Fixtures

USA USL League Two 05/15 22:00 1 North Carolina FC II vs West Virginia United - View
USA USL League Two 05/18 22:00 1 North Carolina FC II vs Charlotte Independence II - View
USA USL League Two 05/21 22:00 1 Charlotte Eagles vs North Carolina FC II - View
USA USL League Two 05/24 23:00 1 Tobacco Road vs North Carolina FC II - View
USA USL League Two 05/29 23:00 1 North Carolina Fusion U23 vs North Carolina FC II - View
USA USL League Two 06/08 23:00 1 Charlotte Independence II vs North Carolina FC II - View

Results

USA USL League Two 07/15 21:00 1 FC Carolinas v North Carolina FC II W 1-2
USA USL League Two 07/11 22:00 1 [7] North Carolina FC U23 v West Virginia Alliance FC [3] W 4-1
USA USL League Two 07/08 22:00 1 [7] North Carolina FC U23 v Tobacco Road [6] L 1-3
USA USL League Two 06/21 22:00 1 [7] North Carolina FC U23 v Charlotte Independence II [8] W 5-1
USA USL League Two 06/17 22:00 1 Tobacco Road v North Carolina FC II L 3-1
USA USL League Two 06/14 23:00 1 [1] North Carolina Fusion U23 v North Carolina FC U23 [7] D 1-1
USA USL League Two 06/09 22:00 1 [6] North Carolina FC U23 v Wake FC [7] L 0-1
USA USL League Two 06/06 22:00 1 [5] North Carolina FC U23 v Charlotte Eagles [2] L 1-2
USA USL League Two 06/03 22:00 1 West Virginia United v North Carolina FC II L 4-1
USA USL League Two 05/31 23:00 1 Wake FC v North Carolina FC II D 2-2
USA USL League Two 05/26 21:00 1 [5] Charlotte Independence II v North Carolina FC U23 [7] W 0-1
USA USL League Two 05/23 22:00 1 [4] North Carolina FC U23 v North Carolina Fusion U23 [1] L 0-4

Statistika

 TotalKodusVõõrsil
Matches played 13 7 6
Wins 5 3 2
Draws 2 0 2
Losses 6 4 2
Goals for 23 15 8
Goals against 26 15 11
Clean sheets 1 0 1
Failed to score 2 2 0

Wikipedia - North Carolina FC U23

North Carolina FC U23 is an American soccer team based in Cary, North Carolina. It was founded in 2002 as the Raleigh Elite, and the current affiliate of North Carolina FC, a third division club in the United Soccer League. The team plays in USL League Two (the fourth tier of the American Soccer Pyramid), and previously in the National Premier Soccer League (NPSL). The team was known as the Cary Clarets in 2008 and 2009; and went dormant for a year in 2010. As a member of the USASA League, the then-Carolina RailHawks U23's took the Men's Region III Championship in 2011, 2012, and 2013 and won the U-23's National Championship in 2011 and 2013. The team's colors are navy blue, gold, and cardinal red.

History

The Raleigh CASL Elite entered the PDL for the first time in 2002, and was run by the Raleigh-based Capital Area Soccer League (CASL). They finished their first competitive campaign second in the Mid-Atlantic Division (behind Williamsburg Legacy) with an 11–7–0 record; and made the playoffs. They overcame Northeast Division champions Vermont Voltage 1–0 in the Conference Semi-finals before falling to the Cape Cod Crusaders in the Eastern Conference final. Raleigh enjoyed a brief foray into the US Open Cup thanks to their positive early season form, knocking out D3 Pro League side Carolina Dynamo 5–2 in the first round before losing 3–0 to A-League stalwarts Richmond Kickers in the second.

Raleigh Elite finished third in the Mid Atlantic Division in 2003, with an 8–8–2 record, 17 points behind divisional champions Richmond Kickers Future. Chris Norbet was Elite's top scorer, with seven goals; while John Izzo contributed three assists for the season.

Elite finished in fourth place behind divisional champs Carolina Dynamo with a 7–9–2 record in 2004.

In 2005 Elite enjoyed a productive season, losing just four games. The Elite were high-scoring entertainers throughout the year. They finished in third place in the Mid Atlantic Division, one point behind the Carolina Dynamo. That year, Aaron King was Raleigh's top scorer, with ten goals, while Spencer Wadsworth contributed an impressive eight assists.

Prior to the beginning of the 2006 season, the CASL organization severed ties with them, and the team was taken over by the Morrisville, North Carolina-based Next Level Academy, who renamed it the Raleigh Elite. The new Elite took a step backwards in 2006, which saw them win just four games all season. Willy Guadarrama was Raleigh's top scorer, with nine goals; Guadarrama and Michael Harrington contributed four assists each.