
THE UNOFFICIAL OFFICIAL
FORT LAUDERDALE STRIKERS WEBSITE
This site is dedicated to my favorite extinct professional soccer club and its seven year existence in the North American Soccer League. Included are all-time rosters, records, and a history of Broward County's first major league professional sports franchise.
For you kids who think the Major League Soccer is the first big-time soccer league in the U.S., a brief history lesson. The North American Soccer League was born in 1968, long before you were. The league grew from a low of five teams in 1969 to 24 teams by the end of the 1970's. International superstars such as Pele, Franz Beckenbauer, Gerd Müller, Eusebio, Johan Cruyff and others played in stadiums from Boston to L.A. to Vancouver to Miami. However, the league collapsed after the 1984 season, crippled by high salaries, bloated by over-expansion and eventually dying from fan apathy, a lesson hopefully the MLS has learned.
The Fort Lauderdale Strikers never took the league title that rivals such as Tampa Bay and New York won, but with four appearances in the league semi-finals and an appearance in the league final in 1980, the club that never missed a playoff appearance in its seven-year history at Lockhart Stadium is an important a part of U.S. professional soccer history.
NEWS!!!
The Fort Lauderdale Strikers live again! From a Miami FC press release:
Miami FC announced today its commitment to officially
pay homage to the richest legacy in South Florida soccer, the storied Ft. Lauderdale
Strikers. The Strikers competed in the North American Soccer League (NASL) from 1977
to 1983, the American Professional Soccer League (APSL) from 1988 to 1994 and the United
Systems of Independent Soccer Leagues Pro Division (USISL Pro) from 1995 to
1997. After repeated requests from media, former players and fans including a survey
conducted by Miami FCs commercial department which showed overwhelming support for
the Strikers name, the club will incorporate the Strikers name and ethos
starting in 2011.
Its almost like weve come full circle. We are a member of the new NASL
and currently play at legendary Lockhart Stadium where so many greats of the game have
competed in the past, both with and against the Strikers. We want to honor that tradition
and build upon it in the most respectful manner possible, said Miami FC President
Aaron Davidson.
The Ft. Lauderdale Strikers had the best regular season record in the North American
Soccer League (NASL) in 1977 and reached the Soccer Bowl final in 1980. Between 1978 when
Lockhart Stadium was expanded and 1982, the club averaged over 12,000 fans per game each
season. Among the great players who starred for the team were Teofillo Nene
Cubillas, George Best, Gordon Banks, Ray Hudson, Gerd Mueller and Ellias Figueroa.
The Strikers were revived in 1988 competing in the American Professional Soccer League
(APSL). The Strikers reached the championship final in 1988 and won the title in
1989, managed by Thomas Rongen, a former Striker player, and the current coach of the US
U-20 National Team. Local Margate product Eric Eichmann played in the 1990 World Cup for
the United States while an active member of the Strikers. The Strikers continued to play
in the APSL and subsequently the USISL until the Miami Fusion joined MLS in 1998.
Throughout the Strikers existence their greatest rival was the Tampa Bay Rowdies.
Both in the NASL and APSL, the Strikers-Rowdies matchups would conjure up unparalleled
passion amongst their supporters. With the return of the FC Tampa Bay Rowdies in 2010, the
time is even more fitting for the return of the Strikers.
The new NASL seeks to honor the legacy of the original NASL respectfully and
meaningfully. Weve noted how the Vancouver Whitecaps, Portland Timbers, Seattle
Sounders and Tampa Bay Rowdies legacies have been embraced by local supporters. Here
in South Florida we are responding to the sentiments of our fans to do the same,
concluded Aaron Davidson who is also CEO of the NASL.
Miami FC will work closely with former Strikers players, coaches, fans (Striker
Likers) and the South Florida soccer community in general to ensure that the legacy is
honored, protected and extended appropriately.
Visit the new Fort Lauderdale Strikers at www.strikers.com.
This page created by Jeffrey Duly. If you like this page, tell a friend. If you don't, keep it to yourself.