Desmond
Armstrong (last
played in the MISL in 1989; last played in
the APSL in 1991; last played in the U.S.
national team in 1994; last played in the
USISL in 1996). Played 81 full internationals
for the United States between 1987 and 1994,
including three World Cup qualifiers in 1988
and 1989 and three World Cup games in 1990.
Member of the United States teams at the
1988 Olympic Games and the 1990 World Cup.
Played three seasons in the MISL and three
seasons in the APSL and its predecessors.
Barry
Barto (last played
in the U.S. national team in 1975; last played
in the NASL in 1977). Played six seasons
in the NASL between 1972 and 1977 for Montreal,
Philadelphia and Fort Lauderdale. NASL champion
in 1973 with Philadelphia. Played 16 full
internationals for the United States between
1972 and 1975, including four World Cup qualifiers
in 1972. Played 68 NASL regular-season games
and two NASL playoff games.
George
Best (last played
in the NASL in 1981). Played six seasons
in the NASL between 1976 and 1981 for Los
Angeles, Fort Lauderdale and San Jose. NASL
all-star in 1976 and 1977. NASL second-team
all-star in 1981. NASL honorable mention
all-star in 1978. Played 139 NASL regular-season
games and 11 NASL playoff games.
Hubert
Birkenmeier (last
played in the NASL in 1984; last played in
the MISL in 1987). Played six seasons in
the NASL between 1979 and 1984 for New York.
NASL champion in 1980 and 1982 with New York.
NASL all-star in 1982 and 1984. NASL second-team
all-star in 1981. Played 145 NASL regular-season
games and 23 NASL playoff games. Played three
seasons in the MISL.
Teofilo Nene Cubillas (last
played in the NASL in 1983; last played in the USL
in 1986; last played in the ASL in 1989). Played
five seasons in the NASL between 1979 and 1983 for
Fort Lauderdale. NASL all-star in 1980 and 1981.
NASL runnerup in 1980 with Fort Lauderdale. NASL
second-team all-star in 1979 and 1982. Played two
seasons in the United Soccer League and two seasons
in the ASL. Played 120 NASL regular-season games
and 21 NASL playoff games.
Steve
David (last played
in the NASL in 1981; last played in the MISL
in 1984). Played eight seasons in the NASL
between 1974 and 1981 for Miami, Los Angeles,
Detroit, California, San Diego and San Jose.
NASL all-star in 1975 and 1977. NASL runnerup
in 1974 with Miami. NASL honorable mention
all-star in 1974. Played 175 NASL regular-season
games and seven NASL playoff games. NASL
most valuable player in 1975. NASL scoring
champion in 1975 and 1977. Played three seasons
in the MISL.
Linda
Hamilton (last played
in the U.S. national team in 1995). Played
71 full internationals for the United States
between 1987 and 1995, including four World
Cup qualifiers in 1994 and 12 World Cup games
in 1991 and 1995. Women's World Cup champion
in 1991. Member of the United States teams
at the 1991 and 1995 Women's World Cups.
John
Kerr Jr. (last played
in the ASL in 1990; last played in the MISL
in 1992; last played professionally outside
the United States in 1995; last played in
the U.S. national team in 1995; last played
in MLS in 1997). Played 16 full internationals
for the United States between 1984 and 1995,
of which 10 were prior to 1990, including
three World Cup qualifiers in 1985. Played
two seasons in MLS between 1996 and 1997
for New England. Played 38 MLS regular-season
games. Played five seasons in English and
Irish professional leagues, three seasons
in the ASL, one season in the Canadian Soccer
League and one season in the MISL.
Bill
McPherson (last
played in the ASL in 1931; last played in
the SLSL in 1934). Played 10 seasons in the
ASL between 1922 and 1931 for Fall River
Marksmen and New Bedford Whalers. Played
two seasons in the St. Louis Soccer League
in 1933 and 1934 for Stix, Baer & Fuller.
ASL champion in 1924, 1925, 1926, 1929 and
1930 with Fall River. St. Louis league champion
in 1933 and 1934 with Stix, Baer & Fuller.
U.S. Open Cup champion in 1924, 1927, 1930
and 1931 with Fall River, 1932 with New Bedford,
and 1933 and 1934 with Stix, Baer & Fuller.
U.S. Open Cup runnerup in 1935 with Pawtucket
Rangers. Played 366 regular-season games
and four playoff games in the original ASL.
Bruce
Murray (last played
in the U.S. national team in 1993; last played
in the A-League in 1995; last played in the
NPSL in 1996). Played 85 full internationals
for the United States between 1985 and 1993,
including 10 World Cup qualifiers in 1988
and 1989 and three World Cup games in 1990.
CONCACAF Gold Cup champion in 1991. Member
of the United States teams at the 1988 Olympic
Games and the 1990 World Cup. Played six
seasons in the APSL/A-League and its predecessors.
Played one season in the NPSL.
Glenn Mooch Myernick (last
played in the U.S. national team in 1979; last played
in the MISL in 1980; last played in the NASL in 1984).
Played 10 full international games for the United
States between 1975 and 1979. Played eight seasons
in the NASL between 1977 and 1984 for Dallas, Portland
and Tampa Bay. Played one season in the MISL. Played
163 NASL regular-season games and five NASL playoff
games. Head coach in MLS for four seasons.
John "Harp" O'Connell (last
played in the U.S. national team in 1954; last played
in the ASL in 1956). Played 10 seasons in the ASL
between 1946 and 1956 for Brooklyn Wanderers, New
York Americans and New York Hakoah. ASL champion
in 1954 with New York Americans. U.S. Open Cup champion
in 1954 with New York Americans. ASL most valuable
player in 1948 and 1949. Played four full internationals
for the United States between 1949 and 1954, including
two World Cup qualifiers in 1954.
Hugo
Perez (last played
in the NASL in 1984; last played in the
MISL in 1988; last played in the U.S. national
team in 1994; last played professionally
outside the United States in 1996). Played
73 full internationals for the United States
between 1984 and 1994, including seven
World Cup qualifiers in 1984, 1985, 1988
and 1989, and one World Cup game in 1994.
CONCACAF Gold Cup champion in 1991. Member
of the United States teams at the 1984
Olympic Games and the 1994 World Cup. Played
three seasons in the NASL between 1982
and 1984 for Tampa Bay and San Diego. Played
49 NASL regular-season games and two NASL
playoff games. Played four seasons in the
MISL, two seasons in the French second
division, one season in the Swedish first
division, one season in the Saudi Arabian
first division and two seasons in the Salvadoran
first division. Honda Award winner in 1991.
USSF men's athlete of the year in 1991.
Bob
Rigby (last played
in the U.S. national team in 1975; last played
in the NASL in 1984). Played 12 seasons in
the NASL between 1973 and 1984 for Philadelphia,
New York, Los Angeles, Montreal and Golden
Bay. NASL champion in 1973 with Philadelphia.
Played six full internationals for the United
States between 1973 and 1975. NASL second-team
all-star in 1973 and 1974. Played 217 NASL
regular-season games and 20 NASL playoff
games. Played three seasons in the MISL.
Kyle
Rote (last played
in the U.S. national team in 1975; last played
in the NASL in 1979). Played seven seasons
in the NASL between 1973 and 1979 for Dallas
and Houston. NASL North American all-star
in 1978. Played five full internationals
for the United States between 1973 and 1975.
Played 142 NASL regular-season games and
eight NASL playoff games.
Information
This list of players have met the criteria making them eligible and have
been selected by the Veteran Screening Committee to be candidates in
the election that will choose a veteran player to be inducted into
the National Soccer Hall of Fame in 2008. This list includes both information
about the achievements that enabled these players to meet the eligibility
criteria and other information about their playing careers.
All of the players on this list have
been retired long enough that they are no longer
eligible for election to the Hall of Fame by the
regular player selection process. For purposes of
the 2008 election, this means that they must have
retired in 1997 or earlier.
All of the players on this list have
been added to it via one or another of the following
three processes:
1. The records of the United States national teams, the North American
Soccer League and the American Soccer League where available have been
studied to find players who meet the eligibility criteria via their play
in the national teams, the NASL or the ASL. Those who do meet the criteria
in this way, and who have been retired long enough, have been added to
this list (the study of ASL records is only partially complete).
2. Some nominations for players from certain other, pre-NASL, leagues
have been received by the National Soccer Hall of Fame. The records of
these leagues have been studied where possible and other research efforts
have been made by the Hall of Fame's historians to determine whether
the players in question meet the eligibility criteria. If they do, they
have been added to this list.
3. Players whose years on the eligibility list for the Hall of Fame's
regular selection procedure have expired have been added to this list.
A player can meet the eligibility
criteria established by the Board of Directors of
the National Soccer Hall of Fame in either or both
of the following ways:
1. Through his or her play in the United States national team. To meet
the criteria via this route, a player must have played at least 20 full
international games for the United States. This 20-game requirement is
reduced to 10 games if they were prior to 1990 and five games if they
were prior to 1960.
2. Through his play in the North American Soccer League or, prior to
1968, one of various regional leagues that include the American Soccer
League, the North American Soccer Football League, the German-American
Soccer League of New York, the National Soccer League of Chicago, the
St. Louis Soccer League, the Keystone League of Western Pennsylvania,
the Greater Los Angeles Soccer League, the San Francisco Soccer League
and the National Association Foot Ball League. To meet the criteria via
this route, a player must have played at least five seasons those leagues
and won the league championship, won the U.S. Open Cup championship or
been selected a first-team league all-star at least once.
The information listed here is not
limited to the achievements that enabled a player
to become eligible. It includes professional-leagues
information for players who have met the eligibility
criteria only through their national-team careers
and national-team information for players who have
met the eligibility criteria only through their professional-league
careers.
Some of the players listed here had
careers in those pre-NASL leagues that began before
the start of the NASL in 1968 but extended beyond
1968. Their full years in those leagues are cited
here, rather than just the pre-NASL years.
Some definitions:
-Winning the league championship means that the player played on the
winning team in the championship game or series, or in at least one
victory during seasons when there was no league final and the champion
was decided by the league standings.
-Winning the U.S. Open Cup means that the player played on the winning
team in the championship game or series.
-NASL all-star means first-team all-star. Second-team and honorable mention
selection are listed in part of the biography. NASL North American all-star
refers to the team selected by the Professional Soccer Reporters Association.
-In many pre-NASL leagues, all-star teams were not chosen. In those instances,
winning a league MVP award or a league goalscoring title is considered
sufficient to fulfill the all-star requirement.
-References to "predecessors" of the APSL refer to the third
American Soccer League and the Western Soccer Alliance/Western Soccer
League, which merged in 1990 to form the APSL.
Sources for the information here include
The 1984 North American Soccer League Media Guide,
The 2006 U.S. Soccer Federation Media Guide, The "Bill
Graham" Guides, American Soccer League, 1921-31
by Colin Jose, The North American Soccer League Encyclopedia
by Colin Jose, The New York Times, The Philadelphia
Inquirer and The Newark Evening News.
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