Los Angeles Skyhawks

The Los Angeles Skyhawks was a professional soccer club based in Los Angeles, California, that was a member of the American Soccer League. Founded as part of the American Soccer League's expansion to the west coast in 1976, they were the first professional sports team to be based in the San Fernando Valley area of Los Angeles. The ASL, under commissioner Bob Cousy, had expanded in an attempt to compete with the North American Soccer League. Coming into the league with the Skyhawks were the Oakland (later Golden Bay) Buccaneers, Tacoma Tides, Sacramento Spirits, and the Utah Pioneers (later Golden Spikers). These teams formed the Western Division, while the Eastern Division had the established teams New York Apollo, Connecticut Yankees, Rhode Island Oceaneers, Chicago Cats, New Jersey Americans, and Cleveland Cobras.

The Skyhawks played their games at Birmingham High School Stadium for the 1976 and 1977 seasons. At the time, Birmingham was the largest stadium in the valley with a capacity of 10,000, and it was centrally located. Many of the players commented that the field conditions and lighting were better than that at many lower division European stadiums. After 1977, the Skyhawks moved to Shephard Stadium at Los Angeles Pierce Community College.

History

1976: The magical first season

The Skyhawks managed to obtain the services of the renowned Ron Newman as their head coach, and he assembled a roster consisting of a number of young players from England's second and third divisions. Many of these players also had some limited first division experience; players such as goalkeeper Brian Parkinson (Everton), Midfielder Tony "Wheels" Whelan (Manchester City), Jimmy Rolland (Northwich Victoria), and forward Jimmy "the Price" Hinch (York), were the stars of the team. In addition, U.S. college player of the year Steve Ralbovsky (Brown University) spurned the N.A.S.L. and signed with the Skyhawks. The defense was anchored by 38-year-old sweeper and former Scottish International Ron Yeats ("the Colussus"), a veteran of the English First Division, where he was Liverpool's captain when Liverpool rose to glory in the 1960s. Hinch ended up as the A.S.L.'s leading scorer and Parkinson had the lowest goals against average (0.78) among A.S.L. goalkeepeers. Led by these stars and a strong supporting cast, the Skyhawks had the league's best record (13 wins, 6 draws, 2 defeats) and regularly drew upwards of 4,000 fans per game, easily leading the ASL in attendance.

The 1976 ASL playoff format had the top 3 teams in each division qualifying for the playoffs, with the 1st place teams earning a first round bye while the 2nd place team hosted the 3rd place team.

After earning a first round bye, the Skyhawks faced the 2nd place Tacoma Tides, who had defeated Utah 2-1 in the first round. The Skyhawks took a 1-0 lead, but midway through the second half, goalkeeper Brian Parkinson suffered a head injury in a collision, and Tacoma equalized against backup keeper Marine Cano to force overtime. Facing the prospect of going into a penalty kick shootout without their #1 keeper, the Skyhawks won the game in the second 10-minute overtime period on a goal by Jimmy Rolland.

In the ASL championship game, the Skyhawks faced Eastern Division winner and defending champion New York Apollo. Over 9,000 fans showed up at Birmingham Stadium and saw the Skyhawks fall behind early, 1-0. Then late in the first half, Skyhawk defender Alty McKenzie was controversially sent off with a red card so L.A. had to play a man down the remainder of the game. But Hinch equalized early in the second half, and late in the game Ralbovsky was tripped from behind in the penalty area while on a breakaway. Skyhawk forward Ane Mihailovich buried the penalty kick into the back of the net past N.Y. keeper Gerard Joseph, and the Skyhawks were ASL champs, making Ron Newman the only man to coach an ASL and NASL champion. Hinch was named MVP, and Newman was coach of the year.

Roster

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
1 England GK Brian Parkinson
2 Jamaica DF Alty McKenzie
3 Republic of Ireland DF Ken Fogarty
4 England MF Mickey Cave
5 Scotland DF Ron Yeats (captain)
6 United States MF Steve Ralbovsky
7 Scotland FW Jimmy Rolland
8 Israel MF Abraham Cohen
9 England FW Jimmy Hinch
No. Position Player
10 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia FW Ane Mihailovich
11 England MF Tony Whelan
12 Israel DF Benny Binshtock
13 Norway MF Leif Werneid
14 United States FW Steve Cacciatore
16 United States GK Marine Cano
17 Mexico DF Javier Loza
18 England DF John Willis
19 United States FW Jerry Kazarian
20 Israel DF Moshe Hoftman

1977 Season

The Skyhawks were again led offensively by Jimmy Hinch and Jimmy Rolland (who finished 2nd and 3rd in the league in scoring) and in goal by Brian Parkinson (who finished 2nd in GAA). While they couldn't duplicate their dominance of the 1976 season, they finished 2nd in the West and 4th overall with 13 wins, 4 draws, and 7 defeats. After a 3-2 first round playoff win over the California Sunshine, they lost to Western Division champion Sacramento in the Western Division playoff finals, 2-1.

Roster

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
1 England GK Brian Parkinson
9 England FW Jimmy Hinch
18 England DF John Willis
2 United States DF Brooks Cryder
3 El Salvador DF Miguel Lopez
16 United States GK Marine Cano
20 Israel DF Moshe Hoftman
7 Scotland FW Jimmy Rolland
No. Position Player
17 Mexico DF Javier Loza
4 England DF Bernie Fagan
12 United States MF Garo Osmanian

1978 Season

By 1978, the ASL was in severe financial difficulty, with every team losing money. On the field, the Skyhawks, led by ASL leading scorer and MVP Jimmy Rolland and goalkeeper Brian Parkinson (again 2nd in GAA), returned to the top of the Western Division and with a record of 17-6-1. They made it to the championship game for the 2nd time in 3 years, but lost in the final, 1-0 to the New York Apollo, who had the league's best record at 18-5-1.

Roster

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
1 England GK Brian Parkinson
4 United States DF Charlie Kadupski
3 El Salvador DF Miguel Lopez
6 England MF Alan Sproates
10 England MF Paul Taylor
7 Scotland FW Jimmy Rolland
11 England FW Mal Roche
No. Position Player
17 Mexico DF Javier Loza
20 Israel DF Moshe Hoftman
9 Scotland FW Billy McNichol
5 England MF Geoff Davies
8 Scotland MF Doug McMillan
12 United States MF Garo Osmanian
21 United States GK Joe Hight
2 England DF Brian Gardiner

1979 Season

The Skyhawks lost much of their scoring punch with the departures of Jimmy Hinch and Jim Rolland. Despite it all, the Skyhawks managed to place 3rd in the West with a 13-11-4 record. But the season ended with a first round playoff loss to Sacramento by a score of 3-2, in what proved to be the final Skyhawk game ever.The Skyhawks also played a friendly that season in Los Angeles Jackie Robinson Stadium against the 1980 US Men's Olympic Team in March losing the match 2-1. Due to financial difficulties, the team folded at the end of the 1979 season.

Roster

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
1 England GK Brian Parkinson
5 England DF Dave Donaldson
3 United States DF Leo Kulinczenko
17 Mexico DF Javier Loza
11 England FW Mal Roche
8 Argentina MF Carlos Zavaleta
13 United States DF Kurt Stierle
15 DF Paddy Dunning
18 Scotland MF Vinnie McCarthy
7 United States MF Garo Osmanian
No. Position Player
10 England MF Paul Taylor
9 Scotland FW Billy McNichol
4 El Salvador DF Miguel Lopez
12 United States MF Les Peterson
2 United States DF Kevin Handlan
14 United States MF Manny Matos
16 England DF Brian Gardiner
21 United States GK Joe Hight

Honours

Champions

MVP

Leading Scorer

Leading Goalkeeper

Coach of the Year

First Team All Star

Year-by-year

Year Division League Reg. Season Playoffs U.S. Open Cup
1976 West ASL 1st, West Champion Did not enter
1977 West ASL 2nd, West Semifinals Did not enter
1978 West ASL 1st, Western Final Did not enter
1979 West ASL 3rd, Western 1st Round Did not enter

Management

Coaches

Skyhawk Trivia and Notes

References

External links

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