FC Dallas

FC Dallas
Nickname(s)Toros, Burn
FoundedJune 6, 1995 (1995-06-06) as Dallas Burn
StadiumToyota Stadium
Frisco, Texas
Capacity19,096
OwnerHunt Sports Group
ChairmanClark Hunt
Head coachPeter Luccin (interim)
LeagueMajor League Soccer
2024Western Conference: 11th
Overall: 21st
Playoffs: Did not qualify
Websitefcdallas.com
Primary colors
Alternate colors
Current season

FC Dallas is an American professional soccer club based in the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex. The club competes as a member of the Western Conference in Major League Soccer (MLS). The franchise began play in 1996 as a charter club of the league. The club was founded in 1995 as the Dallas Burn before adopting its current name in 2004.

Since 2005, Dallas have played in the DFW area's northern suburbs at the 20,500-capacity soccer-specific Toyota Stadium in Frisco, Texas; home games in the club's early years were played at the Cotton Bowl. The team is owned by the Hunt Sports Group led by brothers Clark Hunt and Dan Hunt, who is the team's president. The Hunt family also owns the NFL's Kansas City Chiefs and part of the Chicago Bulls.

FC Dallas in 2016 won their first Supporters' Shield. In 2010 they were runners-up in the MLS Cup, losing to the Colorado Rapids in extra time. The team has won the U.S. Open Cup on two occasions (in 1997 and again in 2016). Their fully owned USL affiliate, North Texas SC, won the 2019 USL League One regular season and overall championship titles, the third division title in American soccer. The International Federation of Football History & Statistics, in its Club World Ranking for the year ending December 31, 2016, placed FC Dallas as the 190th best club in the world and the ninth best club in CONCACAF.[1]

The Toros' academy is reputed for its player development, having produced several players who have gone on to feature for European clubs and the United States men's national soccer team such as Weston McKennie, Reggie Cannon, Ricardo Pepi, and Chris Richards.[2][3][4]

  1. ^ "CLUB WORLD RANKING 2016 : CLUB ATLETICO NACIONAL MEDELLIN (COLOMBIA) – IFFHS". April 5, 2017. Retrieved October 12, 2017.
  2. ^ "Youth". FC Dallas.
  3. ^ "FC Dallas: Paxton Pomykal the next great export?". June 29, 2020.
  4. ^ "FC Dallas Youth". FC Dallas.

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