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Team Hawaii was an American professional soccer club based in Honolulu, Hawaii. The team played home games at Aloha Stadium in the suburb of Halawa. Notable for being the only professional men's soccer club ever based in the state of Hawaii, the team competed in a single season of the North American Soccer League in 1977 before folding and relocating to Tulsa, Oklahoma.

History
The club was originally founded as the San Antonio Thunder by Herman Lay Jr., the son of the founder of the eponymous Lay's brand. After competing in San Antonio for two seasons, the club had failed to qualify for the playoffs in either season and generated total losses in excess of $600,000. After the Aloha Soccer Festival invitational match between the New York Cosmos and Team Honda drew over 21,000 fans to Aloha Stadium in early 1976, Lay Jr. became motivated to move the team to Honolulu. Following negotiations with the city and the league, the move was confirmed in November of 1976 ahead of the 1977 season.

Team Hawaii retained no players or staff from the original incarnation of the club. Don Paul, a former NFL cornerback and all-pro, was hired as the club's general manager. He selected Hubert Vogelsinger, the former manager of the collegiate Yale Bulldogs and NASL's Boston Minutemen, as the team's first manager. Players were recruited from European clubs such as Benfica and West Ham, as well as other NASL clubs such as the Cosmos.

Despite winning their first competitive match, defeating the Seattle Sounders 1-0 at home at Aloha Stadium, the club struggled to attract meaningful attendance throughout the season. Only 5,000 fans attended the team's NASL debut, and the team averaged only 4,500 fans per match throughout the season, significantly underselling the 50,000-seat capacity of the new Aloha Stadium. Vogelsinger was replaced as manager during the season by Charlie Mitchell, a member of the team's playing squad who simultaneously played and coached for the club for the remainder of the season. Despite a late season uptick in form, including a 6-5 win over the Los Angeles Aztecs that placed the club in contention for a playoff berth, the club finished the 1977 season outside of the playoffs with a losing record of 11-15.

After generating losses of at least $500,000 in one season and failing to secure adequate sponsorship for the next season, Lay Jr. dissolved the club. One year after announcing the club's original move to Hawaii, the team officially announced its relocation to Tulsa, Oklahoma for the 1978 NASL season. Known as the Tulsa Roughnecks from 1978 until the league dissolved in 1984, the club achieved success in Tulsa, eventually winning Soccer Bowl '83.

The club remains one of only two professional top-flight sports teams ever to be based in Hawaii. The Hawaiians, an American football franchise of the World Football League, competed at Aloha Stadium for two seasons in 1974 and 1975.