San Jose CyberRays

San Jose CyberRays was a professional soccer team that played in the Women's United Soccer Association. The team played at Spartan Stadium on the South Campus of San José State University in San Jose, California. Stars included U.S. National Team star Brandi Chastain, WUSA Goalkeeper of the Year LaKeysia Beene, and leading scorer Julie Murray. Other memorable CyberRays were Brazilians Sissi and Katia, Tisha Venturini (from the U.S. National Team), and "ironwoman" Thori Bryan, who played every minute of the first season. They were coached by Ian Sawyers, who received WUSA Coach of the Year honors in 2001.

San Jose CyberRays
Full nameSan Jose CyberRays
Nickname(s)Bay Area CyberRays; CyberRays
Founded2001
Dissolved2003
StadiumSpartan Stadium
Capacity30,456
OwnerWUSA
LeagueWomen's United Soccer Association
20036th

History

Establishment

The CyberRays were founded in 2000 as a member of the Women's United Soccer Association, the first professional women's soccer league in the United States. The league featured many of the stars from the 1999 FIFA Women's World Cup.[1][2] The team featured United States women's national team players and league founding players Brandi Chastain, Tisha Venturini and LaKeysia Beene.[3]

Year-by-year

YearLeagueRegular seasonPlayoffsAvg. attendanceTotal attendance
2001WUSA2nd place1st place7,69276,922
2002WUSA5th placedid not qualify7,16778,836
2003WUSA6th placedid not qualify6,79167,912

[4]

Inaugural season

The team won the WUSA title (known as the Founders Cup) for the league's inaugural season in 2001. The CyberRays triumphed over the Atlanta Beat, in a 4–2 shootout after double overtime of a 3–3 game. It was the only year in the country's history that both a women's and men's professional soccer team won championship titles in the same city.[5]

2002

In 2002 the team changed its name from the Bay Area CyberRays to the San Jose CyberRays, and also gave their roster a facelift, allowing Murray to retire and trading for Pretinha from the Washington Freedom, who along with Katia and Sissi, gave the new attack a decidedly Brazilian flavor. The bold changes didn't have the desired effect, however, and the team finished out of the playoffs. One bright spot was the emergence of Katia, who scored 15 goals and broke Tiffeny Milbrett's record for most points in a season.

2003

The CyberRays had high hopes for 2003, but an anemic offense (worst in the league in goals scored) hurt the team all year. The team remained in contention until the end of the season, but finished out of the playoffs for a second straight year.

But even bigger problems were brewing in the background, as the WUSA continued to struggle financially. The CyberRays folded on September 15, 2003, when the league announced it was suspending operations.

[6][7]

Players

2003 roster

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality. Squad correct as of August 15, 2003.[8]

No.Pos.Player Nation
14DFDianne Alagich  Australia
16MFKatie Antongiovanni  United States
11MFKatie Barnes  United States
13MFBetsy Barr  United States
1GKLaKeysia Beene  United States
4FWChristina Bell  United States
2DFThori Bryan  United States
6DFBrandi Chastain  United States
22FWMandy Clemens  United States
3MFAnn Cook  United States
17DFAmanda Cromwell  United States
12DFMichelle French  United States
20GKDawn Greathouse  United States
9FWKatia  Brazil
5DFKelly Lindsey  United States
18FWKim Patrick  United States
7FWPretinha  Brazil
8DFKeri Sanchez  United States
10MFSissi  Brazil
15MFTisha Venturini  United States

Stadium

The CyberRays played at Spartan Stadium on the South Campus of San Jose State University in San Jose, California.[9] The stadium was used for the 1999 FIFA Women's World Cup and was also the home of the San Jose Earthquakes of Major League Soccer from 1996 to 2005. At the time, the stadium featured a grass pitch and up to 30,456 capacity.[10]

Broadcasting

In 2002, games were broadcast on television via PAX TV.[11] California Bears assistant coach Jennifer Thomas provided color commentary while KCBS Radio sports announcer Hal Ramey was the play-by-play announcer.[12] A number of league games were broadcast on Turner Sports and CNN/Sports Illustrated.[13]

See also

References

External links