If it had been her kid’s soccer game in the late June downpour, Andrea Yoch might have been watching from the car. But inside TCO Stadium, more than 4,000 fans still turned up despite heavy rain for Minnesota Aurora FC’s 4-1 win over Chicago City.
It was a reminder for Aurora co-founder Yoch that the club had the foundation needed for what’s next. Having wrapped up its third preprofessional season in the USL W League, “we weren’t the shiny new thing” in town anymore, Yoch said. And yet fans kept turning up.
So where does that leave the Aurora now?
After its 12th season, armed with a new four-year, $240 million media deal, the professional National Women’s Soccer League plans to announce its newest expansion club this fall. The already-announced Boston team and the next expansion pick will debut as the league’s 15th and 16th teams in 2026.
The Aurora want into the professional league that fields most of the U.S. national team stars and international talent from six continents. Aurora founders are one of two groups, alongside one from Cleveland, that have publicly confirmed bid submissions over the summer. Yoch told the Star Tribune 11 groups filed preliminary bids by the early June deadline. In June, Sports Business Journal reported the two cities, plus Cincinnati, as markets that would submit bids and Atlanta, Denver, Nashville and Jacksonville as “maybe.”
Professional expansion, take two
This isn’t the first time the Aurora have expressed interest in the NWSL. Minnesota’s group had bid for one of two spots in the league’s previous round of expansion in 2022. Those spots ultimately went to Boston and the Bay Area for around $50 million each.
“We didn’t really have the investors,” Yoch said of the first bid, for which she had planned to find investors during the process. “We really spent the intervening time finding those investors. … We’ve built a lot of relationships. And so there’s a lot of things we were able to anticipate that are important this time.”
The Aurora group has not publicly stated who those investors are beyond noting some have local sports business experience and some do not, with the intent of “protecting some privacy” in the circumstance they are not awarded the bid, Yoch said. Yoch also stated that should the Aurora be awarded the bid, its 3,080 community owners “come with us.”