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Georgia Revolution FC

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Georgia Revolution FC
Full nameGeorgia Revolution FC
Nickname(s)Revs
Founded2010; 14 years ago (2010)
StadiumWarhawk Stadium
McDonough, Georgia
Capacity3,300
PresidentEric Morrison
Head CoachJack Marchant
LeagueNational Premier Soccer League
20222nd, Southeast Conference
Websitehttp://www.georgiarevolutionfc.com/ pattern_la1=

Georgia Revolution FC is an American soccer club based in McDonough, Georgia, United States. The team competes in the Southeast Conference of the National Premier Soccer League (NPSL), the fourth tier of the United States soccer league system. The NPSL is officially affiliated to the United States Adult Soccer Association (USASA) and qualifies for the U.S. Open Cup. It is generally considered to be the level of competition behind Major League Soccer (MLS), the USL Championship, USL League One, and roughly equal with USL League Two.[1]

History

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The Georgia Revolution FC was founded in 2010 to begin play in the National Premier Soccer League (NPSL), the fourth tier of the American soccer pyramid. The team was created to serve as the top level of the Rockdale Youth Soccer Association.[2] The Revolution defeated Jacksonville United 2–1 in its first game on May 13, 2011.[citation needed]

The Revolution qualified for the 2012 Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup, defeating PDL side Mississippi Brilla on May 15, 2012, on a header goal scored by Hailob Habtom in extra time. They moved on to the next round and faced the NASL's Atlanta Silverbacks, where they lost 1–0 thanks to a goal by Raphael Cox. Later in their season they defeated the reigning NPSL champions, Jacksonville United, 7–3 in a regular season match.

The Revolution would again qualify for the Open Cup in 2013 and see a rematch against second division state rivals, Atlanta Silverbacks, losing 3–2.[3]

Following the 2015 regular season, the team participated in the NPSL playoffs losing to the Atlanta Silverbacks (NPSL). At the end of 2015, the Revolution was sold by the Rockdale Youth Soccer Association to a new ownership group.

In 2016, the Revolution won the inaugural I-20 Cup by defeating the Birmingham Hammers 2–0 on aggregate in the two match tournament.

The 2016–2017 off season brought many changes to the Revs organization. The team was moved from Conyers to McDonough in Henry County, Georgia. The move generated excitement in the local community and brought many more high quality players to the squad. In addition, the Revs Reserves were formed to play in the Atlanta District Amateur Soccer League as a way to develop talent in the local area.

During the 2018 season, the Revs Senior Team's home matches were played at Warhawks Stadium at Henry County High School. This was the first time the team played in a stadium and also live streamed all home games. The team returned to the playoffs for only the third time and made club history by winning its first playoff game 3–2 over the New Orleans Jesters with goals by Ehjayson Henry, Jumar Oakley and Isaac Promise.

In 2019, the club won its first trophy in its history. The 2018/2019 ADASL season saw the Georgia Revolution Reserves win the division 1 championship, winning the trophy and the entry into the 2019-2020 US Open Cup qualifiers. The team competed in the 2019 NPSL summer season, where the club finished 3-1-6 and 5th in the southeast conference, just missing out on the playoffs. On September 21, the reserves team began its US open cup journey away at ATLetic FC in Sandy Springs, Georgia. The Revolution emerged victorious with a 1–0 win. The club was drawn away to Soda City FC of Columbia, South Carolina. The game was played on November 2 with Soda City prevailing 4–2.

In 2020, the NPSL summer season was cancelled due to COVID-19. The club missed out on play until July, when the club joined the NISA Independent Cup, along with Chattanooga FC, Soda City FC, and Savannah Clovers. The club finished 4th in the group, going 0–1–3.

2021 was the best season to date in club history. The squad won the NPSL Southeast conference, finishing the regular season 8-1-1 ranked #9 in the Nation. They went on to win both conference playoff games, defeating LSA on PKs and Georgia Storm 2-1 in the final. In the Regional semi-final, the Revs fell on a late goal 1-2 to Motown FC in Baltimore. The team's performance qualified them for the 2022 US Open Cup. Rev Defender Oier Bernaola was voted the NPSL Player of the Year.

2022 saw the Revs return to the Lamar Hunt US Open Cup, losing a highly contested match to Southern States of the NPSL in Hattiesburg, MS in the first round. The team had another strong performance in NPSL play, earning 2nd place in the Southeast Conference but fell to North Alabama SC 0-1 in the playoffs. Defender George Maxwell earned NPSL Region XI honors and Southeast Conference XI along with teammates Sebastian Doppelhofer, Kimo Lemki, and Callum Schorah.

Colors and badge

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Crest

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In 2016 a new crest was introduced. Paying homage to the history of the team, the new crest keeps the familiar Eagle's Head and patriotic red, white, and blue colors. Transitioning to a circle which unites the entire crest symbolizing the team motto "United We Stand" while highlighting the name Georgia Revolution FC and the year the team was established, 2010.[4]

Colors

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The colors of the Georgia Revolution FC are Red, White, and Blue. For the first five seasons of the club's existence they wore Blue or White Jerseys with matching shorts and red/white stripped or blue/white stripped socks. For 2016, Joma was the Kit Supplier. With that came a change to a Red and White stripped home Jersey and a White away Jersey. Both Jerseys are worn with blue shorts and either blue or white socks. In 2019, Summa Sportwear became the new Kit supplier and our away kit was changed to all blue.

Sponsorship

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Date Primary Jersey Sponsor Kit Manufacturer
2011–2014 Courtesy Ford Stanno
2015 Beasley Pharmacy Stanno
2016 BenchMark Physical Therapy Joma
2017–2018 Eagles Landing Family Practice Joma
2019–2021 Resurgens Orthopaedics Summa Sportswear
2022–present The Sellers Law Firm Summa Sportswear

Club culture

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Rivalries

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When the Georgia Storm FC joined the NPSL in 2021, a new rivalry was born. In the first game ever between the teams, a Revs defender was issued a red card in the first 10 minutes for a hard foul against a Storm player and the rivalry began. The Revs went on to win that game 1-0 with a late goal. The two teams played to a draw in a game later that season and faced off in the Conference Championship, which the Revs won 2-1.

For several years, the Georgia Revolution FC's primary rival were the crosstown Atlanta Silverbacks. The teams first played in the 2012 US Open Cup and again in 2013. When the Silverbacks left the North American Soccer League to join the NPSL in 2016 the rivalry was rekindled but ended when the Silverbacks folded after the 2019 season.

In the past, the club had a burgeoning rivalry with the Birmingham Hammers. The two teams competed annually for the I-20 Cup, a competition instituted by the two clubs. The cup was awarded to the team that had the most points across the teams' meetings throughout the season. The Birmingham Hammers moved to the PDL in 2018.

Supporters

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The major supporters' group is The Uprising.The Uprising was created on April 29, 2017. They are known to "wave flags, set off fan smoke matching our colors, beat drums and provide great support to our players and a great atmosphere to all attendees.”[5] In addition, they have hosted public tailgates before home matches.

Affiliates

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Georgia Revolution FC works with several youth soccer organizations in the Georgia Soccer community; including Lake Country United FC.[6][7] Lake Country FC (formerly Putnam Impact Soccer Club)[8][9] is a highly respected soccer club east of the Atlanta metro area which provides elite soccer, at what is considered by most a lower than the typical cost, in one of the most economically challenged areas of Georgia.[10] Georgia Revolution FC provides support to these affiliates by sharing resources and providing mentoring and access to the teams and members of the coaching staff before and after games and training sessions.

Players

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First-team squad

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As of May 6, 2022[11] Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
GK Austria AUT Sebastian Doppelhofer
GK United States USA Nathaniel Martinez
GK United States USA CJ Wyborn
GK Mexico MEX Daniel Cortes-Reyes
DF United States USA Evan Schroeder
DF England ENG George Maxwell
DF Portugal POR Joao Martinho
DF United States USA James Orson
DF England ENG Craig Chisholm
DF United States USA Skylar Schmidt
DF Uruguay URU Diego Milessa
DF United States USA Justin Deas
DF England ENG Lewis Green
DF Northern Ireland NIR Joel McIlroy
DF Germany GER Lewis Trapp
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF United States USA Martin Saucedo
MF United States USA Justin Guest
MF Germany GER Kimo Lemke
MF England ENG Callum Schorah
MF Sierra Leone SLE Alhaji Tambadu
MF United States USA Sai Tummala
MF Germany GER Kimo Lemke
MF England ENG Iola Jones
MF France FRA Karim Tamimi
FW England ENG Brad Kay
FW Togo TOG Alex Harlley
FW United States USA Piers Ringdahl
FW Spain ESP Javier Bello

Reserve squad

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The GA Revs Reserves were established in 2016 and play in the Atlanta District Amateur Soccer League, Atlanta's oldest and most prestigious local league. The season goes from October through April. The team also participates in the Perrin Cup, an Inter-League knockout style tournament that includes teams from both Divisions and is played throughout the ADASL season.[12]

The purpose of the Revs Reserves is to identify and develop local soccer players who have the potential of playing for the Georgia Revolution FC Senior Team which plays in the National Premier Soccer League (NPSL). The Reserves are an extension of the club, providing players professional training from the NPSL coaching staff to improve the individual players, while maintaining the playing style and philosophy of the Senior Team. The team includes non-college players from the NPSL Team, adding quality of play and value to player development.[13]

2016–2017 Season. The Revs Reserves played a strong first season in the ADASL, achieving a second-place finish in Division II and gaining promotion to Division I. They also advance to the Perrin Cup Semi-Final, losing to defending Champions Arsenal Atlanta. Five new players were promoted from the Revs Reserves to the Senior Team and competed during the 2017 NPSL Season, providing a pathway for players to reach the next level.

2017–2018 Season. Based on the success of the previous year, the Revs U23 Team was created to compete in DIV II of the ADASL. After the end of the NPSL season, three new players were promoted to the Senior Squad. Standout forward Steeve Selso Saint-Duc signed with Los Angeles FC mid-ADASL season.

2018-2019 Season. The Revs added the Revs U21 Team to complete in DIV II of the ADASL. The season was very successful with the Revs Reserves winning the ADASL Championship and entering the 2020 the US Open Cup Qualifiers. Second year returner Clayton Adams signed with Austin Bold FC mid-ADASL season.

2019-2020 Season. The season was cut short due to the COVID pandemic. It was still a successful year for the Revs in the ADASL, seeing the Revs U23s promoted to DIV I of the ADASL.

2020-2021 Season. The Revs Reserves won their second ADASL Champion. The Revs U23s remained in Div I.

2021-2022 Season. The club dropped back down to two ADASL team. The Revs Reserves and Revs U23s both play if Div 1 of the ADASL. The Revs Reserves made it to the 3rd round qualifiers of the Lamar Hunt US Open Cup and won the Perrin Cup. The Revs U23s were relegated back to Div II at the end of the season.

Notable former players

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Staff

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Executive staff

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Position Name
President/GM United States Eric Morrison
Operations United States Rick Zambrana
Marketing / Social Media United States Matt Laczko
Broadcast Team United States Justin Murphy

Technical staff (UPSL)

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Position Name
Head coach United States Alec Morrison
Assistant coach United States Tim Gilbert
Assistant coach United States Eric Diaz

Records

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Team records

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Year-by-Year

Season Domestic League U.S.
Open Cup
Head coach Average
Attendance
League GP W D L Pts Conference Pos. Playoffs
2011 NPSL 10 4 2 4 14 Southeast Conference 2nd Did not qualify Did not enter United States Rafe Mauran 400
2012 NPSL 10 7 1 2 22 Southeast Conference 1st Division Final 2nd round United States John Sprague 400
2013 NPSL 8 4 2 2 14 Sunshine Conference 2nd Did not qualify 1st round United States John Sprague 200
2014 NPSL 10 1 1 8 4 Southeast Conference 6th Did not qualify Did not qualify United States Robin D. Dixon 200
2015 NPSL 10 4 2 4 14 Southeast Conference 3rd Conference Quarterfinal Did not qualify United States Robin D. Dixon 100
2016 NPSL 10 1 2 7 5 South Atlantic Conference 6th Did not qualify Did not qualify Germany Juergen Mauer 125
2017 NPSL 12 0 3 9 3 Southeast Conference 5th Did not qualify Did not qualify United States Chris Mahaffey 250
2018 NPSL 14 5 3 6 18 Southeast Conference 6th Conference Semifinal Did not qualify Republic of Ireland Stephen Magennis 350
2019 NPSL 10 3 1 6 10 Southeast Conference 5th Did not qualify Did not qualify Republic of Ireland Stephen Magennis 350
2020 NISA Independent Cup 3 0 1 2 1 Southeast 4th N/A N/A United States Scott Redding N/A
2021 NPSL 13 10 1 2 25 Southeast Conference Champions Regional semifinal Did not qualify England Ricky Davey 300
2022 NPSL 11 4 4 3 16 Southeast 2nd Conference Semifinal 1st round England Jack Marchant 250
2023 NPSL 12 6 0 6 15 Southeast 2nd Conference Final Did not qualify England Jack Marchant 250

Year-by-Year (Rev Reserves)

Season League Season Perrin Cup US Open Cup League Record (W-D-L) Head Coach
2016–2017 ADASL DIV II 2nd Semi-Finals Did not enter 13–2–1 United States Scott Redding
2017–2018 ADASL DIV I 2nd Round of 16 Did not enter 13–2–3 United States Scott Redding
2018–2019 ADASL DIV I Champions Round of 16 Did not enter 13–1–2 United States Scott Redding
2019–2020 ** ADASL DIV I 7th Round of 8 2nd round Qualifiers 5-4-4 United States Scott Redding
2020-2021 ADASL DIV I Champions N/A N/A 7-1-0 United States Chris Jackson
2021-2022 ADASL DIV I 4th Champions 3rd round Qualifiers 9-4-5 United States Rob Kytan
2022-2023 ADASL DIV I 4th Semi-finals Did not enter 9-5-4 United States Alec Morrison

Year-by-Year (Revs U23)

Season League Season Perrin Cup League Record (W-D-L) Head Coach
2017–2018 ADASL DIV II 6th 1st round 8–5–3 United States Alec Morrison
2018–2019 ADASL DIV II 13th 1st round 5–2–9 United States Alec Morrison
2019–2020 ** ADASL DIV II 1st Round of 8 13-1-2 United States Alec Morrison
2020-2021 ADASL DIV I 7th N/A 2-5-1 United States Alec Morrison
2020-2021 ADASL DIV I 9th Round of 8 3-5-10 United States Alec Morrison
2022-2023 ADASL DIV II 4th Round of 8 11-5-4 United States Tim Gilbert
Fall 2023 UPSL DIV I 2nd N/A 10-0-2 United States Alec Morrison

NOTE: 2019-2020 ADASL Season and the Perrin Cup were ended early due to the COVID-19 outbreak.

Player records

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NPSL Players of the Year[14][15]

Award 2016 2017 2018 2019 2021 2022 2023
MVP United States Scott I. Redding United States George Rodriguez Nigeria Isaac Promise France Toni Tiente England Ollie Peters England George Maxwell England Callum Schorah
Attacker of the Year United States Jarrel Smalls United States Sam Choi Saint Kitts and Nevis Ehjayson Henry United States Jumar Oakley Israel Sagi Hircsh England Callum Schorah United States Aaron Whitten
Defender of the Year United States Adam McCabe Trinidad and Tobago Marcelle Francois England Jack Gurr Italy Gianmaria Fiore England Sam. Pollard England George Maxwell England Tom Wilson
Young Player of the Year United States Bjorn Kammholz United States Carson Oakes France Toni Tiente France Eduardo. Gomes England Mason Tunbridge Austria Sebastian Dopplehofer United States Nathaniel Martinez

All-Time Senior Team Statistical Leaders[16][17]

Stat 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th
Appearances Scott Redding - 79 Aaron Whitten - 38 Sagi Hircsh - 37 Kwandwo Poku - 31 Toni Tiente - 26
Goals Kwandwo Poku - 14 Aaron Whitten - 11 Callum Schorah - 10 Jumar Oakley - 7 Isaac Promise - 7
Assists Craig Chisholm - 9 T: Sagi Hircsh - 7

Aaron Whitten - 7 Callum Schorah - 7

Jack Gurr - 5

Stadium

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References

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  1. ^ "The Unruly Soccer Pyramids of America by Mike Firpo". SoccerNewsday.com. February 10, 2012. Retrieved October 1, 2013.
  2. ^ Robert L. Boggus Jr. "History of the RYSA". RYSA.net. Archived from the original on January 17, 2013. Retrieved June 8, 2013.
  3. ^ Matt Stigall (May 22, 2013). "2013 US Open Cup Second Round: Atlanta Silverbacks top Georgia Revolution again in rematch". TheCup.us. Retrieved June 8, 2013.
  4. ^ "Georgia Revolution FC Facebook Page". Georgia Revolution FC. January 12, 2016.
  5. ^ Darius Goodman (20 July 2017). "Georgia Revolution semi-pro soccer club gaining momentum in Henry County". Henry Herald.
  6. ^ "Georgia Revolution". Protagonist Soccer. Archived from the original on 2019-06-30. Retrieved 2019-06-30.
  7. ^ "Putnam Impact defeats Nexus FC". Eatonton Messenger. 2018-08-09. Archived from the original on 2019-06-30. Retrieved 2019-06-30.
  8. ^ "Rebranded area soccer club to hold tryouts next week". Milledgeville, Georgia: The Union-Recorder. June 1, 2019.
  9. ^ "Lake Country United to hold tryouts". Eatonton Messenger. 2019-05-29. Archived from the original on 2019-06-30. Retrieved 2019-06-30.
  10. ^ "Putnam County GA Economy data". towncharts.com. Archived from the original on June 30, 2019. Retrieved 2019-06-30.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  11. ^ "2021 NPSL Roster – Georgia Revolution FC".
  12. ^ "Home". www.adasl.com.
  13. ^ "Georgia Revolution FC Reserves Join the ADASL". Georgia Revolution FC. Archived from the original on June 16, 2018. Retrieved August 26, 2016.
  14. ^ "Team News: Players of the Year". Georgia Revolution FC. Archived from the original on April 14, 2018. Retrieved August 11, 2016.
  15. ^ "Georgia Revolution 2017 Player Awards". 22 July 2017 – via www.youtube.com.
  16. ^ "Team News: Players of the Year". Georgia Revolution FC. Archived from the original on April 14, 2018. Retrieved August 11, 2016.
  17. ^ "Georgia Revolution 2017 Player Awards". 22 July 2017 – via www.youtube.com.
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