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'''[[Soccer Bowl|NASL Final]] 1968''' was the [[North American Soccer League (1968–84)|North American Soccer League]]'s postseason championship final of the [[1968 North American Soccer League season|1968 season]]. The event was contested in a two-game aggregate match between the [[Atlanta Chiefs]] and the [[San Diego Toros]]. The first leg was played to a, 0–0, draw on September 21, 1968 at [[Balboa Stadium]] in [[San Diego, California]]. The return leg was contested on September 28, 1968 at [[Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium|Atlanta Stadium]] in [[Atlanta, Georgia]] with the Chiefs winning by the score of 3–0. After the two-day competition was completed, the Atlanta Chiefs held a 3–0 aggregate lead and were crowned the 1968 NASL champions.<ref>{{cite web|last=NASL|title=NASLSoccerBowl - History - Past Winner|url=http://www.naslsoccerbowl.com/index.php?id=788|publisher=North American Soccer League}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last=NASL|title=NASL 1968-1984 - Yearly Result|url=http://www.nasl.com/index.php?id=458|publisher=North American Soccer League}}</ref>
'''[[Soccer Bowl|NASL Final]] 1968''' was the [[North American Soccer League (1968–84)|North American Soccer League]]'s postseason championship final of the [[1968 North American Soccer League season|1968 season]]. The event was contested in a two-game aggregate match between the [[Atlanta Chiefs]] and the [[San Diego Toros]]. The first leg was played to a, 0–0, draw on September 21, 1968 at [[Balboa Stadium]] in [[San Diego, California]]. The return leg was contested on September 28, 1968 at [[Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium|Atlanta Stadium]] in [[Atlanta, Georgia]] with the Chiefs winning by the score of 3–0. After the two-day competition was completed, the Atlanta Chiefs held a 3–0 aggregate lead and were crowned the 1968 NASL champions.<ref>{{cite web|last=NASL|title=NASLSoccerBowl - History - Past Winner|url=http://www.naslsoccerbowl.com/index.php?id=788|publisher=North American Soccer League}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last=NASL |title=NASL 1968-1984 - Yearly Result |url=http://www.nasl.com/index.php?id=458 |publisher=North American Soccer League |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20131012023409/http://www.nasl.com/index.php?id=458 |archivedate=October 12, 2013 }}</ref>


==Background==
==Background==

Revision as of 23:30, 1 July 2016

NASL Final 1968
EventNASL Final
Aggregate goals
DateSeptember 21, 1968 (1968-09-21)
VenueBalboa Stadium[1], San Diego, California
RefereeReg Clark (Canada)
Attendance9,360
DateSeptember 28, 1968 (1968-09-28)
VenueAtlanta Stadium, Atlanta, Georgia
RefereeJim Carr (England)
Attendance14,994
1967
1969


NASL Final 1968 was the North American Soccer League's postseason championship final of the 1968 season. The event was contested in a two-game aggregate match between the Atlanta Chiefs and the San Diego Toros. The first leg was played to a, 0–0, draw on September 21, 1968 at Balboa Stadium in San Diego, California. The return leg was contested on September 28, 1968 at Atlanta Stadium in Atlanta, Georgia with the Chiefs winning by the score of 3–0. After the two-day competition was completed, the Atlanta Chiefs held a 3–0 aggregate lead and were crowned the 1968 NASL champions.[2][3]

Background

The Atlanta Chiefs qualified for the playoffs by virtue of winning the Atlantic Division with 174 points. They faced the Lakes Division champion Cleveland Stokers in a two-game aggregate match for the Eastern Conference championship. The first game was played on September 11 and ended in a, 1–1, draw. The second leg, played on September 14, also finished regulation at 1–1, but the Chiefs were able to score in overtime to win the Eastern Conference title and advance to the finals.

The San Diego Toros qualified for the playoffs by virtue of winning the Pacific Division with 186 points. They faced the Gulf Division champion Kansas City Spurs in a two-game aggregate match for the Western Conference championship. Like the other match played that day, the first leg ended in a, 1–1, draw on September 11. After 90 minutes of regulation the second leg ended with neither team able to score. The September 16 match moved into overtime, and then into a second overtime before Toros' reserve Novak Tomić scored in 118th minute to end it. The victory gave San Diego the Western Conference title and advanced them to the finals.[4]

Match summary

Championship results

Team 1 Aggregate Team 2 First leg Second leg Attendance
Atlanta Chiefs 3–0 San Diego Toros 0–0 3–0 September 21 Balboa Stadium 9,360
September 28 Atlanta Stadium 14,994

First leg

San Diego Toros0–0Atlanta Chiefs
Attendance: 9,360
Referee: Reg Clark (Canada)
San Diego
Atlanta

Second leg

Atlanta Chiefs3–0San Diego Toros
Peter McParland
Delroy Scott
Kaizer Motaung
Attendance: 14,994
Referee: Jim Carr (England)[citation needed]


San Diego[10][9]

1968 NASL Champions: Atlanta Chiefs

See also

References

  1. ^ http://soccerstats.us/teams/san-diego-toros/games/
  2. ^ NASL. "NASLSoccerBowl - History - Past Winner". North American Soccer League.
  3. ^ NASL. "NASL 1968-1984 - Yearly Result". North American Soccer League. Archived from the original on October 12, 2013. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  4. ^ The Milwaukee Journal - Google News Archive Search
  5. ^ Rome News-Tribune - Google News Archive Search
  6. ^ http://www.nasljerseys.com/images/Chiefs/Chiefs%2068%20Road%20Team%202.jpg
  7. ^ NASL Soccer North American Soccer League Players-Delroy Scott
  8. ^ http://www.nasl.com/index.php?id=3&newsid=3083
  9. ^ a b http://www.nasljerseys.com/images/TorosSD/Toros%2068%20Home%20Pepe%20Fernandez.jpg
  10. ^ http://www.nasljerseys.com/images/TorosSD/Toros%2068%20Home%20Miroslav%20Milanovic.jpg

External links

NASL Soccer Bowl (official website)