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Buffalo Storm were an American professional soccer team. They played for one season (1984) in the
United Soccer League The United Soccer League (USL) is an organizer of various professional and amateur soccer leagues in the United States league system. It currently organizes its Championship, League One, and League Two for men, its Super League and W Leag ...
, with home games at
All-High Stadium All-High Stadium (Robert E. Rich All-High Stadium) is a American football, football stadium in Buffalo, New York. It was opened in 1926, and received a Memorial Day dedication on May 29, 1929. The stadium was modeled after classic European soccer ...
.


History

The early 1980s were a lean and difficult time for professional outdoor soccer in the United States. The
North American Soccer League The North American Soccer League (NASL) was the top-level major professional soccer league in the United States and Canada that operated from 1968 to 1984. It is considered the first soccer league to be successful on a national scale in the ...
was in significant decline following the boom years of the late 1970s, undone by a period of over-expansion and overspending that created an unstable environment in which teams were constantly folding or moving to new cities. By 1984, only nine teams were left in the league (down from a peak of twenty-four in 1980). The de facto second division American Soccer League had likewise doomed itself to instability and difficult economic realities when it expanded beyond the northeastern United States, where it had operated very modestly since 1933, and tried to establish a foothold on the west coast in the '70s and southern states in the '80s. These expansions produced a string of short-lived franchises, and the league had contracted to only six teams in 1983. At the ASL's annual league meetings in January 1984, chronic instability and frustration over a power structure that allowed inactive owners to still influence the direction of the league led the owners of the
Jacksonville Tea Men The Jacksonville Tea Men was a soccer team based in Jacksonville, Florida, United States. Overall, the Tea Men played a total of four years in Jacksonville, first in the major league-level North American Soccer League (NASL) from 1980–1982, ...
and
Dallas Americans Dallas Americans was an American professional soccer club based in Dallas, Texas. The team played in the American Soccer League in 1983 and the United Soccer League in 1984 and 1985. Both leagues unofficially served as the second division of pr ...
to break away and start planning a new second division league, which they named the United Soccer League. Their vision was a stable league in which teams could operate within their means and take a more grass roots approach to building a fan base in their communities. Year-round operation (with an indoor season in the winter), a strict salary cap, a focus on American players and a mostly regional schedule to reduce travel costs were all pillars on which this new league was to be founded. Three ASL clubs would end up coming directly to the USL, while two other clubs were re-organized and renamed for USL membership. Four new teams also joined the league, one of which would be the Buffalo Storm. The new Buffalo team was led by two men whose history together dated back to the defunct Rochester Lancers of the NASL. Owner Sal DeRosa had been the Lancers' head coach for a few years in the '70s (including for their 1970 championship season), and he chose former Lancers all-star midfielder Francisco "Pancho" Escos to be the Storm's coach. They officially announced their existence in April.


The 1984 Season

In between working together in Rochester and founding the Storm, DeRosa and Escos were both part of the Buffalo Stallions of the Major Indoor Soccer League (DeRosa as vice president and GM, Escos as a player), and they took advantage of this connection when assembling their new team. Eleven Stallions players joined the Storm's roster. The team was placed into the USL's Northern Division along with the New York Nationals and
Rochester Flash The Rochester Flash was an American soccer club based in Rochester, New York, that was a member of the American Soccer League from 1981–82 and of the United Soccer League in 1984. History Rochester's first experience with professional soccer ...
. Buffalo's season began on May 19 with a 2–1 loss at Jacksonville. The Storm would be a "middle of the pack" team in the league as a whole, finishing with an 11–13 record. Rochester and New York would both post worse records, though, and the Storm ended up qualifying for the playoffs as division winners, earning them a best-of-three semifinals matchup with the
Fort Lauderdale Sun Fort Lauderdale/South Florida Sun was a professional U.S. soccer team which played two seasons in the United Soccer League. Origins In November 1983, The Fort Lauderdale Strikers of the North American Soccer League, motivated in part by the lack ...
. Sal DeRosa chose to surrender the team's right to host the first game in the series at home since it would mean a mid-week game at All High Stadium, which did not have lights. The Sun eliminated the Storm by scores of 3-0 and 5-1.


The Storm's End

The Storm faced two substantial challenges in joining the upstart USL. The first was that they only had about six weeks in between announcing their existence and the beginning of league play, leaving little time to drum up sponsors, investors or fans. The other was having to play all home games at a field without lights. Official attendance figures were not kept, but one contemporary media source listed the average attendance for Buffalo home games at less than 1,000 fans per game. Despite the USL's austere financial design, the Storm were not able to balance the books in these conditions. Most of the rest of the league was not faring much better. The indoor season that had been discussed at the league's founding never materialized. Shortly after discussions for a USL/NASL merger fell apart in March 1985, Buffalo failed to meet the USL's financial requirements and dropped out along with other members of the Northern Division, Rochester and New York. The MISL's Stallions had "suspended" operations to re-organize the previous July but ultimately never re-started, so the folding of the Storm left Buffalo without any professional soccer until the formation of the
Buffalo Blizzard The Buffalo Blizzard was a soccer club that existed from 1992 to 2001 in Buffalo, New York. History The team was originally owned by the Knox brothers who owned the Buffalo Sabres at the time, and additionally by the Riches who owned the minor l ...
in the indoor NPSL in 1992.


Players

* Dennis Mepham 1984 * Randy Pikuzinski 1984 *
Rudy Pikuzinski Rudy Pikuzinski (born August 9, 1959) is a former U.S. soccer forward who spent most of his career playing indoor soccer. He was a three time American Indoor Soccer Association MVP and served as an assistant coach his last year as a player. Yo ...
1984 *
Otto Orf Otto E. Orf II (born November 4, 1963) is a retired American soccer goalkeeper who played professionally in the United Soccer League and Major Indoor Soccer League and National Professional Soccer League. He played one game for the U.S. at the ...
1984 * Dave Lischner 1984 *
Pat Occhiuto Pat Occhiuto is a retired Italian-American soccer forward who played professionally in the American Soccer League, United Soccer League, Major Indoor Soccer League and National Professional Soccer League. Occhiuto attended Erie Community Co ...
1984 * Carlos Salguero 1984 * Ernesto Buriano 1984 * Oscar Pisano 1984 * Herve Guilliod 1984 * Niels Guldbjerg 1984


References



{{United Soccer League (1984–85) Defunct soccer clubs in New York (state) Association football clubs established in 1984 Sports in Buffalo, New York United Soccer League (1984–85) teams Men's soccer clubs in New York (state) 1984 establishments in New York (state) Association football clubs disestablished in 1984 1984 disestablishments in New York (state)