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Sports Illustrated
August 10, 2007
An attorney leading the charge to lure big-time soccer to the St. Louis area will make his case next week to the Metro East community of Collinsville, Ill., for a new 18,500-seat stadium he thinks will kick-start the courtship. Jeff Cooper's pitch Monday to the Collinsville City Council on behalf of the St. Louis Soccer United group marks the biggest step yet in his group's quest to land a Major League Soccer expansion team by the 2009 season.
The league, with 13 teams in the U.S. and Canada, looks to add three
more by 2010, spokesman Dan Courtemanche said. San Jose already has
been tapped to join the fold next season, leaving St. Louis and 10
other potential markets vying for the other two expansion spots that
could be announced by this year's end, Courtemanche said.
One catch: The market must have a soccer-specific stadium or a plan for one, Courtemanche said.
"It's a huge deal for St. Louis. St. Louis is Soccer Town USA, the best
soccer market in the country," Cooper said Friday, touting the region's
population base, geographical location and media market size as plusses
in its courting a franchise. "The only thing holding it back has been a
proper venue to play."
Cooper said the project -- the stadium, along with retail and mixed-use
space -- could run about $400 million, with the bulk of the cost
covered by a private investment group.
"The state is not going to have any role in financing. We haven't asked
for that (help)," added Cooper, a 38-year-old native of nearby Granite
City who played soccer in high school and at DePauw University in
Greencastle, Ind.
Cooper said the proposed "classically designed," canopied stadium would
be on former farm land near Interstates 55-70 and Interstate 255, just
10 minutes from the Gateway Arch and the rest of downtown St. Louis.
The venue also would host international and collegiate soccer matches
and high school tournaments, along with possible concerts and music
festivals. The complex would have nine additional grass fields for
camps, clinics, regional and national tournaments, and league play for
local soccer groups.
The proposed development, on 400 acres, also calls for hundreds of
thousands of square feet of retail space, stand-alone office space, two
120-room hotels, roughly 1,200 units of affordable housing, and large
tracts of green space.
Messages left Friday with Collinsville Mayor Stan Schaeffer were not immediately returned.
Cooper's group had made a bid for Utah's Real Salt Lake franchise to
move that MLS team to St. Louis. But that pursuit was dashed earlier
this year when Utah lawmakers approved a financing package that kept
the team in Salt Lake City.
St. Louis has a heady history when it comes to soccer, aside from its
being the former home of several pro teams. Saint Louis University has
10 NCAA national championships, and the city of St. Louis last November
hosted the College Cup, the semifinals and finals for men's NCAA soccer.
Five of the 11 players on the 1950 U.S. World Cup team that defeated
England 1-0 -- among the most famous soccer upsets -- were from St.
Louis. That event was chronicled in the 2005 movie, "The Game of Their
Lives," with St. Louis providing many of the backdrops in the film.
"Clearly, St. Louis has a strong tradition for the support of soccer," Courtemanche said.
Cooper founded the SimmonsCooper LLC law firm of East Alton in 1999
with John Simmons, who in May completed his own quest to bring
professional sports to southern Illinois by opening a new minor-league
ballpark in Marion for the fledgling Southern Illinois Miners of the
independent Frontier League.
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