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In March 2013, the club renamed again, this time to ''Minnesota United FC''.[http://www.mnunitedfc.com/news/detail/uuid/1q4gmhinf8nia19ozhga21gp06/minnesota-stars-fc-rebrands#.VBmhvflSpS0] |
In March 2013, the club renamed again, this time to ''Minnesota United FC''.[http://www.mnunitedfc.com/news/detail/uuid/1q4gmhinf8nia19ozhga21gp06/minnesota-stars-fc-rebrands#.VBmhvflSpS0] |
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− | Minnesota United FC logo (alternate, with wordmark).svg |
+ | Minnesota United FC logo (alternate, with wordmark).svg |
− | Minnesota United FC logo (alternate, with wordmark).png |
+ | Minnesota United FC logo (alternate, with wordmark).png |
+ | MNUFC.svg|Alternate abbreviated logo |
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{{NASL 2011}} |
{{NASL 2011}} |
Revision as of 21:45, 18 February 2019
2010–2012 | 2012–2013 | 2013–present |
NSC Minnesota Stars
2010–2012
Minnesota Stars FC
2012–2013
The club rebranded to Minnesota Stars FC in January 2012, with a new logo.[1]
Minnesota United FC
2013–present
In March 2013, the club renamed again, this time to Minnesota United FC.[2]
Clubs: Atlanta Silverbacks | FC Edmonton | Fort Lauderdale Strikers | Indy Eleven | Jacksonville Armada | Miami FC | Minnesota United | Montreal Impact | New York Cosmos | North Carolina FC | Ottawa Fury FC | Puerto Rico FC | Puerto Rico Islanders | Rayo OKC | San Antonio Scorpions | San Francisco Deltas | Tampa Bay Rowdies Abandoned expansion: Related: |
Western Conference: Austin FC | Colorado Rapids | FC Dallas | Houston Dynamo | LA Galaxy | Los Angeles FC | Minnesota United | Portland Timbers | Real Salt Lake | San Jose Earthquakes | Seattle Sounders | Sporting Kansas City | St. Louis City | Vancouver Whitecaps Eastern Conference: Future clubs: Former clubs: Related: |