thefootyqueen:

Tatie Danielle pense soccer et New York Cosmos. - 1977 -
[The Vintage Football Club]
Footy love, nikhak

thefootyqueen:

Tatie Danielle pense soccer et New York Cosmos. - 1977 -

[The Vintage Football Club]

Footy love, nikhak

#New York Cosmos #NASL

The New York Cosmos will enter the NASL in 2013.

The New York Cosmos will enter the NASL in 2013.

#New York Cosmos #NASL

In the late 1970s Johan Cruyff came to America, playing two exhibition games for the New York Cosmos and then in three tumultuous NASL seasons for the Los Angeles Aztecs and Washington Diplomats that helped shape the Dutch legend’s future.
In issue one of XI, Pieter van Os and Leander Schaerlaeckens tell that story in full for the first time in English:

Legendarily hubristic, cocksure, singularly combative and ruthless, Cruyff was forever embroiled in power struggles or embarking on ideological crusades. If his talent for manipulating a ball and orchestrating an offense was immense, it was (and is) dwarfed by his capacity for inciting conflict and playing mind games.
But the Dips didn’t know any of that yet. In 1980, all they knew was that they’d landed the player considered one of the greatest of all time for his second season in the now-defunct North American Soccer League. 

Subscribe to issue one of XI now and receive over 100 pages of long-form essays, glossy photography and illustrations telling the story of North American soccer in your mailbox for only $7.99

In the late 1970s Johan Cruyff came to America, playing two exhibition games for the New York Cosmos and then in three tumultuous NASL seasons for the Los Angeles Aztecs and Washington Diplomats that helped shape the Dutch legend’s future.

In issue one of XI, Pieter van Os and Leander Schaerlaeckens tell that story in full for the first time in English:

Legendarily hubristic, cocksure, singularly combative and ruthless, Cruyff was forever embroiled in power struggles or embarking on ideological crusades. If his talent for manipulating a ball and orchestrating an offense was immense, it was (and is) dwarfed by his capacity for inciting conflict and playing mind games.

But the Dips didn’t know any of that yet. In 1980, all they knew was that they’d landed the player considered one of the greatest of all time for his second season in the now-defunct North American Soccer League.

Subscribe to issue one of XI now and receive over 100 pages of long-form essays, glossy photography and illustrations telling the story of North American soccer in your mailbox for only $7.99

#Celebrity #Fame #Football #Johan Cruyff #Los Angeles Aztecs #Netherlands #New York Cosmos #Soccer #Washington Diplomats #large

Soccer is returning to Wrigley Field in Chicago for the first time since 1984. The above video footage shows a classic match-up at the Friendly Confines between the New York Cosmos and the Chicago Sting from June 1981. The Sting would go on to win the Soccer Bowl later that year, defeating the Cosmos in Toronto.

#NASL #Chicago Sting #Wrigley Field #New York Cosmos #Chicago #History

On June 20th 1977, the New York Times reported that the largest crowd to ever attend a soccer game in the United States had the previous day watched the New York Cosmos’ 3-1 victory over the Tampa Bay Rowdies at Giants Stadium, aided by a Pelé hat-trick. In a follow-up report a few weeks later in the Times, Tony Kornheiser (yes, that Tony Kornheiser) wrote that the Cosmos’ GM Mike Martin “was shivering with excitement” when the crowd was announced, and that LA Aztec’s owner John Chaffetz had “tears brought to my eyes” when he saw the above photo in the Times the next day.
The hyperbole did not stop there. The US Soccer Federation’s General Secretary Kurt Lamm told Kornheiser that “When they write the history of soccer in this country, that afternoon will be Day One in all the books.”
NASL Commissioner Phil Woosnam gustily predicted that “In as few as five years, but in no more than 10, soccer will become the biggest pro sport in this country, bigger than football.”
Kornheiser, after also reviewing the remarkably rapid growth of youth soccer in the U.S. throughout the 1970s, concluded himself that “Soccer is…in the infant stage of a boom that may leave it unmatched among team sports in this country. It is no longer an “immigrant” sport but suddenly something as American as, say, baseball.”
Yet, there was one downbeat section to Kornheiser’s report: soccer was not, he noted, proving popular in the inner-cities, while it was generally most popular in cities not noted for their ethnic minorities. “The inner-city youth looks to high-paying professional sports such as basketball and football for upward mobility out of the ghetto,” Kornheiser observed, also saying awareness of the sport remained low in cities due to the lack of television coverage. In places where soccer was traditionally popular with ethnic groups, like Toronto and Chicago, NASL’s attendances couldn’t even reach four figures except for Pelé’s visits. Crowds across pro soccer were extraordinarily varied (in the NASL, from 34,150 in 1977 for the Cosmos down to 3,902 for the Connecticut Bicentennials).
While looking past the euphoria of 62,394 witnessing the Cosmos was hard to do, the future was perhaps not quite as shiny as it appeared in the magical summer of 1977 for North American soccer. “The coronation of professional soccer is premature,” Kornheiser wisely concluded.
- Tom DunmoreFollow @pitchinvasion

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On June 20th 1977, the New York Times reported that the largest crowd to ever attend a soccer game in the United States had the previous day watched the New York Cosmos’ 3-1 victory over the Tampa Bay Rowdies at Giants Stadium, aided by a Pelé hat-trick. In a follow-up report a few weeks later in the Times, Tony Kornheiser (yes, that Tony Kornheiser) wrote that the Cosmos’ GM Mike Martin “was shivering with excitement” when the crowd was announced, and that LA Aztec’s owner John Chaffetz had “tears brought to my eyes” when he saw the above photo in the Times the next day.

The hyperbole did not stop there. The US Soccer Federation’s General Secretary Kurt Lamm told Kornheiser that “When they write the history of soccer in this country, that afternoon will be Day One in all the books.”

NASL Commissioner Phil Woosnam gustily predicted that “In as few as five years, but in no more than 10, soccer will become the biggest pro sport in this country, bigger than football.”

Kornheiser, after also reviewing the remarkably rapid growth of youth soccer in the U.S. throughout the 1970s, concluded himself that “Soccer is…in the infant stage of a boom that may leave it unmatched among team sports in this country. It is no longer an “immigrant” sport but suddenly something as American as, say, baseball.”

Yet, there was one downbeat section to Kornheiser’s report: soccer was not, he noted, proving popular in the inner-cities, while it was generally most popular in cities not noted for their ethnic minorities. “The inner-city youth looks to high-paying professional sports such as basketball and football for upward mobility out of the ghetto,” Kornheiser observed, also saying awareness of the sport remained low in cities due to the lack of television coverage. In places where soccer was traditionally popular with ethnic groups, like Toronto and Chicago, NASL’s attendances couldn’t even reach four figures except for Pelé’s visits. Crowds across pro soccer were extraordinarily varied (in the NASL, from 34,150 in 1977 for the Cosmos down to 3,902 for the Connecticut Bicentennials).

While looking past the euphoria of 62,394 witnessing the Cosmos was hard to do, the future was perhaps not quite as shiny as it appeared in the magical summer of 1977 for North American soccer. “The coronation of professional soccer is premature,” Kornheiser wisely concluded.

- Tom Dunmore

#New York #Giants Stadium #New York Cosmos #Soccer #Football #New York Times #Tony Kornheiser #Sports #Large

yourweeklyfootballhistorylesson:

Beckenbauer, Pele and Chinaglia.
(via brittanyschray)

yourweeklyfootballhistorylesson:

Beckenbauer, Pele and Chinaglia.

(via brittanyschray)

(via pitchinvasion)

#New York Cosmos #New York #Soccer #Football #NASL #large

The first in a series of historical scans from Soccer America magazine. Founded in 1971, SA has been covering the news of the sport ever since, and XI co-editor David Keyes has been rooting through their archives. This first post looks at the state of the NASL heading into 1973, the New York Cosmos having won their first championship the season before.
Reproduced with the permission of Soccer America

The first in a series of historical scans from Soccer America magazine. Founded in 1971, SA has been covering the news of the sport ever since, and XI co-editor David Keyes has been rooting through their archives. This first post looks at the state of the NASL heading into 1973, the New York Cosmos having won their first championship the season before.

Reproduced with the permission of Soccer America

#Soccer America #Soccer #Football #Sports #History #Magazine #Archive #Journalism #NASL #large #New York Cosmos

RIP Giorgio Chinaglia. Greg Lalas on Giorgio’s legacy: “Chinaglia reminds us all that soccer has a history in the US.”

#soccer #Football #MLS #NASL #Giorgio Chinaglia #New York Cosmos