International Soccer League

The International Soccer League was a U.S.-based soccer league which was formed in 1960 and collapsed in 1965. The League, affiliated with the American Soccer League, featured guest teams primarily from Europe and some from Asia, South America, Canada and Mexico.

The creation of the League was announced in January 1960, when it was regarded as an attempt to create a Club World Cup. However, the concurrence of the UEFA/CONMEBOL-endorsed Intercontinental Cup, launched also in 1960, nullified any possibility that the League might have relevance as a club world championhsip.[1]

History

In 1960, William D. Cox, a wealthy U.S. businessman and former owner of the Philadelphia Phillies, a U.S. baseball team, saw a potential market in the United States for top-level soccer. Recognizing that U.S. teams did not play at a sufficiently high level to attract the attention of most fans, he began to consider the possibility of importing European and South American teams during their league off-seasons. Traditionally, tours by European clubs in the northeast United States had drawn well and Cox decided to pursue this approach.

However, soccer in the U.S. was run by the U.S. Soccer Football Association (USSFA). As a member of the soccer's international governing organization, FIFA, the USSFA had the sole power in the U.S. to authorize the creation of a new league, and any league created without USSFA authority would be declared an "outlaw league". Any person playing in an "outlaw league" would then be banned from playing in any other league or team affiliated with FIFA, and as nearly every league and team in the world was affiliated with the world soccer body, this would effectively ban a player from playing soccer anywhere.

To get USSFA approval, Cox worked through the existing American Soccer League, a USSFA-recognized league. This went so far that in 1961, the ASL scheduled only one game during the ISL season in order to keep from drawing fan support from the league. Each year, the ISL played two halves to its season, with different sets of teams; the top team from each half played each other in a season-ending championship game. In order to give the American fans a greater stake in the league, Cox also decided to enter a team of U.S.-based players; this team, called variably New York, the New Yorkers and the New York Americans, was usually a mix of U.S.-based European professionals with some native all-stars. Cox also gained regional television coverage, and the associated revenue stream. While the games were initially played in the New York metropolitan area, as interest in the ISL increased, he expanded the league to Chicago, Detroit, Boston and Los Angeles.

The ISL lasted only through the end of the 1965 season before folding, not so much by its continuing financial losses (some $100,000 over five seasons), but due to the continuing hostility of the USSFA. The ISL's growing success, combined with Cox’ refusal to allow USSFA a part in the league management, led to the USSFA's fear losing control of soccer in America. In 1965 the organization forbid Cox from importing teams into the U.S. and threatened to declare the ISL an outlaw league. Cox was forced to fold the ISL, but sued USSFA in federal court for anti-trust violations, a suit he eventually won. While the ISL played its last season in 1965, the model was used again in 1967 when the United Soccer Association (USA) imported foreign teams to populate its league and again in 1969 when the North American Soccer League (NASL) used imported teams for the first half of its season.

In 1967, Cox joined with several other investors to found the National Professional Soccer League, a non-USSFA sanctioned league which, the following year, merged with the USA to become the NASL.

Trophy Section l and Section ll

It was the trophy given to first place in each group.

Trophy Section l:

  • 1960 Kilmarnock (Scotland)
  • 1961 Everton (England)
  • 1962 America RJ (Brazil)
  • 1963 West Ham United (England)
  • 1964 SV Werder Bremen (West Germany)
  • 1965 New York Americans (USA)

Trophy Section ll:

  • 1960 Bangu (Brazil)
  • 1961 Dukla Prague (Czechoslovakia)
  • 1962 Belenenses (Portugal)
  • 1963 Gornik Zabrze (Poland)
  • 1964 Zaglebie Sosnowiec (Poland)
  • 1965 Polonia Bytom (Poland)

American Challenge Cup

In 1962, the ISL initiated an annual challenge cup. It would pair the winner of the previous year's Challenge Cup winner with the current season's league champion. Dukla Prague had won the 1961 title, defeating Everton F.C. 7-2 and 2-0 in the championship. Therefore, they were paired in the first Challenge Cup with the 1962 season winner, América RJ. Dukla won and returned for the next three challenge cups, winning each, except for the last in which they fell to Polonia Bytom.

League champions

American Challenge Cup

List of champions.

¹automatic champion

League MVP

Beginning in 1961, the league champion was awarded the Dwight D. Eisenhower trophy, but from 1962 to 1965 it was given to the league MVP. However, in 1960 and 1961 the best players in the tournament were Ademir da Guia (Bangu) and Válter Santos (Bangu) respectively.

Teams

TeamYears
Greece AEK Athens1964
Brazil América RJ1962
Brazil EC Bahia1964
Brazil Bangu1960, 1961
West Germany Bayern Munich1960
Portugal Belenenses1962, 1963
Turkey Besiktas1961
England Blackburn Rovers1964
England Burnley F.C.1960
Mexico Club Deportivo Oro1963
Romania Dinamo Bucharest1961
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Dinamo Zagreb1963
Czechoslovakia Dukla Prague1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965
Scotland Dundee F.C.1962
Sweden Elfsborg1962
Spain RCD Espanyol1961
England Everton F.C.1961
Hungary Ferencvaros1965
Northern Ireland Glenavon F.C.1960
Poland Górnik Zabrze1963
Mexico Club Deportivo Guadalajara1962
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Hajduk Split1962
Israel Hapoel Petah Tikva1961
Sweden Helsingborgs IF1963
Scotland Heart of Midlothian1964
West Germany Karlsruhe1961
Scotland Kilmarnock F.C.1960, 1961, 1963, 1965
Italy Lanerossi-Vicenza1964
Italy Mantova1963
France Monaco1961
Canada Montreal Concordia1961
Hungary MTK Budapest1962
France Nice1960
Sweden Norrköping1960
Italy Palermo1962
Greece Panathinaikos1962
Poland Polonia Bytom1965
Brazil Portuguesa1965
West Germany Preussen Munster1963
Austria SK Rapid Wien1960, 1961
Spain Real Oviedo1962
Spain Real Valladolid1963
West Germany SSV Reutlingen1962
Brazil Sport Recife1963
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Red Star Belgrade1960, 1961, 1964
Italy Sampdoria1960
Austria Schwechater1964
Republic of Ireland Shamrock Rovers1961
Portugal Sporting Club1960
West Germany TSV Munich 18601965
Hungary Újpest FC1963
France Valenciennes1963
Italy Varese1965
Portugal Vitoria Guimaraes1964
Austria Wiener AC1962, 1963
West Germany Werder Bremen1964
England West Bromwich Albion1965
England West Ham United1963, 1965
Poland Zagłębie Sosnowiec1964

References

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