
Table Manufacturer History, from EBSCO & Vulcan, Irving Kaye & Hurricane and several other manufacturers that were around from 1952 to 1976. (Aprox)
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EBSCO Amusements, a division of EBSCO Industries Inc.. entered the table soccer field in 1965. Initially, EBSCO imported
two German made tables. The Deutcher Meister and the Leonhart. However, a few years later, the firm began manufacturing
the Vulcan Fussball Table at its Red Bank. New Jersey plant.
A work force numbering more than forty people is currently involved in the manufacture of the five Vulcan table models.
in EBSCO's 30.000 square foot plant. The facility has a production capability of three hundred Vulcan machines a month.
"Over the past few years. many new features have been added to the Vulcan tables, as part of EBSCO's efforts to
manufacture the strongest, most durable. and most playable fussball table on the market," stated sales manager Jack
DeMarco. EBSCO currently is marketing Vulcan two player and four player machines. both coin operated and free play.
The company also manufactures a home model table which contains the same fast action excitement of the popular four
player Vulcan coin model, the 1 CP machine EBSCO is represented throughout the United States by various distributors
and its own sales force.
As far as promotion is concerned. EBSCO Amusements is presently involved in soccer tournaments. The first of which was
held recently in central New Jersey Plans are being formulated for additional tournaments during the upcoming spring and
summer months. A tournament information package is available upon request by writing to EBSCO Amusements in Red Bank.
DeMarco predicts a great future for the game of table soccer. "Due to the various promotional efforts on the part of
many of the manufacturers, within the next few years the game will continue to grow in popularity in many parts of the
country EBSCO Amusements will continue to play an important role in making it the number one table sport in the country."
DeMarco stated.
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Irving Kaye & The Hurricane |
Cabinet-game veterans at the Irving Kaye Sales Corp entered the soccer table arena in 1969 with their Super Soccer table
The firm. which has been a prominent manufacturer of pool tables since the 50s. lent its carpentry/amusement skills to
the new game concept and came out with a piece that offered a number of exclusives at that time, including a slide-out
playfield for maintenance ease and a one-piece cabinet.
The Super Soccer also featured such things as metal ends bolted to the cabinet corners to insure sturdiness under
vigorous play. an all-steel cash-box and secured ball mechanism. The cash-box could be reached by the routeman without
opening the machine. Kaye's tables were a product of a company which was a long time in the business of making equipment
for the operating industry and they were well received.
The Hurricane "American-styled" table followed the Super Soccer table shortly thereafter. This line was essentially
designed in response to actual player suggestions on improvements on machines in operation in American locations at
that time. according to Kaye Company's Howard Kaye. The result was the classic product now well known to the industry.
Weighing in at 375 Ibs. the Hurricane table features textured glass playfield for better ball control. special compound
balls, counterbalanced ''men'' on the chrome plated rods and an improved playfield shape to offer players far more
accuracy when banking a shot, according to Kaye . . a result of their expertise in pool table manufacture.
The Kaye company is currently promoting a series of tournaments, most often with prize purses of $500 to $1,000. Three
such events have already been staged (e.g. Syracuse, N.Y.) with six more planned for coming months, and at least one,
maybe two "larger" events now on the planning boards. Kaye's philosophy is to hold several mini tournaments in the
same city at regular intervals. Jim Tyrell heads up the firm's tournament activities and is assisted by Becky and Tina
Eberts.
Kaye's tables. While of the "American style" are exported today all over the world. The firm also boasts the world's
largest inventories of soccer parts A parts catalog is readily available upon request.
"Spinetta-Marengo." A rich Italian dessert? A torrid Latin dance? Not quite. It's a small town between Milan and Genoa;
more importantly, the home of Renato Garlando and the Garlando, Chevrolet of soccer tables.
Garlando has been in the table soccer business for twenty-five years and is the paterfamilias to his forty-two factory
workers An apocryphal story circulates that his father made coffins and that Garlando transformed them into his first
soccer cabinets. Influential in the European game industry. Garlando did not enter the American market until 1969. That
year he met Joe Robbins. vice president of Empire Distributing, Chicago. at the Milan Fair and Empire subsequently
became his exclusive North American distributor.
The marriage had a rocky start. At first and for approximately a year, the Garlando table was rejected. Operators put
them on locations, but returned them disgruntled. Nobody understood the game so nobody played it. Even a sixty-day free
trial in the Chicago area proved futile. You could have made them into planters. Only in Wisconsin did Garlando gain a
quick foothold while languishing everywhere else.
Then Robbins aggressively and patiently promoted it. Time and education were the crucial elements. "It requires time for
a strange game to be accepted. and both operator and patron had to learn how to play the game." according to Empire
salesman Alan Zeidman. Once they caught on. it sold "like Big Mac hamburgers, outdistancing its chief rivals Vulcan and
Rene Pierre. From Florida to Montana, from California to Wisconsin. wherever the four winds blew. people were playing
Garlando. The heydey lasted five years," Zeidman stated.
By late 1973 there was a veritable plethora of soccer table manufacturers. The MOA exhibition devoted an entire room to
them. Garlando's most exuberant competition came from the heavy duty Texas style table, and it forced him to revise his
own model. "In early 1975, Garlando's Deluxe and Giant replaced the standard table, and he still remains at the top of
the proverbial heap, however precarious that may be." Zeidman declared.
"Why is Garlando Foosball so popular? What makes a Garlando table different from other tables? Perhaps Renato Garlando's
own manufacturing philosophy provides the answer. He strives for durability and player appeal at a reasonable cost. He
is an innovator. He developed the first solid plastic man and then the die mold. and used Formica and metal where
competitors used composition board. He patented the spring loaded oilier bushings for easier rod handling." Zeidman said.
"Garlando responds to change. Each year he visits the MOA to survey his rivals and tries to incorporate in his game
whatever operators and players want. In the past five years, he has constructed at least a dozen experimental models
until he achieved the desired product. His painstaking efforts were widely accepted." he added.
The Garlando is a fast moving rather than control game. It has the smooth play field glass, hard plastic ball, and the
spring loaded rods, while the control game uses serrated glass, a lighter rubberized ball, and sponge rubber rod cushions.
What is the future of Garlando tables7 Renato Garlando is again at work on a new model. but the innovations are hush-hush.
Perhaps a breakthrough. "The history of the Garlando is not yet finished," Zeidman observed.
Mirco Games first entered the soccer business in 1969 under the name of Arizona Automation. With a staff of one, Dick
Raymond dedicated all of his efforts to a company which is now one of the oldest and largest manufacturers of soccer
tables in the United States. Here's how the story goes:
In 1967 Dick Raymond and John Walsh, while working for General Electric in Germany, became interested in one of the most
popular arcade games of Europe. Soccer tables were found in many of the bars and taverns of France. Germany, and Italy
and were avidly played by Europeans as well as by American servicemen and businessmen. Like many Americans: Raymond and
Walsh saw the potential for such a game back home. They made plans to export tables to the United States and the plan
materialized when Raymond returned to Phoenix and formed Arizona Automation.
With an office space of 600 square feet. Raymond served as the only employee, doing his own typing, packaging, shipping,
and ordering. Both coin and non-coin operated tables were shipped from Germany by Walsh, with Raymond acting as a
distributor in Phoenix, operating and selling the games in very small quantities to individuals and businesses.
The game was copyrighted under the name of Champion Soccer. In 1969. Raymond took on full ownership of the company and
continued to import tables until the devaluation of the German Mark. At that time it became more economical to
manufacture tables domestically so in 1971 Arizona Automation began building the Regular Coin Model table. A game which
according to Raymond, was an instant success. This was followed up by the development of the Regular Club Model,
the TModel, and the Glass Club Model. In four years Raymond built sales from $15.000 to $ 1,000,000. "Many of the
current manufacturers also got their start by operating Champion Soccer tables." Raymond states.
The 1970 MOA Convention was the beginning of a new era for Arizona Automation. "Exhibiting at the MOA was one of the
best things to ever happen to us." states Raymond. "Hy Sandler of Sandler Vending was our first distributor. He treated
us all as though we represented a large company rather than the beginners we were. That convention did quite a bit to
place us in the forefront of the soccer industry. It was our big start."
An equally important development in the company's history occurred in 1971. Again John Walsh and Richard Raymond joined
forces, this time in a merger which was to greatly affect both men and their careers. John Walsh was at that time
president of Mirco, Incorporated. a computer tester firm. And though it may seem that the two fields are unrelated,
Mirco's expertise in the electronics field made an ideal marriage with Arizona Automation's knowledge of the games
industry and its distributor network. As Mirco Games. Raymond's company went on to produce four video electronic games
as well as the first, computerized pinball game. He also established factories in Australia and Germany.
But this expansion did not exclude the soccer market. The first coin games produced after the merger were the Grand
Champion and the Little Champion two player table. In 1975. the company introduced three more club model tables which
are handled through the Montgomery Ward stores as well as retail outlets throughout the U.S. "The Grand Champion Club,
the Maverick, and the new Junior Champion have given Mirco the distinction of offering the most extensive line of
tables in the industry." Raymond declared.
Realizing that sales are not contingent solely on the quality of the products, Mirco is now planning a series of
promotional events, mainly in the form of statewide tournaments in key metropolitan cities. In 1973 and 1974 they
sponsored the Louisiana State Soccer Tournaments, both of which were $2000 events. In 1975, Mirco tournaments were held
in Detroit, Minneapolis, Omaha, and Kansas City, with total prize money exceeding $16.000. The 1976 schedule includes
St. Louis, Rochester, and Detroit, for which definite plans have been made. Mirco will continue to work with
distributors throughout the country to maintain player enthusiasm.
Mirco's games division employs approximately seventy people, including a large engineering staff, marketing department,
and warehouse and clerical personnel. The factory and corporate offices are located in an indoor-outdoor garden like
series of buildings in Phoenix, Arizona. The games section is only one of five divisions of Mirco, Incorporated, known
world wide for its expertise in the electronics field.
Mirco has come a long way since its small beginnings in 1969. It has earned a reputation for quality and reliability
for the diversified products it manufactures. Mirco strongly believes that soccer is here to stay and salutes the other
manufacturers who have helped the coin operated industry through continued promotion and advertising of the sport of
table soccer.
The Rene Pierre Manufacturing Co. of Chalon-sur-Saone in France began to manufacture its soccer table in 1952.
Since then, Rene Pierre has expanded to manufacture other coin operated games. primarily billiard tables. In addition to
the U.S. his products are currently marketed in England, Africa, the Middle East, and most of western Europe.
The Rene Pierre soccer table has undergone many changes and improvements since 1952. For example, the first rods were on
ball bearings and protruded through the side of the table. The first men used were made of wood, later changed to
plastic, and finally evolved to the durable metal men currently used.
Peabody's Inc. of Virginia Beach. Virginia, is a diversified corporation with major interest and emphasis on the
marketing of youth orientated products. This marketing direction has led Peabody's, since its conception 10 years ago,
into a very large T-shirt silk screening venture. Peabody's printed T-shirts are marketed through wholesale, and a chain
of retail outlets. In addition to the T-shirts. Peabody's also owns and operates several resort type Discotheques.
With this youth orientated marketing philosophy in mind. Nabil Kassir and Ed Ruffin, principles of Peabody's Inc.,
observed the popularity of table soccer in Europe with great interest. In 1970 they brought a Rene Pierre soccer table
from France and placed it in one of their discotheques.