Indoor soccer league
Football league
The American Indoor Soccer League was a semi-professional indoor soccer league founded in 2002 and folded in 2008.
History
Founded in 2002, the AISL's headquarters were in West Springfield, Massachusetts, but the media relations office was in Cleveland, Ohio. The 2005–06 season started with promise, starting with six teams, but the New Mexico Storm and Detroit-Windsor Border Stars decided not to play in the AISL just before the season got under way. In 2006, the league announced the membership of the Canton Crusaders,[1] but the team's membership was revoked after the ownership was unable to fulfill its financial obligations.
In 2008 with the Cincinnati Excite going on hiatus, and the Massachusetts Twisters and Rockford Rampage moving to the National Indoor Soccer League, the 2008–09 campaign was canceled. On December 23, 2008, all news stories were dropped from the website.
Rules
Like many other indoor soccer leagues, the AISL also had their own variations on the generally-followed indoor soccer rules. Some of these variations were:
- A point system that consisted of 1, 2, and 3 point goals, depending on how far away from the net the shot was taken.
- No three lines rule.
- One timeout per half per team.
- Similar to the MSL, a goalkeeper could "...not use his hands when team-mate passes the ball back. Only after a shot from the opposing team, can you pass back to the keepers hands inside your third line. ( Rebounds, etc...) No direct pass back to keeper outside the third of field to hands."[2]
- The clock did not stop unless the ball went out of play in the last two minutes of the fourth quarter.
Teams
Team
|
City/Area
|
Arena
|
Years
|
Cincinnati Excite
|
Cincinnati, Ohio
|
Game Time Indoor Soccer Training Facility
|
2004–08
|
Canton Crusaders
|
Canton, Ohio
|
Canton Civic Center
|
N/A
|
Connecticut Academica FC
|
Cheshire, Connecticut
|
Sports Domain
|
2003
|
Detroit-Windsor Border Stars
|
Windsor, Ontario
|
Novelletto Rosati Complex[3]
|
2004–05
|
Massachusetts Aztecs
|
Beverly, Massachusetts
|
Soccer Etc.[4]
|
2003
|
Massachusetts Twisters
|
West Springfield, Massachusetts
|
Big E Coliseum
|
2003–08
|
Montréal Team Canada
|
Montréal, Canada
|
Sportsplexx
|
2003
|
Memphis Mojo
|
Memphis, Tennessee
|
Agricenter Showplace Arena
|
N/A
|
New Hampshire Storm
|
New Hampshire
|
|
2003
|
New Mexico Storm
|
Albuquerque, New Mexico
|
Blades Multiplex Arenas
|
2004–06
|
New York Hampton Surf
|
Long Island, New York
|
Southampton Youth Sports Center
|
2006–07
|
Northern Illinois Rebels
|
Waukegan, Illinois
|
Lake County Sports Center
|
2007–08
|
Rockford Rampage
|
Loves Park, Illinois
|
Victory Sports Complex
|
2005–08
|
Tulsa Revolution
|
Tulsa, Oklahoma
|
Soccer City Indoor Sports Complex
|
2007–08
|
Previous champions
Notable names
See also
References