Season | May 31 – September 30 (regular season) October 4 – October 14 (playoffs) |
---|---|
Champions | St. Catharines Wolves |
Regular Season title | Toronto Olympians |
Matches played | 56 |
Goals scored | 270 (4.82 per match) |
Top goalscorer | Gus Kouzmanis (Toronto Olympians) |
Best goalkeeper | Dino Perri |
Biggest home win | Toronto Olympians 12-0 York Region Shooters (September 27, 1998) |
Biggest away win | Toronto Croatia 0-10 Toronto Olympians (August 19, 1998) |
Highest scoring | Toronto Olympians 12-0 York Region Shooters (September 27, 1998) |
1999 → |
The 1998Canadian Professional Soccer League season was the inaugural season under the Canadian Professional Soccer League name. The season began on May 31, 1998, and concluded on October 14, 1998, with the St. Catharines Wolves defeating the Toronto Olympians in 4-2 victory in a penalty shootout to claim the first CPSL Championship held at Centennial Park Stadium in Toronto, Ontario. [1] Though Toronto was denied the treble they still managed to go undefeated the entire regular season, and dominate the league with the best offensive and defensive record.
The CPSL was created by an alliance forged by the Ontario Soccer Association with the Canadian National Soccer League in order to implement the Image of the Game Report to provide a suitable professional soccer structure in Ontario and potentially throughout the country for the development of players and to serve as a preliminary league for the North American top tier leagues. During the initial stages of the formation of the league it faced certain difficulties as the schedule was finalized just two weeks prior kickoff. The scheduling problem revolved mainly around the status of Toronto Italia as it disagreed with the league's policy and territory rights. [2] Though they applied for membership it was challenged by Toronto Croatia over alleged debts being owned to them from the 1995 CNSL season. After refusing to pay the debt Italia withdrew and were refunded of its membership application fee, as a result the CPSL lost one of the country's most prestige clubs. [3] In addition the league received sponsorship from Adidas, Labatt, and Coffee Time. [4] [5]
After the demise of the Canadian Soccer League in 1992 Canada was without a Division I national professional league. The Canadian soccer landscape was fractured into several different foreign and regional senior leagues. [6] When the CSL ceased operations three of their clubs the Vancouver Whitecaps, Toronto Blizzard, and Montreal Supra joined the American Professional Soccer League, which at the time was constituted as the highest tier league in the Canadian soccer structure. [7] While the remaining clubs with the exception of London Lasers joined the National Soccer League the country's oldest and only exclusively Canadian professional league. [8] After the addition of the Winnipeg Fury it changed its name to the Canadian National Soccer League.
Though the CNSL was primarily based in Ontario it operated as a private league for several years after a heated dispute with the Ontario Soccer Association. [9] While other provinces operated with a top senior amateur league Ontario had its own senior league, but was without a sanctioned professional league for its amateur players as the CNSL was considered an outlaw league by the OSA. As a result the OSA completed a study named the Image of the Game in 1995/1996, which led to the plans of launching the Ontario Professional Soccer League as a Division III league in the Canadian soccer league system. [10] [11] As the OSA failed to bring their project to fruition they settled their differences with the CNSL and formed an alliance to launch the Canadian Professional Soccer League beginning with an Ontario division. [12]
The CPSL would serve as the link between the provincial senior leagues to the USL A-League/USISL clubs, and provide opportunities for the development of youth players and referees. [13] [14] The intention of the league was to form regional divisions under the CPSL banner with each divisional champion competing in a playoff format for the championship. Michael Di Biase the CNSL president would serve as the commissioner, and OSA administrator Bill Spiers was named the league's chairman. [15] The founding members included four CNSL clubs London City, North York Astros, St. Catharines Wolves, Toronto Croatia, and four of the OPSL teams Glen Shields, Mississauga Eagles, Toronto Olympians, and York Region Shooters. [16] While the remaining CNSL teams like Toronto Italia, Toronto Supra, and Kosovo Albanians failed in successfully applying for membership. [17]
The Canadian Professional Soccer League was formed as a result of merger between the OSA stillborn Ontario Professional Soccer League with the Canadian National Soccer League. The original purpose of the alliance was to provide young players an opportunity to embark on a professional career. Originally operated in Ontario with the intention of expanding nationally with a similar provincial setup. Some of these regulations included: [10] [12]
Team | City | Stadium | Manager |
---|---|---|---|
Glen Shields | Vaughan, Ontario (Thornhill) | Dufferin District Field | Ron Harrison [18] |
London City | London, Ontario (Westmount) | Cove Road Stadium | Harry Gauss [19] |
Mississauga Eagles P.S.C. | Mississauga, Ontario (Malton) | Wildwood Park | Josef Komlodi [20] |
North York Astros | Toronto, Ontario (North York) | Esther Shiner Stadium | Jorge Armua [21] |
St. Catharines Wolves | St. Catharines, Ontario (Vansickle) | Club Roma Stadium | Dino Perri [1] |
Toronto Croatia | Toronto, Ontario (Etobicoke) | Centennial Park Stadium | Rudolf Belin [20] |
Toronto Olympians | Toronto, Ontario (Scarborough) | Birchmount Stadium | David Gee [22] |
York Region Shooters | Aurora, Ontario (Aurora Village) | Highland Park | Sam Foti [23] |
Pos | Team | Pld | W | D | L | GF | GA | GD | Pts | Qualification |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Toronto Olympians (C) | 14 | 13 | 1 | 0 | 73 | 6 | +67 | 40 | Playoffs |
2 | St. Catharines Wolves (O) | 14 | 8 | 3 | 3 | 31 | 26 | +5 | 27 | |
3 | Glen Shields | 14 | 6 | 3 | 5 | 26 | 27 | −1 | 21 | |
4 | North York Astros | 14 | 6 | 1 | 7 | 34 | 30 | +4 | 19 | |
5 | York Region Shooters | 14 | 5 | 2 | 7 | 30 | 44 | −14 | 17 | |
6 | London City | 14 | 4 | 3 | 7 | 27 | 42 | −15 | 15 | |
7 | Mississauga Eagles P.S.C. | 14 | 3 | 1 | 10 | 29 | 44 | −15 | 10 | |
8 | Toronto Croatia | 14 | 2 | 4 | 8 | 20 | 51 | −31 | 10 |
Semifinals | Final | ||||||||||||
1 | Toronto Olympians | 5 | 2 | 7 | |||||||||
4 | North York Astros | 1 | 0 | 1 | |||||||||
1 | Toronto Olympians | 2 (2) | |||||||||||
4 | St. Catharines Wolves | 2 (4) | |||||||||||
2 | St. Catharines Wolves | 1 | 4 | 5 | |||||||||
3 | Glen Shields | 1 | 0 | 1 |
October 4, 1998 | North York Astros | 1–5 | Toronto Olympians | Toronto, Ontario |
7:30 ET | Alejandro Martinez 86' | (Report) | Stadium: Esther Shiner Stadium Attendance: 100 Referee: Glenn Sharkey (Ontario) |
October 4, 1998 | Glen Shields | 2–1 | St. Catharines Wolves | Thornhill, Ontario |
8:00 ET |
| (Report) | Tony Carbonara 86' | Stadium: Dufferin District Field Attendance: 80 Referee: Steve Mortimer (Ontario) |
Toronto Olympians advanced to the semi-final as a result of a 2-0 forfeit.
October 7, 1998 | Toronto Olympians | 2–0 | North York Astros | Toronto, Ontario |
8:00 ET | Stadium: Birchmount Stadium |
October 12, 1998 | St. Catharines Wolves | 4–0 | Glen Shields | St. Catharines, Ontario |
8:15 ET | Arghittu 8', 24', 36' Gary McGuchan 89' | [ [24] ] | Stadium: Club Roma Stadium Referee: Mike Cvetanovich |
Toronto Olympians | 2–2 | St. Catharines Wolves |
---|---|---|
Berdusco 58', 84' | Report |
|
Penalties | ||
2 – 4 |
|
|
Assistant referees: |
Position | Player | Nationality | Club | Goals |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Gus Kouzmanis | Canada | Toronto Olympians | 33 |
2 | Eddy Berdusco | Canada | Toronto Olympians | 19 |
3 | Gong Lei | China | Toronto Olympians | 17 |
4 | Gary McGuchan | Canada | St. Catharines Wolves | 15 |
5 | Ivan Jurisic | Serbia | North York Astros | 12 |
6 | Carlo Arghittu | Canada | St. Catharines Wolves | 12 |
Player | Club | Against | Result | Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ivan Jurisic | North York Astros | London City | 7–0 (H) | 2 August 1998 |
Gus Kouzmanis | Toronto Olympians | Toronto Croatia | 10–0 (A) | 19 August 1998 |
John Matas | Toronto Olympians | Toronto Croatia | 10–0 (A) | 19 August 1998 |
Peter Firebrace | Glen Shields Sun Devils | York Region Shooters | 4–3 (H) | 20 September 1998 |
Jerry Cipriani | St. Catharines Wolves | Toronto Croatia | 4–3 (A) | 23 September 1998 |
Gus Kouzmanis | Toronto Olympians | York Region Shooters | 12–0 (H) | 27 August 1998 |
The 1998 CPSL Executive Committee.
Position | Name | Nationality |
---|---|---|
Chairman | Bill Spiers | English |
Commissioner | Michael Di Biase | Canadian |
Committee Member | Peter Li Preti | Canadian |
Committee Member | Walter Kircher | Canadian |
Committee Member | Brian Avey | Canadian |
The CPSL presented their inaugural team awards on December 18, 1998 at the Soccer Centre in Woodbridge, Ontario. [22] The majority of the awards were taken by the former CNSL teams with North York Astros, St. Catharines Wolves, and London City receiving four awards. While the Toronto Olympians with London City won the most awards with two wins. After leading the Olympians to an undefeated regular season David Gee was named the Coach of the Year. The regular season champions had Gus Kouzmanis the 1996 CNSL Rookie of the Year win the Golden Boot. [29] For the third straight season London City managed to produce another Rookie of the Year with Tom Bianchi, and win the Fair Play award for being the most disciplined team..
The remainder of the awards went to North York, and St. Catharines with former CNSL veterans Dino Perri, and Rene Martin taking home the Goalkeeper and MVP awards. The league also gave recognition to the best official by introducing the Referee of the Year award with Bill Teeuwen being its first recipient.
Award | Player (Club) |
---|---|
CPSL Most Valuable Player | Rene Martin (North York Astros) |
CPSL Golden Boot | Gus Kouzmanis (Toronto Olympians) |
CPSL Goalkeeper of the Year Award | Dino Perri (St. Catharines Wolves) |
CPSL Rookie of the Year Award | Tom Bianchi (London City) |
CPSL Coach of the Year Award | David Gee (Toronto Olympians) |
CPSL Referee of the Year Award | Bill Teeuwen |
CPSL Fair Play Award | London City |
C.N.S.C. Toronto Croatia is a Canadian soccer team based in Toronto, Ontario, that plays in the Supergroup Open Division in the Canadian Academy of Futbol. The team's colours are red, white and blue, similar to those of the Croatian national football team.
Eddy Berdusco is a Canadian retired professional soccer player. A former forward, he began his career in the Canadian Soccer League, where he finished as the third all-time highest goalscorer. After the demise of the CSL he spent some time abroad in Europe, China, before returning to North America to play with the Milwaukee Rampage. Berdusco would spend the remainder of his career in the Canadian Professional Soccer League, winning several team championships with the Toronto Olympians, and retiring with the Toronto Supra in 2002.
The North York Astros were a Canadian soccer team that was founded in 1990. The team initially played in the National Soccer League. The team played their home games at Esther Shiner Stadium in North York, a district of the city of Toronto, Canada. The team's colours were orange and black. The club was originally named North York Atletico Argentina Soccer Club, and witnessed instant success in its initial stages. After a merger with North York Talons, and a relocation to Scarborough the team was eventually renamed the North York Astros. The Astros were a founding member of the Canadian National Soccer League's successor league the Canadian Professional Soccer League in 1998.
St. Catharines Roma Wolves, are a Canadian soccer team, founded in 1967. The team currently plays in the semi-professional League1 Ontario in both the men's and women's divisions. The club is a former member of the Canadian Soccer League (CSL), where it fielded a professional team from 1998 to 2013, and now operates youth teams in the Peninsula Soccer League. Teams play out of Club Roma in St. Catharines, Ontario in the Niagara Peninsula. The team's colours are dark red and white, mimicking those of the famous Italian club A.S. Roma.
The Glen Shields Sun Devils were a soccer team which played in the Canadian Professional Soccer League from 1998–2002. They played their home matches in Thornhill, Ontario. The franchise was one of the original teams of the CPSL. Originally founded as a youth soccer club, the youth club still continues to operate, now known as Glen Shields FC.
The Durham Storm were a Canadian soccer team that last played in the Canadian Professional Soccer League (CPSL) in 2005. The club was founded as the Toronto Olympians in 1998 and played in Toronto, Ontario through 2001, before being renamed the Mississauga Olympians for 2002 and 2003. The team relocated to Oshawa, Ontario in Durham Region for the 2004 & 2005 seasons and was renamed Durham Storm.
The 2003 Canadian Professional Soccer League season was the sixth season for the Canadian Professional Soccer League. The season began on May 24, 2003 and concluded on October 5, 2003 with the Brampton Hitmen defeating Vaughan Sun Devils 1-0 to capture the CPSL Championship. The victory marked Brampton's first championship title, and the final was played at Cove Road Stadium in London, Ontario. During the regular season the Ottawa Wizards and the Hamilton Thunder won their respective conferences. Ottawa became the second CPSL franchise to go undefeated throughout the regular season.
The 2001 Canadian Professional Soccer League season was the fourth season for the Canadian Professional Soccer League. The season began on May 25, 2001 and concluded on October 14, 2001 with St. Catharines Wolves defeating Toronto Supra by a score of 1-0 to win their second CPSL Championship. The final was hosted in St. Catharines with Club Roma Stadium as the venue, while the match received coverage from Rogers TV. The season saw the league expand to a total of 12 teams, and went beyond the GTA and Ontario border to include a Montreal and Ottawa franchise. Throughout the regular season the Ottawa Wizards became the first club to end the Toronto Olympians league title dynasty. The CPSL also launched the CPSL Soccer Show with Rogers TV providing the broadcasting, and granting Rogers naming rights to the CPSL Championship. Other major sponsors included the Government of Canada, which served as the sole sponsor for the CPSL Rookie of the Year Award. The league also announced a working partnership with the Canadian United Soccer League a task force originally started by the Canadian Soccer Association in order forge a unified professional structure with the cooperation of the Canadian franchises in the USL A-League to launch a Canadian first and second division domestic league.
The 2000 Canadian Professional Soccer League season was the third season under the Canadian Professional Soccer League name. The season began on May 26, 2000 and concluded on October 1, 2000 with Toronto Croatia defeating Toronto Olympians 2-1 to claim their first CPSL Championship. The final was hosted at Cove Road Stadium for the first time. Throughout the season, all eight clubs from the previous year returned, while the Olympians secured their third straight regular season title. The league received sponsorship from Primus Canada, which granted Primus naming rights to the CPSL Championship, and Vincent Ursini was appointed the CPSL Chairman.
The 1999 Canadian Professional Soccer League season was the second season under the Canadian Professional Soccer League name. The season began on May 28, 1999, and concluded on October 2, 1999, with Toronto Olympians defeating Toronto Croatia 2-0 to claim their first CPSL Championship. The Olympians made history by becoming the first club in the league's history to achieve a treble. For the second straight season, they went undefeated for the entire season. The league also introduced their first All-Star match where the CPSL All-Stars faced the CSA Development team.
Paul Moore is a Canadian former soccer player who played most notably in the USL A-League, National Professional Soccer League, and with various Canadian soccer leagues.
Salvatore Borgh is a Canadian former soccer player who played his entire career in Canadian Professional Soccer League, and the USL A-League.
Chris Handsor (born January 14, 1972) is a Canadian former soccer player who played outdoor and indoor primarily in the USL A-League, National Professional Soccer League, and the Canadian Professional Soccer League.
Gus Kouzmanis is a Canadian former soccer player who played in the National Professional Soccer League, and the Canadian Professional Soccer League.
Paulo Silva is a former Brazilian footballer and manager who played in Brazil, Canada, and served on the coaching staff with the Toronto Lynx in the USL A-League.
Leonardo Simon is a Canadian former soccer player who played in the National Professional Soccer League, Canadian National Soccer League, and the Canadian Professional Soccer League.
Gary Hughes is a Canadian former soccer player who played in the USISL Select League, and the Canadian Professional Soccer League.
Carlo Arghittu is a Canadian former soccer player and coach who played in the Canadian National Soccer League, National Professional Soccer League, USL A-League, and the Canadian Professional Soccer League.
Ervin Ryta is an Albanian former footballer who played in the Western Ontario Soccer League, USL A-League, and the Canadian Professional Soccer League.
The 1997 Canadian National Soccer League season was the seventy-fifth season for the Canadian National Soccer League. The season began on June 4, 1997, and concluded on October 8, 1997, with St. Catharines Roma Wolves defeating Toronto Supra in a two-game series for the CNSL Championship. While the league cup was awarded to Toronto Supra due to several irregularities on behave of Kosova Albanians.
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