Washington Diplomats

Washington Diplomats
Full nameWashington Diplomats
Nickname(s)Diplomats
Dips
Founded1974
Dissolved1981; 43 years ago (1981)
StadiumRobert F. Kennedy Stadium
Pat Cunningham Stadium[1]
D.C. Armory (indoor)
Capacity55,000
5,000
6,500 (indoor)
ChairmanSteve Danzansky
CoachGordon Bradley
LeagueNASL, NSL
Washington Diplomats (1981)
Full nameWashington Diplomats
Nickname(s)Diplomats
Dips
Founded1981
StadiumRobert F. Kennedy Stadium
Capacity55,000
ChairmanJimmy Hill
LeagueNASL NSL

The Washington Diplomats were an American soccer club representing Washington, D.C. Throughout their playing existence, the club played their home games at Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium and indoor home matches at the neighboring D.C. Armory.[2] Founded as an expansion franchise in 1974, the Diplomats competed in the now-defunct North American Soccer League, then the top-tier soccer league of the American soccer pyramid.

Plagued with mediocrity in their first few seasons of existence, the Diplomats did not qualify for the playoffs until 1976, their third year in the league. The Diplomats were knocked out by the New York Cosmos in the first round. That season, the club played their home matches in Northern Virginia at W.T. Woodson High School, before going back to RFK Stadium in 1977. During the next three seasons, the Diplomats achieved more regular season success and reached the postseason every year from 1978 until 1980. Consequently, the club experienced a spike in average attendance, nearing 20,000 fans a game by the 1980 season, although a significant number of tickets were "comps" or "papered" by the team's front office staff.

Following the end of the 1980 season, the original Diplomats club folded when then owner, the Madison Square Garden Corp., had accumulated losses of $6 million and team president Steve Danzansky could not gather enough money to keep the team alive.[3] However, that same season the Detroit Express NASL franchise relocated to the Washington metropolitan area, renaming themselves the "Diplomats" due to perceived familiarity of the moniker to the area. However, a regression of attendance and a lack of field success sounded the death knell of the franchise, and the Diplomats folded following the 1981 season.

  1. ^ "WT Woodson High School History". Archived from the original on March 10, 2016. Retrieved February 17, 2016.
  2. ^ "St. Petersburg Times – Google News Archive Search". Archived from the original on April 4, 2016. Retrieved June 18, 2015.
  3. ^ Feinstein, John (December 9, 1980). "Death of the Diplomats". The Washington Post. p. D1.