Eastern Canada Professional Soccer League

Last updated
Eastern Canada Professional Soccer League
Founded1961
CountryCanada
Confederation NAFC
Number of teamsHigh of 6, Low of 4

The Eastern Canada Professional Soccer League was a soccer league in Canada. The league operated for six seasons from 1961 to 1966 across four cities in two Canadian provinces and one American state. In the 1960s, the Eastern Canada Professional Soccer League was one of four major leagues in Canadian soccer alongside the Pacific Coast League, the Western Canada Soccer League, and the National Soccer League of Ontario/Quebec. [1]

Contents

The league was founded in 1961 by George Gross and Peter Bosa. [2] According to Gross, the genesis for the league was formed from a conversation the two men had during the Christmas 1960 holidays. Bosa promised the inclusion of his club Toronto Italia (champions of the National Soccer League) and arranged for the inclusion of the Hamilton Steelers (backed by John Agro and Arnold Martini); Gross helped form Toronto City FC (with Ed Fitkin, Steve Stavro and Laddie Myslivec) and arranged for the inclusion of Montréal Cantalia FC (run by Dr. Ernest Stastny).

The league was officially launched on 30 March 1961 at a press conference in Toronto with Sarto Marchand the league's first president and William Simpson as the league's secretary. Harold Ballard, initially the league's executive vice-president, succeeded Marchand as league president and held the position until March 1964. Simpson thereafter served as league president (1964) and then Chairman (1965 and 1966). After six seasons, the Eastern Canada Professional Soccer League amalgamated with the National Soccer League on 20 December 1966. [3] [4]

The league typically operated from May to September, which initially allowed Canadian clubs to sign European-based players for the summer season. In the first year, stars like Danny Blanchflower, Stanley Matthews and Johnny Haynes all joined the new league for part of the 1961 summer season, then returned to England for the 1961-62 Football League season. The practice proved unpopular with European clubs, prompting British clubs to ban their players from traveling to Canada to join the rival league. On 19 April 1962, FIFA ruled that players could not switch clubs without a proper transfer. [5]

Champions

In each season, there was both a regular-season champion and playoff champion. The regular-season champions managed to win the playoff championship only twice in six years (1963 and 1964).

Champions

YearPresident's Cup Playoff ChampionsPlayoff Runners-upRegular season league winners
1961Montréal Cantalia FC Toronto Italia FC Toronto City SC
1962 Toronto Italia FC Toronto City FC Toronto Roma FC
1963 Toronto Italia FC Montréal Cantalia FC Toronto Italia FC
1964 Toronto City FC Toronto Italia FC Toronto City FC
1965 Toronto Italia Falcons Primo Hamilton FC Montréal Italica
1966Toronto Inter Roma Toronto Italia FC Toronto Italia FC

Titles

TeamPlayoff championshipsRegular season championshipsTotal championships
TitlesYearsTitlesYears
Toronto Italia FC / Italia Falcons 31962, 1963, 196521963, 19665
Toronto City FC 1196421961, 19643
Toronto Roma FC / Inter-Roma11966119622
Montréal Cantalia FC1196101
Montréal Italica0119651

1961 season

The 1961 season featured a 48-match schedule from 14 May to 20 September, with all four teams playing 24 matches each. Matches were played at Varsity Stadium in Toronto, Civic Centre in Hamilton, and Stade Delorimier in Montréal. Hamilton Steelers won the league's opening match 2-1, although it was Montréal Cantalia's Ismael Ferreyra who scored the league's first goal in the 14 May opener. [6] An all-star match was played on 4 September featuring stars from Toronto's two teams against stars from Hamilton-Montréal. The regular season was then followed by two rounds of playoffs from 21 September to 9 October.

1962 season

The 1962 season featured a 60-match schedule from 5 May to 9 August, with five teams playing 24 matches each. Montréal Cantalia, the 1961 playoff champions, withdrew from the league, as did proposed entries Ukraina and Hungária SC from the same city. [7] Toronto Roma FC and Buffalo White Eagles were both added. With Buffalo in the league, this was the first and only season in which matches were played outside of Canada. The regular season was followed by two rounds of playoffs from 12 to 18 August (one match per series).

1963 season

The 1963 season featured a 74-match schedule from 5 May to 1 September, with six teams playing up to 25 matches each. Montréal Cantalia rejoined the league, Ukraina Montréal were added, [8] while Buffalo dropped out. The regular season was followed by two rounds of playoffs from 4 to 18 September.

1964 season

The 1964 season featured a 60-match schedule from 3 May to 26 August, with five teams playing up to 24 matches each. Ukraina Montréal dropped out while Cantalia were replaced by Montréal Italica. A league all-star team played touring Heart of Midlothian F.C. on 5 June in Toronto. The regular season was followed by two rounds of playoffs from 29 August to 13 September.

1965 season

The 1965 season featured a 60-match schedule from 5 May to 5 September, with five teams playing 24 matches each. In the second half of the season, Wednesday night matches at Varsity Stadium were broadcast live through a television deal with O'Keefe beer. The regular season was followed by two rounds of playoffs from 8 to 22 September.

1966 season

The 1966 season featured a 48-match schedule from 8 May to 28 August, with four teams playing 24 matches each. Toronto City, one of the league's original teams, withdrew from the league in January. The regular season was followed by two rounds of playoffs from 31 August to 7 September (one match per series).

Teams from 1961 to 1966

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References

  1. "2018 Canada Soccer Records & Results".
  2. Jose, Colin (2001). On-Side - 125 Years of Soccer in Ontario. Vaughan, Ontario: Ontario Soccer Association and Soccer Hall of Fame and Museum. p. 192.
  3. Waring, Ed (December 21, 1966). "Semi-pro soccer: ECPSL decides to amalgamate with National". The Globe and Mail . p. 30.
  4. "Soccer leagues join together in 10-team loop". The Globe and Mail . February 20, 1967. p. 21.
  5. "The Montreal Gazette - Google News Archive Search". news.google.com.
  6. "The Montreal Gazette - Google News Archive Search". news.google.com.
  7. "The Montreal Gazette - Google News Archive Search". news.google.com.
  8. "The Montreal Gazette - Google News Archive Search". news.google.com.