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Chicago Power
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Chicago Power

The Chicago Power were an indoor soccer team based in Chicago, Illinois, that competed in the American Indoor Soccer Association and National Professional Soccer League.[1]

Key Information

After the 1995–96 season, the team was sold to Peter Pocklington, moved and became the Edmonton Drillers.[2]

Year-by-year

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Year Division League Reg. season Playoffs Avg. attendance
1988–89 2 AISA 3rd Final
1989–90 2 AISA 3rd, National 1st Round 3,602
1990–91 2 NPSL 1st, National Champions 2,459
1991–92 2 NPSL 1st, National Semifinals 4,612
1992–93 1 NPSL 3rd, National 1st Round 4,909
1993–94 1 NPSL 5th, National Did not qualify 4,515
1994–95 1 NPSL 6th, National Did not qualify 3,333
1995–96 1 NPSL 6th, National Did not qualify 2,847

Outdoor play

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Although the Power was primarily known only as an indoor team, in the summer of 1992 they formed a full outdoor squad.[3] Home matches were played at St. Charles High School's Norris Stadium and at Hanson Stadium on the Northwest Side.[4] In addition to several exhibition matches[5] they participated in the 1992 Professional Cup alongside five APSL and two CSL clubs. Chicago also took part in another international series dubbed Copa Chicago '92[6][7] which included Liga MX's Tecos F.C. and Tigres UANL and the APSL's Miami Freedom.[8] They finished last in both competitions. In eight outdoor matches that year the Power won only once, lost five times, while drawing twice.[9] In 1993 several other APSL clubs joined them in summer outdoor play.[10][11]

1992 Outdoor results

[edit]
Date Opponent Venue Result Attendance Goal Scorers Ref.
June 21, 1992 Colorado Foxes Englewood Stadium 0–2 [12]
June 27, 1992 Colorado Foxes Norris Stadium 1–1 1,479 Batata [5]
July 10, 1992 Tigres UANL Mexico Hanson Stadium 1–2 3,000 est. Richard Cordosa [13][14]
July 12, 1992 Miami Freedom Hanson Stadium 1–3 3,200 est. Art Wywrot [15][7]
July 22, 1992 San Francisco Bay Blackhawks Buck Shaw Stadium 0–2 2,050 [16]
July 27, 1992 Torpedo Minsk Belarus East McCully Field 1–0 Batata [17][18]
August 8, 1992 Cruz Azul Mexico Hanson Stadium 2–2 7,000 est. Pato Margetic, Mirko Castillo [19][20]
August 19, 1992 San Francisco Bay Blackhawks Norris Stadium 2–3 Ken Snow, Pato Margetic [21][22]

Notable players

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Media coverage

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The Chicago Power appeared locally, on SportsChannel Chicago.[23] Howard Balson[24] and Kenny Stern[25] were the primary broadcast team in Chicago.

References

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