Career
He coached the United States. U-20 women"s national team at the 2006 Fédération internationale de football association U-20 Women"s World Championship. Schulz was a Parade Magazine High School All American as a soccer player at Air Academy High School in Colorado Springs, Colorado. In 1980, the San Jose Earthquakes of the North American Soccer League drafted Schulz out of high school.
He broke into the first team during the 1981 season.
In the fall of 1982, he signed with the Denver Avalanche in the Major Indoor Soccer League but was back with the Earthquakes, now known as the Golden Bay Earthquakes in 1983. When the NASL collapsed at the end of the 1984 season, he signed with the Saint Louis Steamers of the MISL for the 1984-1985 season.
In June 1985, he was back with the Earthquakes, now playing in the Western Soccer Alliance. In 1986, he moved to the Los Angeles Heat.
He returned to the Steamers for the team"s final two years in the MISL, 1986-1988.
In 1990, he played a single season with the expansion Colorado Foxes in the American Professional Soccer League. In 1992, he signed with he expansion Denver Thunder in the National Professional Soccer League. He retired at the end of the season.
In 1983, he was a part of the United States. team which finished 0-2-1 at the Pan American Games.
Schulz has coached at the youth club level since the mid-1980s. In 1989, he became the director of coaching of the Colorado Rush soccer club
In 2000, he moved up to become president and Chief Executive Officer of the club He was the head coach of the Region IV Olympic Development Program from 2000 to 2004 and was the assistant coach for the United States. Under-18 Men"s National Team from 1998 to 2000.
On May 5, 2005, USSF hired Schulz as the head coach of the United States U-20 women's national soccer team as it prepared for the 2006 Fédération internationale de football association U-20 Women"s World Championship.
Schulz took the team to a fourth-place finish in the tournament.