Chivas USA could be headed for a minimum two-year hiatus from Major League Soccer, ESPN is reporting.

According to ESPN's sources, the franchise will suspend operations at the end of the 2014 campaign and not play for at least two seasons until new ownership has time to build a new stadium for the embattled team and rebrand the franchise with a new name.

The report also states that the league has agreed to sell the team to an investment group for $100 million and that the two-year break is a condition of the sale.

Chivas USA has been under league control since they were purchased by the MLS in February.

The report includes a statement from MLS commissioner Don Garber where he says that the league expects to complete a sale for Chivas by the end of the season, but the final decision on if the franchise will operate for the 2015 season has not yet been finalized.

Chivas USA joined MLS in 2004 under the ownership of Club Deportivo Guadalajara's Jorge Vergara.  

They are currently last in the MLS' Western Conference with 24 points from 30 games.