Las Vegas is finalizing an MLS expansion franchise with backing from V Sports, the holding company that controls Aston Villa. The deal values entry at roughly $500 million, consistent with the San Diego FC slot announced in May 2023. The franchise would begin play in 2027 or 2028, making it the league's 30th club. No stadium site has been disclosed.
V Sports is led by Nassef Sawiris and Wes Edens, who acquired Aston Villa in 2018 for $88 million and have since pushed the club back into European competition. Sawiris controls OCI, a nitrogen fertilizer conglomerate with $7.1 billion in 2023 revenue. Edens co-founded Fortress Investment Group and chairs New Fortress Energy; he also owns the Milwaukee Bucks. The group's local partners have not been named, but prior Las Vegas bids involved hotel operators and the Findlay automotive family, who walked away in 2020 after the pandemic delayed league expansion.
The move matters because MLS has been courting a Las Vegas franchise since at least 2017, when it was part of a four-city expansion round. The league awarded slots to Nashville, Miami, Austin, and Sacramento (later replaced by St. Louis after stadium financing collapsed). Las Vegas dropped out each time over stadium uncertainty. The city has 2.2 million residents in the metro area, behind only Phoenix among Western markets without MLS, and draws 40 million annual visitors. Allegiant Stadium, home to the Raiders, seats 65,000 but is considered too large and too expensive for soccer-specific use. A smaller venue in the 22,000–25,000 range would require either public land or hotel-adjacent development, both of which have been floated in past proposals.
V Sports brings a different risk profile than prior bidders. Aston Villa's revival has been capital-intensive: the club spent $182 million on player transfers in summer 2024 and carries a wage bill near $150 million annually, high for a mid-table Premier League side. The strategy paid off; Villa qualified for the Champions League in 2023–24, generating an estimated $80 million in additional revenue. The same model—front-load spending, chase prestige competitions—does not translate cleanly to MLS, where a hard salary cap and limited international windows constrain European-style squad building. What does translate is venue operation and sponsorship infrastructure. Villa Park, the club's stadium, underwent $50 million in renovations under V Sports, and the ownership has added kit deals with Castore and principal sponsorships with BK8 and Jeddah-based Starzbet.
The Las Vegas franchise will compete with the Raiders, Golden Knights, and Aces for sponsorship dollars, but it enters a market with no territorial MLS broadcast conflicts and a corporate base that has grown sharply since 2020. Allegiant Air, Caesars Entertainment, MGM Resorts, and Wynn all maintain headquarters or significant operations locally. Naming rights for a new stadium would likely clear $5 million annually, in line with Lower.com Field in Columbus and below the $7 million that DRV PNK Stadium commands in Fort Lauderdale. Season-ticket pricing has not been discussed, but comparable Western markets (Austin, Sacramento, Phoenix) have averaged 7,500–12,000 season-ticket holders in year one.
MLS has one expansion slot remaining after Las Vegas. League president Don Garber has mentioned San Diego (now awarded), Las Vegas, Phoenix, and Detroit as finalists. Detroit remains in play, supported by Pistons owner Tom Gores and backed by a downtown stadium proposal tied to a $1.5 billion mixed-use development. Phoenix has no public bid but is the largest U.S. market without a top-five league franchise. If Las Vegas closes by end of Q1 2025, as league sources expect, the final slot would likely be awarded by 2026, giving the league an even 32 teams by the end of the decade.
The next sixty days will clarify the stadium site and local ownership structure. MLS requires controlling owners to hold at least 20% equity and demonstrate $500 million net worth independent of the franchise investment. V Sports clears that threshold, but the league also prefers visible local partners with civic credibility. The Findlay family, who explored earlier bids, have not been named, nor has Station Casinos, which was once rumored. Steve Wynn, now divested from Wynn Resorts, has not surfaced in this round. Whoever is named, the franchise will be measured against the immediate success of St. Louis City SC, which sold out 22,500 season tickets before kicking a ball and finished second in the Western Conference in its 2023 debut season.
The takeaway
V Sports closes Las Vegas MLS at **$500M**, slot 30; stadium site and local partners unnamed, league expects announcement by March.
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