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Montreal Manic

Montreal Manic

FieldValue
clubnameMontreal Manic / Manic de Montréal
imageMontrealManic81.png
nicknameThe Manic / Le Manic
founded1981
dissolved1983
stadiumOlympic Stadium
Montreal Forum (indoor)
capacity66,308
ownerMolson Brewery
fullnameMontreal Manic / Manic de Montréal
chairmanRoger Samson
mgrtitleCoach
managerEddie Firmani
Andy Lynch
leagueNorth American Soccer League
pattern_la1_monman81h
pattern_b1_monman81h
pattern_ra1_monman81h
pattern_so1_monman81h
shorts12A3E7B
pattern_la2_monman81a
pattern_b2_monman81a
pattern_ra2_monman81a
pattern_so2_monman81a
shorts2FFFFFF

Montreal Forum (indoor) Andy Lynch

The Montreal Manic or the Manic de Montréal were a professional soccer team based in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, that played in the North American Soccer League.

History

Manic_de_Montréal_1981-1983_(4957536060)
Vintage Montreal Manic pennant.

"Le Manic" as they were called by the locals, were Montreal's first professional soccer team since the NASL's Montreal Olympique folded in 1973. The team was named after a river in northeast Quebec, the Manicouagan, the site of a massive hydroelectric project.

The Montreal Manic competed from 1981 to 1983, with their home field being the Montreal Olympic Stadium. Previous to Montreal, the team played as the Philadelphia Fury from 1978 through 1980 and ten Fury players as well as manager Eddie Firmani moved to Montreal for 1981.

After defeating the Los Angeles Aztecs in the first round of the 1981 NASL playoffs, the Manic faced the Chicago Sting. An Olympic Stadium crowd of 58,542 (the largest-ever to see an NASL playoff game outside the Cosmos' Giants Stadium) saw the Manic defeat the Sting in the opening match before the series shifted to Chicago where the Manic lost twice and were eliminated. In 1982 the Manic performed better in the regular season than in 1981, but lost in the first round of the playoffs to the Fort Lauderdale Strikers and Firmani was fired.

In 1983 the interest in the team and the average attendance fell sharply. The Manic's opening home match in 1983 versus the Tampa Bay Rowdies was witnessed by just 6,460 fans. However, in their final season, the Manic produced one of the great shocks in NASL history by eliminating the New York Cosmos in the quarterfinals of the 1983 playoffs, winning the first match away 4–2 and winning the second match at home in a shootout. The Manic then lost to the Tulsa Roughnecks in the next round.

In the 1983 season, the Manic hosted Nottingham Forest (a 4–3 extra time loss) and FC Nantes (a 2–1 shootout victory for Montreal) at the Olympic Stadium.{{cite news|url=https://www.nasljerseys.com/Friendlies/Teams/Manic%20Friendlies.htm| title= Montreal Manic Friendlies| access-date=27 November 2018| publisher=www.nasljerseys.com/}}

In his book, Soccer in a Football World, North American soccer historian Dave Wangerin partially attributes the downfall of the Manic organization to the Molson ownership's declaration to attempt to build a Team Canada roster for the 1984 season. The new direction of the team meant many of the team's players who originated from foreign countries would be let go, to emphasize an all Canadian roster instead. Given that Canada had a relatively poor track record at producing world class soccer talent, Montreal fans were likely put off by the prospect that the quality of the team's play would instantly diminish for the 1984 season.{{cite news|url=http://archives.radio-canada.ca/sports/soccer/clips/12317/|title= Le Manic, c'est fini|date=8 February 1983|access-date=16 February 2012| publisher=radio-canada.ca/}} More importantly, the team was allegedly in financial trouble despite the fact that the Manic had some of the highest attendances in the NASL. Reports indicated that during the first two seasons, the Manic lacked profitability as they had lost $7 million. Manic president Roger Samson blamed the losses on bad stadium deals, high rents, having the concession profits going directly to the Montreal Expos, a lack of a television deal, and that an average attendance of over 20,000 was insufficient to keep the franchise solvent.

Year-by-year

YearLeagueWLPtsReg. seasonPlayoffsAvg Attend
1981NASL15171412nd, Eastern DivisionWon 1st round (Los Angeles)
Lost quarterfinal (Chicago)23,704
1981–82NASL Indoor991st, American Conference, East DivisionLost 1st round (Tampa Bay)
1982NASL19131592nd, Eastern DivisionLost 1st round (Ft. Lauderdale)21,348
1983NASL Indoor Grand Prix53531st, Grand Prix preliminariesRunners-up (Tampa Bay)6,972
1983NASL12181244th, Eastern DivisionWon 1st round (New York)
Lost semi-final (Tulsa)9,910

Honours

NASL championships

  • none

NASL Indoor championships

  • 1983 (runner-up)

Division titles

  • 1981–82 Eastern Division, Atlantic Conference (indoor)

Indoor Leading Goal Scorer

  • 1983 Dale Mitchell 12 goals

Indoor Leading Goalkeeper

  • 1983 Mehdi Cerbah (GAA: 4.36, GA: 24)

Indoor Tournament Defensive MVP

  • 1983 Mehdi Cerbah

All-Star first team selections

  • 1981 Gordon Hill

All-Star second team selections

  • 1983 Frantz Mathieu

Indoor All-Stars

  • 1981–82 Gordon Hill (Atlantic Conference)

Canadian Soccer Hall of Fame

  • 2001 Gerry Gray
  • 2002 Dale Mitchell
  • 2008 John McGrane
  • 2014 Carmine Marcantonio

U.S. Soccer Hall of Fame

  • 2003 Alan Willey
  • 2007 Bobby Smith

Indoor Soccer Hall of Fame

  • 2012 Victor Nogueira
  • 2013 Brian Quinn
  • 2014 Dale Mitchell

Notable players

  • Iran Mostafa Ebadi (1981–1983)
  • Canada Nick Albanis (1981)
  • Algeria Mehdi Cerbah (1983)
  • Canada Chris Chueden (1981–1982)
  • ENG Elvis Comrie (1982–1983)
  • France Michel Corre (1981)
  • Canada Brian Decaire (1982–1983)
  • Italy Mimmo Dell'Armi (1982)
  • Canada Pasquale Di Blasio (1983)
  • Canada Charlie Falzon (1981–1982)
  • USA Pat Fidelia (1981)
  • USA Ed Gettemeier (1983)
  • Canada Gerry Gray (1983)
  • SCO Mike Hewitt (1983)
  • ENG Gordon Hill (1981–1982)
  • Canada Greg Ion (1983)
  • Canada Greg Kern (1981–1982)
  • USA Hayden Knight (1981–1982)
  • France Jean-François Larios (1983)
  • Canada Netherlands Dwight Lodeweges (1983)
  • Scotland Andy Lynch (1981–1982)
  • Canada Carmine Marcantonio (1981–1983)
  • HAI Frantz Mathieu (1983)
  • Canada John McGrane (1981–1983)
  • Canada Dale Mitchell (1983)
  • USA Victor Nogueira (1982)
  • Ireland Fran O'Brien (1981–1982)
  • South Africa Andrew Parkinson (1981–1982)
  • Northern Ireland Brian Quinn (1982–83)
  • USA Bob Rigby (1981–1982)
  • USA Bobby Smith (1981)
  • Yugoslavia Damir Šutevski (1981–1982)
  • England Tony Towers (1981–1983)
  • Nigeria Thompson Usiyan (1981–1982)
  • Canada John Van Oostveen (1981–1983)
  • Netherlands Robert Vosmaer (1981–1982)
  • Yugoslavia Dragan Vujović (1982–1983)
  • ENG Alan Willey (1981–83)

Head coaches

  • South Africa Italy Eddie Firmani 1981–1982
  • RomaniaCanada Pierre Mindru interim (1982)
  • Scotland Andy Lynch (1983)

References

References

  1. Gammon, Clive [https://www.si.com/vault/1981/06/15/825720/manic-but-not-depressive-in-a-down-year-for-the-nasl-things-are-looking-up-in-expansion-city-montreal "Manic but not depressive"], "Sports Illustrated", 15 June 1981. Retrieved on 28 November 2018.
  2. (16 February 2012). "Le Manic se range derrière l'Impact". rds.ca/.
  3. "1983 Rowdies vs. Manic Game Report". mytampabayrowdies.blogspot.com.
  4. Wangerin, Dave. (2008), Soccer in a Football world: The Story of America's Forgotten Game, [[Temple University Press]]. ({{ISBN. 1592138853)
  5. (14 October 2015). "Manic Depression". ussoccerplayers.com.
  6. "The Evening Independent - Google News Archive Search".
  7. "Archived copy".
  8. (February 2022)
  9. "Soccer Hall of Fame & Museum".
  10. "US Soccer Hall of Fame Membership".
  11. "Hall of Fame Classes".
  12. "Home - Indoor Soccer Hall of Fame".
  13. "NASL All-time Player Register".
  14. (10 September 1982). "Transactions; BASEBALL ATLANTA (NL) - Acquired Carlos Rios, shortstop, from Pittsburgh and as- signed him to Richmond of the Interna- tional League. DENVER (AA) - the American As- sociation team announced that it is not renewing its working agreement with the Texas Rangers. MONTREAL (NL) - Purchased Dave Tomlin, reliever, from Indianapolis of the American Association. PORTLAND (PCL) - Announced the end of four years of affiliation with the Pittsburgh Pirates A". The New York Times.
  15. "Thursday's Sports Transactions".
  16. [http://collections.banq.qc.ca:8008/lapresse/src/cahiers/1983/02/17/04/82812_1983021704.pdf Cahiers] banq.qc.ca {{dead link. (July 2023)
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