Saturday, July 18, 2026

El Paso Locomotive FC at FC Tulsa

FC Tulsa


On an FC Tulsa match night, ONEOK Field experiences a small but convincing identity crisis. The baseball diamond retreats beneath temporary grass, goals appear where outfielders usually patrol, and drums begin to echo against the warehouses and office buildings of downtown. It does not become London, Buenos Aires, or Mexico City. It remains unmistakably Tulsa—practical, improvised, a little eccentric, and capable of becoming unexpectedly loud.

That may be the best way to understand soccer in Tulsa. The game has never arrived here only once. It has appeared, disappeared, changed names, moved fields, survived bankrupt leagues, and returned wearing a different badge. Each generation seems to rediscover it, though someone from an earlier generation is usually standing nearby with an old scarf and the patient expression of a person who has heard all this before.

Professional soccer first made a serious claim on the city in 1978, when Team Hawaii relocated to Oklahoma and became the Tulsa Roughnecks. The name was an inspired piece of local translation. Soccer may have come from abroad, but the Roughnecks belonged to the oil fields. The club took an international game and dressed it in Tulsa work clothes.

They played at Skelly Stadium on the University of Tulsa campus during the extravagant years of the original North American Soccer League. This was the era when American clubs imported famous players, adopted ambitious names, and occasionally behaved as though the nation might abandon baseball before the weekend. The New York Cosmos were the league’s grandest attraction, but when they came to Tulsa in April 1980, more than 30,000 people watched the Roughnecks defeat them, 2–1.

For many people in Tulsa, that match was proof that soccer could be more than a children’s recreation played on uneven fields between orange cones. It could draw a crowd. It could fill a stadium. It could make Tulsa feel connected to a much larger world.

The Roughnecks’ defining season came in 1983, though it began with little indication that anything memorable was underway. Tulsa had one of the league’s smallest payrolls and lost eight of its first ten matches. The roster had been assembled quickly, the league was becoming increasingly unstable, and the team appeared more likely to be remembered as a financial precaution than as a champion.

Then it began winning.

The Roughnecks recovered, captured their division, and advanced to Soccer Bowl ’83 against the Toronto Blizzard in Vancouver. Before more than 50,000 spectators, Tulsa won, 2–0. A club representing a city far from the traditional centers of the sport had become champion of the highest level of American professional soccer.

Tulsa welcomed the team home with a parade. President Ronald Reagan sent congratulations. The players had given Oklahoma one of its earliest major professional sports championships and the city a soccer memory that outlived the league itself.

That last point matters. The original NASL collapsed after the 1984 season, but soccer did not vanish from Tulsa. It settled into the city.

Several international players who had come to Tulsa through the Roughnecks remained after their professional careers ended. They became coaches, organizers, and teachers. They worked with youth clubs and passed the game to children who had never seen the championship team play. Tulsa’s soccer culture grew not only through trophies and professional franchises, but through former players standing on practice fields and teaching young athletes how to receive a pass, create space, and resist the childhood conviction that everyone should play forward.

The Roughnecks name returned in the 1990s through another professional organization, this time in the shifting landscape of lower-division American soccer. That team competed both indoors and outdoors and helped maintain the city’s connection to the sport. The scale was smaller than it had been during the NASL years, but permanence in American soccer has rarely meant uninterrupted existence. More often, it means that someone keeps the name, the memory, or the habit alive until the next version arrives.

The University of Tulsa became one of the city’s most consistent soccer institutions. Its men’s program developed players and coaches while connecting Tulsa to the college game. Indoor facilities such as SoccerCity allowed children and adults to play throughout the year. Youth clubs expanded. High school programs grew stronger. Former players returned as coaches, and adult league participants encountered the same opponents season after season, aging together while continuing to argue over fouls with the moral seriousness of international diplomats.

Soccer became a local habit.

Tulsa Athletic represents another branch of that history. The club grew from a local team into a successful amateur organization built around community participation. Its home at Hicks Park in east Tulsa lacks the polish of a purpose-built professional stadium, but it possesses something more difficult to manufacture: character.

Families bring lawn chairs. Volunteers help maintain the grounds. The setting feels less like a commercial entertainment district and more like a neighborhood gathering that happens to include organized competition.

In 2023, Tulsa Athletic hosted professional FC Tulsa in the U.S. Open Cup. The Open Cup is one of the few places in American sports where an amateur team can meet a professional club in meaningful competition. Tulsa Athletic defeated FC Tulsa, 1–0, on a field that appeared determined to participate in the match.

It was called a cup upset, but the result captured something essential about the appeal of soccer. Budgets differ. Facilities differ. Players arrive with different levels of fame, training, and institutional support. Yet the field remains rectangular, the goals remain the same size, and the ball remains stubbornly indifferent to status.

The present professional club began play in 2015 as Tulsa Roughnecks FC. Owned at first by the organization behind the Tulsa Drillers, the team joined the United Soccer League and began playing at ONEOK Field. The revived name deliberately connected the club to 1983, though the early seasons offered more continuity of memory than continuity of victory.

In 2019, Tulsa natives J. W., Ryan, and Kyle Craft purchased the club and relaunched it as FC Tulsa. The Roughnecks identity was retired, and a new crest appeared featuring Oklahoma’s scissor-tailed flycatcher. The colors drew inspiration from the city’s Art Deco architecture, giving the badge a look rooted in Tulsa rather than borrowed from a distant European club.

The change represented a broader ambition. The Roughnecks name belonged naturally to the oil economy and the mythology of working men in the fields. FC Tulsa attempted to speak for a larger and more complicated city: downtown redevelopment and east Tulsa neighborhoods, Art Deco wealth and Greenwood history, suburban youth clubs and immigrant communities, longtime residents and new arrivals.

That is a difficult task for any sports organization. A city is not a single audience. It is a collection of communities that occasionally agree to sit in the same stadium.

The supporters’ group 83 United provides one of the clearest bridges between the old and new eras. Its name honors the 1983 championship, but its members support the present club with drums, songs, flags, and an admirable willingness to remain enthusiastic during seasons that did not always reward enthusiasm.

That kind of support is easy to romanticize after a victory. It is more revealing during a loss, when a supporters’ section continues singing despite the uncomfortable evidence provided by the scoreboard. Loyalty in sports is often measured less by celebration than by repetition: showing up again, standing in the same place, beginning the same chant, and behaving as though hope has not already made a fool of you several times.

The rivalry with Oklahoma City Energy added another distinctly local feature. The winner of the Black Gold Derby received a large wrench, a trophy far more appropriate to Oklahoma than a polished silver cup. A wrench suggests that soccer here has not been inherited fully assembled. It has had to be built, repaired, and occasionally struck with a heavy object until it began functioning again.

Yet professional clubs tell only part of the story. Tulsa’s futbol culture also lives in its Hispanic and Latino communities, where the game does not require a marketing campaign to explain its importance. It is played through youth programs, adult leagues, indoor facilities, school teams, informal matches, and family traditions. Supporters follow clubs from Mexico, Central America, South America, Europe, and the United States, often maintaining several loyalties at once.

FC Tulsa has increasingly attempted to recognize those communities through Spanish-language outreach, cultural celebrations, local partnerships, and Vamos Tulsa events. At their best, such efforts do not pretend that the professional club introduced futbol to east Tulsa. They acknowledge that a deep soccer culture was already present and that the club’s future depends upon whether those communities see themselves represented within it.

The distinction is important. A professional team can stage a themed night. It cannot manufacture belonging.

Tulsa’s soccer culture also gathers in less formal sanctuaries. Bars open early for international matches. Youth teams occupy long tables while parents attempt to follow both the match and the children. Supporters of Mexico, the United States, England, Argentina, and half a dozen other nations watch the same screen while responding to entirely different inheritances.

In these rooms, “soccer” and “fĂștbol” are not opposing terms. They are evidence that people have arrived at the same game by different routes.

Some came through the Roughnecks and remember 1983. Some were introduced through youth soccer and orange slices. Some followed family clubs from another country. Some discovered the game through college, television, travel, or a brother who understood the rules slightly better. Others remain uncertain why the referee has added six minutes to a match that was advertised as ninety. Soccer allows for this confusion. In fact, it often seems to encourage it.

FC Tulsa’s 2025 season offered the strongest evidence yet that the modern club had found a larger place within the city. The team finished first in the Western Conference and advanced through the USL Championship playoffs. Attendance records fell as the club moved deeper into the postseason, and ONEOK Field became increasingly convincing as a soccer ground.

Tulsa eventually hosted the USL Championship Final against Pittsburgh Riverhounds SC. After 120 scoreless minutes, the match went to penalties, where FC Tulsa lost.

It was a painful conclusion, as penalty shootouts generally are unless one has the good fortune to support the winning side. Yet the defeat did not erase what the season revealed. Thousands of people had filled the stadium repeatedly. The city had responded not merely to a nostalgic Roughnecks anniversary, but to the present club.

The appetite had been there all along. It simply required something substantial enough to gather around.

The creation of the FC Tulsa Academy offered another sign of maturation. By connecting the professional club more directly to youth development, the organization began building a clearer pathway for local players. The ambition is straightforward but significant: A child growing up in Tulsa should be able to imagine progressing through local soccer without immediately assuming that the serious part of the journey must happen somewhere else.

There is a satisfying historical symmetry in that possibility. Former Roughnecks once remained in Tulsa and informally taught the next generation. The modern club is now attempting to turn that inheritance into a permanent system.

Tulsa will probably never resemble the great soccer capitals of the world, nor should it try too hard. Its soccer culture is more interesting because it is distinctly its own. It has been assembled through oil-field names, college programs, indoor leagues, immigrant traditions, amateur volunteers, youth coaches, stubborn supporters, uneven fields, improvised stadiums, and one championship team that began its greatest season by losing eight of ten matches.

FC Tulsa did not create this culture. It inherited it.

The club’s task is to persuade all those separate traditions to recognize themselves in the same place: the supporter carrying a Roughnecks scarf from 1983, the child learning the game at an indoor facility, the family watching Liga MX, the student-athlete at the University of Tulsa, the amateur player arriving at Hicks Park, and the drummer standing behind the goal at ONEOK Field.

Perhaps that is what a soccer club is supposed to do. It takes a city made up of people who arrived by different routes and asks them, for ninety minutes and whatever mysterious additional time the referee invents, to face the same direction.


The University of Tulsa



The easiest version of the University of Tulsa’s history begins in 1894, when Henry Kendall College opened its doors in Muskogee. The truer version begins twelve years earlier, with a group of Native girls whose names nearly disappeared from the story.

In 1882, before Oklahoma was a state and before Tulsa had become synonymous with oil, the Presbyterian School for Indian Girls opened in Muskogee, Indian Territory. It was a small boarding school established to educate girls from the Muscogee Nation. The word educate, however, carries considerable historical baggage. Schools such as this one offered literacy and opportunities that could shape a student’s future, but they also operated within a national system intended to assimilate Native children into White American society. Language, religion, culture, and identity were not merely subjects surrounding the classroom; they were often the contested ground beneath it.

Alice Mary Robertson became the school’s director in 1885. Her family had long participated in Presbyterian mission work among the Muscogee people, and the school stood on Robertson family land. She would later enter politics and become the first woman from Oklahoma elected to Congress. For many years, however, institutional memory treated Robertson as the central figure in photographs of the school. Her name was preserved; the girls standing beside her were frequently left unidentified.

That imbalance has only recently begun to be corrected. University researchers, working with the Muscogee Nation’s Historic and Cultural Preservation Department, have undertaken the slow work of identifying the students in those photographs and reconstructing their lives. They have recovered women such as Susan Hampton Tiger, who later taught in Native schools, and Nellie Riley Woodward, who struggled at first because English was not her first language but eventually became active in Native church and women’s organizations. The university’s history becomes more honest when these women are treated not as figures gathered around Alice Robertson but as people with stories of their own.

In 1894, Presbyterian leaders decided that the school should become something more ambitious. At the request of the Synod of Indian Territory, the Presbyterian Board of Home Missions elevated the academy to collegiate status and chartered it as Henry Kendall College. The name honored Henry Kendall, a former leader of the church’s home-mission work. The new college held its first classes on September 12, 1894.

It was an audacious undertaking. Henry Kendall College was attempting to build an institution of higher education in Indian Territory, far from the established academic centers of the East and without anything resembling a secure financial foundation. Ambition may inspire the construction of a college, but it does not reliably pay professors or repair roofs. The institution struggled through much of its first decade. By 1906, its leaders were considering the sale of the Muskogee property and searching for another community willing to support the school.

Tulsa appeared at precisely the right moment.

The city was being transformed by the discovery of oil at Glenpool. Workers, merchants, speculators, bankers, and fortune-seekers arrived with the usual confidence of people who believe prosperity has finally chosen the correct address. Yet Tulsa’s civic leaders understood that a boomtown could not live forever on derricks, boardinghouses, and optimism. A college offered something oil could not: permanence. It suggested that Tulsa intended not merely to extract wealth from the ground but to become a place where people might build lives after the wells had begun to empty.

Tulsa’s business and professional community successfully courted Henry Kendall College, and the institution moved to the city in 1907, the same year Oklahoma entered the Union. Its first Tulsa students attended classes in temporary quarters while permanent buildings were constructed. By the 1908–1909 academic year, the college occupied a new campus east of downtown. Early photographs show brick buildings placed against an enormous prairie sky, looking at once substantial and slightly uncertain—as though the school had arrived before the surrounding landscape had been informed that a university was expected.

The college survived its relocation, but Tulsa’s educational ambitions soon produced another difficulty. In 1919, the Southern Methodist Church began planning a second institution, McFarlin College, named for oilman and philanthropist Robert M. McFarlin. Tulsa may have been growing rapidly, but its leaders concluded that the city was not yet large enough to support two competing private colleges.

Rather than conduct a denominational contest between Presbyterians and Methodists, the trustees of Henry Kendall College proposed that the two projects unite under a broader name: the University of Tulsa. McFarlin College was never constructed as a separate school. On November 9, 1920, the Kendall trustees approved a charter for the new University of Tulsa, with the formal transition unfolding into 1921. The name change represented more than an administrative adjustment. Henry Kendall College belonged to the institution’s missionary and denominational past. The University of Tulsa announced an alliance with the city and its ambitions.

The university acquired its enduring athletic identity shortly afterward. Before 1922, its teams had accumulated a collection of nicknames that included the Kendallites, Presbyterians, Tigers, Tulsans, Orange and Black, and Yellow Jackets. New football coach Howard Acher wanted something more distinctive. He considered the Golden Tornadoes, only to discover that Georgia Tech had already claimed a similar name. Acher then moved, with questionable meteorological logic but admirable promotional instinct, from tornado to hurricane. The players voted, and the Golden Hurricane was born.

There are no actual hurricanes in Tulsa, of course, but geography has rarely been allowed to interfere with college athletics. The name was forceful, memorable, and wonderfully excessive. It has endured for more than a century.

By 1928, the university had revised its governing structure and emerged as an independent institution controlled by its own board of trustees. Its Presbyterian ancestry remained part of its heritage, but the university was no longer governed as a denominational college. That same period brought an academic development almost inevitable for a school in Tulsa: the opening of a petroleum engineering program.

The relationship between the university and the oil industry soon became visible in brick and stone. In 1930, three important buildings were dedicated: McFarlin Library, Tyrrell Fine Arts Building, and the Phillips Petroleum Engineering Building. Their names and purposes captured the emerging personality of the institution. There was oil, certainly, but there were also books, music, theater, and art. Tulsa’s wealth may have risen from underground, yet the university meant to demonstrate that it could be converted into laboratories, libraries, and cultural life.

McFarlin Library became the architectural center of the campus. Its tower rose above the surrounding grounds with considerably more dignity than the average oil derrick. Over time, its collections expanded beyond the needs of a regional college, eventually encompassing rare books, literary manuscripts, historical archives, and millions of individual items. The library became evidence that an institution born from mission work and sustained by oil money could also make a serious claim upon literature, scholarship, and memory.

The Great Depression tested the university’s survival once again. Under President Clarence Pontius, it continued operating while establishing a school of business administration. In 1943, a downtown law school that had previously maintained a loose association with the university formally became the University of Tulsa School of Law. Petroleum engineering and geology helped the school develop an international reputation, drawing students and scholars from oil-producing regions around the world. Petroleum Abstracts, created to organize technical research for the oil and gas industry, further connected the university’s academic work to Tulsa’s dominant economy.

After the Second World War, the university began another period of reinvention. President Ben Graf Henneke, himself a Tulsa graduate and professor, oversaw a modernization effort beginning in 1959. The James A. Chapman Endowment, established in 1966, provided resources for further development. Graduate programs grew, international enrollment increased, and the institution gradually ceased to be understood merely as Tulsa’s local college. It became a small university with a reach disproportionate to its size.
During the 1980s, the university strengthened its academic core, emphasizing mathematics, writing, and languages while investing in computing, research, and endowed faculty positions. The establishment of a Phi Beta Kappa chapter in 1988 offered national recognition of its work in the liberal arts and sciences. In the decades that followed, the campus expanded through new academic buildings, student housing, athletic facilities, and legal and research centers. Petroleum remained an important part of the university’s identity, but it no longer defined the whole of it.

The deeper story of the University of Tulsa, however, is not simply one of growth. It is a story of repeated reinvention. A mission school became a college. A financially precarious college moved to an oil town. A Presbyterian institution adopted the name of its city. A regional undergraduate school developed graduate programs and an international reputation. A university tied to petroleum accumulated literary manuscripts and rare books.

Each transformation preserved something from the past while obscuring something else.

That is why the university’s renewed examination of its Indigenous origins matters. The old institutional story was often presented as a simple ascent: a small school became a college, the college moved to Tulsa, and the university prospered. The fuller story is less comfortable and far more human. The institution owes its beginning partly to Native students whose names were not consistently preserved and to a missionary system that mingled education with cultural assimilation. The legacy includes opportunity and injury, achievement and erasure. It cannot be understood honestly by choosing only the more flattering half.

The recent effort to identify the girls in the earliest photographs represents a quiet but important reversal. For generations, the institution remembered its presidents, trustees, ministers, oilmen, and benefactors. Now researchers are asking who the students were, what languages they spoke, how they experienced the school, and what became of them after they left.

It is difficult to imagine a more appropriate task for a university than recovering the names that history neglected to record.
The University of Tulsa resembles the city that adopted it: ambitious, repeatedly remade, enriched by oil, and still negotiating the uneasy relationship between prosperity and memory. Its buildings stand as monuments to confidence, but its archives preserve the quieter lives beneath them—the Native girls in Muskogee, the struggling professors, the civic boosters, the ministers, the oilmen, the scholars, and the generations of students who inherited an institution assembled from all of them.

The university was not born once. It was born first from mission work, then from financial necessity, then from Tulsa’s oil-fueled ambition. It continues to be born whenever it chooses to examine its past more honestly than the generation before it.

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