Northern Virginia Royals

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Northern Virginia Royals
File:NVRoyals.png
Full name Northern Virginia Royals
Nickname(s) The Royals
Founded 1998
Stadium Hellwig Memorial Field Stadium
(Capacity: ????)
Chairman Flag of the United States Mo Sheta
Manager Flag of the United States Tom Torres
League USL Premier Development League
2009 in progress
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Home colors
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Away colors
Early Northern Virginia Royals logo

Northern Virginia Royals is an American soccer team based in Manassas, Virginia, United States. Founded in 1998, the team plays in the USL Premier Development League (PDL), the fourth tier of the American Soccer Pyramid, in the Mid Atlantic Division of the Eastern Conference.

The team plays its home games at Hellwig Memorial Field Stadium, where they have played since 2009. Occasionally, games are also held in the stadium at Fairfax High School in nearby Fairfax, Virginia. The team's colors are blue, black and white.

The team has a sister organization, the Northern Virginia Majestics, who play in the women's USL W-League, and fields a team in the USL’s Super-20 League, a league for players 17 to 20 years of age run under the United Soccer Leagues umbrella. Throughout their recent history, the Royals have enjoyed minor league affiliation with D.C. United, the nearby Major League Soccer franchise.

Contents

[edit] History

[edit] D-3 Pro League

The Northern Virginia Royals joined the USISL D-3 Pro League as an expansion franchise in 1998, and ended their first season in 7th place behind Delaware Wizards in the Atlantic Division with a 5-12-1 record. Their second season, 1999, was a major improvement, with the team winning 10 of their 18 regular season games, and finishing fourth in the Atlantic Division behind Charlotte Eagles, with striker Tim Prisco scoring a team-leading 14 goals. The team also qualified for their first US Open Cup campaign in 1999, but were upset in the first round by Florida PDL side Cocoa Expos, losing an 8-goal thriller 5-3. In the playoffs they beat divisional rivals South Carolina Shamrocks 2-1 in the first round before falling 4-0 to Charlotte in the conference semi final, but the progress on the field seemed to bode well for the future.

Unfortunately, the 2000 season was a disappointment, as the team slumped to a 6-12-0 regular season record and finished the year 7th in the Southern Division behind Texas Rattlers. The Royals did qualify for the US Open Cup for the second time in 2000, but unfortunately lost at the first attempt for the second straight year, losing 3-2 to the Hampton Roads Mariners in the second round. 2001 was even worse for the Royals, as the team hit rock bottom with just one win all year long, and finished dead last Southern Conference. In a truly testing season they scored just 9 goals while conceding 63 - a quite appalling record. 2002 was an improvement, but only just, as the Royals secured three victories in the 20 game regular season, but still finished in the basement of the Southern Conference, a full 55 points behind divisional champions Wilmington Hammerheads.

[edit] Pro Select League/USL Second Division

Another early Northern Virginia Royals logo

The D-3 Pro League became the USL Pro Select League in 2003, and the Royals suffered yet another disappointing season, finishing bottom of the 3-team Southern Division, with just 6 wins for the year. The year began poorly with a 5-game losing streak in May that included a 5-1 thrashing at the hands of Wilmington Hammerheads; they finally picked up their first win the last weekend of the opening month, 4-2 over West Virginia Chaos, but promptly lost their next four games on the trot. The Royals did enjoy brief run of form in late June in which they won three straight games, including an exciting 3-2 victory at home over Greenville Lions, and they followed that up with a comprehensive 3-0 win over the Chesapeake Dragons in early July, but this as good as it got for the team in 2003. They lost four of their last five games down the home stretch, falling 4-1 to Wilmington Hammerheads on the road on the final day of the season, capping a largely dispiriting year.

If 2003 was bad, then 2004 was even worse as the Royals finished the season rock bottom of the Southern Division, with just three wins all year. The victories - 3-2 over the Long Island Rough Riders in May with two goals from Matthew Osborne, 2-1 over Chesapeake Dragons in June, and then 4-1 over Chesapeake again in July with two goals from Fabio Andrade - were scant reward for a season where they dropped points and conceded goals left right and center everywhere else. They conceded 5 goals in their games against Harrisburg City Islanders, Pittsburgh Riverhounds and Charlotte Eagles in the early part of the season, and then let Charlotte hit them for six in the return fixture in mid-July, their most ignominious defeat of the season. Times were hard in northern Virginia.

The USL Pro Select League became the USL Second Division in 2005, and dispensed with divisions in favor of a single-table format; unfortunately for the Royals, this proved to be yet another disastrous season. In what was undoubtedly a long and demoralizing season, the Royals picked up just two wins all season, lost all of their 18 other games, conceded an astonishing 90 goals in the process, and finished bottom of the league, 37 points behind regular season champions Western Mass Pioneers. The wins - a hard fought 4-3 victory over Wilmington Hammerheads and a 3-1 triumph at home over New Hampshire Phantoms with 2 goals from Matthew Osborne - were the loan high points of the season. The Royals were truly awful in every other game: they conceded 5 goals on 5 different occasions, let in 6 goals twice, and lost 7-0 to Charlotte Eagles on the opening day of the season, to Harrisburg City Islanders in late July, and to Pittsburgh Riverhounds in the penultimate game. First choice goalkeeper Alexander Hall ended the year with a dismal 4.514 GAA average, while top scorer Fabio Andrade managed just four goals all season.

With declining attendances and awful on-field performances, the Royals management took the decision to self-relegate themselves to the USL Premier Development League for the 2006 season.

[edit] USL Premier Development League

The transition from professionalism to amateurism was not a wholly smooth one for the Royals in 2006. Despite winning their first ever game in the PDL, 3-1 over West Virginia Chaos, the Royals suffered spotty form for most of the season thereafter, never quite building up enough of a head of steam to put together a decent run of victories. They beat Reading Rage 4-2 at home in a seesaw game thanks to two goals from substitute Davorin Husadzinovic, and put together a pair of back-to-back wins over Virginia Legacy and West Virginia Chaos again in early June, but their form on the road was their downfall. A run of five heavy defeats stretching into mid-July, including a 6-0 walloping at the hands of the Virginia Beach Submariners, put pay to any scant playoff hopes they might have had, and despite gaining a 3-1 revenge win over Virginia Beach in the penultimate game of the season, their 2-0 defeat to Raleigh Elite on the final day left them fourth in the Mid Atlantic Division, ten points off of the playoff positions. Davorin Husadzinovic was the Royals' top performer, with 4 goals and 8 assists on the season.

The Royals slumped even further in 2007, picking up just three wins all season long, and traveling across Northern Virginia to play home games in four different stadiums. The three wins - 1-0 over Delaware Dynasty, 2-0 over West Virginia Chaos and 2-1 over Reading Rage on the last day of the season - were the lone high points in an otherwise terrible season. Expansion side Fredericksburg Gunners demolished them 7-0 in their first meeting in mid-May, and put another four past them in the return meeting in late June, while Ocean City Barons, Hampton Roads Piranhas and Virginia Legacy all registered comprehensive victories during the Royals' awful mid-season period, 4-0, 5-0 and 6-1 respectively. The Royals finished the year 8th in the Mid Atlantic Division, just one point above basement-dwellers West Virginia Chaos. The team's token top scorers were Francis McCardle and James Stevens, with 3 goals each. Long-time head coach Silvino Gonzalo resigned after the home game against the Fredericksburg Gunners to take up a post with new USL2 franchise Real Maryland Monarchs, and he was replaced by former Royals goalkeeper John Pascarella.

Despite this, things didn't get any better for the Royals in 2008: just three wins, just 20 goals scored, and fifth in the Mid Atlantic Division, out of the playoffs for the third consecutive season at this level. The year actually started quite brightly when the Royals handed the Hampton Roads Piranhas their first home loss in franchise history, 1-0 off an injury-time goal from striker David Atkinson. Unfortunately, this proved to be a false dawn, as the Royals failed to win any of their next 10 games: they lost 4-0 to Fredericksburg Gunners in their very next match, lost to them again 3-0 in early June, and frustratingly let a 2-goal lead slip in their 3-3 tie with Richmond Kickers Future. The Royals earned a little bit of revenge over Fredericksburg in early July with a tight 2-1 victory at home, and managed to beat 10-man Virginia Legacy 3-1 on the home stretch, but these were small highlights, and the bigger picture was yet another disappointing one. Matthew Brady and AJ Sheta each scored 4 of the Royals' 20 goals, while Irad Young contributed 3 assists. Unusually, three of the Royal's games in 2008 were abandoned due to inclement weather.

During the 2008 offseason, head coach Pascarella left the team to take up a goalkeeper coaching position with the Kansas City Wizards[1]; he was subsequently replaced by Royals' former Super-Y League coach Tom Torres[2].

[edit] Players

[edit] Current roster

as at June 20, 2009

No. Position Player
1 Flag of the United States GK Sean Kelley
2 Flag of the United States MF Matthew Brady
3 Flag of the United States DF Zach Ward
4 Flag of the United States DF Brian James
5 Flag of the United States DF Steven Wagoner
6 Flag of the United States MF Philip Gordon
7 Flag of the United States DF Kareem Sheta
8 Flag of the United States MF Grady Renfrow
9 Flag of the United States MF Maurice Hughes
10 Flag of the United States FW Eber Martinez
11 Flag of the United States MF Jonathan Romero
12 Flag of Uganda MF Stanley Kaweesi Katongole
13 Flag of the United States MF Sean O'Reilly
14 Flag of the United States DF Michael Green
15 Flag of the United States DF Max Greissbach
No. Position Player
16 Flag of the United States MF Ernesto Marquez
17 Flag of the United States DF Brant Hovington
18 Flag of the United States DF Andrew Harvey
19 Flag of the United States MF Jonathan Romero
20 Flag of the United States FW Joe Barnd
21 Flag of Japan MF Yu Hoshide
22 Flag of the United States FW AJ Sheta
23 Flag of England FW David Atkinson
24 Flag of the United States MF Irad Young
25 Flag of the United States DF William Proctor
26 Flag of the United States MF Aaron Ross
29 Flag of the United States DF Nicholas Sylvester
31 Flag of the United States GK Joel Helmic
Flag of the United States MF Ty Hall
Flag of the United States DF Daniel Lucas

[edit] Notable former players

[edit] Year-by-year

Year Division League Reg. Season Playoffs Open Cup
1998 3 USISL D-3 Pro League 7th, Atlantic Did not qualify Did not qualify
1999 3 USL D-3 Pro League 4th, Atlantic Conference Semifinals 1st Round
2000 3 USL D-3 Pro League 7th, Southern Did not qualify 2nd Round
2001 3 USL D-3 Pro League 4th, Southern Did not qualify Did not qualify
2002 3 USL D-3 Pro League 4th, Southern Did not qualify Did not qualify
2003 3 USL Pro Select League 3rd, Southern Did not qualify Did not qualify
2004 3 USL Pro Soccer League 3rd, Southern Did not qualify Did not qualify
2005 3 USL Second Division 9th Did not qualify Did not qualify
2006 4 USL PDL 4th, Mid Atlantic Did not qualify Did not qualify
2007 4 USL PDL 7th, Mid Atlantic Did not qualify Did not qualify
2008 4 USL PDL 5th, Mid Atlantic Did not qualify Did not qualify
2009 4 USL PDL in progress Did not qualify

[edit] Head coaches

Former D.C. United midfielder Joshua Gros is currently an assistant coach with the Royals.[3]

[edit] Stadia

[edit] Average attendance

Year Attendance Notes
2006 362
2007 581
2008 not yet available
All Time 472

[edit] References

  1. ^ http://pdl.uslsoccer.com/home/298691.html
  2. ^ http://www.uslsoccer.com/home/300766.html
  3. ^ http://pdl.uslsoccer.com/home/317469.html

[edit] External links

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