Frank McKenna (footballer)

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Frank McKenna
Personal information
Date of birth
Place of birth    Scotland
Playing position Wing Forward
Senior clubs1
Years Club App (Gls)*

1920
1920-1921
1921-1922
1922-1923
1923-1926
1926-1927
1927-1928
1928
1928
1928-1929
Vale of Leven
Bethlehem Steel
Robins Dry Dock
Todd Shipyards
Paterson Silk Sox
Fall River Marksmen
Indiana Flooring
New York Nationals
Fall River Marksmen
Providence Clamdiggers
J&P Coats



20 (15)
14 (14)
74 (20)
31 0(8)
20 0(2)
02 0(0)
03 0(0)
16 0(2)   

1 Senior club appearances and goals
counted for the domestic league only.
* Appearances (Goals)

Frank McKenna (born Scotland) was a Scottish football Wing Forward who began his career in Scotland before playing eight seasons in the American Soccer League.

McKenna began his career with Vale of Leven F.C. in the Scottish Football League Second Division. In the spring of 1919, he briefly joined Bethlehem Steel F.C. of the National Association Football League (NAFBL) after the completion of the 1918-1919 season. However, he left the team before the start of the 1919-1920 season. In May 1920, he rejoined Bethlehem Steel for the last few games of the season.[1] He then moved to Brooklyn Robins Dry Dock for the 1920-1921 season. The move to Robins paid off when Dry Dock took the 1921 National Challenge Cup title. In 1921, several teams from the NAFBL merged with teams from the Southern New England Soccer League to form the first American Soccer League. While Robins intended to move to the new league, the parent corporation, Todd Shipyards consolidated Robins with another of the company’s teams, Tebo Yacht Basin F.C., to form the Todd Shipyards team. Therefore, McKenna spent the the 1921-1922 season with Todd. McKenna went to his second National Challenge Cup, but was on the losing side this time. Following that loss, the company withdrew the team from the league and McKenna moved to Paterson Silk Sox where he scored a goal a game in both league and cup play. Once again, he went to the National Challenge Cup, winning his second title as he assisted on John Hemingsley tying goal in the 84th minute. McKenna finished the season with the Fall River Marksmen, one of the perennial powers in the ASL. During his three seasons in Fall River, McKenna won three league titles and yet another National Challenge Cup. In 1925, he began the season with the Marksmen but finished it with Indiana Flooring. In 1927, Indiana Flooring was renamed the New York Nationals. McKenna played sixteen games with the Nationals, then moved back to the Marksmen for two games before moving to the Providence Clamdiggers for three games. He finished his ASL career with J&P Coats in 1928-1929. [2]

[edit] References

  1. ^ May 17, 1920 The Globe
  2. ^ Jose, Colin (1998). American Soccer League, 1921-1931 (Hardback), The Scarecrow Press. (ISBN 0-8108-3429-4).