Vancouver Whitecaps (NASL)

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This article is about the defunct Vancover Whitecaps team from the North American Soccer League. For the current USL team, see Vancouver Whitecaps (USL).
Vancouver Whitecaps
Vancouver Whitecaps
Full name Vancouver Whitecaps
Nickname(s) The 'Caps
Founded 1974
Dissolved 1984
Ground Empire Stadium
BC Place
(Capacity 30,000 (Empire)
60,000 (BC))
League North American Soccer League
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Home colours
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Away colours
Original NASL Whitecaps Logo
Original NASL Whitecaps Logo

The original Vancouver Whitecaps were founded on December 11, 1973 and during the 1970s and 1980s played in the North American Soccer League (NASL). The Whitecaps achieved good success, winning the 1979 Soccer Bowl. The Whitecaps of that era included international players such as Alan Ball, but also "home grown" stars like Bobby and Sam Lenarduzzi, Buzz Parsons, and Glen Johnson. In 1979 the team from the "Village of Vancouver" (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, they triumphed against the Tampa Bay Rowdies in a disappointed New York City.

It was during this short period that soccer interest peaked in Vancouver. The Whitecaps attendance at Empire Stadium grew to regular sellouts, at 32,000. The team also recorded two tracks, with "White is the Colour" becoming a hit on local radio during the run-up to their championship win.

After playing at Vancouver's 32,000 seat Empire Stadium for most of their existence, the team moved into the cavernous 60,000 seat BC Place Stadium in 1983. Although the novelty of the stadium drew capacity crowds for the first few games, attendance waned quickly, due to the declining league and, in the opinion of many fans, the harsh environment of the domed stadium.

With the subsequent demise of the NASL, in 1984 the Whitecaps, along with many other teams in the NASL, were forced to fold.

Contents

[edit] Honours

[edit] Statistics

Year League W L T Pts Reg. Season Playoffs
1974 NASL 5 11 4 70 4th, Western Division Did not qualify
1975 NASL 11 11 99 4th, Pacific Division Did not qualify
1976 NASL 14 10 120 3rd, Pacific Conference, Western Division Lost 1st Round (Seattle)
1977 NASL 14 12 1s4 2nd, Pacific Conference, Western Division Lost Division Championship (Seattle)
1978 NASL 24 6 199 1st, National Conference, Western Division Won 1st Round (Toronto)
Lost Conference Semifinal (Portland)
1979 NASL 20 10 172 1st, National Conference, Western Division Won Conference Quarterfinal (Dallas)
Won Conference Semifinal (Los Angeles)
Won Conference Championship (New York)
Won Soccer Bowl '79 (Tampa Bay)
1979/80 NASL Indoor Did not enter
1980 NASL 16 16 139 3rd, National Conference, Western Division Lost 1st Round (Seattle)
1980/81 NASL Indoor 11 7 1st, Northern Division Won 1st Round (California)
Lost Semifinal (Edmonton)
1981 NASL 21 11 186 1st, Northwest Division Lost 1st Round (Tampa Bay)
1981/82 NASL Indoor 10 8 2nd, National Conference, Northwest Division Lost 1st Round (San Diego)
1982 NASL 20 12 160 3rd, Western Division Lost 1st Round (San Diego)
1979/80 NASL Indoor Season cancelled
1983 NASL 24 6 187 1st, Western Division Lost 1st Round (Toronto)
1983/84 NASL Indoor 12 20 5th Did not qualify
1984 NASL 13 11 117 2nd, Western Division Lost Semifinal (Chicago)

[edit] Attendance

The record home attendance for a Whitecaps game was on June 20, 1983. 60,342 came to watch the caps take on the Seattle Sounders in the first game at BC Place Stadium. It is also the largest crowd to ever see a club soccer match in Canada.

[edit] NASL average attendance

  • 1974 10,098
  • 1975 7,579
  • 1976 8,656
  • 1977 11,897
  • 1978 15,724
  • 1979 22,962
  • 1980 26,834
  • 1981 23,236
  • 1982 18,251
  • 1983 29,164
  • 1984 15,208

[edit] Notable Former Players

[edit] NASL era

[edit] See also