Friends on the field
Bryce Alderton
Watching soccer enthusiasts trample the grass and boot the ball
around makes some people long to put on the shorts and shirt, tie-up
the laces and run around for awhile on Sunday mornings.
Such was the case about 15 years ago when a group of men, many who
had gotten their children into soccer and coached an AYSO soccer team
or a club team, wanted to learn more about soccer and try playing it.
Pretty soon these men formed a league based on the “club concept,”
where players invited other players to the club and they divided into
teams systematically for competitive balance -- thus the Gentlemen’s
Soccer League was formed.
Now it is called the Coastline Soccer League comprised of 120
players, including Kirk McIntosh, founder of the yearly Daily Pilot
Cup youth soccer tournament played at the Farm Complex in Costa Mesa,
who are divided into eight teams each September and play every Sunday
at Gisler Elementary School in Huntington Beach.
Alan Denny, 57, began playing soccer in 1972 and now enters his
10th year as the league’s commissioner. He plays on a team with
McIntosh.
Two men began the league 15 years ago, but fled unexpectedly,
leaving league players “holding the bag,” Denny said.
“We had no information for rosters so we had to jump in and pick
up the pieces,” Denny said. “Now it’s grown and expanded to eight
teams.”
The league’s year begins each September and is divided into three
seasons. Each team plays 42 games.
Each player pays “about $250” yearly, which covers costs for
uniforms, referees and field maintenance since AYSO allows Coastline
to use the fields, Denny said.
“AYSO Region 56 has been kind to let us use their fields, so if
there’s ever a conflict, we always give way,” Denny said.
Part of the $250 goes toward field maintenance. Players paint the
lines on the field each Friday before AYSO games on Saturday.
“We have a lot of professionals in our club who donate time to
maintenance work trying to be good citizens,” Denny said.
Denny stresses that the league operates in a recreational manner,
where fighting is not allowed.
“The referees call our games with an eye to not allow
out-of-control play to take place,” Denny said.
“We have very strict rules. If a punch is thrown, even if it
doesn’t hit, the player must leave the league forever.”
In the league’s 15 years, Denny said there have only been two
instances where players have thrown punches.
The league is made up of players ages 35 to 70 and features skill
levels from novice to semi-professional and ex-professional.
“There’s no exclusion based on talent,” Denny said.
“Players are put on teams on a first-come, first-serve basis. We
try to maintain balance and if there are players who seem better
suited for a more competitive league, then I recommend that to them.”
About 70% of the 120 players are either active youth coaches in
AYSO or for a club team, Denny said.
Newport Beach resident John Curtis has been playing in the league
off-and-on for seven years, and has watched the league grow.
“The people I play with are the most level-headed people I’ve been
with, everybody knows everybody else,” Curtis said. “Over the years
the level has risen tremendously from what it was 10 years ago.”
Curtis, 56, began playing soccer when he was 28 and has played on
teams when he lived in England and Scotland and has announced soccer
games for the California Surf who used to play games in the Los
Angeles Coliseum.
He took his wife of 20 years, Susan, to announce a game on their
first date.
“I am obsessed with the game itself from coaching, watching and
playing it,” Curtis said. “I got into (soccer) when I was single and
looking for something to do. This league provides an ongoing
opportunity to play soccer and meet with other guys that really love
the game. It’s close to my house and I enjoy sharing the time with
the guys. It’s a great release for me. I just need to go there and
run.”
Curtis is founder of the Orange County United Soccer Club
(originally the Newport Beach Soccer Club), a club soccer league that
his three children have all played in.
Interested players may call Denny at (714) 964-5472 or visit the
Coastline Soccer League Web site at www.coastlinesoccer.com.
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