FC Seattle Storm 1990 record: W-10 L-10. Did not make playoffs.

 

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The Year in Soccer

Storm face LA Heat

Salt Lake Sting Invade Seattle

 

Chiles put up a fight

Roster

League Map

Fan Collage

at Vancouver

 

Russian Visit

Russian Cards

Ticket Stubs

v. Nomads

1990 Program

v. Emperors

View Program pages:

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

10 11 12 13

(in PDF Format)

Thanks to Karl Norambuena

v. Vistas

v. Bournemouth

v. Dnepr

v. LA Heat

v. Salt Lake Sting

v. Foxes

1990 Schedule

1990 Storm Watch

1991 Jr. Boosters Promo

1991 Season Ticket Promo

Window Cling

Russian Visit Ad

Other 1990 Programs...

 

Cover: SF Blackhawks

Cover: Portland Timbers

Rosters: Seattle & PDX

(in PDF Format)

 

Thanks to Karl Norambuena

 

The Storm played DNEPR of the USSR as the T-shirt above shows. (Donated by Loretta Pirrozi) 

Heather Johnson donated the Russian player cards.  She volunteered for FC Seattle during the Russian visit. 

Tickets from Jeff Lageson.

 

Date

Opponent

Result

Score

Seattle Goals

4/14

at San Francisco Bay

L

2-3 (tb)

Fry (2)

4/21

San Diego Nomads

W

2-1 (tb)

Saari

4/28

California Emperors

W

3-1

Goulet (2), Fry

5/5

Victoria Vistas

W

3-0

Saari (2), Fry

5/11

at Los Angeles Heat

W

3-2 (ot)

Henderson (2), Fry

5/12

at Real Santa Barbara

L

0-2

 

5/20

Bournemouth* (*=Non-League match)

W

1-0

Fry

5/25

at Arizona Condors

L

1-4

Fry (pk)

5/26

at New Mexico Chiles

L

0-2

 

5/29

Dnepr*

L

1-2

Webber

6/2

Arizona

W

10-2

Henderson, Weber (2), Fry, Benedetti (3), Forgette, Goulet (2)

6/9

San Francisco Bay

W

1-0

Fry

6/15

Los Angeles

W

3-2

Fry (2), Benedetti

6/23

Salt Lake Sting

W

5-1

Benedetti (2), Fry (3)

6/29

New Mexico Chiles

W

4-3

Fry (2), Benedetti (2)

7/6

Real Santa Barbara

W

3-0

Henderson, Weber, Benedetti

7/14

at California

L

1-2(tb)

Fry

7/15

at San Diego

L

0-1(tb)

 

7/18

Portland Timbers

L

0-3

 

7/20

at Colorado Foxes

L

0-1

 

7/21

at Salt Lake

L

2-4

Goulet, Fry

7/29

at Portland

L

0-1

 

8/1

at Victoria*

L

0-1

 

8/5

at Vancouver 86ers*

L

3-5

Russ, Benedetti, McCrath

8/8

Vancouver*

W

3-2

O'Brien, Fry (2)

8/11

Colorado

W

2-0

Weber, Fry

(Thanks to Frank MacDonald for the score table information.)

Meanwhile, a familiar Seattle soccer name "Hint-ons" at an idea for a 'new' Sounders...

American Professional Soccer League
From US Soccer Archives


The American Professional Soccer League was formed as a result of a 1989 merger agreement between the Western Soccer Alliance and the American Professional Soccer League. This merger brought together the two strongest professional outdoor leagues, and that union accomplished several important purposes: It was seen as an opportunity to return top flight soccer on a nationwide basis for the first time since the demise of the North American Soccer League, and shift the balance in favor of the outdoor sport, which had taken a back seat to indoor soccer for the latter half of the 1980's. The league also had ambitions to be designated by FIFA as the new Division 1 American league. The APSL had several advantages, among them several established clubs, some of them with years of amateur experience, as well as the bulk of the top players in the US. APSL rosters boasted many of the National Team players and reserves who were not already part of the USSF residency program. The major challenges were the fact that none of the teams was truly operating at a high level of professionalism, and the new nationwide sprawl of teams would wreak havoc with high travel expenses. To ease the transition, The former ASL and WSA played their regular seasons as separate conferences, meeting only at the end for the Championship game.

The regular season provided some high excitement in the divisional races, as Maryland, Albany and Penn-Jersey fought a tight three way battle right into the last week of the season, with Maryland squeaking out a two point victory at season's end. The WSL featured two divisional races worth watching: In the North, the San Francisco Bay Blackhawks, Salt Lake Sting, Colorado Foxes and Portland Timbers were within five points of each other, with Salt Lake City and San Francisco tied for the crown. Meanwhile in the South, California, Los Angeles and Real Santa Barbara finished neck and neck. In the first official APSL Championship game, Maryland and San Francisco Bay mounted a memorable fight in driving rain at Boston before a national television audience, and Maryland finally pulled out a 2-1 victory on penalty kicks to crown a true national outdoor champion for the first time in more than half a decade.


WEST (WSL) Conference
North Division                                 G     W   T   L    GF   GA     PTS 
San Francisco Bay Blackhawks           20   13   0    7    39     30      104
Salt Lake Sting                                20   12   0    8    39     34      104
Colorado Foxes                                20   14   0    6    22     12      100
Portland Timbers                              20   10   0   10   42     36       99
Seattle Storm                                   20   10  0   10   42      35       93