1981 North American Soccer League season

Statistics of North American Soccer League in season 1981. This was the 14th season of the NASL.

North American Soccer League 1981 season
Season1981
ChampionsChicago Sting
PremiersNew York Cosmos
(5th title)
Matches played336
Goals scored1,234 (3.67 per match)
Top goalscorerGiorgio Chinaglia
(29 goals)
Highest attendance50,755
Washington at Montreal
(August 18)
Lowest attendance1,861
Dallas at Chicago
(May 10)
Average attendance14,084
1980
1982

Overview edit

There were a total of 21 teams participating. Three teams (Houston, Rochester and Washington) folded, while four others (Memphis, Detroit, New England and Philadelphia) moved to new cities. Playoff series were switched from the two matches plus a mini-game tiebreaker used since 1977, to a best-of-three full matches played on three separate dates. The Chicago Sting defeated the New York Cosmos in Soccer Bowl '81 on September 26 to win the championship.

When Major League Baseball players went on strike on June 12, there was speculation that other sports, especially soccer, would see larger crowds. However, the 157 NASL matches played during the baseball work stoppage (which ended August 9) drew an average attendance of only 13,419, less than the full-season average of 14,084.

Changes from the previous season edit

New teams edit

  • None

Teams folding edit

Teams moving edit

  • Memphis Rogues to Calgary Boomers
  • Detroit Express to Washington Diplomats
  • New England Tea Men to Jacksonville Tea Men
  • Philadelphia Fury to Montreal Manic

Name changes edit

  • None

Regular season edit

W = Wins, L = Losses, GF = Goals For, GA = Goals Against, PT= point system

6 points for a win in regulation and overtime, 4 point for a shootout win, 0 points for a loss, 1 bonus point for each regulation goal scored, up to three per game.[1]

 -Premiers (most points).  -Other playoff teams.
Eastern Division W L GF GA PT
New York Cosmos 23 9 80 49 200
Montreal Manic 15 17 63 57 141
Washington Diplomats 15 17 59 58 135
Toronto Blizzard 7 25 39 82 77
Southern Division W L GF GA PT
Atlanta Chiefs 17 15 62 60 151
Fort Lauderdale Strikers 18 14 54 46 144
Jacksonville Tea Men 18 14 51 46 141
Tampa Bay Rowdies 15 17 63 64 139
Central Division W L GF GA PT
Chicago Sting 23 9 84 50 195
Minnesota Kicks 19 13 63 57 163
Tulsa Roughnecks 17 15 60 49 154
Dallas Tornado 5 27 27 71 54
Western Division W L GF GA PT
San Diego Sockers 21 11 67 49 173
Los Angeles Aztecs 19 13 53 55 160
California Surf 11 21 60 77 117
San Jose Earthquakes 11 21 44 78 108
Northwest Division W L GF GA PT
Vancouver Whitecaps 21 11 74 43 186
Calgary Boomers 17 15 59 54 151
Portland Timbers 17 15 52 49 141
Seattle Sounders 15 17 60 62 137
Edmonton Drillers 12 20 60 79 123

NASL All-Stars edit

First Team[2] Position Second Team[3] Honorable Mention[4]
  Jan van Beveren, Fort Lauderdale G   Hubert Birkenmeier, New York   Volkmar Gross, San Diego
  Frantz Mathieu, Chicago D   Barry Wallace, Tulsa   Nick Rohmann, San Diego
  Wim Rijsbergen, New York D   Kevin Bond, Seattle   Robert Iarusci, New York
  Peter Nogly, Edmonton D   Mihalj Keri, Los Angeles   Dave Huson, Chicago
  John Gorman, Tampa Bay D   Pierce O'Leary, Vancouver   Carlos Alberto, California
  Arno Steffenhagen, Chicago M   Alan Hudson, Seattle   Juli Veee, San Diego
  Vladislav Bogićević, New York M   George Best, San Jose   Jomo Sono, Toronto
  Teófilo Cubillas, Fort Lauderdale M   Peter Lorimer, Vancouver   Duncan McKenzie, Tulsa
  Brian Kidd, Atlanta F   Karl-Heinz Granitza, Chicago   Mike Stojanović, San Diego
  Gordon Hill, Montreal F   Roberto Cabañas, New York   Pato Margetic, Chicago
  Giorgio Chinaglia, New York F   Franz Gerber, Calgary   Alan Green, Jacksonville •   Steve Wegerle, New York

Playoffs edit

15 teams qualified for the playoffs – each first and second-place team across the divisions plus the five next best teams. Division winners were seeded 1 through 5, the second-place teams were seeded 6 through 10, and the last five teams were seeded 11 through 15 regardless of division placing.[5] The top seed received a bye, and the remaining 14 teams paired off to play the first round. Series winners would be reseeded by season point total after each round.

The 'best of two' format used from 1978 to 1980 was discarded for a more straightforward best of three games format in the first three rounds.

Bracket edit

First Round
(Best-of-3)
Quarterfinals
(Best-of-3)
Semifinals
(Best-of-3)
Soccer Bowl '81
(Single match)
            
1 New York 2
14 Tampa Bay 1
3 Vancouver 0
14 Tampa Bay 2
1 New York 2
9 Fort Lauderdale 0
6 Minnesota 2
11 Tulsa 0
6 Minnesota 0
9 Fort Lauderdale 2
8 Calgary 0
9 Fort Lauderdale 2
1 New York 0
2 Chicago 1
2 Chicago 2
15 Seattle 1
2 Chicago 2
10 Montreal 1
7 Los Angeles 1
10 Montreal 2
2 Chicago 2
4 San Diego 1
4 San Diego 2
13 Portland 1
4 San Diego 2
12 Jacksonville 1
5 Atlanta 0
12 Jacksonville 2

First round edit

Lower seed Higher seed Game 1 Game 2 Game 3 (higher seed hosts Games 2 and 3)
Tulsa Roughnecks - Minnesota Kicks 1–3 0–1 (SO, 4–5) x August 22 • Skelly Stadium • 16,205
August 26 • Metropolitan Stadium • 10,722
Portland Timbers - San Diego Sockers 2–1 1–5 0–2 August 22 • Civic Stadium • 16,003
August 26 • Jack Murphy Stadium • 12,039
August 30 • Jack Murphy Stadium • 15,244
Jacksonville Tea Men - Atlanta Chiefs 3–2 (OT) 2–1 x August 23 • Gator Bowl • 9,287
August 25 • Atlanta–Fulton County Stadium • 6,572
Fort Lauderdale Strikers - Calgary Boomers 3–1 #2–0 x August 23 • Lockhart Stadium • 12,196
#August 26 • Lockhart Stadium • 11,494
Tampa Bay Rowdies - Vancouver Whitecaps 4–1 1–0 x August 23 • Tampa Stadium • 21,192
August 26 • Empire Stadium • 28,896
Seattle Sounders - Chicago Sting 2–3 *2–0 2–3 August 23 • Comiskey Park • 14,643
*August 26 • Kingdome • 15,176
August 30 • Wrigley Field • 24,080
Montreal Manic - Los Angeles Aztecs 5–3 2–3 2–1 (OT) August 24 • Olympic Stadium • 46,682
August 27 • Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum • 7,529
August 30 • Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum • 8,812
(first round bye) New York Cosmos

#Due to a scheduling conflict between the Calgary Boomers and the Billy Graham Crusade, the Fort Lauderdale Strikers hosted both Games 1 and 2 (instead of Game 1 only), there-by gaining home field advantage even though they were the lower seed.[6]

*Seattle Sounders hosted Game 2 (instead of Game 1) due to a scheduling conflict with the Mariners baseball club.[7]

Quarterfinals edit

Lower seed Higher seed Game 1 Game 2 Game 3 (higher seed hosts Games 2 and 3)
Tampa Bay Rowdies - New York Cosmos 3–6 3–2 (SO, 4–2) 0–2 September 2 • Tampa Stadium • 29,224
September 5 • Giants Stadium • 38,691
September 9 • Giants Stadium • 33,754
Montreal Manic - Chicago Sting 3–2 2–4 2–4 September 2 • Olympic Stadium • 58,542
September 5 • Wrigley Field • 24,648
September 10 • Comiskey Park • 27,489
Fort Lauderdale Strikers - Minnesota Kicks 3–1 3–0 x September 2 • Lockhart Stadium • 11,918
September 6 • Memorial Stadium • 10,278
Jacksonville Tea Men - San Diego Sockers 2–1 (OT) 1–2 1–3 September 2 • Gator Bowl • 12,252
September 6 • Jack Murphy Stadium • 14,428
September 9 • Jack Murphy Stadium • 14,015

Semifinals edit

Lower seed Higher seed Game 1 Game 2 Game 3 (higher seed hosts Games 2 and 3)
Fort Lauderdale Strikers - New York Cosmos 3–4 1–4 x September 12 • Lockhart Stadium • 18,814
September 16 • Giants Stadium • 31,172
[8]
San Diego Sockers - Chicago Sting 2–1 1–2 0–1 (SO, 2–3) September 12 • Jack Murphy Stadium • 18,192
September 16 • Comiskey Park • 21,760
September 21 • Comiskey Park • 39,623

Soccer Bowl '81 edit

Chicago Sting1–0 (SO)New York Cosmos
Report
Penalties
Margetic  
Spalding  
Peter  
Granitza  
Glenn  
2–1   Seninho
  Chinaglia
  Bogićević
  Buljan
  Iarusci
Attendance: 36,971
Referee: Dante Maglio (Canada)

1981 NASL Champions: Chicago Sting

*From 1977 through 1984 the NASL had a variation of the penalty shoot-out procedure for tied matches. The shoot-out started 35 yards from the goal and allowed the player 5 seconds to attempt a shot. The player could make as many moves as he wanted in a breakaway situation within the time frame. Even though this particular match was a scoreless tie after overtime, NASL procedure also called for the box score to show an additional "goal" given to the winning team.[9][10]

Post season awards edit

References edit

  1. ^ "St. Petersburg Times - Google News Archive Search".
  2. ^ Cote, Greg (September 11, 1981). "Strikers open at home against Cosmos Saturday". Miami Herald. p. 4F. Retrieved March 12, 2021.
  3. ^ "NASL All-Stars". The Evening Independent. September 11, 1981. p. 2-C. Retrieved March 12, 2021.
  4. ^ "NASL All-Star Team". The Tampa Times. September 11, 1981. p. 2C. Retrieved March 12, 2021.
  5. ^ Scheiber, Dave (August 3, 1981). "NASL's playoff system hurts its credibility". St. Petersburg Times. p. 3C. Retrieved September 26, 2018.
  6. ^ Scheiber, Dave (September 1, 1981). "Rowdies cashing in on their new underdog label". St. Petersburg Times. p. 3, sec. 4. Retrieved July 4, 2016.
  7. ^ Conklin, Mike (September 27, 1981). "Sting hopes for even more success in playoffs". Chicago Tribune. p. 3, sec. 4. Retrieved July 4, 2016.
  8. ^ Bonapace, Ruth (September 17, 1981). "Chinaglia Pulls It Out Of The Hat For Cosmos". Evening Independent. p. 4, sec. C. Retrieved July 4, 2016.
  9. ^ "This Day In 1981 : Soccer Bowl Edition | Chicago Fire Confidential". Archived from the original on September 20, 2013. Retrieved June 21, 2013.
  10. ^ "The Year in American Soccer - 1977". Archived from the original on July 13, 2013. Retrieved June 21, 2013.
  11. ^ "The Calgary Herald - Google News Archive Search".

External links edit