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The club will have an affiliation with youth club Nanaimo United FC, as well as Vancouver Island University. [1] [2] Their home field will be at the Q’unq’inuqwstuxw Stadium of Nanaimo District Secondary School, with a capacity of 1500, with a goal of eventually expanding to a capacity of 3500.
Montgomery was born in Nanaimo, British Columbia [1] to a Canadian father and Fijian mother. [2] He began playing youth soccer at age four with the Nanaimo Soccer Association. [ 2 ] Afterwards, he joined the Vancouver Island Wave in 2011.
The BC Soccer Premier League or BCSPL is the highest level of youth soccer in the province. It was established in 2011 as a standards-based youth league in partnership with Vancouver Whitecaps FC to support player development pathways at the U13 to U18 age groups. [1]
Langley United was founded as a youth soccer club in 1926. [1] In February 2020, the club was awarded a National Youth License by the Canadian Soccer Association. [2] The club plays its home games at Willoughby Community Park, which it shares with Canadian Premier League club Vancouver FC.
Raymond D. Telford (born 23 November 1946) is a Canadian former soccer player who competed at the 1976 Summer Olympics. [1] [2] He also represented Canada at the 1971 and 1975 Pan American Games. He moved to Nanaimo, British Columbia from England when he was eighteen years old. [3]
In 1987, McKinty joined the newly established Vancouver 86ers in the Canadian Soccer League. From 1988 to 1991, Vancouver dominated the CSL, winning four consecutive league championships. When the CSL collapsed following the 1992 season, McKinty and his teammates moved to the American Professional Soccer League. McKinty remained with Vancouver ...
In fact, he was the only player, of Aboriginal or European descent, to play on all three Nanaimo premier soccer teams. [6] A member of the Snuneymuxw First Nation, he was born on Vancouver Island. [1] He was recruited by the Nanaimo Thistles in 1898 to play in the provincial championship. In 1903, he was named to the Nanaimo all-star team.
These regional leagues have been designated by Canada Soccer as "major leagues". [1]: 101 For leagues that used a fall-spring format, the year in this table indicates the year in which the season ended, e.g. the 1960–61 champion would appear in the 1961 row. Only league seasons designated by Canada Soccer are included in this list.