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M.L.S. Plans Return With Florida Event. But It’s Already Looking Past It.
Major League Soccer will return to the field in July with a monthlong, World Cup-style tournament in Florida that it hopes will be a prelude to a return to league play — and a traditional postseason — in the fall.
M.L.S. announced plans for the Florida event, in which all 26 of its teams will play in empty stadiums, on Wednesday. The tournament will open July 8 and, like the World Cup, feature multiple games a day to reduce six groups of teams into a round of 16. From there, the event will be a straight knockout tournament, culminating in a final on Aug. 11.
The entire competition, from group stage through the knockout rounds, will be played at the ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex at the Walt Disney World Resort near Orlando.
The event’s format is similar to the one announced last month by the National Women’s Soccer League, but it differs in important ways as M.L.S. looks beyond the horizon to a return to play. The biggest difference is that group stage matches will count in the regular-season standings, the league said, as part of an effort to chip away at a schedule that was suspended by the coronavirus pandemic just after the league’s season began in March.
Once the Florida tournament ends, M.L.S. plans to continue its regular season with a revised schedule in which teams would play in their home cities. The playoffs and the 25th M.L.S. Cup championship game would follow, state rules and the pandemic permitting.
“I do believe we will get back to our markets, all our fans should expect that to happen,” M.L.S. Commissioner Don Garber said in a conference call with reporters. “When that will happen is uncertain, and if we will have any markets with fans is also uncertain.
“But we are hearing about different guidelines state-by-state that there is even a possibility some fans might be able to attend games.”
No fans will be allowed to attend the Florida games, an accommodation to a global outbreak that is recording more cases than ever each day — even as dozens of American states continue the process of reopening their economies.
Florida, which delayed imposing statewide coronavirus restrictions at the start of the outbreak and then lifted some before other states, has seen an upward trend of cases since June 1.
Garber, like his counterparts in the N.B.A. and the N.W.S.L. who have also created single-city formats for the resumption of play, is banking on a bubblelike atmosphere, new hygiene protocols and regular virus testing to help reduce the risk of infection or a new outbreak of cases.
“The opportunity to have all 26 clubs in a controlled environment enables us to help protect the health of our players, coaches and staff as we return to play,” Garber said.
Teams will begin arriving in the Orlando area on June 24, though those that are holding full-squad workouts in their home markets will be allowed to delay their travel. Every club must be in Orlando by July 1, the league said.
Tournament games will be played at 9 a.m., 8 p.m. and 10:30 p.m. each day, with the bulk of the schedule taking place in the evening.
To address an uneven amount of teams, Nashville will be moved to the Eastern Conference for the remainder of the 2020 season. In Florida, the Eastern Conference will have three groups, one with six teams and two consisting of four teams each. The Western Conference will have three groups, each with four teams.
After 16 days of group stage matches, the top two teams in each group and the four best third-place finishers will advance to the knockout rounds.