Puerto Rico United

Last updated
Puerto Rico United
Puerto Rico United Logo.JPG
Full namePuerto Rico United Sporting Club
Nickname(s)PR United
Founded2007
Stadium Aguada Stadium
Aguada, Puerto Rico
Capacity4,000
Owner Raul Blanco
Head Coach Jose Sanchez
2011 (PRSL)4th (disqualified)
Website Club website

Puerto Rico United is a Puerto Rican association football team based in Aguada, Puerto Rico founded in 2007. The team has played professionally in the Puerto Rico Soccer League (PRSL) and briefly in the American USL Professional Division. The team last competed in a professional league in 2011.

Contents

The team's colors are lime green, silver, white and black. As of 2011, the team played its home games at Aguada Stadium.

History

Puerto Rico United was founded in 2007. Beginning in 2010, they played in the Puerto Rico Soccer League (PRSL). [1]

In 2011, they joined two other Puerto Rican clubs, River Plate Puerto Rico and Sevilla FC Puerto Rico, as well as 11 American clubs and one Antiguan club to compete in the inaugural season of the U.S.-based USL Professional Division. [1] However, the Puerto Rican clubs quickly encountered issues due to poor attendance and high travel expenses. In May 2011, less than two months into the season, all three Puerto Rican teams were removed from the league. [2]

The three teams then returned to play in the PRSL for the remainder of the 2011 season. The PRSL was also experiencing financial troubles, and the 2011 season included just six teams and ran from April to July. PR United finished in 4th place during regular season play, and was set to compete in the league's playoffs. However, on July 25, 2011, the PRSL suspended PR United from the tournament. According to a Puerto Rico football blog, the club was suspended for violating Puerto Rican Football Federation regulations following rumors that the club's coach lacked a work visa. Mayagüez FC, the 5th place team, took PR United's slot in the tournament. [3]

As their financial difficulties continued, PRSL cancelled the 2012 season. In 2013, the Liga Nacional de Fútbol de Puerto Rico (LNFPR), which had previously been considered a second division league, replaced PRSL as the top active league in Puerto Rico. [4] Puerto Rico United was set to join LNFPR in 2016.[ citation needed ] However, the league suspended operations after its 2015 season. [4]

As of January 2020, Puerto Rico United's website remains active, and includes records of the club participating in a tournament in 2018 as well as the 9th annual Coca-Cola Cup in early 2019. [5]

Stadium

Record

Year-by-year

YearDivisionLeague Puerto Rico Soccer League.Regular SeasonPlayoffsU.S. Open Cup
2010PRSL3rd, Group BDid not qualifyN/A
20113

Related Research Articles

Puerto Rico Islanders Association football club

The Puerto Rico Islanders were a professional association football team based in Bayamón, Puerto Rico. They played in several different leagues from 2004 to 2012, when they suspended operations. In their last two seasons they played in the North American Soccer League (NASL), the second tier of the American soccer pyramid. They played their home games at Juan Ramón Loubriel Stadium. The team's colors were orange and white. They are succeeded by Puerto Rico FC.

Petter Villegas is an Ecuadorian-born Puerto Rican footballer who played for Puerto Rico Islanders in the North American Soccer League.

Club Atlético River Plate Puerto Rico Association football club based in Fajardo, Puerto Rico

Club Atlético River Plate Puerto Rico is a Puerto Rican professional association football team based in Fajardo, Puerto Rico. Founded in 2007, the team plays in the Puerto Rico Soccer League, and is the reigning Supercopa DirecTV champion.

The Puerto Rico Soccer League or PRSL is an association football league in Puerto Rico founded in 2008 and the first unified football league in the island's history. Association football had been growing in popularity in recent years, and this was an attempt to further develop the game on the island. The previous highest league in the country was the Campeonato Nacional de Fútbol de Puerto Rico. It shares Division I status with Liga Nacional de Fútbol de Puerto Rico.

Sevilla FC Puerto Rico Association football club based in Juncos, Puerto Rico

Sevilla FC Puerto Rico was a Puerto Rican professional association football team based in Juncos, Puerto Rico. Founded in 2006, the team used to play in the Puerto Rico Soccer League. The club was founded in 2006 as a farm team for the Puerto Rico Islanders of the North American Soccer League in Bayamón, but in 2008 partnered with the Spanish La Liga club Sevilla FC and moved a year later to Juncos. Sevilla won both the regular season and play-offs in the inaugural season of the Puerto Rico Soccer League in 2008, and also won the regular season in 2011 before losing the play-off final on penalties to Leones.

Bayamón Fútbol Club Association football club based in Bayamón, Puerto Rico

Bayamón Fútbol Club is a Puerto Rican football club. The team is based in Bayamón and founded in 1999. They play their home games at Bayamón Soccer Complex. The club is a member of David Villa's DV7 Soccer Academy.

The PRSL PlayOffs Cup is the annual championship tournament of the Puerto Rico Soccer League. The winner gets an automatic bid to CFU Club Championship.

The Puerto Rico Soccer League Regular Season Cup, first played in 2008, is an annual league competition for Puerto Rico Soccer League. The top four teams advance to the PlayOff cup.

Antigua Barracuda FC Former association football club in Antigua and Barbuda

Antigua Barracuda were an Antiguan professional football team based in St. John's, Antigua and Barbuda. Founded in 2010, the team played in USL Pro, the third tier of the United States soccer league system from 2011 to 2013.

Cody Laurendi American association football player

Cody Laurendi is a Puerto Rican former professional footballer.

The 2011 Puerto Rico Soccer League season was the 3rd season of Puerto Rico's top-division professional football league. The regular season ran from April to July 2011. The league had planned in 2010 to make use of an Apertura and Clausura format, but this format was not be utilized. The Sevilla FC Puerto Rico won the regular season, but was defeated at the Playoff final by debuting FC Leones de Ponce.

USL Championship Professional soccer league in the United States

The USL Championship (USLC) is a professional men's soccer league in the United States that began its inaugural season in 2011. The USL is sanctioned by the United States Soccer Federation as a Division II Professional League since 2017, placing it under Major League Soccer in the hierarchy. The USL is headquartered in Tampa, Florida.

The 2011 USL Pro season was the 25th season of third-division soccer in the United States, and was the inaugural season of the United Soccer Leagues' (USL) new professional competition. The league is effectively a combination of the USL's former First and Second Divisions.

Football is one of the leading sports of Puerto Rico, ranking only behind baseball, basketball and boxing in national popularity and is the number one participation sport on the island. There has been a significant growth in the sport in recent years, as traditionally football has played a very small role in Puerto Rico. The sport on the island is governed by the Puerto Rican Football Federation an affiliate of FIFA.

North American Soccer League (2011–2017)

The North American Soccer League (NASL) was a professional men's soccer based in the United States. The league was named for, but had no connection to, the original North American Soccer League. The later NASL was founded in 2009, and began play in 2011 with eight teams, following a 2010 season that saw NASL and USL teams play in a combined temporary Division II league.

The Caribbean Professional Football League was a short-lived association football competition spanning several Caribbean nations. The aim of the competition was to introduce professional standard football to the Caribbean region.

The Puerto Rico soccer league system is a series of professional and amateur soccer leagues based in Puerto Rico. Sometimes erroneously called the Puerto Rican soccer pyramid, teams and leagues in the United States are not linked by the system of promotion and relegation typical in soccer elsewhere. Instead, the Puerto Rican Football Federation (FPF) officially defines leagues in levels, called divisions, with the top two sanctioned directly by the FPF.

The 2017 Puerto Rico Soccer League season would be the 9th season as Puerto Rico's top-division football league.

References

  1. 1 2 Diaz, Cesar (18 April 2011). "Soccer in Puerto Rico: Existing and Evolving". Bleacher Report . Retrieved 24 January 2020.
  2. "Three Puerto Rico teams dumped". Soccer America. 10 May 2011. Retrieved 24 January 2020.
  3. Jusino, Edwin R. (26 July 2011). "Sancionado el Puerto Rico United" [Puerto Rico United Sanctioned]. FBNET (in Spanish). San Juan, Puerto Rico. Archived from the original on 19 March 2012. Retrieved 24 January 2020.
  4. 1 2 "Puerto Rico - List of Champions". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. 5 Dec 2019. Retrieved 24 January 2020.
  5. "Puerto Rico United". Puerto Rico United (in Spanish). Retrieved 24 January 2020.