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1983–84 NASL indoor season

The 1983–84 North American Soccer League indoor season was the fourth and last in league history. The San Diego Sockers defeated the New York Cosmos for their third straight indoor title, having won the NASL Indoor title in 1981–82 and the MISL title in 1982–83.

North American Soccer League
1983–84 indoor season
Season1983–84
ChampionsSan Diego Sockers
(2nd Title)
PremiersSan Diego Sockers
Matches played112
Goals scored1,377 (12.29 per match)
Top goalscorer Steve Zungul
(63 goals)
1983
Final season →

Season recap edit

The NASL was struggling for life at this point, and finding teams to play the indoor season would be difficult. While San Diego, the Chicago Sting and the Golden Bay Earthquakes were committed to the league, filling out the ranks would be problematic. With the league making plain their desire to have both an indoor and outdoor element going forward, the Fort Lauderdale Strikers decided to move to Minnesota for the 1984 NASL season due to a lack of suitable arenas in the local area.[1]

The Tampa Bay Rowdies were unsure whether or not they would be able to play, as the previous owners had committed to play in the indoor season and then sold the team. This left the new owners in the lurch.[2] The lack of a suitable arena was also an issue, eventually forcing Rowdies' home games to be split among three sites.[3] The Tulsa Roughnecks were only in the league thanks to a fundraiser that put $65,000 in the team's coffers, even though the team had won the outdoor Soccer Bowl just weeks earlier.[4]

Despite the uncertainty, this would be the largest NASL indoor season ever as a 32-game regular season, a best-of-three semifinal round and a best-of-five championship series were on the schedule. Also, the first (and only) All-Star Game in NASL history took place on February 8 at Chicago Stadium. The hometown Chicago Sting took on an All-Star team of the six other squads. Despite four goals from Chicago's Karl-Heinz Granitza, the All-Stars won 9–8.[5]

Not surprisingly, the teams with steady management performed best through the season. The Sockers averaged over 11,000 for their home games and finished first, overcoming a slow 8-8 start.[6] The hot streak continued in the playoffs as the team won all five of their postseason games en route to the NASL title.[7]

The NASL confirmed plans for 40-game indoor seasons in 1985 and 1986 near the end of the season,[8] but folded for good in March 1985.[9] By then, San Diego, Minnesota, New York and Chicago had joined the MISL.[10] While the Sockers, Strikers and Sting experienced success in the MISL, the Cosmos would start the season but drop out on February 22, 1985.[11]

Teams edit

Regular season edit

The 1983–84 regular season schedule ran from November 11, 1983, to March 25, 1984. The 32 games per team was almost double the length of previous NASL Indoor seasons.

W = Wins, L = Losses, GB = Games Behind 1st Place, Pct. = Winning Percentage, GF = Goals For, GA = Goals Against

Final Standings W L Pct. GB GF GA Home Road
San Diego Sockers 21 11 .656 196 148 14–2 7–9
New York Cosmos 20 12 .625 1 219 198 13–3 7–9
Chicago Sting 20 12 .625 1 183 148 12–4 8–8
Golden Bay Earthquakes 19 13 .594 2 206 190 12–4 7–9
Vancouver Whitecaps 12 20 .375 9 187 209 6–10 6–10
Tulsa Roughnecks 11 21 .344 10 166 216 7–9 4–12
Tampa Bay Rowdies 9 23 .281 12 177 225 5–11 4–12

Regular season statistics edit

Scoring leaders edit

GP = Games Played, G = Goals, A = Assists, Pts = Points

Player Team GP G A Pts
Steve Zungul Golden Bay Earthquakes 32 63 56 119
Karl-Heinz Granitza Chicago Sting 32 59 33 92
Juli Veee San Diego Sockers 28 45 29 74
Carl Valentine Vancouver Whitecaps 32 44 26 70
Chico Borja New York Cosmos 31 29 37 66
Godfrey Ingram Golden Bay Earthquakes 32 38 25 63
Tatu Tampa Bay Rowdies 30 49 11 60
Stan Terlecki New York Cosmos 23 34 23 57
Peter Ward Vancouver Whitecaps 28 42 12 54
Kaz Deyna San Diego Sockers 27 28 24 52

Leading goalkeepers edit

Note: GP = Games played; Min – Minutes played; GA = Goals against; GAA = Goals against average; W = Wins; L = Losses

Player Team GP Min GA GAA W L
Jim Gorsek San Diego Sockers 18 1074 73 4.08 14 4
Victor Nogueira Chicago Sting 32 1873 136 4.36 20 10
Bob Rigby Golden Bay Earthquakes 31 1890 184 5.84 18 13
David Brcic New York Cosmos 26 1570 155 5.92 18 8
Jürgen Stars Tampa Bay Rowdies 26 1506 171 6.81 8 18
Winston DuBose Tulsa Roughnecks 22 1416 161 6.82 7 15

1984 NASL All-Star Game edit

On February 8, the city of Chicago hosted what turned out to be the only All-Star game in NASL history. The Chicago Sting battled a team of All-Stars from the other six teams for the benefit of Chicago Tribune Charities. The starters were voted on by the players, while San Diego coach Ron Newman selected the reserves.[13] The All-Stars outdueled the Sting 9–8 before 14,328 fans at Chicago Stadium, despite an MVP performance by Chicago's Karl-Heinz Granitza. Granitza scored four goals on the night.[14][15]

All-Star Game Starters   Position   All-Star Game Reserves
*Alan Mayer, San Diego G David Brcic, New York • Tino Lettieri Vancouver[16]
Barry Wallace, Tulsa D Angelo DiBernardo, New York • Frantz Mathieu, Tampa Bay
Fernando Clavijo, Golden Bay D Mike Connell, Tampa Bay • Gert Wieczorkowski, San Diego
Steve Zungul, Golden Bay F Carl Valentine, Vancouver • ^Stan Terlecki, New York
Kaz Deyna, San Diego F Jean Willrich, San Diego • Zequinha, Tulsa[17]
Juli Veee, San Diego F Peter Ward, Vancouver

*Alan Mayer of San Diego was originally selected as a starter but due to a broken finger was unable to play. Tino Lettieri of Vancouver was named as his replacement.[18]^Stan Terlecki of New York was originally selected as a reserve but due to injury was unable to play. Zequinha of Tulsa was named as his replacement.[19]

Match report edit

February 8, 1984 All-Star Game Chicago Sting 8–9 NASL All-Stars Chicago, Illinois
8:00 PM (CST) Margetic   00:48' (Fajkus)
Granitza   3:23' (Fajkus)
Weiner   7:00' (Simanton)
Granitza   23:27' (Fajkus)
Granitza   27:32' (pen.)
Granitza   29:19' (Margetic)
Margetic   45:32' (Fajkus)
Margetic   56:33' (Fajkus)
Report Zungul   00:48' (Clavijo)
Zequinha   3:23' (Ward)
Ward   7:00' (Valentine)
Ward   23:27' (Willrich)
Valentine   27:32' (Mathieu)
Zungul   29:19' (Wieczorkowski)
Veee   37:50' (Zungul)
Deyna   54:08' (Zungul)
Wieczorkowski   57:16' (Willrich)
Stadium: Chicago Stadium
Attendance: 14,328
Referee: Feliks Fuksman & Julio Salas

NASL All-Stars edit

During the finals the NASL announced the traditional All-NASL team of All-Stars, as voted on by the players at the end of the regular season.[20]

First Team   Position   Second Team
Victor Nogueira, Chicago G David Brcic, New York
Fernando Clavijo, Golden Bay D Dan Canter, New York
Gert Wieczorkowski, San Diego D Martin Donnelly, San Diego
Kaz Deyna, San Diego M Juli Veee, San Diego
Steve Zungul, Golden Bay F Carl Valentine, Vancouver
Karl-Heinz Granitza, Chicago F Pato Margetic, Chicago • Stan Terlecki, New York

Playoffs edit

Bracket edit

Semifinals
Best-of-3
Championship series
Best-of-5
          
1 San Diego Sockers 5 7
4 Golden Bay Earthquakes 2 2
1 San Diego Sockers 5 10 7
2 New York Cosmos 2 4 3
2 New York Cosmos 4 3 8
3 Chicago Sting 3 7 7

Semifinals edit

Best of three series

Higher seed Lower seed Game 1 Game 2 Game 3 Attendance
San Diego Sockers Golden Bay Earthquakes 5–2 7–2 x March 29 • San Diego Sports Arena • 10,870
April 1 • Oakland Coliseum Arena • 4,413
New York Cosmos Chicago Sting 4–3 3–7 8–7 March 28 • Brendan Byrne Arena • 2,842
March 30 • Chicago Stadium • 15,462
April 1 • Brendan Byrne Arena • 5,420

Championship Series edit

Best of five series

Higher seed Lower seed Game 1 Game 2 Game 3 Game 4 Game 5 Attendance
San Diego Sockers New York Cosmos 5–2 10–4 7–3 x x April 5 • San Diego Sports Arena • 12,006
April 8 • San Diego Sports Arena • 12,696
April 11 • Brendan Byrne Arena • 4,717

Championship match reports edit

April 5, 1984 Game 1 San Diego Sockers 5–2 New York Cosmos San Diego, California
8:00 P.M. (PST) Willrich   12:17' (Crow)
Donnelly   17:12' (Quinn)
Willrich   25:17' (Veee)
Deyna   26' (Veee)
Deyna   44:17' (Donnelly)
Report A
Report B
Borja   4:06' (Kozić)
Parkinson   56'
Stadium: San Diego Sports Arena
Attendance: 12,006
April 8, 1984 Game 2 San Diego Sockers 10–4 New York Cosmos San Diego, California
6:30 P.M. (PST) Deyna   6:52' (Veee)
Pérez   14:01'
Coker   19:02'
O'Kane   20:29'
Quinn   21:36' (Newman)
Willrich   3rd Qtr' (Hilkes)
Coker   3rd Qtr' (Hilkes)
Pérez   4th Qtr' (Coker)
Pérez   4th Qtr'
Skouras   4th Qtr'
Report A
Report B
Moyers   11:46'
Moyers   4th Qtr'
De Matthaeis   4th Qtr'
De Matthaeis   4th Qtr'
Stadium: San Diego Sports Arena
Attendance: 12,696
April 11, 1984 Game 3 New York Cosmos 3–7 San Diego Sockers East Rutherford, New Jersey
8:00 P.M. (EST) DiBernardo   3:15'
Parkinson   6:47' (Borja)
Borja   29:29' (Gray)
Report A
Report B
Namdar   17:37' (Willrich)
Willrich   20:16' (Gorsek)
Crow   21:25' (Pérez)
Crow   33:23' (Pérez)
Deyna   43:04' (Veee)
Veee   44:32' (Quinn)
Pérez   52:37' (Willrich)
Stadium: Brendan Byrne Arena
Attendance: 4,717
Referee: Gordon Arrowsmith (Canada)
and Peter Johnson


1983–84 NASL Indoor Champions: San Diego Sockers

Post-season awards edit

Team attendance totals edit

Club[23] Games Total Average
Chicago Sting 16 189,228 11,827
San Diego Sockers 16 182,633 11,415
New York Cosmos 16 78,391 4,899
Golden Bay Earthquakes 16 72,190 4,512
Tulsa Roughnecks 16 59,304 3,707
Vancouver Whitecaps 16 46,336 2,896
Tampa Bay Rowdies 16 43,065 2,692
OVERALL 112 671,147 5,992

References edit

  1. ^ Marmor, Jon (December 1, 1983). "Strikers' Departure Is Official". Palm Beach Post. p. D1. Retrieved February 20, 2023.
  2. ^ Beard, Randy (November 1, 1983). "Rowdies scrub the indoor season". The Evening Independent. p. 1-C. Retrieved June 2, 2012 – via Google News Archive Search.
  3. ^ Beard, Randy (November 5, 1983). "Don't hold your breath as Rowdies unveil schedule". The Evening Independent. p. 4-C. Retrieved June 2, 2012 – via Google News Archive Search.
  4. ^ . Milwaukee Journal. November 5, 1983. p. 12. Archived from the original on December 22, 2015. Retrieved June 2, 2012 – via Google News Archive Search.
  5. ^ "Hey Now, You're An All-Star". Kenn Tomasch. Retrieved May 3, 2013.
  6. ^ Beard, Randy (March 1, 1984). "Frustration continues for Rowdies: Sockers' spurt means season winding down". The Evening Independent. p. 6-C. Retrieved June 2, 2012 – via Google News Archive Search.
  7. ^ "San Diego soccer champs". Ottawa Citizen. April 12, 1984. p. 54. Retrieved June 2, 2012 – via Google News Archive Search.
  8. ^ "Must Play in '84, Sting Is Told". New York Times. February 10, 1984. Retrieved June 2, 2012 – via nytimes.com.
  9. ^ "NASL down to two teams, won't play this season". Eugene Register-Guard. March 29, 1985. p. 2D. Retrieved June 2, 2012 – via Google News Archive Search.
  10. ^ "MISL takes four NASL teams". Boca Raton News. August 31, 1984. p. 2C. Retrieved June 2, 2012 – via Google News Archive Search.
  11. ^ "Cosmos pull out of MISL, NASL". Ellensburg Daily Record. February 23, 1985. p. 11. Retrieved June 2, 2012 – via Google News Archive Search.
  12. ^ Yannis, Pat (March 8, 1984). "Hartford Shift Seen For Indoor Cosmos". New York Times. Retrieved December 22, 2016 – via newyorktimes.com.
  13. ^ Beard, Randy (February 3, 1984). "All-star picks baffle Rowdies Connell, Mathieu". The Evening Independent. p. 6-C. Retrieved May 3, 2013 – via Google News Archive Search.
  14. ^ "Hey Now, You're An All-Star". Kenn Tomasch. Retrieved May 3, 2013.
  15. ^ . Archived from the original on April 8, 2016. Retrieved June 16, 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  16. ^ "Hey Now, You're An All-Star". Kenn Tomasch. Retrieved May 3, 2013.
  17. ^ "Hey Now, You're An All-Star". Kenn Tomasch. Retrieved May 3, 2013.
  18. ^ Miranda, Randy (February 2, 1984). "Coach Marsh should know verdict soon". Lakeland Ledger. p. 5D. Retrieved October 24, 2016 – via Google News Archive Search.
  19. ^ "stat sheet; Moves; SOCCER". The Spokesman-Review. February 8, 1984. p. 20. Retrieved October 24, 2016 – via Google News Archive Search.
  20. ^ "NASL all-stars". Chicago Tribune. April 10, 1984. p. 4; sec 4. Retrieved January 12, 2017.
  21. ^ "NASL: Cosmos get serious". Record-Journal. April 5, 1984. p. 20. Retrieved October 24, 2016 – via Google News Archive Search.
  22. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the : "San Diego Sockers vs New York Cosmos, 1984 NASL Indoor Finals, Game 3". YouTube.
  23. ^ "Attendance Project: NASL Indoor". Kenn Tomasch. Retrieved July 13, 2013.

External links edit

    1983, nasl, indoor, season, 1983, north, american, soccer, league, indoor, season, fourth, last, league, history, diego, sockers, defeated, york, cosmos, their, third, straight, indoor, title, having, nasl, indoor, title, 1981, misl, title, 1982, north, americ. The 1983 84 North American Soccer League indoor season was the fourth and last in league history The San Diego Sockers defeated the New York Cosmos for their third straight indoor title having won the NASL Indoor title in 1981 82 and the MISL title in 1982 83 North American Soccer League 1983 84 indoor seasonSeason1983 84ChampionsSan Diego Sockers 2nd Title PremiersSan Diego SockersMatches played112Goals scored1 377 12 29 per match Top goalscorerSteve Zungul 63 goals 1983Final season Contents 1 Season recap 2 Teams 3 Regular season 4 Regular season statistics 4 1 Scoring leaders 4 2 Leading goalkeepers 5 1984 NASL All Star Game 5 1 Match report 6 NASL All Stars 7 Playoffs 7 1 Bracket 7 2 Semifinals 7 3 Championship Series 7 3 1 Championship match reports 8 Post season awards 9 Team attendance totals 10 References 11 External linksSeason recap editThe NASL was struggling for life at this point and finding teams to play the indoor season would be difficult While San Diego the Chicago Sting and the Golden Bay Earthquakes were committed to the league filling out the ranks would be problematic With the league making plain their desire to have both an indoor and outdoor element going forward the Fort Lauderdale Strikers decided to move to Minnesota for the 1984 NASL season due to a lack of suitable arenas in the local area 1 The Tampa Bay Rowdies were unsure whether or not they would be able to play as the previous owners had committed to play in the indoor season and then sold the team This left the new owners in the lurch 2 The lack of a suitable arena was also an issue eventually forcing Rowdies home games to be split among three sites 3 The Tulsa Roughnecks were only in the league thanks to a fundraiser that put 65 000 in the team s coffers even though the team had won the outdoor Soccer Bowl just weeks earlier 4 Despite the uncertainty this would be the largest NASL indoor season ever as a 32 game regular season a best of three semifinal round and a best of five championship series were on the schedule Also the first and only All Star Game in NASL history took place on February 8 at Chicago Stadium The hometown Chicago Sting took on an All Star team of the six other squads Despite four goals from Chicago s Karl Heinz Granitza the All Stars won 9 8 5 Not surprisingly the teams with steady management performed best through the season The Sockers averaged over 11 000 for their home games and finished first overcoming a slow 8 8 start 6 The hot streak continued in the playoffs as the team won all five of their postseason games en route to the NASL title 7 The NASL confirmed plans for 40 game indoor seasons in 1985 and 1986 near the end of the season 8 but folded for good in March 1985 9 By then San Diego Minnesota New York and Chicago had joined the MISL 10 While the Sockers Strikers and Sting experienced success in the MISL the Cosmos would start the season but drop out on February 22 1985 11 Teams editTeam City Area Arena Chicago Sting Chicago Chicago Stadium Golden Bay Earthquakes Oakland CaliforniaDaly City California Oakland Alameda County Coliseum ArenaCow Palace New York Cosmos East Rutherford New JerseyNew York New York Brendan Byrne Arena 8 games Madison Square Garden 12 8 games San Diego Sockers San Diego San Diego Sports Arena Tampa Bay Rowdies Tampa FloridaSt Petersburg FloridaLakeland Florida Tampa Fairgrounds Arena 8 games Bayfront Center 5 games Lakeland Civic Center 3 games Tulsa Roughnecks Tulsa Oklahoma Tulsa Fairgrounds Pavilion Vancouver Whitecaps Vancouver Pacific ColiseumRegular season editThe 1983 84 regular season schedule ran from November 11 1983 to March 25 1984 The 32 games per team was almost double the length of previous NASL Indoor seasons W Wins L Losses GB Games Behind 1st Place Pct Winning Percentage GF Goals For GA Goals Against Final Standings W L Pct GB GF GA Home Road San Diego Sockers 21 11 656 196 148 14 2 7 9 New York Cosmos 20 12 625 1 219 198 13 3 7 9 Chicago Sting 20 12 625 1 183 148 12 4 8 8 Golden Bay Earthquakes 19 13 594 2 206 190 12 4 7 9 Vancouver Whitecaps 12 20 375 9 187 209 6 10 6 10 Tulsa Roughnecks 11 21 344 10 166 216 7 9 4 12 Tampa Bay Rowdies 9 23 281 12 177 225 5 11 4 12Regular season statistics editScoring leaders edit GP Games Played G Goals A Assists Pts Points Player Team GP G A Pts Steve Zungul Golden Bay Earthquakes 32 63 56 119 Karl Heinz Granitza Chicago Sting 32 59 33 92 Juli Veee San Diego Sockers 28 45 29 74 Carl Valentine Vancouver Whitecaps 32 44 26 70 Chico Borja New York Cosmos 31 29 37 66 Godfrey Ingram Golden Bay Earthquakes 32 38 25 63 Tatu Tampa Bay Rowdies 30 49 11 60 Stan Terlecki New York Cosmos 23 34 23 57 Peter Ward Vancouver Whitecaps 28 42 12 54 Kaz Deyna San Diego Sockers 27 28 24 52 Leading goalkeepers edit Note GP Games played Min Minutes played GA Goals against GAA Goals against average W Wins L Losses Player Team GP Min GA GAA W L Jim Gorsek San Diego Sockers 18 1074 73 4 08 14 4 Victor Nogueira Chicago Sting 32 1873 136 4 36 20 10 Bob Rigby Golden Bay Earthquakes 31 1890 184 5 84 18 13 David Brcic New York Cosmos 26 1570 155 5 92 18 8 Jurgen Stars Tampa Bay Rowdies 26 1506 171 6 81 8 18 Winston DuBose Tulsa Roughnecks 22 1416 161 6 82 7 151984 NASL All Star Game editOn February 8 the city of Chicago hosted what turned out to be the only All Star game in NASL history The Chicago Sting battled a team of All Stars from the other six teams for the benefit of Chicago Tribune Charities The starters were voted on by the players while San Diego coach Ron Newman selected the reserves 13 The All Stars outdueled the Sting 9 8 before 14 328 fans at Chicago Stadium despite an MVP performance by Chicago s Karl Heinz Granitza Granitza scored four goals on the night 14 15 All Star Game Starters Position All Star Game Reserves Alan Mayer San Diego G David Brcic New York Tino Lettieri Vancouver 16 Barry Wallace Tulsa D Angelo DiBernardo New York Frantz Mathieu Tampa Bay Fernando Clavijo Golden Bay D Mike Connell Tampa Bay Gert Wieczorkowski San Diego Steve Zungul Golden Bay F Carl Valentine Vancouver Stan Terlecki New York Kaz Deyna San Diego F Jean Willrich San Diego Zequinha Tulsa 17 Juli Veee San Diego F Peter Ward Vancouver Alan Mayer of San Diego was originally selected as a starter but due to a broken finger was unable to play Tino Lettieri of Vancouver was named as his replacement 18 Stan Terlecki of New York was originally selected as a reserve but due to injury was unable to play Zequinha of Tulsa was named as his replacement 19 Match report edit Chicago Sting v NASL All Stars February 8 1984 All Star GameChicago Sting8 9NASL All StarsChicago Illinois8 00 PM CST Margetic nbsp 00 48 Fajkus Granitza nbsp 3 23 Fajkus Weiner nbsp 7 00 Simanton Granitza nbsp 23 27 Fajkus Granitza nbsp 27 32 pen Granitza nbsp 29 19 Margetic Margetic nbsp 45 32 Fajkus Margetic nbsp 56 33 Fajkus Report Zungul nbsp 00 48 Clavijo Zequinha nbsp 3 23 Ward Ward nbsp 7 00 Valentine Ward nbsp 23 27 Willrich Valentine nbsp 27 32 Mathieu Zungul nbsp 29 19 Wieczorkowski Veee nbsp 37 50 Zungul Deyna nbsp 54 08 Zungul Wieczorkowski nbsp 57 16 Willrich Stadium Chicago Stadium Attendance 14 328Referee Feliks Fuksman amp Julio SalasNASL All Stars editDuring the finals the NASL announced the traditional All NASL team of All Stars as voted on by the players at the end of the regular season 20 First Team Position Second Team Victor Nogueira Chicago G David Brcic New York Fernando Clavijo Golden Bay D Dan Canter New York Gert Wieczorkowski San Diego D Martin Donnelly San Diego Kaz Deyna San Diego M Juli Veee San Diego Steve Zungul Golden Bay F Carl Valentine Vancouver Karl Heinz Granitza Chicago F Pato Margetic Chicago Stan Terlecki New YorkPlayoffs editBracket edit SemifinalsBest of 3Championship seriesBest of 5 1San Diego Sockers57 4Golden Bay Earthquakes22 1San Diego Sockers51072New York Cosmos2432New York Cosmos4383Chicago Sting377 Semifinals edit Best of three series Higher seed Lower seed Game 1 Game 2 Game 3 Attendance San Diego Sockers Golden Bay Earthquakes 5 2 7 2 x March 29 San Diego Sports Arena 10 870 April 1 Oakland Coliseum Arena 4 413 New York Cosmos Chicago Sting 4 3 3 7 8 7 March 28 Brendan Byrne Arena 2 842March 30 Chicago Stadium 15 462 April 1 Brendan Byrne Arena 5 420 Championship Series edit Best of five series Higher seed Lower seed Game 1 Game 2 Game 3 Game 4 Game 5 Attendance San Diego Sockers New York Cosmos 5 2 10 4 7 3 x x April 5 San Diego Sports Arena 12 006April 8 San Diego Sports Arena 12 696 April 11 Brendan Byrne Arena 4 717 Championship match reports edit San Diego Sockers v New York Cosmos April 5 1984 Game 1San Diego Sockers5 2New York CosmosSan Diego California8 00 P M PST Willrich nbsp 12 17 Crow Donnelly nbsp 17 12 Quinn Willrich nbsp 25 17 Veee Deyna nbsp 26 Veee Deyna nbsp 44 17 Donnelly Report AReport B Borja nbsp 4 06 Kozic Parkinson nbsp 56 Stadium San Diego Sports Arena Attendance 12 006 San Diego Sockers v New York Cosmos April 8 1984 Game 2San Diego Sockers10 4New York CosmosSan Diego California6 30 P M PST Deyna nbsp 6 52 Veee Perez nbsp 14 01 Coker nbsp 19 02 O Kane nbsp 20 29 Quinn nbsp 21 36 Newman Willrich nbsp 3rd Qtr Hilkes Coker nbsp 3rd Qtr Hilkes Perez nbsp 4th Qtr Coker Perez nbsp 4th Qtr Skouras nbsp 4th Qtr Report AReport B Moyers nbsp 11 46 Moyers nbsp 4th Qtr De Matthaeis nbsp 4th Qtr De Matthaeis nbsp 4th Qtr Stadium San Diego Sports Arena Attendance 12 696 New York Cosmos v San Diego Sockers April 11 1984 Game 3New York Cosmos3 7San Diego SockersEast Rutherford New Jersey8 00 P M EST DiBernardo nbsp 3 15 Parkinson nbsp 6 47 Borja Borja nbsp 29 29 Gray Report AReport B Namdar nbsp 17 37 Willrich Willrich nbsp 20 16 Gorsek Crow nbsp 21 25 Perez Crow nbsp 33 23 Perez Deyna nbsp 43 04 Veee Veee nbsp 44 32 Quinn Perez nbsp 52 37 Willrich Stadium Brendan Byrne Arena Attendance 4 717Referee Gordon Arrowsmith Canada and Peter Johnson 1983 84 NASL Indoor Champions San Diego SockersPost season awards editMost Valuable Player Steve Zungul Golden Bay 21 Coach of the Year Eddie Firmani New York Finals MVP Jean Willrich San Diego 22 Team attendance totals editClub 23 Games Total Average Chicago Sting 16 189 228 11 827 San Diego Sockers 16 182 633 11 415 New York Cosmos 16 78 391 4 899 Golden Bay Earthquakes 16 72 190 4 512 Tulsa Roughnecks 16 59 304 3 707 Vancouver Whitecaps 16 46 336 2 896 Tampa Bay Rowdies 16 43 065 2 692 OVERALL 112 671 147 5 992References edit Marmor Jon December 1 1983 Strikers Departure Is Official Palm Beach Post p D1 Retrieved February 20 2023 Beard Randy November 1 1983 Rowdies scrub the indoor season The Evening Independent p 1 C Retrieved June 2 2012 via Google News Archive Search Beard Randy November 5 1983 Don t hold your breath as Rowdies unveil schedule The Evening Independent p 4 C Retrieved June 2 2012 via Google News Archive Search NASL results 1 team lost 1 team saved Milwaukee Journal November 5 1983 p 12 Archived from the original on December 22 2015 Retrieved June 2 2012 via Google News Archive Search Hey Now You re An All Star Kenn Tomasch Retrieved May 3 2013 Beard Randy March 1 1984 Frustration continues for Rowdies Sockers spurt means season winding down The Evening Independent p 6 C Retrieved June 2 2012 via Google News Archive Search San Diego soccer champs Ottawa Citizen April 12 1984 p 54 Retrieved June 2 2012 via Google News Archive Search Must Play in 84 Sting Is Told New York Times February 10 1984 Retrieved June 2 2012 via nytimes com NASL down to two teams won t play this season Eugene Register Guard March 29 1985 p 2D Retrieved June 2 2012 via Google News Archive Search MISL takes four NASL teams Boca Raton News August 31 1984 p 2C Retrieved June 2 2012 via Google News Archive Search Cosmos pull out of MISL NASL Ellensburg Daily Record February 23 1985 p 11 Retrieved June 2 2012 via Google News Archive Search Yannis Pat March 8 1984 Hartford Shift Seen For Indoor Cosmos New York Times Retrieved December 22 2016 via newyorktimes com Beard Randy February 3 1984 All star picks baffle Rowdies Connell Mathieu The Evening Independent p 6 C Retrieved May 3 2013 via Google News Archive Search Hey Now You re An All Star Kenn Tomasch Retrieved May 3 2013 Archived copy Archived from the original on April 8 2016 Retrieved June 16 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Hey Now You re An All Star Kenn Tomasch Retrieved May 3 2013 Hey Now You re An All Star Kenn Tomasch Retrieved May 3 2013 Miranda Randy February 2 1984 Coach Marsh should know verdict soon Lakeland Ledger p 5D Retrieved October 24 2016 via Google News Archive Search stat sheet Moves SOCCER The Spokesman Review February 8 1984 p 20 Retrieved October 24 2016 via Google News Archive Search NASL all stars Chicago Tribune April 10 1984 p 4 sec 4 Retrieved January 12 2017 NASL Cosmos get serious Record Journal April 5 1984 p 20 Retrieved October 24 2016 via Google News Archive Search Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine San Diego Sockers vs New York Cosmos 1984 NASL Indoor Finals Game 3 YouTube Attendance Project NASL Indoor Kenn Tomasch Retrieved July 13 2013 External links editThe Year in American Soccer 1984 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1983 84 NASL indoor season amp oldid 1172293478, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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