143:, 2-1, at halftime in San Diego (with Njego Pesa getting both New York tallies). However, a flurry of San Diego goals in the second half made the final score 6-2, dropping the Express' record to 3-23. It would be the last game the New York Express would ever play: two days later, on February 17, the club announced it was bankrupt. Messing blamed poor attendance (an average of 5,212 for 13 home games) and an inability to sell sufficient shares in a $ 5.2 million public stock offering. MISL commissioner Bill Kentling, unhappy to see its New York team fail so spectacularly, threatened to sue the Express for fraud and breach of contract. The 37-year-old Messing also retired as a player after the death of the Express.
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Things did not go nearly as well for the club once they joined the MISL; in fact, it quickly turned into a disaster. Despite drawing a decent crowd of 10,577 for their home opener on
November 21, 1986, attendance quickly dropped as New York lost their first ten games, costing coach
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two nights later at the
Coliseum; however, another slump gave the Express a putrid 2-22 record at the All-Star break. (Defender Chris Whyte and midfielder Michael Collins were selected for the game, played at the
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The
Express were formed in late 1985, and played an exhibition schedule in the winter of 1986. The Express featured Messing in goal and former Cosmos star and U.S. National Team player
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On
February 14, 1987, the Express got their third (and final) win of the season when Mark Liveric's goal gave New York a 6-5 overtime win over the
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national teams, drawing about 6,000 fans per contest. Finally, on May 15, 1986, the
Express were accepted as an expansion franchise by the MISL.
46:. They played only part of the 1986–87 MISL season before folding just after the league's midseason All-Star Break. Their home arena was
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The
Express were the fourth and final attempt by the MISL to establish itself in the New York market, after previously failing with the
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78:. New York won all five games it played (all held at the Nassau Coliseum), against such competition as
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to a 16-36 record, worst in the West.) The next day, in a game carried nationally on
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his job on
December 23. After three more defeats, the Express hired ex-Arrows coach
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N.Y. Express Games were broadcast on WBAU radio. Play-by-play highlights.
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in Los
Angeles. (It was the Lazers' ninth straight loss
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and won by the East over the West, 6-5, in overtime.)
155:(1978–1984), who also played at Nassau Coliseum, the
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223:Leptich, John. "Era Ends In Style For Sting,"
23:For the 19th century New York newspaper, see
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50:. They were owned by Stan Henry and ex-
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109:Don Popovic
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88:Portuguese
68:Rick Davis
62:Formation
133:en route
141:Sockers
80:Arsenal
54:goalie
147:Legacy
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34:was a
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30:The
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