San Francisco Seals (soccer)

San Francisco Seals
Full name San Francisco Seals
Nickname(s) The Seals
Founded 1985 as San Francisco United Soccer Club 501c3
Stadium Negoesco Stadium USISL and Kezar Stadium A-League
Ground Capacity 3,000 USF 10,000 Kezar
Chairman United States Tom Simpson
Manager Tom Simpson 1985-2006, 2008; Paul Aigbogun 2007; San Simpson 2009 to present
League USISL 1992-1995, USISL Pro D3 1996-1997, A-League 1998-1999, PDL 2006-2008
Website [Seals Website Club home page]

San Francisco Seals began as the senior team of the San Francisco United Soccer Club founded in 1985, a 501c3. The club is based in San Francisco, California.In 1992, the SFUSC youth team started playing as the "All Blacks" in the top tier of the USISL when CYSA, the governing body of youth soccer closed the youth program by blocking the movement of players across boundaries. The team played its home games at Negoesco Stadium on the campus of the University of San Francisco. The team's colors were black, red and white. After the first season and for five straight seasons the Seals dominated soccer on the West Coast winning 5 division titles, 3 regional titles and went to 3 national championship finals. In 1997 the Seals was called the "Team of the Year" by USA today after beating the Seattle Sounders, the Kansas City Wiz (now Sporting), and the San Jose Clash (now Earthquakes) in the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup. The Seals continued in the A-League until 2000 when the franchise stopped professional soccer and returned to youth development. The Seals continued as members of the Y-League and expanded their youth development to include college level players in 2006 by entering the PDL. Since 2009 the Seals have concentrated on youth development from U6 to U23 soccer.

History

Early Years

The San Francisco United Soccer Club (SFUSC) was first organized as a youth soccer club in 1985. Drawing on talented players from throughout the Bay Area, SFUSC soon became a "super club" and a dominant force in California state youth soccer. In 1990 SFUSC won the California Youth Soccer Associations (CYSA) state championship. It then continued on to take the Region IV title which put it into the National "McGuire Cup" final. However, the rise of "super clubs" such as SFUSC sparked a counter reaction from smaller Northern California youth teams and in 1992 CYSA-North implemented rules to block SFUSC from competition. Faced with this opposition, the SFUSC decided to forsake the traditional path to amateur success, through the state competitions, and enter a team in the U.S. Interregional Soccer League (USISL), the forerunner of today's United Soccer Leagues.

Early San Francisco Bay Seals logo

In 1992, the SFSCU formed its team, known as the San Francisco All-Blacks based on its all black uniform, and entered it in the USISL. After an initial 7-7 season with U19 players, the team rapidly excelled in the face of stiff national-level competition. In 1993, 1994 and 1995, the All Blacks, now known as "The Seals," took first place in the Pacific Conference, won the regionals in 1995, and went to the National Championship in Richmond . In 1996, the club changed the team's name to the San Francisco Bay Seals." They won the Western Conference Division in 1996 and 1997, the Regional Title in 1996 and 1997, and went to the National Championships both years. In 1998, the Seals moved up to the A-League. In 2000, SFSCU sold the team to new ownership, which renamed the team the Bay Area Seals. However, the Seals lasted only to the end of the 2000 season before folding.

The Seals were division champions three times, in 1994, 1995 and 1997. In 1997, the Seals made an incredible and historic run to the semi finals of the US Open Cup. After winning the D3 US Open Cup, the Seals knocked out the Seattle Sounders. They then took out two Major League Soccer clubs. First came the Kansas City Wiz in the round of 16, and then the San Jose Clash in the quarter finals at the Clash's home field, Spartan Stadium. The Seals' Cinderella run through higher division clubs came to an end in the semi-finals when they lost 2-1 to D.C. United.

Resurrection in the PDL

Then, in 2006, after a six-year gap, the original club owners resurrected the senior team, this time as a franchise in the PDL as the San Francisco Seals. Their first year back in competition was fairly decent - four wins in their first six games, including a comprehensive 3-1 over California Gold - left the team well in contention for the playoffs as the second half of the campaign began. However, a disappointing run of results in the latter half of 2007, including a winless streak of 5 games from mid-June to early July saw the team slip down the table, eventually finishing 6th. The end of the season was enlivened by a staggering 8-1 victory over California Gold that featured a brace by Luke Sassano. Jose Diaz and Peruvian striker John Colan were the team's top scorers, notching 13 goals between them, while Shani Simpson contributed 4 assists.

2007 was a similar seesaw season of disappointing inconsistency for the Seals, when victory following defeat following victory following defeat all year long - this despite the presence of former Manchester City defender Danny Warrender marshalling the back line. The Seals did enjoy a comprehensive 3-1 victory over Orange County Blue Star in July, but failed to overcome their Bay Area rivals San Jose Frogs in their two-game series, losing 2-0 in San Jose in June, and losing 2-0 at home in their season finale. The Seals eventually finished a comfortable mid-table 6th; Anton Peterlin and Keith Ratzberg were joint top scorers with 3 goals each, while Richard Halvorsen registered 3 assists.

The Seals began 2008 in fine form, picking up four wins in their first six games, including 3-2 opening day victory over Fresno Fuego that featured a brace from Kellan Wilson, and a come-from-behind victory over Orange County Blue Star which again saw Wilson increase his goal tally by two. They only just missed out on qualifying for the US Open Cup, beaten by a similarly fast-starting Los Angeles Legends, but suffered a down-turn in form in June, picking up just one win (2-0 away to Southern California Seahorses) and suffering a desperate last-minute loss away at Los Angeles Legends. It was this inconsistency which ultimately cost the Seals a place in the post-season; after three back to back wins in July, including a nailbiting 3-2 win over Lancaster Rattlers, nerves set in; a 3-0 final day loss to San Jose Frogs when a win was required proved to be the ultimate nail in the coffin. They eventually finished the season in 4th, just two points out of the playoffs. Kellan Wilson and Peter Lovell were joint top scorers with six goals each.

In December 2008 the Seals announced that, due to the folding of their local competition the San Jose Frogs, and the state of the economy, they would not be fielding a PDL team in 2009.[1]

Players

Seals Hall of Fame Team

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
1 United States Eduardo Yoldi
19 United States CJ Brown
3 United States Tim Weaver
14 United States Angelo Sablo
No. Position Player
9 United States Shani Simpson
10 United States Kenny Folan
6 United States Chris Davini
7 United States Rob Gallo
5 United States Joe Enochs
23 United States Kimtai Simpson
10 United States Shane Watkins
15 United States Marquis White

Notable former players

Year-by-year

Year Team Name Division League Regular Season Playoffs Open Cup
1992 San Francisco All Blacks N/A USISL 3rd, Pacific Did not qualify Did not enter
1993 San Francisco All Blacks N/A USISL 3rd, Pacific Divisional Finals Did not enter
1994 San Francisco United All Blacks 3 USISL 1st, Pacific Divisional Semifinals Did not enter
1995 San Francisco United All Blacks N/A USISL Premier League 1st, Pacific 3rd Place Did not qualify
1996 San Francisco Bay Seals 4 USISL Premier League 2nd, Western Northern Final Did not qualify
1997 San Francisco Bay Seals 3 USISL D-3 Pro League 1st, West Semifinals Semifinals
1998 San Francisco Bay Seals 2 USISL A-League 6th, Pacific Did not qualify Did not qualify
1999 San Francisco Bay Seals 2 USL A-League 6th, Pacific Did not qualify Did not qualify
2000 Bay Area Seals 2 USL A-League 5th, Pacific Conference Quarterfinals Did not qualify
2001–2005 On Hiatus
2006 San Francisco Seals 4 USL PDL 4th, Southwest Did not qualify Did not qualify
2007 San Francisco Seals 4 USL PDL 6th, Southwest Did not qualify Did not qualify
2008 San Francisco Seals 4 USL PDL 4th, Southwest Did not qualify Did not qualify

Honors

Head coaches

Stadiums

The Seals' last stadium, Negoesco Stadium

Average Attendances

External links

References

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