James Berry James Berry

Our 16th Captain of the Match, Daniel McCallum

Daniel captains a team called EWAM (Exceptional Women, Average Men), which promotes gender equality in mixed gender sports. 

Daniel goes above and beyond what it means to be a captain.

He hosts an annual fundraiser for women's reproductive rights, which to date has raised over $22 thousand dollars, and is on the board of WeDoGoodWorks, a charity that furnishes the homes of New Yorkers in need. 

Daniel grew up in Glasgow, where he learned to love football, Glasgow Celtic, and a pint... or two. 

It was only after he moved to NYC, where he's lived for the last 13 years, that he came into his own as a footballer and as an exceptional captain and community leader.

Beyond the on-the-field championships and the off the field accolades, Daniel McCallum has brought together hundreds of people over the years under the umbrella of EWAM and NYC Footy. 

More than anything, this is what it means to be a captain, to create a space through which people can come together.

It's through people like Daniel that we begin to see how far our actions and relationships can ripple and effect change. 

Thank you Captain Daniel!

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Our 17th and Final Captain of the Match: Ben Siegel

Ben Siegel is a born and raised New Yorker and the captain of Left Footed Letdown.

A superlative captain who, more than anything, epitomizes what it means to care; care for the game of soccer, care for his teammates, and above all care for his friends.

Ben has been working in tech and non-profits since he graduated from Northeastern.

Ben's passion for soccer is matched by his interest in history, fantasy, and most importantly food.

Ben now lives in Brooklyn with his partner Sarah, and their two adopted cats, Sir Maxwell and Nora.

Ben's emphatic attitude towards the things and people he cares deeply about are what set him apart as a captain and as a person.

We're so happy that he's been with Footy for so many years, and are looking forward to many more! Thank you captain Ben.

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Neighborhood Spotlight: Chelsea Piers In Prospect Heights

Hello Footy,

NYC Footy’s Winter registration has officially begun so we’re going to be walking you through another one of our neighborhood spotlights.

This time, the brand new Chelsea Piers Field House in Downtown Brooklyn.

We fully expect this field to be our most popular winter location alongside Bedford Armory given it’s prime location and the fact that it’s on indoor turf. So without any delay, here’s are the details.

The Field

Chelsea Piers Field House, Prospect Heights

Chelsea Piers has been expanding their facilities all around the city, so when we heard that they were opening up a field house with an indoor turf field we had to get some field time right away.

Indoor turf is the best of both worlds in the winter, plus everything about the field space is just exceptional. The high walls and ceilings, the trim nets, clear lines, tight turf (sometimes indoor turf gets really loose over time), everything about the Chelsea Piers Field House sets it apart including, as you’ll see below, how easy it is to get to.

The Neighborhood:

The Field House is roughly two blocks from the Barclay’s Center, which means there’s 1001 things to do within walking distance of the facility plus every subway line you can imagine.

We’re going to skip the Chuck E Cheese and Buffalo Wild Wings that are right next door for now and are gonna stick with some of the neighborhood favorites so you and your teammates have places to pop into after the game.

Hanson Dry:

Just north of the fields, and right across from the A/C train station is Hanson Dry, a neighborhood favorite and for good reason.

They’ve got well priced cocktails, a warm, inviting, unpretentious vibe to the space, and a private backyard. It’s the perfect spot for you to hang up your cleats for a drink or two before you hop on the train.

Bilt Bar

Bilt Bar

Bilt Bar is your no-nonsense old school Brooklyn bar. They’ve got excellent cocktails, a friendly staff, and possibly the most important thing they’re right on the same block as the field, at 583 Vanderbilt Avenue.

Espescially when you don’t want to go very far for a bar in the winter, Bilt is the perfect choice.

Uncle Barry’s

Uncle Barry’s

To wrap up the list, we’ve got Uncle Barry’s just two blocks away from the field on the other side of Barclay’s.

Uncle Barry’s is another great spot, particularly if you want to carry on from your game with some fun, less active activities like trivia (every Wednesdays) and darts.

How To Get There:

Subway: Chelsea Piers is near one of the main locus of transportations in Brooklyn, Atlantic Ave. The stop is 4 blocks away from the field, meaning you can grab the 2, 3, B, D, 4, 5, N, Q, R, trains all from that same station.

Just two more blocks and you can also find a stops for the G and C.

Bus: If you’re looking to get there by bus, you’re going to want to get either the B69 or the B52.

Bike: There’s also a CitiBike station on the corner next to the facility.

And there’s Chelsea Piers Filed House in Prospect Heights! Until next time.

Ever,
James B

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Neighborhood Spotlight: Riverbank State Park, The Gem of the Hudson

Hey all, it’s been quite some time since we’ve been able to bring you a neighborhood spotlight, but this field is just so over the top with good qualities we couldn’t pass up the opportunity.

So without further ado, introducing Riverbank State Park!

Riverbank State Park, Harlem, NYC

Riverbank State Park was originally designed to mirror Japanese urban rooftop designs, making it a one-of-a-kind facility in the city.

Before we get to the pitch itself, we just have to touch on the depth of offerings Riverbank has beyond just soccer.

The facility includes an olympic sized pool, an 800 seat theater, a 2,500 seat athletic complex, an ice rink in the winter that doubles as a roller rink in the summer, playgrounds for kids, four tennis courts, four paddleball courts, four basketball courts, an educational greenhouse (for all of you who continue, despite your best efforts, to kill your houseplants), a softball field, a running track, a carousel, an amazing bar and restaurant, and all of it with a spectacular view of the Hudson River and the Palisades.

It’s the first time that we’ve been able to run a league here at Riverbank, and so we want to make sure you’ve got everything you need so that you feel like even though it’s your first time, that you’re well situated.

The Field:

The most important detail of any league you play in is the pitch. How’s the turf? what are the sidelines like? Are there bleachers for your adoring fans?

Riverbank has you covered on all fronts.

The field is a regulation, 11v11 sized pitch, surrounded by a running track, so you don’t have to worry about any walls or fences, just the occasional incensed jogger, but that’s NYC up and down anyways.

The turf was recently redone so you can expect a flat, even, experience when you’re playing. Unfortunately that means you’ll have to wait a few years to be able to reliably blame your mistakes on the field.

Since we’re running both 11v11 and 7v7 leagues here, you can expect fields of different sizes, 11v11 running the length of the entire field, and 7v7 splitting the field into two halves for a more reasonable game size given the numbers.

Plus, there are places for friends and fans alike to sit all around the facility.

The Neighborhood:

The footbridge to Riverbank State Park comes right off of 145th street and Riverside Drive. If you walk just a little bit further into Manhattan (read: one block), you’ll find an area full of bars, restaurants, and life.

Or if you’d rather, you can stick to the edge on Riverside Park, enjoy the green trees, open spaces, and long bike path that can take you all the way up and down the island.

As is the format, we’ll give you our three top recommendations for after game watering holes, but this is a great area to explore around it.

Harlem Public:

Harlem Public

Something about Harlem Public’s “Do Work, Sip Brews” resonates with us. And as it turns out, it resonates with their 60k+ followers on Instagram too.

Between their classic American fare, a great and shifting craft beer selection, tons of specials throughout the week, and heaps of charisma and charm, you can go wrong here, but if you do it’s probably on you.

Sofrito:

Sofrito

If you, like I am, are a person of class and taste and all you want from like is a good margarita within walking distance from your soccer field, well you’re in luck.

Not only is Sofrito inside of the Riverbank park facility and stocked to handle all your margarita desires, they also are known for some incredible Puerto Rican food.

If you’re looking for the perfect balance of convenience and choice, with outdoor seating and even a little snack bar on the side if all you want is a bite on your way back home, this is it.

Hamilton’s:

If you’re looking for something that hits right in the middle, Hamilton’s is it.

Your cozy daytime cafe that becomes a relaxed bar with live jazz at night, and only 3 blocks away from the field (and only one away from the subway), Hamilton’s is great on any day of the week at any time.

The space is warm, open, and inviting and so are the staff. If you’re looking for somewhere to rest your legs and have some drinks and some laughs with your teammates after the game, Hamilton’s is great.

How To Get There:

Subway: The 1 train will let you off at 145th street, which is exactly one block from the facility. Just three blocks beyond that, the A, B, C, and D trains all stop at 145th street as well. So traveling by train is by far your best bet.

Bike: Biking up the Hudson River is honestly one of the most pleasurable and calming experiences NYC has to offer. Not to mention, if you work in midtown it’s only a 30 minute ride, which is going to be faster than any taxi. There

Sadly, there aren’t any ferry stops near by.

This is all we’ve got for you today! Stay tuned for the next spotlight!

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NYC Footy: Managing Meeting Gender Requirements for Free Agent Teams

At NYC Footy, we have very intentionally focused on fostering and building a vibrant and inclusive soccer community by offering leagues that are and always have been mixed gender.

A meaningful part of our community, season in and season out, is made up of individuals and small groups that go on to join teams of total strangers for the joy of the beautiful game. Our mixed gender format is designed to create an environment where everyone can play, compete, and build connections.

At NYC Footy, we have very intentionally focused on fostering and building a vibrant and inclusive soccer community by offering leagues that are and always have been mixed gender.

A meaningful part of our community, season in and season out, is made up of individuals and small groups that go on to join teams of total strangers for the joy of the beautiful game. Our mixed gender format is designed to create an environment where everyone can play, compete, and build connections. 

As we continue to grow, we are committed to maintaining the integrity of our league while addressing challenges related to gender balance within teams. As organizers and players, we know that ensuring a balanced gender composition is crucial to providing a positive and enjoyable experience for all participants whilst fulfilling our vision of a competitive but not ridiculous soccer experience for New Yorkers. That is why we have established certain gender minimums for each team, such as having a specified number of female players on the pitch at all times.

However, we recognize that, despite our concerted efforts, assembling teams with sufficient female players can sometimes be a challenge. We want to be transparent about the options available to free agent teams that find themselves in this situation, ensuring that they can navigate the situation with clarity and collaboration.

If registered players made up of individuals and small groups do not, collectively, create appropriately gender balanced free agent teams, and NYC Footy’s additional outreach efforts do not fulfill this need, we have provided the following options for Free Agent Teams without sufficient female players:

  • [Ongoing] Female Player Referral Program: NYC Footy has a standing referral program that provides a 50% off discount for any new female player introduced to our community by an existing member. That member, agnostic of gender, will receive $50 in NYC Footy credits per new female player introduced to our community (up to $1,500 in credits).

  • Reduced Female Minimum Grace Period: When registering as an individual or part of a small group, NYC Footy groups you with others to form a free agent team. If your team doesn't meet the required gender minimums before the season begins, we will add an "FAx" qualifier to your team name for the first two weeks. This qualifier temporarily reduces the female minimum by one (1) female  for games in divisions where two (2)  or more female players are required. After the initial two weeks, “FAx” teams will be expected to meet the standard female minimum by leveraging the following resources:

  • FootyHQ Player Forum: Each free agent team will have an assigned captain who can access our FootyHQ community forum. In this forum, captains can actively recruit female players for the entire season or for individual games.

 
 
  • Captain's WhatsApp Chat: Captains also have access to the "captain's chat" for their division. This feature allows them to collaborate with other captains and explore the possibility of borrowing female players from other teams..

  • Female Recruitment Discount Code: NYC Footy provides a discount code to FAx teams, enabling existing roster players to invite female players to join the league at a reduced rate (usually $20 for a full season).

Beyond these tools, we are heavily motivated to explore partnerships and support from female-focused organizations, student bodies, and other communities to encourage female player participation, which strengthens the diversity of our Footy family and ensures our free agent teams are experiencing NYC Footy as it was intended. 

At NYC Footy, we value the passion and enthusiasm our participants bring to the field. We understand that challenges can arise, and we appreciate your cooperation and understanding as we collectively work towards strengthening our community and the player experience as a whole.  

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The Wonderful People of NYC Footy: Debbie Tasioudis

This is Debbie’s Story, her battle through Covid and breast cancer, and finding strength through soccer.

J: James Berry here again with our second Wonderful Person of NYC Footy, Debbie Tasioudis. Debbie, good to see you, why don’t you tell everyone a little bit about yourself?

D: Hey James, sure. Well my name is Debbie Tasioudis, I’m from Atlanta, but I live in Brooklyn now. I work for the NYC for the schools and I joined Footy in I think 2021, spring or summer of 2021 sounds right.

J: Did you have friends that played already?

D: No, I actually joined as a free agent, but we sort of coalesced afterwards and have come together and are now our own team. 

J: That’s great. What’s the team name? 

D: Heat Strokes (hey everyone!), but I’m also playing on FA Weah Behind Schedule. I think we’re currently number six in the league right now. 

J: Out of? 

D: Out of seven. 

J: It’s a rebuilding season then.

D: Exactly. No, we’d like to be good, but it’s not really about winning for us, it’s just about, you know, getting out there and having fun.

J: As it should be. Where do you guys play?

D: I’m a bit all over, I play at Brooklyn Bridge Park, Sternberg, and also in Ridgewood, and I can’t really figure out which one I like more. BBP has that amazing view, but Ridgewood and Sternberg are just kind of like home I guess. I love them all.

J: Yeah it’s hard to pick just one, I feel like having a home field is a really special thing though, so I’m glad you’ve got 2. How did you end up finding Footy in the first place?

D: I played in one season of NYC Soccer and I just didn’t find it to be very social. It was like you show up, you play the game, you leave. I was asking around about more social leagues and someone recommended Footy, so I looked into Footy and I’ve found a really nice community of players. 

J: I think that’s the most important thing about Footy right, the community. 

D: Exactly. And Heat Strokes are definitely such a solid group now, it’s just really good.

J: That’s incredible. So you and I have talked a bit, but could you just tell us about your story, and what happened to you right at the beginning of Covid?

D: Absolutely, so in 2020-I work for the NYC schools, we shut down our school system on March 23rd- we opened maybe 50 schools just for kids of first responders, and I had the privilege of leading one those schools. While I was doing that, I got Covid. Probably not at school, but yeah.

So I was home with Covid in April and had to wait a little to go to the doctor, but when I did, I discovered that I had stage 2 breast cancer. All of the hospitals were closed and I had to wait until June to get surgery. That led to another surgery in July, 16 weeks of chemo, and almost 30 rounds of daily radiation. That was tough.

That ended around February 2021. I was feeling really grateful to be at a place where there was no evidence of disease. I made it through the difficulties of chemo, made it through the slow but difficult consequences of radiation. I went home for a month, worked remotely and tried to focus on feeling healthy again.

Sometime in there, I realized that I hadn’t been working out in the way that I normally do and I hadn’t been active enough. I came back to NY and for example I was scared to be on the train, not because of issues on the train, but because my body was scared to be around a lot of people. And I started taking a protective stance in crowds, in the grocery store.

It took me a while to realize that this wasn’t a Covid thing, this was a cancer thing after all the things that happened to my body.

So I decided that I couldn’t walk around afraid all the time. I had to find a way to find some body confidence, to not be scared. So the first thing that came to me was getting back on the soccer field.

I had played soccer in high-school, I played a little co-ed in college, and I played in my mid-twenties when I moved back to NY, but I hadn’t played in a long time.

To me it seemed like a good way to get confident again because, you know, it’s a good way to get hit, but in a safe way. You intend to throw your body in front of another person, you intend to throw your body in front of the ball.

So I very cautiously made my way to a P5 NYC Footy team. I gotta say my first season was very tough.

I had some muscle memory about the game, but the ball would come towards me and I would scream a high-pitched scream I don’t normally use and run from the ball or cower. I was reluctant to run into anyone. But every game it got a little better and a little better.

I really felt like I had to tell my teammates why I was there and why I was excited to be on the field but sometimes afraid of the ball. 

So I told a couple of my teammates, I told the captain, ‘I’m here. I just finished cancer treatment. I’m trying to get some body confidence back. Get myself back to feeling normal and strong.’ My teammates were so open, responsive, and supportive. 

J: Can you speak to what it felt like to get to that point? To feel like you were able to get your body back. 

D: A thing happens when you have a couple surgeries, radiation. You’re still in your body, but your body is a different body than it was before. So there’s a lot to that. 

I’m part of a group called The Breasties. It’s this incredible network of pre-vivors-people who don’t have cancer, but have a genetic disposition- survivors, caregivers, and thrivers-people who are living with on-going cancer.

They’ve got really great resources, like on how to do a self-exam, I literally wouldn’t be here if I didn’t do a self-exam, and so much more. But through this network, I spoke with others about how to get comfortable in my bodies again and things that I could do intentionally to get comfortable.

Things like looking in the mirror everyday. Outfit of the day. Exercising. Finding strength. I think that was some of my motivation.

I also have a regular barre practice. When the studio re-opened in person I started going back there again. That got me feeling strong and confident again, but that’s a singular practice I was doing.

There’s a difference in soccer because it’s a thing your body does with other people.

The people on your team, and the people you play against, it’s more of a full-contact sport and that’s what was missing for me and I found on the soccer field; the physical movement, remembering that I can do hard things, I can run for a 20 minute half, I can take a hit, I can take the ball from someone.

Then there’s also a mental thing that happens on the field. You and your teammates develop a language together and it’s a really encouraging environment. Particularly on the teams I’ve been on.

On Heat Strokes for example, we’re very encouraging on each other when we’re on the field, and then in our chat as well. I get confidence from that, from being a part of a team and seeing your skills improve over time. 

J: There are people, while many or most might not come from a situation as dire as cancer, come into this league coming off of a serious injury, or with a feeling of feeling isolated in their own body, or even detached from their own body. Can you speak more to what made you feel like it was time to take that space back in yourself? What led to that decision and what it felt like to be doing that?

D: You know when I first came to NY I think I played one season of soccer. Through a dating situation I played softball. It’s not really an athletic sport. It’s a lot of standing around. But I got tackled once-

J: You got tackled in softball? 

D: Correct. In softball. By a drunk 250 pound guy who didn’t even have the ball and I wound up tearing my my gastroc muscle. You could hear it pop. So I was reluctant after that. I was in a boot for maybe 8 weeks or something.

But it goes back to the cancer thing, the injury thing, you cannot be afraid forever. There’s so much good that happens in a 50 minute game.

I always play outside. Just being outside, not thinking about work, not thinking about your personal relationships. It’s you, your teammates, and the game. It’s such a privilege to move your body.

That is first and foremost something I learned: you never know what’s going to happen and once you find yourself in a situation, through injury or cancer, you realize what a gift it is to move your body every day and so you want to keep doing that.

It’s also not the world cup. It’s a Wednesday rec league, or a Sunday rec league, you don’t have to be perfect. Just go out there and try to play well, try to be better every game. 

J: When someone close to you tells you they have cancer, there’s a lack of understanding of how to respond to that. How do people who are around someone diagnosed with cancer, or any serious illness, how can they help. There’s almost this feeling of not wanting to burden them more, or wanting to give them space. What were the things that were most helpful for you to receive from the people around you and what might you offer to people who may be needing that kind of help in their own recovery, whether they can ask for it, or find it from their teammates, friends, and family?

D: I think the single most important thing for me in survivorship in that time after active treatment ends is an understanding that when active cancer treatment ends it’s not over, survivorship is a lifetime of ongoing appointments, check-ins scans, tests, and it’s terrifying every time.

Your body remembers what it’s like to go to the place where you got chemotherapy, where you got surgery, where your body got radiated. Even if you feel comfortable, your body can feel resistant.

I think that’s something people don’t realize, I think people think that cancer treatment’s over, she doesn’t have cancer anymore. It’s done. But there really isn’t a finish line. There are benchmarks.

You can make it to 5, 10 years, and you’re probably not going to get it again, but you’re always looking over your shoulder. You’re always trying to learn how to live in your body. And you’re putting yourself in a situation where you’re doing everything you can to not get cancer again.

I think the awareness that it doesn’t end when the treatment ends and just listening, making space, and checking in. Just saying “how are you? How are things going?” I think there’s a lot of assumptions and just listening and understanding for me is the the most important thing in my survivorship.

I think also every cancer survivor I know can talk about people who they told they had cancer to and then never heard from them again. It happens all the time. People have their own trauma around cancer, their own stories. Or they just don’t know what to say, they get overwhelmed.

I don’t think I need someone to reach out and say ‘hey how’s your cancer’, just ‘hey how are you?’ For a lot of us, we just want to know that people care. That we’re not just our cancer diagnosis, that we’re complex beings. 

J: You’ve got such an incredible story, and just hearing you talk about it with such confidence is really magnificent and awesome, is there anything you want add that I might have missed?

D: Yeah. I love my barre practice, I love my regular workouts, that’s what keeps me injury friend when I’m not on the field. But there’s something so wonderful about being a part of a team, having this amazing game to focus on every week.

It is the highlight of my week. If it’s raining or snowing, I’m learning to love it. I’m grateful for Footy, you don’t have to be great at this game, you just have to get out there. 

The other thing I would say, you’re never too young to get breast cancer and I would encourage people to get to know your own body, and learn how to perform a self-exam.

Anybody can get breast cancer. Some people say “Feel it on the first”, just make a routine, get to know how your breast is supposed to feel. I’m alive today because I found the lump myself.

And one final note, when I got back I got hit in the breast, nearly immediately, with a soccer ball and I thought, “oh my god I have breast cancer again” but, pro-tip from my breast oncologist, you cannot get breast cancer from getting hit with a soccer ball.

J: Hahaha that’s great to know. Debbie this has been so inspiring and thank you for taking the time to come down and share your story with me and all of us here in the Footy community.

D: Of course, I’m happy to do it.

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The Best Field You've Never Heard Of: Bush Terminal Park

Hugging the water on the west shoulder of Sunset Park, in an area that remains what Williamsburg was like 20 years ago (soon to be overrun), sits the greatest park in NYC you’ve never played on. Bush Terminal Park.

The Field: Bush Terminal Park is one of those rare places that has Perfect turf, clear field lines, tons of space, high fences, and an incredible view of both the city to the north and of the Manhattan Sound, which the field is situated right alongside.

Fresh Cut Turf!

A sanctuary of Footy

Bush Terminal Park is just waiting to become the next Bushwick Inlet Park, or even the next Pier 5.

I say that in large part because of what is around the field, which I will get into later in the post, but also because of the opportunity the field presents.

Bush Terminal Park, for all of it’s beauty and serenity, has remained largely un-chartered territory by leagues because of how far south it is. It’s parallel with the southern part of Prospect Park.

But that distance, which as any New Yorker will tell you grows smaller every year, has framed Bush Terminal Park as one of the ideal fields in the city.

A field in relative isolation, surrounded by good food, good bars, and good views, that you and a dozen of your friends can make your own, to retreat to every weekend or week night, curl your backs to the city, and just play.

There’s a Field of Dream’s quality to the place and believe me it won’t stay like that forever.

If the field itself wasn’t enough to convince you, let’s take a look at what’s going on nearby.

The Neighborhood:

Up first, we’ve got somewhere you’ve undoubtedly heard of.

Industry City:

Industry City - Sunset Park

Located a ten minute walk from the pitch, this massive indoor-outdoor facility has everything you could ever imagine inside.

More bars than you could realistically go to in a season of Footy (but we won’t stop you), artist pop-ups, dozens of incredible restaurants, game and leisure spaces at every turn, event spaces, comic book shops (shout out to St. Marks Comics), as well as tons more I’m running out of space to list.

It’s a place designed to foster community and you can feel that in and out at every new area you walk into.

My recommendations would be to set up a little cocktail crawl or a wine waddle, and see where you and your team like it best.

Keep an eye out for the Gun Hill Publick House, as they’re notoriously kind to people wearing NYC Footy jerseys.


Up Next, we’ve got a Footy Favorite: The Five Boroughs Brewing Co.

The Five Boroughs Brewing Co.

With more types of beer than you can shake a stick at, a great space that happens to be only 2 blocks from the field, some of the kindest staff and brewers on site, a bar room full of games and other activities, and a healthy balance of numerous, yet avoidable if unwanted TV’s, there’s not much more one could hope for when looking for an after game haunt.

Except a standing discount for NYC Footy players… which there also is.

If you and your friends are looking for the nearest, and possibly best place to drink after your games at Bush Terminal Park, look no further.

But, if you’re looking for something a little different, with a little more Sunset Park flavor, head to the last place on our list, Judy’s.

Judy’s - Sunset Park

If you’re looking for a wholesome joint that wants nothing more than you to feel welcome, have a drink, relax, and be apart of it’s community, Judy’s is it.

Judy’s (which has made this list for other fields) is the perfect balance of coffee shop meets bar, sliding from one to the other seamlessly around 5PM everyday (although everything is served all the time).

The outdoor space is comfortable, the drinks are affordable, the snacks are great, the pastries are from The Good Batch Bakery, and if nothing on menu is to your liking, the staff will literally help you find a place nearby to order or grab food from which you’re more than welcome to eat at the bar.

If that doesn’t illustrate what type of establishment this is, I’m not sure what will.

The Transportation:

Most people’s big complaint for this field is that it’s too far away. But I’m here to help you find your way here so you can discover the most underserved field in the city.

Trains: The D train stops at 45st and is only a 10 minute walk from the field.

Bikes: Biking remains (as is true of most of Brooklyn) the best way to get to this field. With easy bike lines along the waterfront and a Citi Bike station right at 43rd street and 2nd avenue (one block from the entrance to the park), this is by far the simplest way to get here.

Car: One of the very rare occasions that I’ll bring up driving here because the parking is actually incredibly sound in this area. Not to mention the field happens to be right off of the Belt Parkway, making it super convenient for any car commuting folk.

Bus: The B37 is your best bet, as it runs straight down 3rd avenue and drops you off 2 blocks from the field.

That’s all we’ve got for this field, we’re looking forward to seeing you out there soon!

-James Berry

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NYC Footy's 5th Captain of the Match: Mateo Bonilla

Mateo is one of the best captains to grace the Footy field, bringing his own combination of intelligence and support to his team, the Best Team Evra. 

Mateo makes sure that everyone, even his opponents, get to feel like they're part of the squad. 

When he's not on the pitch, Mateo is working towards his Masters at NYU. He also volunteers at the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, a program he has volunteered with since 2016 when he was living in Ecuador. 

Mateo has a passion for robot design, gaming, legos, as well as politics and economics. 

We're fairly certain by 2040 he'll have created the first fully robotic soccer player, and we just hope that he'll let it sub for us. 

Thank you so much Mateo for being our 5th Captain of the Match! We hope you enjoyed the game!

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The Wonderful People of NYC Footy: Rory Brown

Meet Rory

J: Hey everyone, James Berry here with Rory Brown on behalf of NYC Footy in our first installment of The Wonderful People of NYC Footy. We’re really excited to kick this off, so Rory why don’t you just dive in and introduce yourself.

R: Hey everyone. I’m Rory. I moved to New York a year and a half ago from Colorado. I wasn’t born there, I was born in Alabama, but I was raised in Colorado because my family loves the mountains and loves to ski. 

J: So what brought you to the city? 

R: I got a job working at Discovery. I thought I was going to be able to work remotely and one day they just said: hey we’re moving back into the office, you have to come here. So I made one visit, saw five apartments, picked the last one I saw, and now I’m just here.

J: Whirlwind kind of move, but it seems like you settled in pretty well.

R: Yup. I love NY, it really feels like home.

J: So then what brought you to Footy, because I’ve heard why and I’ve got a feeling that a lot of people can relate to it.

R: When I first moved here my first friend at work who was training me, Matt, happened to be really really attractive and I had this huge crush on him and we were talking and he found out I played soccer at Cornell. He immediately asked me to join his Footy team with all of his friends from college because they needed girls, which seems to be a pretty common problem.

J: Are you and Matt dating now? 

R: No. That would be a good ending, he has a girlfriend. But we’re friends though. His loss. 

J: Kicking himself I’m sure.

R: Absolutely. 

J: More importantly, are you better than him at soccer ? 

R: I don’t know, he’s pretty good, his a ball hog thought. We’re different players, he scores a lot, but he never defends. 

J: Got it. Pretty standard striker behavior. 

R: Exactly.

J: And what position do you play?

R: I play left mid because I’m a leftie, sometimes center mid, but I was a left-back in college. My favorite thing is when there’s a big strong guy dribbling down the field and they don’t think that I’m gonna go in and I really tackle them. And then… you know. They find out.

J: Cool, note to self don’t test Rory. Got it. So you found Matt, or Matt found you. Had you been playing soccer in the city before then at all?

R: No, actually I had not touched a ball in 3+ years. The pandemic happened, but before that, I was so burnt out of soccer. I hated it. I had gotten two knee surgeries and when I tried to get back into playing, the pandemic happened right before I graduated. The Ivy League cancelled all games and practices, and my soccer dreams ended. I finished Cornell remotely. No more soccer. I told myself I was better off without soccer, and that I’d never play again. And then I moved to the city for a job and here’s, you know, hot Matt inviting me to play in NYC Footy, so how could I say no. 

J: So Footy was your first time on the field in 3 years?

R: Well backing up, after that conversation with Matt, I didn’t hear from him for six months, and one day out of the blue he asked me ‘hey we have a game today can you come play’. I said sure and spent the this whole day getting ready and I was so nervous because I hadn’t touched a ball in so long and thought I was gonna suck, and had bad knees and I didn’t feel like the active Colorado girl that I once was. But I played in the game and I could tell NYC Footy was clearly different.

J: What was different about it? 

R: Well, I didn’t know who or what Footy was to be honest, but I was immediately impressed that we got jerseys. The field (DeWitt Clinton) was nice and so scenic. There were refs who called the game with care for our well being, and the teams we played were all out there for the same reason we were, for the love of the game. We even wound up winning the championship! So we got photos and Champagne and the ref even saw us at the bar after and bought us a round. I was in awe you guys exceeded my expectations. 

J: Championship on the first go, way to go. So you were in.

R: 100%. We joined another league in Chinatown right after. The turf wasn’t as nice, but it was such a unique and special experience. And the view! It made me feel so alive and present in the moment to see the bridges right there, and even these little funny NY moments like a lady coming through with a trash bag, pouring out and taking our water bottles mid game, or the net being a little loose and the ref laughing when he wasn’t sure if it was a goal or not, which strangely but really genuinely added to the whole experience because it was just about having fun and being around other people who had fun. 

J: So you’d found your main team? 

R: Well no, actually. So we won the Chinatown league as well. They bring the champagne out and take the photos. I’m loving it. I figured I was peaking in life at that point. But then the team sort of wasn’t saying anything and I figured I could figure this out myself. Other teams need girls.

J: So you went full hired gun. 

R: Totally. And being a free agent is where I feel like I really started to break out and meet new people. I would just show up to a game as a sub, maybe score maybe not, but it would be easy from there. You know I can be nervous when I’m meeting someone or talking to someone, but when you play your guard goes down, which I really like. 

J: How many teams are you on now? 

R: Right now I’m on three free agent teams. I found all of them just randomly or on FootyHQ. Again, it was the best decision. I get to meet so many new people, but I know that they’re all people who enjoy soccer, are here for the love of the game, but also you know, have to go to work tomorrow. I can’t tell you how many friends I’ve made from NYC Footy since moving here. I literally can’t count them all. 

J: Do you prefer being on a team or being a free agent more?

R: I really like both. I like being able to meet new people from the free agent side, but I like the team feeling from the other side. But the team I really like now is cool because nobody knew each other and now people are already becoming friends. And it’s a little motley crew, some people have kids, some people just graduated college, and there’s always an open invite to go to a nearby bar. I watched Rihanna’s half-time show with them, and if I hadn’t been with them I probably just would have been at home watching on my computer. 

J: What do you think makes that community click? 

R: I think the soccer is important; clicking on the field is big. The fact that we are all free agents makes everybody pretty open to hanging out, being welcoming, you know we’re playing on a Sunday, we might as well do something after too. 

J: Has there been a highlight of playing in Footy so far?

R: The first time I scored, I just felt like I still got it. 

J: Are you a soccer fan too? 

R: I really like watching women’s soccer, women’s college soccer. My little sister plays at Pittsburg. Last season it was so fun watching her because they made it to the NCAA Playoffs, to the Sweet 16 I think, and it was just so exciting seeing her succeed and do that? 

J: So are we gonna get her into Footy?

R: I’m already working on it I promise.

J: How about the She Believes Cup, did you see any of that this last round? 

R: Yeah actually one of the players on USA, Mallory Swanson, we grew up playing together. She used to score 10 goals in our little peewee games, just wrecking people. Even when she went to college, I think she just saw that D1 wasn’t good enough for her so she just went pro after I think one year.
J: Is there anyone you really want to play with?

R: Abby Wombach. Meghan Rapinoe, Shannon Box. I feel like they’re kind of iconic. And they’re more than soccer. I feel like as a kid I was inspired by their mission so that would be a dream.

Rory, on the left, in her Real Colorado kit.

J: That’s a class list, you’ve clearly got some high standards for soccer. How’s Footy holding up? Is there anything about Footy you’d want to change?

R: The nets, some of the fields have old nets. It’s not even that bad but we have this joke on my team because when we won we kind of weren’t sure if the ball actually went in the net. It went through the back and we all just started celebrating and the ref was like, sure. Goal. But that’s also part of the charm. There were definitely some goals over the course of the season that we arbitrated with ref, and I’ve never seen this before in soccer but I like it. 

J: We love a little bit of on the field litigation. Despite the reverse VAR, do you feel happy about joining Footy?

R: Absolutely, Footy has shaped a lot of my experience of exploring the city is through playing on different fieldsIt’s a cool way to get to know your city. Also I love my Sundays now. It’s not the Sunday scaries it’s the Sunday soccer. 

J: Sunday is the holy day for soccer then.

R: No, everyday is.

J: Fair enough. Well before we wrap up, I’ve got ask is there a current on the field crush? Don’t worry, this will only go to the 20,000 or so newsletter subscribers. 

R: There might be some cute guys, but I’ve got like no game. Like my plan is to just play really well and they’ll somehow figure it out.

J: From the way it sounds like you play I’m sure someone will figure it out pretty quickly.

R: Haha hopefully.

J: Is there anything else you wanna add? What days of the week you’re free to play maybe, what type of guy you’re into?

R: Haha none of that no. I just wanna thank NYC Footy. I really do look forward to it so much. It’s funny on my Gramercy team one guy on the team just had a baby, he’s not even from NY he was just visiting, but now he kinda of plays every week and he was saying how it’s just the highlight of his week. Last weekend I scored a header goal and I’ve always wanted to do that, those don’t come often and that whole day was just amazing afterwards. I think I texted my entire family. I could do really well at work, doesn’t matter. If I do well at soccer, it changes my whole week. It’s really the most special thing to me, so thank you.

J: That’s wonderful, yeah I feel the same way. Well Rory, thanks so much for joining us and being Footy’s first Wonderful Person, and I’m both looking forward to and dreading seeing you on the pitch depending on what team your on.

-James Berry

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NYC Footy's 4th NYCFC Captain of the Match: Linda Saraguro

Linda is one of the most recent additions to the NYC Footy Captains club, having learned how to play soccer only one year ago.

Linda started her soccer journey through BetterPlayer, and after hopping around to a few free agent teams, secretly scouting the local talent, she formed Hardly Athletic FC! 

Linda's passion for the game is contagious; even drawing people back to the game after more than ten years off the pitch.

Everyone on Hardly Athletic FC is inspired by and shares Linda's drive, competitiveness, and particularly her love for post-game analysis over half-off drinks.

When she's not playing, Linda is a software engineer of considerable pedigree.

Linda works at Giant Machines and took first place Essteem's 2019 Hackathon Challenge!

Her commitment to code and community goes even further, as shown during her time spent volunteering for Upperline Code, a program that teaches coding to underprivileged high school students.

We, and her teammates, are better for having Linda on the pitch. She represents how so much can happen and change in such a short amount of time if you really want it to.

Thank you Linda for being our 4th Captain of the Match!

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NYC Footy's 3rd NYCFC Captain of the Match: Shimpei Shirafuji

Shimpei is all about using soccer to bring people from all walks of life together. 

Whether it's bringing in new faces to join a team at NYC Footy or inviting someone to their first NYCFC or Gotham FC match, there is no better builder of community than Shimpei. 

Shimpei is a fan of NYCFC, Gotham FC, Leeds United, the Japanese National Team, and of course, Unlucky Cats United. 

It's through his passion for soccer that Shimpei has discovered great friendships and the love of his life.

When he's not in cleats, Shimpei is a professional photographer and retoucher. He loves to eat, practices yoga and Muay Thai (luckily he's also the kindest, most respectful soul you'll ever meet), and collects soccer jerseys. 

His goal in life is to be playing soccer past the age of 80. Only 40 more years to go my friend :). Here's to hoping you spend many of those years with Footy, but all of them with people you love!

Fun Fact: The Unlucky Cats had their own custom jerseys made; of all the teams with custom jerseys, 80% of them are cat themed teams. This is not a joke, dog owners step it up.

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NYC Footy's 2nd NYCFC Captain of the Match! Grisha Levine-Rozenvayn

Grisha has been a player in NYC Footy since it's inception in 2010, and is one of our longest tenured captains.

He's one of the special few who really knows how to balance fun and competition on the pitch.

Between his never-say-quit attitude on the field and his patented half-time white-board strategy meetings (which put Arteta's to shame) he's a cornerstone of every team that he plays on.

Though it's off the field that sets Greg apart.

His commitment to always learning and his unconditional love and deep respect for others (as well as the game), are what make him the quintessential captain, player, and friend.

As one example, Greg takes in and fosters stray cats, making sure they find homes filled with the same love, joy, and care he brings to his teams (anyone in need of a loving Cat? Find Greg on FootyHQ and ping him).

I can't tell you how lucky we are at NYC Footy as well as those around him that count him amongst their own, and how grateful we are as a community have him as a captain of Rottenham FC (with their sweet custom kits), and as a part of the bedrock of NYC Footy.

Thank you, Captain Grisha!

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NYC Footy's 1st NYCFC Captain of the Match! Emily Li!

Emily is the captain of NoHands FC, a team which would not have existed if they all hadn't serendipitously joined a BetterPlayer practice together last year.

From day 1 it was clear that they all understood the assignment, that Footy, and BetterPlayer, are about doing something fun with people you love.

There is no better team that exemplifies that than NoHands and It's been amazing to watch them grow, in no small part because of Emily.

You can find the tight-knit but open to all NoHands FC all over the city, at Gov Cup, and Footy Fest (last year they even made an amazing documentary about it), with their patented pink kit and custom banner, all thanks to Emily's leadership. 

When Emily is not wrangling NoHands players onto the pitch, she dances and volunteers.

She has two performance intensives coming up this spring, and volunteered with CAAAV doing public housing outreach and organizing of tenants in Mandarin, as well as with a program that helped formerly incarcerated folks learn how to code and transition back into the workforce while she was in school.

We're so proud that people like Emily are a part of our community, and who can create such a wonderful place for so many people to simply come, be together, and have fun.

Thank you, Captain Emily!

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NYC Footy's New Partners: Gotham FC and NYCFC

NYC Footy’s groundbreaking partnership with NYCFC and Gotham FC

Gotham FC & NYCFC Partner with NYC Footy

This week marks one of the biggest moments not only for NYC Footy, but for soccer in NYC (maybe even in the United States).

NYC Footy is now partnered with two of New York’s major soccer teams, NYCFC and Gotham FC.

The partnerships spell a lots of integrating potential for our players. From standing ticket discounts, NYCFC’s Captain of the Match program (now powered by NYC Footy), Footy Days at their respective stadiums, in-stadium advertising, Footy tournament activations and so much more.

But beyond the tangible benefits, there is something unique and new within this partnership, the likes of which have not been seen here in NYC or, more broadly, the US.

Let’s meet our partners:

Gotham FC

Gotham FC was founded in 2006, under a different name, the Jersey Sky Blue, which would go on to become one of the founding members of the National Women’s Soccer League in 2013.

In their inaugural year in the first division of the league (they had spent 2006-2008 playing in the second division), the Sky Blue won the inaugural Women’s Professional Soccer Championship in what can only be described as one of the greatest all-time underdog stories in sports.

Over the next decade the Sky Blue battled in and out of the playoffs until 2021, when they changed their name to Gotham FC, landing on the new name, logo, and colors after extensive fan involvement.

The change has catapulted the team forward, allowing them to do a bit of restructuring post-Covid. Not only have they taken on new head coach Juan Carlos Amoros, who took Tottenham to the Women’s Super League in 2018, they’ve also grown their ownership team to include some really big names, like Sue Bird, Kevin Durant, and Eli Manning.

While primed for success in the 2023 season, Gotham FC represents more than just what they are able to accomplish on the field.

Through programs like Gotham FC Heroes, Gotham Kids, as well as their youth community clinics and community partners, Gotham FC is a team that enriches the lives of those around them. They understand what it means to belong to a community and how give back in a way that makes those around them thrive.

It’s for this reason, more than anything, that we’re proud to have them as a part of our community, and to be a part of theirs.

We can’t wait to see what we can achieve together!

NYCFC

NYCFC is New York’s biggest and best MLS program. A fact even more remarkable because the program is less than ten years old.

The inaugural season for the boys in blue was 2015, which technically makes their supporter group, The Third Rail, older than the team as the group was created the same day the club was announced!

Despite their age, NYCFC is one of the biggest names in the league, drawing thousands of fans for each home game, as well as the likes of superstars Andres Pirlo and David Villa to play on their roster.

The team has also enjoyed no small amount of success on the pitch, consistently breaking into the playoffs, going deep in the Eastern Conference Championships, and winning the MLS Cup in 2021!

Not bad for the new kid on the block.

Over the short amount of time NYCFC has been in the city, they have ingratiated themselves to the city of New York in ways that make me proud to be a fan.

They understand what it means to be a part of the sports culture of the greatest city on earth, and the expectations that come with that.

They have plans to build their own stadium in Queens, which is New York’s most populous and underserved sports borough, strangely enough as Queens has some of, if not the, most avid fans in the whole city.

Beyond their plans to build a stadium, NYCFC has also created programs, like the Healthy Hat Trick, Saturday Night Lights, and Soccer Bloc, that give back to New Yorkers off the field by supporting after school programs, violence prevention, and addressing the lack of free community programming in parks for the youth of New York City.

Our partnership with NYCFC means a lot of things. Beyond just the fun and excitement of getting our players to the games, and seeing NYCFC at our events and tournaments, it signals the opportunity to be a part of something greater, granting our players an opportunity to be a part of an instrument of positive change here in the city.

We’re proud to see what we can accomplish with NYCFC at our backs. Or more specifically on our chest.

NYC Footy

Founded in 2010, NYC Footy is a collection of thousands of creative humans from all walks of life, coming together on and off the pitch to enjoy the beautiful game, who over the years have turned Footy into the largest and most visible recreational soccer league in NYC and one of the largest leagues in the country.

It is not accident. There is something special, something even beyond soccer, about Footy. It is a place where people come to find not only fun, but family.

It’s something you have to experience for yourself, but I have simply lost count of how many people I know who have joined Footy to try to get a bit more exercise or just want to have fun, but wound up finding a second home and a group of friends that stick with them for the rest of their lives.

All of our leagues are mixed gender, a fact that we’ve prided ourselves on from the start, but are not content to rest on.

Through existing partnerships with organizations like Women In Soccer, our new partnership with Gotham FC, and how we build our programming (we’ve recently introduced ‘flip’ gender leagues, where instead of the traditional two-female-minimum, we’re placing a two-male-maximum on the pitch), we are striving to make soccer a more equitable place for women, and players from all walks of life.

So if you’ve never played, or you played in college, and anything in-between, come see what the fuss is all about.

We’ve got leagues year-round, indoor and out, as well as two incredible tournaments: Gov Cup, a two-day soccer palooza on Governor’s Island, and Footy Fest, a more relaxed, autumn jaunt in the Catskills.

What the Partnership Represents:

In the last decade, soccer in the US has been on an exponential climb.

The sport has moved into the mainstream over that time, with larger and larger portions of people in the United States tuning in.

Not only the biggest events the sport has to offer (The World Cup, The Euros, The Champions League), but to the MLS and its more established geographical cousins in Europe (The Premier League, La Liga, and so on) have all found a steady foothold here in the United States after decades of wondering whether or not soccer would ever stick in the one place on earth it never seemed to.

During that time, Footy has continued to grow on its own, organic, intrinsic to the identity of soccer in New York City, and parallel to the growth we’ve seen in the sport around the country, becoming a microcosm of that growth we’ve seen on a national level.

A steady climb of interest and attention within a small, dedicated, wonderful community of soccer fans and players, that has erupted in the last few years.

This feeling of a gigantic swing forward was in no small part because of Covid.

The foggy and ominous peril of Covid as a virus, which sparked a wave of dislocation and isolation the likes of which the world, let alone NYC, had never seen, illustrated a few things.

First, when the world buckled, on the inside its own doorstep and unable to leave without some trepidation no less, it became clear how precious community is, and how invaluable doing things with people we care for can be.

That feels like such a blunted, obvious thing to say, but there were not only moments, but months, where for many that felt like it was not an option.

Second, we all realized how important it was to move and play.

Moving not to just shuffle from the fridge, back to the kitchen table 15 times before sunset, but the type of play that can take us out of our heads and grant us those moments of quiet freedom only unvarnished enthusiasm can provide us.

The type of unvarnished enthusiasm that soccer has garnered globally for many decades.

Footy was, for so many people, a perfect solution to the woes that Covid had brought upon them.

It gave them a chance to be a part of a community, be active, and be involved in something that took them out of themselves.

NYCFC and Gotham FC play the same role for so many more in NYC and around the country, providing the space for community, friendship, and enthusiastic participation, things that were taken away from everyone during the pandemic.

Beyond a shared solution to the personal blows dealt to everyone by the pandemic, Footy’s partnership with NYCFC and Gotham FC represents something fascinating and unique in the landscape of soccer in the US.

The tethering of two ends of the soccer spectrum, the professional and the recreational. It is the type of partnership that sets the groundwork to fill in the gaps of our national soccer programs and interest, gaps that has held us back for so long and which are finally beginning to fill in thanks to programs like Gotham FC, NYCFC, and NYC Footy.

These partnerships aim to build upon that growth and it’s our sincere and shared belief that it is one more step towards bringing soccer to more people, both on the pitch and in the stands, and ultimately reshaping the landscape of the sport in this city, and around the world.

-James Berry

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NYC Footy Spring 2023 Mixed Gender Soccer Rule Changes

We are implementing some rule changes for this year, starting with our spring season. 

The purpose behind these changes is to protect the experience of our players and ensure our members continue to receive a professional and consistent soccer experience.

Here we go:

1. Jerseys: You must wear your NYC Footy jersey during your game or gift your opponent one (1) goal for every player that takes the pitch without their assigned NYC Footy jersey.

  • Purpose: To decrease likelihood of non-rostered players. To decrease confusion. To ensure an organized consistent and professional operation.

  • If your team lost their jerseys or not having a jersey is a result of a failure on our part, then you must communicate this to us immediately to resolve the issue and get you back on the pitch.

  • Lost jerseys must be re-purchased.

2. Start Times:  The clock starts at your scheduled game time. If teams are not ready, then the first half will feel shorter.

  • Purpose: To ensure all games start and end at their assigned times. To encourage teams (and referees) to be on the field and ready. To avoid delayed game starts and/or shortened game times for non-offending teams.

  • If a team is waiting for the requisite number of players to avoid a forfeit (e.g. 5 in a 7v7 league), then they may take the field without the requisite number of players and will have 5 minutes to field enough players to avoid a forfeit. If after 5 minutes a team does not have the requisite number of players to avoid a forfeit, a forfeit will be logged (the game, however, will still be played).

3. Female Minimums: In our non-flip leagues, if a team does not have the requisite number of female players to start the game, there will no longer be a negotiation between captains to allow a reduced minimum format. The referee will allow the team to decide if they want to play down a player or give the opposing team a 3 goal advantage. 

  • Purpose: To motivate teams to work harder to field the appropriate number of female players. To prevent putting opposing teams in uncomfortable position of agreeing to an alternative format.

  • For example. If a team shows up ready to play but has only 1 female player and requires 2, they can play down a player or may field a team of 7 with just 1 female player, but the opponent will be credited with 3 goals. If they have 0 female players, then they either play down 2 or they can play with a team of 6, with 0 female players, but the opponent will be credited with 3 additional goals (you cannot give the opponent 6 goals and play with a team of 7 and 0 female players).

  • If a team agrees to credit the opponent with 3 goals, they cannot change their mind, even if they are later able to field the requisite number of female players (e.g. they show up late). 

  • If a free agent team assembled by NYC Footy does not have the requisite number of female players on their roster, they will be labeled FAx ("x' signifies exception). In these games, to protect the free agent experience, referees will reduce the female minimum until the roster is satisfied.

4. Game balls: Each referee is required to have two (2) game balls with them at all times (at fields where the loss of a ball is possible, the referee will have more).

  • Purpose: To reduce delays and maximize game time.

  • If a game-ball gets kicked out of play at a distance, the referee will wait for a player (preferably the nearest substitute) to begin retrieving the ball and will immediately drop the second ball into play to minimize any stoppage of gameplay.

  • This does require a collective community effort (Thank you!)
    

REMINDER OF RULES RECENTLY IMPLEMENTED LAST YEAR:

  • A yellow card requires the offending player to sub out for a minimum of 2 minutes. A second yellow requires the player to sit out the remainder of the game. In both cases, the team CAN continue at full strength by subbing on a replacement player.

  • Captains must meet the referee at the center circle before the start of each game for a possession "coin toss"
    

Thank you and have a wonderful season!

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NYC Footy: A home for everyone (18+. Sorry kids.)

At NYC Footy, we strive to continue to create more inclusive spaces for our community.

From the start, NYC Footy has always been a co-ed league. From year one, when we began getting requests for men’s leagues, we didn’t budge, despite the obvious growth that would come with making the change.

As we’ve grown and as the environment has changed, we began getting requests for women’s leagues as well. We continued to not budge.

But that doesn’t mean we haven’t evolved. For starters, we have recently moved away from co-ed and towards the more inclusive “mixed gender,” which, to be fair, is actually how it’s phrased in many other countries.

Despite mixed gender being core to our ethos here at Footy, we’re aware that soccer, and on a larger scale, the sports landscape more broadly, has been dominated by males. Inclusion is not only hard, but many times, an afterthought.

While the needle has started to move closer towards gender parity (many thanks to soccer and our very own USWNT), the general sense is that sports, and in our case, recreational sports, is still a male oriented space and one that still lives in the female/male binary.

For some people that’s not an issue. For others, it matters most.

That is why NYC Footy continues to evolve as a community and make changes within how we operate in order to reflect the needs of our community members.

There are already members of our community who have created these types of smaller communities, and have maintained them for a long time; communities and teams that reverse the gender norms of co-ed leagues and value inclusion above all else. One great example: EWAM (Exceptional Women, Average Men). Another, LFLD (Left-Footed Letdown) and a 3rd, an evolution from the early days: Headballaz (the longest running team in NYC Footy).

These teams, and many more throughout the league, disregard the gender requirements in favor of a more unbiased approach, going beyond the gender minimum requirements. While there might be a two female minimum on the field, more often than not there are 4,5 or 6 female players on the field, (read: two female minimum IS NOT two female maximum).

And just to dispel any lingering biases, EWAM has won an absurd amount of titles in Beginner through Intermediate/Advanced leagues over the years.

EWAM after another title

We will continue to be a community that fosters and supports these teams, drives the league towards more parity, and remains a welcoming place for all, binary or non-binary alike.

To the effect, there’s a couple things that we’ve taken it upon ourselves to do.

First, we're experimenting with increasing the minimum of women on each team by creating a reverse ratio league.

Instead of a 7v7 match where there is a two female minimum, there’s a two male maximum.

Honestly, we wish we trialed this sooner. But we’re here now and we expect this to be a growing staple of NYC Footy season in and season out.

If you’re interested in joining, you can find the registration page right below.

We believe that this new format is a way for more females and non-binary players to feel core to NYC Footy and not an after-thought by way of a small female-minimum.

Our goal with this flipped league is that people will enjoy it, which is always our goal, but also that Footy players will be able to find and create new communities they might not have thought available to them in NYC Footy.

Off the pitch, we’re creating more ways for our female and and non-binary players to connect, organizing watch parties and other events, and partnering with WIS (Women-In-Soccer), a community united by the inclusive spirit of soccer, who helped us to create our Ted Lasso Code of Conduct.

Moving on from “Co-ed”

Finally, we want to bring up the subject of language, specifically the term: co-ed.

The term co-ed reflects a dynamic that is inherently binary.

To prevent that term from being a boundary for anyone, a more accurate word/phrase than “co-ed” is “mixed-gender”. That’s why we’ve recently moved to this.

However you identify, you’re welcome in NYC Footy. Just be kind, understanding and respectful. Oh, and “keep it clean”.

We learn because of our experience, because of our partnerships, and most importantly because as our community grows and engages with us, we can tailor our efforts and understanding to you.

Please keep making NYC Footy special. Please continue helping us grow and evolve, and if you have any thoughts at all on how we can make Footy a better home, you know where to find us.

Love Always,
James

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James Berry James Berry

What Makes Footy Fest Special

For us, Footy Fest is a special thing.

It’s an opportunity to do what we can’t while we’re in the city.

To play on real grass, breathe fresh air, enjoy the sport of football somewhere the trees outnumber the buildings and pedestrians.

It’s an opportunity for the NYC Footy community to get together once a year, around what is really meaningful to all of us, around friends, family, and football, and try something different.

That’s the ethos we started Footy Fest with and it’s been a privilege to see it grow over the years into what it is now, a tournament where over 500 players come up to the Catskills and enjoy the quiet side of life for a weekend.

Last year we made a video about the experience of Footy Fest, with the intention of creating a sizzle reel for the upcoming year.

The video turned out to be anything but that. It really captures the soul of Footy Fest, in ways that I can’t hope to do here in this short blog post.

So if you haven’t gone before and want to understand what Footy Fest is about, or you have and know that how spending 5 minutes day-dreaming about it is time well spent, watch this video.

And if you’ve got any friends who might like to come, feel free to pass it on to them too.

Ever,

James

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Tarek Pertew Tarek Pertew

A message from NYC Footy. Reflecting on a challenging year.

Hi Footy Friend,

This is our year in review email. It's a once-a-year narrative and it's quite long.

You don't have to read this (and if you don't, at least scroll to the second to last image).

But, if you're curious what it's like to run a soccer league, then grab a comfort drink and settle in.

It's consistent with my random emails over the years that explain, in detail, what the hell is going on at Footy. Last year was the most intense year in our history and I don't think it's a stretch to say that, at moments, the entire operation was at risk.

Here's what went down.

TLDR: 2022 asked a lot from us, to a point where I was genuinely concerned about our future (and my health). But monumental efforts from a growing team helped right the wrongs, re-wire some circuits, launch new, helpful initiatives and set NYC Footy up for lots of new in 2023.

Summer 2011. First ever season of Footy. 2/3 founders can be found in this photo.

For years NYC Footy was such a small, manageable operation that we knew damn near every player in the league. It was pretty easy to get the "vibe" we were pushing because we played in basically all of the leagues and tournaments we offered. 

Our original vision for Footy was one league in Williamsburg where we could set the standard and play weekly. Turns out quite a few folks liked the type of league we created for ourselves and it started to grow.

1st season at BBP. Again 2/3 founders in this photo.

Things changed first in 2013 when we got our first permit at BBP. But a larger inflection point was probably 2018 when we finally landed a permit in Manhattan (it took 7 years). 

Our 1st season in Manhattan. Battery Park changed the game for Footy.

The biggest change, however, may have been the ripples of COVID in NYC. Creating migration patterns that welcomed many new New Yorkers, but also an acute need for activity and, more importantly, connection.

Footy B.C. (Before Covid) was a strong, steady, wonderful, and not necessarily small community of players in NYC. Since then, the community has nearly tripled.
 

Suddenly, things get far more complicated.


I am pretty focused on ensuring everyone in this league understands how important this operation is to us. Many of you don't fancy my long-winded emails explaining every decision we make. But others really appreciate it. I tend to fall in the latter category myself, which is why I over-index a bit on TMI.

2022 was far and away the most challenging professional year of my life. The year began without anyone working exclusively full time at NYC Footy. For me, it had been a full-time job already, but I was (and still am) running my other company (Uncubed). Gerardo and Joe also had other serious obligations. G managing a band that went gangbusters and Joe operating the most iconic hardware store in NYC.

At the start of last year, it became very clear that we could no longer run NYC Footy as we had for the previous decade. Everyone in the community deserved better.
 

Help is on the way.


I began seeing the demand was outweighing our abilities, no matter how many hours I worked. Fortunately, a few faces began to show up to help, starting with Grace, Gianluca and Kristin, all of whom came on board in part time capacities to support the overwhelming workload.

That's Grace. We met when she pointed out her jersey had a backwards "3" (jersey not pictured).

Last year there were, quite literally, thousands of brand new players. Far more than any previous year. For a league that is desperate to maintain the culture we've created, this is a massive opportunity to expand that, but also a real challenge to ensure so many new faces catch the drift of our operation and understood that Footy is a league built upon community more than anything.


The customer experience is at risk


With my declining success in responding to these new faces, we started to feel the bolts loosen on the operation. By now, I was downright failing on the attentive, quick-to-respond customer service standard we had set.  

We also began seeing more league disruption. It wasn't a lot, but for our small team, it was the largest contributor to our stress. Perhaps a referee didn't show up on time (or at all). Or maybe goals were destroyed or we couldn't get into our storage box. Embarrassing stuff and we couldn't catch up because we didn't have enough resources.

The hight of this stress was the summer of this past year. I was living in Portugal for 3 months, working from 8am to 3am with no end in sight. To top it off, we suddenly lost one of our keystone contributors for 3 weeks that summer. That's about when I had to see a cardiologist because my heart started doing very unusual things (all checked out, thankfully).


There's light at the end of the tunnel


Fortunately, Grace came on board full time to support Kristin, who joined us full time a couple months earlier. Then, our first full time customer service hire started, Zimanta. "Zee' for short. This changed the game, as she began taking over the customer service tasks that helped all of us focus on ensuring we solved any potential league disruptions while continuing to meet the demands of players living all over this great city.

We started to see light at the end of the tunnel when G, my co-founder, reworked his schedule to commit a near full-time effort to Field Operations and ensuring we right sized the issues we were having with jerseys being delayed, goals being broken, and refs being unprepared.

Soon after, Gianluca committed a meaningful PT effort to his FT role at BetterPlayer to support field operations and our referee manager, Markus. His top priority: recruitment and training of new refs.

Finally, as we entered Q4, the referee shortage we'd been experiencing all year, causing the majority of our league disruptions and staff stress, was beginning to wane. We're not fully there (just this morning, we had a ref emergency at 3 fields), but we are a long way from 6 months ago. And I'm not going to bed at 3am anymore.

In October, just after the Footy Fest, the event that truly culminated an extraordinary year, Federico joined full time to direct our customer efforts and focus on player retention and happiness (this will be a never-ending job). 

We rounded off the year by making a full-time offer to James, who started this year as our manager of marketing and communications. He's the fella that now preps these emails for me (and why you're starting to see some more consistency).

This also does not highlight the part-time help we continue to get from the likes of Ashley, Amanda, Thais, Markus and many more that keep our social media flowing, our designs original and our refs scheduled at the right field!

A general idea of what our team looks like now (minus our referees).

Meet the team.


I would love for you to meet this team and, as of yesterday, we have a number of faces up on our about page here.

This is a work in progress, because there are far more faces than these that help make NYC Footy what it is. For starters, the dozens of referees that have such a critical role in your experience (soon their faces will be up on our site as well).

So that's the story in a nutshell, but if you're interested in getting a more specific idea of the good, the bad and the go-forward, then read on.

A Lens Into The Good & The Bad


Lots of good. Here's a sample of what we're proud of this year.


As you might have noticed, Footy grew multiplicatively in 2022, welcoming more new faces in 2022 then in the first 9 years combined. This meant we had to expand current offerings and, where we couldn't expand, get creative.

Tournaments: Governors Cup became the largest soccer tournament in the city, spanning two days in June. The Footy Fest welcomed 500 players, turning it into one of the largest single-day gatherings of city slickers in upstate New York. 

Sunset Leagues: We launched leagues that required players to kick off at 5pm on a weeknight. An experiment that was so successful, it will open way more doors for us this year. 

New Locations: Thanks to an effort led by Kristin, we added dozens of new locations last year to accommodate the many New Yorkers that can't be bothered commuting anywhere!

Vampire Leagues: Nearly all of our vampire leagues (10pm to midnight) were full. Another exciting opportunity moving forward.

We Won a Small Business Award: We won the Mastercard City Assist Award for our contributions to the NYC community as a small business.

Sponsors & Partners: We welcomed NYCFC, Umbro, Pumpkin Pie and NY Orthopedics as league sponsors and partners, culminating in a Footy Day out at Yankee Stadium where 1,000 Footy players attended.

Return of In-Person Events: We came back with a bang with our 1st-timers happy hour, Champion's League Final (over 500 of you attended) and World Cup Viewing Parties.

Growing Online Community: We launched a new online community to help teams and players connect, fill rosters, avoid forfeits, play pickup and more. To date, more than 1K of you have joined.

There's more where that came from, but this email is already far too long!
 

Things we need(ed) to do better on


None of the above was possible without lots of opportunities to learn.

We had more moments than any of us are comfortable sharing where we...well I'll just use the metaphor...dropped the ball. The frequency was enough that we created a "league disruption form" to track these issues and ensure we took care of our players appropriately.

Condition of one of our fields after a concert

Field Changes: We had a field closed due to poor field conditions, a natural grass field destroyed after hosting a concert and a new field that came online a full month later than promised. In all scenarios, teams were re-located to different locations and different times.

No Ref: There were times when players showed up to a field and there was no ref.

No Equipment: Players showed up and our refs couldn't get into our storage box. Playing games with cones as goals.

Customer Service Delays: Before Zimanta joined, my biggest nightmare began to manifest. Customers not getting a response, or getting it so delayed that it no longer mattered.

That doesn't scratch the surface with internal challenges that made decision making and transfer of information seamless and efficient.

When we fail players, it's stomach churning. It creates more work for us, a growing number of "nastigrams" (some justifiable) and the need to dig ourselves out of a hole that should not have been there in the first place.

What I can say is this: league disruptions declined meaningfully between summer and fall, and have become almost non-existent this winter. That is very much credit to our laser focus on these issues and a committed team determined to solve them.

And The Footy (Changes)


In order to continue being the place where you can come hang, play and form the kinds of relationships that made us start this league in the first place, we're making changes that are frankly long overdue.

The first thing will be the least popular.

Generally speaking, prices are going up (with shades of grey).

Starting this spring, we are going to do something we've only every done once before. Raise prices. In fact, the average price for a team captain or free agent is less today than it was at any point in our history.

We've delayed this as long as possible, but it's clear with our nearly universal increase in costs, coupled with building a team that can maintain (if not improve) our standard, we have to. More to come on that in a separate email (cause we'll also have more opportunities to save).

We've increased our number of referees.

Over the last few months, we've increased the number of refs we have to over 50, and have implemented a new ref training program so that every ref who steps onto the field is fully prepared to best represent Footy.

Reducing waste.

We're looking to reduce our jersey waste by implementing return programs and making custom jerseys easier to make.

Get more out of our partners & sponsors for our community.

We've continued to grow our relationships with existing sponsors, and have made connections to new sponsors.

This means that things like getting tickets to NYCFC games and joining us for World Cup Viewing parties will not only continue, but will continue to grow as we add more programming in the year to come. 

Doing more for team captains.

We some of the plans we have in store, we're hoping that by the end of this year, everyone will want to be a captain.


Here's to 2023.

We have a feeling you're going to love what's coming your way in 2023. 

And if you don't. Tell us.

We have always thought of ourselves as a league for players, by players (every full timer here at Footy was a community member first), so your feedback on what we can do better is extremely useful to us.

Critical feedback, big ideas, funky requests, etc. All are welcome. Just be nice.

We apologize for the abnormally bulky, dry, text ridden email. We wanted to make sure that as we go into 2023, we did so with our intentions clear so that you can continue to get the soccer and community experience you deserve, and which is so vital and needed in the world we live in today.

With love, always,

Tarek and the Footy Fam

P.S. Enjoy the best email from 2022 👇 

This email had me laughing for a week straight

Me laughing for a week straight


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James Berry James Berry

The Art of Recovery

Hey everyone,

We’re just about entering the third week of the new year. That means many of us are both mid season, focused on sticking to our New Year’s resolutions, and the regretful, albeit healthy, fad known as dry January.

This post is going to be a small introduction into how to stay healthy over the course of the year, and specifically how to recover.

Unless you grew up with a nutritionist, a doctor, or you’ve done considerable research on your own, you may not really know what to do with yourself when you reach your limit except to keep hitting that wall until you collapse, or to stop completely, neither of which are conducive to a healthy, sustained athletic life (or any kind of life).

It’s a fairly common thing for players to hit the ground running in the new year and not be able to sustain their exercise or soccer goals simply because they don’t think about recovery, so that’s what we’re going to go over here to today.

This post is going to contain pretty generalized advice. While it will get into specifics in certain circumstances, and we will be diving into more detail in subsequent posts, know that your body is different and while all of these factors are important facets in healthy recovery, how much they effect you individually will vary from person to person. So it’s best that you think about them as slices of a pie, and as you train and learn you augment how big a slice each part gets.

Before I get into my unsolicited, unprofessional, generalized advice that I’ve gained over a few decades of coaching and playing sports at a high level, I’m going to point you in the direction of my betters.

Specifically NYOrthopedics. If you ever get injured they should be your first stop on the road to recovery.

NY Orthopedics

NYOrthopedics has been serving the NYC area for over twenty years now, and is one of our sponsors at NYC Footy, a partnership that we’re really happy to have, especially as we get older and more injury prone. You may have seen them at Gov Cup, massaging strains, icing bruises, and just generally giving care where it was needed.

I have first hand experience with them and I can tell you that the care is excellent. Most, if not all, of the doctors there are athletes so they understand what it means to recover as an athlete.

Not only do they have experience on both sides of the coin, both as athletes and doctors, but as an institution they do a lot to make you feel like you’re being handled by people and not like you’re a cog in the medical meat grinder.

Signing up for appointments is incredibly easy, which can be done online in seconds.

They have a very comprehensive recovery program which will give you detailed instructions on what to do day in and day out in order to recovery in the most effective way right on your phone.

Finally, and maybe most importantly, while they take most insurances, if you’re uninsured they will go a long way to help out to make sure your health doesn’t suffer for the fear of the bill.

You can find their facilities all over the NYC area, and while I hope you don’t actually need to go visit them, should you get injured I wouldn’t really recommend you going anywhere else.

The rest of today’s post is going to be focused on the three main ways you can avoid going to see them, and how to take care of yourself through the year in very practical, no-nonsense way.

Let’s start it off with inarguably the most important way to recover.

Sleep and rest.

You can think of sleeping like investing in Apple 30 years ago. No matter how hard you work (how much stretching, icing, compression you do), nothing you do will net you the same return as just sleeping well.

This extends not only to sleep, but also to resting while you are awake. If you exercise 7 days a week without any time for your body to rest, you will see diminishing returns on the exercise that you do.

Resting and allowing your body to recover is the bedrock of what allows your body to take action and if you don’t do it, your performance, on the pitch, in the gym, running, wherever, will dwindle over time and you will inevitably hit a wall, rendering a lot of your hard work moot.

Sleep and rest represent the best and worst things about recovery.

The best thing is that your body is complex, highly intuitive, and it will repair itself without you needing to ‘learn’ what to do.

The downside is that to a certain extent you have to let go of control and allow your body take its course towards recovery. And if you try to speed up that recovery process, you’re going to inevitably add weeks, if not months or years, onto what could have been a fairly minor injury.

All of this is in service of saying, protect your sleep, let your body recover, and take rest days. It is as important than the exercise you do.

While rest and sleep do make a huge difference and are vital to your recovery, there is a lot you can do outside of your exercise routine that will ensure you stay active and healthy for the long run, sticking to those resolutions for months to come (or to throwing them out the window like the rest of us, but in a way that lets you still feel and stay healthy).

Nutrition

You are what you eat is just very real. What you put into your body will become your body. I don’t think a scientist would ever say it that way, but in essence that’s what happening.

There are certain stipulations within that. Obviously if you eat incredibly well and you sit on your couch all day, what you eat will make less of a difference if it is incredibly healthy or not.

I’m sure none of this is news to you at this point, but it bears repeating because what we eat and drink is a question that we’re faced with probably dozens of times a day and so it bears creating a little bit of a plan around.

I’m going to lay out three easy tips for how to becoming more nutritionally aware and healthy. This isn’t a diet plan. Not only does everyone’s body absorb nutrients differently, the amount of exercise each person does is different, but also people’s ability to spend money on food will be drastically different and a lot of ‘healthy’ food is simply more expensive and so is unavailable to some people. Therefore my suggestions are all tailored towards everyone, regardless of your diet, exercise plan, or food budget.

#1, plan your weekly activities: Thinking about how you’re active should be a big part about how you want to eat.

You should eat differently on a day when you exercise (carbs early in the day, even some sugars close to when you exercise) as opposed to a rest day (cheese, mostly cheese). Sincerely though, your body will take in and use nutrients different in activity versus rest, so take 10 minutes every Sunday, mark each day you are going to be active, and then adjust what you eat that day accordingly.

#2, avoid food fads. There are a ton of fads around nutrition that just aren’t real and are really a marketing gimmick.

The best example I can give is actually making a resurgence right now, which is cottage cheese. Yes. Cottage cheese, the food that sounds the most like a clogged artery, was marketed as a health food in the 80s, and is once again being lauded as a health food.

Without getting incredibly bogged down in the details, while cottage cheese is high in protein, it is also fairly dense in fat and cholesterol (less cholesterol than other cheeses, but when cheese is the comparison it’s not a great thing).

I bring this up only to say, don’t take these fad foods and diets at face value and don’t let them push you towards drastic changes in your diet all at once. Fad diets tend not to work and more often than not, they create a situation where you rubber-band back to the old eating habits you were trying to grow out of in the first place.

Is it ok to incorporate them into your diet? Of course it is, but don’t let them become the basis for everything you deem healthy. Instead, build around health foods you enjoy eating and cooking at home where you can control the ingredients, flavors, and cost.

#3, become nutritionally literate.

More than anything, this is going to help you make healthy choices about what you put in your body. Start by just learning how to read the labels on your food. Do you know the difference between unsaturated fat and polyunsaturated fats? It really is not a high bar, I promise.

From there, if you want to, you can move on to learning how your body processes carbs, proteins, and fats, but even if you stop at being able to read a label, it will help you so much in terms of putting a plan in place that suits your lifestyle so you can ignore people like me.

Warm-ups and Active Recovery

The final major block in the foundation of general healthiness is warming up and active recovery.
I’m talking about active recovery and warming up in the most basic senses, referring to jogging and stretching before the game, and stretching a bit after.

Warming-up is pretty self-explanatory and should be pretty obviously good idea. I see maybe 99% of players walk on and off the field in Footy without stretching, warming up, or cooling down (shout out to my friend Randy, who is 42 and still plays at a high level, because he stretches and warms up).

For the love of God, touch your toes, bend your knees, and swing your arms a little bit before you go full tilt on the pitch.

If you wonder why you hit a wall about 3-5 minutes into the game, it’s not because you don’t have the energy to play longer, it’s because your body wasn’t ready to dive into the deep end so quickly and it needs a little bit of time to establish a rhythm.

My view on warming up is that it’s like an on/off ramp to a highway. You have to build up your speed as you enter the highway, and reduce your speed as you come off. You don’t just go 0-60-0 when getting on and off.

If you sit at home or in an office for 6-8 hours, then get over to the soccer field and start sprinting immediately, you’re body is going to hate you and you’re just asking to pull a muscle.

Active recovery is the same framework as warming-up just on the back end. Stretch a little bit after your game while everyone is taking off their shinguards and cleats. It will help your body re-situate to not being as active

There is so much more that I want to talk about in terms of recovery, but as this is a brief introduction and overview, I’m going to cut it off here for today.

Don’t worry though, as this is just the first of an on-going series that will be rolling out this year, that focuses on how we can help you take care of your bodies as you strive towards whatever your fitness and Footy goals are.

-James

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James Berry James Berry

Neighborhood Spotlight: LIU Brooklyn

Hey All,

We’re back with another neighborhood spotlight, and this one comes to us right in the middle of Downtown Brooklyn.

With tons of new NYC Footy leagues springing up around the city as we roll into winter, I want to take this moment to point out one of our best looking new locations, LIU Brooklyn.

Those of you who have played with us during the winter before this year, and those of you who call Pier 5 home, probably were familiar with the gym at St. Francis. Sadly, this space is no longer available as the whole building got sold.

While it’s always sad to see a field go, especially one with so much connection to Footy, this makes LIU all the more special.

The gym at LIU is only a short walk from where St. Francis used to be, so those of you who live in Downtown Brooklyn or who covet a short walk from the subway to the gym won’t have to sacrifice a thing.

This is the LIU Brooklyn Spotlight!

LIU

The Pitch:

The gym is incredibly well maintained and as you can see above is gigantic.

We’ll be running a two games on the floor side by side so there will be a lot more soccer for you and your friends to play, especially for those of you who like to stick around and sub for the games after yours.

This also means there is plenty more space on the side where you can keep your stuff, change, and sub without worrying about an errant ball (or human) flying towards you.

It may seem like a small luxury, but most indoor fields are fairly tight on space and this is one of the few locations where you’ll have the entire large area at your disposal.

Indoor seasons are a great way to get into shape in the ‘off season’ as there’s always a way to be active on the smaller field, so LIU is a perfect chance for you to kick off those resolutions strong and stay in shape for the spring and summer seasons.

The Neighborhood:

Downtown Brooklyn is chock full of post game parlors for you and your team.

I’m going to point you towards a few of my favorite recommendations. If you’re someone who likes to explore on their own both Fulton St. and Lafayette Ave are littered with bars, restaurants, and coffee shops, and rest just a block away from LIU to the south.

On the other end, the Dekalb Market Hall is just a block to the west, so there’s plenty around you in any direction.

Wherever you go, if you have your friends, it’ll be a great place!

Up First: Alibi

Alibi

Alibi is this lists no no-nonsense dive, and it just so happens to have landed the #2 spot on GrubStreets list of the Top 50 Dive Bars in New York (you can check out the full article right here: Grub Streets 50 best dives).

Alibi is located just a few blocks up Lafayette Ave. If you’re looking for somewhere dimly lit, with draft beers, and a dart board this is the place for you.

The bartenders are incredibly jovial and warm, so your kindness towards them goes a long way.

IF you get up here and find that it’s not to your liking or is a little too packed, there are four other bars on this one block of Lafayette Ave, so just keep calm and mosey on.

Up Next: Fancy Free

Fancy Free

Good bar food, drink specials all the time, a friendly staff, not to mention it’s two blocks away from the field and sits directly in front of the subway.

As you can see, there’s plenty of outdoor space (with space heaters in the winter of course), and the indoor goes deep into the back and is filled with long tables so even if you come in with your whole team, you won’t have to worry about accommodations.

Perfect if you’re looking for that “ok fine but only one because I have stuff to do” drink.

Up Next: Walter’s

Walter’s

Walter’s falls more on the sit down and eat category than quick post-game drink, but if you’re playing on a weekend afternoon and want to spend some more time with your wonderful teammates, Walter’s is perfect.

They serve elevated American fare, have great drinks and brunch specials at your pleasure.

Additionally, they’re right across the street from Ft. Greene Park, so on those rare, crisp but comfortable winter days you can spend some time lounging among the trees or walking through the farmer’s market that pops up right across the street on weekends.

And Lastly: Rockwell

Rockwell

Rockwell is a great bar, serving beer, cocktails, small and large bites in a really nice space complete with a front street patio.

While all of this is well and good (and I do mean that sincerely) the real reason Rockwell finds itself on this list is because it is right across the street from the gym. Really, right across the street.

So if you and your friends are trying to make a quick exit from the gym and want to land back inside within 60 seconds or less, Rockwell is your place.

Directions:

LIU sits near the heart of Downtown Brooklyn, so there are about fifty different ways you can get to the field easily.

Subway: The G, 2, 3, B, D, 4, 5, F, N, R, W all have stations in close proximity to the field making it one of the most easily accessible locations around.

Bike: There are two Citibike stations on both sides of the gym, so if you’re biking (in the winter no less, bless your heart) you’ll find it super easy.

Bus: You can also use the B54 which runs along Myrtle Ave and will drop you right in front of the location.

As always, it’s been a pleasure to write for y’all and share what I can. I hope you take some notes and have a great season!

-James

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