Sacramento Republic FC

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Sacramento Republic FC
Sacramento Republic FC.svg
Full nameSacramento Republic FC
Nickname(s)Republic
Founded2012 (9 years ago) (2012)
StadiumHeart Health Park
Capacity11,569
OwnerSac Soccer & Entertainment Holdings, LLC
Chairman and CEOKevin M. Nagle
Head coachMark Briggs
LeagueUSL Championship
20205th, Western Conference
Playoffs: Quarterfinals
WebsiteClub website
Away colors
Third colors
Current season

Sacramento Republic FC is an American professional soccer team based in Sacramento, California, that plays in the Western Conference of the USL Championship. Co-founded by Warren Smith and Joe Wagoner in 2012, the team started to play in 2014 at Hughes Stadium, a 20,231 seat stadium. They moved mid-season to their current home at Heart Health Park. Since then, Republic FC won the 2014 USL championship and made the playoffs four times.

With fan support and attendance, the team prepared an expansion bid for Major League Soccer, which was submitted in January 2017. On May 15, 2017, MLS bid proponent Sac Soccer & Entertainment Holdings, led by Kevin Nagle, officially acquired Sacramento Republic FC from president and co-founder Warren Smith. On October 21, 2019, MLS announced that Sacramento Republic will be the 29th team in MLS, originally slated to start in 2022, later pushed to 2023.[1] However, on February 26, 2021, it was announced that the expansion to the MLS was placed on indefinite hiatus.[2] The team is working with the city of Sacramento to build a $226 million stadium in the large Railyards urban infill project.[3]

History[]

On December 3, 2012, USL Pro announced that a Sacramento expansion team would join the league for the 2014 season.[4] On July 15, 2013, Predrag "Preki" Radosavljević was announced as head coach of the new franchise.[5] The official name of the team and team shield were decided by fan vote. On July 18, 2013, the franchise officially announced the team name Sacramento Republic FC during the first annual Sacramento Soccer Day.[6] As of April 2015, the team had sold more than 9,500 season-tickets.[7]

2014: First-year championship[]

Republic huddle before second half of a friendly against Atlas FC

Republic FC made their home debut on April 26, 2014, at Hughes Stadium, losing 2–1 to the Harrisburg City Islanders, before a sellout crowd of 20,231.[8] This figure nearly doubled the previous USL regular season single game attendance record of 10,697.[9] The following match, a 2–1 win over Orange County Blues FC, drew a slightly smaller crowd of 17,414. Eventually, all their home games were sellouts except this one.[10]

Republic FC inaugurated their new 8,000 seat, soccer-specific stadium, Bonney Field at Cal Expo, on June 20, 2014. They defeated the Colorado Rapids Reserve team 4–3. Mike Fucito scored the winning goal in the 84th minute.[11]

On July 27, 2014, the team broke the USL regular season attendance record of 112,748, previously set by Orlando City SC. Their total attendance was 182,107 (158,107 regular season; 24,000 in the playoffs).[12]

Republic FC finished the regular season in 2nd place behind Orlando City SC with a 17-win, 4-tie and 7-loss record. They defeated the Wilmington Hammerheads 4–1 in the Quarterfinals. Rodrigo López scored a hat trick, including the game winner in stoppage time, to defeat LA Galaxy II 3–2 in the Semifinals. Sacramento won the USL Championship by defeating the Harrisburg City Islanders 2–0 on goals from Octavio Guzman and Thomas Stewart. López was named the Championship MVP.[13][14] Preki was named Coach of the Year. Nemanja Vuković was named Defender of the Year. Both López and Vuković were named to the All-League First Team.[15]

2015–present[]

Republic FC's second season saw them play in an expanded Bonney Field. 2015 also saw the business arm of the NFL side San Francisco 49ers and also NBA side Sacramento Kings venture into soccer, investing in Sacramento Republic in January 2015 with future plans should the club venture into the MLS as a franchise.[16]

Sacramento lost their first game of the season 4–2 away to Seattle Sounders FC 2.[17] They soon picked up form and saw them beat Sonoma County Sol and Chula Vista FC 4–2 and 7–3 respectively in the US Open Cup to reach the Fourth Round two years running.[18][19][20] On July 7, the Republic announced that Head-Coach Preki would be leaving and was being replaced by Paul Buckle.[21] Buckle's first game with the Republic was a friendly with Premier League side Sunderland on July 14, which Sacramento won 1–0.[22]

Sacramento placed fourth in the USL Western Conference standings after a season-concluding draw with conference champions Orange County Blues.[23][24] The Republic qualified for playoffs for the second consecutive year, losing to LA Galaxy II 1–0 in the first round.[25]

On January 22, 2019, billionaire Ron Burkle, the lead investor in the Pittsburgh Penguins ice hockey team since 1999, was announced as the Sacramento Republic's lead investor to satisfy MLS requirements.[26]

On September 19, 2019, Sacramento Republic FC was reported to be entering MLS as its 29th team, sources told CBS Sports. MLS called the report "erroneous" stating that they were still in "advanced discussions".[27] A press conference was held on October 21, 2019, to award an expansion team to Sacramento with Sacramento Republic FC slated to begin play in 2022.[28][29][30] Due to delays relating to the COVID-19 pandemic in California. Sacramento Republic and MLS announced that the team would instead play in 2023.[31] On February 26, 2021, MLS then announced that lead investor Ron Burkle "had decided not to acquire an expansion team in Sacramento".[32] The current status of the team's expansion bid is placed on indefinite hold.

Colors and crest[]

Republic FC's colors are old glory red, maple, and egg shell. The club crest is a classic shield that honors the Bear Flag, taking several colors from the flag itself. The crest also carries an image of a California grizzly bear, which is found on the state's flag and is California's official state animal, along with a nautical star, which is representative of, and in the same color as, the star on the Bear Flag. Below the bear is the motto of the city of Sacramento, "Urbs Indomita", in Latin meaning "Indomitable City".[33]

Kit[]

The club released the design of their inaugural home and away shirts on December 5, 2013. The kit manufacturer was Italian sportswear company Lotto, with UC Davis Children's Hospital as the shirt sponsor through the 2016 season. The home kit's dominant color is the club's signature color "Old Glory Red", and the away shirt is primarily white. Both Lotto kits featured a diagonal stripe of dark maroon, with the club crest positioned on the left side of the wearer's chest. The club's motto, "Urbs Indomita", was printed on the right sleeve.[34] The third kit, unveiled before the 2015 season and US Open Cup, featured horizontal eggshell and white stripes and a star over the crest to commemorate the previous season's USL Championship.[35]

On November 21, 2015, Republic FC announced a new partnership with Nike and unveiled new home and away kits for the 2016 USL season. The home kit is once again "Old Glory Red," while the away kit is now white and gray. Both designs omit the diagonal stripe in favor of vertical patterns. The new designs feature "Urbs Indomita" written on the back neckline.[36]

UC Davis Children's Hospital, the kit sponsor since the club's inception and one of Republic FC's first corporate partners, renewed their sponsorship on July 22, 2016, for USL play beyond the year 2016. Moreover, UC Davis Health Systems announced it would become the shirt sponsor in MLS should Republic receive an expansion bid.[37]

Sponsorship[]

Period Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor
2014–2015 Lotto UC Davis Children's Hospital
2016 Nike
2017– UC Davis Health

Supporters[]

Tower Bridge Battalion

Republic FC draws fans from a large region of Northern California, with many fans traveling from the eastern areas of the bay and as far north as Redding to watch matches.

The club's independent supporters' group is called the Tower Bridge Battalion.[38] The group gets their name from the Tower Bridge, a central structure in downtown Sacramento that connects Sacramento proper to West Sacramento. The Tower Bridge Battalion occupies one area of the team's home stadium. Several chants have been coordinated for the Tower Bridge Battalion, which they yell throughout the match. Common instruments used by the Battalion are large drums, megaphones, and other noise-making items. The group has several coordinators that help to keep the crowd in unison during the match.[39][40]

The Tower Bridge Battalion have been central in organizing fan support of a Major League Soccer expansion team in Sacramento. On September 19, 2014, the Battalion led a crowd of thousands through the streets in downtown Sacramento designed to showcase the area's fanbase for MLS officials.[41]

Stadiums[]

Heart Health Park[]

When the club was originally proposed, officials had planned on using Hughes Stadium, a 20,311 seater, open, multi-purpose stadium at Sacramento City College.[42] On November 14, 2013, however, it was announced that Republic FC planned to play in a new 8,000 seat soccer-specific stadium being built on the grounds of Cal Expo.[43] The proposed stadium would be funded and owned by Ovations Food Service and, if approved, was expected to be completed in time for the first match of the 2014 USL season.[44] Because the new stadium at Cal Expo was not completed in time for the start of 2014 season matches, the club played its initial 2014 matches at Hughes Stadium.[42] The new stadium was named Bonney Field, following a sponsorship deal for naming rights with Bonney Plumbing, Heating, Air and Rooter Service.

On June 20, 2014, the club played its inaugural match at the completed Bonney Field against the Colorado Rapids Reserves, winning the match 4–3. The game drew a sellout crowd of 8,000, significantly lower than the regular crowds at Hughes Stadium due to the smaller size of Bonney, but this number still remains very high for regular-season USL Pro matches.

In January 2015, expansion efforts at Bonney Field began to increase the seating at the stadium.[45] Capacity for 2015 was expanded to 11,442,[46] with added seats in the north endline and east sideline. In March 2017, Papa Murphy's Holdings, Inc. acquired the naming rights to the stadium, and Bonney Field was renamed Papa Murphy's Park.[citation needed] On May 5, 2021, the Sacramento Republic FC and Western Health Advantage agreed to a new naming rights deal that would change the name of the stadium to Heart Health Park.[citation needed]

Proposed railyards MLS stadium[]

As part of team owners' efforts for the club to join MLS as an expansion team, Republic FC has announced intentions to build a 20,000 seat soccer-specific stadium in Downtown Sacramento.[47] In August 2015, Republic FC announced the hiring of HNTB Corp as lead architects of the stadium project, which will be on the former site of the Sacramento Railyards. (HNTB previously designed two Northern California venues, Sutter Health Park in Sacramento and Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara.)[48]

The concept design of the new stadium, based in part on fan input from a web survey and a series of workshops, was unveiled on December 1, 2015.[49][50] Though designed with a closed bowl, the stadium will have separate stands on different sides to create a unique character for each one, an homage to classic English stadia like St James' Park. To meet the designer's stated goal of creating MLS's best home court advantage, the seating will feature the steepest grade in the MLS in and an untiered east side reminiscent of Westfalenstadion's Yellow Wall.[51] On December 1, the evening of the design unveil, the Sacramento City Council voted 8–0 to approve a term sheet promoting construction of the 25,000-seat venue, with a target 2018 completion date if the club is accepted into MLS. The stadium is estimated to cost $226 million, and will be privately financed.[52]

On April 2, 2019, Sacramento Republic FC released updated renderings of the proposed stadium. Additions to the previous design included a 360-degree concourse/pedestrian walkway, new seating at the canopy level on the west side of the stadium, and additional field-level seating areas, raising the cost to about $252 million. The team stated that if their MLS bid is accepted, they would likely begin construction on the stadium immediately, hoping to complete it by late 2021 or early 2022, in time for the 2022 MLS season. With the team being accepted into MLS on October 21, 2019, they were expected to complete construction for the 2023 season.[53][54] The plans to build the stadium and join the league are on indefinite hiatus as of February 2021.[55]

Players and technical staff[]

First team roster[]

As of August 27, 2021[56]
No. Pos. Player Nation
2 DF Shannon Gomez  Trinidad and Tobago
3 DF Hayden Sargis  United States
4 DF Mitchell Taintor  United States
5 DF Dan Casey  Republic of Ireland
6 MF Fatai Alashe  United States
7 MF Tucker Bone  United States
8 MF Petteri Pennanen  Finland
9 FW Kharlton Belmar  Grenada
10 FW Dariusz Formella  Poland
11 MF Emil Cuello (on loan from San Antonio FC)  Argentina
14 DF Duke Lacroix  United States
17 FW Jerome Kiesewetter (on loan from FC Tulsa)  United States
18 GK Rafael Díaz  Dominican Republic
22 MF Julian Chavez ([A])  United States
23 MF Mario Penagos  United States
24 MF Jaime Villarreal  United States
27 GK Tomas Gomez  United States
28 MF Andrew Wheeler-Omiunu  United States
30 DF Jordan McCrary  United States
31 FW Cameron Iwasa  United States
34 MF Rafael Jauregui  United States
36 DF Nabilai Kibunguchy (on loan from Minnesota United)  United States
39 GK ([A])  United States
47 DF ([A])  United States
51 MF ([A])  United States
52 MF ([A])  United States
53 FW ([A])  United States
54 DF ([A])  United States
61 FW ([A])  United States
62 DF ([A])  United States
63 MF ([A])  United States
64 MF ([A])  United States
65 DF ([A])  United States
96 MF Luis Felipe  United States
99 FW Maalique Foster  Jamaica
FW Patrick Weah (on loan from Minnesota United)  Liberia
  1. ^
    USL Academy contract

Out on loan[]

No. Pos. Player Nation
4 DF Mitchell Taintor (on loan to San Antonio FC)  United States

Technical staff[]

As of November 5, 2019[57]
Position Name
General manager United States Todd Dunivant
Head Coach England Mark Briggs
Assistant coach Republic of Ireland Colin Falvey
Goalkeeper coach France Romuald Peiser
Strength and conditioning coach United States Luke Rayfield
Head athletic trainer United States Betty Olmeda
Academy director United States Dennis Sanchez

Team records[]

Year-by-year[]

This is a partial list of the last five seasons completed by Republic. For the full season-by-season history, see List of Sacramento Republic FC seasons.

Season League Position Playoffs USOC Continental Average attendance Top goalscorer(s)
Div League Pld W L D GF GA GD Pts PPG Conf. Overall Name Goals
2016 3 USL 30 14 6 10 43 27 +16 52 1.73 1st 4th R1 R3 DNQ 11,514 United States Cameron Iwasa 12
2017 2 USL 32 13 12 7 45 43 +2 46 1.44 8th 13th QF R5 11,569 Trinidad and Tobago Trevin Caesar 9
2018 USL 34 19 7 8 47 32 +15 65 1.91 2nd 4th R1 R5 11,311 United States Cameron Iwasa 18
2019 USLC 34 14 14 6 50 43 +7 48 1.41 7th 15th QF R4 10,436 United States Cameron Iwasa 17
2020 USLC 16 8 2 6 27 17 +10 30 1.88 5th 10th R1 NH 11,569 Poland Dariusz Formella 8

^ 1. Avg. Attendance include statistics from league matches only.

^ 2. Top Goalscorer(s) includes all goals scored in league, league playoffs, U.S. Open Cup, CONCACAF Champions League, FIFA Club World Cup, and other competitive continental matches.

Head coaches[]

As of October 10, 2020
  • Includes USL Regular season, USL Play-offs and U.S. Lamar Hunt Open Cup
Sacramento Republic FC Coaching Stats
Coach Nationality Start End Games Win Loss Draw Win %
Preki[58]  United States July 15, 2013 July 11, 2015 54 32 15 7 059.26
Paul Buckle  England July 12, 2015 February 1, 2018 78 34 23 21 043.59
Simon Elliott  New Zealand February 1, 2018 November 5, 2019 79 40 25 14 050.63
Mark Briggs  England December 16, 2019 present 16 8 2 6 050.00

Average attendances[]

Sacramento Republic FC Average Attendances
Year Reg. Season Play-offs
2014 11,293 (USL Record) 8,000
2015 11,329 (USL Record) 11,442
2016 11,514 10,926
2017 11,569
2018 11,311 11,569
2019 10,436 9,907
2020 11,569 11,569

Club captains[]

Sacramento Republic FC Club Captains
Dates Player Nationality
2014–2015 Justin Braun  United States
2016–2017 Danny Barrera  Colombia
2018 Jeremy Hall  Puerto Rico
2019 Cameron Iwasa  United States
2020 Drew Skundrich  United States
Rodrigo López  Mexico
2021–present Petteri Pennanen  Finland

Honors[]

USL Championship
Competitions Titles Seasons
USL Cup 1 2014
Western Conference 1 2016
Playoffs 7 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020

References[]

  1. ^ Brisendine, Steve. "Sacramento ownership group, Republic FC reach agreement for unified MLS bid". MLS. Major League Soccer. Retrieved June 8, 2017.
  2. ^ Carlisle, Jeff. "Sacramento MLS team on indefinite hold after investor pulls out of deal". ESPN. ESPN. Retrieved February 26, 2021.
  3. ^ Lillis, Ryan; Kaiser, Dale. "Sacramento council OKs preliminary term sheet for soccer stadium". The Sacramento Bee. McClatchy Corp. Retrieved June 8, 2017.
  4. ^ "Sacramento lands minor league soccer franchise". Sacramento Bee. December 3, 2012. Archived from the original on December 4, 2012. Retrieved December 4, 2012.
  5. ^ "Preki resurfaces as the man to help lead Sacramento toward MLS". Major League Soccer. July 15, 2013.
  6. ^ "New soccer franchise to be called Sacramento Republic FC". Sacramento Bee. July 18, 2013. Archived from the original on January 7, 2014.
  7. ^ "Republic FC reaches season ticket cap at 9,500", Sacramento Bee, June 11, 2015.
  8. ^ "Republic FC loses home opener before sellout crowd at Hughes Stadium" Archived April 27, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, Sacramento Bee, April 27, 2014.
  9. ^ "Sacramento Republic FC opener sells out, sets league record" Archived May 6, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, Sacramento Bee, April 25, 2014.
  10. ^ "Sacramento pleases large crowd with win " Archived May 6, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, Sacramento Bee, May 3, 2014.
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  32. ^ "MLS announces update on Sacramento expansion". MLSsoccer.com.
  33. ^ "Know Your Crest". Sacramento Republic FC. Archived from the original on December 26, 2013. Retrieved December 16, 2013.
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  35. ^ "Sacramento Republic FC Unveil Third Kit for 2015 Season". Sacramento Republic FC. May 7, 2015. Retrieved August 28, 2015.
  36. ^ "Sacramento Republic FC and Nike Partner on 2016 Kit". Sacramento Republic FC. November 21, 2015. Retrieved October 2, 2017.
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  38. ^ "Tower Bridge Battalion ready for supporting role at Republic FC's home opener". Sacramento Bee. April 23, 2014.
  39. ^ "Millennials kick up soccer's popularity". Marketplace.org.
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  41. ^ "Sacramento Republic FC fans turnout for MLS". Kcra.com.
  42. ^ Jump up to: a b "Play and Practice Location". Sacramento Republic FC. Retrieved December 20, 2013.
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  49. ^ "Sacramento Republic FC wants fan input for downtown stadium". Sacramento Bee. August 14, 2015. Retrieved August 28, 2015.
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  58. ^ Rivera, Kristopher (July 19, 2013). "A Great Show of Support". Sacramento Bee.

External links[]

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