1992 Canadian Soccer League season

The 1992 Canadian Soccer League season was the sixth and final season of play for the Canadian Soccer League, a Division 1 men's soccer league in the Canadian soccer pyramid.

Canadian Soccer League
Season1992
Dates
  • May 26 – September 8
    (regular season)
  • September 16 – October 4
    (playoffs)
ChampionsWinnipeg Fury
Regular season leaderVancouver 86ers
Matches played60
Goals scored176 (2.93 per match)
Top goalscorerEddy Berdusco (14)
Best goalkeeperPaolo Ceccarelli (0.78 GAA)
1991

Format and changes from previous season edit

Shortly before the 1992 season, the Hamilton Steelers, Nova Scotia Clippers, and Kitchener Kickers folded.[1][2][3] The league was not doing well financially either and Montreal Supra owner Frank Aliaga was named the new league president, replacing the interim president Mario DiBartolomeo, who was the owner of the now-folded Hamilton Steelers.[4][5] Hamilton folded despite offers of cost sharing with the Vancouver and Montreal team owners.[6]

The London Lasers returned from a one-year hiatus, leaving the league with a six-team division. The league had a balanced schedule with each team playing the others a total of four times, twice each home and away. Due to the drop in teams, only four teams qualified for the playoffs. For the first time, the Championship final would not be a one-off match, but instead would be a two-tie fixture as the other rounds.

Two teams (Montreal and Vancouver) participated in the Professional Cup alongside the five APSL clubs and one from the NPSL.[7] Neither CSL side was able to advance out of the first round.[8]

As 1991 CSL champions, Vancouver qualified for the 1992 CONCACAF Champions' Cup, however, they withdrew from the tournament before their first match.[9]

Summary edit

Vancouver once again won the regular season title and advanced to the MITA Cup finals for the fifth consecutive year, where they met the Winnipeg Fury in the final. Winnipeg won the title becoming only the third club to win the championship, ending Vancouver's four-year winning streak, snapping Vancouver's 15 match playoff winning streak, handing them their first playoff loss since 1987.[10]

Regular season edit

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1 Vancouver 86ers 20 11 3 6 42 28 +14 36 Playoffs
2 North York Rockets 20 8 6 6 25 20 +5 30
3 Winnipeg Fury (O) 20 8 1 11 27 43 −16 25
4 Montreal Supra 20 6 7 7 29 24 +5 25
5 London Lasers 20 6 7 7 25 32 −7 22[a]
6 Toronto Blizzard 20 6 6 8 28 29 −1 21[a]
Source: Canadian Soccer History Archives 1992 CSL Stats
(O) Play-off winners
Notes:
  1. ^ a b London and Toronto deducted 3 points each for unsportsmanlike conduct during their match on August 30.

Playoffs edit

The playoffs were conducted with a total points system. Teams earned two points for a win, one point for a draw, and zero points for a loss. The team with the most points following the two-game series advanced. If the teams were tied on points, they played a 30-minute mini-game for a bonus point, followed by a penalty shootout if the mini-game remained tied.

Semi-finals Final
          
1 Vancouver 86ers 1 1 3 PTS
4 Montreal Supra 1 0 1 PTS
1 Vancouver 86ers 0 1 1 PTS
3 Winnipeg Fury 2 1 3 PTS
2 North York Rockets 1 0 1 PTS
3 Winnipeg Fury 1 4 3 PTS

Semifinal edit

September 16, 1992 Montreal Supra 1–1 Vancouver 86ers Montreal, Quebec
20:00 Needham   90' [[10] Report] Titotto   11' Stadium: Claude Robilliard Stadium
Attendance: 1009
Referee: J. Jerome
September 20, 1992 Vancouver 86ers 1–0 Montreal Supra Vancouver, British Columbia
21:30 Easton   29' [[10] Report] Stadium: Swangard Stadium
Attendance: 3728
Referee: Rob Brown

Vancouver won the series 3–1 on points.

September 16, 1992 Winnipeg Fury 1–1 North York Rockets Winnipeg, Manitoba
20:30 Nocita   61' [[10] Report] Berdusco   46' Stadium: Winnipeg Stadium
Attendance: 1823
Referee: Mario Perrino
September 20, 1992 North York Rockets 0–4 Winnipeg Fury North York, Ontario
15:30 [[10] Report] Corazzin   13', 28'
Dodd   54'
Holness   90'
Stadium: Esther Shiner Stadium
Attendance: 2290
Referee: Tony Camacho

Winnipeg won the series 3–1 on points.

Final edit

September 27, 1992 Winnipeg Fury 2–0 Vancouver 86ers Winnipeg, Manitoba
19:30 Nocita  
Holness  
[[11] Report] Stadium: Winnipeg Stadium
Attendance: 1513
Referee: Dino Bucci
October 4, 1992 Vancouver 86ers 1–1 Winnipeg Fury Vancouver, British Columbia
21:00 Mitchell   [[11] Report] Steve Millar   Stadium: Swangard Stadium
Attendance: 6087
Referee: Mike Seifert

Winnipeg won the series 3–1 on points.

Statistics edit

Top scorers edit

Rank Player Club Goals
1   Eddy Berdusco North York Rockets 14
2   Carlo Corazzin Winnipeg Fury 8
  Geoff Aunger London Lasers
4   Marco Abascal Toronto Blizzard 6
  John Catliff Vancouver 86ers
  Doug Muirhead Vancouver 86ers
  Dale Mitchell Vancouver 86ers
8   Grant Needham Montreal Supra 5
Reference:[10]

Top goaltenders edit

Rank Player Club GAA
1   Paolo Ceccarelli North York Rockets 0.78
2   Pat Onstad Winnipeg Fury 0.93
3   Shel Brodsgaard North York Rockets 1.18
4   Pat Harrington Montreal Supra 1.20
5   Bryan Rosenfeld London Lasers 1.25
Reference:[10]

Honours edit

The following awards and nominations were awarded for the 1992 season.[10][12]

Awards edit

Award Player Team
Most Valuable Player   Eddy Berdusco North York Rockets
Rookie of the Year   Carlo Corazzin Winnipeg Fury
Top Newcomer   Brad Smith London Lasers
Top Goaltender   Paolo Ceccarelli North York Rangers
Fair Play Award Vancouver 86ers

League All-Stars edit

Player Position
  Pat Onstad (Winnipeg Fury) Goalkeeper
  Peter Sarantopoulos (Winnipeg Fury) Defender
  Nick Dasovic (North York Rockets) Defender
  Dino Lopez (London Lasers) Defender
  Carl Fletcher (Toronto Blizzard) Defender
  Geoff Aunger (London Lasers) Midfielder
  Dale Mitchell (Vancouver 86ers) Midfielder
  Lyndon Hooper (Toronto Blizzard) Midfielder
  Eddy Berdusco (North York Rockets) Forward
  Carlo Corazzin (Winnipeg Fury) Forward
  Paul Peschisolido (Toronto Blizzard) Forward

Reserves

Player Position
  Paul Dolan (Vancouver 86ers) Goalkeeper
  Ian Carter (Winnipeg Fury) Defender
  Patrick Diotte (Montreal Supra) Defender
  Tony Nocita (Winnipeg Fury) Midfielder
  Gino DiFlorio (Toronto Blizzard) Forward

Front office

Person Role
  Paul James (London Lasers) Head Coach
  Barry MacLean (London Lasers) Assistant Coach
  Hector Marinaro (Vancouver 86ers) General Manager

Average home attendances edit

Pos. Team GP Average attendance
1 Vancouver 86ers 10 3,937
2 Montreal Supra 10 2,388
3 Winnipeg Fury 10 2,236
4 Toronto Blizzard 10 1,628
5 North York Rockets 10 1,496
6 London Lasers 10 306
League total 60 1,999
Reference:[11]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Kitchener Spirit/Kickers (1990-91)". CSL Memories.
  2. ^ "Nova Scotia Clippers (1991)". CSL Memories.
  3. ^ "Hamilton Steelers (1987-91)". CSL Memories.
  4. ^ Tougas, Marc (May 18, 2017). "D'une ligue canadienne à l'autre" [From one Canadian league to another]. Capitaine Soccer (in French).
  5. ^ Intravaia, Fabrizio (January 16, 2018). "L'Impact festeggia 25 anni di storia" [Impact celebrates 25 years of history]. Corriere Italiano (in Italian).
  6. ^ Stinson, Dan (October 7, 1992). "Ilich's bankbook kept CSL on the field". The Vancouver Sun Newspaper via ProQuest Canadian Newsstream Database. Vancouver, BC. pp. D12. Retrieved November 2, 2017.
  7. ^ Brackman, David (June 12, 1992). "Rowdies add punch to schedule". St. Petersburg Times. p. 6D. Retrieved June 15, 2016.
  8. ^ Trudelle, Jean (August 13, 1992). "Le F.C. Supra dans un creux de vague..." [F.C. Supra in a trough...]. La Presse (in French). p. 7.
  9. ^ "Copa de Campeones y Subcampeones CONCACAF 1992". RSSSF.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h "1992 CSL Stats" (PDF). Canadian Soccer League.
  11. ^ a b c Jose, Colin (2001). On-Side - 125 Years of Soccer in Ontario. Vaughan, Ontario: Ontario Soccer Association and Soccer Hall of Fame and Museum. pp. 130, 134.
  12. ^ "Eddy Berducso profile". Canadian Soccer Association.

External links edit