Changes Afoot

1951 – Around the World and Close to Home

As the Korean War rages on, passage of the 22nd Amendment limits Presidents to two terms and the Rosenbergs are sentenced to death for treason. Washington launches its state ferry system and Seattle’s KING broadcasts the first live television news program in the Pacific Northwest.

Changes Afoot

While the Washington top tier’s geographical footprint would shrink, the state senior league would add two sponsored clubs’ whose names would grow synonymous with championship contenders for many years to come.

Throughout the Twenties and Thirties the Vikings moniker was activated and associated with squads primarily of Scandinavian heritage. The pirates of the Norse are brought back once more, following a 13-year hiatus, for the 1950-51 season. It’s not truly a new team, as the Vikings are a rebrand of Acme Tyee, the defending champions. Different name, same outcome the Vikings claim a total of five prizes, including the league, knockout cup and finally the Northwest champions with a resounding 7-0 rout of Oregon’s Clan McCleay.

The other new club is just growing into its skin. The Buchan Baking Co. sponsors the youngest entry in the top division, a cast created predominantly from the Fremont Boys Club. Eddie Craggs brings his Bakers into the senior circuit. They debut versus eventual league finalist Seattle SC and only fall, 1-0. They would take their share of lumps but also stayed out of the league cellar by winning a few matches.

By the second half of the campaign all six teams are from Seattle, a city celebrating its centennial year. Black Diamond, once a force in the region, leaves the league after a humbling first half when the Miners were humiliated by the Vikings, 11-nil, and only managed to field a respectable side by picking-up players from the disbanded E&E Meats.

The Vikings found themselves on the other end of such lopsided loss, albeit in a friendly, a few months later. Stockholm’s AIK, just the second touring professional club to visit Seattle, delivers a 12-2 beating. Still, it’s an occasion to bring together the game’s extended family, with an outstanding turnout of 5,000 at West Seattle Stadium.

Northwest Champion
Vikings 7:0 Clan McCleay (Portland))
State Men's Champion
Seattle SC
State Knockout Cup
Vikings 3:1 Sunny Jim
Largest Attendance
5,000, Vikings v AIK (Sweden), West Seattle

1951: Changes Afoot

There's some new kids in town, the Bakers, and Vikings become the team to beat. Meanwhile, Black Diamond's days on pitch are done.

Norselander Wins State League
April 1, 1951

Vikings get two goals and an assist from Norwegian Per Petersen to overpower Seattle SC, 5-2, for the league championship and McMillan Cup at White Center Stadium.

Vikings Lift 4th Trophy
April 15, 1951

The Vikings lift their fourth trophy of the season by winning the 16-team five-a side tournament at White Center. Five of the entries are form Vancouver, including Sunset Memorial, the British Columbia junior champions who fall to Vikes, 3-1 in the final. Erling Hansen, Einar Eliasson and Emmett Brennan score in the 15-minute match.

Sunny Jim Rises Again
March 4, 1951

Sunny Jim, after finishing the second half of league play with two defeats, regroups and rises to blank the Vikings, 3-0, in the George Washington Cup final at White Center. Sunny Jim, coached by Gordon Roberts, gets goals from Ben Weischer, Ivor Merryfield and Walter Clark.

Sponsors Step Up to Secure Swedes
May 27, 1951

Five major individual sponsors step up to provide a $2,000 guarantee for Sweden’s AIK to visit Seattle. AIK’s tour will begin on the East Coast, with matches in New York and Massachusetts before moving on to Detroit and then Vancouver and Seattle. Einar Carlson, Axel Thornberg, Ivan Anderson, Austin Gunderson and Barney Kempton are the sponsors for the June 17 friendly versus the state champion Vikings at West Seattle Stadium. AIK was recently relegated from Sweden’s first division, the Allsvenskan.

Briscoe Wins Parochial League
November 25, 1951

Briscoe School wins the Seattle Parochial League with 3-2 victory over St. Anne’s at Lower Woodland despite Oliver Flor’s 2 goals. St. Mary’s finishes the CYO league unbeaten by beating St. Benedict’s of Broadway, 5-4.

Vikings Avenge Cup Loss
March 25, 1951

In their second cup final meeting in three weeks, the Vikings avenge a loss to Sunny Jim in the league knockout cup. A goal in each half by Thor Ronning carries Norselander to a 3-1 win at White Center.

Teen Steps Up for Vikes
March 18, 1951

In the absence of regular keeper Perry Stangvik, 15-year-old Bob Moser, usually a midfielder, steps between the sticks for the Vikings’ 5-1 win over Black Diamond in the semifinals of the league knockout cup.

Fyfe Bags 4 for Bakers
December 9, 1951

Dave Fyfe scores four goals for Buchans in a 5-0 win over United Restaurants. Meanwhile, the Vikings debut their three new recruits: Billy Smith, formerly of Pacific Coast League’s North Shore, Oslo’s Lars Torviw and Dane Carl Pedersen.

Stockholm's AIK Routs Vikings
June 17, 1951

A crowd of 5,000 packs West Seattle Stadium for an international friendly featuring Sweden’s AIK. The Stockholm side, which had already beaten the ASL All-Stars in New York, 4-0, throttle the state champion Vikings, 12-2. G. Nillson opens the scoring after three minutes and B. Blackwell nets four times for the Swedes.

Brothers Score Six-Pack
January 15, 1951

Brothers Gene and Merle Mjelde score three goals apiece in Seattle Soccer Club’s seventh straight league win, 6-1 win over Black Diamond.

Seattle SC Clinches on Own Goal
February 11, 1951

A late own goal gifts Seattle SC the decisive goal in the second-half title race with Sunny Jim. SSC (8-0-2) earns the title with a 2-1 win at Lower Woodland. The decline for Sunny Jim began a week earlier when league secretary Vic Weston ruled they had used an ineligible player in a 9-1 victory over Buchan. The Bakers were awarded a forfeit, the Jims’ first loss of the stage.

Vikings Rule Northwest
April 8, 1951

Erling Hansen’s hat trick is enough, but the Vikings add four more goals to decisively earn Northwest bragging rights with a 7-nil pounding of Portland’s Clan McCleay at White Center. Emmett Brennan, Sig Edngelstad, Austin Gunderson also score for the Vikes.

AIK carried the attack all the way, dribbling, butting and feinting the ball to coast to the lopsided win. The Swedes let the ball do the work while the Seattle eleven chased it under a warm afternoon sun.
Seattle Times match report for Vikings v AIK
On this Day in History
November 29, 2001
Brian Schmetzer, a Sounders player in both the NASL and A-League eras and a Seattle native, is named Sounders head coach. This will be the first head coaching appointment for Schmetzer, 39. He served as player/assistant coach with the indoor Seattle SeaDogs from 1995-97. Schmetzer serves as coaching director of the Emerald City Futbol Club and coached the Lake City Hawks over-30 team to the national championship last year.
More from 2001 ›
November 16, 1997
Battling for a roster spot, Chris Henderson scores and assists in his first start for the U.S. National Team in 30 months, a 4-2 win over El Salvador to wrap-up World Cup qualifying in Foxborough, Mass. Henderson lays the ball back for Brian McBride's first-half goal and scores his third international goal and first since 1993 in the 49th.
More from 1997 ›
November 25, 2005
Whitworth comes up short in its bid to reach the NCAA Division III final, falling to Minnesota's Gustavo Adolphus, 2-1, in semifinal at Greensboro, N.C. Skye Henderson scores for the Pirates. Their first loss in 18 games concludes their best-ever season, setting records for total victories (19) and winning percentage (.886).
More from 2005 ›
November 3, 1995
A 7th-minute strike from Scott Jenkins from a Jason Boyce corner kick sets the tone in Washington's 2-0 win over Seattle Pacific. The Huskies score again in the 59th minute when Bryan McNiel takes a Boyce throw-in and blasts past SPU goalkeeper Johann Noetzel. The victory at Husky Soccer Field extends the UW unbeaten streak to 11 games (8-0-3) and cinches a return to the NCAA tournament after a two-year absence.
More from 1995 ›