Alabama A&M Bulldogs soccer
| Alabama A&M Bulldogs soccer | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Founded | 1977[1] | ||
| Folded | November 2011[2] | ||
| University | Alabama A&M University | ||
| Head coach | Salah Yousif (21th.[1][2] season) | ||
| Conference | SWAC I Division | ||
| Location | Normal, Alabama, US | ||
| Stadium | John Hunt Park Stadium [3] (capacity: 2,000 [4]) | ||
| Nickname | Bulldogs | ||
| Colors | Maroon and white[5] | ||
| |||
| NCAA tournament runner-up | |||
| 1978, 1981 | |||
| NCAA tournament Semifinals | |||
| 1980 | |||
| NCAA tournament appearances | |||
| 1977, 1979 | |||
| Conference tournament championships | |||
| n/a | |||
| Conference Regular Season championships | |||
| n/a | |||
The Alabama A&M Bulldogs soccer was the intercollegiate varsity men's soccer team representing the Alabama A&M University, located in Normal, Alabama. The team was a member of the Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC) athletic conference of NCAA Division I.[6]
The Bulldogs' last head coach was Salah Yousif,[7] who had started his coaching tenure in 1977 and leaded the team to win two national championships,[8] in 1977 and 1979.[9][10]
Alabama A&M played their home matches at the John Hunt Park Stadium,[3] located in Huntsville[11] with capacity for 2,000 spectators.[4], which also served as home venue to the women's team.[12]
History
The Bulldogs' won their first NCAA DII national championship in 1977, which was also the first NCAA tournament contested by Alabama A&M.[13] The Bulldogs eliminated Loyola Maryland 2–1 on extra time, Florida International 4–0, New Haven 2–0, and finally defeated Seattle Pacific 2–1 to win their first championship.[13]
Alabama A&M also made a great campaign in 1978, where they not only eliminated but thrashed their opponents: Florida International (6–0), Loyola MD (4–0), Eastern Illinois (5–0) to reach their second consecutive NCAA final against the same opponent (Seattle Pacific, 17–5–4 record)[14] , but the team lost 0–1 on extra time with a golden goal by Bruce Raney.[15] Until the final, the Bulldogs had an impressive record of 15 goals scored in only 3 matches.[13]
By 1980, the Southwestern Athletic Conference had been promoted to NCAA Division I so the team participated in the NCAA DI championship. that same year the team debuted in the tournament, where they finished third after defeating Duke (2–0), William & Mary (1–0), and losing to San Francisco (0–1) in semifinals. Alabama A&M then defeated Hartwick 2–0 in the third place match.
Alabama A&M contested their second consecutive NCAA DI tournament in 1981. They eliminated Duke (1–0), Clemson (2–1), West Virginia (2–1), and Philadelphia Textile (3–2) to play their first final in the top division, but they were defeated by Connecticut 1–2 on extra time at Stanford Stadium.[16]
Despite the success of their first years in the NCAA, the program decreased considerably in its later years. The 2010 season ended with no wins, being defeated in all of their games. The negative performances included several heavy defeats at the hands of UC Riverside (0–5), UNLV (1–8), Bradley (0–9), Evansville (0–9), and Jacksonville (0–7), among other disastrous results.[17] That same season, the university announced its plans to cut off the program due to budget cuts. At the moment of the annoucement, A&M was the only SWAC school that sponsored men's soccer.[18]
On November 3, 2011, the A&M team played their last game, with a 0–8 defeat to Memphis to finish with another negative record of 0–15. The program only had two winning seasons in the last eight.[2]
The program was discontinued following the 2011 season.[19][20]
Players
Roster
(As of 2010 season)[7]
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
|
|
Players in the pros
| Nat. | Player | Pro. | Selected teams | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ike Udeh | 1997 | Kansas City Wizards), Jacksonville Cyclones | [21][22] | |
| Jean Harbor | 1988 | Washington Diplomats, Tampa Bay Rowdies, Colorado Rapids | [23] | |
| Matthew Mendy | 2008 | 1. FC Kleve, 1. FC Vöcklabruck, Anhui Jiufang | [24] | |
| Eugene Sseppuya | 2005 | Colorado Rapids, FC Urartu | [25][26] |
Other notable players
Coaches
Notable coaches
The Alabama A&M's most notable coach was Salah Yousif, born in Ethiopia,[1] who had been initially hired in 1976 as an economics professor, then becoming soccer coach in 1977.[8] Under his guidance, the men's program won two national championships within three years, apart from being runners-up in 1978.[13] Yousif spent 21 seasons with the team, winning 238 matches.[1] He achieved a 238–121–24 record in 21 years with the Bulldogs.[17]
Yousif was the main promotor to the soccer development at Alabama A&M, convincing the University officials to start a team. The program became so successful that only lost four games between 1977 and 1980. Nevertheless, Yousif was fired by the university after a NCAA investigation about illegal activities. He was later reinstated when the NCAA exhonerated him from any of those accusations. Yousif died in an accident in his native country in 2013.[1][30]
Honours
National
| Competition | Titles | Winning years |
|---|---|---|
| NCAA DII championship | 2 |
1977, 1979 |
Team statistics
NCAA appearances
Alabama A&M's appearances in NCAA tournaments (Divisions I and II) are listed below:[31][13]
- Key
- a.e.t. – Match went to extra time
- p – Match decided by a penalty shootout after extra time
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|
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References
- ^ a b c d e Former A&M professor Salah Yousif, who launched national championship soccer program, dies in Ethiopia. 5 Jul 2013
- ^ a b c Alabama A&M sports history: Men's soccer program folded after years of success By Mark McCarter on AL.com. 18 Feb 2012
- ^ a b 2010 men's soccer schedule
- ^ a b John Hunt Park at huntsville.org
- ^ Alabama A&M University Style Manual (PDF). Retrieved September 11, 2016.
- ^ Division I - Normal, AL | Alabama A&M University on ncaa.com
- ^ a b 2010 Men's soccer roster at aamusports.com (archived)
- ^ a b Alabama A&M: Yousif coaches Bulldogs to two national championships by Reggie Benson, The Huntsville Times at AL.com. 23 Feb 2012
- ^ Men's Soccer - Championship History at ncaa.com
- ^ DII men’s soccer teams with the most NCAA DII national championships on ncaa.com. 14 Dec 2025
- ^ "John Hunt Park" at North Alabama Soccer Coalition
- ^ Women's soccer schedule
- ^ a b c d e Division II Men's Soccer Championships Records Book (1972–2018) at ncaa.org
- ^ Hall of Fame - Men's Soccer Team, 1978 at spufalcons.com
- ^ Hall of Fame: Bruce Raney at spufalcons.com
- ^ 1981 NCAA Champion Men's Soccer Team Holds 25th Reunion at uconnhuskies.com. 29 Sep 2006
- ^ a b 2010 schedule at aamusports.com
- ^ A&M to drop men's soccer program. 12 Aug 2010
- ^ Kennedy, Paul (August 16, 2010). "Alabama A&M to drop men's program". SoccerAmerica. Archived from the original on August 20, 2010. Retrieved October 9, 2012.
- ^ McCarter, Mark (February 18, 2012). "Alabama A&M sports history: Men's soccer program folded after years of success". The Huntsville Times. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved October 9, 2012.
- ^ Why many footballers suffer after retirement – Ex-F’Eagles star Udeh at punching.com. 29 Dec 2025
- ^ Soccer coach builds library in native Nigeria by NEAL EMBRY at hooversun.com. December 27, 2020
- ^ Players of Color Part 1: Jean Harbor by Matt Pollard at Holding The High Line. 5 Feb 2021
- ^ Matthew Mendy - career stats at globalsportsarchive.com
- ^ Sepuya joins Armenia league Archived 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "SL: Sepuja najproduktivniji napadač, MTS Mondo, 26 April 2009". Archived from the original on 27 April 2009. Retrieved 26 April 2009.
- ^ #10. MfanaFuthi Bhembe profile (archived)
- ^ Alabama A&M at South Carolina on gamecocksonline.com. 23 Sep 2007
- ^ OBITUARY: Alabama A&M keeper Mdluli killed 09/07/2006 on Socceramerica.com
- ^ The widow of Dr. Salah Yousif donated books to ECSU Library at Ethiopian Public Service University. 30 Jul 2013
- ^ Division I - Men's Soccer Records at ncaa.com