- Fall River Marksmen
Football club infobox
clubname = Fall River Marksmen
fullname = Fall River Marksmen
founded = 1922
dissolved = 1931
ground =Mark's Stadium North Tiverton, Rhode Island
capacity = 15,000 | chairman = flagicon|United StatesSam Mark | league =American Soccer League : 1921-1930
Fall River Marksmen were a
United States soccer club, based inFall River, Massachusetts . They originally played asFall River United before becoming known as the Marksmen after their owner,Sam Mark . During the 1920s and early 1930s they were one of the most successful soccer clubs in the United States, winning theAmerican Soccer League on seven occasions. They also won theNational Challenge Cup four times. In 1924 they won the first ASL / Challenge Cup double and were subsequently theAmerican soccer champions three times in succession. Between 1928 and 1930 they won a further four titles in a row. In 1930 they completed a treble, winning the ASL title, the Challenge Cup and theLewis Cup . The same year they also touredCentral Europe .The Marksmen played their home games at
Mark's Stadium , one of the earliest examples of asoccer-specific stadium in the United States.cite book | last = Wangerin | first = David | title = Soccer in a Football World: The Story of America’s Forgotten Game | format = Paperback | publisher = Temple University Press | year = 2008 | id = (ISBN 1-5921-3885-3) ] In 1931 the franchise relocated and merged twice. They first moved to New York, where they merged withNew York Soccer Club and became the New York Yankees. They actually won their fourth National Challenge Cup after they became the Yankees, but due to complications following the merger it was credited to the Marksmen. The Yankees later moved toNew Bedford, Massachusetts where they merged with Fall River F.C. to become the New Bedford Whalers.History
Early Years
In 1921 the
Southern New England Soccer League and theNational Association Football League effectively merged to form theAmerican Soccer League . As a result of this mergerFall River Rovers of the SNESL were disbanded and a new teamFall River United were formed to enter the ASL. [cite book | last = Jose | first = Colin | title = American Soccer League, 1921-1931 | format = Hardback | publisher = The Scarecrow Press | year = 1998 | id = (ISBN 0-8108-3429-4) ] During the inaugural season United struggled, finishing sixth out of eight, and were on the verge of folding. However, in 1922 the club was taken over bySam Mark and subsequently became known as the "Fall River Marksmen".Mark was willing to invest in the club and one of his first moves was to build the team its own stadium.
Mark's Stadium was located inNorth Tiverton, Rhode Island , just over theMassachusetts border from Fall River. As a result, the club was now able circumvent the Massachusetts'Blue Law s and play on a Sunday. Crucially, Mark also managed to recruitHarold Brittan from Bethlehem Steel. During the 1922-23 season Brittan scored 19 goals in 23 games and subsequently went on to serve the Marksmen for nearly a decade as a player, coach and manager. Other notable signings included winger James White and full-back Tommy Martin, both from Motherwell, full-back Charlie McGill from Third Lanark and wing-halfBill McPherson from Beith. Together with goalkeeperFindlay Kerr , who joined the following season, White, McGill and McPherson would become the backbone of the Marksmen team throughout the its short history. [http://www.fairchallenge.com/home/blog.php?id=4 www.fairchallenge.com] ] [ [http://www.sover.net/~spectrum/year/1922.html The Year in American Soccer - 1922] ] [ [http://www.sover.net/~spectrum/year/1923.html The Year in American Soccer - 1923] ]Golden Era
The 1920s and early 1930s are sometimes described as the "Golden Era" of US soccer and it was the Fall River Marksmen that emerged as the era's dominant team. During the 1923-24 season the Marksmen completely dominated the league. They eventually won their first league title, finishing 6 points clear of Bethlehem Steel.
Harold Brittan again spearheaded the attack, scoring 15 goals. However the strength of the team lay in a strong defence which includedNed Tate andFindlay Kerr , who kept an incredible 14 clean sheets during the league season. The season also saw the Marksmen go on to complete the first ASL /National Challenge Cup double. In the semi-final of the Challenge Cup, the Marksmen defeated Steel 2-0 at Dexter Park in front of 20,000 fans. On March 20 1924 the final attracted 14,000 fans to the High School Field inSt. Louis, Missouri were they witnessed the Marksmen defeatSt. Louis Vesper Buick 4-2. The only disappointment for the Marksmen during the season came when they lost 1-0 to Steel in the final of theAmerican Cup . [ [http://www.sover.net/~spectrum/year/1924.html The Year in American Soccer - 1924] ]The Marksmen went onto win further ASL titles in 1924-25 and 1925-26, completing a three in a row sequence. They won it again in 1928-29 and then completed a four in a row when they won further titles in during the Fall 1929, Spring 1930 and Fall 1930 seasons. [ [http://www.sover.net/~spectrum/year/1925.html The Year in American Soccer - 1925] ] [http://www.sover.net/~spectrum/year/1926.html The Year in American Soccer - 1926] ] [ [http://www.sover.net/~spectrum/year/1929.html The Year in American Soccer - 1929] ] [http://www.sover.net/~spectrum/year/1930.html The Year in American Soccer - 1930] ] On May 1 1927, the Marksmen also won their second National Challenge Cup, defeating
Holley Carburetor F.C. 7-0 before a crowd of 10,000 at theUniversity of Detroit Stadium . [ [http://www.sover.net/~spectrum/year/1927.html The Year in American Soccer - 1927] ]From the beginning the Marksmen regularly recruited
Scottish Football League journeymen, sometimes directly from Scottish clubs but also from other ASL teams, most notably Bethlehem Steel. However two of their most notable players,Billy Gonsalves andBert Patenaude , actually grew up in Fall River itself. Both players first established themselves at other ASL clubs - Gonsalves atBoston Wonder Workers and Patenaude atPhiladelphia Field Club - before forming a formidable partnership at the Marksmen. In 1930, the duo played a major role in helping the Marksmen win a treble. During the Spring 1930 season, when the ASL played as the "Atlantic Coast League", they scored 44 league goals in 26 games as the Marksmen won another league title. In theNational Challenge Cup the Marksmen defeated Cleveland Bruell Insurance in a two-leg final. They just about finished off the Cleveland team when they won the opening leg, 7-2, on March 30 at thePolo Grounds .Jimmy McAuley andWerner Nilsen each scored ahat-trick whileAlex McNab scored the other Fall River goal. On April 6 atLuna Park in Cleveland, Fall River took the second leg, 2-1, with further goals from McNab andBob McAuley , no relation to Jimmy. They completed the treble when they won theLewis Cup defeatingHakoah All-Stars 2-1 and 3-0 in another two-legged final.European Tours
Throughout their short history the Marksmen regularly provided opposition for touring European teams and, more often than not, they held their own. On September 19, 1926 the Marksmen beat
Sparta Prague 3-2. On June 3, 1928 atMark's Stadium , a capacity crowd of 15,000 saw goalkeeper Jimmy Douglas keep a clean sheet as the Marksmen held Rangers to a 0-0 draw. [ [http://www.rangershistory.co.uk/various/tour1928.html Rangers tours] ] [ [http://geocities.com/br1anmccoll/rangerstour19281930.htm Rangers tours] ] Then on August 26, 1928 at the same venue they beat an Italian League XI, playing as "Palestra Italia", 4-2. [ [http://www.sover.net/~spectrum/year/1928.html The Year in American Soccer - 1928] ] In 1930 they played Rangers twice. On May 30 they lost 3-2 withBilly Gonsalves andWerner Nilsen scoring the Fall River goals. The goalkeeper that day wasJohnny Reder who later playedbaseball withBoston Red Sox . However a few weeks later on June 22 they lost 6-1 at thePolo Grounds . Guest playerArchie Stark scored the only goal for Fall River. In between these games they beat Kilmarnock 3-0 atMark's Stadium on June 15. Stark scored the opening goal withAlex McNab and Bob McAuley adding the other two. [ [http://geocities.com/br1anmccoll/rangerstour19281930.htm Rangers tours] ] [ [http://geocities.com/br1anmccoll/kilmarnocktour Kilmarnock tours] ]While teams from Europe regularly toured North America, it was rare for an ASL team to play overseas. However in August 1930 the Marksmen toured
Central Europe , playing six games inCzechoslovakia ,Austria andHungary . The squad included, among others,Bill Harper ,Alex McNab ,Jerry Best andWerner Nilsen as well as veterans James White, Charlie McGill andBill McPherson and guest playerArchie Stark . BothBilly Gonsalves andBert Patenaude were playing with the United States at the 1930 FIFA World Cup and did not travel. They opened the tour on August 20 with a 2-2 draw againstSlavia Prague in front of a crowd of 18,000. This was the first of two games against Slavia. They lost the other 4-0 on August 28. They also playedFK Austria Wien twice, losing the first game 6-0 on August 23 before winning the second 3-1 the following day. On August 30 they won their second game when they put three goals pastŠK Slovan Bratislava . The tour came to an end on August 31 when they lost 6-2 toFerencvárosi TC . The tour ended early, and in dispute, with Fall River unhappy about their share of the gate receipts.Yankees / Marksmen
The Marksmen returned from their European tour, and started the ASL Fall 1930 season late, but that didn't stop them from winning their seventh league title, despite playing only 27 out of 30 games. However, by this stage the effects of the
Great Depression had seen attendance fall atMark's Stadium . As a resultSam Mark moved the club to New York, hoping that a new market there would be more lucrative. Once there he merged the club withNew York Soccer Club and renamed them the New York Yankees. Before the merger was finalised, however, Fall River Marksmen had entered the1931 National Challenge Cup and Mark was unable to re-register them as the Yankees. As a result the Spring 1931 season saw them continue to play in the Challenge Cup as the "Fall River Marksmen" while at the same time playing as the "New York Yankees" in the ASL. While the "Yankees" only managed to finish third in the ASL, the "Marksmen" won the cup. Largely on the goalscoring strength ofBilly Gonsalves , with 9, andBert Patenaude , with 13, they reached the final where they eventually beat Chicago'sBricklayers and Masons F.C. in a final played as a three game series. The last of these three games is officially regarded as the last game the Marksmen ever played. The first leg of the final was played on April 5 at thePolo Grounds , where the Marksmen won 6-2, and seemingly established a clear lead. Patenaude scored five goals in that game whileBill McPherson added the other. A week later at Mills Stadium in Chicago, the Bricklayers kept the series alive by earning a 1-1 draw. This time Gonsalves got on the score sheet. Sparta Stadium in Chicago attracted 4,500 for the deciding game on April 19. The Marksmen could only field 10 players after their captain,Alex McNab , broke his arm in a midweek friendly and the club had neglected to bring along any reserves. Despite this they still managed to win 2-0 with goals from Patenaude andGordon Burness . [ [http://www.rsssf.com/tablesu/usacuphist.html#det www.rsssf.com] ] [ [http://www.sover.net/~spectrum/year/1931.html American Soccer - 1931] ] [ [http://www.sover.net/~spectrum/asl.html www.sover.net] ]Year-by-year
Honors
*
American Soccer League
**"Winners" 1923-24, 1924-25, 1925-26, 1928-29, Fall 1929, Spring 1930, Fall 1930: 7
*National Challenge Cup
**"Winners" 1924, 1927, 1930, 1931: 4
*Lewis Cup
**"Winners" 1930: 1
**"Runners Up" 1925: 1
*American Cup
**"Runners Up" 1924: 1Notable Players
"see also cl|Fall River Marksmen players"
Notable Managers
*
Harold Brittan : 1922-1926
* Fred MorleyReferences
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