Clubname: | Cleveland SC |
Upright: | 0.65 |
Fullname: | Cleveland Soccer Club |
Founded: | [1] |
American: | true |
Stadium: | Drive Morris Stadium (North Olmsted, Ohio) |
Capacity: | 4,000[2] |
Owner: | Samuel Seibert (Cleveland SC Corp.) |
Mgrtitle: | Head coach |
Manager: | Joe Jovanovski |
League: | National Premier Soccer League |
Season: | 2023 |
Website: | https://www.clevelandsoccerclub.com |
Pattern La1: | _orange_shoulders |
Pattern B1: | _orangecollar |
Pattern Ra1: | _orange_shoulders |
Pattern Sh1: | _whitebottomleft |
Leftarm1: | ffffff |
Body1: | ffffff |
Rightarm1: | ffffff |
Shorts1: | ff4500 |
Socks1: | ff4500 |
Pattern La2: | _orange_shoulders |
Pattern B2: | _orangecollar |
Pattern Ra2: | _orange_shoulders |
Pattern Sh2: | _whitebottomleft |
Leftarm2: | 000 |
Body2: | 000 |
Rightarm2: | 000 |
Shorts2: | ff4500 |
Socks2: | ff4500 |
Current: | 2023 National Premier Soccer League season--> |
Cleveland SC is an American semi-professional soccer club based in the Greater Cleveland, Ohio region. Cleveland competes in the National Premier Soccer League (NPSL) as part of the Midwest Region's Great Lakes Conference. The club was established on February 19, 2018, taking over from the recently defunct AFC Cleveland as the city's representative in the NPSL.
Cleveland SC (CSC) plays home matches at Drive Morris Stadium in North Olmsted, Ohio, but has played at four other stadiums during its existence: Don Shula Stadium, George Finnie Stadium, Lakewood Stadium, and Krenzler Field. Samuel Seibert, a local banker and administrator, founded the club after being approached by a group of former AFC Cleveland players who wanted to see competitive soccer retained in the Cleveland area. Vlad Muresan is the third head coach in club history and has been in charge since April 2022.
Through six seasons, Cleveland SC has won three conference and two region championships, has never missed the NPSL playoffs, and has appeared twice in the U.S. Open Cup. Cleveland has rivalries with fellow Ohioan NPSL clubs Akron City FC and FC Columbus and previously contested the Rust Belt Derby with FC Buffalo and Detroit City FC. Notable players to have appeared for the club include Puerto Rico international Ryan López, as well as Ohio natives Riley Grant and Ben Fitzpatrick, while Louie Rolko served as an assistant coach.
For the previous six seasons, from 2012 to 2017, AFC Cleveland had represented the city of Cleveland in the National Premier Soccer League. That run included an NPSL national championship in 2016, as well as two appearances in the U.S. Open Cup.[3] However, the club was expelled from the NPSL due to "not [being] in good financial standing with the league."[4] That announcement came on December 12, 2017, just months before the new season was set to begin.[5]
The catalysts for founding Cleveland SC were two former AFC Cleveland players, Coletun Long and Chris Cvecko. According to Long, the two "started having a conversation in the car and talked further in a Chipotle parking lot outside the city. We wrote down ideas and called teammates and others previously associated with AFC Cleveland."[6] One of those people contacted was Samuel Seibert, a Northeast Ohio native who had been on the media relations staff for AFC Cleveland. He went on to take the lead on the NPSL expansion process, culminating in an official announcement of Cleveland SC as an NPSL expansion club on February 19, 2018.[7] [8] That announcement came just 90 days before the club was set to play its first regular season match.
Prior to the season beginning, CSC announced that the club would play its inaugural season at Don Shula Stadium, located in University Heights, Ohio on the campus of John Carroll University.[9] In conjunction with local designers, a crest and kits featuring an orange and black color combination were launched in mid-March, less than a month before the club's inaugural match.[10] Ryan Osborne was announced as the club's first head coach and the first two matches in club history took part in April, the inaugural edition of the Cheese Barn Derby against FC Columbus.[6] The first-ever league match in CSC history took place on May 19, 2018, ending in a 2–0 victory over Rochester Lancers courtesy of goals from Declan McGivern and American futsal international Antonio Manfut.[11] After a second-place finish in the Midwest-East, the club qualified for the playoffs and defeated Erie Commodores in the quarterfinals before falling to AFC Ann Arbor in the regional semifinals.[12]
When Cleveland SC was founded, the first part of the club identity to be decided was the colors: orange and black.[3] The color scheme was chosen because of its uniqueness in the NPSL and therefore an ability to visually stand out from the crowd. Orange was chosen to represent the sunsets over Lake Erie that are common in the Cleveland summer. Although the colors are visually similar to the Cleveland Browns of the National Football League, the Cleveland SC colors were not inspired by the Browns identity.[13]
The club crest was designed by Mike Kubinski of Cleveland Clothing Co., a local T-shirt company headquartered in Lakewood, Ohio. The name and founding year of the club, stylized in Roman numerals, feature at the top of the badge. An image of one of the Guardians of Traffic statues comprises the focal point of the badge.[13] The statues are located on the Hope Memorial Bridge in Downtown Cleveland and are also the namesake of the Cleveland Guardians of Major League Baseball, although the baseball team didn't adopt that nickname until 2021. Club owner Samuel Seibert said the reason for the choice was that "one of the coolest things in the city of Cleveland that wasn't getting enough publicity at the time was our transportation bridge", and because the bridge connects the east and west sides of the city.[3]
Cleveland SC's original kits were designed by club creative director Cory Mizer. The orange home shirt featured a depiction of the Cleveland skyline. The black away shirt featured an orange chevron across the chest, with the shape of the chevron inspired by the shape of the Lake Erie shoreline. These kits, manufactured by Admiral Sportswear, were worn for the first two seasons of the club's existence.[13] Ahead of the 2020 season, Cleveland switched manufacturers to UN1TUS, a local company headquartered in Westlake, Ohio. The new orange kit kept the same design, while the away kit was replaced by a white shirt featuring a much larger chevron, although it kept the Art Deco detailing inspired by the pattern on the Guardians statues.[14] After two years, Cleveland SC unveiled new kits ahead of the 2022 season. White was worn at home, with black returning as the away shirt. Both jerseys, paired with orange shorts and socks, featured the statue from the logo in a detail on the right side of the shirt.[15]
Cleveland SC hosted its first round match in the 2023 U.S. Open Cup at Drive Morris Stadium in North Olmsted, Ohio.[16] The stadium, which was built in 2018, has a capacity of 4,000. North Olmsted High School, the primary tenants of the stadium, play football, soccer, and track and field at Drive Morris.[2]
Cleveland SC played its inaugural season at Don Shula Stadium, located in University Heights, Ohio on the campus of John Carroll University.[9] The head coach of the Blue Streaks men's soccer program at the time, Hector Marinaro, helped secure the stadium availability for CSC.[6] On May 19, 2018, in the first competitive game in club history, Cleveland defeated Rochester Lancers by a 2–0 scoreline at Shula.[17] Cleveland finished with four wins, one loss, and one tie at Shula Stadium, while averaging 200 to 300 fans per game.[18]
Due to renovation work at Shula Stadium over the summer of 2019, Cleveland SC moved to Baldwin Wallace University's George Finnie Stadium, located in Berea, Ohio.[19] The debut match at the stadium was on May 5, an international friendly against Mexican side Monarcas Morelia Reserves as part of the Neighbor Nations Showdown.[20] CSC returned to the stadium ahead of the 2021 season and spent two more years in Berea, losing just three total home games across those three seasons.[21] Cleveland SC hosted two NPSL playoff games at the George Finnie in 2021, as well as the club's U.S. Open Cup debut, a first round victory against Chicago FC United in March 2022.[22]
In between stints at the George Finnie, Cleveland SC announced ahead of the 2020 season that they would play home matches at two stadiums that year: Lakewood Stadium, in Lakewood, Ohio, and Krenzler Field, on the campus of Cleveland State University.[23] However, the NPSL season was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and CSC did not play a home game in the two cup competitions they took part in.[24] The club returned to both stadiums during the 2022 season, playing one regular season game in Lakewood and their Midwest Region quarterfinal at Krenzler.[25]
Cleveland SC has hosted friendly matches at two other stadiums. The first match in club history, against FC Columbus in 2018, was played at Highland Stadium in Medina, Ohio, and a game against Ambassadors FC Ohio in 2021 was held at Sparky DiBiasio Stadium in Euclid, Ohio.[26]
scope=col | Stadium | scope=col | Location | scope=col | Capacity | scope=col | Years |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Don Shula Stadium | University Heights, Ohio | 5,416[27] | 2018 | ||||
George Finnie Stadium | Berea, Ohio | 7,800[28] | 2019; 2021–2022 | ||||
Krenzler Field | Cleveland, Ohio | 1,680[29] | 2019 (one game); 2020; 2022 (one game) | ||||
Lakewood Stadium | Lakewood, Ohio | 10,000[30] | 2020; 2022 (one game) | ||||
Drive Morris Stadium | North Olmsted, Ohio | 4,000 | 2023–present |
The organized supporters' group for Cleveland SC is the 6th City Syndicate (6CS).[31] 6CS is an independent group that predates the founding of the club: they previously supported AFC Cleveland before coming along after the creation of Cleveland SC. During matches, 6CS hangs painted banners, sings songs and chants, and lets off smoke after every Cleveland goal.[6] [32]
6CS has declared itself to be "against racism, sexism, homophobia, religious intolerance...bigotry of any kind, violence, and the threat of violence real or perceived."[31] The group has participated in the yearly Prideraiser campaign, raising money for the LGBT Community Center of Greater Cleveland.[33]