Edmonton Scottish

Canadian soccer club From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Edmonton Scottish Soccer Club, better known as Edmonton Scottish, is a Canadian semi-professional soccer club based in Edmonton, Alberta.

Full nameEdmonton Scottish Soccer Club
NicknamesEllerslie Boot Boys
Tartans
Short nameSCO
Founded
List
  • 11 April 1907; 118 years ago (11 April 1907), as Edmonton Caledonians Athletic Club
    23 May 1937; 88 years ago (23 May 1937), as Edmonton Scottish Soccer Club
Quick facts Full name, Nicknames ...
Edmonton Scottish SC
Full nameEdmonton Scottish Soccer Club
NicknamesEllerslie Boot Boys
Tartans
Short nameSCO
Founded
List
  • 11 April 1907; 118 years ago (11 April 1907), as Edmonton Caledonians Athletic Club
    23 May 1937; 88 years ago (23 May 1937), as Edmonton Scottish Soccer Club
StadiumHamish Black Field
Ellerslie, Edmonton, Alberta
Capacity1,612
Coordinates53°24′13″N 113°29′21″W
Head CoachPaul Hamilton (League1)
John Pegg (AMSL)
2025L1AB, 5th (men)
L1AB, 8th (women)
Websitehttps://www.scottishunited.com/
Current season
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They competed in League1 Alberta from 2023 to 2025 using its youth affiliate's moniker Scottish United, the club has also competed continuously in the Alberta Major Soccer League (AMSL) since 1992 – simultaneously fielding reserve squads and adult teams across several leagues within the Edmonton and District Soccer Association (EDSA).[1][2][3] The teams train at the Edmonton Soccer Dome and play home matches at Hamish Black Field, both of which are located at Grant MacEwan Park in the Ellerslie area of southeast Edmonton.[4]

In 2016, Edmonton Scottish completed the amateur domestic treble, capping off an undefeated season by winning the Challenge Trophy to become Canada Soccer national champions for the first time — having previously finished as runners-up in 1992, 2012, and 2015.[5][6][7] They are eight-time AMSL league winners and thirteen-time provincial champions, capturing the Bennett Shield in 1913 and the Alberta Soccer Challenge Cup a total of twelve times since 1972.[8][9] The club was recognized by the Canada Soccer Hall of Fame in 2019 as an Organisation of Distinction, and in 2021 it was announced that they have formed a semi-professional team and would begin seeking entry to an interprovincial league – eventually joining the League1 Canada pyramid in 2023.[10][11][12]

The club is affiliated with nine-time Jubilee Trophy champions, Edmonton Angels.[13]

History

The club was founded in 1909 by Scottish immigrants who settled in the Edmonton area.[14] The senior men participate in the Alberta Major Soccer League (AMSL), where they have won multiple league titles.[14]

In 1972, they participated in the Challenge Trophy, the Canadian national amateur championship, reaching the quarter-finals.[15] In 1987, they won the bronze medal in the Challenge Trophy, followed by silver medal performances in 1992, 2012, and 2015.[15] In 2016, following an undefeated outdoor season in the AMSL, they were able to capture their first title as Canadian amateur champions.[14][15]

Edmonton Angels logo

The Angels Scottish women's team has won nine Jubilee Trophies as women's national amateur champions,[14] including the inaugural title in 1982, which was the first of five consecutive national titles.[16][17]

In 2021, the club announced their intention to launch semi-professional men's and women's teams with the goal of participated in a new interprovincial league in 2022.[18] In 2023, they became part of the new League1 Alberta, competing under the name Edmonton Scottish United SC.[19] They won the men's league title in 2024, earning qualification to the 2025 Canadian Championship.[20] In March 2026, they announced that they would pause operation of the team and not participate in the 2026 season.[21]

Facilities

Edmonton Scottish are primary tenants of the Edmonton Soccer Dome, pictured here in November 2021.

Grant MacEwan Park

As part of a 1967 Centennial project, the Edmonton Scottish Society acquired a 20-acre parcel of ancestral land in the Ellerslie neighbourhood of Edmonton — an area that had been previously settled by Scots, dating back to as early as 1895.[22] Constructing six soccer fields and a fully fixtured soccer pavilion for its senior teams on the land, the society would officially open the park in 1970 and name it after Lieutenant Governor Grant MacEwan.[23][24]

In 2018, the grounds were named in the United 2026 FIFA World Cup bid as a potential team base camp.[25] In 2019, plans to build a new, 2,200 m2 (24,000 sq ft) banquet hall and clubhouse (including twelve changing rooms, a bar, and a restaurant) were announced, with further plans to build a microstadium revealed in 2021.[26][27][28]

Hamish Black Field

Located within Grant MacEwan Park, Hamish Black Field is a natural grass pitch that measures 105 metres (115 yd) long by 73 metres (80 yd) wide and serves as the home field for Edmonton Scottish teams.[29] For ticketed matches such as the 2021 Summer Series, the club sets up beer gardens and brings in temporary seating, increasing the capacity to 1,612 spectators.[30][31]

Edmonton Soccer Dome

In October 2018, construction was completed on the Edmonton Soccer Dome, a CA$7 million air-supported structure that features a FieldTurf CORE artificial turf playing surface.[32][33] Located in Grant MacEwan Park, the dome is the club's primary training facility and is occasionally used for matches that may have otherwise been impacted by inclement weather.[34][35]

Club culture

Rivalries

Bertie Mee says to Bill Shankly
'Have you heard of Callies from Calgary?'
Shanks says 'no, I don't think so',
'but I've heard of the Ellerslie Boot Boys!'

Da da da dadadada da da da (x3),
We are the Ellerslie Boot Boys!

Edmonton Scottish supporters' chant[36]

Since 1907, the Callies, and later Edmonton Scottish, have maintained three distinct rivalries. Most prominently, the club has had a century-long rivalry with their Scottish Battle of Alberta counterparts, the Calgary Callies, and throughout the 1950s, developed a cross-city rivalry with 1st DFC Victoria following consecutive meetings in Dragoon Cup Finals.[37][38] A third rivalry with Edmonton Ital-Canadians emerged in the 1970s, with the teams often competing for league titles in EDSA, and later the first iteration of AMSL.[39][40]

Supporters

Tartan Army

Members of the Highland Herd Crew pictured cheering on Edmonton Scottish during a League1 Alberta match.

Supporters of Edmonton Scottish are known collectively as the tartan army. For ticketed matches, they are joined by the Clan MacNaughton pipe band, who provide a guard of honour as teams walk onto the pitch.[41]

Highland Herd Crew

In 2023, an independent group of ultras called the Highland Herd Crew was founded by Scottish supporters to cheer on its League1 Alberta and AMSL squads.[42] Occupying the north stands of Hamish Black Field, they quickly became known for their drumming, use of smoke grenades, and tifo displays.

Team colours and crest

Edmonton Scottish SC's crest is inspired by the crest worn by Scotland's national soccer team. A roundel encloses a shield, with the words "Edmonton Scottish Soccer Club" written around the outside. In the shield's background lays a lion rampant surrounded by 11 thistle, representing the national flower of Scotland and the number of players on a soccer pitch. The club's official colours are Big Stone Blue and Polo Blue, which symbolize loyalty, strength, trust, and their connection to Scotland, as well as Maroon Flush, which pays homage to the autumn colours of the nearby Ewing Trail tree tunnel.[43][44]

Kits and sponsorship

Beginning in 2009, Edmonton Scottish have signed deals with specific kit manufacturers, with Macron currently supplying the club until at least 2024.[45] The club wore Scotland replica kits throughout the '80s and '90s, but have since moved back to their traditional dark blue shirts with white shorts and white socks as its home kit — reversing the colours for its change strip.

Having previously partnered with local businesses, the club has gone without shirt or sleeve sponsors since moving to Macron in 2019.[46][47]

The club has permanently retired number 20 in honour of midfielder Chris Kooy, who died from colon cancer in 2020.[48][49]

More information Period, Kit manufacturer ...
Period Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor (chest) Shirt sponsor (sleeve)
2009–2011 Umbro Aristocrat Liquor Mart
2012–2015 Antrim Construction Ashley Fine Floors
2016–2018 Blackrock EMI
2019– Macron
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Players and staff

Edmonton Scottish's starting XI, pictured ahead of a 2021 Summer Series match vs. USL2's FC Manitoba

Roster

Current squad

As of July 31, 2023[50]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

More information No., Pos. ...
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Current staff

  • Canada Kevin Poissant – Head Coach
  • Canada James BlackAssistant Coach

Notable players

This is a list of players who have played for a national team or have played professionally, either before or after joining Edmonton Scottish.

Player development

Scottish United

Founded in 2004, Scottish United serves as the youth extension of Edmonton Scottish.[51] Among the inaugural recipients of the Canada Soccer National Youth Club Licence, its youth teams compete in the Alberta Youth Soccer League (AYSL) and within the Edmonton Minor Soccer Association (EMSA).[52][53][54] As of 2022, its youth teams encompass over 1,300 players — with over 40% of the female teams in the Greater Edmonton Area playing for the club.[55]

Players training in the youth stream receive MLS homegrown player benefits and are generally eligible to play for the first team or reserve squads as youth trialists by age 16.[56][57] In recent years, Scottish United players have gone on trial with FC Edmonton, joined Whitecaps FC Academy, or have graduated from youth soccer to the senior club's AMSL or EDSA teams.[58][59][60]

Broadcasting

In order to provide programming to its members during the COVID-19 pandemic, Edmonton Scottish began its own free, in-house streaming service called Fitba.TV along with its youth affiliate, Scottish United in 2020.[61][62] While the club has since began using its Fitba.TV service to broadcast its 2021 Summer Series home matches, its AMSL matches are live-streamed by CFN Media.[63]

Honours

National competitions

Winners (1): 2016
Runners-up (3): 1992, 2012, 2015

Provincial competitions

League titles

Winners (8): 1994, 2003, 2009, 2012, 2013, 2016, 2022, 2023
Runners-up (8): 1998, 2000, 2001, 2004, 2005, 2011, 2014, 2019
  • Alberta Major Soccer League (1975–1980)
Winners (2): 1975, 1980

Cups

Winners (1): 1913
Runners-up (4): 1908, 1909, 1912, 1926
Runners-up (1): 1935
  • Jack Bushnell League Cup
Runners-up (3): 2000, 2002, 2003
  • John Dolan League Cup
Winners (2): 1976, 1978
  • Mike Traficante Challenge Cup
Winners (12): 1972, 1979, 1987, 1992, 1996, 2012, 2013, 2015, 2016, 2018, 2019, 2023
Runners-up (5): 1993, 1994, 2001, 2010, 2022

Awards

  • Alberta Soccer Golden Shoe
Winners (3): 1992, 2012, 2016

Local competitions

League titles

  • Edmonton City Football League Series
Winners (6): 1908, 1909, 1910, 1912, 1913, 1914
  • Edmonton Senior League Championship
Runners-up (3): 1922, 1926, 1927

Cups and tournaments

  • Charity Shield
Winners (4): 1912, 1913, 1924, 1927
Runners-up (1): 1928
  • Dragoon Cup
Winners (11): 1921, 1926, 1927, 1933, 1934, 1958, 1960, 1963, 1973, 1974, 1975
Runners-up (5): 1925, 1928, 1930, 1959, 1964
  • Germania Cup
Winners (1): 1958
  • Klondike Cup
Winners (1): 1972
Runners-up (1): 1974
  • Vets-Martin Trophy
Winners (3): 1925, 1926, 1927
Runners-up (4): 1928, 1931, 1934, 1936

Record

Year-by-year

More information Season, League ...
Season League Other Competitions Ref.
League Pld W D L GF GA Pts Pos. AMSL League Cup Challenge Cup Challenge Trophy
1992 Outdoor AMSL 17 7 6 4 34 18 20 4th 1st 2nd [66]
1993 Outdoor AMSL 18 11 3 4 40 20 25 3rd 2nd [67]
1994 Outdoor AMSL 18 14 0 4 56 24 28 1st 2nd [68]
1995 Outdoor AMSL [?] [?] [?] [?] [?] [?] [?] [?] 6th [69]
1996 Outdoor AMSL [?] [?] [?] [?] [?] [?] [?] [?] 1st 7th [70]
1997 Outdoor AMSL [?] [?] [?] [?] [?] [?] [?] [?]
1998 Outdoor AMSL 16 12 1 3 57 16 37 2nd 7th [71][72]
1999 Outdoor AMSL 20 6 4 10 39 37 22 5th 5th [73]
2000 Outdoor AMSL 14 8 3 3 26 15 27 2nd 2nd 4th [74]
2001 Outdoor AMSL 14 8 5 1 27 11 29 2nd 5th 2nd [75][76]
2002 Outdoor AMSL 14 8 0 6 26 25 24 3rd 2nd 4th [77][78]
2003 Outdoor AMSL 14 11 1 2 34 15 34 1st 2nd 4th [79][80]
2004 Outdoor AMSL 16 8 3 5 30 24 27 2nd 5th [81][82]
2005 Outdoor AMSL 16 10 3 3 33 13 33 2nd 6th [83][84]
2006 Outdoor AMSL 16 8 2 6 29 21 26 4th 3rd [85][86]
2007 Outdoor AMSL 18 8 4 6 33 30 28 5th 3rd [87][88]
2008 Outdoor AMSL 17 6 2 9 20 29 20 6th 4th [89]
2009 Outdoor AMSL 18 12 2 4 46 20 38 1st 4th [90][91]
2010 Outdoor AMSL 18 9 4 5 27 16 31 3rd 2nd [92]
2011 Outdoor AMSL 14 9 4 1 22 9 31 2nd 3rd [93]
2012 Outdoor AMSL 13 12 0 1 33 10 36 1st 1st 2nd [94]
2013 Outdoor AMSL 14 9 4 1 36 15 31 1st 1st 7th [95]
2014 Outdoor AMSL 14 8 4 2 28 11 28 2nd 4th [96]
2015 Outdoor AMSL 14 7 3 4 29 16 24 3rd 1st 2nd [97]
2016 Outdoor AMSL 14 11 3 0 48 15 36 1st 1st 1st [98]
2017 Outdoor AMSL 14 8 3 3 26 14 27 3rd 3rd [99]
2018 Outdoor AMSL 14 8 3 3 28 12 27 3rd 1st 5th [100]
2019 Outdoor AMSL 17 9 5 3 47 18 32 2nd 1st 4th [101]
2020 Outdoor AMSL Competitions cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic [102][103]
2021 Outdoor AMSL
2022 Outdoor AMSL 15 10 2 3 39 16 32 1st 2nd [104][105]
2023 Outdoor AMSL 12 11 0 1 37 3 33 1st 1st 6th [106]
Totals AMSL 419 248 74 97 930 473
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Prior to 1995, two points were awarded for a win and one point was awarded for a draw

Challenge Trophy

More information Year, Pld ...
Year Pld W D L GF GA Result Ref.
1972 1 0 0 1 0 1 Qualifiers [107]
1979 2 1 0 1 4 2 Qualifiers [108]
1987 3 2 1 0 5 3 3rd
1992 3 2 0 1 2 1 2nd
Soccer New Brunswick 1996 4 1 2 1 3 4 7th
2012 5 3 2 0 7 4 2nd [109]
2013 5 2 0 3 5 9 7th [110]
2015 5 2 2 1 7 5 2nd [111]
2016 5 5 0 0 9 0 1st [112]
2018 5 2 1 2 8 6 5th [113]
2019 5 2 1 2 9 8 4th [114]
2023 5 2 1 2 7 6 6th [115]
Totals 48 24 10 14 66 49
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References

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