APSL 1994 Season (original) (raw)

The league terminated the Houston franchise after one game.

Ft. Lauderdale Strikers 20 8 12 2-3 23 33 22 72

After the season, Los Angeles, Ft. Lauderdale and Toronto folded

1994 PLAYOFFS

*-after extra time

First Round

Sept. 30 Montreal 2-1 Los Angeles

Oct. 2 Los Angeles 3-0 Montreal

Series tied 1 game apiece

Montreal advance via shootout, 2-1

Sept. 29 Colorado 2-0 Seattle

Oct. 2 Seattle 4-1 Colorado

Series tied 1 game apiece

Colorado advance via shootout, 2-1

APSL Championship

Oct. 15 Montreal 1-0 Colorado

Leading Goalscorers

Paul Wright, Los Angeles 12

Paulinho, Los Angeles 11

Jason Dunn, Seattle 10

Jean Harbor, Montreal 8

Domenic Mobilio, Vancouver 7

Ted Eck, Colorado 6

Lloyd Barker, Montreal 6

Dale Mitchell, Vancouver 5

David Hoggan, Seattle 5

Walter Boyd, Colorado 4

Gino DiFlorio, Montreal 4

Goalkeeping Leaders GAA

Marcus Hahnemann, Seattle 0.57

Mike Littman, Los Angeles 0.76

Pat Harrington, Montreal 0.95

Mario Jimenez, Los Angeles 1.09

Mark Dodd, Colorado 1.10

Pat Onstad, Toronto 1.70

Paul Dolan, Vancouver 2.16

Jim St. Andre, Ft. Lauderdale 2.17

1994 APSL Award Winners

Most Valuable Player: Paulinho, Los Angeles Salsa
Coach of the Year: Alan Hinton, Seattle Sounders
Rookie of the Year: Jason Dunn, Seattle Sounders

1994 APSL First XI

GK Marcus Hahnemann (Seattle)
D Robin Fraser (Colorado)
D Neil Megson (Seattle)
D Danny Pena (Los Angeles)
D Steve Trittschuh (Ft. Lauderdale)
M Ted Eck (Colorado)
M Shawn Medved (Seattle)
M Dale Mitchell (Vancouver)
M Paulinho (Los Angeles)
F Paul Wright (Los Angeles)
F Chance Fry (Seattle)

Home Attendance G Total Avg.

Seattle 10 63,468 6,347

Vancouver 10 47,423 4,742

Colorado 10 35,395 3,540

Los Angeles 10 33,405 3,341

Montreal 10 32,148 3,215

Ft. Lauderdale 10 17,325 1,733

Toronto 10 14,305 1,431

LEAGUE 70 243,469 3,478

One and done! The odd story of the Houston Force

Throughout it's years, the USL First Division has had a few teams threaten to go belly up at mid season, only for the league to take over operations of the club to see it though the end of the year. In 1991, the league cut short the Salt Lake Sting's season midway through, leaving a messy trail of 1-0 forfeits along the way. They have even had expansion teams who never made it to the starting line.

In 1994, the APSL learned their lesson and didn't wait until mid-season to pull the plug on one of their new teams, the Houston Force. They nipped them in the bud after just one game.

Never heard of the Houston Force? Can't say I blame you, for they are buried in the depths of U.S. Soccer history, as if the soccer gods decreed their name be stricken from all records for all of time.

In 1994, the APSL was on shaky ground. Just two years earlier, they were down to five teams. They boosted up to seven teams in 1993 with the addition of Canadian Soccer League refugees Vancouver and Montreal, but lost one of it's better franchises, the San Francisco Bay Blackhawks. The 'Hawks left the APSL due to concerns of the leagues future, as well as interest in joining the Mexican Second Division. In January of '94, another one of their oldest clubs, the Tampa Bay Rowdies, closed up shop, bringing the count down to six. Speculation ran wild that the APSL would skip the 1994 season all together, and regroup for 1995.

However, on March 1, APSL Chairman William De La Pena proudly announced the league would indeed play on in 1994, with the addition of three new clubs: the Seattle Sounders (still around today), Toronto Rockets (folded after the season), and the Houston Force. the club seemed doomed right away. The roster printed in Soccer America in the July 25 issue showed only three players with any real professional experience, David Vaudreuil (last with Tampa Bay in '93), Chris Charles (Tampa BAy '92), and Eloy Salgado, who has played indoors in the MISL.

July 14 was Opening Day at Robertson Stadium, where the MLS Dynamo now play. The Force were hosting the Los Angeles Salsa, the previous season's runner-up. To say Houston were lucky to get away with only a 3-0 loss is an understatement. The Salsa out shot them 25-6, and had 7 corner kicks to none for the Force. 1993 MVP Paulinho scored twice in front of a reported crowd of 3,000, which some say was more in the range of 1,400. Little did those 1,400 know they would have to wait another 12 seasons to see another professional outdoor team call Robertson Stadium it's home.

On July 21, the APSL pulled the plug on the Force. The league cited internal ownership disputes, including financial difficulties. The league obviously did not want a repeat of the Salt Lake debacle, and cut the cord as early as they could. The Houston Force was an unfortunate situation, one we fought to maintain," De La Pena said, "but after realizing the ownership group in Houston was unable and unwilling to resolve financial differences, the board felt the most prudent course of action would be to revoke its membership and plan for 1995." Of course, there was no return to Houston in 1995. With the creation of Major League Soccer looming in 1996, the league had a chip on it's shoulder after being turned down by the USSF for Division I status, and this episode was a huge black eye for the APSL.

Below is the boxscore of the one and only game played by the Houston Force in 1994. All of the stats were wiped from the record books a week later, and the team drifted off to the agate type of soccer history.

July 14, 2004 - Robertson Stadium - Houston, Texas

Houston Force 0

Lineup - H. Gomez, David Vaudreuil, Cory Christiansen, Kevin Onwudiwe, Berti Generes, Staines, Jorge Gomez (Chris Charles 45'), Higel, Eloy Salgado, Tony McGuiness, Tolik Dimitrikov (Porkova 45')

Los Angeles 3 Paulinho 26' 67', Paul Wright 81'

Lineup - Mike Littman, Danny Pena, Lawrence Lozzano, Michael N'Doumbe, Jeff Agoos, Arut Karapetyan, Mike Fox, Paulinho, Thor Lee, Jose Vasquez, Paul Wright (Brad Smith 82')

HOU LA Bookings

Shots 6 25 8' Berti Generes (HOU)

Saves 13 2 30' David Vaudreuil (HOU)

Corners 0 7 62' Mike Fox (LA)

Fouls 12 9 76' Danny Pena (LA)

Offside 1 1 85' Higel (HOU)

Att-3,000 89' Staines (HOU)

(est. 1,400 actual) 89' Brad Smith (LA)

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