San Diego Nomads Soccer

San Diego Nomads

Western Soccer Alliance (1986-1988)
Western Soccer League (1989)
American Professional Soccer League (1990)

Tombstone

Born: 1986 – Western Soccer Alliance expansion franchise
Died: Postseason 1990 – The Nomads drop to amateur/youth club status

First Game:
Last Game:

Western Soccer Alliance/League Champions: 1987 & 1989

Stadia

1986: Balboa Stadium

1988: DeVore Stadium (7,700)

1989: Balboa Stadium (5,500)

1989: The Aztec Bowl (playoffs only)

1990: DeVore Stadium

Branding

Team Colors:

  • 1989: Blue & White
  • 1990: White, Blue & Red

Ownership

Owners:

  • 1986-1988: ?
  • 1988-1990: Jerry Burwell

 

Background

The San Diego Nomads were a low-budget semi-pro/pro soccer club that competed during the late 1980’s, a period viewed as the Dark Ages for outdoor professional soccer in the United States.  After the demise of the North American Soccer League in 1984 there was no nationwide pro league in the country for the remainder of the decade.  The best players toiled indoors in the Major Indoor Soccer League (MISL), which was dominated by foreign players.

The city of San Diego hosted the finest indoor team of the era. The Sockers (1978-1996) were a former outdoor side turned indoor dynasty and they employed the highest paid soccer player in the United States at the end of the 1980’s. The Yugoslav striker Branko Segota earned $102,000 during the 1989-90 MISL season.1Patterson, Don. “At $102,000, Segota tops MISL Salaries”. The Times (Los Angeles, CA). March 22, 1990

1989 San Diego Nomads program from the Western Soccer League

Semi-Pro Status

The Nomads entered the Western Soccer Alliance quietly in the spring of 1986.  For the next four summers, the Nomads would compete as a semi-pro side.  U.S. National Team players like Marcelo Balboa and Paul Caligiuri played alongside high school players and moonlighting Sockers players such as Paul Dougherty and Paul Wright.

In 1989, the Nomads won the Western Soccer League title with a semi-pro roster. The WSL championship game on August 12, 1989 drew a franchise record 5,200 fans to the Aztec Bowl. The Nomads blanked the San Francisco Bay Blackhawks 1-0 on a 2nd half goal by Paul Wright.

The victory earned them a meeting with the Fort Lauderdale Strikers of the East Coast-based American Soccer League to crown the so-called National Pro Soccer Champion.  The Strikers were a fully professional side, featuring many veterans of the old NASL.  The Nomads had three 17-year old high school players on the team and were missing five regular players for the title match due to NCAA commitments.  The Nomads took an early 1-0 lead, but ultimately were no match for the veteran Strikers and lost 3-1.  The match drew an impressive (for the era) 8,600 fans in the neutral site of San Jose’s Spartan Stadium on September 9th, 1989.

1989 National Pro Soccer Championship Game Program

1990: Move to Fully Professional Status & Demise

In 1990 the Western Soccer League merged with the American Soccer League to former the American Professional Soccer League (APSL).  Although teams continued to play a regional schedule, it was a baby step toward the restoration of a fully professional league with a nationwide footprint.  The Nomads committed to field a pro side for the first time in 1990.  At the same time, the club shifted its home games from Balboa Stadium in San Diego to the campus of Southwestern College in Chula Vista.

The move to Chula Vista was a bust at the box office and the Nomads withdrew from professional play after the 1990 APSL season.  Like many lower-division American clubs of the 1990’s and 2000’s, the Nomads came to realize their real business was running academy programs at the youth level.  The Nomads still exist today as an academy program (www.nomadssoccer.org) and still use the same logo from their adult semi-pro/pro sides of a quarter century ago.

 

San Diego Nomads Shop

 

 

San Diego Nomads Video

The Nomads host the San Francisco Bay Blackhawks at the Aztec Bowl in the Western Soccer League final on August 12th, 1989.

 

Downloads

6-19-1988 Nomads vs. F.C. Seattle Storm Game Notes

6-19-1988 San Diego Nomads vs FC Seattle Storm Game Notes

 

4-23-1989 Nomads vs. L.A. Heat Game Notes

7-23-1989 Nomads vs. Portland Timbers Game Notes

9-9-1989 Nomads vs. Fort Lauderdale Strikers National Pro Soccer Championship Game Roster

 

Links

Western Soccer Alliance / League Programs

 

American Professional Soccer League Media Guides

American Professional Soccer League Programs

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Comments

2 Responses

  1. The Nomads played most of their 1987 home games at the University of California, San Diego, before moving to Southwestern College for a late-season exhibition game and the playoffs.

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