
Aug. 10 (2013)
A gathering of 54,184, at the time the largest ever for a soccer match in Missouri, sees Real Madrid defeat Inter Milan, 3-0, at the Edward Jones Dome.

Aug. 9 (2012)
St. Louis native Becky Sauerbrunn plays the final 10 minutes plus added time in the USA’s 2-1 victory over Japan in the women’s soccer gold medal match at the 2012 Olympics.

Aug. 8 (1966)
St. Louis is one of nine cities announced as homes of franchises for the new National Professional Soccer League, which will begin play in 1967. The NPSL will merge with the United Soccer Association in December 1967 to form the North American Soccer League.

Aug. 7 (1968)
Casey Frankiewicz leads the St. Louis Stars to an important 3-1 NASL win over the Kansas City Spurs. Frankiewicz, the Stars’ leading scorer, knocks in the game’s first goal. The outcome evens the Stars’ record at 10-10-5 and keeps them alive in the race for a playoff berth.

Aug. 6 (1998)
St. Louisan Steve Ralston scores in the 12th minute to start the Tampa Bay Mutiny on the way to a 3-1 victory over their cross-state rivals, the Miami Fusion, in a Major League Soccer match at Houlihan Stadium before 6,511 fans.

Aug. 5 (2000)
A new professional indoor soccer team in St. Louis with an old name — the Steamers — loses its first game, 8-5, to the Arizona Thunder at Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum in Phoenix.

Aug. 4 (2017)
St. Louisan Julie King sets the Boston Breakers’ record for most games played. A defender, she plays 95 games for the Breakers through the 2017 season. She will end her NWSL career in 2020 with 97 games played, third-most of any St. Louisan.

Aug. 3 (1969)
The foreign-player-laden Kansas City Spurs, who will go on to win the league championship, get a scare from the mostly St. Louis lineup of the St. Louis Stars before prevailing, 3-1, in an oddly structured 1969 North American Soccer League season.

Aug. 2 (1924)
Soccer pioneer and future U.S. Soccer Hall of Famer Tom Cahill (pictured), who spent his early life in St. Louis and profoundly influenced the growth of the sport there, strikes a major blow against the U.S. Football Association (today’s U.S. Soccer Federation). Cahill convinces one of the nation’s two major professional leagues, the American Soccer League of the eastern United States, to follow the lead of the St. Louis League and pull out of the National Challenge Cup (today’s Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup).

Aug. 1 (1959)
Kutis ties St. Andres of Detroit, 2-2, to win its fourth straight U.S. Amateur Cup. The two-game series is decided on goal differential. Kutis won the opener, 5-0, July 25.

July 31 (1979)
The year-old Major Indoor Soccer League awards a franchise to St. Louis. The team has a name (the Steamers), a logo designed by Bill McDermott, an owner (Marvin Mann of New Jersey), a general manager (Steve Weaver, former PR director of the NASL’s St. Louis Stars), and a home (the Checkerdome) — but no players and no coach.

July 30 (2017)
Fire and Ice Soccer Club of Belleville, Ill., wins the Women’s Premier Soccer League title with a come-from-behind 2-1 win over the Gulf Coast Texans in Norco, Calif. Kelsey Dinges (pictured) scores both goals.

July 29 (1948)
The opening ceremonies for the first summer Olympics since 1936 include five soccer players from St. Louis in the parade of all Olympic athletes at London’s Wembley Stadium: Bob Annis, Ray Beckman, Bill Bertani, Charley Colombo and Gino Pariani. St. Louisan Justin Keenoy is a referee for the Olympic soccer tournament.

July 28 (1991)
J.B. Marine becomes the first and only St. Louis team to win the U-19 national soccer championship for girls by defeating Fairfax, Va., in the final in Omaha, Neb. The game is decided on penalty kicks after overtime ends in a 2-2 draw.

July 27 (1996)
Mark Filla’s 51st-minute goal propels Scott Gallagher of St. Louis to a 1-0 win in the final of the McGuire U-19 Cup over Philadelphia’s F.C. Delco in Indianapolis.

July 26 (1930)
St. Louisan and future U.S. Soccer Hall of Famer Ralph Tracey profoundly influences the destiny of the U.S. team in the semifinals of the first World Cup vs. Argentina. Tracey, a center halfback, suffers a severe knee injury and can’t continue in the second half. The 10-man U.S. team gives up five goals and loses, 6-1. The semifinal appearance in 1930 remains the farthest the United States has advanced in the men’s World Cup.

July 25 (2012)
St. Louis native Jack Mackenzie, one of the winningest coaches in college soccer history, steps down as head coach at Quincy. His Quincy College/Quincy University teams compiled a combined record of 516-258-76 and nine NAIA championships over his 43 seasons as head coach.

July 24 (1977)
The St. Louis Stars shower goals on the Minnesota Kicks on a rainy afternoon at Washington University’s Francis Field. The Stars boot the Kicks, 4-0, before 6,251 soggy fans.

July 23 (1961)
Kutis, perhaps the best soccer team of its time in the United States, coasts to its sixth consecutive U.S. Amateur Cup championship by tying the Hartford (Conn.) Italian-American Stars, 3-3, in Hartford in the second game of a two-game series decided on total goals.

July 22 (1974)
Using an all-St. Louis lineup, the St. Louis Stars defeat West German powerhouse Werder Bremen, 1-0, before 8,228 fans at Busch Stadium. The game’s only goal comes from Mike Seerey (pictured) off Jim Bokern’s corner kick in the 37th minute.