MLS Returns With Another New Team and a Whole New Way to Watch

St. St. Louis, a city with a rich soccer history dating back more than a century, will finally get its Major League Soccer team this year. But to watch it, and the league’s other 28 teams, armchair supporters will have to make the transition from television to streaming, whether they like it or not.

Here’s what is happening with MLS in 2023.

What’s new?

For the seventh straight season, MLS is expanding. St. Louis City SC will be the league’s 29th team — a total that may grow in the next few months — and play in a new stadium downtown, Citypark.

St. Louis had long been a target for expansion; The city had a pioneering professional soccer league in the early 1900s and NASL, indoor and minor-league teams more recently. But previous efforts have all failed, torpedoed either by inadequate financing or, in 2017, a public referendum in which voters rejected a plan to finance a stadium for an expansion franchise.

The new team includes Roman Bürki, a 32-year-old Swiss goalkeeper with seven years at Borussia Dortmund under his belt, and Klauss, a Brazilian striker. But if recent MLS history is any indication (not you, Atlanta United), St. Louis City is likely to suffer typical expansion woes as it tries to build a winner.

It may not be the lowest team on the MLS totem pole for long, however: Commissioner Don Garber has made clear that the league’s expansion will not stop at 29. “We do need more teams,” Garber said this week in New York. A 30th franchise will be announced by the end of the year, he said, with San Diego and Las Vegas currently leading the contenders. Garber also cited Phoenix, Sacramento, Detroit and Tampa, Fla., as possibilities for further expansion in the near future.

What will Week 1 bring?

Thirteen games will be played on Saturday, starting with New York City FC’s visit to Nashville on Saturday afternoon. The big game comes later in the day: MLS is expecting a crowd of more than 70,000 in the Rose Bowl on Saturday to watch the Los Angeles Galaxy, now playing second fiddle in the city they once ruled, take on the defending league champion, LAFC

The Philadelphia Union, which lost last season’s MLS Cup championship game in an excruciating manner, will kick off against Columbus at home. And Atlanta United, which led the league in attendance again last season, expects another big crowd inside Mercedes-Benz Stadium for its opener against San Jose.

How can I watch?

MLS is banking on its younger fan base’s familiarity with technology (and its aversion to traditional TV) as it moves the bulk of its games to Apple TV as part of a 10-year, $2.5 billion broadcast contract.

For hard-core MLS fans, that will mean a deluge of content: every game, including the playoffs and the League’s Cup tournament with the Mexican league; English and Spanish broadcasts; a Red Zone-style whip-around show hitting the highlights of games as they happen; and no blackouts for out-of-market games.

The cost is $79 a year with an Apple TV subscription and $99 without, but several games each week will be broadcast free throughout the season.

As for traditional television, ESPN is out of the mix, as are all local broadcasts around the country. Fox and FS1 will broadcast roughly one game a week, part of a conscious effort to keep one foot in the traditional broadcasting world as the league dives headlong into something new. “We didn’t want to go cold turkey and shut it all down,” said Gary Stevenson, the league’s deputy commissioner.

Who is going to win the MLS Cup?

The list of favorites has to start with LAFC, which won the Supporter’s Shield with the best regular-season record last season and then added the MLS Cup title, becoming the first team to pull off that double since Toronto FC in 2017. The Welsh star Gareth Bale, whose tenure was known for limited minutes and stunning goals, has retired, and the team’s top scorer, Cristian Arango, has moved to the Mexican league, so expect more of the load to fall on club legend Carlos Vela, now 33. .

Philadelphia had the same number of points as LAFC last season and a much better goal difference (plus-46 to plus-28), but it lost the Shield because it had fewer wins and then the final in the most agonizing way possible.

The Union are well equipped to find their way back. Andre Blake is the reigning goalkeeper of the year, Jakob Glesnes was last season’s defender of the year and Daniel Gazdag will again provide the goals.

Nashville should rely on last season’s league’s most valuable player, Hany Mukhtar, who led MLS with 23 goals. After a shaky first season, Austin took a huge step forward by reaching the Cup semifinal last season and now will look to improve even more. Inter Miami was a .500 team last season, but it has added Josef Martínez, who had 98 goals in six years with Atlanta United. If he can regain his past scoring form, he makes any team a title contender.

The playoffs changed again. How will they work?

Expansion and playoff tinkering are two time-honored MLS traditions, and this week the league announced yet another new postseason format. This season, 18 teams will make the playoffs, up from 14, and there will be a new play-in round for the lowest-ranked two in each conference. After four years of strictly one-and-done games, MLS will introduce a best-of-three format for the round of 16. But the quarterfinals and beyond will revert to single-game eliminations. Confused? Here’s some supplemental reading with all the rules.

What about side competitions?

The Concacaf Champions League, the regional championship that was won by an MLS team, the Seattle Sounders, for the first time in 22 years last season, begins in March with LAFC, Philadelphia, Vancouver, Orlando and Austin participating. The two-legged final ends on June 4.

League games will be halted from mid-July to mid-August for an expanded 77-game Leagues Cup that will include every team from MLS and Mexico’s Liga MX. Those games will all be held in the United States and Canada.

And the American MLS teams will join the venerable US Open Cup, which dates back to 1914, in April, with the final scheduled for Sept. 27. The defending champion is Orlando City FC, but the safest of bets is that an MLS team will win it again. The last non-MLS team to win the Open Cup was the Rochester Rhinos in 1999.

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​ St. St. Louis, a city with a rich soccer history dating back more than a century, will finally get its Major League Soccer team this year. But to watch it, and the league’s other 28 teams, armchair supporters will have to make the transition from television to streaming, whether they like it or not. Here’s
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