Short name | TSS Rovers | ||
---|---|---|---|
Founded | 1997 2017 (semi-pro team) | ||
Stadium | Swangard Stadium Burnaby, British Columbia [n 1] | ||
Capacity | 5,288 | ||
Coordinates | 49°13′51″N123°01′16″W / 49.23083°N 123.02111°W | ||
Coach | Brendan Teeling (men) Kevin Booker (women) | ||
League | League1 British Columbia | ||
2024 | L1BC, 1st; Playoffs, Champions (men) L1BC, 4th; Playoffs, SF (women) | ||
Website | http://www.tssfc.ca/adult | ||
TSS FC Rovers, commonly referred to as TSS Rovers, are a Canadian soccer team based in Richmond, British Columbia, Canada that play in League1 British Columbia, the third tier of soccer in Canada. [n 1] Established for the 2017 PDL season by general manager Will Cromack and head coach Colin Elmes, the Rovers are the under-23 team of the TSS Academy, one of the largest soccer schools in British Columbia's Lower Mainland. [1]
TSS (Total Soccer Systems) Academy was founded in 1997, based in Richmond, British Columbia. [2]
In late 2016, TSS purchased the rights to the Premier Development League franchise of the Washington Crossfire, and in the spring of 2017 fielded their first squad. [3] [4] The club has a supporters group called the "Swanguardians," alluding to the Rovers' new home, Swangard Stadium, which was previously the home stadium of the Vancouver Whitecaps before the Caps joined the MLS. [4] The team has a stated policy of fostering Canadian talent, or players eligible for the Canadian men's national teams, stating every player must be "either a Canadian citizen, permanent resident or refugee or immigrant with an intent to one day wear the Maple Leaf." [5] [6]
In 2018 the women's team was founded to play in the WPSL. Notable signings included Canada WNT players Jordyn Huitema and Julia Grosso. [7] In 2018, the men's team signed its first non-Canadian, Dutchman Nick Soolsma, a former Toronto FC midfielder, as player-coach. [8]
The club competed with the Victoria Highlanders for the Juan de Fuca Plate, awarded annually to the best PDL/USL League Two club in British Columbia. [9] The Rovers won it in 2018 and 2019. [10]
In 2020, the club updated their logo to include a sword fern, a plant indigenous to coastal BC. [11]
On November 1, 2021, it was announced that the club would be playing in the inaugural season of League1 British Columbia. [12] In addition, TSS decided to emulate those German clubs that were partly owned by their fans, giving the fans voting rights and a say in the direction of the team. [13] [14] Fans will own 49% of the team through this initiative. [15] After finishing second in the league standings in their first season, the men's team went on to defeat Varsity FC on penalty kicks in the Championship Final, [16] thereby qualifying for the national 2023 Canadian Championship. [17]
TSS Rovers made their first appearance in the Canadian Championship on April 19, 2023, at Swangard Stadium, where they defeated Valour FC 3–1, becoming the first semi-pro team to knockout a professional team in Canadian Championship history. [18] [19] They were then defeated by another CPL club, Pacific FC, in the quarter-finals. [20] TSS Rovers would finish the 2023 League1 BC season in second place before falling to the eventual playoff winners, Whitecaps FC Academy, in the semi-finals.
On April 19, 2024, it was announced that TSS Rovers would participate in the 2024 Canadian Championship to replace Victoria Highlanders FC, who had withdrawn from the competition. [21] They were drawn against Pacific FC for the preliminary round, where they drew 1-1 in normal time, with Pacific scoring a game-tying goal in the eighth minute of extra time, before being defeated 5-4 in penalty kicks. [22] In 2024, the Rovers won the League1 BC regular season title, which qualified them for the 2025 Canadian Championship. [23] On August 4, 2024, TSS Rovers defeated Altitude FC 3-2 in the League1 BC playoff championship, making them the first team in League1 history to complete the league double. [24] [25]
The team is supported by The Swanguardians, a small group of supporters who stand at the south end of the pitch and support the team with banners, smoke displays, and original chants made primarily from Canadian songs. [26] [27] The group was formed in 2017 shortly after the founding of the team, and continues to support its former players in their college, professional, and national team careers on social media through their #AlwaysARover hashtag.
TSS Rovers participates in the Ironworkers Derby which is contested against Altitude FC. [28] The derby is so named due to the Ironworkers Memorial Bridge which connects the North Shore, where Altitude FC's home field is located, to the rest of Greater Vancouver. The two teams met in the 2024 League 1 Playoff Championship, where TSS Rovers came out on top and completed the double.
Men
No. | Pos. | Player | Nation |
---|---|---|---|
1 | GK | Justyn Sandhu | Canada |
2 | DF | Elijah Dos Santos | Canada |
3 | DF | Gabriel Escobar | El Salvador |
4 | DF | Benjamin Hultin | Canada |
5 | DF | Nicholas Burret | Canada |
6 | MF | Ali Zohar | Canada |
7 | MF | Connor MacMillan | Canada |
8 | MF | Ivan Mejia | Canada |
9 | FW | Massud Habibullah | Canada |
10 | MF | Matteo Polisi | Canada |
11 | FW | Erik Edwardson | Canada |
12 | DF | Grant Verhoeven | Canada |
13 | MF | Kyle Jones | Canada |
14 | MF | Tyler Dhillon | Canada |
15 | FW | John Joseph | Canada |
16 | DF | Naseeb Bains | Canada |
17 | MF | Danylo Smychenko | Ukraine |
18 | DF | Christopher Schmit | Canada |
19 | DF | Brennan Slawter | Canada |
20 | MF | Taylor Richardson | Canada |
21 | DF | Shaya Zarjampour | Canada |
24 | DF | Nikolas Papakyriakopoulos | Canada |
29 | DF | Fugo Segawa | Japan |
30 | GK | Ahmed Hassona | Canada |
Women
No. | Pos. | Player | Nation |
---|---|---|---|
— | GK | Mae Hobensheild | Canada |
— | GK | Julia McDonald | Canada |
— | GK | Kirstin Tynan | Canada |
— | DF | Cassie Chan | Canada |
— | DF | Jessica Fennell | Canada |
— | DF | Chantaya Ipsen | Canada |
— | DF | Reese Moffat | Canada |
— | DF | Molly Quarry | Canada |
— | DF | Brooklyn Tidder | Canada |
— | DF | Joanna Verzosa-Dolezal | Canada |
— | DF | Claire Ye | Canada |
— | MF | Kathleen Aitchison | Canada |
— | MF | Harmeet Dadrao | Canada |
— | MF | Stella Downing | Canada |
— | MF | Madi Elcombe | Canada |
— | MF | Ella Gagno | Canada |
— | MF | Megan Lauener | Canada |
— | MF | Jessica Merk | Canada |
— | MF | Maya Rogers | Canada |
— | MF | Shayla Chorney | Canada |
— | MF | Aislin Streicek | Canada |
— | FW | Raya Athwal | Canada |
— | FW | Katie Bishop | Canada |
— | FW | Isabella Muzzolini | Canada |
Year | Div | League | Record | Regular season | Playoffs | Juan de Fuca Plate [lower-alpha 1] | Canadian Championship | Top scorer | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2017 | 4 | USL League Two [lower-alpha 2] | 3–3–8 | 6th, Northwest | Did not qualify | Runner-up | Not eligible | Daniel Davidson (5) | [31] |
2018 | 5–2–7 | 4th, Northwest | Did not qualify | Winner | Zach Verhoven (5) | ||||
2019 | 3–2–9 | 6th, Northwest | Did not qualify | Winner | Matteo Polisi (6) | [32] | |||
2020 | Season cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic | ||||||||
2021 | Did not enter due to COVID-19 pandemic travel restrictions | ||||||||
2022 | 3 | League1 British Columbia | 6–4–2 | 2nd | Champions | 2nd | Not eligible | Erik Edwardson (10) | [33] |
2023 | 9–2–3 | 2nd | Semi-finals | 2nd | Quarter-finals | Massud Habibullah (8) | [33] | ||
2024 | 7–3–2 | 1st | Champions | 2nd | Preliminary round | Massud Habibullah (7) | [33] |
Year | League | Record | Regular season | Playoffs | Juan de Fuca Plate [lower-alpha 1] | Interprovincial Championship | Top scorer | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2018 | Women's Premier Soccer League | 3–2–2 | 4th, Northwest | – | – | N/A | Jenna Baxter (5) | [34] |
2019 | 4–0–4 | 5th, Northwest | – | – | [34] | |||
2020 | Season cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic | |||||||
2021 | Did not enter due to COVID-19 pandemic travel restrictions | |||||||
2022 | League 1 British Columbia | 6–3–3 | 4th | Did not qualify | 2nd | Did not qualify | Claire Ye (5) | [35] |
2023 | 6–3–5 | 4th | Semi-finals | 2nd | Did not qualify | Delana Friesen (7) | [35] | |
2024 | 5–2–5 | 4th | Semi-finals | 2nd | Did not qualify | Jenna Baxter (5) | [35] |
The following players have played at the professional or senior international level either before or after playing for the PDL/WPSL/L1BC team.
Men
Women
Major
Minor
Swangard Stadium is a multi-purpose stadium in Central Park in Burnaby, British Columbia. Primarily used for soccer, rugby, football, and athletics, the stadium also used to be home to the Simon Fraser Clan football team and the Vancouver Whitecaps while they were in the Canadian Soccer League (CSL) and various US-based Division 2 leagues. It opened on April 26, 1969, and has a capacity of 5,288.
Victoria Highlanders FC is a Canadian soccer team based in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. The club was founded in 2008.
Whitecaps FC Academy is the youth system of the professional soccer club Vancouver Whitecaps FC, based in Vancouver, British Columbia. It fields a men's and women's team in the semi-professional League1 British Columbia.
Nick Soolsma is a Dutch footballer.
The Juan de Fuca Plate is an annual trophy awarded by supporters to the best semi-professional team in the Canadian province of British Columbia. The trophy is currently awarded to the League1 British Columbia club who accrues the greatest number of combined points across the men's and women's divisions. From 2012 through 2019, it was awarded to the winner of the season series of matches played between British Columbian teams in the Premier Development League.
Matteo Mario Polisi is a Canadian professional soccer player who plays for TSS FC Rovers in League1 British Columbia.
League1 British Columbia (L1BC) is a semi-professional men's and women's soccer league in British Columbia, Canada. The league is sanctioned by the Canadian Soccer Association and the BC Soccer Association as a Division III Pro-Am league in the Canadian soccer league system.
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Gabriel Ricardo Escobar Flores is a Salvadoran professional footballer who plays for TSS FC Rovers in League1 British Columbia.
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