After moving to Minneapolis, Joe Robbie took an interest in
professional football and became a season ticket holder for the
Minnesota Vikings. In March 1965, Robbie met with
American Football League (AFL) Commissioner
Joe Foss in
Washington, D.C.. At the meeting, Foss recommended that Robbie look into
Miami as a potential site for an
expansion franchise. Robbie formed a partnership with comedian
Danny Thomas, a fellow
Lebanese-American, and raised the $7.5 million required to purchase an expansion team. In addition to his work in football, Robbie briefly appeared as himself in the 1977 thriller
Black Sunday, where he was interviewed about security measures for
Super Bowl X (1976), which was held at the
Orange Bowl in Miami. Robbie was also involved in professional
soccer, owning both the
Miami Toros, which rebranded in 1977 as the
Fort Lauderdale Strikers. Both of teams that competed in the
North American Soccer League (NASL). During the early 1980s, the Strikers were temporarily relocated to
Minnesota and played as the
Minnesota Strikers. The
Strikers later returned to
Florida and resumed operations in
Fort Lauderdale, eventually competing in the
American Professional Soccer League (APSL).
Joe Robbie Stadium was one of the first major sports venues in the United States designed with soccer in mind and was also engineered to be easily reconfigured for baseball. Believing in Miami's growth as a major sports market, Robbie predicted the city would eventually secure a
Major League Baseball franchise. His prediction was realized in 1990—just two months after his death—when Miami was awarded the
Florida Marlins (now the
Miami Marlins). ==Honors and awards==