American Indoor Soccer Association (1986-1989)
Tombstone
Born: May 1986 – AISA expansion franchise
Re-Branded: September 1989 (Memphis Rogues)
First Game: November 1, 1986 (L 4-3 @ Tampa Bay Rowdies)
Last Game: March 31, 1989 (W 5-4 vs. Chicago Power)
AISA Championships: None
Arena
Mid-South Coliseum (9,609)
Opened: 1964
Closed: 2006
Marketing
Team Colors: Blue & Orange
Radio:
- 1986-87: WLVS (1430 AM)
Radio Broadcasters:
- 1986-87: Dave Woloshin
Ownership
Owners:
- 1986: Cameron Trail
- 1986-1988: Joyce Smith, Wise Smith & Don DeWeese
Trophy Case
AISA Goalkeeper of the Year
- 1987-88: Manny Sanchez
AISA Rookie of the Year
- 1987-88: Rod Castro
AISA Coach of the Year
- 1986-87: Terry Nicholl
- 1987-88: Terry Nicholl
Best Seller
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Memphis Storm Logo T-Shirt
Available Today at Extra Time Vintage Soccer!
Background
The Memphis Storm (1986-1989) were the third attempt to make a buck off of indoor soccer at Memphis’ Mid-South Coliseum during the 1980’s. The hybrid sport briefly captivated Memphis sports fans in the winter of 1979-80. At the time, the city had a losing, unpopular outdoor soccer team in the North American Soccer League (1968-1984) called the Memphis Rogues. The Rogues drew poorly in the summer at the Liberty Bowl. But when the NASL experimented with a winter indoor season 1979, Memphians suddenly went nuts for the game.
“We played indoor soccer there when no one knew anything about it and we sold out every game,” former Rogues GM Rudi Schiffer recalled in 2011. “We won the Western Division championship and had a heckuva team. [The Rogues] did that with a lot of promotions and it was wild and exciting and everybody loved it. Sold every ticket in the house. But that all faded when the team moved to Canada.”
Rogues owner Avron Fogelman sold the Rogues later in 1980 and the club moved to Calgary. Outdoor soccer in Memphis was gone for good, but the Rogues’ intriguing success indoors continued to tempt investors.
First up was Athletes in Action, the Christian sports ministry. Nine months after the Rogues left town, AIA bought a bankrupt Major Indoor Soccer League franchise from Hartford and moved it to Memphis. The club was called the “Hellions” and their logo featured a depiction of Satan. The evangelical group vanquished Satan, renamed the team the “Americans“, and dressed the players in patriotic Red, White & Blue. The Americans lasted three seasons at the Mid-South Coliseum from 1981 to 1984, but never truly thrilled the city the way the Rogues did. In May 1984, new owners moved the Americans to Las Vegas.
Storm Brewing – 1986
The Memphis Storm arrived in town as an American Indoor Soccer Association expansion franchise in May 1986. The AISA was basically a low-budget Midwestern bus league at the time. Speculators kept betting on Memphis, but each successive Memphis soccer team had shallower and shallower pockets. Original Rogues owner Harry Mangurian also owned the Boston Celtics. His successor at the Rogues, Avron Fogelman, was a real estate titan who later owned the Kansas City Royals.
By contrast, the neophyte founder of the Memphis Storm, Cameron Trail, was a 25-year old whose previous business experience was owning a string of ice cream parlors. Trail ran out of money and unloaded the Storm after just two games in November 1986.
Nevertheless, GM Chris Bartels put together a solid veteran squad, led by Argentinean midfielder and fan favorite Toni Carbognani. Carbognani was the only player to suit up for all three of Memphis’ pro teams in the 80’s – the Rogues, the Americans and the Storm. The Storm lured several other talented vets from the higher-paying MISL, including Oscar Albuquerque, Terry Nicholl, Tony Peszneker and Gregg Willin.
Financial Problems & Closure
The Storm were competitive for their first two seasons. They posted the AISA’s best record (16-8) during an abbreviated 1987-88 season that saw the league reduced to just four teams. New owners Wise Smith and Joyce Smith took over the Storm but soon ran out of money. The AISA confiscated the franchise in December 1988, one month into the Storm’s third season and assumed operations.
Another group of new owners took over for the club’s fourth season in the winter of 1989-90. They desperately tried to reignite interest in the team by dropping the “Storm” name and reviving the Memphis Rogues brand. But by 1989 the old NASL Rogues’ brief heyday was a decade in the past and largely forgotten. The 1989-90 Rogues cemented their fate by finishing a league-worst 6-34 and folded shortly thereafter.
Memphis Storm Shop
In Memoriam
Storm defender Art Hughes died in a car accident in 1990. The Memphis native was 24 years old.
Links
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One Response
Wish I had one of these posters. And a shirt with the memphis storm logo on it!