Tampa Bay Rowdies Explained

Clubname:Tampa Bay Rowdies
Fullname:Tampa Bay Rowdies
Nickname:Rowdies
Stadium:Al Lang Stadium
St. Petersburg, Florida
Capacity:7,500
Chrtitle:Owners
Chairman:Tampa Bay Rays
(Stuart Sternberg)
Mgrtitle:Head coach
Manager:Robbie Neilson
League:USL Championship
Season:2023
Position:2nd, Eastern Conference
Playoffs: Conference Quarterfinals
Website:https://www.rowdiessoccer.com/
American:true
Current:2023 Tampa Bay Rowdies season
Pattern B1:_vneckyellow
Pattern La1:_yellowhoops
Pattern Ra1:_yellowhoops
Pattern Sh1:_tampa22h
Pattern So1:_tampa15h
Leftarm1:008000
Body1:008000
Rightarm1:008000
Shorts1:008000
Socks1:008000
Pattern La2:_pumaglory22fl
Pattern B2:_pumaglory22fl
Pattern Ra2:_pumaglory22fl
Leftarm2:DDFF00
Body2:DDFF00
Rightarm2:DDFF00
Shorts2:DDFF00
Socks2:DDFF00
Pattern La3:_pumacup23w
Pattern B3:_pumacup23w
Pattern Ra3:_pumacup23w

The Tampa Bay Rowdies are an American professional soccer team based in St. Petersburg, Florida. The club was founded in 2008 and first took the pitch in 2010. Since 2017, the Rowdies have been members of the USL Championship in the second tier of the American soccer pyramid. They formerly played in USSF Division 2 (in 2010) and the North American Soccer League (NASL) (from 2011 to 2016), which were also second-tier leagues. The Rowdies play their home games at Al Lang Stadium on St. Petersburg's downtown waterfront.

The current club is a phoenix club of the original Tampa Bay Rowdies, who were active from 1975 until 1993, most notably in the original North American Soccer League. It shares its name, logo, and some of its club culture with the original club. The owners of the current club announced their intention to use the old Rowdies' trademarks at its introductory press conference in 2008. However, licensing issues forced the club to use the name FC Tampa Bay until December 2011, when it gained full rights to the Rowdies name and other intellectual property.[1] The current Rowdies have always used the same green and yellow color scheme and "hoops" as the original team, even when they could not yet use the Rowdies name.[2]

The Rowdies captured the NASL championship in Soccer Bowl 2012, and their team shield includes two stars: one for their 2012 win and one for the 1975 Soccer Bowl championship won by the original Rowdies. The club has had a long-standing rivalry with the Fort Lauderdale Strikers, with whom they have contested the Florida Derby since the original Rowdies and Strikers first met in 1977. The Rowdies were also named co-league champions in 2020 after winning the USL Regular Season title and Eastern Conference Championship, but the title game was canceled due to COVID-19. They were Eastern Conference Champions again in 2021, but lost in the title game.

In October 2018, the Tampa Bay Rays, the area's Major League Baseball franchise, announced plans to purchase the Rowdies and assume control of Al Lang Stadium.[3]

Background

See main article: Tampa Bay Rowdies (1975–1993). The original Tampa Bay Rowdies were an expansion franchise in the original North American Soccer League and played for 10 seasons in Tampa Stadium starting in 1975. NASL indoor competitions saw the Rowdies claim three titles during the 1976, 1979–1980, and 1983 seasons. The Rowdies played until the NASL folded in 1984, after which the team played in the AISA, ASL and the APSL before folding in 1993. Between the years of the former and current Rowdies franchises, the Tampa Bay Mutiny played in the Major League Soccer during 1996 through 2001, leaving less than ten years between professional soccer teams in Tampa Bay since the former Rowdies' first season in 1975 and FC Tampa Bay's first season in 2010. While the Mutiny have no connection to either Rowdies franchise, the team often paid tribute to the former Rowdies by wearing jerseys of their colors, and even wearing the logo of both the Tampa Bay Mutiny and Rowdies on the same shirt.

Club history

On June 18, 2008, local businessmen David Laxer, Andrew Nestor and Hinds Howard announced plans to start a new soccer club which would revive the Rowdies name as FC Tampa Bay Rowdies and start play in 2010 as an expansion team in the USL First Division, the second tier of the American Soccer Pyramid.[4] However, in November 2009 FC Tampa Bay announced their intent to instead become the co-founders of a new North American Soccer League, which would begin play in 2010.[5] These plans were subsequently superseded by the USSF Division 2 deal, which created a compromise one-season only league comprising teams from both the USL and the new NASL. In December 2013, local businessmen Bill Edwards bought a controlling interest in the club.[6] In October 2018, the Tampa Bay Rays baseball club announced their purchase the Rowdies for an undisclosed amount, pending St. Petersburg City Council approval. Once the sale was finalized, Rays presidents Matthew Silverman and Brian Auld became vice chairmen of the soccer club.[7] [8]

Name changes

In January 2010, the club became known as "FC Tampa Bay" due to a legal dispute with sports apparel company Classic Ink over the merchandising rights to the Tampa Bay Rowdies name and related trademarks.[9] The name was still used informally by the club until October 2010, when the team announced that it would not use the "Rowdies" nickname at all until the ongoing rights issue was resolved.[10] [11]

On December 15, 2011, after two seasons of play, the club announced that it had finally reached a licensing agreement to use the "Rowdies" name and classic logos, allowing it to change its name back to "Tampa Bay Rowdies" before the 2012 season.[1] [2]

2010 season

See main article: 2010 FC Tampa Bay season. The team played its first official game on April 16, 2010, a 1–0 victory over Crystal Palace Baltimore. The first goal in franchise history was scored by striker Aaron King. The first home game was held at George M. Steinbrenner Field in Tampa on May 8, 2010, and ended in a 2–2 draw with Austin Aztex FC. The club started their inaugural season with a 5–1–3 record, but then won only 2 of its last 21 games and failed to make the playoffs with a final record of 7–12–11, leading to dismissal of manager Paul Dalglish.[12] They did, however, capture the 2010 Ponce De Leon Cup.

2011 season

See main article: 2011 FC Tampa Bay season. For the 2011 season, FC Tampa Bay transitioned to the new North American Soccer League, a second division league, and also changed their home pitch, as they moved across Tampa Bay to Al Lang Stadium in St. Petersburg. Former original Rowdie Ricky Hill was named the club's manager in January 2011.

After winning only 2 of their first 10 matches, the club rebounded to finish third in the league table and qualified for the NASL playoffs. A highlight was a 1–0 mid-season friendly win over the Bolton Wanderers of the English Premier League at Al Lang Stadium.

2012 season

See main article: 2012 Tampa Bay Rowdies season. The 2012 season marked the return of the Rowdies name, as the club was finally able to secure full rights to use the moniker. It was also the most successful season in modern Rowdies history, as the club finished second in the league table and became NASL champions with a victory in Soccer Bowl 2012.

Tampa Bay amassed 45 points in 28 matches during the regular season under returning manager Ricky Hill, tallying 12 wins, nine draws. and seven losses. The Rowdies earned a bye to the semifinals of the 2012 NASL Playoffs, where they beat the Carolina RailHawks by a 5–4 aggregate in the two-leg series. In the championship round against Minnesota Stars FC, the Rowdies fell behind 0–2 after the first leg but were able to tie the aggregate with a 3–1 win in the second leg back at Al Lang Stadium. Extra time ended scoreless, so the match was decided with a penalty shoot-out, which Tampa Bay won 3–2 to secure the league championship.[13] Hill was named the NASL Coach of the Year.

2013 season

See main article: 2013 Tampa Bay Rowdies season. The defending champions got off to a slow start in two pre-league tournaments, as they went winless in their first six contests against MLS and USL Pro clubs. The Rowdies improved enough in league play to finish 4th in the NASL spring table with a record of 5 wins, 3 draws, and 4 losses. The highlight of the early season was a run to the 4th round of the 2013 Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup, which included a 1–0 win over Seattle Sounders FC of MLS.

The Rowdies went 5–4–4 during the fall portion of the schedule, good for 3rd place. The club earned 38 points over the entire campaign, second most in the league. However, because of the NASL's new split-season format, the Rowdies did not qualify for the playoffs.[14] Midfielder / striker Georgi Hristov led the team with 15 goals in all competitions and was named the NASL's Golden Ball Award winner (MVP).

2014 season

See main article: 2014 Tampa Bay Rowdies season. The Rowdies struggled in 2014, coming in 7th place in the NASL's spring season and 8th in the fall while allowing the most goals (50) in the league overall. The club rose to 3rd in the table midway through the fall campaign but tailed off, going winless over their last 10 matches. Manager Ricky Hill was dismissed after the season.

2015 season

See main article: 2015 Tampa Bay Rowdies season. The Tampa Bay Rowdies' new manager for 2015 was Thomas Rongen, who had coached the MLS's Tampa Bay Mutiny in 1996. The team also brought in another familiar face when Farrukh Quraishi, who had been a player and a youth development director for the original Rowdies, was named general manager.

In March 2015, the Rowdies traveled to Portugal to play several preseason friendlies against clubs in the Portuguese second and third division. It was the first time that the current club had undertaken an international tour.[15]

The Rowdies lost only one match during the NASL spring season, good for second place in the table. After starting the fall season 2–1–6, however, club owner Bill Edwards dismissed both Rongen and Quraishi.[16] Assistant Stuart Campbell was promoted to manager and led the team to a 3–4–4 record. The Rowdies finished the fall season in 8th out of 11 teams in the league table and missed the playoffs.

2016 season

See main article: 2016 Tampa Bay Rowdies season.

For the second consecutive year, the Rowdies visited Europe during the preseason, traveling to England in March to play several friendlies. The Rowdies held their own against three lower division sides, going 1–2–0 in official matches. The results of the 2016 NASL season were not as good. The club went 4–4–2 in the NASL spring season, good for 5th out of eleven teams in the league table. However, results slipped in the fall portion of the schedule, and the Rowdies finished the season 9–11–12, missing the playoffs for the fourth consecutive year.[17] A few days before their final game of the season, the franchise announced they would be leaving the NASL to compete in the United Soccer League beginning with the 2017 season.[18]

2017 season

See main article: 2017 Tampa Bay Rowdies season.

Having made the jump to the USL, the Rowdies served notice that they were not to be taken lightly. During the regular season they lost only once at home, and en route to finishing in third position on the USL's Eastern Conference table, lost only two of their final 15 matches. They posted a record of 14–11–7 with 53 points to propel them into the playoffs. In the USL Cup playoffs, they lost in extra time at home in the conference semifinals. It was only their second home-loss of the season.

2018 season

See main article: 2018 Tampa Bay Rowdies season.

After a strong start the team lost three straight without scoring a goal. This prompted the firing of head coach Stuart Campbell on May 17, with defender Neill Collins retiring to accept the coaching vacancy the following day.[19] On July 4 Georgi Hristov scored his 58th career goal for the Rowdies, to pass Derek Smethurst and become the Rowdies’ all-time top scorer.[20] The team finished the season in 12th position on the Eastern Conference table.

2019 season

See main article: 2019 Tampa Bay Rowdies season.

An extremely strong start saw the club go unbeaten in their first 13 matches and losing only once in their first 20. The final third of the season wasn't as successful, as the team lost half of their last 14 games, including 2 crucial losses to expansion sides in October that saw the club finish 5th in the Eastern Conference. Their return to the postseason was short-lived, as they lost 2–1 on the road in Louisville in the first round of the 2019 USL Championship Playoffs. Elsewhere, the club advanced to the third round of the 2019 U.S. Open Cup, defeating The Villages SC before falling to OKC Energy FC. The club also entered into a partnership with Norwich City FC[21] that saw defender Caleb Richards arrive on a season-long loan. Richards made 34 appearances, playing all but two minutes of the regular season, and scoring one goal.

2020 season

See main article: 2020 Tampa Bay Rowdies season.

2021 season

See main article: 2021 Tampa Bay Rowdies season.

2022 season

See main article: 2022 Tampa Bay Rowdies season.

2023 season

See main article: 2023 Tampa Bay Rowdies season.

Club venues

Al Lang Stadium

The Rowdies' home pitch since 2011 has been Al Lang Stadium, a 7,500 seat former baseball stadium located on the downtown waterfront of St. Petersburg, Florida. When the club first moved to the venue, the pitch ran from the third base grandstand to right field wall, and the seating arrangement utilized the baseball grandstand along with temporary bleachers along one sideline. The arrangement has been tweaked every season since to provide a more traditional soccer experience for the fans.

The facility underwent a significant renovation in 2015 that reconfigured the pitch to run from the grandstand on one end to the left field wall on the other. A portion of the old right field wall was removed, and larger semi-permanent bleachers were installed along the south sideline, adding many more seats closer to the action and making Al Lang Stadium more soccer-friendly.

Stadium management

Although the Rowdies have been the only regular tenant of Al Lang Stadium since 2011, it was still used for exhibition and amateur baseball events during the spring and summer, necessitating the regular restoration and removal of the pitcher's mound and clay infield and causing much wear and tear to the turf.[22] [23]

After becoming majority owner of the club in 2013, St. Petersburg businessman Bill Edwards expressed displeasure with the condition of the playing field and the aging facilities at Al Lang Stadium.[22] Months of rebuffed complaints about poor turf, leaky pipes, broken seats, and other issues[24] culminated in a July 2014 lawsuit filed by the Rowdies against the St. Petersburg Baseball Commission claiming that the commission was not properly maintaining the "dilapidated" facility.[25] The dispute was resolved in October 2014 when Edwards and the city of St. Petersburg brokered a deal that gave Edwards' Big 3 Entertainment company sole management control of Al Lang Stadium. As part of the arrangement, the facility would no longer be used for spring baseball, and Edwards agreed to complete $1.5 million in renovations as he sought to make Al Lang more soccer friendly.[26]

Former stadiums

When the club was founded in 2008, its owners announced plans to build a 5000-seat soccer-specific stadium in northwest Tampa along the Veterans Expressway. These plans were shelved in early 2009 when residents living near the chosen site voiced concerns to the Hillsborough County Commission about potential noise and parking issues.[27]

After exploring other possible stadium sites around the Tampa Bay area, FC Tampa Bay decided to play its 2010 inaugural season at George M. Steinbrenner Field, an 11,000-seat baseball stadium near West Tampa. The club shared the facility with the Tampa Yankees, the Class A-Advanced affiliate of the New York Yankees,[28] which presented some difficulties. Scheduling home games was a challenge because the club's seasons overlapped for most of the summer. The pitcher's mound and the infield dirt could not be removed, forcing the soccer field to be set across the outfield from the right field foul line to left centerfield. This created a pitch much smaller than most professional soccer fields, and a large portion of the playing surface of one attacking third was clay.[29] And because of the difficulty of running on wet clay and potential damage to soggy turf, the Rowdies were not allowed to take the field when the ground was wet, which is often the case during Tampa's summer rainy season.[30]

Because of all these problems, the soccer club relocated to Al Lang Field for their second campaign.

Future plans

In 2013, the city of St. Petersburg began the process of creating a master plan for the waterfront area that includes Al Lang Stadium. Some of the proposals suggest replacing the entire stadium and surrounding parking areas with a soccer park complex centered by a new soccer-specific stadium.[31] Former club owner, Bill Edwards, had stated that "in a perfect world", Al Lang Stadium would be replaced by an 18,000-seat soccer-specific stadium, enabling the Rowdies to become a Major League Soccer club.[32]

Club culture

Badge

When the club first took the pitch in 2010, the badge was a green and yellow striped shield bearing the club name (FC Tampa Bay) and topped with a star representing the original Rowdies' victory in Soccer Bowl 1975. The badge was changed before the 2012 season to the original "Rowdies" text logo, and a second star was added after the club won Soccer Bowl 2012.[33]

In 2021, the club introduced an alternate crest, which still contained the text logo and stars, but with the addition of a figure styled after Ralph Rowdie, the mascot of the original club. It also had the numbers "75" and "10" to represent the founding year of the original club in 1975 and the current club in 2010.[34]

Supporters

Ralph's Mob is an independent supporter group for the Rowdies named after "Ralph Rowdie", a fictional mustached footballer featured in the logo of the original Tampa Bay Rowdies.[35] [36] The group is known for wearing green and gold striped scarves, socks, and face paint, and for loudly cheering on their team while teasing opponents, much like the "Fannies" of the original Rowdies.[37] [38] [39] Ralph's Mob has a designated seating area at home matches. Many members also travel to away games, particularly when the Rowdies play at in-state rival Fort Lauderdale.[40] [41] A second group, the Skyway Casuals, is composed of supporters from the area south of the Skyway Bridge, mainly Bradenton and Sarasota.[42]

Rivalries

See main article: Fort Lauderdale – Tampa Bay soccer rivalry. The Rowdies' traditional rivalry has been with the Fort Lauderdale Strikers. The rivalry began in 1977 between the original Tampa Bay Rowdies and the original Fort Lauderdale Strikers of the old NASL when the term Florida Derby was first used.[43] It came back into use again in the late 1990s, when both cities had MLS franchises (the Tampa Bay Mutiny & Miami Fusion).[44] Finally in 2010, after a nine-year absence Florida Derby re-entered the lexicon of American soccer, as the modern squads began facing one another.[45] The rivalry currently sits in limbo, after Rowdies' owner, Bill Edwards won a 2017 summary judgement in a lawsuit against the Strikers. Edwards now controls the copyrights, trademarks and any rights to the use of the name "Fort Lauderdale Strikers" or any variation thereof.[46] [47] [48]

Coastal Cup

The Coastal Cup (est. 2010) originally was contested between the Rowdies and Strikers, but with Jacksonville Armada FC's entry into the league in 2015 and Miami FC in 2016, the competition had grown to become quadrilateral.[49] [50]

Rowdies 2

In December 2015 the Rowdies announced that they would begin fielding a developmental team in the National Premier Soccer League for the 2016 season and that the club would be called Rowdies 2.[51] The original Tampa Bay Rowdies had fielded a similarly named reserve/developmental squad from 1982 to 1983, but used Roman numerals to dub them Rowdies II.[52] [53] [54] Rowdies 2 competed in the Sunshine Conference of the South Region of NPSL, finishing in fourth place with a record of four wins, four losses, and two draws. The team disbanded in 2016.

Rowdies U23

See main article: Tampa Bay Rowdies U-23. In February 2017, The Rowdies announced that they would field a team in the USL's Premier Development League, with Rowdies U23 set to join the league this for 2017 PDL season.[55] Rowdies U23 will compete in the Southeast Division of the Southern Conference of PDL. The team went 3–8–3 in conference play and finished sixth out of nine teams. The team did not return for the 2018 season.

On January 15, 2020, USL League Two (formerly the PDL) announced that the Rowdies would be launching the U23 for the 2020 USL League Two season.[56] The team will play in the Southeast Division once again, play its games as Al Lang Stadium, and will be coached by former Rowdies player Andres Arango.

YearLeagueRegular seasonPlayoffsU.S. Open Cup
2017PDL6th, Southeast Divisiondid not qualifyIneligible
2018No team fielded
2019
2020USL2TBD, Southeast DivisionTBDIneligible

Tampa Bay United

In 2017, they formed a partnership with youth club Tampa Bay United to serve as their youth affiliate.[57] In 2021, TBU replaced the Rowdies U23 in USL League Two.[58]

Players and staff

Technical staff

Medical staff

Front office

Head coaches

Head CoachYears
  • Matches
  • Win-Draw-Loss
2009–2010 30 7–11–12
2010 2 1–0–1
2011–2014 120 45–35–40
2014–2015 19 7–5–7
2015–2018 92 33–27–32
2018–2023 176 97-34-45
2023 5 0-2-3
202315 9-1-5
2024–present
  1. 0
0-0-0

Retired numbers*

See main article: List of retired numbers in association football.

No.PlayerPositionNationTenure
6 1975–1984
12 1978–1982, 1984, 1991–1993
*Steve Wegerle's No. 7 jersey was retired by the original Tampa Bay Rowdies in 1989. As of yet the current club does not acknowledge this honor.[60]

Team captains

PlayerSeasonsref
2010 [61]
2011–2014 [62]
2015 [63]
2016 [64]
2017–2018 [65]
2019–2022 [66]
2023–present [67]

Record

See main article: List of Tampa Bay Rowdies seasons. This is a partial list of the last five seasons completed by the Rowdies. For the full season-by-season history, see List of Tampa Bay Rowdies seasons.

SeasonLeaguePositionPlayoffsUSOCContinentalAverage attendanceTop goalscorer(s)
DivLeaguePldWLDGFGAGDPtsPPGConf.OverallNameGoals
20192USLC34 16 8 10 61 33 +28 581.715th7thR1R3DNQ5,497 Sebastián Guenzatti19
2020USLC16 10 3 3 25 11 +14 332.064th7thbgcolor=silver FNHN/A Sebastián Guenzatti10
2021USLC32 23 7 2 55 23 +32 712.22bgcolor=gold1stbgcolor=gold1stbgcolor=silver FNH0 Sebastián Guenzattistyle=background:#FAECC8;" 21
2022USLC34 20 7 7 73 33 +40 671.973rd4thSFR35,148 Leo Fernandes19
2023USLC34 19 9 6 60 39 +21 631.852nd3rdR1R35,984 Cal Jennings19
1. Avg. attendance include statistics from league matches only.
2. Top goalscorer(s) includes all goals scored in league play, playoffs, U.S. Open Cup, and other competitive matches.

Notable friendlies

Honors

League Championship
  • Winners: 2012
  • Runners-up: 2021
  • Finalists: 2020
    Fair Play Award
  • Winners: 2011, 2012, 2014
    USL Season Champion
  • 2021
    USL Division Champion
  • 2020, 2021
    USL Conference Champion
  • 2020, 2021
    Ponce De Leon Cup
  • Winners: 2010, 2012
    Coastal Cup
  • Winners: 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2016, 2020, 2021

    Individual achievements

    Golden Ball Award (MVP)
  • 2013: Georgi Hristov
    Golden Glove Award
  • 2021: Evan Louro[68]
    Coach of the Year
  • 2012: Ricky Hill
  • 2021: Neill Collins[69]
    Goalkeeper of the Year
  • 2021: Evan Louro[70]
    Defender of the Year
  • 2020: Forrest Lasso[71]
  • 2021: Forrest Lasso[72]
    NASL Best XI
  • 2011: Pascal Millien, Mike Ambersley
  • 2012: Jeff Attinella, Takuya Yamada, Luke Mulholland
  • 2013: Luke Mulholland, Georgi Hristov
  • 2016: Joe Cole
    USL Championship MVP
  • 2022: Leo Fernandes[73]
    USL All-League
  • 2017: (1st team) Marcel Schäfer 2019: (2nd team) Papé Diakité, Sebastián Guenzatti
  • 2020: (1st team) Forrest Lasso
  • 2021: (1st team) Evan Louro, Forrest Lasso, Sebastián Guenzatti[74]
  • 2021: (2nd team) Aarón Guillén[74]
  • 2022: (1st team) Leo Fernandes, Aarón Guillén[75]
  • 2023: (1st team) Cal Jennings, Charlie Dennis[76]

    See also

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. Web site: "Tampa Bay's pro soccer team reclaims Rowdies name" – St. Pete Times, Dec. 15, 2011 . Tampa Bay Times . December 15, 2011 . September 13, 2012 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120325060128/http://www.tampabay.com/sports/soccer/tampa-bays-pro-soccer-team-reclaims-the-rowdies-name/1206403 . March 25, 2012 .
    2. Web site: The Rowdies Return . https://web.archive.org/web/20120109144846/http://www.rowdiessoccer.com/index.php?id=31&newsid=1609 . dead . January 9, 2012 . Rowdiessoccer.com . September 13, 2012 .
    3. News: Page . Rodney . Tampa Bay Rays to purchase Rowdies soccer club . October 1, 2018 . Tampa Bay Times . October 1, 2018.
    4. News: Tampa Bay Rowdies to get new life in USL. Encina. Eduardo A.. June 19, 2008. St. Petersburg Times. June 20, 2008. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20080628190409/http://www.tampabay.com/sports/soccer/article633711.ece. June 28, 2008.
    5. Web site: USL outcasts set to launch new league in 2010 . Soccerbyives.net . November 10, 2009 . September 13, 2012.
    6. News: Cashill. Margaret. Bill Edwards buys controlling interest in Tampa Bay Rowdies. October 19, 2015. Tampa Bay Business Journal. December 12, 2013.
    7. Web site: The Rays are buying the Rowdies. What does it mean for Tampa Bay?. October 1, 2018. Tampa Bay Times. March 24, 2019.
    8. Web site: Rays purchase USL's Tampa Bay Rowdies. October 2, 2018. ESPN. March 24, 2019.
    9. Web site: Quarstad . Brian . Tampa Bay Rowdies Change Name to FC Tampa Bay | IMSoccer News . January 29, 2010 . Insidemnsoccer.com . September 13, 2012.
    10. Web site: Tampa Bay's soccer team no longer going by "Rowdies" – St. Petersburg Times . Tampa Bay Times . September 13, 2012 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20121013101815/http://www.tampabay.com/sports/soccer/tampa-bays-soccer-team-no-longer-going-by-rowdies/1128129 . October 13, 2012 .
    11. Web site: Jarrett Guthrie . FC Tampa Bay to be included in NASL's Division II . .tbo.com . November 23, 2010 . January 15, 2013 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110127132326/http://www2.tbo.com/content/2010/nov/23/230006/PSPNEWSO6-fc-tampa-bay-to-be-included-in-nasls-div/ . January 27, 2011 .
    12. Web site: Rowdies close with 6–3 win . https://archive.today/20130203111234/http://www2.tbo.com/content/2010/oct/01/012204/rowdies-close-with-6-3-win/sports/ . dead . February 3, 2013 . .tbo.com . October 1, 2010 . January 15, 2013 .
    13. Web site: NASL. Tampa Bay Wins NASL Championship Series After Penalty Shootout – Rowdies Lift Soccer Bowl Trophy in Dramatic Fashion. North American Soccer League.
    14. Web site: NASL standings . NASL . November 3, 2013.
    15. Web site: Tampa Bay Rowdies Head to Portugal for Preseason Tour. thebradentontimes.com. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20150402173828/http://www.thebradentontimes.com/news/2015/02/23/sports/tampa_bay_rowdies_head_to_portugal_for_preseason_tour/. April 2, 2015.
    16. Web site: Longtime Rowdies, a self-made owner and bruised feelings . The Tampa Bay Times . May 17, 2016 . May 24, 2016 . Fennelly, Martin.
    17. News: Rowdies End Season With Loss . Tampa Bay Times . October 30, 2016 . October 31, 2016.
    18. News: USL Expands with Additions of Tampa Bay Rowdies, Ottawa Fury FC. United Soccer League (USL). October 25, 2016. October 25, 2016.
    19. News: Kennedy. Will. Rowdies transition defender Neill Collins to head coach. May 18, 2018. Tampa Bay Times. May 18, 2018.
    20. Web site: Hristov Writes More Rowdies History in 3–1 Win Over Toronto. July 5, 2018. March 24, 2019.
    21. Web site: Rowdies And Norwich City FC Launch Historic Partnership. rowdiessoccer.com.
    22. Web site: Edwards to city: Fix Al Lang field or the Rowdies may have to move. Tampa Bay Times.
    23. Web site: FC Tampa Bay to call Al Lang home for two seasons – St. Petersburg Times . Tampa Bay Times . January 19, 2011 . September 13, 2012 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20121016203835/http://www.tampabay.com/sports/soccer/fc-tampa-bay-to-call-al-lang-home-for-two-seasons/1146358 . October 16, 2012 .
    24. Web site: Tampa Bay Rowdies fans complain about Al Lang Stadium. Tampa Bay Times. March 1, 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20160304112713/http://tbtpics.tampabay.com/news/business/tampa-bay-rowdies-fans-complain-about-al-lang-stadium/2174889. March 4, 2016. dead.
    25. Web site: Bill Edwards sues baseball commission over Al Lang Stadium. Tampa Bay Times.
    26. Web site: St. Petersburg City Council gives developer Bill Edwards control of Al Lang Stadium. Tampa Bay Times.
    27. News: Rowdies withdrawal request to build soccer stadium . Tampa Bay Times . January 13, 2009 . October 26, 2013 . Danielson, Richard . https://web.archive.org/web/20131030053703/http://www.tampabay.com/news/localgovernment/rowdies-withdraw-request-to-build-soccer-stadium/967183 . October 30, 2013 . dead . mdy-all .
    28. Web site: Tampa Bay Rowdies will play at New York Yankees' Steinbrenner Field – St. Petersburg Times . Tampa Bay Times . January 27, 2010 . September 13, 2012 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110606160805/http://www.tampabay.com/sports/soccer/article1068589.ece . June 6, 2011 .
    29. http://fctampabay.com.ismmedia.com/ISM3/std-content/repos/Top/News/steinbrenner.jpg{{dead link|date=April 2016}}
    30. Web site: FC Tampa Bay considers playing soccer at St. Petersburg's Al Lang Field – St. Petersburg Times . Tampa Bay Times . January 7, 2011 . September 13, 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121016203848/http://www.tampabay.com/sports/soccer/fc-tampa-bay-considers-playing-soccer-at-st-petersburgs-al-lang-field/1143884 . October 16, 2012 . dead .
    31. News: Woodrow Cox. John. St. Petersburg creates master plan for downtown waterfront. September 2, 2013. Tampa Bay Times.
    32. News: Rowdies getting closer to stadium goal in St. Pete . Tampa Tribune / tbo.com . June 9, 2014 . June 20, 2014 . O'Donnell, Christopher . March 7, 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160307222730/http://www.tbo.com/sports/rowdies/rowdies-getting-closer-to-stadium-goal-20140609/ . dead .
    33. Web site: Rowdies unveil new logo – Tampa Bay Business Journal . The Business Journals . December 28, 2012 . January 15, 2013.
    34. Web site: Cook. Glenn. USL's Tampa Bay Rowdies Unveil New Crest, Kits. February 1, 2022. SportsLogos.Net News. April 24, 2021 .
    35. Web site: Martin Fennelly . A match for a new Rowdies generation . .tbo.com . May 9, 2010 . September 13, 2012.
    36. Web site: Tampa Bay Rowdies fans still rabid after all these years – St. Petersburg Times . Tampa Bay Times . September 13, 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121014154918/http://www.tampabay.com/features/humaninterest/article1100029.ece . October 14, 2012 . dead .
    37. Web site: When it comes to the Rowdies, you'd be surprised at what you missed – St. Petersburg Times . Tampa Bay Times . September 13, 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121014155035/http://www.tampabay.com/news/humaninterest/when-it-comes-to-the-rowdies-youd-be-surprised-at-what-you-missed/1126883 . October 14, 2012 . dead .
    38. Web site: OOPS! SORRY, SOMETHING WENT WRONG | NASL. https://web.archive.org/web/20110206172033/http://www.nasl.com/article/ralph-s-mob-linking-to-the-rowdies-legacy. dead. February 6, 2011. nasl.com.
    39. Web site: "Rowdies fans are loyal all the way" – The Lakeland Ledger, June 29, 1979 . June 29, 1979 . September 13, 2012.
    40. Web site: Jeff Rusnak . Miami FC vs. Tampa Bay Rowdies – Sun Sentinel . Sun-Sentinel . April 30, 2010 . September 13, 2012.
    41. Web site: Tampa Bay Rowdies have high expectations as first season opens – St. Petersburg Times . Tampa Bay Times . September 13, 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121014154912/http://www.tampabay.com/sports/soccer/tampa-bay-rowdies-have-high-expectations-as-first-season-opens/1087798 . October 14, 2012 . dead .
    42. Web site: Rowdies' atmosphere of cheers, chants amps up sense of community. July 9, 2020. Tampa Bay Times. en.
    43. Web site: St. Petersburg Times – Google News Archive Search. November 24, 2014.
    44. Web site: Fusion Eager To Face Rivals From Tampa – Sun Sentinel . Sun-Sentinel . May 18, 2001 . June 20, 2014.
    45. Web site: Diaz . Armando . Florida Derby . Insidemnsoccer.com . August 27, 2011 . January 21, 2012.
    46. Web site: Nutting . Jake . Foreclosed Strikers Set for Public Auction. empireofsoccer.com. June 16, 2017. June 21, 2017.
    47. Web site: Krishnaiyer . Kartik . FORT LAUDERDALE STRIKERS BEGIN NEW CHAPTER WITH BILL EDWARDS ACQUISITION. thefloridasqueeze.com. June 20, 2017. June 21, 2017.
    48. Web site: The Strikers name/remaining assets just sold to the plaintiff, i.e. Bill Edwards, for $5,100.. reddit.com. June 20, 2017. June 21, 2017.
    49. Web site: Rowdies NASL: NASL Releases 2015 Fall Season Schedule. rowdiessoccer.com. March 1, 2015. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20150205033446/http://www.rowdiessoccer.com/news/detail/uuid/qutwuhnlt7hf1itr4kpr7spdf/nasl-releases-2015-fall-season-schedule#.VMKMJoWAeto. February 5, 2015.
    50. Web site: MIAMI FC BECOMES 12TH NASL CLUB. NASL.com. May 20, 2015. May 20, 2015.
    51. Web site: Tampa Bay Rowdies. April 26, 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160430200624/http://www.rowdiessoccer.com/news/2015/12/23/tampa-bay-rowdies-2-joins-the-national-premier-soccer-league. April 30, 2016. dead.
    52. Web site: Lakeland Ledger – Google News Archive Search. April 26, 2016.
    53. Web site: St. Petersburg Times – Google News Archive Search. April 26, 2016.
    54. Web site: The Evening Independent – Google News Archive Search. April 26, 2016.
    55. Web site: Rowdies U23 to compete in USL'S Premier Development League. February 15, 2017.
    56. Web site: Staff . USLLeagueTwo com . Tampa Bay Rowdies Add U23 Team in USL League Two . USL League Two . January 16, 2020 . January 15, 2020.
    57. Web site: Tampa Bay Rowdies Announce Youth Development Affiliation with Tampa Bay United. March 20, 2017. Tampa Bay Rowdies.
    58. Web site: Tampa Bay United to Join USL League Two for 2021 Season. April 8, 2021. USL League Two.
    59. Web site: Front Office. rowdiessoccer.com. March 24, 2019.
    60. News: Great playmaker bows out tonight. Landman. Brian. July 22, 1989. St. Petersburg Times. 4T. January 20, 2018.
    61. Web site: Murray. Nicholas J.E.. Preseason Soccer. Tampa Tribune. April 10, 2010. 2C. April 7, 2018.
    62. Web site: Manganello. Mike J.E.. Effort there but result isn't. Tampa Tribune. April 18, 2011. 9C. April 7, 2018.
    63. Web site: Camunas. Mike . Roster filled with new faces. Tampa Tribune. April 4, 2015. 6C. April 7, 2018.
    64. Web site: Sharp. Darek J.E.. Spring sprint starts season again. Tampa Bay Times. April 2, 2016. 1C. April 7, 2018.
    65. Web site: Sharp. Darek J.E.. Rowdies blast Toronto to move to 2–0. Tampa Bay Times. April 2, 2017. 2C. April 7, 2018.
    66. Web site: Guenzatti Fires Rowdies to Opening Day Win Over Memphis. Tampa Bay Rowdies. April 9, 2019. March 17, 2019.
    67. Web site: Tampa Bay Rowdies captain celebrates centennial milestone. fox13news.com. April 12, 2023. June 23, 2023.
    68. Web site: Colorado Springs' Hadji Barry Awarded 2021 USL Championship Golden Boot . USL Championship . USLChampionship.com . November 1, 2021. November 1, 2021.
    69. Web site: Tampa Bay's Neill Collins Voted Championship's Coach of the Year . USL Championship . USLChampionship.com . November 27, 2021. November 27, 2021.
    70. Web site: Tampa Bay's Evan Louro Named Championship's Goalkeeper of the Year . USL Championship . USLChampionship.com . November 26, 2021. November 26, 2021.
    71. Web site: Tampa Bay's Forrest Lasso Named Championship's Defender of the Year . USLChampionship.com Staff . November 4, 2020. November 4, 2020.
    72. Web site: Tampa Bay's Forrest Lasso Voted Championship's Defender of the Year . USL Championship . USLChampionship.com . November 26, 2021. November 26, 2021.
    73. Web site: Tampa Bay's Leo Fernandes Voted 2022 USL Championship Most Valuable Player . USL Championship . USLChampionship.com . November 10, 2022. November 10, 2022.
    74. Web site: USL Championship Announces 2021 All-League Teams. USL League One. USLChampionship.com . November 23, 2021. November 23, 2021.
    75. Web site: USL Championship Announces 2022 All-League Teams. USL Championship. USLChampionship.com . November 1, 2022. November 1, 2022.
    76. Web site: USL Championship Announces 2023 All-League Teams. USL Championship. USLChampionship.com . November 7, 2023. June 20, 2024.