Sporting Arizona FC
Full name | Sporting Arizona Football Club | ||
---|---|---|---|
Founded | 1989 | ||
Stadium | Gateway Park El Mirage, Arizona | ||
Capacity | 2,000 | ||
Owner | Maitland Primrose Investments | ||
Manager | Heber Valenzuela | ||
League | UPSL|SWPL | ||
Website | Club website | ||
|
Sporting Arizona FC is an American developmental soccer team based in Arizona that was founded in 1989. They compete in the United Premier Soccer League (UPSL) Premier Division.
History
[edit]This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (December 2009) |
The club originally started in 1989 as the Phoenix Hearts in the original indoor SISL league. They made an immediate impact on the league when they went to the 1989–1990 SISL indoor championship before falling to the Addison Arrows. Hearts coach Peter Baralić was named Coach of the Year.[1]
They changed their name to the Arizona Cotton in 1992 and played both indoor and outdoor for one more year in the USISL, before joining the amateur USISL Premier League in 1995. In 1992, they again went to the final of the USISL Indoor season, losing to the Atlanta Magic. The Arizona coach, Zelimar Antonievic, was named Coach of the Year.[2]
In 1996, the team became the Arizona Phoenix. In 1997, they changed their name again, this time to Arizona Sahuaros, and moved up to the USISL D-3 Pro League. In 1998, the Sahuaros front office named 3 player coaches to take over the Sahuaros Professional franchise, Mate Kozul (Head Coach), Edson Rico and Roger Salazar (Assistant coaches). With their connections in the Valley they assembled a strong team of former HS Gatorade Players of the Year, College All Americans and National JUCO Champions from Yavapai College. That year the Sahuaros were crowned the Western Division Champions and coach Matt Kozul was named USISL Coach of the Year.[3]
After the 2002 season, the Sahuaros left the USL D-3 Pro League and helped form the new Men's Premier Soccer League, finishing the season as champions in the first year. The Sahuaros competed in the NPSL until 2004, after which the club chose to play in USASA affiliated leagues. They re-joined the NPSL in 2008. In 2003–2009, the Sahuaros hired Petar Draksin as their head coach, he made a significant contribution to the Sahuaros franchise by bringing in many talented players and winning many significant games in the different leagues.
In 2016, the Sahuaros were renamed Sporting AZ FC. They joined the UPSL on January 8, 2017, and were placed in the Arizona Conference along with the Arizona Scorpions FC, El Salto United FC & Super Inter AZ.[4] Sporting AZ FC won the Arizona Conference in their 1st season in the UPSL, moving on to the UPSL National Quarterfinals. The team was led by head coach Tim Marchisotto and standout goalkeeper Jake Rybicki. 2018 saw the team raise the bar again, with Marchisotto moving into the general manager role and the addition of Aidan Davison as head coach. The duo achieved success with the team. Sporting AZ won the new Southwest Conference of the UPSL and went to the UPSL Championship game.
In January 2020, "Sporting AZ FC" was renamed Sporting Arizona FC and with the new name came a new ownership. The club continues the same original traditions as a development pathway for players and coaches to reach the professional ranks. In seasons 2021 and 2022, the Club fielded two teams in the United Premier Soccer League (UPSL) – Sporting Arizona FC and SAFC Sahuaros. Sporting Arizona FC coached by Eric Junis Aguilar won the UPSL Division 1 title. In season 2023, the Club has fielded the two teams in the inaugural Southwest Premier League – Arizona Premier. Sporting Arizona coached by Omar Ledesma has won the league with SAFC Sahuaros coached by Eric Junis Aguilar taking second place. Since 2021, Sporting Arizona FC has been the exclusive 'path-to-pro' partner of State 48 FC, Arizona's fastest growing youth and community soccer development club.
Players
[edit]Notable former players
[edit]- Roger Espinoza (2013 – Premier League – Wigan Athletic)[5] (2008 SuperDraft – MLS 11th pick in the 1st round – Kansas City Wizards) [6]
- Allen Chapman (Professional referee working in MLS since 2012)[7]
- Nick DeLeon (2012 Super Draft – MLS 7th pick in the 1st round – DC United)[8]
- Justin Meram[9]
- Scott Maxwell (1991/92 Indoor Season – acquired from SISL's Amarillo Challengers)
- Randy Soderman
Year-by-year
[edit]Outdoor team
[edit]Year | Division | League | Reg. Season | Playoffs | Open Cup | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Phoenix Hearts | ||||||
1990 | SISL | 3rd, Western | Quarter-finals | Did not enter | ||
1991 | SISL | 5th, Southwest | Did not qualify | Did not enter | ||
Arizona Cotton | ||||||
1992 | USISL | 4th, Southwest | Did not qualify | Did not enter | ||
1993 | USISL | 7th, Southwest | Did not qualify | Did not enter | ||
1994 | 3 | USISL | 5th, Southwest | Did not qualify | Did not enter | |
1995 | 4 | USISL Premier League | 6th, Western | Did not qualify | Did not qualify | |
Arizona Phoenix | ||||||
1996 | 4 | USISL Premier League | 3rd, Western Southern | Division Semi-finals | Did not qualify | |
Arizona Sahuaros | ||||||
1997 | 3 | USISL D-3 Pro League | 6th, West | Did not qualify | Did not qualify | |
1998 | 3 | USISL D-3 Pro League | 1st, Western Division | Quarter-finals | 2nd round | |
1999 | 3 | USL D-3 Pro League | 3rd, Western | Conference Semi-finals | 2nd round | |
2000 | 3 | USL D-3 Pro League | 6th, Western | Did not qualify | Did not qualify | |
2001 | 3 | USL D-3 Pro League | 4th, Western | Conference Semi-finals | Did not qualify | |
2002 | 3 | USL D-3 Pro League | 3rd, Western | 1st round | Did not qualify | |
2003 | 4 | MPSL | 3rd | Champions | Did not qualify | |
2004 | 4 | MPSL | 3rd | Runner-up | Did not qualify | |
2005 | On Hiatus | |||||
2006 | USASA | n/a | n/a | 1st round – Sahuaros (USASA) vs BYU Cougars (USL-PDL) 5–1[10] 2nd Round – Sahuaros (USASA) vs Virginia Beach Mariners (USL-D1) 0–1 [11] | ||
2007 | USASA | n/a | n/a | Did not qualify | ||
2008 | 4 | NPSL | 2nd, Southwest | Did not qualify | 1st round | |
2009 | USASA | n/a | n/a | 1st round – El Paso Patriots (USL-PDL) vs Sahuaros (USASA) 2–1[12] | ||
2010 | USASA | n/a | n/a | 1st round – Sahuaros (NPSL) vs Ventura County Fusion (USL-PDL) 1–1 regulation 4–2 PKs[13] 2nd Round – Austin Aztex (USSF-D2) vs Sahuaros (NPSL) 3–1 [14] | ||
2011 | On Hiatus | |||||
2012 | USASA | n/a | n/a | Did not qualify | ||
2013 | USASA | n/a | n/a | Did not qualify | ||
2014 | USASA | n/a | n/a | Did not qualify | ||
2015 | USASA | n/a | n/a | Did not qualify | ||
2016 | USASA | n/a | n/a | Did not qualify | ||
Sporting AZ FC | ||||||
2017 (Spring) | UPSL | 1st, Arizona Conference | Quarter-finals | Did not qualify | ||
2018 (Spring) | UPSL | 1st, Southwest Conference | Championship Final | 1st round – Sporting AZ FC (UPSL) vs FC Arizona (NPSL) 1–0[15] 2nd Round – Sporting AZ FC (UPSL) vs Phoenix Rising FC (USL) 1–1 regulation 5–4 PKs [16] 3rd Round – Fresno FC (USL) vs Sporting AZ FC (UPSL) 2–1 in overtime. | ||
2021 (Spring) | UPSL | 1st, Arizona 1st Division Conference | ||||
2022–23 (Spring) | SWPL | 1st, Arizona Premier | ||||
2022–23 (Fall) | UPSL | 2nd, Arizona 1st Division Conference |
Indoor team
[edit]Year | League | Reg. Season | Playoffs |
---|---|---|---|
Phoenix Hearts | |||
1989/90 | SISL Indoor | 1st, Cactus | Championship Final |
1990/91 | SISL Indoor | 4th, Southwest | Quarter-finals |
1991/92 | USISL Indoor | 4th, Southwest | Did not qualify |
Arizona Cotton | |||
1992/93 | USISL Indoor | 2nd, Southwest | Championship Final |
Honors
[edit]- MPSL Champions 2003
- USL D-3 Pro League West Division Champions 1998
- SISL Cactus Division Champions 1989/90 (Indoor)
- UPSL Arizona Conference Champions 2017 (Spring Season)
- UPSL Southwest Conference Champions 2018 (Spring Season)
- UPSL Southwest Conference Division 1 Champions 2022 (Spring Season)
- SWPL Arizona Premier Champions 2023 (Spring Season)
Hall of Fame
[edit]- Mate Kozul Induction year 2009
- Edson Rico Induction year 2009
- Roger Salazar Induction year 2009
- Harold Calvo Induction year 2018
Head coaches/Assistant coaches
[edit]- Peter Baralić (1989–1991)
- Cole Antonijevic (1992)
- Zelimar Antonijevic (1993–1995)
- Dave Murray (1996)
- Walter Brusic (1996–1998)
- Mate Kozul (1998–1999)
- Asst. Edson Rico (1998–1999)
- Asst. Roger Salazar (1998–1999)
- Manny Arias (1999–2001)
- Asst. Tim Marchisotto (2000–2003)
- Petar Draksin (2002–2009)
- Orhan Kraja (2010–2011)
- Tim Marchisotto (2012–2017)
- Aidan Davison (2017–2018)
- Tom Hurdle (2019–2020)
- Eric Junis Aguilar (2020–2022)
- Tim Schicky (2021–2022)
- Eric Junis Aguilar (2022–present)
- Omar Ledesma (2022–2023)
- Roberto Biell (2023–present)
References
[edit]- ^ The Year in American Soccer – 1990
- ^ The Year in American Soccer – 1993
- ^ The Year in American Soccer – 1998
- ^ "United Premier Soccer League Welcomes Sporting AZ Football Club as Expansion Team for 2017". prlog.org. January 8, 2017. Retrieved January 8, 2017.
- ^ "Wigan Athletic FC".
- ^ "Roger Espinoza | MLSsoccer.com".
- ^ "Allen Chapman | SoccerStats.us".
- ^ "Nick DeLeon | MLSsoccer.com".
- ^ "Meet the Arizona Sahuaros, Professional Soccer Team Members".
- ^ "2006 Lamar Hunt US Open Cup bracket". November 2006.
- ^ "2006 Lamar Hunt US Open Cup bracket". November 2006.
- ^ "2009 Lamar Hunt US Open Cup bracket". September 2009.
- ^ "2010 US Open Cup First Round: Sahuaros knock out defending PDL champions in PK shootout". 18 June 2010.
- ^ "2010 US Open Cup Second Round: Marosevic sparks Aztex past Sahuaros (Video)". 23 June 2010.
- ^ "2018 US Open Cup round 1: Sporting AZ edges FC Arizona in budding rivalry in the desert". 16 May 2018.
- ^ "2018 US Open Cup round 2: Sporting AZ lone UPSL team left after PK upset of Phoenix Rising". 21 May 2018.