Sasho Cirovski

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sasho Cirovski
Personal information
Place of birthVratnica, Yugoslavia
Playing positionMidfielder
Youth career
1981-1984UW–Milwaukee Panthers
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
Windsor Wheels
London City
1986-1987Milwaukee Wave (indoor)26(4)
North York Rockets
Teams managed
North York Rockets
-1991Milwaukee Wave (assistant)
1988-1990UW–Milwaukee Panthers (assistant)
1991-1992University of Hartford
1993-Maryland Terrapins
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only. † Appearances (Goals).

Sasho Cirovski (1962) is a Yugoslavian-Canadian soccer coach of the University of Maryland. Born in Yugoslavia and raised in Windsor, Ontario, Canada, Cirovski led his University of Maryland team to the NCAA championship in 2005 and 2008.

Early life and career

Born in Yugoslavia, he grew up in Vratnica, a small village in presentday Macedonia. Cirovski immigrated to Canada at the age of eight and became an outstanding all-around athlete in Ontario schools. A stand-out college soccer player for the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee he was selected the school's outstanding athlete upon his graduation in 1985. He earned a masters degree there in 1989. He played for the Milwaukee Wave of the American Indoor Soccer Association during the 1986-1987 season and later played and coached the North York Rockets. His subsequent coaching career included stints at both his alma mater and at the University of Hartford, where he led his team to two consecutive NCAA Tournament berths.

Cirovski at Maryland

In February 1993 Cirovski was recruited by then Assistant Athletic Director Gothard Lane to come to the University of Maryland, College Park, where the soccer program had enjoyed limited success for years.[1] Upon his arrival in College Park, Cirovski startled the local soccer community when he announced that his goal was to "win the national championship." Starting with holdover players and two transfer students from Hartford who came to join their charismatic coach, his teams began to turn out winning records within two years. In 2002, the Terrapins began a remarkable streak of four consecutive appearances in the NCAA College Cup, the final four of American college soccer. In 2005, they captured the national title with a 1-0 win over top-ranked University of New Mexico. In 2008 he led the Terps to an ACC championship win over Virginia, the team's first since 2002, and also guided his team to the 2008 National Championship over North Carolina by a score of 1-0 in Frisco, Texas.

Personal information

A vocal and demonstrative coach, Cirovski cultivated a "family" atmosphere on his close-knit teams. He also earned the respect of his colleagues, who selected him as the chairman of the national collegiate coaches association in 2004, and the national coach of the year in 2005. He lived in the Maryland suburbs with his wife Shannon Higgins-Cirovski, herself a former soccer All-American and member of the National Soccer Hall of Fame, and their three daughters.

A young Cirovski can be seen performing his soccer skills in the 1987 ESPN Home Video, "Teaching Kids Soccer with Bob Gansler."

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.