Soccer Bowl Series '84 Explained

Soccer Bowl '84
Other Titles:Soccer Bowl Series '84
Event:Soccer Bowl
Team1:Chicago Sting
Team1score:2
Team2:Toronto Blizzard
Team2score:0
Details:(on best-of-three series)
Firstleg:Game 1
Team1score1:2
Team2score1:1
Stadium1:Comiskey Park
City1:Chicago, Illinois
Man Of The Match1a:Manuel Rojas
Referee1:David Socha (United States)
Attendance1:8,352
Team1score2:3
Team2score2:2
Secondleg:Game 2
Stadium2:Varsity Stadium
City2:Toronto, Ontario
Man Of The Match2a:Pato Margetic
Referee2:Bill Maxwell (United States)
Attendance2:16,842
Previous:1983

Soccer Bowl Series '84, also known as Soccer Bowl '84, was the championship series of the 1984 NASL season, and the last championship of the original NASL. In a departure from previous years, it was a best-of-three series between the Chicago Sting and the Toronto Blizzard as opposed to a single-game championship. The first game of the series was held on Monday, October 1 at Comiskey Park, in Chicago, Illinois; the Sting won it, 2–1. The second game was played at Varsity Stadium, in Toronto, Ontario on October 3. Chicago won again, this time by a score of 3–2, to sweep the series and claim its second North American championship.[1] [2]

Background

Chicago Sting

The Chicago Sting finished the regular season with a 13–11 record, while the Blizzard went 14–10. However, due to the NASL's point system, the Sting were crowned the Eastern Division champions, and also won the league's regular season title with 120 points. This ensured that they would retain home field advantage throughout the playoffs. Since all series were best-of-three ties, that meant a Game 3 if necessary, would be in Chicago. The Sting defeated the Vancouver Whitecaps in their semi-finals series, two games to one.

Toronto Blizzard

The Toronto Blizzard qualified for the playoffs as runners-up in the Eastern Division and faced the San Diego Sockers in the other semi-final series. The Blizzard earned a return trip to the finals with a two–game sweep of the Western Division champion Sockers. Games 1 and 3 of the Soccer Bowl Series were scheduled to be played at Comiskey Park, while game 2 was set for Toronto's Varsity Stadium.

Sportsvision televised the series in the Chicago area; this coverage was simulcast on the then-new TSN (which had started up a month earlier) cable channel in Canada.

Series summary

Notes

Match details

Game 1

GK 1 Victor Nogueira
DF 5 Hayden Knight
DF 7 Victor Kodelja
DF 6
MF 9 Manny Rojas
MF 4 Gerry Gray
MF 8 Rudy Glenn
MF 11 Mark Simanton
FW 12 Karl-Heinz Granitza (c)
FW 10 Pato Margetic
FW 3 Seninho
Substitutes:[3]
FW 16
FW 20 Elvis Comrie
DF 28
Manager:
Willy Roy
GK 1 Paul Hammond
DF 24 Colin Miller
DF 2 Bruce Wilson (c)
DF 17 Derek Spalding
DF 4 Conny Karlsson
MF 10 Cliff Calvert
MF 16 Randy Ragan
MF 12
MF 8 Ace Ntsoelengoe
FW 19 David Byrne
FW 11 Roberto Bettega
Substitutes:
MF 9
MF 20
Manager:
Bob Houghton
Assistant referees:[4]
Ulrich Strom
John Pozadzides

----

Game 2

GK 1 Paul Hammond
DF 2 Bruce Wilson (c)
DF 17 Derek Spalding
DF 4 Conny Karlsson
DF 10 Cliff Calvert
MF 16 Randy Ragan
MF 5 Jimmy Nicholl
MF 12
MF 8 Ace Ntsoelengoe
FW 19 David Byrne
FW 11 Roberto Bettega
Substitutes:
MF 9
MF 20
Manager:
Bob Houghton
GK 1 Victor Nogueira
DF 5 Hayden Knight
DF 7 Victor Kodelja
DF 6
MF 9 Manny Rojas
MF 4 Gerry Gray
MF 8
MF 11 Mark Simanton
FW 12 Karl-Heinz Granitza (c)
FW 10 Pato Margetic
FW 3 Seninho
Substitutes:
FW 16
FW 20 Elvis Comrie
DF 28
Manager:
Willy Roy
1984 NASL Champions: Chicago Sting
Series MVP:
Pato Margetic (Chicago)
Assistant referees:[5]
Dilvo DiPlacido
Michael Saunders

Championship Statistics

Game 1[6]
StatisticChicagoToronto
scope=rowGoals scored 21
scope=rowTotal shots 1612
scope=rowShots on target 69
scope=rowSaves 84
scope=rowCorner kicks 65
scope=rowFouls2126
scope=rowOffsides 83
scope=rowYellow cards 75
scope=rowRed cards 00
Game 2[7]
StatisticChicagoToronto
scope=rowGoals scored 32
scope=rowTotal shots 1220
scope=rowShots on target 79
scope=rowSaves74
scope=rowCorner kicks 59
scope=rowFouls1220
scope=rowOffsides 62
scope=rowYellow cards 01
scope=rowRed cards 00

Post-match controversy

Earlier in the year Sting ownership had requested a one-year leave of absence from the NASL, and were denied. With only a few games remaining in the season, Sting chairman Lee Stern, believing that indoor soccer represented the future of the sport, announced that 1984 would be the Chicago Sting's last in the NASL. They, along with three other teams had been granted full admittance to the MISL.[8] The Blizzard, who were run by former Sting president Clive Toye, were one of the franchises fighting to keep the NASL going.

In the immediate aftermath of Chicago's title clinching victory, Toye's actions and subsequent words were unsporting in nature. He refused to honor the long-standing tradition of entering the winning side's locker room to congratulate the victors. He then followed that up by taking verbal jabs at both Willy Roy and Karl-Heinz Granitza to reporters, by referring to them as "cheats" and the Sting as "unworthy champions"[9] among other things. While in the midst of Chicago's post match celebration, not surprisingly, Granitza responded in kind. In the end the pettiness and lack of sportsmanship by both men mattered little, as Chicago left with the league's final trophy. The following spring, with Toye as the NASL's interim president, the league would cease operations.[10] [11] [12]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: NASL. NASLSoccerBowl - History - Past Winner. North American Soccer League.
  2. Web site: NASL. NASL 1968-1984 - Yearly Result. North American Soccer League.
  3. Book: Jose, Colin . NASL: A Complete Record of the North American Soccer League . Breedon Books . 1989 . Derby, England. 311, 312.
  4. Web site: 2 Oct 1984, 48 - Chicago Tribune at . Newspapers.com . 1984-10-02 . 2022-06-05.
  5. Web site: 4 Oct 1984, 80 - Chicago Tribune at . Newspapers.com . 1984-10-04 . 2022-06-05.
  6. News: Scoreboard . October 2, 1984. Chicago Tribune. sec:4 p.8 . September 2, 2018.
  7. News: Scoreboard . October 4, 1984. Chicago Tribune. sec:4 p.8 . September 2, 2018.
  8. Web site: The Albany Herald - Google News Archive Search .
  9. Web site: Ottawa Citizen - Google News Archive Search .
  10. Web site: The Milwaukee Journal - Google News Archive Search . news.google.com . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20151018073849/https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=omsaAAAAIBAJ&sjid=JioEAAAAIBAJ&pg=7072,2646594&dq=sting+leave+nasl&hl=en . 2015-10-18.
  11. Web site: The Bryan Times - Google News Archive Search .
  12. Web site: The Sun - Google News Archive Search .