April Heinrichs
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
April Heinrichs | ||
Personal information | ||
---|---|---|
Full name | April Heinrichs | |
Date of birth | February 27, 1964 | |
Place of birth | Denver, Colorado, United States | |
Club information | ||
Current club | Retired | |
Youth clubs | ||
19??-1986 | University of North Carolina | |
National team | ||
1986-1991 | U.S. women's national team | 47(38) |
Teams managed | ||
1990 1991-1995 1996-1999 1995-2000 2000-2005 2006 |
Princeton University University of Maryland University of Virginia U.S. women's national team (assistant) U.S. women's national team University of California Irvine |
|
|
April Heinrichs (born February 27, 1964 in Denver, Colorado) was among the first players on the United States women's national soccer team, and was captain of the United States team which won the first ever FIFA Women's World Cup in 1991. She finished her international playing career with 47 caps and 38 goals. In 1998 she became the first female player inducted into the National Soccer Hall of Fame.
Contents |
[edit] Collegiate Record
Heinrichs is a 1986 graduate of the University of North Carolina where she was named National Player of the Year twice and earned All-American First team honors three twice.
[edit] College Head Coach
She had an 8-6-1 record as head coach at Princeton University in 1990.
Heinrichs guided University of Maryland to a 56-40-7 record from 1991-95, earning Atlantic Coast Conference Coach of the Year honors in 1995 after leading the Terps to their first NCAA Tournament berth.
She was head coach from 1996-99 at University of Virginia, where she recorded a 52-27-7 mark in leading the Cavaliers to four consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances. She led Virginia to a 13-10 record, including a trip to the round of 16 in the NCAA Tournament in 1999 season.
[edit] Coaching U.S. Women's National Team
She joined the United States womens national team as an assistant coach in 1995. She later became the team's head coach upon Tony DiCicco's retirement in 2000.
During her tenure, Heinrichs was often criticized for failing to lead the previously unstoppable national squad to a major international championship until the 2004 Summer Olympics. While she did lead the United States to wins in international tournaments such as the Algarve Cup, her team failed to win in the 2000 Summer Olympics or 2003 Women's World Cup, despite the unexpected home field advantage gained when the tournament was moved to the United States from China due to the SARS outbreak.
Because of her sparse success record (despite an 87-17-20 record), and gossip regarding her strained relationship with team members, Heinrichs' tenure as US coach was long rumored to be questionable. One notable player who reportedly had a falling-out with Heinrichs was Tiffeny Milbrett, who was removed from the national team setup in 2003, and did not return until after Heinrichs left the coaching job. Heinrichs resigned as coach on February 15, 2005 and became a consultant for U.S. Soccer.
[edit] Present Day
She was named head coach for women's soccer at the University of California Irvine on December 19, 2005. As of December 14, 2006 the University of California, Irvine is in the process of hiring a new women's soccer coach. Her record for the 2006 season was 3-13-1.
[edit] External links
|
|
|