VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA – AUGUST 17: Thomas Müller #13 of the Vancouver Whitecaps FC greets fans as he arrives at the stadium prior to the MLS match between Vancouver Whitecaps FC and Houston Dynamo FC at BC Place on August 17, 2025 in Vancouver, British Columbia. (Photo by Vancouver Whitecaps FC/MLS via Getty Images)
MLS via Getty Images
On Monday, The Athletic reported that a committee of MLS owners had engaged in preliminary discussions about potentially relocating the Vancouver Whitecaps to Las Vegas.
The revelation shouldn’t be particularly surprising to those who have followed the Whitecaps’ unprofitable and increasingly disadventageous stadium situation.
League commissioner Don Garber has previously gone on the record with his assertion that the Whitecaps’ status as secondary tenants at BC Place is unworkable. The Whitecaps themselves have been transparent about searching for new ownership that could assist in the search to find a permanent stadium.
And in light of the latest reporting, both MLS and the Whitecaps have re-iterated those sentiments while indicating their desire to remain in the Pacific Northwest.
From MLS to The Athletic:
We remain focused on supporting the club in identifying a sustainable long-term solution, and our preference is to find a path that allows the Whitecaps to continue to grow and succeed in Vancouver. At the same time, we have a responsibility to ensure the long-term health of the league and its clubs, and we will evaluate all options, including interest that has been expressed in the club from other markets and investor groups.
From a Whitecaps public statement:
We are aware of today’s reporting. The club has faced well-documented structural challenges around stadium economics, venue access, and revenue limitations that have made it difficult to attract buyers committed to keeping the team in Vancouver. Over the past 16 months, we have had serious conversations with more than 100 parties, and to date, no viable offer has emerged that would keep the club here. … If there is a local ownership group with the vision and resources to chart a path forward, we urge them to come forward.
There is a considerable segment of the American soccer media that doesn’t trust the league is telling the truth on this matter, and would actually prefer the club relocate to a glitzier location. Perhaps it’s understandable, given how close the Columbus Crew came to moving to Austin in the previous decade.
But timing is everything. And the far more likely reality is that these continuous revelations – on the record and anonymously – are an attempt to leverage the timing of the World Cup to create the urgency required to attract an in-market buyer.
The alternative, relocating an MLS club from a World Cup host city only months after hosting World Cup matches, would be a devastating blow to the perceived stability of the MLS brand.
Leveraging Circumstances Of 2026 World Cup
For starters, it’s telling that the league and club offices have leaned into 2026 as the year to be so forthright about the scheduling difficulties the Whitecaps have encountered during their 15-year residency at the Province-owned venue.
Yes, the Whitecaps’ home schedule in 2026 is extremely front loaded because of a venue schedule crunch, and it will force the club to play at least one Leagues Cup game away from home this summer. But that crunch is unique to 2026, in which BC Place will host six World Cup matches. Those host duties, plus the installation of a temorary grass surface at a facility, will force the Whitecaps to play nine consecutive away matches beginning Saturday and continuing through July 25.
Those constraints would not apply to future seasons at BC Place. And while the venue still isn’t suitable for the club’s long-term financial future because of the relatively unfavorable lease terms the British Columbia government has offered, the need to relocate might not feel as urgent in 2027 and beyond if there was faith that it would happen eventually.
Further, the flip to a late July-to-late May schedule starting in 2027 would conceivably give the Whitecaps more fixture flexibility at BC Place, should they remain there. The CFL’s BC Lions, the other long-term tenant at the venue, play a June-to-November schedule, the first six weeks of which would now come during MLS’ abbreviated summer off-season. The MLS Cup Playoffs would come in the spring when there would be no CFL clash.
Bad Stadium, But Healthy Market
Meanwhile, under the club’s current sporting director Axel Schuster and manager Jesper Sorensen, the Whitecaps have become one of the league’s stronger-perfoming clubs on the field, in the transfer market and at the box office.
The Whitecaps reached the Concacaf Champions Cup and MLS Cup finals in 2025. Aided by a home-heavy schedule to begin 2026, they sit second in the 2026 Supporters’ Shield race for best regular season record, three points behind a San Jose side that has played one more game.
Last summer, the ‘Caps made the kind of signing that brings global visibility by acquiring longtime Bayern Munich and German national team star Thomas Muller on a free transfer. And since his MLS debut last Augst, the club have been one of the more consistent draws in MLS at the box office, with crowds above 20,000 for all of their 17 home regular season and playoff matches. They currently sit 10th out of 30 in 2026 average attendance, despite having played a higher volume of home matches so far than any other club.
Don’t get it wrong. The economic problems of remaining in BC Place, where the club’s ability to recoup matchday revenues is constricted because the venue is government-owned, are real.
The club’s $46 million in revenue generated in 2026, per Forbes MLS valuations, is the lowest figure in the league, and its estimated value of $445 million is second lowest. But those figures aren’t completely out of line with other smaller market MLS clubs, and they’re actually kind of impressive when factoring in that the only other clubs that play in stadiums not operated by their ownership groups are in New York and Chicago.
But this is a healthy MLS market, if not a healthy stadium situation. And in the brief history of MLS clubs that have relocated or contracted, there has never been one that did so despite such a relatively healthy market presence and ownership desire to keep the club located locally.
The Tampa Bay Mutiny and Miami fusion were both in the bottom third of MLS attendance when they were contracted following the 2001 season. The move of the San Jose Earthquakes to Houston in 2005 was led by the club’s ownership group amid stadium frustrations, not the league. Chivas USA was by far the league’s least-supported team when it folded following the 2014 season.
2026 World Cup Bump Not As Simple As 1994
The biggest legacy of the 1994 World Cup was the foundation of MLS, a first-division competition to replace the defunct NASL. Fast forward 32 years and Garber has said he expects the tournament to be “rocket fuel” for the league’s continued growth.
But while MLS competes in a far more soccer literate nation than when it launched in 1996, it also does so in a far more crowded soccer market. Through most of the 1990s, it was difficult to near impossible to regularly watch live pro soccer from around the globe. There were no other competing American competitions either, be they men’s lower-level domestic leagues like the USL Championship and Canadian Premier League, or the NWSL that is one of the world’s top women’s league’s and one of North American sports’ hottest commercial commodities.
It’s not enough to simply exist in the aftermath of the World Cup. Rather, MLS must compete for the right to be seen as the right platform for commercial investors to embrace as a vehicle for siezing upon the World Cup bump.
The spectacle of one of its most successful teams on the field and at the box office relocating in the aftermath of the tournament would be a daming blow to that argument. It would suggest a league that prioritizes real estate above all other metrics of sporting health, and one with less authenticity and stability than other entities at home or abroad.
That doesn’t mean it won’t happen. But it means we should continue to believe MLS still desperately wants to avoid.

