- Angelo DiBernardo
Infobox Football biography
playername= Angelo DiBernardo
fullname = Angelo DiBernardo
nickname =
dateofbirth = birth date and age|1956|5|16
cityofbirth =
countryofbirth =Argentina
height =
currentclub = Retired
clubnumber =
position =Midfielder / Forward
youthyears = 1976-1978
youthclubs = Indiana University
years = 1979
1980-1984
1985-1986
1987-1988
clubs =Los Angeles Aztecs New York Cosmos Kansas City Comets ("indoor")St. Louis Steamers ("indoor")
caps(goals) = 15 0(1)
80 (11)
nationalyears = 1979-1985
nationalteam = United States
nationalcaps(goals) = 20 0(3)
manageryears = 1991-2002
managerclubs =Waubonsie Valley High School
pcupdate =
ntupdate =Angelo DiBernardo is a retired Argentine-American soccer player who played professionally in the North American Soccer League and Major Indoor Soccer League. He also represented the United States at the
1984 Summer Olympics . After retiring from playing professionally, he taught Spanish and coached boys and girls high school soccer.Youth and college
DiBernardo, a native of Argentina, moved to the United States with his family when he was 16. His family settled in the
Chicago area where DiBernardo attended J. Sterling Morton High School West inNorth Riverside, Illinois . He played soccer both for the school's soccer team and for Sparta, a local Chicago club. DiBernardo attended Indiana University where he played on the school's men’s soccer team for three seasons from 1976 to 1978. He had an immediate impact on the team, helping it to the 1976 NCAA Championship which Indiana lost to San Francisco. In 1977, Indiana failed to make the NCAA post-season, but DiBernardo was selected as a first team All American. In 1978, Indiana reprised the 1976 season, making it to the championship game, but losing to San Francisco yet again. This year DiBernardo won theHermann Trophy as the top collegiate soccer player in the country. At the end of the season, DiBernardo left Indiana and turned pro. He finished his collegiate career with 54 goals and 17 assists for 125 points.National team
In February 1979, DiBernardo earned his first cap for the national team, coming on as a substitute for
Ty Keough in a loss to the Soviet Union. DiBernardo went on to play every national team game in 1979 and was selected to play for the 1980 U.S. Olympic Team. However, he did not compete in these games, held in the Soviet Union, due to President Carter’s boycott. DiBernardo became an integral part of the U.S. efforts to qualify for the 1982 World Cup and played in the four qualification games in 1980. Unfortunately, the U.S. failed to reach the finals.NASL
By this time DiBernardo had already played a season with the
Los Angeles Aztecs , who drafted DiBernardo, of theNorth American Soccer League . He played the 1979 season with the Aztecs before they traded him andLarry Hulcer to theNew York Cosmos . He would remain with the Cosmos from 1980 until 1984 when the NASL collapsed. He had played for the Cosmos as an amateur in the late 1970s. In 1980, he played 29 games and scored 7 goals, adding 13 assists. The 1981 season began well for DiBernardo. He played defense, midfield and forward with the top NASL team until he pulled a hamstring. The injury healed slowly and limited him to only 17 games with the team. In 1982, DiBernardo played only one game after before being badly injured in a hard tackle. Although he recovered from the injury, he never regained his pre-injury quickness or agility. In addition to playing outdoors with the Cosmos, DiBernardo played the 1983-1984 NASL indoor season. In May 1984, the Cosmos asked DiBernardo to take a 20% pay cut. He refused and the team placed him on waivers seven games into the season. [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9801E6DA1739F933A15755C0A962948260]1984 Olympics
After being cut by the Cosmos, DiBernardo spent the rest of the spring and summer playing with the national team as it prepared for the
1984 Summer Olympics and began the qualification for the1986 FIFA World Cup . He played two of the U.S. team's games in the Olympics. His last game with the national team came as a substitute in the loss to 1985 World Cup qualification loss to Costa Rica in Torrance which led to the failure of the team to make the finals.MISL
He played the 1985-1986
Major Indoor Soccer League season with theKansas City Comets . In 1987-1988, he played six games with theSt. Louis Steamers before suffering a back injury which finished his playing career.High school
Since retiring from playing, DiBernardo became a Spanish teacher and soccer coach at
Waubonsie Valley High School inAurora, Illinois beginning in 1991. By the time he finished coaching the school’s boys team in 2002, he had compiled a 145-52-22 (.708) record. The team’s highest finish came in 2001 when it took third in the state. DiBernardo also coached the school’s girls team for a single season, 1991-1992. That team went 19-2-3. DiBernardo's Argentinian heritage has aided him with teaching the Spanish language and South American culture.He also founded the Americas Soccer Club with Rudy Keller, who had played with DiBernardo in their youth club days. In 1991, Indiana University inducted DiBernardo into its Athletic Hall of Fame. He was also selected to the
Soccer America College Team of the Century .External links
* [http://www.socceramerica.com/article.asp?ART_ID=53647 SoccerAmerica Interview with DiBernardo]
* [http://graphics.fansonly.com/photos/schools/ind/sports/m-soccer/auto_pdf/05-media-guide-sec6.pdf History of DiBernardo at IU]
* [http://us-soccer.com/secured/articles/viewArticle.jsp_3063.html 1986 Qualification Campaign]
* [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9801E6DA1739F933A15755C0A962948260 SCOUTING; DiBernardo Gets Some Distance]
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