The Fort Wayne Flames were an indoor soccer club based in Fort Wayne, Indiana , that competed in the American Indoor Soccer Association , playing home games at the Allen County War Memorial Coliseum from 1986 to 1989.
12-622: The team was founded in by a group of four investors: Bob Britt, Fred Mathews, Jr., James Speed, and William Fahlsing and began play in the 1986–87 season of the American Indoor Soccer Association (AISA). The team reached out to experience by hiring away Pete Mahlock from the Louisville Thunder to be the team General Manager. Former Seattle Sounders ( NASL ), Cleveland Force ( MISL ), & Wichita Wings ( MISL ) goalkeeper and University of Washington coach Cliff Brown
24-420: A billboard in the heart of downtown to raise both team awareness and funding. The results were impressive as hundreds of fans purchased stock in the team and 27 prominent local business leaders invested in the team to make up the new board of directors. When DiBernardo decided to leave coaching, the team turned to former MISL standout defenseman Dave MacKenzie to be the fourth Head Coach of the franchise. Entering
36-568: A last-place finish in the regular season. Abandoning a traditional playoff format, the AISA instituted a six-team, home-and-away, round robin “Challenge Cup” Series to crown the 1988 post-season champion. Living up the promise they showed in the regular season, the Flames became dominant during the Cup Series, outscoring their opponents 67–46 through the first 11 games and posting an 8–3 record. The final game of
48-633: Is a 6,600 seat multi-purpose arena in Louisville, Kentucky . It was home to the Louisville Icehawks and Louisville RiverFrogs ECHL teams . The arena, along with Cardinal Stadium and Freedom Hall , is located on the grounds of the Kentucky Exposition Center in Louisville. The arena is used for equestrian events, and other fairground type activities. As of January 2021, the arena
60-527: Is a multi-purpose arena that also served the Louisville RiverFrogs and Louisville IceHawks of the ECHL . It has a 6,600 seat capacity This article related to sports in Louisville, Kentucky is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This article about a soccer club from Kentucky is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Broadbent Arena Broadbent Arena
72-617: The playoffs by one game. The team folded following the 1989 season. Under separate ownership, Fort Wayne was awarded an expansion franchise Indiana Kick , which lasted one additional season (1989–1990). Louisville Thunder Louisville Thunder was an indoor soccer club based in Louisville, Kentucky . The team played in the American Indoor Soccer Association From the club's inaugural season in 1984 to 1987, home games were played in Broadbent Arena . It
84-458: The position as the (then) all-time leader in MISL games played and with a reputation as a hard-nosed, physical player, the team showed marked improvement under MacKenzie, but continued to struggle in close games. Looking to add some extra spark, MacKenzie became the second player/Coach of the franchise as he activated himself and played in 27 games. Despite improving to a .500 record (20–20) the team missed
96-410: The regular season attendance and league-leading playoff attendance, the 1988 off-season was again troublesome for the franchise. Looking to stem the flow of red ink, Hartman restructured the Flames into the only registered not-for-profit sports franchise in the nation. The off-season saw an intense fund-raising operation that included GM Mahlock and players Alan Bodenstein and Bobby Poursanidis living atop
108-399: The season with the fourth-best attendance in the league, the season ended with the franchise having racked up huge losses that left the future in jeopardy. The franchise would return for the 1987–88 season as remaining investors Mathews and Speed were joined by local businessman Craig Hartman, who with a huge influx of his own money, assumed the role as team President. Retaining Mahlock as GM,
120-403: The team hired former three-time Indiana University All American, 1978 Hermann Trophy winner, NASL player, and United States Olympian Angelo DiBernardo to become the third Head Coach of the franchise. Although the on field play improved under new leadership, the team suffered and incredible 10 one-goal losses (the rest of the league had 13 one-goal losses combined) en route to a 9–15 record and
132-504: The “Challenge Cup” was scheduled for April 1, 1988, with the Flames playing host to the 1984–85 and 1985–86 AISA Champion Canton Invaders . With each team hosting an 8–3 record, the game would be winner-take-all for the Cup. In front of a sellout (and franchise record) crowd of 8,028, the Flames would fall behind early and stage a furious rally late, only to fall to the Invaders 5–4. Despite gains in
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#1733086003979144-466: Was brought in to be the first Head Coach of the franchise. The inaugural season was one of struggle for the fledgling team. Just five games into the season, Brown was fired and replaced by defenseman Tom Alioto who continued his on field duties as a player/coach. As the team struggled on field, finishing last in the Southern Division with a 13–29 record, it also struggled off field. Despite finishing
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