Juergen Sommer
Director of Soccer Operations/Head Coach
(June 11, 2013 - June 2, 2015)
North American Soccer League (NASL)
Record: 8W - 13D - 17L
49 GF/63 GA

Biography taken from official Indy Eleven bio (with minor edits):

Indy Eleven Professional Soccer received resumes from across the world in the hopes of landing the club’s top coaching spot, but in the end the expansion North American Soccer League (NASL) side kept its invitation inside the Hoosier State by naming Juergen Sommer as the team’s Director of Soccer Operations and Head Coach on June 11, 2013. In his dual roles, the resident of suburban Carmel and former goalkeeping legend is entrusted to build the club’s roster and technical staff in conjunction with President/General Manager Peter Wilt before leading Indy Eleven on the sideline during the squad’s inaugural season in 2014.

With the hiring of the 44-year old Sommer, Wilt fulfilled the club’s stated goal of hiring a qualified candidate with both strong ties to the State of Indiana and solid connections across the local, national, and international soccer communities. The former Indiana University standout and U.S. Men’s National Team veteran has called Indiana home since retiring from a 12-year professional career in 2002 and has stayed plugged into the sport via coaching roles with the U.S. Soccer Federation, Indiana University, and Carmel United Soccer Club.

Sommer attended high school at Culver Academy in northern Indiana before heading south to Bloomington to walk-on at Indiana University. He would quickly earn the starting role between the posts and never relinquish it, eventually posting 57 career wins for the Hoosiers, still standing as third-most in the storied program’s record books. Sommer would help steer the Hoosiers to their third National Championship in 1988 and another Final Four appearance the following season before ending his collegiate career by being named Soccer America’s Goalkeeper of the Year as a senior in 1990.

As an upperclassman at IU, Sommer would also crack the player pool for the U.S. Men’s National Team, eventually being named an alternate for the 1990 FIFA World Cup squad that broke the USA’s 40-year drought from the tournament’s Finals stage. Sommer would break through one of the most talent-rich position battles in U.S. Soccer’s history to that point to earn spots on both the 1994 & 1998 World Cup rosters, eventually finishing his senior international career with eight appearances from 1994-98.

Upon graduating from Indiana University, Sommer headed to England to test himself at the professional level, his career starting with a stint at Luton Town from 1991-95, a time that also included loan periods with Brighton & Hove Albion, Kettering Town and Torquay United. A move to Queens Park Rangers in 1995 allowed Sommer to make history as the first American goalkeeper to play in the English Premier League during the 1995/96 campaign, and he would amass over 60 appearances for the London-based club from 1995-98 before moving back to the United States to join the ranks of Major League Soccer. Sommer would battle injuries for much of his five-year run in MLS, but still collected 54 appearances between two seasons with the Columbus Crew (1998-99) and three with the New England Revolution (2000-02).

After retiring in 2002, Sommer returned to Indiana and stayed connected to the sport as a longtime member of the United States Soccer Federation’s Athletes Council and, more recently, as a member of the U.S. Soccer Foundation’s Board of Directors since 2011. A USSF “A” licensed coach, Sommer has sharpened his coaching chops as an Assistant Coach at Indiana University from 2004-07 under Mike Freitag; the Goalkeeper Coach for the U.S. Men’s National Team under the direction of another Peter Wilt hire, Bob Bradley, from 2007-10; and a six-year stint with Carmel United Soccer Club as Head Coach of some of the club’s elite Boys travel squads.

For his achievements in and service on behalf of the sport of soccer, Indiana Soccer named Sommer to its Hall of Fame in 2005. Sommer currently resides in Carmel with his wife, Susie, and their two sons, Tommy and Noah.