Now this is a big soccer trifecta: The go-go-go spirit of an entrepreneur could be bringing Major League Soccer and women’s professional soccer as well as a new stadium to the Triangle.

Steve Malik, the founder, seller then re-acquirer of Cary-based Medfusion, is apparently going to announce on Tuesday his next big venture: Taking the Carolina RailHawks franchise, which he owns, to new levels. He also reportedly wants a new soccer stadium.

That’s according to news broken by WRALSportsFan’s Neil Morris (https://twitter.com/ByNeilMorris ).

Is Malik on his way to becoming the Mark Cuban (tech billionaire, owner of NBA Dallas Mavericks) of the Triangle?

Based on advance news he acquired, Morris tweeted out news on Friday that Malik will unveil a new name, a new women’s team, new branding and much more at a press conference on Tuesday. Apparently Malik has been talking about the moves for months.

The RailHawks have been hinting at big news for weeks with tweets themselves about Tuesday’s press conference.

According to Morris, Malik wants to get the RailHawks franchise into the big time as a franchise in Major League Soccer.

He also wants a National Women’s Soccer League team in the Triangle.

Winning — in business, especially — has always been important to Malik who founded Medfusion to capitalize on emerging opportunities in electronic medical records. He sold the company for $91 million to Intuit in 2010 then reacquired it in 2013 when Intuit chose to invest its resources elsewhere. Once he settled down and triggered renewed growth in the company, Malik got that entrepreneur’s itch to do something else.

Next came the RailHawks. The ever-ambitious Malik has made clear from the start when he acquired the RailHawks late last year that he has brought an entrepreneurial spirit to his sports ownership. In other words, he wants to grow it. And fast.

At a conference in May, Malik made clear that soccer in the Triangle has major money-making potential. Yet he also was worried at that time by the fallout from House Bill 2, AKA the “bathroom bill.”

“I see the impact from two sides — the RailHawks and Medfusion,” he said. “There is a stigma that gets attached to us.”‘

His big plans

Despite the stigma, Malik has been a dynamo since becoming the fourth owner of the RailHawks franchise, which plays at WakeMed Stadium in Cary. In fact, before last summer he had never attended a RailHawks game. He told Morris that he had dreamed of someday owning a sports franchise and saw the economic potential for soccer in the Triangle.

“When people used to ask me why I was working so hard,” Malik told Morris, “I’d say, ‘I want to bring a Major League Baseball team to Raleigh.’ My interest in baseball has waned over the years, and I know we’re not going to get an NFL or NBA team. So I think soccer is a natural fit for this area. And I was excited when this opportunity presented itself and started moving on it.”

That entrepreneurial excitement just could bring a major league soccer franchise to the Triangle.