- Brent Goulet
Infobox Football biography
playername = Brent Goulet
fullname = Brent Goulet
nickname =
dateofbirth = birth date and age|1964|6|19
cityofbirth =Cavalier, North Dakota
countryofbirth =United States
height = height|ft=6|in=0
currentclub = Retired
clubnumber =
position = Forward
youthyears = 1983-1987
youthclubs =Warner Pacific College
years = 1986-1987
1987
1987-1988
1988
1989-1990
1989
1990-1992
1992-1994
1994-1995
1995-1996
1996-1998
1998-2001
clubs =FC Portland
FC SeattleAFC Bournemouth
→Crewe Alexandra "(loan)"
Seattle StormTacoma Stars "(indoor)"Bonner SC
TeBe BerlinBonner SC Rot-Weiss Oberhausen
Wuppertaler SVSV Elversberg
caps(goals) =
5 (2)
6 (0)
3 (3)
6 (6)
11 (0)
10 (0)
nationalyears = 1986-1990
nationalteam = United States
nationalcaps(goals) = 8 (0)
manageryears = 2004-2008
managerclubs =SV Elversberg
pcupdate =
ntupdate =Brent Goulet (born
June 19 ,1964 inCavalier, North Dakota ) is a retired Americansoccer forward and current coach. He began his career in theUnited States before moving toEngland andGermany , and also earned eight caps with the U.S. national team.Early career
Goulet was born in North Dakota, but grew up in
Tacoma, Washington . After graduating fromHenry Foss High School in 1983, he attendedWarner Pacific College inPortland, Oregon , which played in the NAIA, and was coached by Bernie Fagan who had extensive professional experience atSunderland A.F.C. and the Portland Timbers. Under Fagan’s direction, Goulet became the dominant offensive player on the team, scoring 108 goals over four seasons. In 1984, Warner Pacific took third in the NAIA championship tournament.WSL
In the 1986 offseason, Goulet played for
F.C. Portland of the Western Soccer Alliance. Despite playing as an amateur in a professional league, Goulet led the league in scoring with 9 goals and 2 assists. He played one more season with F.C. Portland in 1987, and was honored as the league MVP. The WSA season ran to the end of May. At the end of the season, Goulet joined Portland's rival F.C. Seattle for a five game tour of Britain. That tour, which ran from July 27th to August 6th, included a game with English Second Division clubA.F.C. Bournemouth . Goulet's excellent play on the tour, which included two goals, led to Bournemouth offering a contract.U.S. national team
Goulet’s prolific scoring ability also brought him to the attention of the
United States men's national soccer team and, in 1986, he earned his first cap in a February 5, 1986 0-0 tie with Canada. He played again two days later in a 1-1 tie with Uruguay. These were the only two national team games that year.In 1987, the U.S. began qualification for the
1988 Summer Olympics inSeoul, South Korea . Goulet became a regular with the U.S. Olympic team, scoring 6 goals in 6 games. While the full national team played these matches, since they are part of Olympic soccer,FIFA did not recognize them as full internationals. Despite that, Goulet was recoginzed byUSSF as its 1987U.S. Soccer Athlete of the Year .In 1988, he continued his excellent play with the Olympic team, scoring a goal in the U.S. team’s 4-2 loss to the Soviet Union at the Summer Olympics. However, in full internationals he had difficulty both finding a place and scoring. In 1988, despite playing for the national team at the Olympics, he only played one international match, a May 14 loss to Colombia. Goulet began 1989 by playing three consecutive national team games, but did not play again until February 1990, when he played his last two games with the team. Throughout his 8 games with the full team, he never found the net. [ [http://www.soccerhall.org/Registry/MensNationalTeam_F-J.htm#G National Soccer Hall of Fame] ]
Goulet also earned 12 caps between 1987 and 1989 as part of the U.S.
Futsal team. He scored 4 goals. [ [http://www.ussoccer.com/common/stContent.jsp_88-TFAR.html Futsal: All-time player register] ]England and return to the WSL
By then struggling to make a living playing professional soccer, Goulet played six games with
A.F.C. Bournemouth during the 1987-1988 season, but a scoring drought led to the team loaning him toCrewe Alexandra F.C. , for which he scored three goals in three games.From England, Goulet bounced back to the United States, playing with the Seattle Storm of the WSA in 1989 and 1990. In 1989, he began with a bang, scoring two hat-tricks before suffering an
ankle injury on June 9. He returned at the end of the season and finished that year with six goals in six games. In October 1990, he signed with theTacoma Stars of theMajor Indoor Soccer League , playing a single season before moving permanently to Europe.Move to Germany
Rather than trying England again, Goulet elected to move to Germany. He began with
Bonner SC , an Oberliga club, playing two seasons, with 31 goals in 1991-1992. His prolific scoring led to a move toTennis Borussia Berlin . In his first season with the team, he scored 21 goals, helping the club win promotion; however, in his second season, he failed to find the net and was sent back to Bonner SC with whom he played through 1994-1995.His itinerant existence continued the next few years as he left Bonner SC to play with
Rot-Weiss Oberhausen during the 1995-1996 season, thenWuppertaler SV Borussia for two seasons.Coaching in Germany
In 1998, Goulet made his last move as a player when he arrived at
SV Elversberg . He would play with the team until 2001 when he broke his leg during a game. At this point, Goulet decided to retire from playing and enter the coaching career. He became an assistant coach at Elversberg and in 2004 was promoted to head coach. In March 2008, the club released Goulet.References
External links
* [http://209.85.165.104/search?q=cache:bco_0Dwp2-cJ:www.warnerpacific.edu/publications/TheExperienceonline/Spring2006/TheExperienceSpring2006.pdf+%22brent+goulet%22&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=6&gl=us Warner Pacific article]
* [http://www.fussballdaten.de/spieler/gouletbrent/ Bundesliga stats] de icon
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