Troy Snyder is a former United States. soccer player who is second on the high school career scoring list with 208 goals and 117 assists.
Education
Snyder attended Fleetwood High School in Fleetwood, Pennsylvania where he played as a forward on his school’s soccer team Following graduation from high school, Snyder attended Pennsylvania State University where he played for legendary coach Walter Bahr from 1984 to 1986.
Career
Snyder earned five caps with the United States. national team between 1985 and 1991 as well as another nine with the United States. National Futsal Team. Youth
During his high school soccer career, which ran from 1980 to 1983, he scored 208 goals and assisted on 117 others At the time, the 208 goals was a record, which has since been broken.
Professional
In 1987, Snyder turned professional as a midfielder with the San Diego Nomads of the Western Soccer Alliance (WSA).
That winter, he signed with the Minnesota Strikers of the Major Indoor Soccer League (MISL). The Strikers folded at the end of the 1987-1988 season.
Now out of a team, Snyder signed with the Dallas Sidekicks as a free agent. He would go on to play four seasons and 210 games in Dallas.
In addition to playing for Dallas, Snyder spent the 1989 outdoor season with the Maryland Bays of the American Soccer League.
In 1992, Snyder left the Sidekicks and moved east to the Washington Warthogs of the Continental Indoor Soccer League (CISL). However, the Warthogs and the league folded at the end of that season and Snyder moved to the Baltimore Bays of the USISL. He spent the 1997-1998 indoor USISL season with the Bays, winning the league championship before the team folded. He then moved to the Baltimore Blast of the National Professional Soccer League (NPSL).
National team
In 1983, Snyder was selected for the United States U-20 men"s national soccer team which competed at the U-20 World Championship.
The United States. went 1-0-2 and failed to make the second round. On June 15, 1985, the summer before his junior year of college, Snyder earned his first cap in a 5-0 loss to England.
He played three more times that year, all as a substitute. In addition to his five caps with the outdoor national team, Snyder earned another nine caps, and scored one goal, with the United States national futsal team from 1987 to 1996.
Snyder coached the soccer team at Goucher College in Baltimore, Maryland from 1998 to 2000.
He compiled a 12-44-1 record.
Membership
In 1983, he was a member of the United States. team at the U-20 World Championship.