Columbus Crew

Columbus Crew
Columbus Crew
Columbus Crew logo.svg
Full name Columbus Crew
Nickname(s) The Massive, The Fighting Canaries
Founded June 15, 1994
Stadium Columbus Crew Stadium
Columbus, Ohio
(Capacity: 20,455[1])
Owner Clark Hunt
Head Coach Robert Warzycha
League Major League Soccer
2011 Eastern Conference: 4th
Overall: 9th
Playoffs: Wildcard
Website Club home page
Home colors
Away colors
Current season

The Columbus Crew is an American professional soccer club based in Columbus, Ohio which competes in Major League Soccer (MLS), the top professional soccer league in the United States and Canada. It is one of the ten charter clubs of MLS, having competed in the league since its inception.

The club was owned by Lamar Hunt, who also owned the Kansas City Chiefs and FC Dallas until his 2006 death. Upon his death, his son Clark Hunt took over his sports properties. The Crew currently plays their home games at Columbus Crew Stadium, the first soccer-specific stadium ever built by an MLS franchise, with a seating capacity of 20,455 - as of the 2008 Season.[1] From 1996 to 1998, the Crew played their home games at Ohio Stadium on the campus of the Ohio State University. The nickname "the Crew" is the result of a local fan contest. The team colors are black and gold. The team mascot is Crew Cat.

The Crew has won five major trophies: MLS Cup 2008, the 2004, 2008 and 2009 Supporters' Shields, and the 2002 Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup. The Crew won the 2002 Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup by defeating the Los Angeles Galaxy by a score of 1 to 0 at Columbus Crew Stadium. The game's lone goal was scored by Fredy García. The Crew then won its first MLS Supporters' Shield during the 2004 in a tie-breaker over the Kansas City Wizards. During the 2008 MLS Season the Crew won its second Supporters' Shield by six points over Houston, en route to defeating the New York Red Bulls in MLS Cup 2008 by a score of 3 to 1. Guillermo Barros Schelotto assisted on all three Crew goals. The Crew reached the 1998 U.S. Open Cup Final, which was postponed due to a hurricane and controversially relocated from Virginia Beach to Soldier Field, then the home of Chicago Fire, who won the match 2 to 1 after extra time. The Crew lost in the 2010 U.S. Open Cup Final at Qwest Field, home of Seattle Sounders, again by a 2-1 scoreline.

Contents

History

The Beginning: 1994–1998

On June 15, 1994, Major League Soccer announced that Columbus, Ohio, would be home to one of the ten founding members of the new top flight North American professional soccer league. Columbus had promised construction of a soccer–specific stadium and had sold over 12,000 season ticket deposits.[2] MLS investor Lamar Hunt, and his son Clark became the owners of both the Columbus Crew and Kansas City Wizards in 1996. The first players for the Crew were South African national team veteran Doctor Khumalo, by assignment, and Brian McBride. McBride was selected as the first overall pick in the MLS’s first draft in 1996. Former U.S. National Team coach, Timo Liekoski would be the team's head coach for its first season.[3][4]

The Crew played their first game on April 13, 1996 against D.C. United and won 4–0 in front of a home crowd of 25,266 in Ohio Stadium.[5] Columbus would struggle, however, winning only 5 of their next 21 games. After the 6–16 start, Tom Fitzgerald replaced head coach Liekoski.[6] The Crew, under Fitzgerald, won 9 of their last 10 games to finish fourth in the Eastern Conference. They went on to lose in the conference semifinals of the playoffs.[7]

The Crew finished 15–17 in both 1997 and 1998, which put them in third and fourth place, respectively, in the Eastern Conference. Each season ended with losses in the Conference Finals to D.C. United. The club also played in the U.S. Open Cup for the first time in 1998. They advanced to the finals before losing 2–1 in extra time to the Chicago Fire. Stern John, in his first of two seasons with Columbus, was the 1998 scoring champion, amassing 26 goals and 5 assists.[4][7]

A New Home: 1999–2003

The Crew's 1999 season began with the opening of Columbus Crew Stadium, the first soccer–specific stadium in the United States. Columbus won their first game in the stadium, 2–0, against New England Revolution in front of a sell–out crowd of 24,741. Columbus would finish in 2nd place in at 19–13, but would lose in the conference finals to D.C. United for the third straight season. The 1999 season was the last for Stern John who scored 52 goals in 65 games for the club.[4]

Dante Washington was acquired from the Dallas Burn to replace John, but his 13 goals in 2000 was not enough to propel the Crew to the playoffs. For the first time, Columbus failed to reach the postseason. Columbus got off to a slow 1–3–2 start in 2001, which led to the replacement of coach Tom Fitzgerald. Fitzgerald, who had coached 161 of the Crew's first 183 MLS matches over parts of six seasons between 1996 and 2001, was replaced by Greg Andrulis. Andrulis would lead the Crew to a 2nd place finish in 2001 but the team was ousted from the playoffs in the league quarterfinals.[4][7]

In 2002, Columbus would win the U.S. Open Cup for the first time in team history. They advanced to the finals by beating the Richmond Kickers, NY/NJ MetroStars, and Kansas City Wizards. In the final, they beat LA Galaxy, who had just won the MLS Cup earlier in the week. Fredy García scored the only goal and keeper Jon Busch posted the shutout in Columbus's 1–0 win. It was the first championship in team history.[8] The Crew finished 11–12–5 in the regular season and finished in a tie for first place. The lost in the league semifinals to New England. Kyle Martino won rookie of the year in 2002, a first for the Crew. By winning the 2002 U.S. Open Cup, Columbus received a bid to play in the 2003 CONCACAF Champions' Cup. The advanced to the second round by beating Árabe Unido (Panama) 4–2 on aggregate in the first round before losing to Monarcas Morelia, 6–2. McBride would play his final season with the Crew in 2003 before joining Fulham F.C. of the English Premier League. [4][7]

Transitions: 2004–2006

With the departure of McBride, the Crew added Robin Fraser and Simon Elliot to the club. These additions proved to be vital as Fraser went on to win the Defender of the Year award in 2004. The Crew set a franchise record for points, 49, by going 12–5–13, thanks in part to an 18–game unbeaten streak (8–0–10) to end the season. Despite winning the Supporters' Shield for best record in the league, the club would be eliminated from the MLS Cup in the Eastern Conference semifinals. In his last season for the Crew, Jeff Cunningham scored his 62nd goal, which tied him with McBride for the franchise record. [4][7]

Over both of the next two seasons, Columbus battled injuries to several players and struggle to win games. Despite winning the MLS Coach of the Year Award in 2004,[9] Andrulis was replaced on an interim basis by Robert Warzycha midway through the 2005 season. After missing playoffs in the 2005 season, the club would hire former L.A. Galaxy and UCLA head coach Sigi Schmid. Schmid had won an MLS Cup and U.S. Open Championship in six seasons with Galaxy.[10] Warzycha remained on staff under Schmid. In 2006, the Crew went on a 13 game winless streak (0–7–6) between June 10 and August 19. The season ended on a tragic note when team founder and owner Lamar Hunt died on December 14, 2006. [11][4][7]

The Schelotto Era: 2007–2010

MLS Cup 2008 Winners

The 2007 season in Major League Soccer started with news that global icon David Beckham signed with the Los Angeles Galaxy.[12] The Crew followed suit by signing their own superstar, Guillermo Barros Schelotto, on April 19, 2007.[13] The Crew also signed forward Alejandro Moreno to bolster its attack. Even with these new players, the Crew still missed the playoffs in 2007.[4]

In 2008, the Crew won its first MLS Cup. Led by Barros Schelotto, who scored seven goals and had 19 assists and won the MLS Most Valuable Player Award,[14] the team also won its second Supporters' Shield. After going 17–7–6 in the regular season, the Crew won playoff games against Kansas City and Chicago Fire before beating the New York Red Bulls 3–1 in the final. For their efforts, Chad Marshall won MLS Defender of the Year award, and Sigi Schmid won Coach of the Year.[4][7]

After the 2008 season, Sigi Schmid left the Crew to coach the Seattle Sounders, and the team named former player and assistant coach Robert Warzycha head coach. In 2009, Barros Schelotto was rewarded with the honor of becoming the franchise's first Designated Player.[15] The club went 13–7–10 in the regular season, good enough for 49 points and their second consecutive Supporters' Shield. The Crew went on to be eliminated by Real Salt Lake in the two–legged Eastern Conference Semifinals, 4–2 on aggregate. Chad Marshall won his second consecutive MLS Defender of the Year award.[4]

The Crew started the 2010 season in the CONCACAF Champions League. They reached the quarterfinals, but lost to Toluca FC of Mexico in March. The Crew started the MLS season 6–0–2 and finished 14–8–8, but lost in the quarterfinals of the MLS Cup to the Colorado Rapids. In the U.S. Open Cup, Columbus fell to Sounders FC, 2–1, in the finals. [4] After the 2010 season, Guillermo Barros Schelotto, Frankie Hejduk, Brian Carroll, Jason Garey, Steven Lenhart, Gino Padula, Eric Brunner, Adam Moffat, and Duncan Oughton all left the team,[16] and the Crew struggled in 2011. They finished ninth at 13–13–8 and lost in the wild card round of the playoffs to the Colorado Rapids.[17][18]

Colors and badge

Andrew Peterson in Columbus's 2008 home jersey

Prior to the initial MLS season a citywide public contest was created to decide the name for the team, the very first entry was a hit, and The Columbus Crew was born.

The club badge - unique amongst MLS teams in that it features people - contains three silhouetted males wearing construction hats beneath a stylized "Crew" wordmark. The logo is intended to represent a crew of hard working people, much like the hard working, blue collar image the city of Columbus cultivates.

The official colors of the Columbus Crew are black and gold. The Crew's usual primary jersey is predominately bright yellow with black trim, and has been nicknamed the "banana kit" or "canary kit" by fans.

The alternate kit is usually black, but is seldom worn by the Crew, due to the strong favor shown to the all yellow home kit, and due to the fact that the black jerseys compound the heat of summer in the United States. Only occasionally has Crew not worn a black or yellow jersey. In 2007, the Crew wore a predominantly white away shirt with yellow trim, and in 1997 they wore a white away shirt with yellow and black striped "bumblebee"-style sleeves.

Stadium

Columbus Crew Stadium, Columbus's home since 1999

Initially the Columbus Crew played their home games at the 102,000-capacity Ohio Stadium, home of the Ohio State Buckeyes American college football team. They ended with a 33-20 record while playing there.

On May 15, 1999 the Crew opened Columbus Crew Stadium, the first stadium built specifically for soccer in Major League Soccer, as the Crew beat the New England Revolution 2-0 before a sold-out crowd of 24,741. The stadium was built with simplicity in mind because it was the first of its kind in the United States and so it was done completely from scratch.

It has been the model stadium for the rest of the league and one of the stadiums used by the United States national team in World Cup qualifying.

Club culture

Supporters: The Nordecke Transformation

Before the 2008 season, the Columbus Crew front office demolished the north stands where the most ardent of Crew supporters stood, in order to build a stage that would provide additional revenue by facilitating concerts and other events. Prior to this, the team's three supporters groups (The Crew Supporters Union, The Hudson Street Hooligans, and La Turbina Amarilla) sat apart because of differences between the groups ranging from age to ethnicity. The building of the stage forced the groups to come together into the north corner of the stadium, forming one large block of vocal support. Putting their differences aside the three groups formed the "Nordecke." The Nordecke (pronounced Nort-eck-uh) is German for "North Corner". The name "Nordecke" celebrates the city's German heritage.

In 2008 a large contingency of fans from the Nordecke began traveling together to support the Crew during their away campaigns. In late 2009/early 2010 the term "NorOnTour" became popular thanks to social networking sites such as facebook and twitter, to describe the frequent large and rowdy traveling support.[19]

Sponsors

Since 2006 adidas has served as kit manufacturer for all MLS teams. Glidden served as the Crew's shirt sponsor from 2008-2010.

Rivalries

Since 2008 the Crew have contested with Toronto FC for the Trillium Cup. It is named the Trillium Cup because the trillium is the provincial flower of Ontario and the state wildflower of Ohio. The state flower of Ohio is the scarlet Carnation.

On March 28, 2009, the Columbus-Toronto Rivalry intensified, after a relatively flat rivalry in previous years. Results on the field remained in favor of Columbus, with the total series now 5-0-6 in favor of The Crew. However, an off the field incident involving several fans of both the home side and the large traveling contingent of Toronto FC supporters overshadowed the match itself. In the aftermath of the incident, one Toronto FC fan was arrested, while another was subdued with taser guns by Columbus Police.[20] Both Toronto FC fans and officials in Columbus pointed fingers at each other.[21]

The Crew also has a rivalry with the Chicago Fire. Columbus is roughly a six hour drive away from Chicago. Due to the relative close proximity of the two cities, it is not uncommon for supporters of both teams to make the trip to support their club in matches between the two.

The Crew also plays in a regular season derby with F.C. Dallas for the Lamar Hunt Pioneer Cup. They play for this cup because Lamar Hunt was the owner of both of these teams until his death. While perhaps not quite a rivalry, games between the two teams can be somewhat spirited.

Broadcasting

The Crew was the first MLS team to land a local television network, when they did so in March 1997. Crew matches are telecast throughout Ohio on the Ohio News Network. Dwight Burgess serves as play-by-play commentator, and former Crew player Duncan Oughton serves as color commentator for home and away games. Katie Witham is the sideline reporter for all games telecast on ONN. Select games are broadcast nationally on Fox Soccer Channel, ESPN2, and TeleFutura.

English radio broadcasts can be heard on 610 AM WTVN with Neil Sika as play-by-play commentator and John Bluem (during home broadcasts) as color commentator. Spanish radio broadcasts can be heard on 103.1-FM WVKO-FM with Carlos Cordova and Benny Pietrangelo calling all home and road games and include 15-minute pre- and post-game shows.

ONN also airs a weekly half-hour program, Crew Xtra, where host Beau Bishop and a panel of guests review the past week in Crew action and look ahead to upcoming fixtures.[22] SportsTime Ohio frequently re-airs the program later in the week.[23] Crew Soccer Updates air weekdays on 105.7 FM WBWR and 106.7 FM WRXS.

Players and staff

Current roster

As of November 11, 2011.[24]

Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
1 United States GK William Hesmer
2 United States DF Rich Balchan
3 United States DF Josh Williams
5 United States DF Danny O'Rourke
6 Cameroon MF Tony Tchani
7 Venezuela MF Bernardo Anor
9 United States FW Justin Meram
10 Peru FW Andrés Mendoza
11 United States MF Dilly Duka
12 United States MF Eddie Gaven
14 United States DF Chad Marshall (captain)
15 United States MF Kevin Burns
16 United States MF Eric Gehrig
17 Nigeria MF Emmanuel Ekpo
18 United States MF Robbie Rogers
No. Position Player
19 United States MF Cole Grossman
20 Venezuela FW Emilio Rentería
21 Chile DF Sebastián Miranda
22 Serbia MF Dejan Rusmir
23 United States DF Korey Veeder
24 United States DF Ben Sippola
25 United States GK Alex Riggs
26 Trinidad and Tobago DF Julius James
27 United States FW Aaron Horton
28 Argentina MF Santiago Prim
29 Jamaica DF Shaun Francis
30 United States GK Andy Gruenebaum
31 United States DF Josh Gardner
32 United States FW Tom Heinemann
33 United States FW Jeff Cunningham

Reserve Team Players

This list shows players who have played for the team in official 2011 MLS Reserve Division games, but are not part of the senior roster.[25]

Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
United States FW Khal Celestin
United States DF Chris Davis
Mexico MF Arnhold Rivas

Notable former players

This list of former players includes those who received international caps while playing for the team, made significant contributions to the team in terms of appearances or goals while playing for the team, or who made significant contributions to the sport either before they played for the team, or after they left. It is clearly not yet complete and all inclusive, and additions and refinements will continue to be made over time.

  • See also All-time Columbus Crew roster

Head coaches

see List of Columbus Crew head coaches

Achievements

Record

Year-by-Year

Season MLS Regular Season MLS Cup Playoffs Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup CONCACAF Champions Cup/Champions League
1996 4th, East Quarter-Finals Did not enter Did not qualify
1997 3rd, East Semi-Finals Did not enter Did not qualify
1998 2nd, East Semi-Finals Final Did not qualify
1999 2nd, East Semi-Finals Semi-Finals Did not qualify
2000 4th, Central Did not qualify Quarter-Finals Did not qualify
2001 2nd, Central Quarter-Finals Quarter-Finals Not held
2002 2nd, East Semi-Finals Champions Did not qualify
2003 5th, East Did not qualify Round of 16 Quarter-Finals
2004 1st, East* Quarter-Finals Round of 16 Did not qualify
2005 6th, East Did not qualify Round of 16 Did not qualify
2006 6th, East Did not qualify Round of 16 Did not qualify
2007 6th, East Did not qualify Did not qualify Did not qualify
2008 1st, East* Champions Did not qualify Did not qualify
2009 1st, East* Quarter-Finals Round of 16 Did not qualify (08-09)
2010 2nd, East Quarter-Finals Final Quarter-Finals (09-10)
2011 4th, East Wild Card Round 3 Quarter-Finals (10-11)
2012 Did not qualify (11-12)

* Won MLS Supporters Shield † Made the quarterfinals of the CONCACAF Giants Cup which was held instead of the CONCACAF Champions' Cup in 2001

International tournaments

First round v. Costa Rica Deportivo Saprissa -- 0:2, 1:1 (Saprissa advance 3:1 on aggregate)
First round v. Panama Arabe Unido -- 1:2, 3:0 (Crew advance 4:2 on aggregate)
Quarter-Final v. Mexico Monarcas Morelia -- 0:6, 2:0 (Morelia advance 6:2 on aggregate)
  • 2009-10 CONCACAF Champions League
Group Stage
v. Puerto Rico Puerto Rico Islanders 2:0, 1:1
v. Mexico Cruz Azul 0:5, 0:2
v. Costa Rica Saprissa 1:0, 1:1
Quarter-Final v. Mexico Toluca 2:2, 2:3 (Toluca advances 5:4 on aggregate)
  • 2010-11 CONCACAF Champions League
Group Stage
v. Guatemala Municipal 1:0, 1:2
v. Trinidad and Tobago Joe Public 3:0, 4:1
v. Mexico Santos Laguna 1:0, 0:1
Quarter-Final v. United States Real Salt Lake 0:0, 1:4 (Real Salt Lake advances 4:1 on aggregate)

Columbus holds a 7-5-3 all-time record in international friendlies.

Team records

MLS regular season only, through 2006 season

  • All-Time regular season record: 166-165-67 (Through Oct. 26, 2008)

Average attendance

regular season/playoffs

  • 1996: 18,950/20,807
  • 1997: 15,043/11,304
  • 1998: 12,275/12,094
  • 1999: 17,696/10,983
  • 2000: 15,451/Missed Playoffs
  • 2001: 17,551/20,883
  • 2002: 17,429/11,624
  • 2003: 16,250/Missed Playoffs
  • 2004: 16,872/15,224
  • 2005: 12,916/Missed Playoffs
  • 2006: 13,294/Missed Playoffs
  • 2007: 15,230/Missed Playoffs
  • 2008: 14,622/17,613
  • 2009: 14,447/10,109
  • 2010: 14,641/10,322
  • All-Time: 16,344/13,887
  • All-Time Best Attendance For A Game: 53,844 on 07/04/2000 at Mile High Stadium.

[1]

References

  1. ^ a b "Crew Stadium adds concert stage" January 10, 2008
  2. ^ Zeigler, Mark (June 16, 1994). "New league has old woes: Not enough teams; too many seats; not enough money". San Diego Union-Tribune. 
  3. ^ "Sports People: Soccer; Liekoski to Columbus". New York Timies. December 6, 1995. http://www.nytimes.com/1995/12/06/sports/sports-people-soccer-liekoski-to-columbus.html. 
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "2011 Columbus Crew Media Guide". Columbus Crew. p. 14-20. http://mlsdigitalpr.drupalgardens.com/sites/mlsdigitalpr.drupalgardens.com/files/2011%20Columbus%20Crew%20Media%20Guide.pdf. Retrieved 8 November 2011. 
  5. ^ "Crew opens with shutout over D.C.". Dayton Daily News. April 14, 1996. http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_action=doc&p_docid=0F51AFDB763CBF64&p_docnum=1. 
  6. ^ "Fitzgerald fired as coach of MLS Crew". Chicago Tribune. May 18, 2001. http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2001-05-18/sports/0105180095_1_columbus-crew-tom-fitzgerald-doctors. 
  7. ^ a b c d e f g "2011 Columbus Crew Media Guide". Columbus Crew. p. 89-93. http://mlsdigitalpr.drupalgardens.com/sites/mlsdigitalpr.drupalgardens.com/files/2011%20Columbus%20Crew%20Media%20Guide.pdf. Retrieved 8 November 2011. 
  8. ^ "Crew earn first trophy with Open Cup win". U.S.A. Today. October 25, 2002. http://www.usatoday.com/sports/soccer/tourneys/2002-10-24-open-cup_x.htm. 
  9. ^ "Andrulis, Crew Agree To New Contract". OurSports Central. http://www.oursportscentral.com/services/releases/?id=3110965&l_id=&t_id=. Retrieved 16 November 2011. 
  10. ^ "Crew hires head coach". Columbus Business First. October 20, 2005. http://www.bizjournals.com/columbus/stories/2005/10/17/daily27.html?jst=b_ln_hl. 
  11. ^ "Lamar Hunt, Chiefs owner and sports legend, dies at 74". The Associated Press. http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/news/story?id=2697040. Retrieved 17 November 2011. 
  12. ^ "David Beckham Signs Deal with L.A. Galaxy, Rejects Real Madrid Deal". Fox News. http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,243045,00.html. Retrieved 17 November 2011. 
  13. ^ "Crew signs Argentine star Barros Schelotto". ESPN Soccernet. http://soccernet.espn.go.com/news/story?id=422878&cc=5901. Retrieved 17 November 2011. 
  14. ^ "Crew's Schelotto wins MLS MVP Award". USA Today. November 20, 2008. http://www.usatoday.com/sports/soccer/mls/crew/2008-11-20-schelotto-mvp-award_N.htm. 
  15. ^ Bell, Jack (March 17, 2009). "In M.L.S., Designated Players Do Not Guarantee Great Expectations". New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/18/sports/soccer/18soccer.html. 
  16. ^ Mitchell, Shawn (November 15, 2010). "Fan-favorite Schelotto leaving Columbus Crew". Columbus Dispatch. http://www.dispatch.com/content/stories/local/2010/11/16/gbs2_Schelotto.html. 
  17. ^ "2011 Regular Season Standings". Major League Soccer. http://www.mlssoccer.com/standings. Retrieved November 17, 2011. 
  18. ^ "2011 MLS Cup Playoffs Bracket". Major League Soccer. http://cloud.cdn.mlssoccer.com/mlscupbracket.pdf. Retrieved November 17, 2011. 
  19. ^ Steve Sirk. "Nordecke on tour". Thecrew.com. http://www.thecrew.com/news/2010/08/sirk%E2%80%99s-notebook. 
  20. ^ Sean Fitz-Gerald (2009-03-31). "toronto-fc-fan-tasered-placed-among-arrested-in-columbus". nationalpost.com. http://network.nationalpost.com/np/blogs/postedsports/archive/2009/03/31/toronto-fc-fan-tasered-placed-among-arrested-in-columbus.aspx. Retrieved 2009-04-01. 
  21. ^ Daniel Girard (2009-04-01). "TFC owners express `disappointment' over fans' road violence". TheStar.com. http://www.thestar.com/Sports/article/611507/. Retrieved 2009-04-01. 
  22. ^ http://blackandgoldstandard.com/?tag=crewxtra
  23. ^ http://www.sportstimeohio.com/TVSchedule.aspx
  24. ^ http://www.thecrew.com/players
  25. ^ http://www.mlssoccer.com/reserve-league-schedule

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