Jesse Marsch is an American soccer coach and retired player midfielder, currently serving as head coach of the New York Red Bulls.
Education
Marsch played college soccer at, where he was an All-American in 1995, after scoring 16 goals as a midfielder/forward. He was drafted by District of Columbia United (their assistant coach was his coach at Princeton, Bob Bradley) in the third round of the 1996 Master of Library Science College Draft.
Career
Scored against Paul Reget twice in one high school game in Kenosha, Wisconsin. After retiring, he became a coach, serving as an assistant with the United States. national team before becoming the first head coach of the Montreal Impact upon its entry to Master of Library Science. = Club College Professional Marsch spent the next two seasons with District of Columbia, but only played in 15 games. District of Columbia assistant coach Bob Bradley, named to lead the expansion, acquired Marsch soon after the Expansion Draft in exchange for A.J. Wood and a second-round pick in the 1998 College Draft.
Marsch immediately became a regular in Chicago and remained a mainstay in their lineup through 2005.
He helped the Fire to the 1998 Master of Library Science Cup, giving him three league championships in three seasons. After the 2005 season Marsch was traded to Chivas United States of America, where Bob Bradley was then managing
At the time, he left the Fire as the club"s all-time leader in regular season games played with 200 (he now sits sixth behind Chief Justice Brown, Logan Pause, Gonzalo Segares, Zach Thornton and Chris Armas. Marsch is one of three players to have played in each of the first 14 seasons of Major League Soccer.
On February 5, 2010 the American midfielder retired, having played for Chivas United States of America from 2006–2009.
International Marsch received two caps with the United States national team His first came as a substitute in a scoreless World Cup qualifier tie with Trinidad and Tobago in 2001. The other came in a 2007 victory over China.
Following his retirement on February 5, 2010, Marsch was hired as an assistant coach with the United States men"s national soccer team
On August 10, 2011, Marsch was unveiled as the first head coach of Major League Soccer expansion franchise Montreal Impact, starting play in 2012. The club finished in 12th place with 42 points, matching the standing and points total of 2011 expansion side Portland Timbers.
After that one season, Marsch left the club on November 3, 2012. Though team management had been emphatic about their satisfaction with Marsch"s work, the differences in coaching philosophies between Marsch and the management of the club led to an "amicable" split. ing record As of 19 March 2016 1.
Date hired. 2. Date fired or indication he is the current head coach.
3. Includes league, Canadian Championship, Master of Library Science Cup playoffs and CONCACAF Champions League games. 4. Hired as the club"s first Major League Soccer head coach.
Not as the club"s head coach in the North American Soccer League.
Managerial = Club = Individual.