FC London

Last updated

FC London
FCLondonlogo2016.png
Full nameFootball Club London
Founded2008 (as Forest City London)
StadiumPortuguese Club of London
Capacity1,000
OwnerDave DeBenedictis
Head CoachYiannis Tsalatsidis (men)
Garett Peters (women)
League League1 Ontario
2023 League, 13th; Playoffs, DNQ (men)
League, 6th; Playoffs, SF (women)
Website Club website
Soccerball current event.svg Current season

FC London is a Canadian semi-professional soccer club based in London, Ontario that plays in the men's and women's divisions of League1 Ontario in the Canadian third tier. [1] The men's plays in League1 Ontario's second tier Championship division and the women's team play's in League1 Ontario's first tier Premier Division.

Contents

The team was founded in 2008 as Forest City London Soccer Club, and were a member of the Premier Development League from 2009 to 2015; they won the 2012 PDL title, their first championship during this time. They re-branded to FC London following their move to League1 Ontario in 2016, being officially named Football Club London.

In 2017, the club partnered with Toronto FC. FC London's youth teams were renamed London TFC, while the senior team retained the name FC London, but changed its colours to red to match those of Toronto FC.

History

The original Forest City London crest, used 2008-2015 Forestcitylondonlogo.gif
The original Forest City London crest, used 2008–2015

Founded in 2008, Forest City London joined the Premier Development League in 2009. [2] In their first season, they had to split home matches between four stadiums. [3] and played their first ever game on May 29, 2009, against Cleveland Internationals. [4] London won the game 2–1, with the first goal in franchise history being scored by Kevin Zimmermann. [5]

London's debut season was a generally positive one; they remained unbeaten over the course of their first ten games, winning seven games. London's first loss was a 3–1 drop to the Indiana Invaders at the beginning of July, and it initiated a complete reversal of fortune for the team. They did not win another game all season and dropped down the divisional standings. The team finished third in the Great Lakes Division, seven points behind divisional champions Kalamazoo, and faced off against Chicago Fire Premier in the first round of the playoffs. London lost their playoff match 1–0 to the Illinoisans on a goal by Andre Akpan. Kevin Zimmermann and Alan McGreal were London's top scorers in their debut season, with nine and seven goals respectively, while Anthony Di Biase contributed four assists.

They won the 2012 PDL Championship defeating Carolina Dynamo in the finals. [6] The won their first Great Lakes division title the following season. [7]

Club logo from 2016 to 2017 FC London 2016 logo.png
Club logo from 2016 to 2017

The club moved to League1 Ontario in 2016, adding teams in both the male and female divisions. [8] The club went under new ownership and were renamed Football Club London following the move to L1O. [9]

The women's team won the league title in the 2016 and 2017 seasons by winning the league division, while also winning the League Cup in 2017. [10] They won the league division again in 2018, but fell in the semi-finals in the new playoff format. [11] In 2019, they finished third in the regular season, but won the league championship, defeating Oakville Blue Devils in the playoff final. [12]

The men's team won the Western Conference in their debut season in L1O in 2016, but fell to Vaughan Azzurri in the championship final. [13] In 2018, they finished as regular season champions, but ultimately fell in the playoffs. [14] During the 2019 season, they defeated Alliance United in the two legged playoff semi-finals by a 15–0 aggregate score, after victories of 5–0 and 10–0 across the two legs, respectively, [15] before ultimately falling to Master's FA in the championship final. [16]

London TFC logo.jpg

In the latter part of 2017, the club became a partner of Major League Soccer club Toronto FC, with the club being renamed London TFC, although the senior side retained the name FC London, under which it still competes in L1O. [17] As part of the rebrand, FC London changed their club colours and logo to red to match those of Toronto FC. [18] [19] In 2022, the club changed ownership from Ian Campbell to a group led by Dave DeBenedictis, the director of the London TFC Academy. [20]

Squad

As of 16 April 2023 [21]

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

No.Pos.NationPlayer
GK Flag of Zimbabwe.svg  ZIM Darlington Murasiranwa
DF Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  CAN Lewis Dye
DF Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  CAN Kelsey Egwu
DF Flag of Italy.svg  ITA Gianmaria Fiore
DF Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  CAN Brandon Miranjie
DF Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  CAN Carson Wood
MF Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  CAN Ryan Baker
MF Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  CAN Kuhle Bekwayo
MF Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  CAN Nicholas Ferreira
MF Flag of Colombia.svg  COL Santiago Fonseca
MF Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  CAN Mateo Goldsztein Herrera
No.Pos.NationPlayer
MF Flag of the United States.svg  USA Jimmy Wilcox
MF Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  CAN Justin Wood
FW Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  CAN Samuel Barrowcliffe
FW Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  CAN Owura Boateng
FW Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  CAN Efosa Emovon
FW Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  CAN Scott Mazzotta
FW Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  CAN Mike Sneddon
Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  CAN David Bulos
Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  CAN Alexander Nagy

Former players

The following players have either moved on to the professional ranks after their time with FC London, or played professionally before joining the club.

Seasons

Men

SeasonLeagueRecordRegular seasonPlayoffsLeague CupCanadian ChampionshipRef
2009 Premier Development League 8–3–53rd, Great LakesDivisional Semifinalsnot eligible [22]
2010 10–1–52nd, Great LakesConference Semifinals [22]
2011 9–5–23rd, Great LakesConference Quarterfinals [22]
2012 7–5–42nd, Great LakesChampions [22]
2013 10–2–21st, Great LakesConference Final [22]
2014 6–4–44th, Great Lakesdid not qualify [22]
2015 9–4–13rd, Great LakesDivisional Playoff [22]
2016 League1 Ontario 15–2–51st, WestRunner-upRound of 16 [23]
2017 11–5–64th, Westdid not qualifyQuarter-finals [23]
2018 12–2–21st (overall)Group stageQuarter-finalsdid not qualify [23]
2019 8–1–67th (overall)Runner-updid not qualify [23]
2020 Season cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic [24]
2021 8–0–43rd, Westdid not qualifydid not qualify
2022 2–4–1522nddid not qualifydid not qualify
2023 6–7–713thdid not qualifydid not qualify

Women

SeasonLeagueTeamsRecordRankPlayoffsLeague CupRef
2016 League1 Ontario 914–0–2ChampionsSemi-finals [25]
2017 1115–3–2ChampionsChampions [25]
2018 1311–1–01stSemi-finalsQuarter-finals [25]
2019 147–3–33rdChampions [25]
2020 Season cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic [24]
2021 79–2–11stSemi-finals [25]
2022 2013–2–44thSemi-finals [25]
2023 199–5–46thSemi-finals [25]

Honours

Head coaches

Stadium history

Average attendance

Attendance [26]

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References

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