Northern Virginia FC

(Redirected from Northern Virginia Royals)

Northern Virginia FC (formerly Northern Virginia Royals and Evergreen FC, and commonly known as NoVa FC) is an American soccer club from Leesburg, Virginia competing in USL League Two, USL W League, Eastern Premier Soccer League and Major Arena Soccer League 3.

Northern Virginia FC
Full nameNorthern Virginia Football Club
Founded1998; 26 years ago (1998) as Northern Virginia Royals
StadiumSegra Field
Leesburg, Virginia
Capacity5,000
LeagueUSL League Two
USL W League
Eastern Premier Soccer League
MASL3
20244th, Chesapeake Division
Playoffs: DNQ
Websitehttp://www.novafc.org/

The club's women's team was known as the Northern Virginia Majestics, who played in the women's USL W-League, and fielded a team in the USL's Super-20 League, a league for players 17 to 20 years of age run under the United Soccer Leagues umbrella. Throughout their recent history, NVFC previously enjoyed minor league affiliation with D.C. United, the nearby Major League Soccer franchise.[1]

History

edit

Professional

edit

Northern Virginia FC was founded in 1998 and joined the USISL D-3 Pro League as an expansion franchise in 1998, entering the team under the name Northern Virginia Royals.[2] They ended their first season in 7th place in the Atlantic Division with a 5–12–1 record.[3] In their second season, they improved, winning 10 of their 18 regular season games, finishing fourth in the Atlantic Division and also qualified for their first US Open Cup campaign in 1999, where they were upset in the first round by Florida PDL side Cocoa Expos 5–3.[4] In the playoffs they beat divisional rivals South Carolina Shamrocks 2–1 in the first round before falling 4–0 to Charlotte in the conference semi-final. The 1998 season and the Royals were featured in the book "Unlucky: A Season of Struggle in Minor League Professional Soccer" by Dave Ungrady, who trained and played briefly for the Royals as well[5][6]

The D-3 Pro League became the USL Pro Select League in 2003, and the Royals finished bottom of the 3-team Southern Division, with just 6 wins for the year. The USL Pro Select League became the USL Second Division in 2005, and dispensed with divisions in favor of a single-table format; for the Royals, this proved to be yet another disastrous season.

Move to PDL

edit

After finishing bottom of the league in the USL Second Division, the Royals management took the decision to self-relegate themselves to the USL Premier Development League for the 2006 season.[7] The Royals won their first match in the amateur PDL 3–1 over West Virginia Chaos, ultimately finishing fourth in the Mid Atlantic Division in their debut 2006 season.

The Northern Virginia Royals were inducted into the USL Soccer Hall of Fame in 2007.[7]

Partnership with D.C. United

edit

In 2015, the Royals rebranded as Evergreen FC and partnered with Major League Soccer club D.C. United and formed a joint PDL team called D.C. United U-23, who combined their NPSL side with the Royals, to play in the PDL, finishing fifth in the Mid-Atlantic Division.[8][9]

Evergreen Hammers

edit

After the 2015 season, the Royals transferred their operations and relocated to Loudon County, Virginia in 2016 playing under the Evergreen FC banner as the Evergreen Hammers.[7][10]

Northern Virginia FC

edit

For the 2021 season, Evergreen which was already part of the Northern Virginia FC club, renamed the USL League Two club to sit under the NoVa FC banner.[11] NoVa FC had already operated teams under that name in the lower level United Premier Soccer League and Eastern Premier Soccer League.[12]

On 27 August 2021, NoVa FC announced they would be reviving the women's program with a new side in the USL W League beginning in 2022.[13]

Logo history

edit
 
Logo History

Year-by-year

edit

Professional/USL League Two

edit
Year Division League Regular Season Playoffs U.S. Open Cup
Northern Virginia Royals
1998 3 USISL D-3 Pro League 7th, Atlantic did not qualify did not qualify
1999 USL D-3 Pro League 4th, Atlantic Conference Semifinals 1st Round
2000 7th, Southern did not qualify 2nd Round
2001 4th, Southern did not qualify did not qualify
2002 4th, Southern did not qualify did not qualify
2003 USL Pro Soccer League 3rd, Southern did not qualify did not qualify
2004 3rd, Southern did not qualify did not qualify
2005 USL Second Division 9th did not qualify did not qualify
2006 4 USL PDL 4th, Mid Atlantic did not qualify did not qualify
2007 7th, Mid Atlantic did not qualify did not qualify
2008 5th, Mid Atlantic did not qualify did not qualify
2009 7th, Mid Atlantic did not qualify did not qualify
2010 5th, Mid Atlantic did not qualify did not qualify
2011 2nd, South Atlantic Conference Quarterfinals did not qualify
2012 7th, South Atlantic did not qualify did not qualify
2013 3rd, South Atlantic did not qualify did not qualify
2014 6th, Mid Atlantic did not qualify did not qualify
Year Division League Regular Season Playoffs U.S. Open Cup
D.C. United U-23
2015 4 USL PDL 5th, Mid Atlantic did not qualify did not qualify
Evergreen FC
2016 4 USL PDL 7th, Mid Atlantic did not qualify did not qualify
2017 7th, Mid Atlantic did not qualify did not qualify
2018 6th, Mid Atlantic did not qualify did not qualify
2019 USL League Two 8th, Mid Atlantic did not qualify did not qualify
2020 Season cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic
Northern Virginia FC
2021 4 USL League Two 3rd, Mid Atlantic did not qualify did not qualify
2022 3rd, Chesapeake did not qualify did not qualify
2023 2nd, Chesapeake did not qualify did not qualify
2024 4th, Chesapeake did not qualify did not qualify

Eastern Premier Soccer League

edit
Year Division League Regular Season Record (W-D-L) Playoffs U.S. Open Cup*
2020–21 5 Eastern Premier Soccer League 2nd, Mid-Atlantic 6–0–1 did not qualify 2nd Round
2021–22 1st, Mid-Atlantic 12–0–1 Champion 4th Qualifying Round
2022–23 1st, Mid-Atlantic 10–0–0 Champion 4th Qualifying Round

*Club entered in local qualifying round

Major Arena Soccer League 3

edit
Year Division League Regular Season Record (W-L-T) Playoffs
2021–22 3 Major Arena Soccer League 3 1st, East 10–0–0 Champion
2022–23 Major Arena Soccer League 3 1st, East 7–2–0 Champion

USL W League

edit
Year Division League Regular Season Record (W-L-T) Playoffs
2022 4 USL W League 5th, Mid Atlantic 1–7–2 did not qualify
2023 USL W League 3rd, Mid Atlantic 6–0–5 did not qualify
2024 USL W League 6th, Mid Atlantic 4–8–0 did not qualify

Honors

edit

League

edit

Cups

edit

Statistics

edit

Career USL 2 Goal Leaders

edit
Rank Player Goals Career span
1 AJ Sheta 13 2016-
2 JP Ayolmbong 12 2022-
3 Vagner Marquis 11 2022-
4 Tyler Clegg 8 2018-2022
5 KJ Nadeau 7 2019-
6 Bernardo Majano 6 2016-2019
6 Martin Ngoh 6 2021
8 DJ Charlton 5 2018-2019
9 Luke Campbell 4 2021-
9 Connor Coward 4 2016-2017
9 Jhonny de Souza 4 2018-
9 John Emmons 4 2017-2018
9 Lewis Long 4 2017
14 Samuel Biyo 3 2018
14 Graydon Hester 3 2016-2017
14 Iliass Laghjibi 3 2022-
14 Declan Quill 3 2023-
14 Alton West 3 2021-

*Through 2023 USL 2 Season

Head coaches

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "Royals Owner Mo Sheta Inducted in USL Hall of Fame". Northern Virginia Royals.
  2. ^ Kuhns, Will (April 10, 1998). "Local Players, Coach Gonzalo make Royal Entrance to USISL". Washington Post.
  3. ^ "USL Pro Media Guide". United Soccer League. 2012.
  4. ^ "U.S. Open Cup: First-round result (June 10)". Soccer America. June 11, 1999.
  5. ^ Holroyd, Steve (December 28, 2017). "Putting the book in: American soccer literature to read this winter". The Philly Soccer Page.
  6. ^ Edwards, Bob (April 28, 1999). "Soccer". NPR.
  7. ^ a b c "Evergreen FC formerly Northern Virginia Royals". Northern Virginia Royals.
  8. ^ Candeloro, Christian (May 15, 2015). "New York Red Bulls and D.C. United U23 Join PDL". Ocean City FC. Archived from the original on September 24, 2015.
  9. ^ "D.C. United Under-23 team to compete in Premier Development League in 2015". D.C. United. February 19, 2015.
  10. ^ "Next-Level Soccer: Evergreen Hammers Host Final Game Saturday". Loudoun Now. June 22, 2016.
  11. ^ "UNVEILING THE SCHEDULE: USL League Two will kick off May 1". Front Row Soccer. February 25, 2021.
  12. ^ "EPSL Welcomes Northern Virginia FC". EPSL. August 26, 2020.
  13. ^ "Northern Virginia FC Announced as Newest Club to Join USL W League". www.uslwleague.com. Retrieved August 27, 2021.
  14. ^ Royals Hire Burke as PDL Coach
edit