Durham Flames were a semi-professional Canadian football club based in Oshawa, Ontario, Canada. The club competed in the Canadian Professional Soccer League for five seasons from 1999 to 2003.

Background

Durham Flames (previously known as Oshawa Flames) played in the Canadian Professional Soccer League which is the third tier of Canadian football pyramid. The club was founded in 1999 and played their home matches at the Oshawa Civic Stadium in Oshawa. The stadium is able to accommodate 2,000 spectators. The club was affiliated to the Canadian Soccer Association.

History

Durham Flames were originally known as Oshawa Flames and first entered the Canadian Professional Soccer League in 1999, as a replacement for the Mississauga Eagles. The club's first head coach was CSL and APSL veteran Jens Kraemer. Notable acquisition were Darryl Gomez, Pat Sullivan, and Hubert Busby, Jr. The club finished in fifth position and reached the semi-finals of the League Cup before going out 2–0 on aggregate to Toronto Croatia, the second match proving decisive at Centennial Park Stadium. The following season the team hired the services of Durham College head coach Stan Bombino to coach the team. Bombino led Durham to a seventh-place finish which reflected the fact that they drew 9 of their 14 matches. Jimmy Kuzmanovski was the club's top goal-scorer with 9 league and cup goals. At the conclusion of the season Kuzmanovski was awarded the CPSL Rookie of the Year award. Under their new title of Durham Flames, and under the leadership of Danny Stewart the club again failed to reach the championship playoffs in the 2001 and 2002 seasons. Though Durham failed to reach the postseason they received the CPSL Fair Play award in 2001.

In their final season in 2003 in the Eastern Conference the club struggled, winning just one of their 18 league matches. This contrasted with their performance in the Open Canada Cup when they reached the Cup Final weekend before losing 4–1 to London City in a wild card game on 29 August 2003. The Flames last ever match was played on 30 September 2003 when they went down 3–1 away to Vaughan Sun Devils. On October 5, 2003, the organization was awarded their second CPSL Fair Play award for being the most disciplined team.

It was reported in the local press that The Flames were excluded from the League in December 2003, their franchise having been revoked following their failure to pay league fees and fines. Durham Storm took over their slot for home games in Oshawa's Civic Stadium on Friday nights. However The Storm bought the Mississauga Olympians franchise and did not take over the Durham Flames franchise.

Season to season

SeasonLeaguePos.Pl.WDLGSGAPPlayoffsLeague CupClub name
1999Canadian Professional Soccer League514367192614Did not qualifySemi-finalOshawa Flames
2000Canadian Professional Soccer League71429322359Did not qualifyGroup stageOshawa Flames
2001Canadian Professional Soccer League10227312395324Did not qualifyGroup stageDurham Flames
2002Canadian Professional Soccer League (East)5197210284423Did not qualifyDurham Flames
2003Canadian Professional Soccer League (East)618111628739Did not qualifyDurham Flames

First team squad 2003

The following players represented Durham Flames in their final season: Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No.Pos.NationPlayer
No. Pos. Nation Player 1 GK CAN Serge Desbiens 1 GK CAN Daniel Baker 2 CAN Jason Davis 3 DF CAN Luke Brown 4 FW CAN Jahmo Welsh 5 DF CAN Mark Melo 6 DF CAN Roger Badley 8 CAN Ryan Dummett 9 CAN Mike Mason 10 MF CAN Dan Sadler 11 CAN Jamal Jupiter 12 CAN Jonathan Briggs 13 DF CAN Kwamie Wafie-AnnohNo. Pos. Nation Player 14 MF CAN Adam Vickers 15 CAN Zamar Brown 16 DF CAN Laurence Ledwidge 17 CAN Sean Caresdilero 18 FW CAN Danny Mattin 19 CAN Javed Hakim 20 CAN David Mills 21 MF CAN Desmond Humphrey 22 GK CAN Brandon Cedar
1GKCANSerge Desbiens
1GKCANDaniel Baker
2CANJason Davis
3DFCANLuke Brown
4FWCANJahmo Welsh
5DFCANMark Melo
6DFCANRoger Badley
8CANRyan Dummett
9CANMike Mason
10MFCANDan Sadler
11CANJamal Jupiter
12CANJonathan Briggs
13DFCANKwamie Wafie-Annoh
No.Pos.NationPlayer
14MFCANAdam Vickers
15CANZamar Brown
16DFCANLaurence Ledwidge
17CANSean Caresdilero
18FWCANDanny Mattin
19CANJaved Hakim
20CANDavid Mills
21MFCANDesmond Humphrey
22GKCANBrandon Cedar

Club administration 2003

The key officials of the club during the last season were:

Steve Kralj - President Carlos De sousa - Vice President Frank Kralj - Treasurer Stan Bombino - Technical DirectorJack Methven - Manager Steve Hamill - Head Coach Tony Cabral - Assistant Coach Matt Gurr - Goalkeeper Coach

Head coaches

YearsNameNation
1999Jens KraemerCanada
2000Stan BombinoCanada
2001Danny StewartCanada
2002-2003Steve HamillCanada

Footnotes