Bruce Arena
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Image:Bruce-Arena.jpg Bruce Arena (born September 21, 1951 in Brooklyn, New York) is the head soccer coach for the United States men's national soccer team.
Before rising to international stature, Arena was an enormously successful college soccer coach at the University of Virginia. Arena was the head coach of the Virginia program for 18 years, during which he won five national championships and amassed an amazing 295-58-32 record. Additionally, he coached and developed many players who would go on to play significant roles in the United States national team, including Claudio Reyna, Jeff Agoos, John Harkes, Tony Meola, and Richie Williams.
Arena left U.Va. to become the coach of D.C. United for their, and Major League Soccer's, inaugural season in 1996. Arena would lead United to MLS Cup victories in both of the league's first two years, and would win the MLS Coach of the Year Award following his second victory, before losing to the expansion Chicago Fire and his protege Bob Bradley in the 1998 MLS Cup final.
Arena was hired by the U.S. national team to replace Steve Sampson as head coach in October 1998 following the team's disastrous showing in the Template:Wc. He forged the team into a successful international side, and is undisputedly the most successful coach in United States history: most international wins; longest home shut-out; best World Cup showing since 1930, reaching the quarterfinals at the World Cup, before a defeat against Germany; and all-time best international FIFA Ranking (5th place, March 2006).
Arena was a college All-American in both soccer and lacrosse, playing for Nassau Community College (1969-1971) and Cornell (1971-1973). He earned one cap for the U.S. national team in a 1973 friendly against Israel, in which he played goalkeeper. He was drafted (but then cut) by the NASL Cosmos, then played professional lacrosse for the NLL Montreal Quebecois (1975) and professional soccer for the American Soccer League's Tacoma Tides (1976). His son, Kenny, played for the MetroStars in MLS (2003 - 2004) and was on DC United's roster in 2005.
External Links
- Profile at soccertimes.com
- ESPN feature on Arena, part I (part II) by Marc Connolly
- Sports Illustrated profile by Grant Wahl
- Associated Press profile by Ronald Blum
- Article on Arena's visit to boyhood sites by Michael Lewis
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