Miami Freedom

Miami Freedom

The Miami Sharks were an inaugural franchise of the third incarnation of the American Soccer League in 1988. The team were renamed the Miami Freedom and joined the American Professional Soccer League in 1990 when the ASL merged with the Western Soccer League. The club played in the Orange Bowl in Miami, Florida.

Team president and General Manager Julio Moreira, a native of Ecuador, resided in Miami since 1954.

Contents

1990

In 1990, the Miami Freedom played their first seaons in the new American Professional Soccer League (APSL) in the South Division of the league's East Conference. The other members of the division included the Fort Lauderdale Strikers, which won the division that year, the Tampa Bay Rowdies, Orlando Lions and Washington Diplomats.

While the Freedom were one of the best defensive teams in the league, having only 25 goals scored against them, they had difficulty scoring. The team's leading scorer, Lazlo Barna, with 7 goals and 5 assists, finished the season 18th in the league's ranking.

The Miami Freedom finished this season with an 8-12. Despite this record, the team fell just one victory short of reaching post-season play.

Rosters

1988: Windsor del Llano, Jerry DiPiero, Troy Edwards, Joao Carlos Fietoza, Juan Carlos Gomez, Patrick Johnson, Ricardo Johnson, Paul Khoury, Tommy Lehoczky, Dan Pingrey, Guillermo Pizzaro, Pedro Tavares, Jody Weil, Marc Wolff

1989: Maicol Antelo, Mark Barnett, Scott Bauer, Dennis Brose, Mirko Castillo, Mario Chavez, Teofilo Cubillas, Euclides DeGouveia, Dirceu, Jerry DiPiero, Tchaly Eleazard, Juan Carlos Gomez, Wellington Guerra, Brain Japp, Ricardo Johnson, Hughes Joseph, Francisco Lopez, Willington Oritz, Dan Pingre, Guillermo Pizzaro, Tab Ramos, Luis Reyna, Arnold Siegmund, Pedro Tavares, Huber Vallejos

1990: Laszlow Barna, Mark Barnett, Michael Brown, Paul Carollo, Euclides DeGouveia, Ricardo Dillon, Ian Fairbrother, Elias Feanny, Joao Carlos Fietoza, Joseph Flood, Decio Guimaraes, Timo Hamalainen, Brian Japp, Patrick Johnson, Steve Kinsey, David Kulik, Dorian Mesa, Fernando Ramos, Rick Rivera-Gomez, Arnold Siegmund

1991: Celvin Alonzo, Ricardo Alonso, Alex Bahr, Laszlo Barna, Mark Barnett, Brown, Kenny Borden, Juan Castillo, Chrinos, Hugo DeCasanova, Euclides DeGouveia, Paul Dougherty, John Garvey, Grant Gibbs, Rick Iverson, Brian Japp, Pedro Magellanes, Jimmy McGeough, Dorian Mesa, Dale Mulholland, Benjamin Ortiz, Fernando Ramos, Ken Snow, Juan Valencia, Huber Vallejo, Tony DePhillpis, Patrick Johnson[1]

1992: Jose Angulo, Kossivi Asare-Kokou, Mark Barnett, Scott Benedetti, Roger Campagnola, Juan Castillo, Javier Centeno, Zico Doe, Miljice Donev, Chris Edwinson, Kevin Grimes, Darrin Karuzas, John Boa, John Klein, John Maessner, Diego Mandagaran, Luis Medina, Dorian Mesa, Dale Mulholland, Victor Ogunsanya, Boniface Okafor, Rodrique Rocques, Derek Sanderson, Arturo Velazco, Scoop Stanisic,

Notable former players

Coaches

Year-by-year

Year Division League Reg. Season Playoffs Open Cup
1988 N/A ASL 5th, Southern Did not qualify Did not enter
1989 N/A ASL 5th, Southern Did not qualify Did not enter
1990 N/A APSL 4th, ASL South Did not qualify Did not enter
1991 N/A APSL 5th, American Did not qualify Did not enter
1992 N/A APSL 5th Did not qualify Did not enter

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Freedom Tower (Miami) — Freedom Tower Miami Freedom tower …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Miami Orange Bowl — Former names Burdine Stadium (1937–59) Location 1501 NW 3rd Street Miami, Florida 33125 USA Coordinates …   Wikipedia

  • Miami — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Miami (homonymie). 25° 47′ 16″ N 80° 13′ 27″ W …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Miami Orange Bowl — Orange Bowl Stadium Ort Miami, Florida Baubeginn 1936 …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Miami Herald Publishing Co. v. Tornillo — Miami Herald Publishing Co. v. Pat Tornillo Supreme Court of the United States Argued April 17, 1974 …   Wikipedia

  • Miami (Floride) — Miami Pour les articles homonymes, voir Miami (homonymie). Miami …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Freedom ride — Freedom Rider is also a song by Traffic and later Rascal FlattsCivil Rights activists called Freedom Riders rode in interstate buses into the segregated southern United States to test the United States Supreme Court decision Boynton v. Virginia …   Wikipedia

  • Freedom Square (Miami) — Freedom Square, otherwise known as 600 Biscayne or 600 Biscayne Bay, is a planned mixed use skyscraper in downtown Miami, Florida. It is to be located on the west side of Biscayne Boulevard near Northeast 6th Street, forming part of the Biscayne… …   Wikipedia

  • Freedom of the Seas — Technische Daten (Überblick) Schiffstyp: Passagierschiff Einsatzzweck: Kreuzfahrten IMO Nummer: 9304033 Ru …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Freedom Class — is a group of three cruise ships for Royal Caribbean International. The first ship of the class, MS|Freedom of the Seas|3=2, was the largest passenger ship in the world, and the largest ever built in terms of passenger capacity and gross tonnage …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”