets don't have as much to compete with from a sporting perspective.

For example, Chicago has two MLB teams, an NFL team, an NBA team, and an NHL team all downtown.

Kansas City has an MLB team and an NFL team (I won't pretend to know the location of those stadiums, and I'm on a flight so I won't look it up as Google maps will break this crappy internet).

Salt Lake City only has an NBA franchise.

I think the target demographics from an accessibility standpoint is different between those cities. Not just from an ability to attend, but also the attitude on how to get to the stadium, etc.
 
Kansas City's football and baseball stadiums are nowhere near downtown from what I remember. They do have an NBA size basketball arena downtown.

I believe the Utah Jazz play downtown in SLC.

Something the league seems to be picking up on are the limited entertainment options in certain markets. Orlando has the Magic. That's it. Atlanta doesn't have hockey anymore. St Louis lost the NFL. San Diego now has nothing.
 
Kansas City's football and baseball stadiums are nowhere near downtown from what I remember. They do have an NBA size basketball arena downtown.

I believe the Utah Jazz play downtown in SLC.

Something the league seems to be picking up on are the limited entertainment options in certain markets. Orlando has the Magic. That's it. Atlanta doesn't have hockey anymore. St Louis lost the NFL. San Diego now has nothing.
What's interesting about SKC is they represent Kansas City, Missouri. Their corporate offices and training facility are in Missouri. Their stadium is in Kansas City, Kansas....
 
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What's interesting about SKC is they represent Kansas City, Missouri. Their corporate offices and training facility are in Missouri. Their stadium is in Kansas City, Kansas....

Probably for tax purposes...

I wouldn't be surprised that NYCFC's business location is in Purchase or Orangeburg when the new training facility is done to not have to pay city taxes or something.
 
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Screw all of you guys. I think this is a great signing for Chicago. If this gets people to Bridgeview, someone will buy the team and MLS will be better for it.
 
Did it recharge your chi?

It should have, but...


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Wow what the hell are they thinking in Whitecap land?

Edit: OK this is a little better deal for Vancouver than I thought. Sounds like he wasn't going to sign a long term deal with the caps.

"Whitecaps FC acquired midfielder Tony Tchani from Columbus Crew SC, $225,000 in Targeted Allocation Money, and $75,000 in General Allocation Money, in exchange for winger/forward Kekuta Manneh. In the event Crew SC signs Manneh to a new contract, then Vancouver will also receive Columbus' natural first round MLS SuperDraft selection in the immediately following draft. Furthermore, Whitecaps FC will receive additional General Allocation Money if Manneh is traded by Columbus prior to December 31, 2018 and Vancouver will retain a percentage of any future transfer fee if Manneh is transferred outside of MLS"
 
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