Chad Deering

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Chad Deering
Personal information
Full name Chad Deering
Date of birth September 2, 1970 (1970-09-02) (age 37)
Place of birth    Garland, Texas, United States
Height 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m)
Playing position Midfielder
Club information
Current club Retired
Youth clubs
1989-1990 Indiana University
Senior clubs1
Years Club App (Gls)*
1990-1993
1993-1994
1994
1995-1996
1996-1998
1998-2003
2003-2004

2004
Werder Bremen
Schalke 04
Rosenborg
Kickers Emden
VfL Wolfsburg
Dallas Burn
Dallas Sidekicks
DFW Tornados
Charleston Battery
000 0(0)
006 0(0)


041 0(5)
163 (16)
009 0(2)

000 0(0)   
National team2
1993-2001 United States 018 0(1)

1 Senior club appearances and goals
counted for the domestic league only and
correct as of 22:33, 3 january 2007 (UTC).
2 National team caps and goals correct
as of 7 December 2006.
* Appearances (Goals)

Chad Deering (born September 2, 1970 in Garland, Texas) is a retired American soccer midfielder. Deering spent his professional career in Germany as well as with the U.S. based Major League Soccer and Major Indoor Soccer League. He earned 18 caps with the U.S. national team including one game in the 1998 FIFA World Cup.

Contents

[edit] Youth and early career

Deering was born in Garland, Texas and grew up in Plano, Texas, a suburb of Dallas, where he attended Plano Senior High School. He was twice selected as a Parade Magazine high school All American and was the 1988 Texas high school player of the year his senior year. While in high school, he debuted with the U.S. U-16 national team for whom he played at the 1987 FIFA U-16 World Championship. During that tournament, Deering scored a goal in a 4-2 loss to South Korea.

Deering was highly recruited out of high school and elected to play with Indiana University which had just won the NCAA championship. However, he left Indiana after only two season in order to pursue a professional career in Germany, having scored 12 goals and assisted on 12 others. He earned NCAA first team All American honors his second, and final season, with Indiana. That year he was also the NCAA's post-season tournament's points leader with 3 goals and 1 assist.

[edit] Germany

Deering began his professional career with the Werder Bremen reserve team. After three years and no chance of playing for the Bremen first team, Deering moved to Schalke04 in 1993 where he continued to languish playing for Schalke's amateur squad. In 1994, Deering played a single seaon with Rosenborg of the Norwegian Premier League. He returned to Germany the next year, becoming the first of several Americans to sign with Regionalliga team Kickers Emden. In 1996, he moved from Emden to German Second Division club VfL Wolfsburg and finally found a top German team which would play him. That season, he helped Wolfsburg gain promotion to the Bundesliga. The next year, Deering played 15 games for Wolfsburg in its first year in the German top division.

[edit] MLS

In 1998, Deering expressed an interest in returning to the U.S. to play in Major League Soccer (MLS). He subsequently signed with the league, and on July 2, 1998, MLS allocated Deering to the Dallas Burn where he became a regular for the next seven years.

[edit] MISL

On January 24, 2004, Deering signed with the Dallas Sidekicks of Major Indoor Soccer League. The 2003-2004 season was nearly over and Deering played only 9 games with the Sidekicks.

[edit] U.S. Minor Leagues

He also played with the DFW Tornados of the minor league PDL. On December 30, 2004, the Charleston Battery of the USL First Division signed Deering. On March 16, 2005, Deering announced his retirement from professional soccer and his intention to return to Plano, Texas to pursue a coaching career.[1] He never played a game with the Battery, as its season had ended on August 2004 and the 2005 season did not begin until April 2005.

[edit] National Team

He earned his first cap when he came on for Hugo Perez in a December 18, 1993 loss to Germany. Deering would go on to play 18 games for the U.S. national team, scoring his only national team goal in a March 14, 1998 2-2 tie with Paraguay. When U.S. coach Steve Sampson sacked John Harkes, the team's primary defensive midfielder prior to the 1998 FIFA World Cup, Sampson moved Deering into that position.[2] However, Deering proved unable to replace Harkes and played only a single game, a 0-2 loss to Germany, in the World Cup.

Deering is currently the Director of Coaching for the Blackwatch Soccer Club in McKinney, Texas.

[edit] External links

[edit] Notes

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