me neither, weird looking field too, looks like a plastic field, no grass, and players don't wear spikes, by the looks of it with the mcdonalds ad it's the u.s. sometime in the early to mid eighties probably judging by the quality of the photo and the players physique and fans haircuts, weird like i said though the artificial field because I didn't know there were any that back, must have hurt the players real bad to play under such conditions, even by todays standards artificial terains make players very injury prone. From what I can tell it's glass shield between players and fans, very unlikely to almost impossible in europe and by the size of it and the fans closeness it looks like it's been played indoors.
Enough detective work, spill the beans journey!
Ok checked the url zungulvforce, that in the beggining didn't make any sense, but i noticed the word force on the players shirts, so i reckoned the v. stood for versus and zungul must be the players name.
Steve Zungul
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Slavisa "Steve" Zungul (born July 28, 1954 in Yugoslavia) is a Croat soccer player, who spent most of his career playing in the United States.
Zungul played for the Golden Bay Earthquakes of the North American Soccer League in 1983 and 1984, winning the NASL MVP Award in 1984, the league's last season. Zungul registered 20 goals and 10 assists in 24 games that season, but could not keep the Earthquakes out of the bottom of the Western Conference.
Besides playing outdoors in the NASL, Zungul was clearly one of the best players in American indoor soccer throughout the 80's.
Zungul led the MISL in scoring in 1980, after finishing second in 1979, while playing for the New York Arrows in both seasons. Zungul would dominate the league for the next four years, leading the league in scoring each year from 1980 to 1983. After focusing on the NASL for a year in 1984, he returned to the MISL to lead the league again in 1985 and 1986. It was not until 1987 that his run finally came to a close, as another indoor luminary, the Dallas Sidekicks' Tatu, took Zungul's place at the top of the scoring charts. Zungul was also named the league's MVP from 1979-1982, and then again in 1985 and 1986.
Zungul earned 14 caps for Yugoslavia and played in Euro 76.
Very interesting I learned quite a bit about the league by reading around, six players, surprisingly high attendances at around seven thousand per game average in all years, in the early years even competing in some states with mlb and the national bussiness association basketball...it pretty pathetic though that the u.s. couldn't put together a proper government regulated soccer league and had all those splits and sub splits and different competing leagues open to entrepreneurial risk taking.
Jack.