Christopher Sullivan (soccer, born 1965) explained

Christopher Sullivan
Birth Date:18 April 1965
Birth Place:San Jose, California, United States
Position:Midfielder / Forward
Collegeyears1:1983–1987
College1:Tampa Spartans
Years1:1987–1988
Years2:1988–1989
Years3:1989
Years4:1989–1990
Years5:1990
Years6:1992
Years7:1992–1993
Years8:1994–1995
Years9:1995
Years10:1996–1997
Years11:1997
Clubs1:US Joué-lès-Tours
Clubs2:Le Touquet AC
Clubs3:Orlando Lions
Clubs4:Győri ETO FC
Clubs5:Landskrona BoIS
Clubs6:Brøndby IF
Clubs7:Hertha BSC
Clubs8:Yucatan
Clubs9:San Francisco Bay Diablos
Clubs10:Győri ETO FC
Clubs11:San Jose Clash
Caps4:11
Caps5:6
Caps6:0
Caps7:6
Caps10:5
Caps11:24
Goals4:1
Goals5:2
Goals6:0
Goals7:0
Goals10:1
Goals11:2
Nationalyears1:1987–1992
Nationalteam1:United States
Nationalcaps1:19
Nationalgoals1:2

Christopher Sullivan (born April 18, 1965, in San Jose, California) is a retired U.S. soccer midfielder/forward and current soccer trainer and sports broadcaster.

Youth and college

Sullivan began playing soccer at a young age. When he was four he began playing with West Valley S.C. He attended and played soccer at NCAA Division II powerhouse University of Tampa. He was inducted into the University of Tampa Athletic Hall of Fame in October 2010.[1] While playing for the University of Tampa, he earned a second-team Division II All American in 1986 and a first-team All American in 1987.[2]

Professional career

His professional career spanned two continents and seven countries. He began his career in France with lower division clubs US Joué-lès-Tours and Le Touquet. In 1989, he was back in the U.S. with the Orlando Lions of the American Soccer League.[3] He then returned to Europe, signing with Hungary club Raba ETO before moving to Swedish club Landskrona BoIS, Danish club Brøndby IF and German club Hertha BSC. He also spent time with the Mexican lower division club Yucatan. In 1995, he played for the San Francisco Bay Diablos in the USISL. During this time, he twice left active playing for family reasons. On February 1, 1997, Major League Soccer allocated Sullivan to the San Jose Clash. He played the 1997 season with The Clash. On November 6, 1997, MLS held an Expansion Draft. The Clash did not protect Sullivan, but neither Chicago nor Miami selected him. Despite this, the Clash traded Sullivan to the Miami Fusion for the third-round draft pick in two weeks later.[4] He elected to retire rather than join the Fusion. However, he continued to play in the San Francisco Soccer Football League, including club El Farolito in 2003.[5]

National team

He made his US Men's National Team debut while still in college. In 1987, he came on for Brian Bliss in a Presidents Cup game against Egypt in South Korea. He was a member of the 1990 FIFA World Cup U.S. team. In 1992, he played his last game for the U.S. national team in a 1–0 loss to Brazil.

Post-playing career

Since retiring from playing, Sullivan is now a soccer trainer but is probably more recognized for his soccer analyst work on television. He started as a sideline reporter for Fox Sports Bay Area covering the San Jose Earthquakes. He gained national exposure as a soccer analyst on Fox Soccer Channel's now defunct MLS Wrap. Sullivan's technical and tactical insight into the game, his encyclopedia-like recall of soccer history and his passionate delivery soon earned him a more permanent and prominent spot in the Fox Soccer Channel lineup.

He has served as the color commentator or analyst on countless Major League Soccer games as well as on the pre and post game shows for Fox Soccer Channel's Soccer Night in America featuring the Major League Soccer game of the week. Sullivan has worked virtually every level of game broadcast on Fox Soccer Channel in recent history including the FIFA Club World Cup, UEFA Champions League, UEFA Europa League, UEFA Super Cup, CONCACAF Champions League, United States Men's National Team games as well as Fox Soccer Channel's 2006 and 2010 FIFA World Cup previews. Sullivan has been an analyst for the last four World Cups. In 2014 Sullivan was the lead analyst for Yahoo Sports in Brazil and appeared on beIN Sports nightly shows from Rio de Janeiro. He covered the 2015 Copa America Chile and the 2016 Copa America Centenario in the U.S. for beIN Sports and worked as an in studio analyst for beIN Sports for both the 2017 Confederations Cup and 2018 FIFA World Cup Russia.

In 2022, Sullivan covered his 5th World Cup in Doha, Qatar for beIN Sports.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: University of Tampa Announces Athletic Hall of Fame Class of 2010 | TampaSpartans.com . tampaspartans.com . January 13, 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20111208075655/http://tampaspartans.com/article.asp?articleID=2268 . December 8, 2011 . dead.
  2. Web site: National Soccer Coaches Association of America - All-America Awards . www.nscaa.com . January 13, 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070926234910/http://www.nscaa.com/awards-detail.php?it=II&yr=1987 . September 26, 2007 . dead.
  3. Web site: ASL 1989 Season.
  4. Web site: Stanford signs two, then loses to AIA . www.sfgate.com . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110525091317/http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/examiner/archive/1997/11/14/SPORTS15028.dtl . May 25, 2011.
  5. Web site: San Francisco Soccer Football League, Inc. (Men's League) . May 9, 2007. https://web.archive.org/web/20070529141335/http://www.sfsfl.com/season/2003/Y2003te.html#FAR . May 29, 2007. dead .