Metropolitan Oval
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The Metropolitan Oval, also known as Met Oval, is a soccer complex located in Maspeth, Queens in New York City. Village Voice named the complex, which takes up 4.2 acres, the "Best full soccer field in the middle of a residential neighborhood" in 2004, for its "pristine" playing surface and the view of the Manhattan skyline.[1]
[edit] History
The Metropolitan Oval was originally built in 1925 by German and Hungarian immigrants to be a European style soccer field with facilities. From 1925 onwards, the Oval served as a soccer field for men and boys of all ages and ethnicities. Many U.S. national team players from the New York region played games at the Oval while youths.
By the 1990s, however, the Oval was in a state of disarray. Any grass the field once had was gone from overuse. It owed hundreds of thousands of dollars in back taxes and was scheduled for foreclosure by the city.[2]
In response to this state of affairs, the Metropolitan Oval Foundation was formed to save this historic site. The non-profit organization led by Jim Vogt, a longtime Queens native, and Chuck Jacob and Valerie Jacob, two New York lawyers dedicated to the restoration of historic soccer fields across the city, raised enough money to save the field from foreclosure. In addition, Nike and U.S. Soccer Foundation each contributed $250,000 towards the construction of a FieldTurf field and new lights for the complex.[3]FIFA president Sepp Blatter, who visited the Met Oval in November 2001 after the field was resurfaced, called FieldTurf the "future of football".[2]
Currently, the Oval hosts 15-20 games a week from March to November on the field; more than any other facility in New York City. The Brooklyn Knights teams, ranging from U-10 to U-23 (their PDL franchise), and various New York City college soccer teams call the Met Oval their home.
[edit] References
- ^ Malone, Michael. "Best full soccer field in the middle of a residential neighborhood - METROPOLITAN OVAL", Village Voice, 2004.
- ^ a b Lewis, Michael. "Historic field sees 21st century future", FIFA.com, November 20, 2001.
- ^ Nike Inc. (May 18, 2001). "Metropolitan Oval Again Gleams as New York City Soccer Icon". Press release.
[edit] External links
- Metoval.org
- Hernandez, Raymond. "Newcomers Revive Old Soccer Haven", The New York Times, May 5, 1994.
- Satellite image at Google Maps
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