Orlando Dreamers Have Realistic Dream Of An MLB Expansion Franchise

Major League Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred has been saying for more than a year that he would like to add two expansion franchises by the end of the decade or the early 2030s.

Orlando is already positioning itself to land one of those teams. An ownership group called the Orlando Dreamers, fronted by Hall of Fame shortstop Barry Larkin, plans to bid for a franchise and already has funding in place and the land to build a stadium in the city.

Larkin grew up in Cincinnati and played his entire 19-year career with the hometown Reds from 1988-2004. However, Larkin has been an Orlando resident for nearly 30 years and thinks it is the perfect spot for an MLB team.

“I love the city of Orlando,” Larkin said. “I raised my children in Orlando. Love the city, very similar to Cincinnati, very similar to the Midwest kind of town, very unique in the fact that Orlando, being so south, is very much like the Midwest, and I believe there are a lot of baseball fans here who would support a team.”

MLB has never really worked in Florida, as the Miami Marlins and Tampa Bay Rays are perennially near the bottom of the league in attendance. However, Larkin believes Orlando is different from the coastal franchises because it is located in the middle of the state, in one of the most popular tourist destinations in the world.

“An average of 80 million people visit Orlando annually, and most of them are families,” Larkin said. “There are parallels between family and baseball. Baseball is a very family-oriented game. Then you take into account the population in the Orlando area, and it’s easy to see baseball working here.”

Larkin believed Orlando has more to offer than just people visiting Disney World and Universal Studios.

Orlando is the largest media market in the United States without an MLB team. Orlando ranks 15th in market size and has passed Miami, Denver, and Minneapolis-St. Paul – all cities with major-league teams – in the last three years, and is expected to move past Detroit next year

A big plus for Orlando is that it already has a stadium plan with over $1 billion in financial commitments. Larkin says construction could begin on the stadium as soon as the day after the city is awarded a franchise.

The domed stadium would seat 45,000 while sitting in the middle of Orlando’s tourist corridor on land owned by Orange County, and will be within walking distance of the city’s convention center. Other potential expansion cities have indicated they will build ballparks with a capacity of around 35,000.

The Dreamers also plan to generate revenue by holding spring training in the Orlando metropolitan area.

Another potential selling point for the Orlando Dreamers is that they claim their potential team will generate more than $100 million in additional local revenue annually. Orlando will be the only location that can guarantee to current MLB owners that it will not be a net recipient from the local revenue sharing pool.”

There are a lot of things working in Orlando’s favor, but Larkin believes that having a stadium plan tops the list.

“There won’t be any red tape or any waiting around for 10 years to get a stadium built,” Larkin said. “We’re ready to go. All we need is a team.”

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/johnperrotto/2025/11/30/orlando-dreamers-have-realistic-dream-of-an-mlb-expansion-franchise/