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Baltimore Blast


FieldValue
clubnameBaltimore Blast
nicknameBlast
imageBaltimore Blast logo.svg
image_size150
founded(as Baltimore Spirit)
stadiumTU Arena
capacity3,580
season2023–24
pattern_la1_pumafinalg21r
pattern_b1_pumafinalg21r
pattern_ra1_pumafinalg21r
leftarm1ff0000
body1ff0000
rightarm1E11F02
shorts1E11F02
socks1E11F02
pattern_la2_pumafinalg21w
pattern_b2_pumafinalg21w
pattern_ra2_pumafinalg21w
leftarm2FFFFFF
body2ffffff
rightarm2ffffff
shorts2ffffff
socks2FFFFFF
chairmanEdwin F. Hale, Sr.
coachDavid Bascome
leagueMajor Arena Soccer League
position5th, Eastern Division
Playoffs: DNQ
website
Americantrue

Playoffs: DNQ

The Baltimore Blast are an American professional indoor soccer team based in Baltimore, Maryland, that competes in the Major Arena Soccer League (MASL).

Including one championship victory as the original Baltimore Blast, the team has won 10 championships since its founding in 1980. Since the 2017-2018 season, home games have been played at Towson University's TU Arena. The Blast previously played at CFG Bank Arena in downtown Baltimore. Team colors are red and gold. Their current head coach is David Bascome, who took over from Danny Kelly who held the position for 15 years.

History

NPSL, MISL II and MISL III years

The team was founded by North Carolina–based software executive Bill Stealey as the Baltimore Spirit at the end of July 1992 and joined the National Professional Soccer League. The team replaced the earlier Baltimore Blast, who folded along with the original Major Indoor Soccer League. When the team was purchased by Ed Hale, a former owner of the original team, the Spirit were renamed the Blast on July 10, 1998 (Hale had the rights to the Blast name, hence the reason why the team decided to change its name) and joined the new MISL II in 2001. After the MISL II folded in 2008, the team announced it would be joining the new National Indoor Soccer League, which would later acquire the rights to, and became, the third version of the MISL.

Shift to MASL

One day after the 2013–2014 MISL Championship final, USL President Tim Holt announced a number of teams would not be returning to the MISL the following year. The franchise announced on April 2, 2014, that it would not return to the Major Indoor Soccer League (MISL) after its contract with the United Soccer Leagues (USL), owners of the circuit, expired following the 2013–14 season. It was officially announced the Blast would be one of six teams joining the Professional Arena Soccer League (later renamed the Major Arena Soccer League) in the 2014–2015 season.

In their first two seasons as a member of MASL, the Blast would win 33 out of 39 games. They placed first in the Eastern Division in both the 2014-2015 and 2015-2016 seasons, played in the 2015 and 2016 championship series and won the 2016 series over Soles de Sonora two games to none. The Blast repeated as Newman Cup Champions in 2017, again winning the final series over Soles de Sonora two games to one. In 2018, the Blast won their third straight championship, defeating the Monterrey Flash 4-3 in the final.

Attempted launch of the IPL

On February 18, 2016, Blast owner Ed Hale announced his intentions to leave the Major Arena Soccer League and form a new league.

On May 3, 2016, the expansion franchise Florida Tropics SC held a press conference stating they would be joining the IPL. At the press conference, Ed Hale was announced as the chairman of the league, and Sam Fantauzzo, former owner of the Rochester Lancers, was announced as the first commissioner of the league. It was announced that the St. Louis Ambush, Baltimore Blast, and Harrisburg Heat had "resigned" from the MASL.

On August 29, 2016, the Blast, Heat, Ambush re-entered the MASL with the expansion Tropics joining. The move effectively folded the IPL as no teams remained in the league.

After rejoining the MASL, the Blast would go on to win their second Eastern Division championship and MASL championship over Soles de Sonora for the second year in a row.

Move to SECU Arena

The Blast announced in August 2017 that they would move from the Royal Farms Arena to the SECU Arena on the campus of Towson University, beginning in the 2017-2018 MASL season. The move was the first time the Blast franchise played home games in an arena other than the Royal Farms Arena. In June 2021 the Blast announced an affiliation partnership with Baltimore Kings, who will be playing their first arena soccer season in MASL 3 in January 2022. In March 2023, the Blast announced that the Rochester Lancers would be their affiliate in MASL 2

Players

2023–24 roster

Active players

  • As of 2 April 2024

Inactive players

Staff

  • Bermuda David Bascome – Head coach, (2020–present)
  • Brazil Adauto Neto – *Assistant coach *
  • Brazil Sergio Moura – *Assistant coach *

Retired numbers

PlayerNumber
Stan Stamenkovic#10

Hall of Fame

PositionPersonInducted
CoachENG Kenny Cooper2004
FWSFR Yugoslavia Stan Stamenkovic2004
DFSFR Yugoslavia Mike Stankovic2004
DFUSA Bruce Savage2005
N/AUSA Earl Foreman2005
FWUSA Tim Wittman2005
FWUSA Joey Fink2006
FWUSA Dave MacWilliams2006
FWGER Heinz Wirtz2007
FWCAN Domenic Mobilio2008
GKUSA Keith Van Eron2008
FWENG Billy Ronson2009
DFTRI Richard Chinapoo2009
FWCAN Pat Ercoli2010
GKPuerto Rico Cris Vaccaro2010
DFUSA Doug Neely2011
FWUSA Dan Counce2012
DFUSA Rusty Troy2012
FWUSA Tarik Walker2013
MFBrazil Denison Cabral2014
DFUSA Lance Johnson2015
MF/CoachUSA Danny Kelly2017
GKBrazil Sagu2018
DFUSA PJ Wakefield2019
FWUSA Giuliano Celenza2019
MFUSA Lee Tschantret2020
FW/CoachBMU David Bascome2020
TrainerUSA Marty McGinty2020

Notable former players

  • Brazil Denison Cabral
  • USA Jason Dieter
  • CIV Levi Houapeu
  • USA Jason Maricle
  • Scotland Tony McPeak
  • USA Tino Nuñez
  • ENG Onua Obasi
  • USA Rusty Troy
  • USA Barry Stitz
  • USA PJ Wakefield
  • USA Tarik Walker

Year-by-year

YearLeagueGPWLWin%GFGAGF/GGA/GFinishPlayoffsGPWLWin%Avg. attendanceTotal958573385****6,4205,3536.705.609 Championships1076740****
1992–93NPSL II4027133092567.736.401st AmericanQuarterfinal2025,444
1993–94NPSL II4026143222938.057.331st AmericanFirst Round2026,471
1994–95NPSL II4023173173077.937.683rd AmericanFirst Round3125,733
1995–96NPSL II4025153062587.656.452nd AmericanDivision Semifinal6335,037
1996–97NPSL II4020202602586.506.452nd EastConference Semifinal5324,760
1997–98NPSL II4012282503006.257.503rd EastDNQ5,001
1998–99NPSL II4019212712906.787.253rd EastDNQ4,795
1999–2000NPSL II4426183392757.706.251st EastConference Final4225,445
2000–01NPSL II4022183002607.506.503rd AmericanConference Final5325,376
2001–02MISL II4418262652746.026.234th MISLSemifinal1014,998
2002–03MISL II3618181891825.255.063rd EasternChampions5415,559
2003–04MISL II3625112411926.695.331st EasternChampions4406,330
2004–05MISL II3915242052385.266.107th MISLDNQ5,752
2005–06MISL II3017131841686.135.602nd MISLChampions6427,005
2006–07MISL II3015151541505.135.005th MISLDNQ7,449
2007–08MISL II3019111861356.204.503rd MISLChampions5507,230
2008–09NISL18144132667.333.671st NISLChampions1107,534
2009–10MISL III20119105975.254.852nd MISLSemifinal2026,259
2010–11MISL III20155131936.554.651st MISLRunner-up1016,933
2011–12MISL III241861651086.884.501st EasternRunner-up4225,961
2012–13MISL III262151811086.964.151st MISLChampions4405,544
2013–14MISL III20173147467.352.301st MISLRunner-up6336,123
2014–15MASL20182167698.353.451st EasternRunner-up6426,201
2015–16MASL19154129576.793.001st EasternChampions6606,102
2016–17MASL20146113695.653.451st EasternChampions9636,299
2017–18MASL221751431086.504.911st EasternChampions4403,491
2018–19MASL241771441036.004.292nd EasternSemifinal4223,317
2019–20MASL231581751047.614.524th EasternPlay-off cancelled2,641
2021MASLdid not participate
2021–22MASL211291421116.765.292nd EasternQuarterfinal3122,183
2022–23MASL2413111411015.884.212nd EasternRunner-up7432,778*
2023–24MASL2413111401545.836.425th EasternDNQ1,780
2024–25MASL241681671236.965.133rd MASLSemifinal2111,570
*Attendance average excludes one 15 minute mini match played directly after their quarter-final matchup.

Records

Statistics below show the all-time regular-season club leaders and include player statistics from the original Baltimore Blast which competed in the Major Indoor Soccer League (1978–1992). Bold indicates active Blast players.

CategoryRecord holderTotal
GamesUSA Tim Wittman441
GoalsBrazil Denison Cabral445
AssistsYugoslavia Srboljub Stamenković199
Game-winning goalsBrazil Denison Cabral32
BlocksUSA Lance Johnson694
ShutoutsBrazil William Vanzela11
WinsBrazil William Vanzela105

Head coaches

  • ENG Kenny Cooper Sr. (1992–1994)
  • USA Dave MacWilliams (1994–1996)
  • USA Mike Stankovic (1996–1998)
  • USA Kevin Healey (1998–2002)
  • USA Sean Bowers (2002)
  • ENG Bobby McAvan (2002–2003)
  • USA Tim Wittman (2003–2006)
  • USA Danny Kelly (2006–2020)
  • Bermuda David Bascome (2020–present)

Arenas

  • Royal Farms Arena; Baltimore, Maryland (1992–2017) (previously known as Baltimore Civic Center, Baltimore Arena, 1st Mariner Arena)
  • SECU Arena; Towson, Maryland (2017–present)

References

References

  1. (30 August 2017). "Blast find new home at Towson University's SECU Arena".
  2. Wells, Carrie. (November 8, 2014). "'Hale Storm' reveals prominent former banker's CIA ties, two failed marriages". [[Tribune Publishing]].
  3. (28 May 2020). "Blast replace head coach Danny Kelly with assistant David Bascome. Kelly departs after 15 years, six championships".
  4. Ey, Craig S.. (August 11, 1997). "Can soccer succeed in Baltimore?". [[Advance Publications]].
  5. "Sidekicks Opponents: Baltimore Blast (New-MISL)".
  6. "Video: MISL Statement ~ Frequency".
  7. Graham, Glenn. (April 3, 2014). "Seeking to become 'more relevant,' Blast breaks away from MISL". [[The Baltimore Sun]].
  8. Graham, Glenn. (November 7, 2014). "A look at the Blast's new league, the MASL". [[Tribune Publishing]].
  9. "Ed Hale moves Baltimore Blast to Professional Arena Soccer League - Baltimore Business Journal".
  10. Graham, Glenn. (February 18, 2016). "Baltimore Blast owner Ed Hale plans to remove team from MASL, form new league". [[Tribune Publishing]].
  11. "Press Conference | By Florida Tropics SC | Facebook".
  12. (3 May 2016). "Blast owner ed Hale launches Indoor Professional League; eight to 10 teams to start play in November".
  13. "MAJOR ARENA SOCCER LEAGUE EXPANDS TO THE SUNSHINE STATE".
  14. Graham, Glenn. (30 June 2021). "Blast welcome the Baltimore Kings, who will serve as farm team in Major Arena Soccer League's third division".
  15. Lewis, Michael. (March 17, 2023). "THEY'LL BE HAVING A BLAST: Lancers announce affiliation with Baltimore".
  16. "Roster".
  17. "ROSTER".
  18. "Archived copy".
  19. "All-Time Roster".
  20. (28 May 2020). "Baltimore Blast Announces New Coach". The Baltimore Blast.
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