Dzung Tran Explained

Dzung Tran
Birth Date:1963
Birth Place:Huế, South Vietnam
Position:Forward / Midfielder
Collegeyears1:1983–1984
College1:Foothill Owls
Years1:1985–1986
Years2:1985
Years3:1986–1987
Years4:1987
Years5:1988
Years6:1990–1991
Years7:1990–1991
Years8:1991
Years9:1996
Clubs2:San Diego Sockers (indoor)
Clubs4:Milwaukee Wave (indoor)
Clubs6:Milwaukee Wave (indoor)
Clubs9:San Jose Oaks
Caps1:?
Caps2:0
Caps3:?
Caps4:39
Caps5:?
Caps6:23
Caps8:6
Goals1:2
Goals2:0
Goals3:0
Goals4:10
Goals5:3
Goals6:10
Goals8:0

Dzung Tran is a retired Vietnamese-American soccer player who spent time in the Major Indoor Soccer League, Western Soccer Alliance and National Professional Soccer League.

In 1978, Tran, his father and brother, escaped Vietnam after the communist capture of South Vietnam. He attended Livermore High School before transferring to San Jose High School where he graduated in 1983.[1] In 1984, he practiced with the Golden Bay Earthquakes, including playing two minutes of a preseason game.[2] That fall, he began playing soccer at Foothill College, but Golden Gate Conference officials determined that his game with the Earthquakes counted as a professional event. Therefore, he was stripped of his collegiate eligibility during the season. In June 1985, the San Diego Sockers selected Tran in the first round of the Major Indoor Soccer League draft.[3] The Sockers released him in December 1985.[4] In 1985, he played for the San Jose Earthquakes which won the Western Alliance Challenge Series.[5] He continued to play for the Earthquakes in 1986 before moving to the Los Angeles Heat for the 1987 Western Soccer Alliance season.[6] [7] In the fall of 1986, Tran signed with the Milwaukee Wave of the American Indoor Soccer Association. In 1988, he returned to the Earthquakes.[8] In 1990, he played for the Salt Lake Sting in the American Professional Soccer League.[9] He then returned to the Milwaukee Wave for the 1990–1991 indoor season. In 1991, he began the season with the Sting which folded halfway through the season. He then signed with the San Francisco Bay Blackhawks.[10] [11] He later played for the San Jose Oaks.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Streets of Vietnam Foster Soccer Career. latimes.com (Archived). 2023-09-08. 2023-01-07. https://archive.today/20230107084649/https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1985-10-20-sp-14274-story.html. bot: unknown.
  2. "EARTHQUAKES SIGN TWO FORMER QUAKES" San Jose Mercury News (CA) – Monday, June 3, 1985
  3. "Sockers feel right at home with draftees" San Diego Union (CA) – Thursday, June 20, 1985
  4. "Deyna may remain victim of numbers games for a while" Evening Tribune (San Diego, California) – Tuesday, December 24, 1985
  5. http://a-leaguearchive.tripod.com/1985/stats85.htm#San Jose 1985 San Jose Earthquakes
  6. http://a-leaguearchive.tripod.com/1986/stats86.htm#SJ 1986 San Jose Earthquakes
  7. http://a-leaguearchive.tripod.com/1987/stats87.htm#LA 1987 Los Angeles Heat
  8. http://a-leaguearchive.tripod.com/1988/statswsa88.htm#SJ 1988 San Jose Earthquakes
  9. http://a-leaguearchive.tripod.com/1990/statswsa90.htm#SL 1990 Salt Lake Sting
  10. http://www.journaltimes.com/sports/article_144debb7-e6a5-5759-bcd9-7bc4fd70ec0f.html Wave's Tran puts best foot forward in APSL
  11. http://a-leaguearchive.tripod.com/1991/stats91.htm#SFB 1991 APSL season