Ottawa Fury

Ottawa Fury
Ottawa Fury
Ottawa Fury logo
Full name Ottawa Fury
Nickname(s) The Fury
Founded 2005
Ground Algonquin College
Ottawa, Ontario
(Capacity: 5,000)
Owner England John Pugh
Head Coach Canada Stephen O'Kane
League USL Premier Development League
2010 1st, Northeast
Playoffs: Conference Finals
Website Club home page
Home colours
Away colours
Current season

Ottawa Fury is a Canadian soccer team based in Ottawa, Ontario. Founded in 2005, the team plays in the USL Premier Development League (PDL), the fourth tier of the American Soccer Pyramid, in the Northeast Division of the Eastern Conference.

The team plays its home games in the soccer complex on the campus of Algonquin College, where they have played since 2008. The team's colors are white, red and blue.

The team also has a sister organization, Ottawa Fury Women, who play in the USL W-League, and fields a team in the USL’s Super-20 League, a league for players 17 to 20 years of age run under the United Soccer Leagues umbrella.

Contents

History

Ottawa Fury entered the PDL in 2005, joining fellow Canadian teams Thunder Bay Chill and Abbotsford Rangers in the American-based competition. Under the leadership of head coach Colin McCurdy - a Northern Irish legend from his time at Belfast club Linfield [1] - the Fury began brightly, beating Westchester Flames 3-0 in their opening fixture, and winning two of their next four, including a 5-3 victory at home over the Albany Admirals which featured a hat trick from Kevin Omokhua. Unfortunately, Ottawa could never quite string a run of results together; throughout the season, win would follow loss would follow win, although their points tally did keep them high in the standings all year long. A staggering 10-2 annihilation of Brooklyn Knights (which saw Francis Mavula net four goals) and an impressive 6-3 victory on the road over the Westchester Flames were the highlights of the rest of the regular season. A 4-3 defeat to Cape Cod Crusaders on the final day of the season left the Fury third in the Northeast behind Cape Cod, just out of the playoffs. Kevin Omokhua and Francis Mavula were a threatening strike force, netting 21 times between them, while Desmond Tachie contributed 7 goals and 7 assists.

Ottawa moved to the New England Division in 2006, and started the new season in decent form, with a win and two ties in their first three games. However, the Fury stuttered through June, losing 2-1 to Albany Admirals, and being beaten three times in thirteen days by the Cape Cod Crusaders. The 4-4 tie with Rhode Island Stingrays at the beginning of June, in which they trew away a 2-goal lead in the last 15 minutes, may have signalled a downturn in Fury's form, but to their credit they rallied towards the season's end. Ottawa won six of thieir last eight games, including a 3-0 revenge win over Rhode Island, but their late charge towards the playoffs was in vain; they finished the regular season second in the division, a full 20 points behind Cape Cod Crusaders, and failed to secure the post-season wild-card slot. Kevin Omokhua was again Ottawa's outstanding player in front of goal, with 11 for the season.

Head coach McCurdy left at the end of 2006, and he was replaced by Chris Roth; unfortunately, his first season at the helm was a difficult one, as Fury suffered their worst run of results in the franchise's history. Despite an opening tie with Cape Cod Crusaders and a 3-2 win over PDL new boys Long Island Rough Riders in their first two games, Fury suffered an immediate down-turn in form. Fury won just one game in June - 4-0 over Vermont Voltage - and quickly fell out of contention for playoff consideration. Five straight games without a win in July, and eight in total, sent the Fury to the bottom of the Northeast Division table, and only a 4-0 final day win over bottom side Rhode Island Stingrays kept the Canadians from finishing last in the division. Will Beaugé was Fury's top scorer, with six goals, while English midfielder Yan Klukowski contributed 4 assists.

Head coach Roth was replaced by Stephen O'Kane in the offseason, and seemed to have a positive effect on the squad. Ottawa bounded back spectacularly in 2008, enjoying what turned out to be the most successful - but ultimately frustrating - year in franchise history. Despite a rocky start in which they lost their opening two games, Fury responded with four wins in their next five games, including a 5-2 blowout over Vermont Voltage, a 4-1 rollover of Rhode Island Stingrays, and a comprehensive 3-0 win over Long Island Rough Riders. Ottawa's scintillating form continued throughout July, when they enjoyed a 9-game unbeaten run stretching back to the aforementioned Long Island game. Fury were powerhouses in front of goal - they crushed the Rhode Island Stingrays 5-0, and followed this up with a 7-0 annihilation of New Hampshire Phantoms, which saw seven different Fury players find the net. They entered their last game knowing that a win over Vermont would most likely give them the New England Division title over Cape Cod Crusaders; shockingly, they fell to a 3-0 defeat, and then were nudged out of the playoffs by Newark Ironbound Express, who finished second in the Northeast, and finished equal on points, but took the final playoff spot on head-to-head results. Jay Da Costa and Florian Decamps were Fury's top scorers, with seven goals each, while Da Costa and Andrew Rigby both contributed four assists.

Assistant Coach Klaus Linnenbruegger has stepped up to take over the helm of the Ottawa Fury PDL. Linnenbruegger, who played professionally with Bielefeld in Germany, has successfully coached Fury Youth teams over the past seven seasons and is a past head coach of the Ottawa Wizards. The long-time Fury coach replace Steve Payne who has left the Club by mutual consent.

NASL in 2013

On June 20, 2011, the North American Soccer League (NASL) announced that Ottawa Fury has been awarded an expansion team [1]. The new team will be owned by the Ottawa Sports and Entertainment Group and play home games at Lansdowne Park.

Players

Current roster

As of June 5, 2011.[2]

Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
0 Canada GK Brandon Heembrock[3]
1 Canada GK Jonathan Viscosi[4]
2 England MF Mike Stephenson[5]
3 England DF Tom Cosgrave[6]
4 Canada DF Jacob Sheppard[7]
5 United States DF Kyle Manscuk[8]
6 England MF Robert Flint
7 Australia MF Keegan Ziada[9]
8 England FW Liam McInally[10]
9 United States FW Steven Kane[11]
10 England MF Rob Ritchie-Smith[12]
11 England MF Tom Mellor[13]
No. Position Player
12 Scotland MF Blair Stevenson[14]
13 Brazil MF Fabricio Barancoski[15]
14 Canada MF Joey Kewin[16]
15 Canada FW Cameron Davis[17]
18 Canada DF Adam Hintz[18]
17 Canada MF Abraham Kamara[19]
20 Canada MF Peter Manginas[20]
21 United States DF Kenny Vasquez
22 England DF Sean Pound
23 Canada MF Liam Connon
24 Canada FW Miroslav Cabrilo
00 Canada GK Alex Fait[21]

Notable former players

This list of notable former players comprises players who went on to play professional soccer after playing for the team in the Premier Development League, or those who previously played professionally before joining the team.

Year-by-year

Year Division League Regular Season Playoffs Open Canada Cup
2005 4 USL PDL 3rd, Northeast Did not qualify Did not participate
2006 4 USL PDL 2nd, New England Did not qualify Did not participate
2007 4 USL PDL 7th, Northeast Did not qualify Did not participate
2008 4 USL PDL 2nd, New England Did not qualify N/A
2009 4 USL PDL 1st, Northeast Divisional Finals N/A
2010 4 USL PDL 1st, Northeast Conference Finals N/A
2011 4 USL PDL 4th, Northeast Did not qualify N/A

Honors

  • USL PDL Northeast Division Champions 2010
  • USL PDL Northeast Division Champions 2009

Head coaches

  • Northern Ireland Colin McCurdy (2005–2006)
  • Canada Chris Roth (2007)
  • Canada Stephen O'Kane (2008–2009)
  • Canada Carl Valentine (2010)
  • England Steve Payne[22] (2011)
  • Germany Klaus Linnenbruegger (2011)
  • Canada Stephen O'Kane (2012)

Stadia

Average attendance

Attendance stats are calculated by averaging each team's self-reported home attendances from the historical match archive at http://www.uslsoccer.com/history/index_E.html.

  • 2005: 322
  • 2006: 259
  • 2007: 260
  • 2008: 330
  • 2009: 383
  • 2010: 379
  • 2011: 220

References

External links



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