Paul James (soccer) explained

Paul James
Fullname:Paul John James
Birth Date:11 November 1963
Birth Place:Cardiff, Wales
Position:Midfielder
Youthclubs1:Wilfrid Laurier Golden Hawks
Years1:1983–1984
Years2:1986
Years3:1987–1988
Years4:1988
Years5:1989
Years6:1990
Years7:1991
Years8:1992
Clubs1:Toronto Blizzard
Clubs2:Toronto Blizzard
Clubs3:Hamilton Steelers
Clubs4:Doncaster Rovers
Clubs5:Ottawa Intrepid
Clubs6:Hamilton Steelers
Clubs7:Toronto Blizzard
Clubs8:London Lasers
Caps1:21
Caps3:46
Caps4:8
Caps5:24
Caps6:6
Caps7:27
Caps8:20
Goals1:1
Goals3:4
Goals4:0
Goals5:0
Goals6:0
Goals7:1
Goals8:0
Nationalyears1:1983–1993
Nationalteam1:Canada
Nationalcaps1:46
Nationalgoals1:2
Manageryears1:1989
Manageryears2:1992
Manageryears3:1994
Manageryears4:1996–1997
Manageryears5:1998–2001
Manageryears6:2004–2010
Managerclubs1:Ottawa Intrepid
Managerclubs2:London Lasers
Managerclubs3:Le Moyne Dolphins
Managerclubs4:Niagara Purple Eagles (men and women)
Managerclubs5:Canada U20
Managerclubs6:York Lions

Paul John James (born November 11, 1963) is a retired professional soccer player who played as a midfielder. He was a one-time CONCACAF champion who represented Canada at both the Los Angeles 1984 Olympic Games and 1986 FIFA World Cup in Mexico. He later worked as a soccer analyst and soccer coach. He is an honoured member of the Canada Soccer Hall of Fame.

In 1998, was granted his Canada Soccer Coaching "A" Licence. After working as a player-coach in the Canadian Soccer League, he later served as a coach with Canada's national youth teams from 1998 to 2001, including the FIFA U-20 World Cup in 2001. A graduate of Wilfrid Laurier University, James has added to his academic credentials by completing the prestigious Football Industries MBA (FIMBA) at the University of Liverpool in England.

In February 2012, Paul revealed he had suffered from a crack cocaine dependency for many years.[1] Paul was on a hunger strike to protest his mistreatment by York University over his "Substance Disability".[2]

Early years

James lived in Cardiff until July 3, 1980 when at 16 years of age he emigrated to Toronto, Canada, with his parents and sister Julie.

Departed Wales with a Canadian equivalent Grade 12 education and an athletic career which included being awarded Whitchurch High School's Athlete of the Year in 1980; two time Glamorgan champion at 800 metres with the fastest recorded times in Wales in 1977/78 for his age group; a third-place finish at the British Championships in the 1500 metres; excelled in soccer which included competing for Cardiff Schoolboys, county of Glamorgan, Cardiff City Youth Team, and Newport County Reserves as a 15 year old; while also competing in first team high school rugby and cricket.

In 1980/82 Paul John James played for the Oakville Minor Soccer club winning an Ontario provincial championship. In 1982 Paul John James played for the Ontario Provincial team who won the Canadian national championships.

Club career

James developed into a top class midfield player while with the Toronto Blizzard. On the Blizzard team, James scored against the then famed New York Cosmos. He played in the North American Soccer League and Canadian Soccer League,[3] where he earned first team all-star honours on four consecutive occasions. In 1986, he played in the National Soccer League with Toronto Blizzard.[4] He also had a short stint with English league outfit Doncaster Rovers.

International career

Welsh-born James became a Canadian citizen in 1983 and arrived on the international scene when he made full appearances for Canada at the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles. He made his senior debut for Canada in a December 1983 friendly match against Mexico in Irapuato, James played in all four of Canada's games at Los Angeles Olympics including quarter final game against Brazil losing on penalty kicks

He made 46 international "A" appearances for Canada (two goals) as well as additional "B" appearances including the Olympic Games.

He scored a critical goal for Canada against Costa Rica in Toronto in 1985 that helped Canada qualify for the 1986 FIFA World Cup finals in Mexico. A member of the country's 1986 World Cup team, he played in all three games in the finals. He represented Canada in 7 World Cup qualifiers.[5]

James then played for Canada on the famed occasion in St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador when the Canadian men's team qualified for the first time to the FIFA World Cup Championships winning the 1985 CONCACAF Championship in the process. Paul played in all three of Canada's FIFA World Cup games in Mexico, in June 1986 Singapore. Last two games for Canada were in 1993 against the United States (2–2) playing his final international aged 29, a March 1993 friendly match against South Korea (1–0) win.

International goals

Scores and results list Canada's goal tally first.

Date Venue Opponent Score Result Competition
1 October 24, 1984Stade Moulay Abdellah, Rabat, Morocco 2–3 Friendly match
2 August 17, 1985Varsity Stadium, Toronto, Canada 1–1 1–1 1986 FIFA World Cup qualification

Coaching career

After serving as player/coach at Ottawa and London, James also coached at LeMoyne College in Syracuse, New York, leading them to within one game of an NCAA berth and an NCAA Division II national ranking as high as 12th, Niagara University and Under-20 national soccer team. As head coach of the Under-20 team, he led them to the 2001 FIFA World Youth Championship in Argentina 2001. James thus became the first Canadian to represent Canada at a FIFA World Championships both as a player and coach.

Through his coaching career, Paul has garnered six coach of the year awards at varying levels including; CSL, NCAA, and OUA. In 2007 James received the CIS (Canadian Interuniversity Sport) national coach of the year award. James has a reputation for developing successful soccer programs. In 2008 James coached York to the CIS Canadian Championship game where they won the title. On January 16, 2010 James announced his departure from York University after serving with the Lions for six years.[6]

Soccer analyst

From 2004 to 2008 he was an analyst for The Footy Show on The Score television network, along with James Sharman and the late Brian Budd. He also provided soccer analysis for GolTV in Canada until April 2009. Paul has appeared on the CBC and Sportsnet on numerous occasions and has written for The Globe and Mail. James was also a frequent podcast contributor to RedNation Online.[7]

Author, advocacy for human rights protection

Authored Crack Open (2012); Owner Author Confronting the Stigma of Drug Addiction; Submissions to HRTO, Divisional Court of Appeal; Ontario Court of Appeal and Supreme Court of Canada (2012–2019).

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://www.thestar.com/sports/soccer/former-canadian-soccer-player-paul-james-reveals-crack-addiction/article_6f74431a-a09e-58e7-8eec-5f96b0a8e94e.html Article on Paul James' autobiography
  2. News: Ormsby . Mary . He was a Canadian soccer star. Now he's homeless and starving himself in a Toronto park on a lonely crusade for justice.. 8 September 2019 . Toronto Star . 7 September 2018.
  3. Web site: Paul James soccer statistics on StatsCrew.com.
  4. Web site: March 20, 1986. Soccer. 2020-08-10. Newspapers.com. The Province. 17. en.
  5. https://web.archive.org/web/20080228062556/http://www.fifa.com/worldfootball/statisticsandrecords/players/player=51427/index.html Record at FIFA Tournaments
  6. Web site: CIS: Paul James leaves York . 2010-01-06 . 2012-06-02 . theScore.com . https://web.archive.org/web/20111009022329/http://www.24thminute.com/2010/01/cis-paul-james-leaves-york.html . 2011-10-09 . dead .
  7. https://www.listennotes.com/podcasts/paul-james-on-soccer-rednation-online-kIdy9esUotQ/ Paul James on Soccer