In 1957, Scottish giants Celtic embarked on a tour of the United States. Their slate of fixtures was an odd one: Tottenham Hotspur (four times), Philadelphia Uhrik Truckers, Hapoel Tel Aviv, St. Louis All-Stars and the San Francisco All-Stars.
It was a successful tour. They played Tottenham more or less even, comfortably did away with the two American sides and edged Tel Aviv. This was not, in isolation, an unusual thing. European teams had gone on tours of America for years.
But in what proved to be a seminal moment in Californian soccer, Celtic handed their kits to Dr. Michael McFadden, an Irish-American living in the Bay Area. Four years later, he founded San Francisco Glens SC, a pillar of San Francisco’s Irish community. And in their first game, they wore Celtic’s kits.
For those outside of the Glens’ organization, it’s a nice piece of soccer trivia, one of a litany of charming anecdotes sprinkled throughout the American game. But for the Glens, it stands as something bigger, a singular point of authenticity for a club that has grown rapidly in the area, while staying true to its Irish roots.
And now, 64 years later, the Glens are on the verge of the professional game, complete with their own stadium and facilities - run entirely on a not-for-profit model. This is club soccer as it can function in the United States, pushing back on pay-to-play models and expanding both rapidly and sustainably.
“We have a full-on academy and a full-on mission to be a complete club and to do it as a non-profit,” Glens board member Ryan Maquinana said. “We still have the same ambitions as everybody else. We just try to do it our own way.”

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