1. FC Saarbrücken (Germany),
VfL Bochum (Germany), San Jose Clash (USA - MLS), Leon (Mexico),
Miami Fusion (USA - MLS), New England Revolution (USA - MLS),
Chicago Fire (USA - MLS)
Honours
???
Biography
Eric Wynalda (born June 9, 1969 in Westlake Village, California)
is an American soccer forward, the all-time leading scorer for
the US National Team. Wynalda scored the first goal ever in
Major League Soccer in 1996 and was elected to the National
Soccer Hall of Fame in 2004.
After playing for San Diego State University, Wynalda earned his
first cap against Costa Rica on February 2, 1990. Later that
year, he played in his first World Cup and then became the first
American-born player to play for a Bundesliga club. One of the
first Americans to make a name for himself in European soccer,
Wynalda played in Germany for 1. FC Saarbrücken (1992-1994) and
VfL Bochum (1994-1996). In the 1994 World Cup, Eric scored on a
free kick as the United States tied Switzerland. He came back to
the States in 1996, signing with Major League Soccer and the San
Jose Clash. On April 6, 1996 Wynalda scored the lone goal in the
league's first game as the Clash beat DC United. He was named
U.S. Soccer Athlete of the Year that year.
However, Wynalda's MLS career never lived up to expectations, as
the ten goals he scored in his first season he matched only
once, in his last. In 1998, Eric participated in his third World
Cup, becoming only the third US player (Tab Ramos, Marcelo
Balboa) to do so. He was loaned out to Leon in Mexico in 1999,
and was traded by the Clash to the Miami Fusion later that year.
In 2000, Wynalda was traded to the New England Revolution, and
in 2001, to the Chicago Fire, where he finished his career,
ending up with a total of just 34 MLS goals (plus two in the
playoffs).
Wynalda retired from the US National Team as its all-time
leading scorer with 34 goals in 106 appearances. He was named
the Honda US Player of the Decade for the 1990s and elected to
the National Soccer Hall of Fame in 2004. Eric is currently a TV
broadcaster for ESPN.