The global influence of the 1968 Atlanta Chiefs
Kaizer Motaung, Phil Woosnam and the first winners of NASL
Nike is in pretty sketchy form and I’d say England have got off pretty lightly with their new kits.
Sure, the collar on the home shirt is a travesty. But beneath that, I really rather like it. I’m quite taken with the away shirt too – it’s all fine at worst, if you ask me, but clearly it’s impossible to please everyone.
What’s interesting to me is the culture war aspect of the reaction, which has taken a turn that’s at once surprising at not surprising at all.
The blue home shorts have been targeted by them for being blue. We’re England, they say. If you want blue go and buy a Scotland shirt.
For a bunch of people supposedly obsessed with opposing change, this apparent desire below the fold to stick to white and red is quite something. There’s no blue in the English flag – that much is true – but there is plenty in the long tradition of the England football team and the Football Association.
And, let us not forget, in the passports they wanted.
Umbro did strip the strip of blue towards the end of its time as England’s partner. I was a big fan of the result and indeed of the logic behind it. But let’s be honest: in 2024, the bad-faith objective is to target everything all at once and a blueless England would have been woke.
Sometimes, it’s best just to rewind a few decades and wallow in the past. Shall we?
The global influence of the 1968 Atlanta Chiefs
The history of soccer in America is a varied, star-studded affair encompassing disaster, triumph and struggle. Its trajectory is straight out of Hollywood and the real meat of the story lies not in Major League Soccer or World Cup USA '94, but the North American Soccer League (NASL).
Between 1968 and 1984 the sport in the USA went through its adolescence, displaying at once brashness, insecurity, swagger and indiscipline. Without it, MLS would be very different today and might not exist at all. For all its major problems, NASL mattered.
The league was formed in 1968, the result of a merger between two very different professional football leagues, both of which existed for a single year.
The National Professional Soccer League (NPSL) was not sanctioned by any governing body and effectively had no television coverage. The United Soccer Association (USA) owned the United States Soccer Football Association (USSFA, now the United States Soccer Federation) sanction and the FIFA rights that came with it, but it was no ordinary first division: it was not populated by American teams.
Instead, teams of varying stature from Europe and South America were simply imported intact; CA Cerro (New York Skyliners), Sunderland (Vancouver Royal Canadians), ADO Den Haag (San Francisco Golden Gate Gales) and even Shamrock Rovers (Boston Rovers) were among those represented.
In spite of the bizarre nature of this league it achieved supremacy over the NPSL but the unfavoured league refused to go down without a fight, bringing an antitrust lawsuit against the USA, USSFA and seemingly any other governing body for which it could find an address. NASL was born of necessity. It would go on to become one of the most remarkable leagues in the history of football.
Its first pre-season was riddled with changes. Boston Rovers (from the USA) became Boston Beacons; Vancouver Royal Canadians (USA) absorbed San Francisco Gales (USA), who made way for Oakland Clippers, and became Vancouver Royals; Chicago Spurs (NPSL) moved to Kansas City to avoid a clash with Chicago Sting (USA), and would record the highest average attendance in 1968; Los Angeles Toros (NPSL) moved to San Diego to avoid clashing with Los Angeles Wolves. You get the picture.
In addition to those moves, the Skyliners folded to make way for New York Generals, and Philadelphia Spartans and Pittsburgh Phantoms disappeared due to financial losses.
And so began the North American Soccer League, with 17 teams across four divisions – Atlantic, Lakes, Gulf and Pacific – and it was Ferenc Puskas, coach of the Royals due to something of a fluke of the merger, who provided the first glimpse of the star quality that would eventually come to define the league above all else. The stories, however, would develop elsewhere.
The inaugural champions of the North American Soccer League were Atlanta Chiefs, who succeeded under the tutelage of player-coach Phil Woosnam.
Woosnam was one of three former Aston Villa players (the others being 1957 FA Cup Final hero Peter McParland and future Villa and Portland Timbers coach Vic Crowe) who played for the Chiefs in the triumphant 1968 season, and his future was a controversial one as the longest-serving commissioner of the league.
The Chiefs topped the Atlantic Division ahead of Washington Whips and New York Generals, defeating Lakes Division winners Cleveland Stokers in the playoff semi-finals and emerging victorious from a final against Pacific Division champions San Diego Toros.
At this stage playoff matches, including the final, were two-legged affairs. After a goalless first leg draw, a 3-0 win saw the Chiefs past the Toros to win the title for the only time.
Strangely, Malcolm Allison also wrote himself into Chiefs history in 1968. After his Manchester City side (then champions of England) were defeated 3-2 by Woosnam's charges while on a pre-season tour, Allison famously described the Chiefs as a fourth division side and proclaimed that the victory was a one-off that they could never repeat.
When one of City's tour games was cancelled Woosnam challenged Allison to a rematch and the Chiefs won again, defeating City 2-1.
It wasn't just the former Villa trio who would enjoy ongoing recognition after their careers ended. One of the goalscorers as the Chiefs humiliated Manchester City was Kaizer Motaung, a 23-year-old South African striker who went on to score 16 goals in 15 matches and be named as the league's inaugural Rookie of the Year.
As it turned out, Motaung's goal-scoring ability was just the beginning of his talents. In between two spells in NASL (the second representing Denver Dynamos) it was Motaung who launched Soweto's iconic Kaizer Chiefs, named after the club where he had overcome a difficult settling-in period to enjoy such success in 1968.
The Amakhosi came to life in 1970 and have enjoyed enormous success, racking up silverware seemingly for fun.
In the meantime, Motaung's reach extended into South African industry and football administration, including a position of power on the board of FIFA World Cup 2010, undoubtedly his country's proudest football event. He also sits on the South African Football Association's executive committee and the board of the Premier Soccer League. Despite enjoying a huge amount of power within the game, Motaung's progress was not without incident.
His coaching appointments came into question along with his reticence to dispense with some incumbent. Kaizer's son – effectively the club's director of football – is no stranger to the odd controversial statement and allegations of worse.
Even away from Georgia the 1968 NASL season created stories and had an impact on the future of the game, particularly domestically.
Dallas Tornado had a disastrous season, winning just two regular season matches after struggling to rebuild after Dundee United had "been" the Tornado in the United Soccer Association in the season previous.
The club's owner, Lamar Hunt, was a genuine soccer visionary in the States and his impact is still felt today, long after his death. NFL stalwart Hunt's involvement in multiple sports led to the NFL seeking a rule forbidding cross-disciplinary ownership, a challenge that was defeated by the NASL and allowed the assimilated Texan to go on to be a founding investor in Major League Soccer – at one point he helped save the league by owning as many as three clubs simultaneously – and have the US Open Cup, one of football's oldest cup competitions, named after him in 1999.
The individual legacy of Hunt is almost unequalled in the American game, but in terms of collective impact Atlanta Chiefs arguably had more than nearly any professional American side since World War II.
Since Woosnam guided the Chiefs to their triumph in '68, New York Cosmos and LA Galaxy have had a profound effect on soccer in the USA and its reputation abroad.
But with Woosnam running NASL and later taking on a key marketing role at US Soccer and Motaung forming one of Africa's best known clubs, the Chiefs' global influence shouldn't be overlooked.
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“The reaction here felt like a microcosm of the general mood towards Henderson in England, and you imagine he would have faced jeers almost anywhere but Anfield on what was his first match on home soil since November – his first club match in England since leaving Liverpool.
“It is worth pointing out that it is nothing new. Henderson has been booed by England fans already, when playing at Wembley last year as an Al-Ettifaq player.”
Last Thursday I was at Villa Park, where Ajax captain and total jeb-end Jordan Henderson was persona non grata for ninety minutes. In the i, Michael Hincks understood why – and predicted that it might not be Henderson’s last negative reception on his return to England.
Salty beef extracts
Coventry’s Callum O’Hare: ‘I was stuck in bed for two months unable to move, it was horrible’ (The Guardian)
Worry about an all-time title race, not marginal refereeing decisions (The Guardian)
The Premier League owes financial solidarity to EFL and grassroots (Morning Star)
Dessert
I don’t need to explain the appeal of the Copa Mundial Federations Pack from adidas, do I?
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