- Indiana Blast
Football club infobox
clubname = Indiana Blast
fullname = Indiana Blast
nickname = The Blast
founded = 1997
ground =Kuntz Memorial Stadium
capacity = 6,760
chairman =
manager = flagicon|ENGPeter Baah
league =USL Premier Development League
season = 2004
position = 9th, Heartland Divisionpattern_la1=
pattern_b1=
pattern_ra1=
leftarm1=000000
body1= 000000
rightarm1= 000000
shorts1=000000
socks1= 000000pattern_la2=
pattern_b2=
pattern_ra2=
leftarm2= 000000
body2= 000000
rightarm2= 000000
shorts2=000000
socks2= 000000
Indiana Blast were an American
soccer team, founded in1997 . The team was a member of theUnited Soccer Leagues , and played in the D-3 Pro League, the A-League and theUSL Premier Development League (PDL), until folding at the end of the2004 season.The Blast played their home games at
Kuntz Memorial Stadium inIndianapolis, Indiana . The team's colors were white and blue for its last four years after four years with red and black as its colors.Final Squad
"vs
Kalamazoo Kingdom , 17 July 2004"Year-by-year
Honors
* USISL D3-Pro League North Central Division Champions 1998
Competition History
Officially announced a press conference on September 30, 1996, the Blast signed its first player that November in goalkeeper
Mile Milovac . The club played its first match at Kuntz Stadium on April 25, 1997, a 2-0 loss to eventual A-League championMilwaukee Rampage in front of 2,886 fans. The team claimed its first victory on May 9, beating theCincinnati Riverhawks 4-0.By August, the team's original owner, businessman
Ferid Poturkovic , had sold the club toMorSports, Inc . On the day the sale was announced, the Blast beat theChicago Stingers 2-0 to clinch a playoff berth with their fifth consecutive victory to end the regular season. Two weeks later, the Blast came from 2-0 down to defeat theCleveland Caps 3-2 and win a first-round playoff game. The Blast would then defeat Chicago 1-0 on August 22 to make it to the D3 Pro League quarterfinals, where they fell 6-0 to theCharlotte Eagles .The 1998 season was the best in the club's history, as the Blast went 15-3 in league play (17-4 overall) and won the North Central Division's regular-season championship. The Chicago Stingers would exact their revenge for 1997's playoff defeat, though, as they would beat the Blast 3-0 on August 21, 1998 in a first-round playoff match. The year would end with the Blast winning "Organization of the Year" honors from the USISL and earning promotion to the A-League.
In its first A-League game, the Blast won away to Tennessee Rhythm 3-1, but would finish a mere point out of the playoff race with a 13-15 record, having lost the final postseason spot to the
El Paso Patriots by virtue of a tiebreaker.Though the Blast struggled to a 9-15-4 record in 2000, they qualified for the playoffs and absorbed a 7-0 pounding at the hands of the
Minnesota Thunder in the first round. The club would never qualify for postseason play again.Original coach Jimmy McDonald stepped down after the 2000 season and was replaced by
Bret Hall , who had coached the Chicago Stingers and Sockers to three consecutive championships. For health reasons, Hall was forced to relinquish his duties before ever coaching a game and he was replaced by assistant Ian Martin, the former head coach atButler University in Indianapolis. Martin's only season at the helm resulted in an 8-18-0 record in 2001.Former French professional and Mauritanian international
Eric Descombes took over as player-coach for the 2002 season, which saw the team go 6-18-4, including a stretch of 16 games over two months in which it won just one match. A highlight was a 2-2 draw againstRochester Raging Rhinos in a nationally-televised game on August 17 that drew a then-club-record 4,557 fans (a figure that would be topped on July 13, 2003 when 5,140 saw a 3-2 loss to thePittsburgh Riverhounds ).McDonald returned to the sidelines for the 2003 season, but it would be the worst in the club's history, as they continued losing and controversy dogged the Blast from the season's start. McDonald resigned for the final time after a horrendous start and was replaced by assistant
Mike Sanich . Before the 3-23-2 season was over, playerPeter Baah had taken the reins. It would be the Blast's last season in the A-League.A move to the
Premier Development League for the 2004 season infused the club with young talent, but the results weren't much better as the Blast finished 5-12-1 under coachJohn Dolinsky (who was first replaced by player Mark Allen and then by Baah before the season's end). The team's final match ever was a 3-2 loss to theKalamazoo Kingdom at home on July 17, 2004. The final victory in club history came the night before, a 7-3 home decision over theKansas City Brass .In its history, the Blast established quite a rivalry with the
Cincinnati Riverhawks , as the teams met 25 times. Indiana won 12, Cincinnati 11 and there were 2 draws in the series. At the other end of the spectrum, Indiana went just 2-15-1 in 18 matches against theMinnesota Thunder . In eight seasons, the club won 67, lost 114 and tied 11 in league play.Notable former players
* Mark Allen
*Peter Baah
*Jamar Beasley
*Eric Descombes
*Jeffrey Dresser
*John Michael Hayden
*Aleksey Korol
*Marc LeBere
*Chris Lemons
*Amarildo Oliveira
*Jon Pickup
*Nick Pasquarello
* Mark Phillips
*Matt Reiswerg
*Godfrey Tenoff
*Steve Weiger Coaches
* Jimmy McDonald 1994-2000, 2003
*Bret Hall 2001
* Ian Martin 2001
*Eric Descombes 2002
*Mike Sanich 2003
*Peter Baah 2003, 2004
*John Dolinsky 2004
* Mark Allen 2004Stadia
*
Kuntz Memorial Stadium ,Indianapolis, Indiana 2003-04Average Attendance
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