Steve Ralbovsky

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Steve Ralbovsky
Personal information
Full name Steve Ralbovsky
Date of birth
Place of birth    Yugoslavia
Playing position Defender
Youth clubs
1972-1975 Brown University
Senior clubs1
Years Club App (Gls)*
1976
1977
1978
1979-1981
1982
1983
1988
Los Angeles Skyhawks
Chicago Sting
Colorado Caribou
Fort Lauderdale Strikers
Tulsa Roughnecks
Jacksonville Tea Men
Fort Lauderdale Strikers

10 (0)
23 (0)
61 (2)
21 (1)   
National team
1976-1978 United States 15 (0)

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

Steve Ralbovsky is a retired Yugoslavian-American soccer player. He was the 1975 Hermann Trophy winner as the outstanding collegiate soccer player of the year. He then had an extensive professional career including time in the North American Soccer League and the American Soccer League II and III.

Contents

[edit] High school and college

Ralbovsky played soccer at DeWitt Clinton High School in New York City. His excellent play led to his receiving the Public School Athletic League Iron Horse Pegasus Award in 1971-1972 for soccer.[1] After graduating from high school, he attended Brown University where he starred on the school’s men's soccer team. He played both defender and defensive midfielder. During his four seasons with the Bears (1972-1975), Brown dominated the Ivy League. Harvard had been the team to beat in years past, but beginning in 1972, Brown reeled off five straight Ivy League championships. In 1973 and 1975, the team made it to the NCAA Final Four, losing both times in the semi-finals. In 1973, they lost to St. Louis University and in 1975 to the University of San Francisco. Ralbovsky garned numerous individual awards during his time as at Brown. He was selected as All Ivy League in 1974 and 1975. In 1975, he was named as a first team All American, ironically enough as a forward; the NCAA Tournament Defensive MVP and the Hermann Trophy recipient as the year's outstanding collegiate soccer player.

[edit] Los Angeles Skyhawks

When Ralbovsky finished his four years at Brown, both the North American Soccer League and the de-facto second division American Soccer League (ASL) vied for his services. The Los Angeles Skyhawks of the ASL managed to lure him to the lower league with a higher compensation package then the NASL’s Los Angeles Aztecs offered him. Both the Skyhawks of the ASL and the Aztecs of the NASL had selected Ralbovsky with the number one pick in the leagues’ respective college drafts. Ralbovsky had an immediate impact on the Skyhawks as they ran away with the 1976 ALS championship, defeating the New York Apollo 2-1 in the title game. Ralbovsky was named joint Rookie of the Year with John Roeslein of the New Jersey Americans.

[edit] National team

That year, Ralbvosky also made his debut with the U.S. national team. He earned his first cap when he came on as a substitute in an October 3, 1976 scoreless tie with Mexico. He went on to play fifteen times with the national team, taking part in most of the team’s games in 1977 and 1978.

[edit] NASL

While Ralbovsky’s play with the Skyhawks brought him to the attention of the national team, he didn’t stick around to play a second season in Los Angeles. Instead, he jumped leagues to NASL where he joind the Chicago Sting for the 1977 season. Once again he played only a single season with his team before moving again, this time to the Colorado Caribous, also of the NASL, for the 1978 season. He moved yet again after only a single season, this time his last move, to the Fort Lauderdale Strikers. He played with the Strikers for three years, 1979-1981, as a left back. In 1979, he played only 11 games. However in 1980 and 1981, he became an integral part of the Strikers back line, playing 28 and 22 games per season. In 1980, the Strikers made it to the NASL championship game before losing to the New York Cosmos by a score of 3-0. In 1981, the Strikers again went deep in the playoffs before losing again to the Cosmos, this time in the semifinal game.

[edit] American Soccer League

After the 1981 season, Ralbovsky returned to the American Soccer League, this time for good. In 1983, he played for the league champion Jacksonville Tea Men which had jumped leagues from the NASL after the 1982 season. However, this was the last year for the American Soccer League as it folded at the end of the season. The NASL followed suit two years later. In 1988, the American Soccer League was reconstituted with the Fort Lauderdale Strikers back in existence. That year, Ralbovsky played one last season for the Strikers.