Alumni Channel Hilltop Spirit for Austin FC
Thanks to alumni like Alfredo Naim '07, Tony Ho '21 and others, the St. Edward鈥檚-to-Austin FC pipeline is growing more robust. But all of them will tell you that supporters groups like Los Verdes and La Murga de Austin are every bit as vital to the club as the front office. The band, especially, Naim says, 鈥渋s something that we鈥檙e really proud of."
鈥溾嬧婽he supporters love it, and as a staff, we love it, too. It鈥檚 a huge asset that happened organically. They鈥檙e there to support the club, but also to express what the community is all about.鈥
In 蹿煤迟产辞濒, supporters groups are organized fan clubs independent from the team鈥檚 management that fervently promote the brand. Some cities have more robust supporters groups than others, but few in the United States are more vibrant and inclusive than those in Austin, says Naim, whose entire department works closely with each of them.
鈥淭he grassroots effort to get the club to Austin morphed into the supporters groups,鈥 he says. 鈥淥nce we got the stadium, they shifted their focus to supporting the club. The supporters groups truly represent the community as a whole.鈥
And certainly none is louder than La Murga de Austin, the supporters section band. Sometime in 2017, shortly after Precourt鈥檚 ownership group started discussing the possibility of an MLS team in Austin, the band鈥檚 organizers 鈥 influenced by the 蹿煤迟产辞濒 atmosphere in Central and South America 鈥 started brainstorming. By the time Austin FC was lacing up for its first game, the band was already performing throughout the city, blasting popular cover songs with custom lyrics and chants.
Stephanie (Prado) Dempsey 鈥08 and her husband, Edward Dempsey 鈥05, are both members of La Murga de Austin. Neither saw it coming. They attended local watch parties for every game while Q2 Stadium was still under construction, but they were initially skeptical of the circus that surrounded them at the bars. The drums. The brass. The chanting. The band鈥檚 members acted as though they were marching in a Mardi Gras parade 鈥 or, more accurately, a South American Carnaval celebration.
鈥淲hat are these people doing? Why are they so loud? Why are they doing this?鈥 she remembers asking her husband.
鈥淚n the English Premier League, they鈥檙e in the stands doing this all the time,鈥 he told her.
鈥淵eah, but these people are at a bar.鈥
In the beginning, Dempsey admits, she just didn鈥檛 get it. But her attitude quickly changed after the couple attended their first away game in Denver. They spent two days roaming the city with roughly 200 other Austin FC fans, and when they hit the stadium that Saturday, the atmosphere was electric.
鈥淥nce you hear those drum beats, and that snare 鈥,鈥 she says, pausing, her eyes lighting up. 鈥淲hen you give yourself up to it, you start to feel the band鈥檚 energy. You start to feel the passion, not just for the music, but for the team and the players, too.鈥
Back home again, she started paying closer attention to the chants, and soon she was practicing hand signals as a wannabe 鈥渃apo鈥 鈥 a captain who helps direct 鈥 with La Murga de Austin every Tuesday, just outside the stadium. She鈥檚 never been a musician and doesn鈥檛 play any instruments, but she鈥檚 been a teacher for most of her career, and after using her inside voice all week, she鈥檚 ready to let loose come game day.
鈥淏eing able to scream and just let it out 鈥 Aaahhh!鈥 she roars with a smile. 鈥淚t鈥檚 almost like my meditation.鈥
The more Dempsey talks about La Murga de Austin, the more she sounds like Naim, and Ho, and Emely Alvarado '21 and Jos茅 Covarrubias 鈥18, too. As Ho put it, 鈥渋t鈥檚 more than soccer.鈥 Whether they鈥檙e approaching Austin FC from the band or the academy, from the perspective of media or supporter engagement, they鈥檙e all motivated, in the end, by Ho鈥檚 question: How do you build community?
鈥淚 think the club is major for Austin, especially right now, in the times that we live in,鈥 Dempsey says. 鈥淭his is that connection that鈥檚 going to hold us together no matter what鈥檚 happening outside of us.鈥
Photography by Chelsea Purgahn
Explore more of this 5-part series of Hilltoppers who are part of a cultural shift as Austin embraces its first major-league pro team, Austin FC.
PART 1
Childhood Passions Meet Post Grad Opportunities
Austin connections open career doors for student Tony Ho '21.
PART 2
Knowing and Growing Austin FC's Audience
From the classroom to the office, Alfredo Naim '07 leverages his economic studies.
PART 3
From Brand Ambassador to Integral Club Member
Emely Alvarado '21 shares her rise at Austin FC.
PART 4
Finding Purpose in the Big Picture
How a St. Edward's connection helped Jos茅 Covarrubias '18 realize his calling.