Ottawa Fury (women) explained

Clubname:Ottawa Fury Women
Upright:0.8
Fullname:Ottawa Fury Women
Nickname:The Fury
Founded:2000
Dissolved:2014
Stadium:Algonquin College Soccer Complex
Capacity:2,000
Chrtitle:Owner
Chairman:John Pugh
Coach:Dominic Oliveri
League:USL W-League
Season:2014
Position:1st, Central Conference
National Semifinals
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Ottawa Fury Women was a Canadian women's soccer team based in Ottawa, Ontario. Founded in 2000, the team was a member of the United Soccer Leagues USL W-League, the second tier of women's soccer in the United States and Canada. The team competed in the W-League's Central Conference with the rest of the league's Canadian clubs.[1]

The team was part of the Ottawa Fury FC organization, which included the Ottawa Fury FC men's professional team, the Academy and the former semi-professional team Ottawa Fury SC. The women's team was disbanded following the 2014 season.

History

The Ottawa Fury was founded as a women's team in 2000 by Andy Nera, who served as owner and coach, to compete in the USL W-League.[2] The team failed to make the playoffs in each of their first two seasons.

In 2002, the team was purchased by John Pugh.[3] In 2004, the Fury captured their first division title in 2004 (the first of nine consecutive) and their first conference title in 2005. In 2005, the Fury added a men's team, Ottawa Fury SC in the semi-professional Premier Development League.[4]

They advanced to the League Championship final in 2005 and 2006, losing both years to the New Jersey Wildcats and Vancouver Whitecaps, respectively.[5] In 2007, they posted their first undefeated season, with a record of 11 wins and 1 draw.

After clinching their ninth consecutive Central Division title,[6] the Fury women captured the 2012 League title, defeating the Pali Blues in the championship final on penalty kicks, which was hosted in Ottawa.[7] [8]

Following the formation of the professional men's team, Ottawa Fury FC, the women's team adopted the Fury FC branding and logo for the 2014 season. After the 2014 season, in which the team finished the regular season undefeated and coming in third-place in the league championship tournament,[9] [10] the team folded in "a business decision to cease operation", with the organization focusing on it the men's professional team.[11] Despite folding the women's team, the club remained committed to its girls development program through the Elite Girls Academy and other grassroots and community initiatives.[12] The disbanding of the team occurred just days ahead of the 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup official draw in Ottawa.[13] The Fury women had amassed the second-most wins in W-League history.

Head coaches

CoachTenure
Andy Nera2000–2002
Frank Lofranco2003–2007
Craig Smith2008–2010
Dominic Oliveri2011–2014

Year-by-year

YearLeagueRankLeague ChampionshipVoyageurs CupRef
2000USL W-League6–3–53rd, Northern Divisiondid not qualifyNot held[14]
20015–3–65th, Northern Divisiondid not qualify
20025–2–54th, Northern Divisiondid not qualify
200311–1–22nd, Northern DivisionSemi-finals
200413–0–11st, North Central DivisionSemi-FinalsEast Champions
200513–0–11st, Northern DivisionFinalistsEast Champions
200610–1–11st, Northern DivisionFinalists

East Champions


Super Cup runner-up

[15]
200711–1–01st, Northern DivisionQuarter-finalsNot held
200813–0–11st, Northern DivisionQuarter-finals
200911–2–11st, Great Lakes DivisionSemi-finals
20108–3–11st, Great Lakes DivisionQuarter-finals
201112–0–01st, Great Lakes DivisionFinalists
201210–0–21st, Central DivisionChampions
20137–2–32nd, Central ConferenceQuarter-finals
201411–1–01st, Central ConferenceSemi-finals

Awards and honours

Ottawa Fury Women have won the following USL W-League awards:[16]

East titles: 2004, 2005, 2006

Stadium

Notable former players

The following Fury players have played at the senior international level:

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: W-league, Ottawa Fury FC and the Fury Family. Lisa-Marie. Woods. May 28, 2014. Womens Soccer United.
  2. Web site: https://web.archive.org/web/20141109102944if_/https://www.ottawafuryfc.com/page/slug/w-league-history#.VF9CIOj7Q2w. W-League History. November 9, 2014. dead. Ottawa Fury FC.
  3. Web site: USL Announces Addition of Ottawa Fury FC. October 26, 2015. United Soccer League.
  4. Web site: Ottawa Fury fired up for new men's soccer team. Capital Current. April 15, 2005. Jessica. Hellen.
  5. Web site: A recap of past W-League Final Four appearances for Whitecaps FC. Brandon. Timko. July 29, 2011. Vancouver Whitecaps FC.
  6. Web site: Ottawa Fury set their sights on W-League championship. July 26, 2012. Nepean Barrhaven News.
  7. Web site: Fury wins W-League final. Aedan. Helmer. July 29, 2012. Ottawa Sun.
  8. Web site: Ottawa Fury to host 2012 USL W-League championship weekend. February 9, 2012. Ottawa East News.
  9. Web site: Fury women's team shut down. Gord. Holder. Ottawa Citizen. December 2, 2014.
  10. Web site: What the embers of the Fury's glory days show about women's pro sports prospects in Ottawa. April 24, 2021. Brendan. Shykora. Ottawa Sportspages.
  11. Web site: Ottawa Fury FC's USL W-League team folds. Jeff. Kassouf. December 3, 2014. The Equalizer.
  12. Web site: Ottawa Fury women's soccer team shut down in 'business decision'. December 2, 2014. CBC.
  13. Web site: Ottawa Fury FC cuts women's team. December 2, 2014. Dan. Taekema. Capital Current.
  14. Web site: The W-League (USL) (1995-2005). Soccer History USA. Dave. Litterer.
  15. Web site: The W-League (USL) (2006-present). Soccer History USA. Dave. Litterer.
  16. Fury W-League History on Web site: Ottawa FURY Women . 2012-05-06 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110715022341/http://www.ottawafury.com/fw-index . 2011-07-15 .
  17. Canada Soccer,Ottawa to host 2004 W-League Championship, http://www.canadasoccer.com/news/viewArtical.asp?Press_ID=1577&lang=en