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Vancouver Royals

Defunct Canadian soccer club


Summary

Defunct Canadian soccer club

FieldValue
clubnameVancouver Royal Canadians
imageVancouver Royals.png
image_size150px
fullnameVancouver Royal Canadians
nicknameRoyals
founded
dissolved
stadiumEmpire Stadium
capacity32,729
owntitleOwners
ownerBrig. General E.G. Eakins,
George Fleharty
leagueNorth American Soccer League
season1968
positionWest Division: 4th
Playoffs: Did not qualify
pattern_la1pattern_b1=_redwhiteverticalpattern_ra1=pattern_so1=pattern_sh1=_adidasonwhite2011leftarm1=ffffffbody1=ffffffrightarm1=ffffffshorts1=ff0000socks1=ffffff
pattern_la2pattern_b2=_whitestripeonrightpattern_ra2=pattern_so2=pattern_sh2=_adidaswhite2011leftarm2=ff0000body2=ff0000rightarm2=ff0000shorts2=ff0000socks2=ff0000

George Fleharty Playoffs: Did not qualify

The Vancouver Royals were a Canadian professional soccer team based in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Founded in 1967 as the Vancouver Royal Canadians, they were a charter member of the United Soccer Association (USA), and when the USA and rival National Professional Soccer League (NPSL) merged in 1968 to form the North American Soccer League (NASL), the team, rebranded as the Royals, moved to the new league. The Royals played its home matches at the Empire Stadium. The team folded at the conclusion of the 1968 NASL season.

History

In 1966 several groups of entrepreneurs were exploring the idea of forming a professional soccer league in United States. One of these groups, United Soccer Association (USA) led by Jack Kent Cooke, selected 12 cities for team locations with Vancouver franchise purchased by Brigadier General E.G. Eakins. The USA originally planned to start play in the spring of 1968; however the rival National Professional Soccer League, which secured a TV contract from CBS, announced it was ready to launch in 1967. Not wanting to let the rival league gain an advantage, the USA decided to launch early. Not having secured any player contracts, the league imported teams from Europe, Brazil, and Uruguay to represent the franchise cities. English team Sunderland A.F.C. was brought in to play as the Royal Canadians.

The Royals opened the 1967 season away against the San Francisco Golden Gate Gales with a 6–1 loss on May 28, but won their home opener against the Dallas Tornado 4–1 on June 7. The Royals finished the season in fifth place with a record of 3 wins, 5 ties and 4 losses while drawing an average home league attendance of 7,019.

Following the 1967 season, the USA merged with the National Professional Soccer League to form the North American Soccer League. As part of the new league's efforts to consolidate teams and cities, the owner of the San Francisco Golden Gate Gales franchise, George Fleharty, yielded the San Francisco Bay Area to the NPSL Oakland Clippers and bought a controlling interest in the Vancouver Royal Canadians, renaming the team Vancouver Royals. Bobby Robson was originally reported to have been named manager of the new merged team which was to include players both the Royals and Gales organizations had signed between the end of the 1967 season and merger. However, Ferenc Puskás who had been hired to manage the San Francisco franchise was later named by the owner as head coach. Robson, who took over as coach of Fulham F.C. in January 1968, later sued the team for breach of contract.

The Royals finished the 1968 NASL season in last place in the Pacific Division with 12 wins 5 ties and 15 losses. The team averaged a home attendance of 6,197. The Royals were one of 12 teams that folded between the 1968 and 1969 NASL seasons.

Coaches

  • SCO Ian McColl (1967)
  • Hungary Spain Ferenc Puskás, Head Coach (1967)- Bob Lenarduzzi witnessed Puskas coaching Royals in '67 not '68.
  • Hungary Joe Csabai, Assistant Coach (1968)

Year-by-year

League
seasonTeam
seasonRegular seasonPositionPlayoffsDomestic CupTop ScorerLeaguePWLDGFGAPtsDiv.OverallPlayerGoals
19671967USA123542028115th9thout of playoffsSCO George Herd3
19681968NASL321215551601364th13thout of playoffsLUX Henry Klein20

Note: Only regular season goals counted

Notes

References

References

  1. Seese, D.J.. (2015). "The Rebirth of Professional Soccer in America: The Strange Days of the United Soccer Association". Rowman & Littlefield.
  2. Hannigan, Dave. (May 31, 2017). "Summer of soccer: when Shamrock Rovers conquered America". The Irish Times.
  3. Jukich, roy. (June 2, 1967). "Soccer Boss Knows Feeling". The Sun.
  4. "North American Soccer League 1967".
  5. "North American Soccer League".
  6. (January 5, 1968). "Pro League To Operate 2 Divisions". [[The Vancouver Sun]].
  7. (January 22, 1968). "CSFA approves transfer move". The Leader-Post.
  8. Jukich, Roy. (January 3, 1968). "Robson Wins Coaching Duel". The Sun.
  9. Jukich, Roy. (January 24, 1968). "Royals Soccer Boss Awaits Robson Deal". The Sun.
  10. (May 30, 1968). "Royals Face Suit By Robson". The Sun.
  11. (October 11, 1968). "Royals Operation Folds". The Phoenix.
  12. East Side Story, Marino, Rick 2023,
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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