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Toronto City

Defunct soccer club in Canada


Summary

Defunct soccer club in Canada

FieldValue
clubnameToronto City
image[[File:Toronto_soccer_logo.gif150px]]
fullnameToronto City Soccer Club
founded1961
dissolved1967
stadiumVarsity Stadium
owntitleOwners
ownerLarry Myslivec, Ed Fitken
and Steve Stavro

and Steve Stavro Toronto City was a Canadian soccer team based in Toronto, Ontario. Between 1961 and 1967, teams using this name competed in both the Eastern Canada Professional Soccer League and the United Soccer Association.

History

ECPSL

In 1961, along with industrialist Larry Myslivec and journalist Ed Fitken, Steve Stavro, a Macedonian Canadian businessman who would go on to own Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment, formed the Toronto City Soccer Club which played in the newly created Eastern Canada Professional Soccer League. During its inaugural season the team featured several prominent soccer players including Northern Ireland international Danny Blanchflower, England internationals Stanley Matthews and Johnny Haynes and Scottish internationals Jackie Mudie and Tommy Younger, notable as the last time the England, Scotland and Northern Ireland captains played on the same side. Younger also coached the team. City won the league in 1964, and in November of that year they offered the role of "manager-coach" to Stan Cullis. In January 1966 Stavro fell out with the league administrators and withdrew the team from the league.

United States

In 1966 Stavro helped form the United Soccer Association and entered a team called Toronto City in the new league. The USA originally intended to launch its league in the spring of 1968. However a rival league, the National Professional Soccer League, announced it was ready to launch in 1967. Not wanting to lose ground to its rival, the USA decided to fast track its launch. Without any players of its own, it opted to import whole teams from Europe and South America. It was intended that these teams would represent the franchises during the inaugural season, giving them time to build their own squads for the following season. Toronto City was subsequently represented by Hibernian of the Scottish Football League.

Together with Cleveland Stokers, Detroit Cougars, New York Skyliners, Boston Rovers and Washington Whips, City competed in the Eastern Division. These teams were actually Stoke City, Glentoran, C.A. Cerro, Shamrock Rovers and Aberdeen respectively. City eventually finished third, behind the Stokers and the Whips. In December 1967 the US and the NPSL merged to form the North American Soccer League. As a result of this merger some of the USA franchises, including Toronto City folded. This was partly to avoid cities having more than one club in the new NASL, and City lost out to its NPSL rival Toronto Falcons. Stavro sold his team back to the league for $160,000.

Season-by-season record

Note: MP = Matches played, W = Wins, D = Draws, L = Losses, Pts = Points

Toronto City FC in the Eastern Canada Professional Soccer League.

  • In 1967, Hibernian SC played as Toronto City SC in the United Soccer Association (4W-3D-3L in 12 matches).

Head coaches

  • Scotland Tommy Younger
  • ENG Malcolm Allison
  • Scotland Bob Shankly (1967)

References

References

  1. "Mr Cullis's Offer". The Herald.
  2. Hardie, David. (24 July 2009). "When the Hibees became Toronto". [[Edinburgh Evening News]].
  3. Waring, Ed. (1967-12-08). "Pro soccer merger hinges on unified Toronto team". [[The Globe and Mail]].
  4. Waring, Ed. (1967-12-13). "Falcons' boss insists he has sole ownership of merged franchise". [[The Globe and Mail]].
  5. (1967-12-14). "20 cities picked for soccer loop". [[New York Times]].
  6. Waring, Ed. (1968-03-29). "Legal action could boot soccer Falcons from Toronto". [[The Globe and Mail]].
  7. "Hibees And Hippies: From Leith To San Francisco – The Soccer Observer".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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