Jump to content

North American Soccer Football League: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
~~~~ added note about league presidents
1947 Season: ~~~~ add newspaper reference
Line 10: Line 10:


==1947 Season==
==1947 Season==
The [[1947 North American Soccer Football League season|1947 season]] featured a 30-match schedule from 6 April to 30 August, with all six teams scheduled to play 10 matches each. The champion Detroit Wolverines had dropped out of the league, while both the Detroit Pioneers and St. Louis Raiders were added to the league. The Pittsburgh Indians and Toronto Greenbacks finished tied for first place with 14 points each, thus requiring a two-match playoff to decide a champion. The two matches were played in October (after the Fall Season had started), with Pittsburgh winning both matches to claim the championship.
The [[1947 North American Soccer Football League season|1947 season]] featured a 30-match schedule from 6 April to 30 August, with all six teams scheduled to play 10 matches each. The champion Detroit Wolverines had dropped out of the league, while both the Detroit Pioneers and St. Louis Raiders were added to the league. The Pittsburgh Indians and Toronto Greenbacks finished tied for first place with 14 points each, thus requiring a two-match playoff to decide a champion. The two matches were played in October (after the Fall Season had started), with Pittsburgh winning both matches to claim the championship.<ref>https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=djft3U1LymYC&dat=19471013&printsec=frontpage&hl=en</ref>


==1947 Fall Season==
==1947 Fall Season==

Revision as of 02:56, 18 June 2018

The North American Soccer Football League, also known as the North American Football League,[1][2] was a soccer league that operated for two seasons, 1946 and 1947.

Fred Weiszmann was the league founder and first president in 1946 while Leslie O'Connor was the president in 1947 (as elected in December 1946).

Financial problems reduced the league to five teams in September 1947. The Maroons and Vikings of Chicago were replaced with the Chicago Tornadoes. The remaining teams were the St. Louis Raiders, Pittsburgh Indians, Toronto Greenbacks, and Detroit Pioneers. The Tornadoes were a combination of the best players from the old Vikings and Maroons.

1946 Season

The 1946 season featured a 20-match schedule from 7 June to 1 September, with all five teams playing eight matches each. The Detroit Wolverines clinched the title on 24 August after rivals Toronto lost their second-last match of the season. Toronto won their last game of the season over Detroit on 25 August, but still finished one point back in the standings. Detroit and Toronto were then scheduled to meet in a two-match playoff, with Toronto winning the first match on 21 September. Detroit claimed that they did not want to complete the series as they had already won the league's championship.

1947 Season

The 1947 season featured a 30-match schedule from 6 April to 30 August, with all six teams scheduled to play 10 matches each. The champion Detroit Wolverines had dropped out of the league, while both the Detroit Pioneers and St. Louis Raiders were added to the league. The Pittsburgh Indians and Toronto Greenbacks finished tied for first place with 14 points each, thus requiring a two-match playoff to decide a champion. The two matches were played in October (after the Fall Season had started), with Pittsburgh winning both matches to claim the championship.[3]

1947 Fall Season

After league meetings in July, the 1947 Fall season was scheduled to feature seven teams with the return of the Detroit Wolverines. The league decided against adding a team from Cleveland. By the time the season started in September, however, the revised schedule featured just four teams (without the Wolverines, Chicago Maroons, and Chicago Vikings). The league then added a fifth team, the new Chicago Tornadoes.

Champions

Teams from 1946 to 1947

Significant players

Sources

References

  1. ^ "London Lettre". Ottawa Citizen. 14 March 1947. Retrieved 24 October 2014.
  2. ^ "Pro. Soccer". Toronto Daily Star. 17 July 1947. p. 14.
  3. ^ https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=djft3U1LymYC&dat=19471013&printsec=frontpage&hl=en