Bob Bradley

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bob Bradley (born March 3, 1958 in Montclair, New Jersey) is the current interim coach of the United States men's national soccer team and the head coach of the United States U-23 men's national soccer team. He is the head coach with the most wins in Major League Soccer history, managing the Chicago Fire, MetroStars and Chivas USA over nine seasons.

Played in high school at West Essex High School in Essex County, New Jersey. Bradley's coaching career started in 1981, when he was named the head coach of Ohio University at the age of 22. He was hired away by University of Virginia coach Bruce Arena and spent two years as his assistant, before taking the head job at his alma mater, Princeton. Bradley coached the Tigers from 1984 to 1995, winning two Ivy League titles and reaching the NCAA Final Four in 1993.

In 1996, Bradley became Arena's assistant once again, this time with DC United of the newly-formed Major League Soccer. After two seasons there, he became the first head coach of the expansion Chicago Fire, and promptly led them to the MLS Cup and US Open Cup double in 1998, being named MLS Coach of the Year in the process. He won another Open Cup in 2000.

After the 2002 MLS season, Bradley resigned as coach of the Fire and took the reins of his home state team, the MetroStars after having been previously considered for the job in 1996 and 1997. During his tenure, he had the perennial underachivers headed in the right direction as the MetroStars advanced to the US Open Cup final for the first time in team history in 2003. Bradley stayed with the team until October 2005, when he was fired with three games left in the regular season. The team had suffered back-to-back losses and diminishing playoff prospects prior to Bradley's firing.

Shortly after the 2005 season, Bradley was named the head coach of Chivas USA. He was announced as the head coach of the United States men's national soccer team on an interim basis on December 8th, 2006, replacing Bruce Arena.

A number of his relatives are involved in sports as well; his brother Scott played baseball for the Seattle Mariners in the 1980s and is the current coach at Princeton University, and his other brother Jeff is a writer for ESPN The Magazine. Bradley's son, Michael, was drafted by the MetroStars in the 2004 MLS SuperDraft, and played for the team until a transfer to Dutch club sc Heerenveen.

Preceded by
Position Created
Chicago Fire head coach
1998–2002
Succeeded by
Dave Sarachan
Preceded by
Hans Westerhof
C.D. Chivas USA head coach
2006
Succeeded by
Preki
Preceded by
Bruce Arena
United States men's national soccer team head coach (Interim)
2006-Present
Succeeded by
Incumbent
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