San Jose State Spartans men's soccer

San Jose State Spartans
men's soccer
Founded1927 (1927)[1]
UniversitySan Jose State University
Head coachSimon Tobin [2] (12th. season)
ConferenceWAC
I Division
LocationSan Jose, California, US
StadiumSpartan Soccer Complex
(capacity: n/a [3])
NicknameSpartans
ColorsGold, white, and blue[4]
     
Home
Away
NCAA tournament appearances
1963, 1964, 1966, 1967, 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1974, 1976, 1998, 2000, 2003
Conference tournament championships
1939, 1940, 1941, 1942, 1964, 1967, 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1974, 2000, 2003

The San Jose State Spartans men's soccer is the intercollegiate varsity soccer team representing the San Jose State University (SJSU), located in San Jose, California. The team is a member of the Western Athletic athletic conference[5] of NCAA Division I.[6]

The Spartans' current head coach is Simon Tobin,[2] who is in charge since 2023.[1] The team play their home matches at the Spartan Soccer Complex, which also serves as home venue to the women's team.[3]

Established in 1927, the team had a 1–3–2 record in their first year, being coached by A.S. Cakebread.[1] The program has made fourteen NCAA championship appearances (the most recent in 2003). Championships won include five CISC, seven PSC, and two MPSF conference titles,[7] The Spartans also were six-time finalists of the WAC tournament.

The SJSU men's soccer team went an undefeated 18–0–1 during the 2000 regular season, finishing with a 20–1–1 overall record. The Spartans concluded the regular season as the No. 1-ranked team in the country. The Spartans have also an overall NCAA D1 tournament record of 7–14.[8][9]

Players

Current roster

As of December 2025[2]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
0 GK  USA Ronin Axelson
1 GK  USA Edgar Guerra
2 DF  USA Ruben Flores
3 MF  USA Dane Pendleton
4 DF  USA Kaylob Walker
5 DF  USA Niklas Dossmann
6 MF  USA Gilberto Rivera
7 MF  USA Angel Fernandez
8 MF  ENG Cameron Cook
9 FW  USA Arnold Matshazi
10 MF  USA Angel Iniguez
11 FW  USA Jordi Tortell
12 DF  USA Diego Nieves
13 MF  USA Daniel Fregoso
14 FW  USA Angel Gutierrez
15 FW  USA Miliano Suarez
No. Pos. Nation Player
16 MF  USA Neo Ruiz
17 FW  USA Anthony Guzman
18 DF  USA Javier Lopez
19 MF  NOR Jesper Bakli
20 MF  USA Fernando Duarte
21 FW  USA Jalen Scott
22 DF  USA Samuel Navarrete
23 FW  USA Amir Anwary
24 FW  USA Jason Buezo
25 DF  USA Emmanuel Garcia
26 FW  USA Eamon Fakhri
27 GK  USA Jorge Arellano
28 GK  USA Colin Farley
29 DF  USA Tomislav Jozinovic
31 DF  USA Tiko Moodie

Records

Source:[1]

key
  •   – member of the SJSU Athletics Hall of Fame

Players in the pros

SJSU players that play / have played at professional levels are:

Nat. Player Pro Teams Ref.
Ismael Perez 1979 San Jose Earthquakes [12][13]
Mani Hernandez 1974 San Jose Earthquakes, Detroit Lightning, San Francisco Fog [14][15]
Giulio Bernardi 1982 Georgia Generals, Pennsylvania Stoners, Houston Dynamos [16]

Coaches

Current staff

As of 23 December 2025

Source:[2]

Position Name
Head coach Simon Tobin
Assoc. head coach Jesus Sanchez
Assist. coach Jamie Reid
Assist. coach Marcos Oliveira

Coaching history

Source:[17]

As of December 2025
# Name Seas. Tenure Rec.
1 A.S. Cakebread 4 1927–30 12–14–4
2 Charles L. Walker 5 1931–35 10–29–4
3 H.C. McDonald 4 1936–39 26–15–9
4 Gordon Maybury 2 1940–41 11–0–4
5 Roy Diedericksen 1 1942 6–0–0
6 Julius Menendez 36 1954–89 295–205–45
7 Gary St. Clair 24 1990–2013 217–211–41
8 Simon Tobin 12 2014–present 75–86–13 [n 1]
Notes
  1. ^ Statistics as of 2024 season.

Team statistics

NCAA appearances

SJSU's appearances in NCAA D-I tournament are listed below:[9][1]

Key
Season Stage Rival Res. Score
1963 First round San Francisco L 0–2
1964 First round Air Force W 5–2
Quarterfinals Saint Louis L 0–5
1966 First round San Francisco L 1–2
1967 First round San Francisco W 4–3
Quarterfinals Saint Louis L 3–4
1968 Second round UCLA W 3–1
Quarterfinals Air Force W 1–0
Semifinals Maryland L 3–4
1969 Second round Air Force W 1–0
Quarterfinals San Francisco L 1–3
1970 Second round Denver L 1–2
1971 Second round San Francisco L 2–3
1972 Second round Fresno State W 4–0
Quarterfinals UCLA L 1–3
1974 Second round UCLA L 2–3
1976 Second round Washington W 4–1
Quarterfinals San Francisco L 0–5
1998 First round Stanford L 2–3
2000 First round Indiana L 0–4
2003 First round California L 0–2

Titles

Sources:[1][7]

Conference

Conference Titles Winning years
California Intercollegiate Soccer Conference
5
1939, 1940, 1941, 1942, 1964
Pacific Soccer Conference
7
1967, 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1974
Mountain Pacific Sports Federation
2
2000, 2003

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f 2025 Record Book at sjsuspartans.com
  2. ^ a b c d Men's soccer roster at sjsuspartans.com
  3. ^ a b Spartan Soccer Complex
  4. ^ "San Jose State Athletics Branding Style Guide" (PDF). December 14, 2022. Retrieved February 26, 2023.
  5. ^ "MW Expands Sports Sponsorship with the Addition of Men's Soccer and Men's Swimming and Diving in 2026-27" (Press release). Mountain West Conference. October 29, 2025. Retrieved November 1, 2025.
  6. ^ Division I – San Jose, CA | San Jose State University on ncaa.com
  7. ^ a b USA - List of NCAA College Soccer Conference Champions (Men) by Dave Litterer at the RSSSF
  8. ^ "San Jose State Men's Soccer Record Book". SJSU Spartans. San Jose State University. p. 6. Retrieved 2 July 2023.
  9. ^ a b Division I Men's Soccer Championships Records Book (1959–2016) at ncaa.org
  10. ^ 2001 Inductees at sjsuspartans.com. 3 Aug 2018
  11. ^ Revisiting the 1961 National Champs By Ryan Kuhnat at The Guardsman. 8 Nov 2011
  12. ^ Easy Perez career at nasljerseys.com
  13. ^ Preserving and exhibiting Bay Area soccer history by Don Gagliardi at the Society for American Soccer History (SASH). July 28, 2015
  14. ^ Mani Hernandez career at nasljerseys.com
  15. ^ Manuel Fonseca HERNANDEZ biography at Olympics.com
  16. ^ Guilio Bernardi career at nasljerseys.com
  17. ^ All-Time Year-By-Year W-L-T Records & Coaching Records