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The Canadian soccer system consists of several unconnected leagues and it does not have promotion and relegation. Leagues in the Canadian system are classified as either professional, pro-am, or amateur. The Canadian Soccer Association (CSA) is the governing body for the sport in Canada and directly sanctions leagues that operate in more than ...
As of the 2017 season a total of 37 teams have played in the Canadian Soccer League with seven teams (Hamilton Croatia, London City SC, North York Astros, Toronto Supra, Serbian White Eagles, St. Catharines Wolves, and Toronto Croatia) having played in the predecessor league the Canadian National Soccer League. Two of the eight founder members ...
The first official title won by an active Canadian professional soccer club was claimed by the Vancouver Whitecaps, who were crowned 1979 NASL champions after defeating the Tampa Bay Rowdies 2–1 in Soccer Bowl '79. [1] From there, Canadian teams began playing in multiple different American and Canadian leagues, including the original Canadian ...
A new version of the Canadian Soccer League was briefly sanctioned as a third-division semi-pro league by the CSA from 2010 to 2013, losing the sanction after the CSA board of directors adopted a new soccer structure in Canada. [6] [7] A new fully professional Canadian soccer league was first publicly reported in June 2013. [8]
Women's Premier Soccer League; Team City Seasons Debut season Final season Vancouver Angels: Vancouver, British Columbia: 1: 2000 North Shore Girls SC: North Vancouver, British Columbia: 2: 2016: 2017 TSS FC Rovers Women: Burnaby, British Columbia: 2: 2018: 2019 Vancouver Island FC: Victoria, British Columbia: 1: 2019
The Canadian Soccer League was founded in 1998 and has primarily consisted of teams from Ontario. It was sanctioned as a division 3 league in 2010 but was de-sanctioned in 2013. It was sanctioned as a division 3 league in 2010 but was de-sanctioned in 2013.
The Canadian Premier League is the sole professional league atop the Canadian men's soccer league system. It currently consists of eight teams: four in Eastern and Western Canada each. As of its 2023 season, the minimum salary for a player was CA$30,000, and the maximum was ~CA$75,000. [7] [8]
Canadian Soccer League (1998–present) (6 C, 5 P) D. Defunct soccer leagues in Canada (16 C, 19 P) L. League1 Canada (7 C, 7 P) M. Major League Soccer (22 C, 23 P ...