2020 Major League Soccer season


The 2020 Major League Soccer season is the 25th season of Major League Soccer, the top professional soccer league in the United States and Canada. The regular season began on February 29, 2020, and was planned to end on October 4, 2020. The playoffs were planned to begin in October 2020 and would end with MLS Cup 2020 on November 7, 2020.
On March 12, 2020, the season entered a lengthy suspension due to the COVID-19 pandemic in North America, following the cancellation of several matches. On May 1, the league announced that players will be allowed to resume individual outdoor training at MLS facilities on May 6. The COVID-19 pandemic is the first interruption of regular season play since the 2001 MLS season, in which many late regular season games were canceled due to the September 11 attacks. On June 10, MLS announced that a bracket format dubbed the "MLS is Back Tournament" would begin July 8 at ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex in Walt Disney World, and end with the final on August 11. Beyond that tournament, the fate of the remainder of the season is uncertain.
The 2020 season sees the addition of two expansion clubs, Inter Miami CF and Nashville SC, which took Major League Soccer to 26 total teams spread evenly across two conferences. This is the first MLS season in which each team does not play every other team at least once.
The Seattle Sounders FC are the defending champions, having defeated Toronto FC in MLS Cup 2019. Los Angeles FC are the defending Supporters' Shield winners.

Teams

Stadiums and locations

Two stadiums were renamed during the 2019–20 offseason:
Expansion team Nashville SC began the season in the MLS Western Conference. As part of the announcement of the MLS is Back Tournament, MLS confirmed that for one season only, Nashville would transfer to the MLS Eastern Conference which thereby expanded to 14 teams for the season, with the Western Conference reduced to 12.

Personnel and sponsorship

TeamHead coachCaptainShirt sponsorSleeve and short sponsor
Atlanta United FC American Family InsurancePiedmont Orthopedics, Truist, NAPA
Chicago Fire FC MotorolaMotorola, CIBC
FC Cincinnati Mercy HealthCintas, First Financial Bank
Colorado Rapids TransamericaWFG, Western Union
Columbus Crew SC Nationwide Children's HospitalScotts, OhioHealth
D.C. United LeidosCaesars Entertainment, Gainbridge, Events DC
FC Dallas AdvoCare
Houston Dynamo MD AndersonKroger, Coushatta Casino Resort
Inter Miami CF Baptist Health, Bang Energy
LA Galaxy HerbalifeHerbalife, Dignity Health
Los Angeles FC YouTube TVTarget
Minnesota United FC TargetBell Bank, Allianz
Montreal Impact Bank of MontrealSaputo, Frigo Cheese Heads
Nashville SC Renasant BankHyundai, Jackson
New England Revolution UnitedHealthGillette, Santander
New York City FC Etihad AirwaysAT&T, Ford
New York Red Bulls Red BullYanmar
Orlando City SC Orlando HealthExploria
Philadelphia Union Bimbo Bakeries USAThomas', Subaru
Portland Timbers Alaska AirlinesKeyBank, AT&T
Real Salt Lake LifeVantageKeyBank, Ford
San Jose Earthquakes IntermediaClover, Wells Fargo
Seattle Sounders FC ZulilyWaFd Bank
Sporting Kansas City Ivy FundsCompass Minerals
Toronto FC Bank of MontrealGE Appliances, Bank of Montreal, Canadian Tire
Vancouver Whitecaps FC Bell CanadaGE Appliances, Canadian Tire

Coaching changes

Regular season

Format

The 2020 regular season began on February 29, 2020, and was originally scheduled to conclude on October 4, 2020. The league was originally divided into two conferences of 13 teams, with each playing a 34-game schedule with 17 each of home & away matches. Each team will play their intra-conference opponents twice – once home and once away for a total of 24 matches – and one match against 10 of the members of the opposite conference. The 2020 season is the first MLS season in which each team does not play every other team at least once.

Conference standings

Eastern Conference

Western Conference

Overall table

The leading team in this table wins the Supporters' Shield.

Fixtures and results

Attendance

Average home attendances

Team
1Seattle Sounders FC240,12633,080
2Atlanta United FC169,30169,301
3Nashville SC159,06959,069
4Portland Timbers225,51825,218
5Los Angeles FC222,12122,112
6D.C. United217,18316,932
7FC Dallas216,21915,865
8San Jose Earthquakes218,00012,223
9LA Galaxy126,38226,382
10Toronto FC126,17126,171
11Orlando City SC125,52725,527
12122,12022,120
13Houston Dynamo122,03922,039
14Sporting Kansas City121,18821,188
15Montreal Impact121,00621,006
16Real Salt Lake118,09318,093
17Columbus Crew SC117,47317,473
18New York Red Bulls115,70315,703
19New England Revolution115,28915,289
20Colorado Rapids113,06213,062
21Chicago Fire FC000
22FC Cincinnati000
23Inter Miami CF000
24Minnesota United FC000
25New York City FC000
26Philadelphia Union000
Total26637,02069,30113,06224,501

Highest attendances

Regular season
RankHome teamScoreAway teamAttendanceDateWeekStadium
1Atlanta United FC2–1FC Cincinnati69,3012Mercedes-Benz Stadium
2Nashville SC1–2Atlanta United FC59,0691Nissan Stadium
3Seattle Sounders FC2–1Chicago Fire FC40,1261CenturyLink Field
4Seattle Sounders FC1–1Columbus Crew SC33,0801CenturyLink Field
5Los Angeles Galaxy0–1Vancouver Whitecaps FC26,3822Dignity Health Sports Park
6Toronto FC1–0New York City FC26,1712BMO Field
7Orlando City SC0–0Real Salt Lake25,5271Exploria Stadium
8Portland Timbers1–0Nashville SC25,5182Providence Park
9Portland Timbers0–0Minnesota United FC25,2181Providence Park
10Los Angeles FC1–0Inter Miami CF22,1211Banc of California Stadium

Player statistics

Goals

Assists

Shutouts

Hat-tricks

PlayerForAgainstScoreDate
Ayo AkinolaToronto FCMontreal Impact4−3July 16
Diego Rossi4Los Angeles FCLos Angeles Galaxy6−2July 18

4 Scored 4 goals

Awards

Player of the Month

MonthPlayerClubStatsRef
February/March

Player / Team of the Week

Player movement

Collective bargaining agreement

On February 6, 2020, MLS and the MLS Players Association agreed to a new five-year collective bargaining agreement which will last through the 2024 season. The primary issues negotiated were increased player spending, expanded free agency, and more charter travel.
The new collective bargaining agreement will see the league increase player spending to around $11.6 million per club by 2024, with both senior and reserve minimum salaries receiving increases throughout the deal as well as player bonuses for winning games and tournaments. The league will also reduce Targeted Allocation Money by redistributing it into General Allocation Money. In addition, the players will earn a share in any increases in the league's new media deal in 2023.
The Players Association also negotiated a significantly lower threshold for free agency, which was previously set at 28 years of age with eight years of service time in the league. Under the new agreement, the free agency requirement for players is set at 24 years of age, with five years of service time. The number of charter flights allowed for each team was increased from four legs to eight one-way trips in 2020, with future allowances up to 16 one-way trips by 2024. Each MLS team will also be required to charter flights for all MLS Cup Playoffs matches and CONCACAF Champions League matches.
YearSalary budgetStandard minimum salaryReserve minimumDP thresholdGeneral Allocation Money per teamTargeted Allocation Money per teamTotal spending bar per team
2020$4,900,000$81,375$63,547$612,500$1,525,000$2,800,000$9,225,000
2021$5,210,000$85,444$67,360$651,250$1,900,000$2,720,000$9,830,000
2022$5,470,000$89,716$71,401$683,750$2,585,000$2,400,000$10,455,000
2023$5,950,000$104,000$80,622$743,750$2,830,000$2,225,000$11,055,000
2024$6,425,000$109,200$85,502$803,125$3,093,000$2,125,000$11,643,000

SuperDraft

At the MLS SuperDraft in January every year, Major League Soccer teams select players who have graduated from college or otherwise been signed by the league. The first two rounds of the 2020 MLS SuperDraft took place on January 9, 2020, and, unlike previous drafts, was held without a major event ceremony and was instead streamed on Twitter via ESPN. The third and fourth rounds were held via conference call on January 13.
Inter Miami CF and Nashville SC, as expansion clubs, held the first two spots in the SuperDraft. Clemson Tigers forward Robbie Robinson was selected with the first-overall pick by Inter Miami.

Allocation ranking

The allocation ranking is the mechanism used to determine which MLS club has first priority to acquire a player who is in the MLS allocation list. The MLS allocation list contains select U.S. National Team players and players transferred outside of MLS garnering a transfer fee of at least $500,000. The allocations are ranked in reverse order of finish for the 2019 season, taking playoff performance into account.
Once the club uses its allocation ranking to acquire a player, it drops to the bottom of the list. A ranking can be traded provided that part of the compensation received in return is another club's ranking. At all times each club is assigned one ranking. The rankings reset at the end of each MLS season.
Original
ranking
Current
ranking
ClubDate allocation used
Player signedPrevious clubRef
241Los Angeles FC
22Inter Miami CF
33FC Cincinnati
44Vancouver Whitecaps FC
55Orlando City SC
66Sporting Kansas City
77Columbus Crew SC
88Houston Dynamo
99Montreal Impact
1010Chicago Fire FC
1111Colorado Rapids
1212San Jose Earthquakes
1313New England Revolution
1414FC Dallas
1515New York Red Bulls
1616Portland Timbers
1717D.C. United
1818Minnesota United FC
1919LA Galaxy
2020Real Salt Lake
2121Philadelphia Union
2222New York City FC
2323Atlanta United FC
124Nashville SC
2525Toronto FC
2626Seattle Sounders FC

MLS is Back Tournament

To prevent an outbreak of COVID-19 occurring during the season, a bracket tournament, dubbed the "MLS is Back Tournament", was announced on June 10. The tournament is scheduled to take place behind closed doors at the ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex located in the Walt Disney World Resort, in Bay Lake, Florida, with the regular season slated to begin following the tournament. The group stage of the tournament will count towards the regular season. MLS announced on Wednesday its plan to restart the 2020 season with all 26 MLS clubs competing in the MLS is Back Tournament at ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex at Walt Disney World Resort in Florida beginning July 8. The tournament, which will be played without fans in attendance, provides a compelling way for MLS to resume its 25th season. On July 6, 2020, FC Dallas withdrew from the tournament due to ten players and one staff member of the club testing positive for COVID-19, after their opening match was initially postponed. On July 9, 2020, Nashville SC were also withdrawn from the tournament after nine players of the club tested positive for the virus, after their opening match was initially postponed.
Each team will play three group stage matches, and those results will count in the 2020 MLS regular season standings. After 16 consecutive days of group stage matches, the top two teams from each group along with the four best third-place finishers will move on to the knockout stage. The knockout stage will include a Round-of-16, Quarterfinals, Semifinals, and the Championship match will take place on August 11. Matches tied at the end of regulation in the knockout phase will proceed directly to a penalty kick shootout.
The MLS is Back Tournament winner will earn a spot in the 2021 CONCACAF Champions League, regardless of whether it is a U.S. or Canadian club. The winner would replace the berth previously awarded to the MLS regular season points leader in the conference opposite of the 2020 Supporters’ Shield winner.
In addition to matches that count in the regular season standings and the Champions League berth, players will have the opportunity to earn additional bonuses as part of a $1.1 million prize pool.

Groups

Knockout