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North American Soccer League on television

North American Soccer League (NASL) was a professional soccer league with teams in the United States and Canada that operated from 1968 to 1984. Beginning in 1975, the league final was called the Soccer Bowl.

North American Soccer League Progression
Season Teams Games Attendance Network TV
(Games)
1968 17 32 4,699 CBS
1969 5 16 2,930 None
1970 6 24 3,163
1971 8 4,154
1972 14 4,780
1973 9 19 5,954
1974 15 20 7,770 CBS (1)
1975 20 22 7,642 CBS (2)
1976 10,295 CBS (2)
1977 18 26 13,558 TVS (7)
1978 24 30 13,084 TVS (6)
1979 14,201 ABC (9)
1980 32 14,440 ABC (8)
1981 21 14,084 ABC (1)
1982 14 13,155 None
1983 12 30 13,258
1984 9 24 10,759
TV column includes only network TV.
It does not include cable (ESPN,[1] USA)
or pay-per-view (SportsVision[2][3]).

CBS (1967–1976) edit

National Professional Soccer League (1967) edit

In 1967, two professional soccer leagues started in the United States: the FIFA-sanctioned United Soccer Association, which consisted of entire European and South American teams brought to the US and given local names, and the unsanctioned National Professional Soccer League. The National Professional Soccer League had a national television contract in the U.S. with the CBS television network (which signed a two-year contract to broadcast a game every Sunday afternoon live and in color). The NPSL kicked off on Sunday, April 16 with a full slate of five matches. However, the ratings for matches were unacceptable even by weekend daytime standards and the arrangement was terminated. Bill MacPhail, head of CBS Sports, attributed NASL's lack of TV appeal to empty stadiums with few fans, and to undistinguished foreign players who were unfamiliar to American soccer fans.[4]

Play-by-play voice Jack Whitaker was joined by the former Northern Ireland international Danny Blanchflower as a pundit. Blanchflower was not impressed with the standard of play and did not hesitate to say so.[5]

The leagues merged in 1968 to form the North American Soccer League (NASL). It has been suggested that the timing of the merge was related to the huge amount of attention given throughout the English-speaking world to the victory by England in the 1966 FIFA World Cup and the resulting documentary film, Goal. While the USSF and FIFA refused to recognize the NPSL, the television contract with CBS[6] guaranteed some element of financial stability.

Controversy edit

Toronto Croatia played in the National Soccer League until 1975 when they purchased the Toronto Metros of the North American Soccer League to form Toronto Metros-Croatia. During this period the team attracted many soccer stars, such as Portuguese superstar Eusébio, and were successful enough that they won Soccer Bowl '76 – a 3–0 win over the Minnesota Kicks – at the Kingdome in Seattle. The championship team was coached by Marijan Bilić, an immigrant to Canada who had played for Dinamo Zagreb. The champions' team was: Paolo Cimpiel, Ted Polak, Željko Bilecki, Ivan Lukačević, Robert Iarusci, Eusébio, Mladen Cukon, Carmine Marcantonio, Ivair Ferreira, Wolfgang Suhnholz, Damir Sutevski, Ivan Grnja, Filip Blašković and Chris Horrocks.[7]

However, the NASL was never comfortable with the Croatia link (an obvious ethnic connection). League executives lobbied CBS to ensure they were only referred to as Toronto at the Soccer Bowl on television.

The Pelé effect edit

It was during the 1975 season that the New York Cosmos acquired the Brazilian star Pelé, whom they had been attempting to sign since the team was created. Steve Ross had apparently not heard of him before getting involved in soccer, but agreed to finance the transfer when Clive Toye[8] compared the Brazilian's popularity to that of the Pope. Pelé joined the Cosmos on June 10, 1975 on a salary of $1.4 million per year, an enormous wage for an athlete at that time. A number of contracts—only one of which mentioned soccer—were set up for Pelé to ensure that he paid the lowest amount of tax possible, including one as a "recording artist" with Warner subsidiary Atlantic Records. "We owned him lock, stock and barrel," Toye retrospectively boasted.

Pelé's arrival created a media sensation and overnight transformed the fortunes of soccer in the USA. The Pelé deal was later described by Gavin Newsham, an English writer, as "the transfer coup of the century".[9] His arrival turned the Cosmos from a motley crew of foreigners, semi-professionals and students into a huge commercial presence. The club's groundsman, on hearing that the Brazilian's début for New York was to be broadcast on CBS, spray-painted the pitch green to disguise how little grass was on it: the match, against the Dallas Tornado, was broadcast to 22 countries and covered by more than 300 journalists from all over the world.[9] From the moment he signed his contract at the 21 Club on 10 June 1975 in front of ecstatic Steve Ross and a crush of worldwide media, the player's every move was followed, bringing attention and credibility to the sport in America. As previously mentioned, his debut NASL match five days later versus the Dallas Tornado at the dilapidated Downing Stadium on Randall's Island was broadcast live on CBS network—the first regular-season NASL match on US network TV in six years.

It was the Cosmos' tenth match of the season and led by the Brazilian, who recorded an assist and a goal; New York came back from two goals down for the 2–2 final score. The contest was also Pelé's first competitive match in eight months since his last outing with Santos FC in October 1974. He would eventually end up with five goals in his debut season during which his biggest challenge became figuring out how to fit into this team of journeymen players with abilities far inferior to his. Still his biggest impact was on the sport in New York and the rest of America as Cosmos' home attendance got tripled in just half the season he was there. They also played in front of huge crowds on the road since everyone wanted to see Pelé - towards the end of the season when he pulled a hamstring and couldn't suit up, 20,000 fans in Philadelphia showed up just to see him in street clothes. Furthermore, the league's profile got raised as other NASL teams - encouraged by Ross' investment in Pelé and the prominence his arrival brought to the Cosmos franchise - started bringing over more big-name aging foreign stars such as George Best who was about to turn 30, 31-year-old Rodney Marsh, 34-year-old Geoff Hurst, and 35-year-old Bobby Moore.

Commentators edit

  • Paul Gardner - Gardner was the color commentator for the first-ever live telecast in the United States of a World Cup final, in 1982 on ABC. He also served as ABC color commentator with Jim McKay for NASL games in 1979-81. He also did commentary for NBC (1986 World Cup), CBS (NASL) and ESPN (college), and has been a film producer and was the scriptwriter and soccer adviser for the award-winning instructional series Pele: The Master and His Method in 1973.[10][11]
  • Frank Glieber - In 1963, Glieber began a long career with CBS television. Over the next two decades he would broadcast a variety of events for the network including NFL football, NBA and NCAA basketball, professional bowling, tennis, NASL soccer, and golf (including the Masters Tournament each spring). Glieber continued to broadcast local Dallas area sports events during his time at CBS, working as many as sixteen hours a day.
  • Mario Machado - He was the voice of soccer for the CBS television network in 1968 and in 1976, covering the North American Soccer League (NASL). He hosted the weekly soccer program, The Best of the World Cup for the Spanish International Network. Machado hosted All-Star Soccer from England (a syndicated version of ATV's Star Soccer) on Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) Public television stations for six years.
  • Seamus Malin - He also worked with the NASL's Boston Minutemen and New York Cosmos. He also called World Cup matches for NBC, ABC, and Turner Network Television, plus matches on CBS when the network had NASL rights.
  • Jon Miller - His first network exposure came in 1976, when he was selected by CBS-TV to broadcast the NASL Championship Game. From 1974–1976, Miller did play-by-play for the Washington Diplomats of the NASL. He also announced the Soccer Game of the Week for nationally syndicated TVS from 1977–1978.

TVS Television Network and Mizlou Television Network (1977–1978) edit

Soccer Bowl '78[12] was broadcast live in the United States on the TVS network. Jon Miller handled play-by-play duties, while Paul Gardner was the color analyst.[13] This would be the final NASL game broadcast by the network, as the league signed a deal with ABC Sports in the fall of 1978.[14] Gardner would continue as the color analyst for ABC's coverage, while Miller would move on to a long career announcing Major League Baseball.

Mizlou produced the first "live" coast-to-coast satellite feed, of a New York Cosmos soccer game, from San Jose, California to WOR-TV in New York in the late 1970s.

ABC (1979–1981) edit

In 1979, ABC Sports began covering the NASL in a deal that called for 9 telecasts of league games, including the playoffs and Soccer Bowl. In 1979, the team from the "Village of Vancouver", the Whitecaps (a reference to ABC TV sportscaster Jim McKay's observation that "Vancouver must be like the deserted village right now", with so many people watching the game on TV) beat the powerhouse New York Cosmos in one of the most thrilling playoff series in NASL history to advance to the Soccer Bowl. In the Soccer Bowl,[15] they triumphed against the Tampa Bay Rowdies in a disappointed New York City.

Decline edit

On October 1, 1977, Pelé closed out his legendary career in an exhibition match between the Cosmos and Santos. Santos arrived in New York and New Jersey after previously defeating the Seattle Sounders 2–0. The match was played in front of a capacity crowd at Giants Stadium and was televised in the United States on ABC's Wide World of Sports[16] as well as throughout the world. After the retirement of Pelé in 1977, much of the progress that American soccer had made during his stay was lost; there was no star at the same level to replace him as the NASL's headline act. After enduring briefly during the late 1970s, attendances dropped after 1980. The sport's popularity fell and the media lost interest. The deal with broadcaster ABC to broadcast NASL matches was also lost in 1980, and the 1981 Soccer Bowl[17][18] was only shown on tape delay. All of the franchises quickly became unprofitable, and a salary cap enforced before the 1984 season only delayed the inevitable.

Commentators edit

ESPN and USA Network (1981–1984) edit

In the last few years of its existence, the NASL did manage to get some games on a new cable sports network that had begun in 1979 called ESPN. In 1981, they signed a contract to broadcast 20 games on Saturdays. The new USA Network also carried games, usually on Wednesday[20] nights.

Major Indoor Soccer League edit

The 1982–83 Major Indoor Soccer League season was the fifth in league history and would end with the San Diego Sockers winning their first MISL title. It would be the Sockers' second straight indoor championship, as the club had won the North American Soccer League's indoor league the previous spring.

The league would enter into an agreement with the NASL in the summer of 1982 to begin plans for an eventual merger.[21] Initial plans to have all 14 NASL teams play in the winter would not come to pass, as most teams preferred to concentrate on the outdoor season. However, the Chicago Sting and Golden Bay Earthquakes would join the Sockers for the MISL season.

The MISL continued to make inroads on national television. While the spring would see the end of the league's two-year deal with the USA Network, CBS would broadcast a playoff game live from Cleveland on May 7 that drew an estimated four million viewers.

With the NASL near death in the summer of 1984, a handful of teams made plans to switch from outdoor to indoor soccer once the NASL season ended in October.[22] Along with the Sockers, the Chicago Sting, Minnesota Strikers and New York Cosmos formally made the leap in late August.[23] With the addition of the Dallas Sidekicks, the league went back to a 14-team, two-division setup.

This would be the final year the MISL would have games aired on network television, CBS broadcast Game 4 of the championship series live on May 25.[24]

Commentators (USA Network) edit

Local stations edit

WTTW in Chicago carried at least one Sting soccer game (against New York and Pelé, at Giants Stadium) in the early days of that franchise.

WTOG in St. Petersburg, FL aired numerous Tampa Bay Rowdies road games in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Additionally, many of the Rowdies home and away indoor matches were also broadcast.[25][26][27][28][29]

List of broadcasters edit

Team Television station Television announcers
Atlanta Chiefs (1979) WTBS[30] Bob Neal[31] and Terry Hanson
Boston Minutemen Roger Twibell and Seamus Malin
California Surf KHJ-TV[32] Gil Stratton and Dick Calvert
Calgary Boomers Ed Whalen
Chicago Sting SportsVision[33]
WGN-TV
WTTW
Roy Leonard,[34] Howard Balson,[35][36] and Ken Stern[37]
Cleveland Stokers WEWS-TV Paul Wilcox
Dallas Tornado WFAA[38] Verne Lundquist[39] and Brad Sham[40]
Detroit Express WKBD-TV[41] Jim Forney and Jimmy Hill
Edmonton Drillers CFRN-DT[42] Al McCann, Brian Rice, Randy Hahn,[43] and Vic Rauter
Fort Lauderdale Strikers WCIX Roger Twibell
Houston Hurricane KHTV Mario Machado and Hans von Mende
Jacksonville Tea Men WJXT Frank Timoney and Arthur Smith
Los Angeles Aztecs KNXT
ONTV
Gil Stratton[44] and Norm Jackson
Tom Kelly[45] and Dan Avey
Los Angeles Wolves KTLA Chick Hearn[46][47]
Minnesota Kicks KSTP-TV
WCCO-TV
Bob Bruce, Rod Trongard, and Trevor Iseman
Minnesota Strikers KITN-TV Frank Mazzocco
Montreal Manic TVA Claudine Douville, Pierre Donais, Francis Millien, and Michel Champagne
New England Tea Men WSBK-TV/WLVI
WVIT
WPRI-TV
Bill Alex, Steve Glendye, and Scott Wahle
New York Cosmos WNET
WOR-TV[48][49]
HBO
Trans World International
Crane Davis and Kyle Rote Jr.
Jim Karvellas,[50][51] Howard David, Seamus Malin,[52] Lee Arthur, and Werner Roth
Jim Karvellas, Steve Albert, Dick Stockton, Spencer Ross, Tom Kelly and Clive Toye
Tom Kelly and Clive Toye
Oakland Stompers KRON-TV Art Eckman[53] and Jack Hyde
Philadelphia Atoms Gene Hart[54] and Walter Chyzowych
Philadelphia Fury WPHL-TV[55] Al Meltzer[56] and Walter Chyzowych
Rochester Lancers WOKR-TV Jack Palvino, Ron DeFrance,[57] Chuck Schiano, and Tom Pipines
San Diego Sockers KUSI-TV[58] Randy Hahn[59] and Alan Mayer
San Jose Earthquakes Gill Cable[60]
KICU-TV
Bob Ray,[61] Hal Ramey,[62] Dave Chaplik, Jon Miller,[63] and Pat Hughes
Seattle Sounders KCTS-TV Bob Robertson,[64][65] Steve Fimmel, Cliff McCrath, Simon Ostler, and Keith Dysart
St. Louis Stars Dan Kelly
Tampa Bay Rowdies WTOG Bob Wolff[66] and Tom Keene
Team America WATV-LD Bob Carpenter,[67] Gordon Bradley, and Mike Lange
Toronto Metros-Croatia/Blizzard Global Mike Anscombe, Bruce Buchanan, Bob Irving, Shep Messing, Fergie Olver, and Jim Tatti
Tulsa Roughnecks KTUL Chris Lincoln,[68] Bob Carpenter,[69][70] Gordon Bradley, and Al Miller
Vancouver Whitecaps BCTV Bernie Pascall
Washington Diplomats WDCA Jon Miller, Don Earle,[71] and Terry Hanson
Washington Diplomats (1981) WTTG Jim Forney and Jimmy Hill

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ 1981-08-04 ESPN WEEKLY (NASL) on YouTube
  2. ^ NASL: Soccer Bowl '84 on YouTube
  3. ^ 1984-10-03 Soccer Bowl Chicago Sting vs Toronto Blizzard Game 2 Postgame on YouTube
  4. ^ Sports Illustrated, Soccer Is Getting A Toehold, August 30, 1976, http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1091476/index.htm
  5. ^ Maule, Tex. "Kickoff For A Babel Of Booters," Sports Illustrated, April 24, 1967.
  6. ^ 1968 CBS North American Soccer League PROMO (NASL) on YouTube
  7. ^ NASL 1976 Champions - Toronto Metros
  8. ^ 1984-10-01 NASL Soccer Bowl Game 1 Chicago Sting vs Toronto Blizzard Second Half on YouTube
  9. ^ a b Newsham, Gavin (2005-06-10). "When Pele and Cosmos were kings". The Guardian. London: Guardian News & Media. Retrieved 2011-01-20.
  10. ^ http://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n50-15259 [bare URL]
  11. ^ Sandomir, Richard (November 18, 2006). "Hefty Tribute Fit for a Sport's King". The New York Times.
  12. ^ 1978 08 27 Tampa Bay Rowdies vs New York Cosmos Soccer Bowl on YouTube
  13. ^ "NASL TV: A Short History". Kenn Tomasch. Retrieved June 12, 2012.
  14. ^ Kleiman, Carol (May 9, 1979). "Banking on American dollars, ABC to televise NASL soccer games". Boca Raton News. Retrieved 2012-06-12.
  15. ^ 1979-09-08 VANCOUVER WHITECAPS VS TAMPA BAY ROWDIES SOCCER BOWL on YouTube
  16. ^ Friendly Match 1977: Santos x Cosmos New York on YouTube
  17. ^ 1981 Soccer Bowl - Chicago Sting - New York Cosmos (Highlights) on YouTube
  18. ^ 1981 09 26 CHICAGO STING VS NEW YORK COSMOS SOCCER BOWL PART 1 NASL on YouTube
  19. ^ ABC Sports Soccer Bowl 80 Halftime with Pele and Sylvester Stallone Escape to Victory on YouTube
  20. ^ 1982 08 18 Tulsa Roughnecks at New York Cosmos on YouTube
  21. ^ "NASL, indoor league announce merger". Vancouver Sun. August 11, 1982. p. C2. Retrieved 2012-01-27.
  22. ^ Miranda, Randy (August 10, 1984). "Four NASL squads will play in MISL". Lakeland Ledger. p. D1. Retrieved May 8, 2012.
  23. ^ "MISL takes four NASL teams". Boca Raton News. August 31, 1984. p. 2C. Retrieved May 8, 2012.
  24. ^ Sarni, Jim (May 25, 1985). "Blast For Soccer Fans: CBS Airs MISL Game". South Florida Sun-Sentinel. Retrieved May 8, 2012.
  25. ^ Williams, James (January 9, 2015). "It Was Elton John Who Brought Rodney March To The US But It Was Tampa Bay That Won Him Over". sportstalkflorida.com.
  26. ^ thecelebratedmisterk (January 28, 2011). "NASL Indoor: Tampa Bay Rowdies at Ft. Lauderdale Strikers 11/27/1979" – via YouTube.
  27. ^ thecelebratedmisterk (December 19, 2010). "Indoor Soccer: Tampa Bay Rowdies vs. Zenit Leningrad 3/9/1977" – via YouTube.
  28. ^ Randy Scott (July 28, 2014). "RANDY SCOTT SPORTS (3) WTOG-TV TAMPA BAY" – via YouTube.
  29. ^ Randy Scott (March 19, 2015). "Randy Scott Sports (9) Tampa Bay Rowdies vs NY Cosmos 1985" – via YouTube.
  30. ^ "1979-1981 Atlanta Chiefs". Fun While It Lasted. May 12, 2013.
  31. ^ Longshore, Jason (July 13, 2015). "This Week in Atlanta Soccer History, July 13–19". Dirty South Soccer.
  32. ^ Oberjuerge, Paul (July 30, 1978). "San Bernardino Sun, 30 July 1978". The Sun-Telegram.
  33. ^ Zminda, Don (26 April 2019). The Legendary Harry Caray: Baseball's Greatest Salesman. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 170. ISBN 9781538112953.
  34. ^ Rivera, Guillermo (June 27, 2011). "Have Your Say : This Day in 1981". Chicago Fire Confidential.
  35. ^ Conklin, Mike (June 30, 1985). "SUMMER WITHOUT SOCCER". Chicago Tribune.
  36. ^ Leptich, John (September 7, 1988). "CITY'S NEW SOCCER TEAM TO RELY ON OLD STING". Chicago Tribune.
  37. ^ Maurer, Pablo. "How the largest American soccer film archive came to live in a guestroom in Austin, Texas".
  38. ^ "Irving Daily News from Irving, Texas · Page 13". Irving Daily News. June 1, 1972.
  39. ^ "Doylestown Intelligencer Newspaper Archives May 05, 1979 Page 25". Doylestown Intelligencer. May 5, 1979.
  40. ^ "FC Dallas broadcaster Brad Sham named Texas Sportscaster of the Year". Major League Soccer. January 22, 2010.
  41. ^ O'Connor, Larry (July 12, 2019). "Four decades later, Detroit Express chugs along in professional soccer lore". The Detroit News.
  42. ^ "NASL 1980 Edmonton Drillers Pocket Soccer Schedule - CFRN Television". ebay.com.
  43. ^ "EPISODE #125: San Jose Sharks Broadcaster Randy Hahn". GOOD SEATS STILL AVAILABLE. August 11, 2019.
  44. ^ "KICK MAGAZINE MAY 22ND 1977". SportsHistoryCollectibles.com. May 22, 1977.
  45. ^ Leovy, Jill (June 27, 2016). "Tom Kelly dies at 88; broadcast USC football and basketball games for decades". Los Angeles Times.
  46. ^ Smith, Zach (May 11, 2016). "2016 Meet the Underdogs: UPSL's LA Wolves rose from ashes, set to make US Open Cup debut". TheCup.us.
  47. ^ Alexander, Jim (August 17, 2018). "Alexander: Dodgers front office is taking the heat for bullpen failures". The Press-Enterprise.
  48. ^ McMillan, Ken (March 31, 2017). "New York Cosmos TV, web schedule". HudsonValley.com.
  49. ^ Agovino, Michael J. (June 2014). The Soccer Diaries: An American's Thirty-Year Pursuit of the International Game. U of Nebraska Press. p. 22. ISBN 9780803240476.
  50. ^ "OBITUARY: Cosmos broadcaster Jim Karvellas". Soccer America. January 4, 2007.
  51. ^ Crossley, Drew (June 25, 2018). "1972-1973 Baltimore Bays". FUN WHILE IT LASTED.
  52. ^ "Seamus Malin - NASL50th!". NASL 50th Anniversary.
  53. ^ "ART ECKMAN". Edward R. Murrow College of Communication.
  54. ^ Farnsworth, Ed (August 23, 2013). "Champions! Atoms defeat Dallas Tornado 2-0 in NASL final". The Philly Soccer Page.
  55. ^ "1979 Tv ad PHILADELPHIA FURY WASHINGTON DIPLOMATS North American Soccer League". Pinterest.
  56. ^ Fitzpatrick, Frank (June 14, 2018). "Philadelphia sports broadcasting icon Al 'Big Al' Meltzer dies". The Philadelphia Inquirer.
  57. ^ Lewis, Michael (August 19, 2018). "GOODBYE, RON: DeFrance, Rochester TV announcer, dies". Front Row Soccer.
  58. ^ "1983 San Diego Sockers Soccer Schedule, NASL". eBay.
  59. ^ "SAN DIEGO SOCKERS 1982-83 MEDIA GUIDE". SportsHistoryCollectibles.com.
  60. ^ "Earthquakes history -- NASL style!, Part 2". Big Soccer. July 2, 2008.
  61. ^ "what happened to the NASL?". Big Soccer. November 27, 2005.
  62. ^ Ramey, Ted (March 3, 2017). "Ramey: San Jose Earthquakes had a troubled past and a bright future". KNBR.
  63. ^ Conley, Mark (March 25, 2010). "Momcilo 'Gabbo' Gavric, an original San Jose Earthquake, was a fighter until the end". The Mercury News.
  64. ^ Sounders, Frank M. (February 27, 2016). "Birth of a Seattle Broadcasting Legend". Sounder At Heart.
  65. ^ Sounders, Frank M. (February 6, 2016). "A First & Lasting Impression - Original Voice of Sounders Blazed a Broadcasting Path". Sounder At Heart.
  66. ^ Wolff, Bob (23 March 2011). Bob Wolff's Complete Guide to Sportscasting: How to Make It in Sportscasting ... Skyhorse Publishing. p. 169. ISBN 9781616080815.
  67. ^ "EPISODE #99: Sports Broadcaster Bob Carpenter". GOOD SEATS STILL AVAILABLE. February 10, 2019.
  68. ^ "Chris Lincoln". Oklahoma Sportscene.
  69. ^ "099: Sports Broadcaster Bob Carpenter". Good Seats Still Available. 11 February 2019.
  70. ^ "2012 – BOB CARPENTER". Rotary Club of Tulsa.
  71. ^ "EPISODE #14: Radio Personality Terry Hanson's Formative Years In NASL Soccer". GOOD SEATS STILL AVAILABLE. June 9, 2017.

External links edit

  • NASL TV: A Short History
  • Television And The NASL
  • MISL and NASL on National Television
  • NASL question | Soccer Forum | Big Soccer
  • Classic Ground: San Diego Sockers 1983
  • BY THE NUMBERS… NORTH AMERICAN SOCCER LEAGUE VS MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER

north, american, soccer, league, television, north, american, soccer, league, nasl, professional, soccer, league, with, teams, united, states, canada, that, operated, from, 1968, 1984, beginning, 1975, league, final, called, soccer, bowl, north, american, socc. North American Soccer League NASL was a professional soccer league with teams in the United States and Canada that operated from 1968 to 1984 Beginning in 1975 the league final was called the Soccer Bowl North American Soccer League Progression Season Teams Games Attendance Network TV Games 1968 17 32 4 699 CBS 1969 5 16 2 930 None 1970 6 24 3 163 1971 8 4 154 1972 14 4 780 1973 9 19 5 954 1974 15 20 7 770 CBS 1 1975 20 22 7 642 CBS 2 1976 10 295 CBS 2 1977 18 26 13 558 TVS 7 1978 24 30 13 084 TVS 6 1979 14 201 ABC 9 1980 32 14 440 ABC 8 1981 21 14 084 ABC 1 1982 14 13 155 None 1983 12 30 13 258 1984 9 24 10 759 TV column includes only network TV It does not include cable ESPN 1 USA or pay per view SportsVision 2 3 Contents 1 CBS 1967 1976 1 1 National Professional Soccer League 1967 1 2 Controversy 1 3 The Pele effect 1 4 Commentators 2 TVS Television Network and Mizlou Television Network 1977 1978 3 ABC 1979 1981 3 1 Decline 3 2 Commentators 4 ESPN and USA Network 1981 1984 4 1 Major Indoor Soccer League 4 2 Commentators USA Network 5 Local stations 5 1 List of broadcasters 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksCBS 1967 1976 editSee also Soccer on CBS Sports National Professional Soccer League 1967 edit In 1967 two professional soccer leagues started in the United States the FIFA sanctioned United Soccer Association which consisted of entire European and South American teams brought to the US and given local names and the unsanctioned National Professional Soccer League The National Professional Soccer League had a national television contract in the U S with the CBS television network which signed a two year contract to broadcast a game every Sunday afternoon live and in color The NPSL kicked off on Sunday April 16 with a full slate of five matches However the ratings for matches were unacceptable even by weekend daytime standards and the arrangement was terminated Bill MacPhail head of CBS Sports attributed NASL s lack of TV appeal to empty stadiums with few fans and to undistinguished foreign players who were unfamiliar to American soccer fans 4 Play by play voice Jack Whitaker was joined by the former Northern Ireland international Danny Blanchflower as a pundit Blanchflower was not impressed with the standard of play and did not hesitate to say so 5 The leagues merged in 1968 to form the North American Soccer League NASL It has been suggested that the timing of the merge was related to the huge amount of attention given throughout the English speaking world to the victory by England in the 1966 FIFA World Cup and the resulting documentary film Goal While the USSF and FIFA refused to recognize the NPSL the television contract with CBS 6 guaranteed some element of financial stability Controversy edit Toronto Croatia played in the National Soccer League until 1975 when they purchased the Toronto Metros of the North American Soccer League to form Toronto Metros Croatia During this period the team attracted many soccer stars such as Portuguese superstar Eusebio and were successful enough that they won Soccer Bowl 76 a 3 0 win over the Minnesota Kicks at the Kingdome in Seattle The championship team was coached by Marijan Bilic an immigrant to Canada who had played for Dinamo Zagreb The champions team was Paolo Cimpiel Ted Polak Zeljko Bilecki Ivan Lukacevic Robert Iarusci Eusebio Mladen Cukon Carmine Marcantonio Ivair Ferreira Wolfgang Suhnholz Damir Sutevski Ivan Grnja Filip Blaskovic and Chris Horrocks 7 However the NASL was never comfortable with the Croatia link an obvious ethnic connection League executives lobbied CBS to ensure they were only referred to as Toronto at the Soccer Bowl on television The Pele effect edit It was during the 1975 season that the New York Cosmos acquired the Brazilian star Pele whom they had been attempting to sign since the team was created Steve Ross had apparently not heard of him before getting involved in soccer but agreed to finance the transfer when Clive Toye 8 compared the Brazilian s popularity to that of the Pope Pele joined the Cosmos on June 10 1975 on a salary of 1 4 million per year an enormous wage for an athlete at that time A number of contracts only one of which mentioned soccer were set up for Pele to ensure that he paid the lowest amount of tax possible including one as a recording artist with Warner subsidiary Atlantic Records We owned him lock stock and barrel Toye retrospectively boasted Pele s arrival created a media sensation and overnight transformed the fortunes of soccer in the USA The Pele deal was later described by Gavin Newsham an English writer as the transfer coup of the century 9 His arrival turned the Cosmos from a motley crew of foreigners semi professionals and students into a huge commercial presence The club s groundsman on hearing that the Brazilian s debut for New York was to be broadcast on CBS spray painted the pitch green to disguise how little grass was on it the match against the Dallas Tornado was broadcast to 22 countries and covered by more than 300 journalists from all over the world 9 From the moment he signed his contract at the 21 Club on 10 June 1975 in front of ecstatic Steve Ross and a crush of worldwide media the player s every move was followed bringing attention and credibility to the sport in America As previously mentioned his debut NASL match five days later versus the Dallas Tornado at the dilapidated Downing Stadium on Randall s Island was broadcast live on CBS network the first regular season NASL match on US network TV in six years It was the Cosmos tenth match of the season and led by the Brazilian who recorded an assist and a goal New York came back from two goals down for the 2 2 final score The contest was also Pele s first competitive match in eight months since his last outing with Santos FC in October 1974 He would eventually end up with five goals in his debut season during which his biggest challenge became figuring out how to fit into this team of journeymen players with abilities far inferior to his Still his biggest impact was on the sport in New York and the rest of America as Cosmos home attendance got tripled in just half the season he was there They also played in front of huge crowds on the road since everyone wanted to see Pele towards the end of the season when he pulled a hamstring and couldn t suit up 20 000 fans in Philadelphia showed up just to see him in street clothes Furthermore the league s profile got raised as other NASL teams encouraged by Ross investment in Pele and the prominence his arrival brought to the Cosmos franchise started bringing over more big name aging foreign stars such as George Best who was about to turn 30 31 year old Rodney Marsh 34 year old Geoff Hurst and 35 year old Bobby Moore Commentators edit Paul Gardner Gardner was the color commentator for the first ever live telecast in the United States of a World Cup final in 1982 on ABC He also served as ABC color commentator with Jim McKay for NASL games in 1979 81 He also did commentary for NBC 1986 World Cup CBS NASL and ESPN college and has been a film producer and was the scriptwriter and soccer adviser for the award winning instructional series Pele The Master and His Method in 1973 10 11 Frank Glieber In 1963 Glieber began a long career with CBS television Over the next two decades he would broadcast a variety of events for the network including NFL football NBA and NCAA basketball professional bowling tennis NASL soccer and golf including the Masters Tournament each spring Glieber continued to broadcast local Dallas area sports events during his time at CBS working as many as sixteen hours a day Mario Machado He was the voice of soccer for the CBS television network in 1968 and in 1976 covering the North American Soccer League NASL He hosted the weekly soccer program The Best of the World Cup for the Spanish International Network Machado hosted All Star Soccer from England a syndicated version of ATV s Star Soccer on Public Broadcasting Service PBS Public television stations for six years Seamus Malin He also worked with the NASL s Boston Minutemen and New York Cosmos He also called World Cup matches for NBC ABC and Turner Network Television plus matches on CBS when the network had NASL rights Jon Miller His first network exposure came in 1976 when he was selected by CBS TV to broadcast the NASL Championship Game From 1974 1976 Miller did play by play for the Washington Diplomats of the NASL He also announced the Soccer Game of the Week for nationally syndicated TVS from 1977 1978 TVS Television Network and Mizlou Television Network 1977 1978 editSoccer Bowl 78 12 was broadcast live in the United States on the TVS network Jon Miller handled play by play duties while Paul Gardner was the color analyst 13 This would be the final NASL game broadcast by the network as the league signed a deal with ABC Sports in the fall of 1978 14 Gardner would continue as the color analyst for ABC s coverage while Miller would move on to a long career announcing Major League Baseball Mizlou produced the first live coast to coast satellite feed of a New York Cosmos soccer game from San Jose California to WOR TV in New York in the late 1970s ABC 1979 1981 editIn 1979 ABC Sports began covering the NASL in a deal that called for 9 telecasts of league games including the playoffs and Soccer Bowl In 1979 the team from the Village of Vancouver the Whitecaps a reference to ABC TV sportscaster Jim McKay s observation that Vancouver must be like the deserted village right now with so many people watching the game on TV beat the powerhouse New York Cosmos in one of the most thrilling playoff series in NASL history to advance to the Soccer Bowl In the Soccer Bowl 15 they triumphed against the Tampa Bay Rowdies in a disappointed New York City Decline edit On October 1 1977 Pele closed out his legendary career in an exhibition match between the Cosmos and Santos Santos arrived in New York and New Jersey after previously defeating the Seattle Sounders 2 0 The match was played in front of a capacity crowd at Giants Stadium and was televised in the United States on ABC s Wide World of Sports 16 as well as throughout the world After the retirement of Pele in 1977 much of the progress that American soccer had made during his stay was lost there was no star at the same level to replace him as the NASL s headline act After enduring briefly during the late 1970s attendances dropped after 1980 The sport s popularity fell and the media lost interest The deal with broadcaster ABC to broadcast NASL matches was also lost in 1980 and the 1981 Soccer Bowl 17 18 was only shown on tape delay All of the franchises quickly became unprofitable and a salary cap enforced before the 1984 season only delayed the inevitable Commentators edit Paul Gardner Verne Lundquist 19 Jim McKayESPN and USA Network 1981 1984 editSee also Soccer on ESPN In the last few years of its existence the NASL did manage to get some games on a new cable sports network that had begun in 1979 called ESPN In 1981 they signed a contract to broadcast 20 games on Saturdays The new USA Network also carried games usually on Wednesday 20 nights Major Indoor Soccer League edit The 1982 83 Major Indoor Soccer League season was the fifth in league history and would end with the San Diego Sockers winning their first MISL title It would be the Sockers second straight indoor championship as the club had won the North American Soccer League s indoor league the previous spring The league would enter into an agreement with the NASL in the summer of 1982 to begin plans for an eventual merger 21 Initial plans to have all 14 NASL teams play in the winter would not come to pass as most teams preferred to concentrate on the outdoor season However the Chicago Sting and Golden Bay Earthquakes would join the Sockers for the MISL season The MISL continued to make inroads on national television While the spring would see the end of the league s two year deal with the USA Network CBS would broadcast a playoff game live from Cleveland on May 7 that drew an estimated four million viewers With the NASL near death in the summer of 1984 a handful of teams made plans to switch from outdoor to indoor soccer once the NASL season ended in October 22 Along with the Sockers the Chicago Sting Minnesota Strikers and New York Cosmos formally made the leap in late August 23 With the addition of the Dallas Sidekicks the league went back to a 14 team two division setup This would be the final year the MISL would have games aired on network television CBS broadcast Game 4 of the championship series live on May 25 24 Commentators USA Network edit Spencer Ross Kyle Rote Jr Werner Roth Al TrautwigLocal stations editWTTW in Chicago carried at least one Sting soccer game against New York and Pele at Giants Stadium in the early days of that franchise WTOG in St Petersburg FL aired numerous Tampa Bay Rowdies road games in the late 1970s and early 1980s Additionally many of the Rowdies home and away indoor matches were also broadcast 25 26 27 28 29 See also Minnesota Kicks Media coverage List of broadcasters edit Team Television station Television announcers Atlanta Chiefs 1979 WTBS 30 Bob Neal 31 and Terry Hanson Boston Minutemen Roger Twibell and Seamus Malin California Surf KHJ TV 32 Gil Stratton and Dick Calvert Calgary Boomers Ed Whalen Chicago Sting SportsVision 33 WGN TVWTTW Roy Leonard 34 Howard Balson 35 36 and Ken Stern 37 Cleveland Stokers WEWS TV Paul Wilcox Dallas Tornado WFAA 38 Verne Lundquist 39 and Brad Sham 40 Detroit Express WKBD TV 41 Jim Forney and Jimmy Hill Edmonton Drillers CFRN DT 42 Al McCann Brian Rice Randy Hahn 43 and Vic Rauter Fort Lauderdale Strikers WCIX Roger Twibell Houston Hurricane KHTV Mario Machado and Hans von Mende Jacksonville Tea Men WJXT Frank Timoney and Arthur Smith Los Angeles Aztecs KNXTONTV Gil Stratton 44 and Norm JacksonTom Kelly 45 and Dan Avey Los Angeles Wolves KTLA Chick Hearn 46 47 Minnesota Kicks KSTP TVWCCO TV Bob Bruce Rod Trongard and Trevor Iseman Minnesota Strikers KITN TV Frank Mazzocco Montreal Manic TVA Claudine Douville Pierre Donais Francis Millien and Michel Champagne New England Tea Men WSBK TV WLVIWVITWPRI TV Bill Alex Steve Glendye and Scott Wahle New York Cosmos WNETWOR TV 48 49 HBOTrans World International Crane Davis and Kyle Rote Jr Jim Karvellas 50 51 Howard David Seamus Malin 52 Lee Arthur and Werner RothJim Karvellas Steve Albert Dick Stockton Spencer Ross Tom Kelly and Clive ToyeTom Kelly and Clive Toye Oakland Stompers KRON TV Art Eckman 53 and Jack Hyde Philadelphia Atoms Gene Hart 54 and Walter Chyzowych Philadelphia Fury WPHL TV 55 Al Meltzer 56 and Walter Chyzowych Rochester Lancers WOKR TV Jack Palvino Ron DeFrance 57 Chuck Schiano and Tom Pipines San Diego Sockers KUSI TV 58 Randy Hahn 59 and Alan Mayer San Jose Earthquakes Gill Cable 60 KICU TV Bob Ray 61 Hal Ramey 62 Dave Chaplik Jon Miller 63 and Pat Hughes Seattle Sounders KCTS TV Bob Robertson 64 65 Steve Fimmel Cliff McCrath Simon Ostler and Keith Dysart St Louis Stars Dan Kelly Tampa Bay Rowdies WTOG Bob Wolff 66 and Tom Keene Team America WATV LD Bob Carpenter 67 Gordon Bradley and Mike Lange Toronto Metros Croatia Blizzard Global Mike Anscombe Bruce Buchanan Bob Irving Shep Messing Fergie Olver and Jim Tatti Tulsa Roughnecks KTUL Chris Lincoln 68 Bob Carpenter 69 70 Gordon Bradley and Al Miller Vancouver Whitecaps BCTV Bernie Pascall Washington Diplomats WDCA Jon Miller Don Earle 71 and Terry Hanson Washington Diplomats 1981 WTTG Jim Forney and Jimmy HillSee also editList of Soccer Bowl broadcasters Major Indoor Soccer League 1978 1992 on television Women s United Soccer Association on televisionReferences edit 1981 08 04 ESPN WEEKLY NASL on YouTube NASL Soccer Bowl 84 on YouTube 1984 10 03 Soccer Bowl Chicago Sting vs Toronto Blizzard Game 2 Postgame on YouTube Sports Illustrated Soccer Is Getting A Toehold August 30 1976 http sportsillustrated cnn com vault article magazine MAG1091476 index htm Maule Tex Kickoff For A Babel Of Booters Sports Illustrated April 24 1967 1968 CBS North American Soccer League PROMO NASL on YouTube NASL 1976 Champions Toronto Metros 1984 10 01 NASL Soccer Bowl Game 1 Chicago Sting vs Toronto Blizzard Second Half on YouTube a b Newsham Gavin 2005 06 10 When Pele and Cosmos were kings The Guardian London Guardian News amp Media Retrieved 2011 01 20 http www worldcat org identities lccn n50 15259 bare URL Sandomir Richard November 18 2006 Hefty Tribute Fit for a Sport s King The New York Times 1978 08 27 Tampa Bay Rowdies vs New York Cosmos Soccer Bowl on YouTube NASL TV A Short History Kenn Tomasch Retrieved June 12 2012 Kleiman Carol May 9 1979 Banking on American dollars ABC to televise NASL soccer games Boca Raton News Retrieved 2012 06 12 1979 09 08 VANCOUVER WHITECAPS VS TAMPA BAY ROWDIES SOCCER BOWL on YouTube Friendly Match 1977 Santos x Cosmos New York on YouTube 1981 Soccer Bowl Chicago Sting New York Cosmos Highlights on YouTube 1981 09 26 CHICAGO STING VS NEW YORK COSMOS SOCCER BOWL PART 1 NASL on YouTube ABC Sports Soccer Bowl 80 Halftime with Pele and Sylvester Stallone Escape to Victory on YouTube 1982 08 18 Tulsa Roughnecks at New York Cosmos on YouTube NASL indoor league announce merger Vancouver Sun August 11 1982 p C2 Retrieved 2012 01 27 Miranda Randy August 10 1984 Four NASL squads will play in MISL Lakeland Ledger p D1 Retrieved May 8 2012 MISL takes four NASL teams Boca Raton News August 31 1984 p 2C Retrieved May 8 2012 Sarni Jim May 25 1985 Blast For Soccer Fans CBS Airs MISL Game South Florida Sun Sentinel Retrieved May 8 2012 Williams James January 9 2015 It Was Elton John Who Brought Rodney March To The US But It Was Tampa Bay That Won Him Over sportstalkflorida com thecelebratedmisterk January 28 2011 NASL Indoor Tampa Bay Rowdies at Ft Lauderdale Strikers 11 27 1979 via YouTube thecelebratedmisterk December 19 2010 Indoor Soccer Tampa Bay Rowdies vs Zenit Leningrad 3 9 1977 via YouTube Randy Scott July 28 2014 RANDY SCOTT SPORTS 3 WTOG TV TAMPA BAY via YouTube Randy Scott March 19 2015 Randy Scott Sports 9 Tampa Bay Rowdies vs NY Cosmos 1985 via YouTube 1979 1981 Atlanta Chiefs Fun While It Lasted May 12 2013 Longshore Jason July 13 2015 This Week in Atlanta Soccer History July 13 19 Dirty South Soccer Oberjuerge Paul July 30 1978 San Bernardino Sun 30 July 1978 The Sun Telegram Zminda Don 26 April 2019 The Legendary Harry Caray Baseball s Greatest Salesman Rowman amp Littlefield p 170 ISBN 9781538112953 Rivera Guillermo June 27 2011 Have Your Say This Day in 1981 Chicago Fire Confidential Conklin Mike June 30 1985 SUMMER WITHOUT SOCCER Chicago Tribune Leptich John September 7 1988 CITY S NEW SOCCER TEAM TO RELY ON OLD STING Chicago Tribune Maurer Pablo How the largest American soccer film archive came to live in a guestroom in Austin Texas Irving Daily News from Irving Texas Page 13 Irving Daily News June 1 1972 Doylestown Intelligencer Newspaper Archives May 05 1979 Page 25 Doylestown Intelligencer May 5 1979 FC Dallas broadcaster Brad Sham named Texas Sportscaster of the Year Major League Soccer January 22 2010 O Connor Larry July 12 2019 Four decades later Detroit Express chugs along in professional soccer lore The Detroit News NASL 1980 Edmonton Drillers Pocket Soccer Schedule CFRN Television ebay com EPISODE 125 San Jose Sharks Broadcaster Randy Hahn GOOD SEATS STILL AVAILABLE August 11 2019 KICK MAGAZINE MAY 22ND 1977 SportsHistoryCollectibles com May 22 1977 Leovy Jill June 27 2016 Tom Kelly dies at 88 broadcast USC football and basketball games for decades Los Angeles Times Smith Zach May 11 2016 2016 Meet the Underdogs UPSL s LA Wolves rose from ashes set to make US Open Cup debut TheCup us Alexander Jim August 17 2018 Alexander Dodgers front office is taking the heat for bullpen failures The Press Enterprise McMillan Ken March 31 2017 New York Cosmos TV web schedule HudsonValley com Agovino Michael J June 2014 The Soccer Diaries An American s Thirty Year Pursuit of the International Game U of Nebraska Press p 22 ISBN 9780803240476 OBITUARY Cosmos broadcaster Jim Karvellas Soccer America January 4 2007 Crossley Drew June 25 2018 1972 1973 Baltimore Bays FUN WHILE IT LASTED Seamus Malin NASL50th NASL 50th Anniversary ART ECKMAN Edward R Murrow College of Communication Farnsworth Ed August 23 2013 Champions Atoms defeat Dallas Tornado 2 0 in NASL final The Philly Soccer Page 1979 Tv ad PHILADELPHIA FURY WASHINGTON DIPLOMATS North American Soccer League Pinterest Fitzpatrick Frank June 14 2018 Philadelphia sports broadcasting icon Al Big Al Meltzer dies The Philadelphia Inquirer Lewis Michael August 19 2018 GOODBYE RON DeFrance Rochester TV announcer dies Front Row Soccer 1983 San Diego Sockers Soccer Schedule NASL eBay SAN DIEGO SOCKERS 1982 83 MEDIA GUIDE SportsHistoryCollectibles com Earthquakes history NASL style Part 2 Big Soccer July 2 2008 what happened to the NASL Big Soccer November 27 2005 Ramey Ted March 3 2017 Ramey San Jose Earthquakes had a troubled past and a bright future KNBR Conley Mark March 25 2010 Momcilo Gabbo Gavric an original San Jose Earthquake was a fighter until the end The Mercury News Sounders Frank M February 27 2016 Birth of a Seattle Broadcasting Legend Sounder At Heart Sounders Frank M February 6 2016 A First amp Lasting Impression Original Voice of Sounders Blazed a Broadcasting Path Sounder At Heart Wolff Bob 23 March 2011 Bob Wolff s Complete Guide to Sportscasting How to Make It in Sportscasting Skyhorse Publishing p 169 ISBN 9781616080815 EPISODE 99 Sports Broadcaster Bob Carpenter GOOD SEATS STILL AVAILABLE February 10 2019 Chris Lincoln Oklahoma Sportscene 099 Sports Broadcaster Bob Carpenter Good Seats Still Available 11 February 2019 2012 BOB CARPENTER Rotary Club of Tulsa EPISODE 14 Radio Personality Terry Hanson s Formative Years In NASL Soccer GOOD SEATS STILL AVAILABLE June 9 2017 External links editNASL TV A Short History Television And The NASL Framing Soccer for the Network Era ABC and the Challenge to Nationally Broadcast the North American Soccer League 1979 1981 MISL and NASL on National Television NASL question Soccer Forum Big Soccer The Year in American Soccer 1981 Classic Ground San Diego Sockers 1983 BY THE NUMBERS NORTH AMERICAN SOCCER LEAGUE VS MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title North American Soccer League on television amp oldid 1205953729, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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