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1975 Tampa Bay Rowdies indoor season

Tampa Bay Rowdies
1975 indoor season
OwnerUnited States George W. Strawbridge, Jr.
General managerUnited States Beau Rodgers
ManagerItaly Eddie Firmani
StadiumBayfront Center
NASLRegional: Champion
League: Runners-up
Top goalscorer
United States Doug Wark
(10 goals)
Highest home attendance4,437
(Feb. 14 vs. Diplomats)
Lowest home attendance4,032
(Feb. 16 vs. Comets)
Average home league attendance4,235
← first season
1976 →

The 1975 Tampa Bay Rowdies indoor season was the first indoor season of the club's existence. It also marked the first time the expansion Rowdies participated in any North American Soccer League sanctioned competition.

Original kit

The Rowdies' jersey used during the 1975 indoor season was different than later indoor and outdoor years in that the neckline was merely a cuff rather than the full collar style that became so familiar in all of Tampa Bay's later NASL campaigns.[1][2][3] Photographic evidence also indicates that the cuff-style jersey saw limited use during the 1975 outdoor season, but by season's end it disappeared altogether.[4][5]

Club

Roster

No. Position Player Nation
1 GK Mike Hewitt  Scotland
1 GK Bob Stetler*  United States
2 DF Farrukh Quraishi  England
3 DF Alex Pringle  Scotland
4 MF John Boyle (capt.)  Scotland
5 MF Ringo Cantillo  Costa Rica
6 DF Mike Connell  South Africa
7 MF Bernard Hartze  South Africa
8 MF Randy Garber  United States
9 DF Lima  Brazil
9 MF Nick Papadakis  Canada
10 FW Eddie Engerth  United States
11 FW Doug Wark  United States
12 FW Bob Isaacson  United States
12 FW Javier Alvarez  Mexico
13 MF Zygmunt Lezak  Poland
13 DF John Bluem  United States
15 FW Eddie Firmani  Italy

*amateur player

Management and technical staff

  • United States George Strawbridge, Jr., owner
  • United States Beau Rogers, general manager
  • Italy Eddie Firmani, head coach
  • United States Chas Serednesky, business manager
  • Portugal Francisco Marcos, director of public relations
  • United States Alfredo Beronda, equipment manager

Honors

Individual honors

Review

In part because of the success of the spring 1974 indoor tour by the Red Army team the NASL decided to hold an indoor tournament of its own.[6] Of the 20 franchises in the league, sixteen participated. Teams were separated into four regional groups of four. The Bayfront Center in St. Petersburg, Florida, was chosen as one of the Regional venues, with the Rowdies as hosts for Region 3. The San Jose Earthquakes were given the honor of hosting the championship semifinals and finals at the Cow Palace.[7]

Region 3 tournament

The winner of the Region 3 would gain an automatic place in the Championship tournament four weeks later in California. In their first tournament game the Rowdies had no trouble with the Washington Diplomats, winning by a score of 7–2.[8] Two nights later Tampa Bay had a tougher task in coming from behind to defeat the Baltimore Comets, 8–6. Those two victories left the Rowdies tied with the Miami Toros in the standings, however the tie-breaker was goal differential. Tampa Bay's plus-7 goal margin narrowly edged out the Toros’ plus-6, and the Rowdies advanced. Ringo Cantillo was named MVP of the Region, edging out Miami's Nico Bodonczy by one vote.[9]

Regional standings

Pos Team G W L GF GA GD PTS
1 Tampa Bay Rowdies 2 2 0 15 8 +7 4
2 Miami Toros 2 2 0 18 12 +6 4
3 Baltimore Comets 2 0 2 14 19 -5 0
4 Washington Diplomats 2 0 2 6 14 -8 0

Championship tournament

Tampa Bay was paired up with the New York Cosmos in the semifinals, while the other semifinal had San Jose clashing with the Dallas Tornado. Led by Doug Wark’s record six-goal performance, the Rowdies jumped out to an early 3–0 lead, and never looked back, as they dispatched the Cosmos, 13–5, to advance to the final on Sunday.[10]

On March 16, 1975, the Tampa Bay faced a heavily favored San Jose Earthquakes team in the Rowdies first of what would be many championship finals, against. With the score 6–1 at the end of the first period, and 8,618 fans behind them, San Jose showed exactly why they were tabbed to win the tournament. From there the home team cruised to an 8–5 victory. In addition to the Rowdies’ runner-up performance, Doug Wark was named to the All-Tournament squad and was the second leading scorer in the tournament.[11]

Bracket

Semifinals Championship Final
      
R4 San Jose Earthquakes 8
R1 Dallas Tornado 5
R4 San Jose Earthquakes 8
R3 Tampa Bay Rowdies 5
R3 Tampa Bay Rowdies 13
R2 New York Cosmos 5

Championship standings

Pos Team G W L GF GA GD
1 San Jose Earthquakes 4 4 0 37 17 +20
2 Tampa Bay Rowdies 4 3 1 33 21 +11
3 Dallas Tornado 4 2 2 14 12 +2
4 New York Cosmos 4 1 3 18 27 -9
5 Miami Toros 2 2 0 18 12 +6

Match reports

February 14, 1975 Regional #1 Tampa Bay Rowdies 7–2 Washington Diplomats St. Petersburg, Florida
8:30 PM EST Engerth 10:38'
Engerth 14:55'
Wark 23:30'
Wark 29:33'
Cantillo 36:17'
Cantillo 39:15'
Connell 43:15' (Garber)
Report on p. 5-C DeLeon 23:45'
Diane 35:25'
Stadium: Bayfront Center
Attendance: 4,437
February 16, 1975 Regional #2 Tampa Bay Rowdies 8–6 Baltimore Comets St. Petersburg, Florida
8:30 PM EST Quraishi 12:17', 26:38', 39:12'
Papadakis 14:51', 24:49'
Cantillo 40:43', 40:46'
Wark 41:59'
Report Scurti 1:24'
Kazmierski 6:12', 31:29'
Wit 12:54', 14:28', 25:28'
Stadium: Bayfront Center
Attendance: 4,032
March 14, 1975 Semifinal Tampa Bay Rowdies 13–5 New York Cosmos Daly City, California
7:00 PM PDT Cantillo 2:31' (Boyle)
Wark 4:13' (Pringle)
Wark 6:34' (Quraishi)
Wark 13:50'
Wark 14:34' (Hartze)
Lezak 17:22'
Hartze 22:03'
Hartze 22:42' (Cantillo)
Wark 33:03' (Lima)
Hartze 35:34'
Lezak 35:55' (Cantillo)
Lezak 39:35' (Hartze)
Wark 59:35' (Connell)
Report A
Report B
Lamas 10:46' (Mărdărescu)
Mărdărescu 12:07'
Lamas 27:08' (Parades)
Lamas 44:06' (Roth)
Correa 49:36'
Stadium: Cow Palace
Attendance: 9,113
Referee: John Davies
March 16, 1975 Final San Jose Earthquakes 8–5 Tampa Bay Rowdies Daly City, California
9:00 PM PDT Roboostoff 7:10'
Child 9:25' (Gavric)
Roboostoff 14:36' (Child)
Child 16:22' (Welch)
Roboostoff 18:38' (Moore)
Welch 19:38' (Child)
Zaczynski 50:50' (Child)
Child 52:56'
Report A (p. 2C)
Report B
Engerth 9:36' (Lima)
Hartze 25:14' (Quraishi)
Lezak 33:35'
Wark 50:55' (Hartze)
Quraishi 54:56' (Boyle)
Stadium: Cow Palace
Attendance: 8,618
Referee: Henry Landuer

Statistics

Scoring

GP = Games Played, G = Goals (worth 2 points), A = Assists (worth 1 point), Pts = Points

Player GP G A Pts
Doug Wark 4 10 0 20
Ringo Cantillo 4 5 2 12
Bernard Hartze 3 4 3 11
Farrukh Quraishi 4 4 2 10
Zygmunt Lezak 2 4 0 8
Eddie Engerth 3 3 0 6
Nick Papadakis 3 2 0 4
Mike Connell 3 1 1 3
John Boyle 4 0 2 2
Lima 2 0 2 2
Alex Pringle 4 0 1 1
Randy Garber 1 0 1 1
Javier Alvarez - 0 0 0
Bob Isaacson - 0 0 0

Goalkeeping

Note: GP = Games played; Min = Minutes played; GA = Goals against; GAA = Goals against average; W = Wins; L = Losses

Player GP Min GA GAA W L
Mike Hewitt 4 210 21 5.25 3 1
Bob Stetler 0 0 0 0 0 0

Player movement

Since Tampa Bay was a newly formed club, the entire roster was new.

In

No. Pos. Player Transferred from Fee/notes Date Source
3 DF Scotland Alex Pringle Scotland Clyde F.C. No details available December 1974 [12][13]
1 GK Scotland Mike Hewitt Scotland Dundee F.C. Contract purchased from Dundee December 1974 [12][13]
7 MF South Africa Bernard Hartze South Africa Cape Town Spurs No details available December 17, 1974 [13][14]
2 DF England Farrukh Quraishi United States Oneonta State 1st overall pick of NASL college draft January 18, 1975 [15]
10 FW United States Eddie Engerth United States Philadelphia amateur team Former Hartwick College player January 20, 1975 [16]
6 DF South Africa Mike Connell South Africa Rangers Johannesburg No details available January 20, 1975 [16]
11 DF United States Doug Wark United States Rochester Lancers Purchased from Rochester January 27, 1975 [17]
4 DF Scotland John Boyle England Orient Obtained release after 5-month pursuit February 6, 1975 [18]
9 MF Canada Nick Papadakis none Free agent February 9, 1975 [19]
8 MF United States Randy Garber United States Penn State 2nd round of college draft February 9, 1975 [19]
12 FW United States Bob Isaacson United States Hartwick College 3rd round of college draft February 9, 1975 [19]
13 DF United States John Bluem United States Hartwick College 4th round of college draft February 9, 1975 [19]
12 FW Mexico Javier Alvarez United States St. Petersburg Kickers Free transfer March 11, 1975 [20]
15 FW Italy Eddie Firmani none Added as an emergency player March 11, 1975 [20]
1 GK United States Bob Stetler United States East Stroudsburg State No contract, to keep amateur status January 1975 [21]

Out

none

Loan in

No. Pos. Player Loaned from Details Start Source
5 MF Costa Rica Ringo Cantillo United States Cincinnati Comets Indoor season loan February 9, 1975 [19]
9 MF Brazil Lima Mexico Club Deportivo Oro Indoor loan with option for transfer March 11, 1975 [20]
13 MF Poland Zygmunt Lezak United States Polonia NY Indoor loan with option for transfer March 11, 1975 [20]

See also

References

  1. ^ Rowdies image
  2. ^ Inoor Home Team image
  3. ^ "Nick Papadakis vs Comets 1975 (Image)".
  4. ^ "Stetler.JPG (Image)".
  5. ^ "Derek Smethurst, Doug Wark vs Cosmos 1975 (Image)".
  6. ^ "History of Indoor Soccer in the USA".
  7. ^ Zier, Patrick (November 6, 1974). "Preview Of Soccer Set For Bayfront". Lakeland Ledger. p. 2A. Retrieved September 23, 2016.
  8. ^ Martz, Ron (February 15, 1975). "Rousing Rowdie debut: 7–2 victory all". St. Petersburg Times. p. 1-C. Retrieved September 22, 2016.
  9. ^ Martz, Ron (February 17, 1975). "Rowdies do it all". St. Petersburg Times. p. 1-C. Retrieved October 3, 2016.
  10. ^ Spander, Art (March 15, 1975). "Rowdies triumph". St. Petersburg Times. p. 1-C. Retrieved October 3, 2016.
  11. ^ Gurney, Jack (March 17, 1975). "Rowdies Shaken By Earthquake". Evening Independent. p. 1-C. Retrieved October 3, 2016.
  12. ^ a b "Pringle named Tampa coach". St. Petersburg Times. September 24, 1975. p. 2-C. Retrieved October 3, 2016.
  13. ^ a b c Martz, Ron (December 18, 1974). "Striking addition for the Rowdies". St. Petersburg Times. p. 2-C. Retrieved October 3, 2016.
  14. ^ "NORTH AMERICAN SOCCER LEAGUE: Bernard Hartze". Archived from the original on October 14, 2016. Retrieved October 3, 2016.
  15. ^ Martz, Ron (January 17, 1975). "Quraishi year-round Rowdy?". St. Petersburg Times. p. 1-C. Retrieved October 3, 2016.
  16. ^ a b "Rowdies sign pair, have six in fold". St. Petersburg Times. January 21, 1975. p. 3-C. Retrieved October 3, 2016.
  17. ^ Austin, Jim (January 28, 1975). "Rowdies Star-Struck". Evening Independent. p. 1-C. Retrieved October 3, 2016.
  18. ^ Blankenship, Ken (February 7, 1975). "Rowdies sign a captain: Boyle". St. Petersburg Times. p. 8-C. Retrieved October 3, 2016.
  19. ^ a b c d e Blankenship, Ken (February 10, 1975). "Rowdies sign four, want more". St. Petersburg Times. p. 20-C. Retrieved October 3, 2016.
  20. ^ a b c d Blankenship, Ken (March 12, 1975). "Rowdies brace for title try". St. Petersburg Times. p. 6-C. Retrieved October 3, 2016.
  21. ^ Bubil, Harold (March 15, 1976). "Goalie Stetler Makes The Most Of First Pro Chance". Sarasota Journal. p. 3-C. Retrieved October 3, 2016.
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