1990–91 Major Soccer League season

The 1990–91 Major Soccer League season was the 13th and penultimate in league history and would end with the San Diego Sockers winning their ninth title in ten indoor seasons and fourth in a row. This was the first offseason in MISL history that did not have any franchise movement or collapse. After the season, however, the Kansas City Comets folded.[1]

In a nod to the burgeoning nationwide interest in outdoor soccer after the 1990 World Cup, the league's name was changed on July 24, just before the season began. Also, Commissioner Earl Foreman was selected to chair the United States Soccer Federation's exploratory committee for a first-division outdoor league.[2]

Teams

Team City/Area Arena
Baltimore Blast Baltimore, Maryland Baltimore Arena
Cleveland Crunch Cleveland, Ohio Richfield Coliseum
Dallas Sidekicks Dallas, Texas Reunion Arena
Kansas City Comets Kansas City, Missouri Kemper Arena
San Diego Sockers San Diego, California San Diego Sports Arena
St. Louis Storm St. Louis, Missouri St. Louis Arena
Tacoma Stars Tacoma, Washington Tacoma Dome
Wichita Wings Wichita, Kansas Kansas Coliseum

Regular Season Schedule

The 1990–91 regular season schedule ran from October 19, 1990 to April 7, 1991. The 52 games per team was unchanged from the 1989–90 schedule.[3]

Final Standings

Playoff teams in bold.

Eastern Division W L Pct. GB GF GA Home Road
Cleveland Crunch 2923.558--32228020-69-17
Kansas City Comets 2626.500326328317-99-17
Wichita Wings 2131.408825730817-94-22
Baltimore Blast 2131.408829831515-116-20
Western Division W L Pct. GB GF GA Home Road
San Diego Sockers3418.654--30225020-614-12
St. Louis Storm3220.615232028820-612-14
Tacoma Stars2527.481925425917-98-18
Dallas Sidekicks2032.3851425729411-159-17

Playoffs

  Division Semifinals Division Finals Championship Series
                           
  E2  Kansas City Comets 2  
E3  Wichita Wings 0  
  E1  Cleveland Crunch 4  
    E2  Kansas City Comets 3  
      
          
    E1  Cleveland Crunch 2
  W1  San Diego Sockers 4
  W2  St. Louis Storm 2  
W3  Tacoma Stars 0  
W1  San Diego Sockers 4
    W2  St. Louis Storm 1  
      

Division Semifinals

Kansas City vs. Wichita
Date Away Home Attendance
April 12 Wichita 0 Kansas City 6 6,144
April 14 Kansas City 9 Wichita 8 4,737
Kansas City wins series 2-0
St. Louis vs. Tacoma
Date Away Home Attendance
April 9 Tacoma 2 St. Louis 9 5,832
April 11 St. Louis 3 Tacoma 4 2,760
Gary Heale scored at 1:30 of overtime
April 13 Tacoma 2 St. Louis 9 7,084
St. Louis wins series 2-1

Division Finals

Cleveland vs. Kansas City
Date Away Home Attendance
April 18 Kansas City 2 Cleveland 7 5,357
April 20 Kansas City 5 Cleveland 7 10,021
April 24 Cleveland 6 Kansas City 7 4,639
Carl Valentine scored at 11:26 of overtime
April 26 Cleveland 5 Kansas City 4 9,451
April 28 Cleveland 4 Kansas City 5 3,889
Ted Eck scored at 4:27 of overtime
May 1 Kansas City 8 Cleveland 6 7,239
May 4 Kansas City 6 Cleveland 7 12,718
Cleveland wins series 4-3
San Diego vs. St. Louis
Date Away Home Attendance
April 18 St. Louis 6 San Diego 9 5,157
April 20 St. Louis 4 San Diego 5 8,534
Rod Castro scored at 3:58 of overtime
April 21 San Diego 4 St. Louis 5 5,751
April 25 San Diego 11 St. Louis 4 4,633
April 27 San Diego 7 St. Louis 4 6,032
San Diego wins series 4-1

Championship Series

San Diego vs. Cleveland
Date Away Home Attendance
May 10 Cleveland 4 San Diego 8 7,785
May 12 Cleveland 4 San Diego 3 6,996
May 17 San Diego 6 Cleveland 5 14,571
May 19 San Diego 5 Cleveland 7 10,831
May 21 San Diego 6 Cleveland 1 12,102
May 23 Cleveland 6 San Diego 8 12,073
San Diego wins series 4-2

League Awards

Most Valuable Player: Victor Nogueira, San Diego

Scoring Champion: Tatu, Dallas

Pass Master: Tatu, Dallas

Defender of the Year: Kevin Crow, San Diego

Rookie of the Year: David Banks, San Diego

Newcomer of the Year: Paul Peschisolido, Kansas City

Goalkeeper of the Year: Victor Nogueira, San Diego

Coach of the Year: Trevor Dawkins, Cleveland

Championship Series Most Valuable Player: Ben Collins, San Diego

Championship Series Unsung Hero: Glenn Carbonara, San Diego

Team Attendance Totals

Club Games Total Average
St. Louis Storm 26 200,769 7,722
Baltimore Blast 26 193,223 7,432
San Diego Sockers 26 187,000 7,192
Kansas City Comets 26 184,678 7,103
Dallas Sidekicks 26 179,864 6,918
Wichita Wings 26 164,033 6,309
Tacoma Stars 26 142,523 5,482
Cleveland Crunch 26 120,630 4,640
OVERALL 208 1,372,720 6,600

References

  1. "Kansas City soccer team folds". Times-News (Hendersonville, North Carolina). July 17, 1991. p. 16. Retrieved April 26, 2012.
  2. MSL Official Guide 1990-91. 1990. p. 50.
  3. MSL Official Guide 1990-91. 1990. pp. 189–192.

Griffin, John, ed. (1990). MSL Official Guide 1990-91. Overland Park, Kansas: Major Soccer League Communications Department. 

Griffin, John, ed. (1991). MSL Official Guide 1991-92. Baltimore: Major Soccer League Communications Department. 

External links

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