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How Ukrainian immigrants turned Philadelphia into a soccer town : NPR

Standing on a green soccer field and wearing a yellow and light blue soccer uniform, Oleksandr “Sasha” Ostapchuk sets himself up to head a ball that's in the air while playing for a team of Ukrainian immigrants against a club with roots in Belarus at Tryzub Ukrainian American Sport Center in North Wales, Pennsylvania, on June 21.

Oleksandr “Sasha” Ostapchuk (left) heads a ball while playing for a tournament squad of the Philadelphia Ukrainian Nationals soccer team in a match against a club with roots in Belarus at Tryzub Ukrainian American Sport Center in North Wales, Pa., on June 21.

Rachel Wisniewski for NPR


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Rachel Wisniewski for NPR

NORTH WALES, Pa. — Just before game time, Roman Chuprynyak sat in a locker room bent forward, face intense. He ran his hand through stubbly gray hair while giving his team one more pep talk.

“You win,” he shouted in Ukrainian. “There’s no other option, damn it!”

The men, wearing the yellow and blue national colors of Ukraine, roared a cheer and jogged out to the pitch in this suburb just outside Philadelphia.

This isn’t World Cup play. That’s happening in Philadelphia’s big stadium 45 minutes away.

These are two local, ethnic soccer clubs, players with roots in Belarus scrumming on the home pitch of a Ukrainian club called Tryzub. The club’s name is a reference to the trident, Ukraine’s national symbol.

“Everybody calls us Ukis,” Chuprynyak said, grinning with pride. After immigrating to the U.S. as a teenager in 2001, he found his way to Tryzub, where he now works as a coach and an athletic director. “This club has been proven through time — 75 years it’s been here.”

Tryzub, formally known as the Ukrainian American Sport Center, focuses on amateur league play and is home to the Philadelphia Ukrainian Nationals. It’s a top-tier amateur team now, but in the 1950s and 1960s, the squad dominated American pro-leagues, during an era when soccer was still largely eclipsed in the U.S. by football, baseball and basketball.

In its heyday, the team, led by Ukrainian refugees from World War II and Stalin’s postwar oppression, won a half-dozen national championships in various American professional leagues. It also convinced big European teams like Manchester United to come play exhibition matches.

“Nobody cared about [soccer] in the ’60s except the Ukrainians and these other ethnic teams,” said Yana Pashaeva, who made a documentary about Philadelphia’s deep Ukrainian soccer culture. Her film tracks how members of the club helped lay the foundation of the modern U.S. soccer movement, which began to draw wider popularity in the 1990s.

This black-and-white photo shows members of the Philadelphia Ukrainian Nationals soccer team posing for a photo. They are in two rows: one row of members standing in the back and one row of members squatting on the ground in front. Text beneath the photo says: "PHILADELPHIA UKRAINIAN NATIONALS - JUNE 21, 1969." The names of the team members are listed underneath.

Through the late 1950s and 1960s, the Philadelphia Ukrainian Nationals soccer team was one of the top pro-league soccer teams in the United States. Immigrants fleeing World War II and Stalin’s oppression brought their love of the game to Pennsylvania, helping to establish soccer as an American sport.

Photo provided by Eugene Luciw, Tryzub Ukrainian American Sport Center, used with permission/Eugene Luciw


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Photo provided by Eugene Luciw, Tryzub Ukrainian American Sport Center, used with permission/Eugene Luciw

Much of the documentary focuses on a Ukrainian immigrant named Walter Chyzowych, who settled in Philadelphia in 1949. Chyzowych was a star player who helped establish a network of coaching schools and camps around the United States. He later managed the U.S. national team and coached top national squads.

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