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Major Indoor Soccer League (2001–2008)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Major Indoor Soccer League (2001–2008)
SportIndoor soccer
Founded2001
Ceased2008
CountriesUnited States and
Mexico
Last
champion(s)
Baltimore Blast
TV partner(s)Fox Soccer Channel

The Major Indoor Soccer League (MISL) was the top professional indoor soccer league in the United States. The league was a member of both the United States Soccer Federation and FIFA. The MISL had replaced the NPSL which folded in 2001. According to MISL.net, the league ceased operations as of May 31, 2008. "We are considering structural changes that will bring us greater efficiencies, while also allowing long term growth and expansion of the League", said John Hantz, former Chairman of the MISL, and Owner/Operator of the Detroit Ignition.[1] All the teams from MISL went to the new indoor leagues: NISL, MASL and the XSL. The NISL and XSL used the same playing rules as the MISL.

History

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In the summer of 2001, the National Professional Soccer League disbanded. The six surviving teams organized the MISL as a single-entity structure similar to Major League Soccer. In 2002, the MISL absorbed two teams from the World Indoor Soccer League, the Dallas Sidekicks and San Diego Sockers. The St. Louis Steamers, another former WISL team, joined the following year. On May 27, 2008, Commissioner Steve Ryan stepped down as the commissioner of the MISL, and then on June 2, 2008, the Management Committee of the MISL announced they had ceased operations effective May 31, 2008 to reform the league. All of the MISL's teams from its last season joined either the National Indoor Soccer League, Professional Arena Soccer League, or the Xtreme Soccer League.

Organization

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The MISL was organized in a single table playing a 30-game schedule. Traditionally, the season began in October and ended in March. The league also conducted an All-Star Game at midseason. It pitted Eastern teams against Western teams and USA All-Stars against World All-Stars as well as the MISL All-Stars against a Mexican team. No All-Star Game was played in the 2004–2005 and 2006–2007 seasons. The All-Star game scheduled for the 2007–08 season in Stockton, California was also canceled.

The top six teams qualified for the playoffs, which began in April. In the first round, the sixth place team played the third place team while the fourth and fifth place teams also played either other. The top two teams received a bye in the first round. The survivors of the first round played the top two seeds in the semifinals with the first place team playing the lowest surviving seed from the first round and the second place team playing the highest surviving seed. The two semi-final winners met in the MISL Championship Final. The first two rounds were a two-game series with a golden goal tie breaker. The Championship Final was a single game at a predetermined neutral site.

Television

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The MISL had a relative lack of television coverage for being a national professional sports league. In February 2007, the league and Versus announced a partnership to deliver a nationally televised game of the week starting in March 2007. For the 2006–2007 season, Versus broadcast two regular season games, a MISL Championship Series Semifinal game on April 14, and the MISL Championship Series Final. Additionally, the MISL produced its first-ever live magazine show to preview the 2007 MISL Championship Series. Before the 2006–2007 season, national television coverage was limited to the MISL Championships in 2005 and 2006, which were shown on ESPN2.

For the 2007–08, the MISL signed an agreement with Fox Soccer Channel to televise 20 games that season.

In addition to national television, certain games were shown in local markets over local cable networks like CN8.

MISL teams

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Team City/Area Arena
Baltimore Blast Baltimore 1st Mariner Arena
California Cougars[2] Stockton, California Stockton Arena
Chicago Storm Hoffman Estates, Illinois (Chicago area) UIC Pavilion/Sears Centre
Cleveland Force/Crunch Cleveland, Ohio Wolstein Center
Dallas Sidekicks Dallas Reunion Arena
Detroit Ignition Plymouth Township, Michigan (Detroit area) Compuware Arena
Harrisburg Heat Harrisburg, Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Farm Show Complex & Expo Center
Kansas City Comets Kansas City, Missouri Kemper Arena
Milwaukee Wave Milwaukee U.S. Cellular Arena
Monterrey Fury/Tigres Monterrey, Mexico Arena Monterrey
Monterrey La Raza Monterrey, Mexico Arena Monterrey
New Jersey Ironmen Newark, New Jersey Prudential Center
Orlando Sharks Orlando, Florida Amway Arena
Philadelphia KiXX Philadelphia Wachovia Spectrum
St. Louis Steamers St. Louis Family Arena/Savvis Center
San Diego Sockers San Diego San Diego Sports Arena

MISL Championship

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Championship series

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Season Date(s) Champion Series Runner-Up Host
2001–02 April 26, 27 & May 3[3] Philadelphia KiXX 2-1 Milwaukee Wave Milwaukee/Philadelphia
2002–03 April 12, 13 & 18[4] Baltimore Blast 2-1 Milwaukee Wave Baltimore/Milwaukee
2003–04 April 23, 24 & May 1 Baltimore Blast 3-0 Milwaukee Wave Baltimore/Milwaukee
2004–05 May 14 & 21[5] Milwaukee Wave 2-0 Cleveland Force Milwaukee/St. Louis
2005–06 April 28 & 30 Baltimore Blast 2-1 St. Louis Steamers Baltimore/St. Louis
2006–07 April 21 Philadelphia KiXX 1-0 Detroit Ignition Detroit
2007–08 April 25 Baltimore Blast 1-0 Monterrey La Raza Milwaukee

Championship formats

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Series Years
Single game 2006–07, 2007–08
Two game plus golden goal series 2004–05, 2005–06
Best-of-three series 2001–02, 2002–03
Best-of-five series 2003–04

MISL Championships Won

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Team Championships Winning years
Baltimore Blast 4 2002–03, 2003–04, 2005–06, 2007–08
Philadelphia KiXX 2 2001–02, 2006–07
Milwaukee Wave 1 2004–05

MISL All-Star Game

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Season Date Winner Score Loser MVP Host Attendance Notes
2001–02[6] 2/17/2002 East All-Stars 17-15(OT) West All-Stars Joel Shanker Cleveland 13,216
2002–03[6] 3/9/2003 West All-Stars 20-13 East All-Stars Dino Delevski Milwaukee 8,429 Tatu's final All-Star game as a player
2003–04[6] 2/29/2004 Team USA 10-1 Team International Giuliano Celenza St. Louis 4,129
2004–05[6] N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A No game scheduled
2005–06[6] 2/11/2006 MISL All-Stars 9-5 Mexican National Indoor Team Todd Dusosky Milwaukee 8,671
2006–07[7] N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A Stockton N/A Replaced by several games between a Mexican All-Star team and individual MISL clubs
2007–08[7] N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A Stockton N/A Game canceled

Rules

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The MISL game was the standard North American version of indoor soccer. It was different from the FIFA-sanctioned futsal.

Each MISL game consisted of four 15-minute quarters. There were breaks between the first two and the last two quarters. There was also a 15-minute halftime. Ties resulted in consecutive 15-minute sudden death overtimes.

An MISL field was roughly the size of an ice hockey rink, measuring 200 feet by 80 feet. Goals measured 14 feet by 8 feet and are set into the boards. Players were allowed to bounce the ball off the dasher boards. Play stopped if the ball leaves the field of play.

During an MISL game, each team was allowed to have 6 players on the field at a time. One player was the goalkeeper who handled the ball while in the penalty arc. The other players were generally divided as two defenders, one midfielder, and two forwards. Substitution was unlimited and may happen "on the fly" during play.

Fouls and misconducts were generally the same as outdoor soccer with a few changes. First, all kicks were direct, with no whistle to restart play, which usually resulted in a "quick start". Also, the MISL utilized blue cards in addition to the traditional yellow and red cards of outdoor soccer.

Blue cards were for fouls that earn possible two-minute power plays. Yellow cards were given for dissent, resulting in a 5-minute penalty but the offending team did not play short.

All red cards in the MISL resulted in a two-minute power play. Red cards were awarded for violent conduct or accumulation of cards (3 blues or 2 yellows).

Originally, the MISL had a multiple point scoring system where goals were worth 1, 2, or 3 points depending upon the distance that they were scored or game situation. The former WISL teams objected to this. After the 2003 Championship, the league began using a traditional one-point-per-goal rule because of a controversial goal scored during the deciding game. However, the league went back to multipoint scoring in 2006 with 2- and 3-point goals.

Average attendance

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Year Regular season Playoffs
2001–02 5,065 9,280
2002–03 5,420 7,010
2003–04 5,587 6,330
2004–05 4,388 5,864
2005–06 4,737 7,386
2006–07 4,711 4,023
2007–08 4,577 4,463
Seasons Average Playoffs Avg.
7 4,957 6,212

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ http://www.misl.net/news/index.php?cat=3&id=5375[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ "PASL". arenaleague.com. Archived from the original on January 14, 2009. Retrieved April 30, 2018.
  3. ^ "Kixx, Wave prepare for game three". oursportscentral.com. April 30, 2002. Archived from the original on July 9, 2017. Retrieved April 30, 2018.
  4. ^ "Blast enters title series on wave of confidence". baltimoresun.com. Archived from the original on February 27, 2016. Retrieved April 30, 2018.
  5. ^ "ESPNFC: Soccer Wave dominated regular season". go.com. Retrieved April 30, 2018.[dead link]
  6. ^ a b c d e "indoor all-star games". kenn.com. Archived from the original on November 4, 2006. Retrieved January 22, 2011.
  7. ^ a b Gilbert, Lori (February 11, 2007). "Stockton witnesses something special". Stockton Record. Archived from the original on April 6, 2012.