Toronto FC II

Toronto FC II is a Canadian professional soccer team based in Toronto, Ontario, who play in USL League One, the third tier of the American & Canadian soccer league system.[2] It is the reserve team and minor league affiliate of Toronto FC as well as in partnership with Toronto FC Academy.

Toronto FC II
Short nameTFC II
FoundedNovember 20, 2014 (November 20, 2014)[1]
StadiumBMO Training Ground
North York, Toronto
Capacity1,000
OwnerMaple Leaf Sports & Entertainment
PresidentBill Manning
Head coachMike Muñoz
LeagueUSL League One
2019USL League One, 7th of 10
Playoffs: DNQ
WebsiteClub website

On July 2, 2018, Toronto FC II announced they would move down from the United Soccer League (now called USL Championship) to the USL League One for the league's first season in 2019.[3]

2020 Season Cancellation

On July 8, 2020, the team announced they would not play in 2020 because of COVID-19 restrictions. They plan to return for the 2021 season. [4]

Players and staff

Current roster

Where a player has not declared an international allegiance, nation is determined by place of birth. Squad correct as of July 3, 2020.[5]

No. Position Player Nation
35 Midfielder Mehdi Essoussi  Canada
39 Midfielder Luca Petrasso  Canada
40 Goalkeeper Eric Klenofsky  United States
43 Midfielder Adolfo Ovalle  Chile
50 Midfielder Matthew Srbely  Canada
58 Midfielder Jordan Faria  Canada
77 Forward Jordan Perruzza  Canada
88 Defender Jesus West (on loan from Costa del Este)  Panama
97 Midfielder Ralph Priso  Canada
Defender Themi Antonoglou  Canada
Midfielder Antonio Carlini  Canada
Defender Luke Singh  Canada
Midfielder Luca Uccello  Canada

Out on loan

Where a player has not declared an international allegiance, nation is determined by place of birth.

No. Position Player Nation
Defender Robert Boskovic (at Cavalry FC)  Canada
Defender Terique Mohammed (at FC Edmonton)  Canada
Defender Dante Campbell (at Valour FC)  Canada
Defender Nyal Higgins (at Nyköpings BIS)  Canada

Technical staff

As of January 27, 2020[6]
Coaching staff
Head coach Mike Muñoz
Assistant coach Chris Pozniak
Goalkeeping coach Phil Boerger
Fitness coach Fabian Casal

Record

Year by year

Year Tier League Regular season W–T–L Playoffs Avg. attendance
2015 3 USL 11th, Eastern: 6–5–16 did not qualify 445
2016 3 USL 13th, Eastern: 6–5–17 did not qualify 1,026
2017 2 USL 15th, Eastern: 6–7–19 did not qualify 1,089
2018 2 USL 16th, Eastern: 4–6–24 did not qualify 810
2019 3 USL1 7th: 9–9–10 did not qualify 168
2020 3 USL1 No season due to COVID-19 restrictions

Coaches since 2015

Team records

Stadium

The expansion Toronto FC II hosted their games at a new stadium constructed at the Ontario Soccer Centre beginning with the first season in 2015. However, after the planned expansion of the OSC to 5,000 seats, which is a minimum requirement set by the United States Soccer Federation for the USL to be sanctioned as a division 2 league, did not materialize, the club announced that it would move its home games to BMO Field and Lamport Stadium beginning with the 2018 season.[7]

In 2018, the team used Monarch Park Stadium for one game in May, relocated one game to Charlotte, and relocated another four games to Rochester's Marina Auto Stadium, while waiting on availability at Lamport Stadium.

With their drop to the division 3 USL League One for the 2019 season, the team moved their home games to BMO Training Ground.[8]

SK Summer Soccer Series

TFC2 played in Saskatoon for the first SK Summer Soccer Series, which is hosted by the Saskatchewan Selects. Selects defeated TFC II 2–0.

gollark: No, they are not. I will literally Macron.
gollark: I blame apioform #26.
gollark: Huh. Apparently directory contents in ext4 are a linked list. How bad.
gollark: Indeed.
gollark: I agree.

References

  1. "Toronto FC announces USL PRO team | Toronto FC".
  2. "TFC's USL-Pro team to be called Toronto FC II". Sportsnet.ca.
  3. "Toronto FC II joins USL Division III as Founding Member". Toronto FC. July 2, 2018. Retrieved July 8, 2018.
  4. "Toronto FC II withdraws from 2020 USL League One season". Toronto FC Communications. July 8, 2020.
  5. "Roster". torontofc.com. Retrieved January 20, 2020.
  6. "Management Team | Toronto FC". Torontofc.ca. Retrieved April 18, 2018.
  7. Kelly, Tim (August 29, 2017). "TFC II leaving Vaughan for Toronto after 3-season run; stadium size at issue". Vaughan Citizen. Retrieved September 5, 2017.
  8. "Toronto FC II 2019 USL League One Regular Season Schedule Announced". Toronto FC. December 10, 2018. Retrieved January 6, 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.