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Thomas Rongen

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Full name
  
Thomas Rongen

1971–1975
  
AFC

1973–1979
  
AFC

Role
  
Coach

Playing position
  
Midfielder, Forward

Place of birth
  
Amsterdam, Netherlands

Years
  
Team

Name
  
Thomas Rongen

Height
  
1.83 m


Date of birth
  
(1956-10-31) October 31, 1956 (age 59)

Children
  
Chris Megaloudis, Nicole Megaloudis

Teams coached
  
Tampa Bay Rowdies (Coach, since 2014)

Awards
  
MLS Coach of the Year Award

Similar People
  
Ben Olsen, Ray Hudson, Bruce Arena, Piotr Nowak, Marcelo Saragosa

Italy draw with bulgaria tampa bay rowdies head coach thomas rongen soccer morning


Thomas Rongen (born October 31, 1956) is an American soccer coach.

Contents

Next goal wins interview with stars jaiyah selua and thomas rongen


Player

Thomas Rongen Listen to World Soccer Talk Radio from 910pm ET with

Rongen began his playing career with the AFC, with whom he played as defensive midfielder and defender from 1973 to 1979. In 1979, Rongen moved to the United States, joining the Los Angeles Aztecs of the North American Soccer League. Rongen spent the entire 1979 season with the Aztecs. He then began the 1980 season in Los Angeles. On July 12, 1980, the Aztecs sold his contract to the Washington Diplomats. The team folded at the end of the season and Rongen moved to the Fort Lauderdale Strikers where he would remain for the next three seasons. In 1984, Joe Robbie, owner of the Strikers, moved the team to Minneapolis, Minnesota where it was renamed the Minnesota Strikers. Rongen moved with the team and spent the 1984 outdoor season there. The league collapsed at the end of the season and the Strikers moved to the Major Indoor Soccer League for the 1984–1985 season. On May 22, 1985, Rongen joined the South Florida Sun of the United Soccer League. The league lasted six games, then collapsed. In October 1985, Rongen signed as a free agent with the Chicago Sting of MISL. At the end of the season, he moved to Florida to coach youth and high school soccer. In 1987, he played for the Houston Dynamos of the Lone Star Soccer Alliance. On January 8, 1988, he became the first player to sign with the Fort Lauderdale Strikers of the newly established American Soccer League. He continued to play for the Strikers until 1993.

Coach

Rongen began his coaching career as an assistant with the Pope John Paul II High School boy's team in 1984. On June 27, 1986, he was named as head coach. During his tenure coaching PJPII, he took the team to a 32–6–5 record and he was a two time Sun-Sentinel Coach of the Year. He resigned from his position on May 16, 1988. He also coached with the Plantation Eagles Soccer Club. This led to his selection as coach of the Florida U-23 soccer team which defeated the United States men's national soccer team with goals from Zen Luzniak and Henry Gutierrez in a March 8, 1987 scrimmage. Rongen also served as an assistant with the Nova Southeastern University men's soccer team. In August 1988, he was hired to coach the South Plantation High School boy's team. On February 8, 1989, he replaced Wim Suurbier as head coach of the Strikers. He took the Strikers to the 1989 ASL title and then skippered the team to a victory over the San Diego Nomads in the national championship game. He was the 1990 APSL Coach of the Year. In August 1994, he resigned as head coach. In November 1990, he replaced Hal Henderson as head coach of Nova Southeastern University. He coached the team for five seasons, compiling a 50–35–8 record.

Thomas Rongen wvhooligancomwpcontentuploads201105rongenjpeg

Rongen was one of the inaugural coaches in MLS, coaching the Tampa Bay Mutiny in their first season in 1996, with whom he won the MLS regular season, and also won MLS Coach of the Year Award. After a year with the Mutiny, Rongen moved to the New England Revolution, which he would coach in 1997 and 1998. After the Revolution, Rongen succeeded Bruce Arena as the head coach of D.C. United, which he would lead to an MLS Cup in 1999. However, Rongen lost his job with United in 2001, and was replaced with Ray Hudson. Upon leaving United, Rongen was appointed head coach of the United States U-20 men's national soccer team, which he coached from 2001 to his appointment as head coach of Chivas USA for the team's inaugural season in 2005. However, ten games into the season, with the team's record standing at one win, one tie, and eight losses, he was let go of his head coaching duties.

Thomas Rongen NASL Soccer North American Soccer League PlayersThomas Rongen

Rongen was appointed head coach of the Under-20 United States men's national team again in 2006 and led the team to the 2007 FIFA U-20 World Cup and 2009 FIFA U-20 World Cup. He was fired from that position in May 2011 after a series of major gaffes, the most striking being in 2007 when Rongen lost the U.S. national team a future star defender Neven Subotic, a Serbian-American who has since won the Bundesliga and reached the Champions League final, by publicly criticizing him and subsequently leaving Subotic off the U.S. U-20 World Cup roster.

Thomas Rongen Thomas Rongen Pictures Tribeca DriveInESPNNext Goal

In 2011, Rongen became the head coach of American Samoa. With Rongen at the helm, American Samoa registered its first ever victory on November 22, 2011, against Tonga, in the 2014 World Cup qualification. Under Rongen, American Samoa reached 173rd in the world, its highest ever ranking. His work with the American Samoa football team is at the centre of the 2014 British documentary, Next Goal Wins.

Rongen became director of TFC Academy prior to the 2012 season, joining countrymen Aron Winter and Bob de Klerk at Toronto FC.

He was named head coach of the Tampa Bay Rowdies in December 2014. Rongen was fired along with General Manager/President, Farrukh Quraishi on August 21, 2015.

Personal life

Rongen married Gail Megaloudis in 1996. He is stepfather to Gail's children with Nicky Megaloudis, Nicole and Chris. In 2004, Nicole died in a single car accident on I-64 West in Goochland County, Virginia, aged 19. Rongen wore his stepdaughter's baseball cap during American Samoa's win over Tonga, as shown in Next Goal Wins.

References

Thomas Rongen Wikipedia