Continentals F.C.
The Continentals Football Club of New York City was a U.S. soccer team which had a brief period of national prominence from 1914 to 1918.
History
The Continentals were formed as an ethnic soccer club composed of immigrants from Continental Europe. A newspaper clip from January 1914 provides a clue to the origins on the team when it mentions that in a game of the New York Footballers Protective Association, “The Continentals had previously distinguished themselves by defeating England by 6 goals to 1. On their team yesterday were players from Germany, Holland, Belgium, Switzerland and Hungary.”[1] This competition was held annually, with the Continentals participating, until at least 1922.[2] The next oldest reference to the team comes from April 1915, when the team was finishing the 1914-1915 season in the New York State Amateur Football League (NYSAFL).[3] They had won promotion from the second division and would finish in second place in the first division standings.[4] That year, the team also went to the quarterfinals of the National Challenge Cup. In 1916, Harry Cooper was selected to play for the first United States men's national soccer team on its tour of Scandinavia. In 1918, the team went to the semifinals of the National Challenge Cup, but slipped from view until the 1922 New York Footballers Protective Association game mentioned above. There is no mention of the team in any sources after that.
Year-by-year
Year | League | Reg. Season | National Challenge Cup |
---|---|---|---|
1914/15 | NYSAFL | 2nd | Quarterfinal |
1915/16 | NYSAFL | ? | Semifinal |
1916/17 | NYSAFL | 8th | First round |
1917/18 | NYSAFL | 6th | Semifinal |
Honors
League Championship
- Runner Up (1): 1915
References
- January 4, 1914 New York Times
- February 23, 1922 New York Times
- April 26, 1915 New York Times
- "The Year in American Soccer – 1915". Archived from the original on 2008-03-28. Retrieved 2008-03-08.