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| fullname = Ocean City Nor'easters
| nickname = Nor'easters
| founded = {{start date and
| stadium = [[Carey Stadium]]<br />[[Ocean City, New Jersey]]<ref name="Carey Stadium"/>
| capacity = 3,500
| chrtitle = Owner
| chairman = [[Giancarlo Granese]]
|
| league = [[USL League Two]]
| season = [[
| position = 1st, Mid Atlantic Division<br />Playoffs: Conference Quarterfinals
| American = true
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| socks1 = 0033CC
| pattern_la2 =_blackborder
| pattern_b2 =
| pattern_ra2 =_blackborder
| leftarm2 = FF7F00
| body2 = FF7F00
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The team plays their home games at [[Carey Stadium]] which is located right next to the boardwalk in [[Ocean City, New Jersey]]. The stadium's nickname "The Beach House" was coined during the 2005 season by the team's play-by-play announcer Josh Hakala.<ref name="Carey Stadium">{{Cite web|url=http://www.oceancityfc.com/facilities/carey-stadium|title=Carey Stadium|publisher=Ocean City Nor'easters|date=August 11, 2017}}</ref> The team's colors are royal blue and orange.
They are among the most successful [[USL League Two]] teams since joining the league in 2003 after six seasons in the [[USISL D-3 Pro League]]. Since 2003, they have the
In 2008, the Barons formed a partnership with [[Reading F.C.|Reading]] of the English [[Football League Championship]] that has since ended. In 2010, following a split between the PDL team and their youth soccer affiliate, the team re-branded to Ocean City FC, adopted Reading's colors, and a similar badge. The team also adopted a new nickname: the [[Nor'easter]]s.<ref>{{cite web|url=
==History==
Line 53 ⟶ 49:
===South Jersey Barons, D-3 Pro League (1996–2002)===
The club was founded in 1996 as the '''South Jersey Barons''' and joined the [[United Systems of Independent Soccer Leagues]] (USISL) as a professional franchise, competing in the [[USISL D-3 Pro League]] (now the [[United Soccer League]]). In 1998, in only their second year in existence, the Barons won the Mid-Atlantic Division title. The next year, they followed that up with a second straight playoff appearance and a run to the USISL D-3 national championship game. On September 11, 1999, the Barons, playing the title game on the road, lost 2–1 to the [[Western Mass Pioneers]]. The Barons made a third straight playoff appearance in 2000, but would struggle for the next three years, never finishing above fourth place in the division.
===[[USL League Two]] (
In 2003, the Barons moved to the [[USL Premier Development League]], and after finishing in fourth place in their inaugural season, they made history in their second season in the PDL. In 2004, they became the fifth team in league history to go through the regular season with an unbeaten record (14–0–4).<ref name="History"/> They won the Northeast Division title that year, but their season came to the end in the playoffs. In the conference championship game at [[McPherson Stadium]] in [[Greensboro, North Carolina]], they lost to the [[Carolina Dynamo]] 3–2 on a goal in the 90th minute.
In 2005, the South Jersey Barons were taken over by a local
In their first full season at Carey Stadium in the [[USL League Two]], the club won every game in the regular season at home (8–0–0), and finished with a 12–3–1 overall record under the direction of player-coach-general manager [[Neil Holloway]]. By the end of the regular season, their home unbeaten streak had reached 22 games, with their last home loss coming back on June 7, 2003, against the [[Vermont Voltage]]. The fans came out to see the Barons win that year, as the club finished with the sixth-best home attendance in the [[USL League Two]]. They hosted the Eastern Conference playoffs, but were upset in the conference semifinals by the [[Richmond Kickers Future]] 4–3 on a goal in the final seconds of regulation by Richmond's [[Dominic Oduro]].
2006 marked the 10th season for the Barons organization, but on the field, despite finishing with a winning record, it was considered a down year by club standards.<ref name="History"/> The Barons finished with a 6–4–6 record, which was good enough for second place in the Northeast Division, and they missed the playoffs for the first time since moving to the PDL. The
In 2007, long-time [[Ocean City High School]] head coach [[Mike Pellegrino]] took over the coaching duties and returned the Barons to the playoffs. Their 9–3–4 record earned them a second-place finish in the Mid-Atlantic Division. Their home record continued with a 6–1–1 mark and the Barons were selected by the league to host the Eastern Conference playoffs for the second time in three years. The club lost in the conference semifinals to the [[Cape Cod Crusaders]] 5–0 after they had two players sent off in the opening 24
The 2008 campaign was a tale of two halves as the club suffered its worst season since joining the [[USL League Two]]. Despite this, they still had a winning record with 6 wins, 5 losses and 5 draws. In the first half of the season, the Barons were unbeaten, with a record of 4–0–4, but the second half of the season was a different story, finishing with a 2–5–1 record. Some of the highlights included [[Byron Carmichael]] becoming the club's all-time leader in goals and points, while finishing the season with an even 100 career points. Ocean City's 8–1 win over the expansion [[New Jersey Rangers]] was a historic one as [[Steve Miller (soccer)|Steve Miller]] scored the club's third hat trick in franchise history and it was the most goals scored in a game and the largest margin of victory that the club has ever enjoyed as a member of
The Barons bounced back from a disappointing 2008 season with one of the club's greatest campaigns in 2009. In addition to a pair of professional team upsets in the [[U.S. Open Cup]] and a date with [[D.C. United]] of [[Major League Soccer]], Ocean City had a great regular season and a historic postseason run. After a 9–4–3 record earned them a third-place finish in the competitive Northeast Division and a spot in the postseason, they made history with two playoff wins before advancing to the PDL quarterfinals. The Barons eliminated the [[Long Island Rough Riders]], the second best defensive team in the PDL, 2–0 in the opening round, giving OC their first playoff win since 2004. In the next round, the Men In Red handed the undefeated [[Ottawa Fury (2005–2013)|Ottawa Fury]] their first loss of the season with a 2–1 overtime win on a 98th-minute goal by [[Tyler Bellamy]]. The playoff run came to an end in [[Des Moines, Iowa]], where they lost to the [[Chicago Fire Premier]] 3–0.
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===Rebrand as the Nor'easters===
The club rebranded itself after the 2009 season, becoming the Ocean City Nor’easters and adopting the color scheme (royal blue & white) of English club [[Reading F.C.|Reading]]. However, in their
The
The Ocean City Nor’easters began the
The Nor’easters'
After another winning season in 2014 (
In 2017, former Ocean City defender John Thompson took over as head coach as Tim Oswald shifted to a front office role as Sporting Director. Despite finishing with a better regular season record (
Prior to the 2019 season, [http://oceancityfc.com/latest-news/nor-easters-head-coach-john-thompson-to-step-down John Thompson announced he was stepping down from the role as head coach]. Later that offseason, the club announced that [http://oceancityfc.com/latest-news/tim-oswald-returns-as-ocean-city-nor-easters-head-coach-for-2019-season Tim Oswald would return to the sidelines as head coach with Kevin Nuss returning to the club to replace Oswald as Sporting Director]. However, a week before the season, [http://oceancityfc.com/latest-news/nor-easters-head-coach-tim-oswald-steps-down-kevin-nuss-to-lead-ocean-city-in-2019 Oswald announced that he would be stepping down as head coach due to a medical concern and Kevin Nuss would take over as head coach]. The team finished second in the Mid-Atlantic Division.
After the 2020 season was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, play resumed in 2021 under new leadership. Alan McCann, who had won the last two
The Nor'easters did it by making some history along the way on both sides of the ball. Offensively, the 2021 team scored 40 goals, the second most in the league, and the most by an Ocean City team since 2005. The club was led by [[Simon Becher]] with 11 goals. Becher, who was named to the All-Conference team [http://oceancityfc.com/latest-news/nor-easters-simon-becher-named-to-eastern-conference-team-of-the-year], led the league in game-winning goals and finished tied for third in goals. On the defensive side, it was one of the best back lines in club history, allowing just 12 goals in 14 regular season games with a 0.86 team goals against average. Both were records for a 14-game season. Another defensive accomplishment was eight clean sheets across all competitions, the second-most in club history.
===25th season and beyond===
In 2022, Kevin Nuss returned to the sidelines to lead the Nor'easters for the club's 25th season. Ocean City finished the regular season undefeated (11–0–3) for the second time in club history and won the Mid-Atlantic Division title for the fourth time. Last year's team made headlines for its offense, but in 2022, it was the defense that broke club records. Goalkeeper Felix Schafer led a defense that allowed just nine goals in 14 games, along with [[Ben Martino]]. Schafer broke the club record with a 0.55 goals against average (with five shutouts) and became the first Ocean City goalkeeper to be named the [[USL League Two]] Golden Glove winner. The team's 0.64 goals against average was also a club record for a 14-game season. The Nor'easters would finish undefeated at home (6–0–1) for the fifth time in club history and undefeated on the road (5–0–2) for the fourth time. The team also broke the club record for road undefeated streak. The Storm's streak would finish the campaign at 15 and would carry that streak into 2023. The Nor'easters qualified for the playoffs for the second year in a row, but they would fall to the [[Long Island Rough Riders]] in the opening round, 3–1.
After Kevin Nuss accepted a coaching job with [[USL League One]]'s [[Union Omaha]], Matt Perrella, his assistant from the 2019 and 2022 seasons, took over the head coaching job for 2023. Perrella made his Nor'easters head coaching debut in the [[Lamar Hunt US Open Cup]] with a 3–1 road win over rival West Chester United in Round 1. In the Second Round, the Storm faced a professional team for the 15th time in club history. They would fall on the road to the [[Maryland Bobcats FC]] 3–2 as the [[National Independent Soccer Association]] side scored a goal off a corner kick on the final kick of the game. Perrella would keep the team's unbeaten streak from last season going in 2023 as the team would not suffer a loss until the final game of the regular season to [[West Chester United]]. That unbeaten streak would end at 28 games (a club record) and the road unbeaten streak would remain alive (at 21 games) heading into 2024. The 8–1–5 record was enough for Ocean City to win back-to-back division titles for the first time in club history. In the playoffs, they avenged last season's playoff loss by eliminating the [[Long Island Rough Riders]] 2–1 in the Eastern Quarterfinals. They followed that up with a 2–1 win over the [[Hudson Valley Hammers]]. The playoff run would come to an end in the Eastern Conference Final (National Quarterfinals) with a 4–2 extra time loss to [[Lionsbridge FC]].
===U.S. Open Cup===
Adding to their success in the league, the Barons have also qualified for the [[U.S. Open Cup]] on five occasions. They made their first appearance in 2002, their final year as a professional franchise. That year, they defeated [[Vereinigung Erzgebirge]] of the [[USASA]] 4–0 in the first round, but were eliminated in the next round 1–0 by the [[Hampton Roads Mariners]], who played in the level above the Barons, in the A-League (now called the [[USL
In 2004, the year of their undefeated league season in the PDL, they began the tournament with a 5–0 thrashing of the USASA's [[Allied SC]], and once again met an A-League team in the second round. The [[Syracuse Salty Dogs]] were the club, which featured [[Anthony Maher (soccer)|Anthony Maher]], the older brother of the Barons’ [[Matthew Maher (soccer)|Matthew Maher]]. It was only the second time in the
The following year, the Barons made a return to the Cup and made their biggest impression in club history. They began as they had the previous two tournament appearances with a 3–0 shutout win over historic USASA club, [[New York Greek-American Atlas]]. The Barons would host their second round match against the [[Long Island Rough Riders]] of the [[USL Second Division]], and they used their home field advantage at Carey Stadium to thrash the Rough Riders 4–0. [[Ruben Mingo]], [[Tony Donatelli]], [[Chris Williams (American soccer player)|Chris Williams]] and [[Steven Wacker]] all scored in one of the second round's biggest upsets.
In the third round, the Barons were on the short end of a historical Open Cup match in [[Richmond, Virginia]]. Again, weather played a role, postponing the original game date, and a week later, the match was delayed by two hours. When the match was finally completed, the Barons had lost to the [[Richmond Kickers]] of the [[USL First Division]], 8–4. The Kickers answered [[Byron Carmichael]]’s opening goal, with four straight tallies in the first half. Just before halftime, Carmichael cut the lead to two, and just after the break [[Tony Donatelli]]’s goal made it 4–3 in the 54th minute. However, the home side was too strong, and with the Barons pushing for an equalizer, the Kickers opened the floodgates. 12 goals was the most total goals scored in an Open Cup match
After missing out on the tournament in 2006, the Barons returned to the Cup in 2007 and began at home with a 1–0 upset over [[Crystal Palace Baltimore]] of the USL Second Division. They hosted the second round as well and lost 2–1 to the [[Harrisburg City Islanders]] in one of the more exciting matches of the 2007 Open Cup. The Barons had three balls cleared off the line in the second half, but they weren't able to equalize.
2009 was a landmark season for the Barons in the Open Cup as they qualified for the Open Cup for the fourth time in the last six years. But the biggest highlight was the fact that Ocean City faced off with a club from [[Major League Soccer]] for the first time in franchise history. The Barons’ run in the tournament began with a shocking 3–0 home upset of [[Crystal Palace Baltimore]] of the USL Second Division. [[Byron Carmichael]] was named TheCup.us Player of the Round after scoring a pair of first half goals and [[J. T. Noone]] would put the nail in the coffin with a second half goal. The upsets at The Beach House continued in Round 2 when the Barons’ [[Tunde Ogunbiyi]] shutout the [[Real Maryland Monarchs]] of the Second Division and Noone converted a penalty kick in the second period of overtime to put the Barons into the third round by a score of 1–0. With the win, Ocean City became only the sixth amateur team in the Open Cup's modern history to register back-to-back wins over professional teams. Ogunbiyi remains one of three goalkeepers (Jesse Llamas, Derby Carillo) in the Modern Era to earn multiple shutout wins for an amateur team against professional teams in one tournament.
In Round 3, the Barons would put a scare into [[D.C. United]] but would fall 2–0 to the defending Open Cup champs on a wet night at the [[Maryland SoccerPlex]] in [[Germantown, Maryland]]. In 2017, the Nor'easters hosted Junior Lone Star FC of the Philadelphia Premier Soccer League in the opening round. After a 3–1 win, they advance to Round 2 where they hosted the [[Harrisburg City Islanders]] in a rematch of the [[2007 Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup]]. After 120 minutes of scoreless soccer, Harrisburg won the penalty kick shootout 6–5. For Ocean City, it was the sixth shutout of a professional team, more than any amateur team in the Modern Era.
In 2018, the Nor'easters had to play all of their games on the road, starting with a 3–0 win in [[Ypsilanti, Michigan]] over [[National Premier Soccer League|NPSL]] power [[AFC Ann Arbor]]. Next, they traveled to North Carolina to take on the [[Charlotte Independence]] of the [[United Soccer League|USL]] and they won the game 3–1 to earn their sixth win over a professional team in the competition. It was the first time they had upset a professional team away from home and it was the first time they did so while allowing a goal (the previous five were all shutouts). They would return to North Carolina where their US Open Cup run would come to an end with a 4–1 loss to [[North Carolina FC]] of the [[United Soccer League|USL]].
As a [[USL League Two]] team in the Lamar Hunt [[U.S. Open Cup]], Ocean City have six wins with five of them being upsets of professional clubs. Only two amateur teams have more wins and upsets in the tournament ([[Michigan Bucks]] and [[Des Moines Menace]])
====U.S. Open Cup Results====
Line 220 ⟶ 224:
|vs. [[Junior Lone Star FC|Junior Lone Star]]
|[[USASA]]
|W,
|-
|2nd Round
|vs. [[Harrisburg City Islanders]]
|[[United Soccer League|USL]]
|L,
|-
|rowspan="3" |2018
Line 232 ⟶ 236:
|@ [[AFC Ann Arbor]]
|[[National Premier Soccer League|NPSL]]
|W,
|-
|2nd Round
|@ [[Charlotte Independence]]
|[[United Soccer League|USL]]
|W,
|-
|3rd Round
|@ [[North Carolina FC]]
|[[United Soccer League|USL]]
|L,
|-
|2022
Line 249 ⟶ 253:
|vs. [[Lansdowne Yonkers FC]]
|[[Eastern Premier Soccer League|EPSL]]
|L,
|-
|rowspan=2|2023
Line 255 ⟶ 259:
|1st Round
|@ [[West Chester United SC]]
|[[United
|W, 3–1
|-
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|@ [[Maryland Bobcats FC]]
|[[National Independent Soccer Association|NISA]]
|L,
|-
|}
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===Current roster===
''As of
{{Football squad start}}
{{Fs player | no=1 | nat=GER | pos=GK | name=[[Felix Schafer]]|other=}}
{{Fs player | no=2 | nat=USA | pos=DF | name=[[Galen Flynn]]|other=}}
{{Fs player | no=3 | nat=
{{Fs player | no=4 | nat=
{{Fs player | no=
{{Fs player | no=
{{Fs player | no=7 | nat=ITA | pos=MF | name=[[Leonardo D'Ambrosio]]|other=}}
{{Fs player | no=8 | nat=NOR | pos=MF | name=[[Sander Roed]]|other=}}
{{Fs player | no=9 | nat=USA | pos=FW | name=[[Jack Sarkos]]|other=}}
{{Fs player | no=10 | nat=ITA | pos=FW | name=[[Alessandro Arlotti]]|other=}}
{{Fs player | no=11 | nat=
{{Fs player | no=
{{Fs player | no=
{{Fs player | no=
{{Fs player | no=
{{Fs player | no=
{{Fs player | no=
{{Fs player | no=
{{Fs player | no=
{{Football squad mid}}
{{Fs player | no=
{{Fs player | no=
{{Fs player | no=
{{Fs player | no=
{{Fs player | no=
{{Fs player | no=
{{Fs player | no=
{{Fs player | no=
{{Fs player | no=
{{Fs player | no=
{{Fs player | no= | nat=
{{Fs player | no= | nat=
{{Fs player | no= | nat=
{{Fs player | no= | nat=USA | pos=DF | name=[[Dylan Evande]]|other=}}
{{Fs player | no= | nat=USA | pos=FW | name=[[Ryan Peterson (soccer, born 1995)|Ryan Peterson]]|other=}}
{{Fs player | no= | nat=USA | pos=DF | name=[[Raimondo Partito]]|other=}}
{{Fs player | no= | nat=ZIM | pos=DF | name=[[Simbarashe Mazarura]]|other=}}
{{Fs player | no= | nat=ZIM | pos=DF | name=[[Tapiwa Machingauta]]|other=}}
{{Football squad end}}
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''This list of notable former players comprises players who went on to play professional soccer after playing for the team in the Premier Development League, or those who previously played professionally before joining the team.''<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.oceancityfc.com/about-us/ocean-city-nor-easters-in-the-pros|title=Ocean City Nor'easters in the Pros|publisher=Ocean City Nor'easters|date=August 11, 2017}}</ref>
{{columns-list|colwidth=18em|
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Tyler Bellamy]] (
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Michael O'Keeffe (footballer)|Michael O'Keeffe]] (2013)
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[John McCarthy (soccer)|John McCarthy]] (
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Tony Donatelli]] (
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Jamie Franks (soccer)|Jamie Franks]] (2003, 2005)
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Ryan Heins]] (
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Matthew Maher (soccer)|Matthew Maher]] (
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Matthew Nelson (soccer)|Matthew Nelson]] (2002)
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[J.T. Noone]] (2009)
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Ryan Richter]] (
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Jeremiah White]] (2003)
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Adam Williamson]] (2005, 2008)
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Ryan Finley (soccer)|Ryan Finley]] (2008)
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Aaron Dennis]] (2014)
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Steven Miller (soccer)|Steven Miller]] (
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Nathan Bourdeau|Nate Bourdeau]] (2012)
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Tyler Miller (soccer)|Tyler Miller]] (2012)
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Nick Bibbs]] (2012)
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Duke Lacroix]] (
* {{flagicon|CAN}} [[Jordan Murrell]] (2013)
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Ken Tribbett]] (2013)
* {{flagicon|BRB}} [[Keasel Broome]] (2013)
* {{flagicon|COL}} [[Nicolas Perea]] (2013)
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Shawn McLaws]] (
* {{flagicon|DEU}} [[Jason Plumhoff]] (2012, 2014)
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Brendan Hines-Ike]] (2014)
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Mitchell Lurie]] (
* {{flagicon|BRA}} [[Victor Araujo]] (2015)
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Derek Luke (soccer)|Derek Luke]] (2015)
Line 339 ⟶ 351:
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Eric Schoendorf]] (2015)
* {{flagicon|JAM}} [[Chevaughn Walsh]] (2016)
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Christopher Williams (soccer)|Chris Williams]] (
* {{flagicon|ZAM}} [[Mutaya Mwape]] (2016)
* {{flagicon|POR}} [[Martim Galvão]] (2016)
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Miguel Jaime]] (2016)
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Harry Swartz]] (2015)
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Max Hemmings]] (
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Todd Morton]] (
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[
* {{flagicon|ARG}} [[Emil Cuello]] (2016)
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Logan Ketterer]] (2016)
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Mike Kirk (soccer)|Mike Kirk]] (2016)
* {{flagicon|GHA}} [[Oscar Umar]] (
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Logan Ketterer]] (2016)
* {{flagicon|HAI}} [[Fredlin Mompremier]] (
* {{flagicon|CAN}} [[Frantzly Zephirin]] (2017)
* {{flagicon|ENG}} [[Imre Varadi]] (1997)
* {{flagicon|ENG}} [[Deri Corfe]] (
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Keegan Meyer]] (2019)
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Simon Becher]] (2021)
Line 361 ⟶ 373:
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Jahmali Waite]] (2021)
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Claudio Repetto]] (2019)
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Ben Martino]] (2022)
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Nick Pariano]] (2022–23)
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Jeorgio Kocevski]] (2022)
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Montel McKenzie]] (2021)
}}
Line 386 ⟶ 402:
|[[USISL D-3 Pro League]]
| style="background:#b3b7ff;"|[[1998 USISL D-3 Pro League|1st, Mid Atlantic]]
|[[1998 USISL D-3 Pro League#Playoffs|Division
|''did not qualify''
|-
Line 400 ⟶ 416:
|[[USL D-3 Pro League]]
|[[2000 USISL D-3 Pro League|2nd, Northern]]
|[[2000 USISL D-3 Pro League#Playoffs|Conference
|''did not qualify''
|-
Line 428 ⟶ 444:
|[[Premier Development League|USL PDL]]
| style="background:#b3b7ff;"|[[2004 PDL season|1st, Northeast]]
|[[2004 PDL season#Playoffs|Conference
|[[2004 Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup|2nd Round]]
|-
Line 437 ⟶ 453:
|[[Premier Development League|USL PDL]]
|[[2005 PDL season|2nd, Northeast]]
|[[2005 PDL season#Playoffs|Conference
|[[2005 Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup|3rd Round]]
|-
Line 451 ⟶ 467:
|[[Premier Development League|USL PDL]]
|[[2007 PDL season|2nd, Mid Atlantic]]
|[[2007 PDL season#Playoffs|Conference
|[[2007 Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup|2nd Round]]
|-
Line 465 ⟶ 481:
|[[Premier Development League|USL PDL]]
|[[2009 PDL season|3rd, Northeast]]
|[[2009 PDL season#Playoffs|Conference
|[[2009 Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup|3rd Round]]
|-
Line 488 ⟶ 504:
|[[Premier Development League|USL PDL]]
| style="background:#b3b7ff;"|[[2012 PDL season|1st, Mid Atlantic]]
|[[2012 PDL season#Playoffs|Conference
|''did not qualify''
|-
Line 549 ⟶ 565:
|[[USL League Two]]
|[[2021 USL League Two season|2nd, Mid Atlantic]]
|Conference
|''did not qualify''
|-
Line 556 ⟶ 572:
|[[USL League Two]]
|style="background:#b3b7ff;"|[[2022 USL League Two season|1st, Mid Atlantic]]
|Conference
|[[2022 Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup|1st Round]]
|-
|2023
|4
|[[USL League Two]]
|style="background:#b3b7ff;"|[[2023 USL League Two season|1st, Mid Atlantic]]
|Conference Final
|[[2023 U.S. Open Cup|2nd Round]]
|-
|2024
|4
|[[USL League Two]]
|style="background:#b3b7ff;"|[[2023 USL League Two season|1st, Mid Atlantic]]
|Conference quarterfinals
|''did not qualify''
|}
==Honors==
* [[2023 USL League Two season|2023 USL League Two Mid-Atlantic Division Champions]]
* [[2022 USL League Two season|2022 USL League Two Mid-Atlantic Division Champions]]
* [[2024 USL League Two season|2024 USL League Two Mid-Atlantic Division Champions]]
* [[2016 PDL season|2016 USL PDL Eastern Conference Champions]]
* [[2013 PDL season|2013 USL PDL Eastern Conference Champions]]
Line 584 ⟶ 616:
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Mike Pellegrino]] (2007–2008) Record: 15–8–9<ref name="oceancityfc1"/>
* {{flagicon|ENG}} [[Neil Holloway]] (2005–2006, 2009–2011) Record: 32–17–15<ref name="oceancityfc1"/>
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Tim Oswald]] (2012–2016) Record:
* {{flagicon|ENG}} [[John Thompson (soccer coach)|John Thompson]] (2017–2018) Record:
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Kevin Nuss]] (2019) Record:
* {{flagicon|IRE}} [[Alan McCann]] (2021) Record:
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Kevin Nuss]] (2022) Record:
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Matt Perrella]] (2023) Record: 8–1–5
==Stadium<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://oceancityfc.com/men/schedule|title = Ocean City Nor'easters 2022 USL League Two schedule|date = 27 January 2022}}</ref>==
[[Carey Stadium]] ("The Beach House") in [[Ocean City, New Jersey]] has been the primary home for the Ocean City Nor'easters for the majority of the club's history with the exception of the 2001, 2003 and 2004 seasons. In 2002, the season was split between Carey Stadium and Community Park at Rutgers-Camden University in Newark, NJ. Since 2005, when the club made its permanent home at Carey Stadium, the Nor'easters have had to play eight games at the nearby Tennessee Avenue Soccer Complex in [[Ocean City, New Jersey]] due to scheduling conflicts and when the turf at [[Carey Stadium]] was being replaced.
Located a little more than 200 meters from the Atlantic Ocean, only one minor league sports team in the country plays closer to an ocean than the Nor'easters do (Minor league baseball team [[Pensacola Blue Wahoos]] in [[Pensacola, Florida]])<ref name="Carey Stadium history">{{cite web | url=https://oceancityfc.com/facilities/carey-stadium | title=Carey Stadium ("The Beach House") | date=21 April 2017 }}</ref>
'''1997'''<br />
Line 642 ⟶ 677:
|2003
|[[2004 MLS SuperDraft]]
|Round 3 (24th
|[[New England Revolution]]
|-
Line 649 ⟶ 684:
|2004, 2011
|[[2005 MLS Supplemental Draft]]
|Round 3 (30th
| [[New York Red Bulls|Metrostars]]
|-
Line 656 ⟶ 691:
|2003, 2004
|[[2006 MLS Supplemental Draft]]
|Round 3 (31st
| [[New York Red Bulls|Metrostars]]
|-
Line 663 ⟶ 698:
|2004,2005
|[[2006 MLS Supplemental Draft]]
|Round 3 (32nd
|Houston 1836 ([[Houston Dynamo]])
|-
Line 670 ⟶ 705:
|2005, 2008
|[[2006 MLS Supplemental Draft]]
|Round 3 (35th
|[[New England Revolution]]
|-
Line 677 ⟶ 712:
|2005
|[[2007 MLS Supplemental Draft]]
|Round 2 (16th
|[[Kansas City Wizards]]
|-
Line 684 ⟶ 719:
|2006
|[[2007 MLS Supplemental Draft]]
|Round 4 (46th
|[[New York Red Bulls]]
|-
Line 691 ⟶ 726:
|2003, 2005
|[[2009 MLS SuperDraft]]
|Round 4 (49th
|[[Chivas USA]]
|-
|[[Ryan Richter]]
|La Salle
|2008–2010
|[[2011 MLS Supplemental Draft]]
|Round 1 (5th
|[[Philadelphia Union]]
|-
| [[Steven Miller (soccer)|Steven Miller]]
|Colgate
|
|[[2012 MLS Supplemental Draft]]
|Round 3 (39th
|[[Montreal Impact (2012–2020)|Montreal Impact]]
|-
Line 712 ⟶ 747:
|2008
|[[2013 MLS SuperDraft]]
|Round 1 (9th
|[[Columbus Crew SC]]
|-
Line 719 ⟶ 754:
|2012
|[[2015 MLS SuperDraft]]
|Round 2 (33rd
|[[Seattle Sounders FC]]
|-
Line 726 ⟶ 761:
|2013
|[[2015 MLS SuperDraft]]
|Round 3 (46th
|[[San Jose Earthquakes]]
|-
Line 733 ⟶ 768:
|2013
|[[2015 MLS SuperDraft]]
|Round 3 (57th
|[[Real Salt Lake]]
|-
|[[Shawn McLaws]]
|Coastal Carolina
|2013–14
|[[2015 MLS SuperDraft]]
|Round 3 (59th
|[[New York Red Bulls]]
|-
|[[Mitchell Lurie]]
|Rutgers
|2014–2015
|[[2016 MLS SuperDraft]]
|Round 3 (44th
|[[Philadelphia Union]]
|-
Line 754 ⟶ 789:
|2014
|[[2016 MLS SuperDraft]]
|Round 3 (55th
|[[Montreal Impact (2012–2020)|Montreal Impact]]
|-
Line 761 ⟶ 796:
|2013
|[[2016 MLS SuperDraft]]
|Round 3 (59th
|[[Toronto FC]]
|-
Line 768 ⟶ 803:
|2015
|[[2016 MLS SuperDraft]]
|Round 4 (63rd
|[[Colorado Rapids]]
|-
|[[Eric Klenofsky]]
|Monmouth
|2014–15
|[[2017 MLS SuperDraft]]
|Round 2 (34th
|[[D.C. United]]
|-
Line 782 ⟶ 817:
|2016
|[[2017 MLS SuperDraft]]
|Round 4 (71st
|[[Columbus Crew SC]]
|-
|[[Andre Morrison]]
|Hartford
|2015–16
|[[2018 MLS SuperDraft]]
|Round 3 (69th
|[[Toronto FC]]
|-
Line 796 ⟶ 831:
|2016
|[[2019 MLS SuperDraft]]
|Round 1 (19th
|[[LA Galaxy]]
|-
|[[Deri Corfe]]
|Wright State
|2018–19
|[[2020 MLS SuperDraft]]
|Round 2 (41st
|[[New York Red Bulls]]
|-
Line 810 ⟶ 845:
|2019
|[[2020 MLS SuperDraft]]
|Round 2 (43rd
|[[New England Revolution]]
|-
Line 817 ⟶ 852:
|2021
|[[2022 MLS SuperDraft]]
|Round 1 (16th
|[[Vancouver Whitecaps FC]]
|-
Line 824 ⟶ 859:
|2018
|[[2022 MLS SuperDraft]]
|Round 3 (62nd
|[[FC Dallas]]
|-
|[[Joshua Bolma]]
|Maryland
|2021
|[[2023 MLS SuperDraft]]
|Round 1 (4th overall)
|[[New England Revolution]]
|-
|[[Abdi Salim]]
|Syracuse
|2022
|[[2023 MLS SuperDraft]]
|Round 1 (17th overall)
|[[Orlando City SC]]
|-
|[[Luis Grassow]]
|Kentucky
|2021
|[[2023 MLS SuperDraft]]
|Round 2 (47th overall)
|[[Orlando City SC]]
|-
|[[MD Myers]]
|Rutgers / High Point
|2021–22
|[[2023 MLS SuperDraft]]
|Round 3 (66th overall)
|[[New York City FC]]
|-
|[[Andrew Privett]]
|Penn State
|2021
|[[2023 MLS SuperDraft]]
|Round 3 (69th overall)
|[[Charlotte FC]]
|-
|[[Jeorgio Kocevski]]
|Syracuse
|2022
|[[2024 MLS SuperDraft]]
|Round 1 (21st overall)
|[[Orlando City SC]]
|-
|[[Josh Jones (soccer)|Josh Jones]]
|Louisville
|2023
|[[2024 MLS SuperDraft]]
|Round 2 (47th overall)
|[[Real Salt Lake]]
|}
Line 834 ⟶ 918:
* {{official website|http://www.oceancityfc.com}}
* [http://oceancityfc.com/men/schedule Nor'easters All-Time Results]
* [https://oceancityfc.demosphere-secure.com/_files/history/ocean-city-noreasters-
* [https://oceancityfc.demosphere-secure.com/_files/history/ocean-city-noreasters-
* [https://oceancityfc
* [https://oceancityfc.demosphere-secure.com/_files/history/ocean-city-noreasters-all-time-GK-stats.pdf Ocean City Nor'easters All-Time Goalkeeper Stats]
* [https://oceancityfc.demosphere-secure.com/_files/history/ocean-city-noreasters-all-time
{{Ocean City, New Jersey}}
{{Pittsburgh Riverhounds}}
|