Dallas Tornado

This article is about the soccer team. For the meteorological event in 1957, see Early-April 1957 tornado outbreak sequence. For the meteorological event in 2015, see December 26, 2015 tornado outbreak.
Dallas Tornado
Full name Dallas Tornado
Nickname(s) The Tornado
Founded 1967
Dissolved 1981
Stadium Cotton Bowl
Capacity: 70,000
Turnpike Stadium
Capacity: 20,000
P.C. Cobb Stadium
Capacity: 22,000
Franklin Field
Capacity: 8,500
Texas Stadium
Capacity: 65,000
Ownby Stadium
Capacity: 20,000
Indoor soccer:
Fair Park Coliseum
Capacity: 7,513 (1975)
Reunion Arena
Capacity: 16,626 (1980–81)
Chairman Lamar Hunt
League USA (1967)
NASL (1968–1981)

Dallas Tornado was a soccer team based in Dallas that played in the North American Soccer League (NASL).[1] They played from 1967 to 1981. Of the twelve teams that comprised the USA in 1967, the Tornado franchise played the longest–15 seasons.

Their home fields were Cotton Bowl (1967–1968), P.C. Cobb Stadium (1969), Franklin Field (1970–1971),[2] Texas Stadium (1972–1975, 1980–1981) and Ownby Stadium on the SMU campus (1976–1979). The club played Indoor soccer at Reunion Arena for one season (1980–81), and hosted the two-day 1975 Regionals at Fair Park Coliseum.

History

1967–1971

The franchise was one of the original clubs that played in the United Soccer Association, one of the two precursors to the NASL, in 1967. In fact, the USA was made up of international clubs playing in U.S. cities as American teams. The team that played as the Dallas Tornado were Dundee United of the Scottish Football League. The following season when the USA merged with the NPSL, owners Lamar Hunt and Bill McNutt had to build a new team from scratch. They hired Bob Kap, a Serbian born soccer coach who had escaped with his family during the 1956 Hungarian Revolution.[3] Kap had studied with Ferenc Puskás at the Soccor Academy in Hungary. Kap was recruited from Toronto, Canada, where he had relocated after the 1956 Revolution. During the first 6 months as coach, Kap traveled throughout Europe to form the new Dallas Tornado, hiring young players from England to Turkey.

The fledgling Dallas Tornado learned to play as a team on their world tour during seven months in 1967–68, where they played 32 games in 26 countries spanning five continents.[3] Their world tour took them from England to India, from Indonesia to Vietnam during the height of the war. The Tornado consisted 8 players from England, 5 from Norway, 2 each from Sweden and the Netherlands; there was only one American player, Jay Moore.[3] The Tornado played in front of crowds of up to 50,000, and they played several well-established teams, such as a 2–2 draw against Fenerbahçe, as well as playing Spanish second-division side Real Oviedo, and the Japan national team.[3] The tour gave the new Dallas Tornado team an international face at a time when American soccer was relatively unknown. The gallant effort resulted in a 2–26–4 record.

Following the 1968 NASL season, the league was in trouble with ten franchises having folded. The 1969 season was split into two halves. The first half was called the International Cup, a double round robin tournament in which the remaining NASL clubs were represented by teams imported from the United Kingdom. The Tornado was represented again by Dundee United. The Tornado came in tied for third in the Cup with a 2–4–2 record. For the second half of the 1969 season, the teams returned to their normal rosters and played a 16 game schedule with no playoffs.

Fortunes improved for the club as they won the NASL championship in 1971, defeating the Atlanta Chiefs 2–0 in the final game of a three-game series, Mike Renshaw scoring the winning goal. The road to that title was marathon that, barring a rule change, might never be duplicated. In Game 1 of the best-of-three semifinal against the Rochester Lancers, league scoring champion Carlos Metidieri mercifully ended the match 2–1, late in the 6th 15 minute-overtime period in the 176th minute, less than four minutes shy of playing two complete games in one day. Three days later Dallas evened the series at one game each with a 3–1 regulation win. In the rubber match four days later, the two teams ended regulation tied again at 1 goal apiece. The game reached 4OTs before Bobby Moffat sent Dallas into the Finals in the 148 minute. Four days after that, Dallas lost Game 1 of the NASL Championship Series, 2–1 in the 3OTs to Atlanta after 123 minutes. All totaled, Dallas had played 537 minutes of football (3 minutes short of six games) in 13 days time. Finally the Tornado were able to get control of the series pulling away in games 2 and 3 by scores of 4–1 and 2–0 respectively.[4]

1972–1981

Several division titles followed in the years after that league title. The face of the team was Kyle Rote, Jr., son of former New York Giants wide receiver and TV broadcaster Kyle Rote. In 1973, Rote Jr. led the league in scoring and won the league Rookie of the Year award.[5] Rote Jr. further boosted his public profile by winning ABC Sports Superstars competition in 1974, 1976, and 1977.[5] On June 15, 1975, the Tornado played the New York's Cosmos in Pele's NASL debut, a match broadcast nationally on CBS.[5] Steve Pecher won the league Rookie of the Year award in 1976. The Tornado sold Rote Jr. at the end of the 1978 season to the Houston Hurricane for $250,000.[5]

As was the case with most NASL clubs, a drop in attendance contributed to the demise of the club in 1981. The Dallas Morning News estimated Hunt and McNutt's cumulative financial loss over 15 years at a minimum of $20 million.[5] After the 1981 season Hunt and McNutt decided to merge their team with the Tampa Bay Rowdies franchise, while retaining a minority stake in the Florida club.[6][7]

Lamar Hunt did not give up on soccer in America, however, and was one of the founding owners in Major League Soccer.

Ex-Manchester United goalkeeper, Alex Stepney played for Dallas.

Year-by-year

Year Record Regular Season Finish Playoffs Avg. Attend
1967 3–6–3 6th, Western Division, USA Did Not Qualify 9,227
1968 2–26–4 4th, Gulf Division Did Not Qualify 2,927
1969 2–2–4 3rd No Postseason 2,923
1970 8–12–4 3rd, Southern Division Did Not Qualify 2,228
1971 10–6–8 2nd, Southern Division Won Semifinals Series vs. Rochester Lancers, 2–1
Won NASL Finals Series vs. Atlanta Chiefs, 2–1
3,326
1972 6–5–3 2nd, Southern Division Lost Semifinal Game vs. New York Cosmos, 0–1 4,093
1973 11–4–4 1st, Southern Division Won Semifinal Game vs. New York Cosmos, 1–0
Lost NASL Championship Game vs. Philadelphia Atoms, 0–2
7,474
1974 9–8–3 1st, Central Division Won Quarterfinal Game vs. San Jose Earthquakes, 3–0
Lost Semifinal Game vs. Miami Toros, 1–3
8,469
1975 9–13 4th, Central Division Did Not Qualify 4,630
1976 13–11 2nd, Southern Division, Pacific Conference Won 1st Round Game vs. Los Angeles Aztecs, 2–0
Lost Division Championship vs. San Jose Earthquakes, 0–2
14,095
1977 18–8 1st, Southern Division, Pacific Conference Lost Conference Championships vs. Los Angeles Aztecs, 0–2 16,511
1978 14–16 3rd, Central Division, National Conference Did Not Qualify 8,981
1979 17–13 2nd, Central Division, National Conference Lost National Conference Quarterfinals vs. Vancouver Whitecaps, 0–2 9,321
1980 18–14 1st, Central Division, National Conference Won 1st Round Series vs. Minnesota Kicks, 2–0
Lost National Conference Semifinals vs. New York Cosmos, 1–2
6,752
1981 5–27 4th, Central Division Did Not Qualify 4,670

Indoor seasons

In March 1971 the league staged its first ever indoor event, a four-team Hoc-Soc tournament at the St. Louis Arena. Dallas won both of its matches, 2–1 and 3–0, and the title.[8] In the winter of 1975, the NASL organized a two-tiered, 16 team indoor tournament with four regional winners meeting in a "final-four" style championship. Dallas hosted their region at the Fair Park Coliseum and won the group. Though they lost in the semi-final, the Tornado rebounded to win the 3rd place game 2–0 over New York at the Cow Palace. In 1976 they again advanced out of their group, this time as a wild card, but lost both the semi-final and the third-place match at the Bayfront Center. In January 1979 the Tornado joined the Tulsa Roughnecks, Ft. Lauderdale Strikers and host Tampa Bay Rowdies for the two-day Budweiser Invitational.[9] They won both games, and the mini-tournament itself on goal differential. Tornado forward Jimmy Ryan was the leading scorer of the invitational with 7 goals.[10] Dallas participated in only one full NASL indoor season, 1980–81, before folding.[11]

Year Record Regular Season Finish Playoffs
1971 2–0 Hoc-Soc Tournament 1st place
1975 2–2 (16 team tournament only) 3rd place
1976 2–2 (12 team tournament only) 4th place
1979 2–0 Budweiser Invitational 1st place
1980–81 5–27 3rd, Southern Division Did Not Qualify

Honors

NASL Championships (1)

NASL Season Premierships (1)

NASL Indoor Championships (2)

Division/Region Titles (5)

  • 1973 Southern Division
  • 1974 Central Division
  • 1975 Region 1 (indoor)
  • 1977 Southern Division, Pacific Conference
  • 1980 Central Division, National Conference

Rookie of the Year

League Scoring Champion

League Goal Scoring Champion

League Leading Goaltender

Indoor MVP

Indoor Scoring Champion

Indoor Leading Goaltender

All-Star First Team Selections

All-Star Second Team Selections

All-Star Honorable Mentions

Indoor All-Stars

U.S. Soccer Hall of Fame

Indoor Soccer Hall of Fame

Players

Head coaches

References

  1. "The forgotten story of ... Dallas Tornado's 1967–68 world tour – Neil Jones – Football – theguardian.com". theguardian.com. Retrieved 2014-01-11.
  2. "Franklin Stadium – SoccerStats.us". soccerstats.us. Retrieved 2014-01-11.
  3. 1 2 3 4 The Guardian, The forgotten story of ... Dallas Tornado's 1967–68 world tour, Jan. 9, 2014, http://www.theguardian.com/sport/blog/2014/jan/09/forgotten-story-of-dallas-tornado
  4. "The Year in American Soccer – 1971". homepages.sover.net. Retrieved 2014-01-11.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 Fun While It Lasted, 1967–1981 Dallas Tornado, http://www.funwhileitlasted.net/2011/12/16/65-dallas-tornado/
  6. Lamar Hunt: A Life in Sports – Michael MacCambridge https://books.google.com/books?id=9jI5GTaAjZMC&pg=PA262&lpg=PA262&dq=rowdies+tornado+merge&source=bl&ots=hdS-ty1Z3L&sig=O0PNGYzWxJuSH2p3bXj2jHLUjvQ&hl=en&sa=X&ei=gFTDUfOLC4Og9QSBl4CICg&ved=0CC8Q6AEwAQ#v=onepage&q=rowdies%20tornado%20merge&f=false. Retrieved 2014-01-11 via Google Books. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  7. Lakeland Ledger https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1346&dat=19830914&id=YqpNAAAAIBAJ&sjid=o_sDAAAAIBAJ&pg=6683,4875862. Retrieved 2014-01-11 via Google News Archive Search. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  8. Flachsbart, Harold (March 20, 1971). "Fans Get A Kick Out Of Hoc-Soc". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. p. 6. Retrieved August 14, 2016.
  9. "The Evening Independent". news.google.com. Retrieved 2014-01-11 via Google News Archive Search.
  10. Lakeland Ledger. news.google.com https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=o2xNAAAAIBAJ&sjid=rfoDAAAAIBAJ&pg=6094,9183287&dq=dallas+caputes+indoor+soccer&hl=en. Retrieved 2014-01-11 via Google News Archive Search. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  11. 1 2 "History of Indoor Soccer in the USA". rsssf.com. Retrieved 2014-01-11.
  12. "Kasey Keller, Sigi Schmid and Glenn "Mooch" Myernick Elected to National Soccer Hall of Fame".
  13. "Hall of Famers". indoorsoccerhall.com. Retrieved 2014-01-11.
  14. "John Stewart". justsportsstats.com. Retrieved September 7, 2016.
  15. http://thesoccerobserver.com/2013/06/10/dundee-united-and-soccers-original-texas-derby/

External links

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