Harrisburg City Islanders
Full name | Harrisburg City Islanders | ||
---|---|---|---|
Nickname(s) | City Islanders, City, Isles, Islanders | ||
Founded | September 24, 2003 | ||
Stadium |
FNB Field Harrisburg, Pennsylvania (10 games) Clipper Magazine Stadium Lancaster, Pennsylvania (5 games) | ||
Capacity | 6,187 | ||
Owner | Eric Pettis | ||
Head Coach | Bill Becher | ||
League | USL | ||
2016 |
10th, Eastern Conference Playoffs: DNQ | ||
Website | Club home page | ||
| |||
The Harrisburg City Islanders are an American professional soccer team based in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, United States. Founded in 2003, the team plays in the United Soccer League, the third tier of the American Soccer Pyramid.[1]
The team had played its home games at Skyline Sports Complex, located on Harrisburg's City Island since 2004. The 2016 season will be played at neighboring FNB Field. The team's colors are tropical blue, navy blue, and white. Their current head coach is Bill Becher who has been with the club since its formation.
The City Islanders also field a team in the USL’s Super-20 League, a league for players 17 to 20 years of age, operated by the United Soccer Leagues.
On March 1, 2010, the City Islanders entered into an agreement to become the official USL affiliate of Major League Soccer's Philadelphia Union. After five years of cooperation, it was announced on August 19, 2015 that the affiliation would dissolve at the conclusion of the 2015 season as the Union would develop their own USL team, Bethlehem Steel FC, in the Lehigh Valley starting in 2016.[2]
It was announced on January 26, 2016 that the City Islanders would play 10 their home matches at FNB Field which neighbors the Skyline Sports Complex on City Island. The stadium will be joint use with the Harrisburg Senators of the Minor League Baseball EL. And 5 of their home matches will be at Clipper Magazine Stadium in neighboring Lancaster, Pennsylvania.
History
USL
The City Islanders were powerful contenders in the second division, finishing fifth in their inaugural season and qualifying for the playoffs, where they were eliminated in the first round by the Pittsburgh Riverhounds. The City Islanders improved on this showing in their second year, as they finished third in the league with a 12–3–5 record, but were eliminated from the playoffs by the eventual champions, the Charlotte Eagles. In 2005, Bill Becher was named USL-2 Coach of the Year, while Chad Severs was named Rookie of the Year before moving on to the Rochester Raging Rhinos. In 2006, the club failed to reach the playoffs, but in 2007, the Islanders won the USL Second Division Championship, defeating the Richmond Kickers on penalty kicks. The City Islanders qualified for the playoffs in 2008 and 2009 but were unable to duplicate their championship form. Danny Cepero played for Harrisburg on loan from the New York Red Bulls in 2008, and upon returning to New York, became the first goalkeeper in Major League Soccer history to score from open play. In 2009, Ty Shipalane became the second City Islander to win Rookie of the Year and became the first City Islander to jump directly to Major League Soccer after signing with D.C. United at the conclusion of the season. After missing the playoffs for just the second time in franchise history in 2010, Harrisburg won the USL Pro National Division title to again advance to the USL Pro final, falling to the regular-season champion Orlando City on penalty kicks.
U.S. Open Cup
The City Islanders also compete in the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup, where they developed a reputation as "giant killers" for defeating several teams from Major League Soccer. Harrisburg boasts an overall record of 12–5–3 in the competition, including a perfect 5–0 mark against teams from the Premier Development League and 4–4–1 record against MLS clubs. The City Islanders first competed in the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup in 2007, defeating two amateur squads before upsetting D.C. United 1–0 to reach the quarterfinals. They subsequently lost to the New England Revolution 1–2, but in 2009 exacted revenge by beating the Revolution 2–1 before losing to D.C. United 1–2 in the quarterfinals. The City Islanders repeated the feat in 2010, knocking off Major League Soccer's New York Red Bulls 1–0 in the round of 16 and claiming a cash prize for advancing furthest of any USL-PRO team in the tournament. The City Islanders again dispatched the New England Revolution in the 2012 edition of the U.S. Open Cup, prevailing on penalty kicks after a 3–3 draw in the round of 32. Harrisburg next defeated the Red Bulls 3–1 to advance to the quarterfinals, where they lost to the Philadelphia Union by a 5–2 scoreline. In 2012, the City Islanders again won the cash prize for advancing further than any USL-PRO team in the tournament by virtue of a tie-breaker.
Friendlies
The City Islanders have hosted several exhibition matches, or friendlies, against international and top-flight competition. A partnership with D.C. United of Major League Soccer created the "Clash of the Capitals," annual matches between the two capital cities held in 2005–06. In the inaugural edition of the competition in 2005, D.C. United won 1–0 in front of over 4,000 fans at the Skyline Sports Complex. The following year's matchup was staged at Cumberland Valley High School, where 5,133 fans turned out to witness Freddy Adu and United prevail 2–1. That same year included the City Islanders' first international exhibition, as the club defeated Jamaica's Village United F.C. 5–1 at Hersheypark Stadium.
In 2009, the City Islanders played Crystal Palace F.C. of the Football League Championship, England's second division, at Lancaster's Clipper Magazine Stadium. A crowd of 5,099 witnessed the match, a 3–1 Crystal Palace win that included goals by Palace stars Darren Ambrose, Neil Danns, and Freddie Sears. Brandon Swartzendruber scored the lone goal for the City Islanders.
Annual Friendly with Philadelphia
As part of their affiliation, the City Islanders host annual friendly matches against the Philadelphia Union of Major League Soccer. As of the 2014 season, the Islanders have only won one match against their top flight affiliate.
In 2010, the teams played to a 1–1 draw, with Danny Mwanga giving the Union a lead in the 30th minute before an own goal allowed Harrisburg to equalize a minute later. J.T. Noone appeared for both clubs in the match, playing the first half for the City Islanders before switching jerseys and completing the second half for Philadelphia.
The Union prevailed in the 2011 edition by a 5–3 scoreline.[3] The City Islanders carried a 2–0 lead into halftime behind goals by Nelson Becerra and Andrew Welker, but heavy substitutions allowed the Union to demonstrate their superior depth, and they scored five times in thirty minutes before Jose Angulo pegged one back.
With both teams fielding numerous reserves, the City Islanders won the 2012 rematch, which was played at Hersheypark Stadium. Jorge Perlaza and Kai Herdling scored for the Union, while a brace by Garret Pettis and goal by Yann Ekra carried the USL-PRO outfit to the 3–2 victory.[4]
With the affiliation dissolving during the 2015 season, the final friendly between the two teams as affiliates took place in Lancaster, Pennsylvania in front of a record crowd of 6,546 attendees. The Union won the match 3–1.
The table below summarizes the results of the annual contests between the Islanders and Union.
July 27, 2010 Friendly | Harrisburg City Islanders | 1–1 | Philadelphia Union | Harrisburg, Pennsylvania |
---|---|---|---|---|
7:00 ET | Harvey 31' (o.g.) | Report | Mwanga 30' | Stadium: Skyline Sports Complex |
August 24, 2011 Friendly | Harrisburg City Islanders | 3–5 | Philadelphia Union | Harrisburg, Pennsylvania |
---|---|---|---|---|
7:00 ET | Becerra 6' Welker 19' Angulo 85' |
Report | Mapp 48' Richter 49' Pfeffer 60' Torres 76' Tait 78' |
Stadium: Skyline Sports Complex |
June 12, 2012 Friendly | Harrisburg City Islanders | 3–2 | Philadelphia Union | Hershey, Pennsylvania |
---|---|---|---|---|
7:00 PM ET | Pettis 17', 76' Ekra 55' |
Report | Perlaza 45' Herdling 81' |
Stadium: Hersheypark Stadium Attendance: 820 |
June 18, 2013 Friendly | Harrisburg City Islanders | 2–4 | Philadelphia Union | Harrisburg, Pennsylvania |
---|---|---|---|---|
7:00 PM ET | Basso 13' (pen.) Touray 60' |
Report | Carroll 4' Le Toux 19' Hoppenot 69' Torres 90' |
Stadium: Skyline Sports Complex |
August 28, 2014 Friendly | Harrisburg City Islanders | 2–3 | Philadelphia Union | Harrisburg, Pennsylvania |
---|---|---|---|---|
7:00 p.m. EDT | Barril 22' Baúque 55' |
Report | Le Toux 13' Fernandes 45' Fred 75' |
Stadium: Skyline Sports Complex Attendance: 2,558 |
August 31, 2015 Friendly | Harrisburg City Islanders | 1–3 | Philadelphia Union | Lancaster, Pennsylvania |
---|---|---|---|---|
7:00 p.m. EDT | Pereira 33' Jankouskas 44' Donatelli 75' |
Report | White 48' Maidana 66' Casey 75' |
Stadium: Clipper Magazine Stadium Attendance: 6,546 Referee: Ryan Dos Reis |
Colors and badge
The team's colors are tropical blue, navy blue, and white. The logo can also be adorned with a gold star above it, representing the USL Championship the team won in 2007.
Stadium
The Harrisburg City Islanders compete at FNB Field on City Island in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. The stadium has a capacity of 6,187 spectators. The City Islanders also compete at Clipper Magazine Stadium in Lancaster, Pennsylvania which serves as an alternate home ground during the 2016 season.[5]
Stadium Expansion/Upgrade
As of 2015, the parent company of the Harrisburg City Islanders, the Harrisburg Capital Soccer, Inc. have begun applying for grant funding to facilitate upgrades to the existing complex. The proposed upgrades are anticipated to include increasing capacity to 5,000 seats, dedicated VIP areas, entrance plaza, upgraded concessions, restrooms, indoor locker rooms, state-of-the-art broadcasting booth, and a new scoreboard. New seating is intended to be an upgrade from existing bleachers with a mix of individual bucket seats, ten luxury suites, a VIP deck with seating, and bleacher seats with back supports.[6]
Relocation to FNB Field
The 2016 season marks the City Islanders transition from Skyline Sports Complex to FNB Field on City Island in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. The transition was a result of the collaboration with the current tenants, the Harrisburg Senators, and to keep pace with the standards being implemented by the USL.[5] The team will also share home matches with Clipper Magazine Stadium in Lancaster, Pennsylvania as an effort to expand the Islanders fanbase throughout south central Pennsylvania.[5]
Supporter Groups
The Harrisburg City Islanders have two of their own supporters groups, the City Island Hecklers (CI Hecklers) founded by "Them Hecklerz", and the Sons of the Susquehanna (SOS) founded by Jason Henry-Linn. The CI Hecklers often position themselves behind one goal, while the Sons of the Susquehanna position themselves behind the other goal.[7][8][9] In addition to these two, members of the Sons of Ben (supporters of the Philadelphia Union) also provide support.
Broadcasting and Media Coverage
Most City Islanders home matches are broadcast live on Invica, with tape delay feeds on ABC 27 Weather Channel, Comcast channel 245 and Verizon Fios channel 462. Additionally, many road games are broadcast through USLLive. Michael Bullock covers the team for the Patriot-News, while Derek Meluzio provides commentary and videos from his Upper 90 blog. The column Confessions of a Soccer Nobody appears regularly in the Sports 'Burger, offering additional coverage and insight.
As of the 2014 season, USL began regularly broadcasting all league matches on the USL YouTube channel. Home match broadcasting is provided live by Inivca where Play-by-play announcing covered by Chad Edwards with color commentary by Larry Julius.
Sponsorship
Period | Kit Manufacturer | Shirt Sponsor |
---|---|---|
2007–2014 | Adidas | Capital Blue Cross Snickers |
2015–present | Capital Blue Cross Select Physical Therapy | |
Players and staff
Current roster
Updated as of July 19, 2016.[10]
Current staff
Position | Staff | Nation |
---|---|---|
Head Coach & General Manager1 | Bill Becher | United States |
Assistant Coach | Steve Widdowson | United States |
Assistant Coach | Denis Clarke | Ireland |
Club President | Roy Mehl | United States |
Academy Coordinator | Dave Kern | United States |
Academy Coordinator | Molly Gilroy | United States |
Referenced from HCI coaching staff[10] and front office.[11]
1Bill Becher appointed General Manager in February 2016.[12]
Notable former players
Head coaches
Head coach Bill Becher has managed the club since its founding in 2003. Games played include all League, Cup, and playoff contests, and the win percentage is calculated from the total of games.
- Figures correct as of September 20, 2015. Includes all competitive matches
Coach | From | To | Record | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
G | W | D | L | Win % | |||||
Bill Becher | 2004 | present | 308 | 130 | 81 | 97 | 42.21 | ||
Total | 308 | 130 | 81 | 97 | 42.21 |
Honors
- USL Second Division Champions 2007[13]
- USL-Pro Championship Finalist 2011[13]
- USL-Pro Championship Finalist 2014[13]
Individual Achievements
The following detail individual achievements earn by City Islander players over the club's history.[13]
2005
- USL Coach of the Year
Bill Becher - Rookie of the Year
F Chad Severs - All-League First Team
D Shane Crawford
M Sumed Ibrahim - All-League Second Team
M David Schofield
F Chad Severs
2007
- All-League First Team
G Matt Nelson
D Mike Lookingland
M Mo Oduor
M Brian Ombiji - USL Championship Match MVP
D Dustin Bixler
2008
2009
- Rookie of the Year
M Ty Shipalane - All-League First Team
D Dustin Bixler
M Ty Shipalane - All-League Second Team
G Chase Harrison
F Chad Severs
2010
2011
2012
2013
- 2013 All-League First Team
F Sainey Touray - 2013 All-League Second Team
F Luckymore Mkosana
G Nick Noble
2014
2016
Record
Year-by-year
Year | Division | League | Regular Season | Playoffs | U.S. Open Cup | Avg. Attendance | Leading Goal Scorer |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2004 | 3 | USL Pro Soccer League | 2nd, Atlantic | Quarterfinals | Did not qualify | 1,510 | Matt Tanzini (6) |
2005 | 3 | USL Second Division | 3rd | Semifinals | Did not qualify | 1,604 | Chad Severs (13) |
2006 | 3 | USL Second Division | 7th | Did not qualify | Did not qualify | 1,781 | Jamel Mitchell (6) |
2007 | 3 | USL Second Division | 3rd | Champions | Quarterfinals | 1,724 | Mo Oduor (6) |
2008 | 3 | USL Second Division | 5th | Quarterfinals | 2nd Round | 1,684 | Ryan Heins (7) |
2009 | 3 | USL Second Division | 3rd | Semifinals | Quarterfinals | 1,857 | Chad Severs (9) |
2010 | 3 | USL Second Division | 5th | Did not qualify | Quarterfinals | 1,666 | Jason Hotchkin (5) |
2011 | 3 | USL Pro | 2nd, National | Finals | 2nd Round | 1,404 | Jose Angulo (9) |
2012 | 3 | USL Pro | 6th | Quarterfinals | Quarterfinals | 1,452 | Luckymore Mkosana (7) |
2013 | 3 | USL Pro | 4th | Quarterfinals | 2nd Round | 1,456 | Luckymore Mkosana (13) |
2014 | 3 | USL Pro | 8th | Finals | 4th Round | 1,941 | Morgan Langley (6) Jimmy McLaughlin (6) Robbie Derschang (6) |
2015 | 3 | USL | 8th, Eastern | Did not qualify | 3rd Round | 2,430 | Jason Plumhoff (10) |
2016 | 3 | USL | 10th, Eastern | Did not qualify | 4th Round | 1,622 | Craig Foster (10) |
Referenced from Harrisburg City Islanders club history.[13]
Keystone Derby
Although they had been rivals and competed against each other in previous seasons, the inaugural Keystone Derby was officially contested between the City Islanders and the Pittsburgh Riverhounds in 2015. Pittsburgh went on to win the cup in the first edition of the tournament in a series that saw 28 goals through 4 matches. The City Islanders would claim their first derby title in 2016.
Year | GP | Win | Loss | Draw | GF | GA | +/- | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2015 | |||||||||
2016 |
- Key
- Won
- Lost
References
- ↑ "City Islanders Football Club".
- ↑ "Harrisburg City Islanders and Philadelphia Union Agree to Dissolve Five-Year Exclusive Partnership".
- ↑ "Recap: Union net five in second half, top Islanders 5–3". Philadelphia Union.
- ↑ "Recap: Islanders edge Union 3–2 in annual friendly". Philadelphia Union.
- 1 2 3 http://cityislanders.com/club-news/city-islanders-relocate-to-metro-bank-park/
- ↑ "Harrisburg City Islanders Take Next Step In New Stadium Project".
- ↑ CI Hecklers
- ↑ Sons of the Susquehanna
- ↑ Q&A With the Sons of the Susquehanna
- 1 2 "Harrisburg City Islanders".
- ↑ "Front Office".
- ↑ http://cityislanders.com/club-news/bill-becher-adds-gm-title-to-head-coaching-duties/
- 1 2 3 4 5 "History".
- ↑ "City Islanders Claim 2016 Keystone Derby Cup with Draw Against Pittsburgh". Harrisburg City Islanders. Retrieved 28 August 2016.