San Diego Sockers (1978–1996) Explained

Clubname:San Diego Sockers
Fullname:San Diego Sockers
Nickname:Sockers
Founded:1978
Stadium:Jack Murphy Stadium (48,460) (1978–84)
San Diego Sports Arena (12,920) (1980–96)
Owntitle:Owner
Owner:defunct
Mgrtitle:Coach
Manager:Ron Newman
League:NASL (1978–84)
MISL/MSL (1982–83, 1984–92)
CISL (1993–96)
Pattern La1:_blueborder
Pattern B1:_collarblue
Pattern Ra1:_blueborder
Leftarm1:ffffff
Body1:ffffff
Rightarm1:ffffff
Shorts1:000099
Socks1:ffcc00
Pattern La2:_goldborder
Pattern B2:_Roma1
Pattern Ra2:_goldborder
Leftarm2:000099
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Socks2:ffcc00
American:yes

The San Diego Sockers were a soccer and indoor soccer team based in San Diego, California. The team played in the indoor and outdoor editions of the North American Soccer League (NASL) until 1984 as well as the original Major Indoor Soccer League and CISL. The franchise folded in 1996 and was the last surviving NASL franchise.

The Sockers are considered the most successful indoor soccer team. They made the playoffs in all but one of their 16 seasons of playing indoors.

History

The team began as the Baltimore Comets in 1974 but moved to San Diego as the San Diego Jaws in 1976. After a one-year stay in Las Vegas as the Las Vegas Quicksilvers, the team returned as the San Diego Sockers in 1978.[1] [2] They were owned by Bob Bell and played their indoor games at the San Diego Sports Arena.[3]

Initially, victories came slowly for the club but mounted quickly and they experienced moderate success over their outdoor history winning several division titles. However, the San Diego Sockers won the North American Soccer League (NASL) Indoor Championships of 1981–82 and 1983–84.Success was far from over for the San Diego Sockers. When the NASL folded, the San Diego Sockers moved to the Major Indoor Soccer League and won eight championships: 1983, 1985, 1986, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, and 1992. The Sockers carried their success from one league to the next. They switched to the Continental Indoor Soccer League for three more years from 1993 to 1995. However, after several ownership changes, Sockers folded after the 1996 season.

There have been two subsequent revivals of the Sockers. The first was a franchise in the WISL that later joined the second MISL before folding in 2004. A second started play in the PASL-PRO in 2009.

Leagues

Owners

Head coaches

Year-by-year

Outdoor

YearReg. SeasonPlayoffsNotesAttendance
19742nd East, 10–8–2Lost Quarterfinaloperated as the Baltimore Comets4,139
19755th East, 9–13Opted out of playoffs2,641
19765th South, 9–15Opted out of playoffsoperated as the San Diego Jaws6,152
19775th South. 11–15Opted out of playoffsoperated as the Las Vegas Quicksilvers7,079
19781st American Conference West, 18–12Lost Conference Semifinalfirst season as the San Diego Sockers5,146
19792nd American Conference West, 15–15Lost Conference Final11,271
19803rd American Conference West, 16–16Lost Conference Final12,753
19811st West, 21–11Lost Conference Final14,802
19822nd West, 19–13Lost League Semifinal8,532
19834th West, 11–19Opted out of playoffs4,685
19841st West, 14–10Lost Semifinallast outdoor season5,702

Indoor

YearLeagueReg. SeasonPlayoffsAttendance
1976NASL3rd West Regional, 0–2Opted out of playoffs6,055
1980–81NASL4th South, 6–12Opted out of playoffs4,912
1981–82NASL1st West, 10–8Won Championship7,047
1982–83MISL1st West, 32–16Won Championship8,081
1983–84NASL1st NASL, 21–11Won Championship11,415
1984–85MISL1st West, 37–11Won Championship9,595
1985–86MISL1st West, 36–12Won Championship9,581
1986–87MISL3rd West, 27–25Lost Semifinal9,748
1987–88MISL1st West, 42–14Won Championship8,996
1988–89MISL2nd MISL, 27–21Won Championship8,383
1989–90MISL2nd West, 25–27Won Championship8,131
1990–91MSL1st West, 34–18Won Championship7,231
1991–92MSL1st MSL, 26–14Won Championship9,348
1993CISL2nd CISL, 20–8Runners-up5,583
1994CISL2nd West, 18–10Lost Quarterfinal5,032
1995CISL3rd South, 17–11Lost Quarterfinal5,366
1996CISL1st West, 17–11Lost Semifinal4,830

Honors

Championships (10)

Regular Season/ Division Titles (12)

Conference Titles

NASL Coach of the Year

NASL North American Player of the Year

NASL All Stars

NASL indoor MVP

NASL indoor Scoring Champion

NASL indoor Goalkeeper of the Year

NASL indoor Championship Finals MVP

NASL indoor All Stars

Hall of Fame members

MISL MVP

MISL Championship MVP

MISL Scoring Champion

MISL Pass Master (Assists leader)

MISL Defender of the Year

MISL Goalkeeper of the Year

MISL Coach of the Year

MISL Rookie of the Year

MISL First Team All Star

CISL Goalkeeper of the Year

CISL Rookie of the Year

CISL First Team All Star

Sources

Notes and References

  1. News: Jo-Ryan . Salazar . . The San Diego Sockers: A Legacy Renewed . July 26, 2010 . March 24, 2014.
  2. News: Phillip . Brents . . Chula Vista, California . Time to re-connect between Sockers, old and new . December 29, 2010 . March 24, 2014.
  3. News: John . Maffei . . MLIM Holdings . Sports site No. 3: San Diego Sports Arena . July 6, 2013 . July 8, 2013.
  4. Web site: The Calgary Herald - Google News Archive Search.
  5. Web site: Lakeland Ledger - Google News Archive Search.
  6. Web site: Archived copy . home.att.net . January 12, 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080501104955/http://home.att.net/~nasl/nasl.htm . May 1, 2008 . dead.
  7. News: Henderson. Jim . For Keith Bailey, The Long Wait Is Finally Over. April 21, 1981. The Tampa Tribune. 5-C. January 6, 2021.
  8. https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=fYBXAAAAIBAJ&sjid=tjsNAAAAIBAJ&pg=6819,8303699&dq=rowdies+indoor+all+star&hl=en
  9. Web site: Record-Journal - Google News Archive Search.
  10. News: NASL all-stars. April 10, 1984. Chicago Tribune. 4; sec 4. January 12, 2017.
  11. Web site: Hall of Famers . January 11, 2014 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20131023060803/http://www.indoorsoccerhall.com/hall-of-fame-classes . October 23, 2013 .
  12. Web site: Home - Indoor Soccer Hall of Fame.
  13. Web site: Hall of Famers . September 1, 2020. indoorsoccerhall.com . January 10, 2021.