american soccer league (1921-1933) players
Frank Booth (soccer)
1890 births | american soccer league (1921-1933) players | american soccer players | fall river marksmen players | fall river rovers players | southern new england soccer league playersBooth played for the Fall River Rovers of the Southern New England Soccer League beginning at least during the 1915-1916 season, if not earlier. FALL RIVER ROVERS BOW TO BETHLEHEM In 1916, 1917 and 1918, the Rovers met Bethlehem Steel F.C. in the finals of the National Challenge Cup. The team lost in 1916 and 1918, but won in 1917. Booth played all three finals. USA - List of US Open Cup Finals He remained with the Rovers until the establishment of the American Soccer League in 1921. That year, he signed with Fall River United of the new league. He spent only one season, playing twenty league and two National Challenge Cup games before leaving the league at the end of the season.
Robert Hosie
american soccer league (1921-1933) players | brooklyn wanderers players | clydebank f.c. players | national association football league players | new york field club players | new york giants (soccer) players | paterson silk sox players | robins dry dock players | scottish footballers | third lanark a.c. players | todd shipyards players | vale of leven f.c. players10 (2)
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6 (0) manageryears = managerclubs = pcupdate = ntupdate = }} Robert Hosie was a Scottish soccer inside forward who began his career in Scotland before moving to the United States. In the U.S., he played one season in the National Association Football League and five in the American Soccer League.
In October 1920, Hosie joined Brooklyn Robins Dry Dock of the National Association Football League (NAFBL). October 14, 1920 The Globe On April 19, 1921, Robins defeated St. Louis Scullin Steel F.C. in the National Challenge Cup. Hosie scored one of the four Robins goals in the 4-2 victory. That summer, several teams from the NAFBL joined with teams from the Southern New England Soccer League to form the American Soccer League (ASL). This move brought the merger Robins Dry Dock and Tebo Yacht Basin F.C., both sponsored by subsidiary companies of Todd Shipyards into a larger Todd Shipyards. Hosie moved from Robins to Todd Shipyards for the inaugural ASL season. By then the American Soccer League had replaced the NAFBL. Hosie did not become a regular until he signed with the Brooklyn Wanderers in 1924. That season, he played in thirty games, but the next season he only appeared in eight.
Bill Paterson (soccer)
1898 births | 1970 deaths | american soccer league (1921-1933) players | armadale f.c. players | brooklyn wanderers players | coventry city f.c. players | cowdenbeath f.c. players | derby county f.c. players | fall river f.c. players | fall river marksmen players | new bedford whalers players | providence gold bug players | scottish footballers | springfield babes players20 (15)
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17 (11) manageryears = managerclubs = pcupdate = ntupdate = }} Bill Paterson (born March 5, 1898 in Hill O’Beath, Scotland; died 1980 in Cowdenbeath, Scotland) was a Scottish football center forward. He began his career in Scotland before moving to England in 1925. In 1926, he joined the American Soccer League where he led the league in scoring in the fall 1929 season.
Paterson spent time with Cowdenbeath F.C. before moving to Derby County of the Football League in 1921. He spent two seasons with Derby before rejoining Cowdenbeath. He also spent time with Armadale F.C. He then played with Coventry City during the 1925-1926 season. In the fall of 1926, he moved to the United States were he signed with the Springfield Babes of the American Soccer League. Paterson played only thirteen games of the 1925-1926 season with Springfield before jumping to the Fall River Marksmen for twenty games. He did not finish the season with Fall River, but moved to the New Bedford Whalers for seven games. He spent the full 1927-1928 season in New Bedford, but was transferred to the Providence Gold Bugs seven games into the 1928-1929 season. He finished the 1929 fall season as the league’s leading scorer with twenty-seven goals in twenty-two games. U.S. Soccer History - 1929 In 1930, Patterson began the season with the New Bedford Whalers only to jump to the Brooklyn Wanderers. He then played the fall 1931 season with Fall River F.C..

