Soccer Bowl 2014

Soccer Bowl 2014 was the North American Soccer League's postseason championship match of the 2014 season to determine the NASL Champion. The event was contested in a one-game match between the San Antonio Scorpions (Fall Season champions) and the Fort Lauderdale Strikers. San Antonio defeated the New York Cosmos 2-1[1] in their semi-final match while Fort Lauderdale defeated Minnesota United FC (Spring Season champions) in a penalty shootout 5–4 after a 1–1 tie[2] in the other semi-final game. The match was played on November 15, 2014 at Toyota Field, in San Antonio, Texas and televised live on ESPN3, ONE World Sports, NASLLive.com as well as on San Antonio's MeTV KSAT 12.2 and Fort Lauderdale's Sofloradio.com. This was the Scorpions first Soccer Bowl championship. The Soccer Bowl trophy is the third oldest men's professional outdoor soccer league prize in the United States.[3]

Soccer Bowl 2014
EventSoccer Bowl
DateNovember 15, 2014 (2014-11-15)
VenueToyota Field, San Antonio, Texas
Man of the MatchRafael Castillo (SAS)
RefereeTed Unkel
Attendance7,847

Background

Neither the Scorpions nor the Strikers have ever lifted the NASL Soccer Bowl trophy. The Strikers are making their third overall appearance (between NASL Golden and Modern Eras) in the league's championship final, while the Scorpions are playing in their first ever title game. San Antonio is coming off a 2–1 victory over the visiting New York Cosmos in The Championship Semifinals. In the other semifinal match, Fort Lauderdale topped Minnesota United FC, 5–4, on penalty kicks to earn its first berth to the finals since 2011. The Strikers were on an eight-game unbeaten streak, while the Scorpions had won their last three encounters.

San Antonio leads the head-to-head series against Fort Lauderdale, however, the teams played an even series this year (1-1-1). The last meeting between the two sides took place on August 29 when goals from forward Fafà Picault and midfielder Mark Anderson gave the Strikers a 2–0 home victory at Lockhart Stadium.[4]

Game summary

Before a modern-era NASL Championship game record crowd of 7,847 on a cold and misty night at Toyota Field, the San Antonio Scorpions reached the top of the NASL mountain and raised the Soccer Bowl trophy for the first time in their history with a 2–1 win over a determined Fort Lauderdale Strikers.

The Alamo City lads triumphed on the strength of a spectacular 70th minute bicycle kick goal by Rafael Castillo and a 75th minute breakaway strike by Billy Forbes. The Strikers had a golden opportunity to grab the lead just past the hour mark, but rattled the cross bar from the penalty spot. Fort Lauderdale ensured the closing 11 minutes would be tense when Walter Ramirez halved the deficit. As the game unfolded, both the Scorpions and the Strikers began to grow in confidence. San Antonio was unable to take advantage of two corner kicks in the span of a minute as Fort Lauderdale contained the threat and pushed out on the counterattack.

San Antonio came close to breaking the scoring open in the 15th minute when Rafael Castillo sent a free kick into the box that Greg Janicki got his head on, but his effort went wide of the goal. In the 20th minute Castillo got the crowd on their feet with a shot from 30 yards out that went wide of a diving Kamil Contofalsky and also beyond the goal. Six minutes elapsed before the Strikers got another chance to counterattack, but after Darnell King raced down the left side his pass into the box was just out of reach of Mark Anderson and the scorebook remained closed for the time being. The Strikers twice nearly broke the first half deadlock through Aly Alberto Hassan as his effort beat Josh Saunders but bounced outside of the left post. In the 62nd minute the Strikers nearly went ahead through a long-range effort by Shawn Chin, but Saunders was on the spot and dived low to make the save. On the rebound the Strikers were awarded a penalty kick after Anderson was brought down in the box. Martin Nunez stepped up to the spot, but his effort glanced off the top of the crossbar and a golden chance went begging.

The Scorpions finally opened the scoring in the 70th minute in spectacular fashion. Castillo produced a perfectly executed bicycle kick that flew beyond the reach of Contofalsky and tucked inside the far left post to send the Toyota Field crowd wild. In the 74th minute Forbes doubled the advantage and had the Scorpions believing they had one hand on the trophy after he reached Castillo's long through ball and raced around Contofalsky to put the Scorpions ahead 2-0. Fort Lauderdale fought back in the 79th minute when substitute Ramirez got the better of Saunders, finishing off a give-and-go with Anderson with a roofed shot that meant the hosts lived nervously during the closing stages of the match. The first yellow card of an intense game was not issued until the 84th minute when Scorpions substitute Giuseppe Gentile brought Chin down from behind on a slide tackle, and San Antonio's Hassli also picked up a card after he came in late on a tackle.

San Antonio held on for the final minutes, as Fort Lauderdale threw everything they had at them, to become the fourth different team to hoist the coveted Soccer Bowl trophy in as many years in the NASL's modern era.[5]

Championship results

San Antonio Scorpions2–1Fort Lauderdale Strikers
Castillo  69'
Forbes  74'
Report
Report
Nuñez[6]
Ramírez  79'
Attendance: 7,847
Referee: Ted Unkel
San Antonio Scorpions
Fort Lauderdale Strikers

2014 NASL Champions: San Antonio Scorpions

San Antonio Scorpions:
GK25 Josh Saunders
DF2 Jonathan Borrajo
DF3 Julius James
DF12 Greg Janicki
DF21 Stephen DeRoux
MF5 Richard Menjivar
MF7 Wálter Restrepo 85'
MF16 Rafael Castillo
MF19 Josue Soto
FW8 Billy Forbes
FW10 César Elizondo 74'
Substitutes:
GK1 Daryl Sattler
DF44 Juan Leone Cruz
FW9 Trevin Caesar
FW20 Sainey Touray
FW22 Tomasz Zahorski
FW28 Giuseppe Gentile 84' 74'
MF29 Eric Hassli 88' 85'
Manager:
Alen Marcina
Fort Lauderdale Strikers:
GK1 Kamil Čontofalský
DF21 Darnell King
DF33 Rafael Alves
DF2 Stefan Antonijevic 77'
DF12 Iván Guerrero
MF8 Pecka
MF14 James Marcelin
MF9 Martín Núñez 73'
MF17 Shawn Chin
MF20 Mark Anderson
FW15 Aly Hassan 60'
Substitutes:
GK22 Lionel Brown
DF5 Justin Chavez
DF18 Stéphane Guillaume
MF6 Chris Nurse
MF11 Fafà Picault 60'
FW19 Jenison Brito 77'
MF73 Walter Ramírez 73'
Manager:
Günter Kronsteiner

Man of the Match:

Rafael Castillo (San Antonio Scorpions)

MATCH OFFICIALS

  • Assistant referees:
    • Gianni Facchini
    • Felisha Mariscal
  • Fourth official: Armando Villarreal

See also

References

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