Born and raised on a farm near Haskell, OK, Pat Hamilton
saw his first soccer game at the age of thirteen when German
POWs played on the town’s high school football field
during World War II. He remembers thinking at the time that
the players were crazy for letting a kicked ball hit them
in the head and wondering whether that was the reason that
Germany was losing the war. He saw his second soccer game
while he was working on his Ph. D. in Microbiology and Biochemistry
in Madison, WI. The match was played between German-Americans
and Italian-Americans residing in the area.
After completing his graduate
work, Pat was employed in Albany, NY, where a lot of ethnic
soccer was played, and later in Ponca City, OK, where there
was no soccer. Then he moved to North Carolina, where he
first worked with the Research Triangle Institute before
joining the faculty of North Carolina State University.
After a massive heart attack in 1971, Pat was told by doctors
to get a weekend hobby and not to work seven days a week.
He was assured that being involved in youth soccer administration
would be non-stressful, non-demanding and enjoyable. In
1993, he retired from his position at NC State and currently
holds the title of Professor Emeritus of Poultry Science.
Continuing his research and writing while in retirement
and also serving as a consultant on animal agriculture to
governments of thirteen foreign countries, Pat has received
fourteen national and international awards for his research.
Pat provided energy, direction
and inspiration as a soccer organizer in the early 1970’s
in the Raleigh area. In the early 1980’s, recognizing
the pioneer work of several people, the Capital Area Soccer
League (CASL) identified Pat and three others – Steve
Almasi, Bill Holleman and Bill Plunkett -- as cofounders
of the Raleigh Soccer League, predecessor to CASL, and of
CASL itself.
Significant contributions
attributed to Pat and ways in which his contributions have
been recognized include:
Cofounder of Capital Area
Soccer League, for whom he served as Vice President and
Treasurer, started a drive to acquire playing fields which
resulted in the development of the CASL/WRAL Soccer Complex
- Organized and bankrolled
for three years the tournament that developed into
the Raleigh Shootout
- Cofounder and manager
of the Raleigh Vikings Soccer Club which won 11
championships in CASL in five years in all age divisions
- Manager and assistant
coach of the Raleigh Vikings when the team was the
first North Carolina representative at the USYSA
Southern Regional Tournament
- Cofounder of North
Carolina Youth Soccer Association
- Served as Vice President
and President (1979-1981) of NCYSA
- Organized and directed
the first interstate tournament sanctioned by NCYSA
and the first NC Cup tournament
- Helped to get the
North Carolina Olympic Development Program started
- Served on two USYSA
national committees
- Designed the original
shoulder patches of NCYSA and CASL
- Silver Cup Award
from the Raleigh Vikings for organizing, managing
and coaching the Raleigh Vikings
- “Outstanding
Service to Youth Soccer” Award from CASL
- NCYSA’s “Pioneer
of the Game” Award in 1992
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Pat is proud to say that
his entire family is crazy about soccer. His wife, Dolores,
is the mother of a goalkeeper and screamed whenever the
ball crossed midfield. His goalkeeper son, Matthew, was
one of the fifteen kids that showed up for the first scrimmage
that eventually led to the formation of the Capital Area
Soccer League. Their other children, Jeffrey and Cynthia,
were already too old at the beginning, when Pat and others
were getting soccer started in the Raleigh area. But four
of his five grandchildren play soccer … and the fifth
can be forgiven for not having started yet because he is
only one and a half years old!