Kenny Cooper Sr.

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Kenny Cooper
Personal information
Full name Kenneth Cooper
Date of birth (1946-10-11) 11 October 1946 (age 75)
Place of birth Blackpool, England
Position(s) Goalkeeper
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1969–1970 Blackburn Rovers 0 (0)
1970–1979 Dallas Tornado 170 (0)
Teams managed
1979–1980 Houston Summit (indoor)
1980–1992 Baltimore Blast (indoor)
1992–1994 Baltimore Spirit (indoor)
1995–1996 Tampa Bay Terror (indoor)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

Kenny Cooper Sr. (born 11 October 1946) is an English former football goalkeeper and coach. He spent ten seasons playing for the Dallas Tornado of the North American Soccer League and eighteen seasons coaching indoor soccer. He was the 1984 and 1988 Major Indoor Soccer League Coach of the Year.

Coach[]

In 1979, Cooper retired from playing and was immediately hired to replace Timo Liekoski as the head coach of the Houston Summit of Major Indoor Soccer League. Cooper took the Summit to the 1980 MISL championship game, where it lost to the New York Arrows. In 1980, the team's owner, , had decided to move the team to the east coast, but was unsure which city. He tasked Cooper with deciding between Baltimore and Boston. When Cooper arrived in Baltimore, he "was excited from the beginning. It just reminded me of Liverpool." He returned to Houston and informed Rodin the team should relocate to Baltimore.[1] In 1984, he coached the Blast to its only championship in the original MISL and was the 1984 and 1988 MISL Coach of the Year. Cooper also served as the Blast's general manager. In 1992, the Blast folded along with the MISL. With the collapse of the Blast, Cooper was instrumental in the forming of the Baltimore Spirit in July 1992. The Spirit entered the indoor National Professional Soccer League. Cooper took the Spirit to the playoffs in both of his seasons as coach. In 1994, stepped down as head coach, but remained as the team president. In 1995, Cooper joined with Bill Collins, a minor-league baseball owner, to enter an expansion team into the NPSL. He went on to serve as general manager and coach for the team, known as the Tampa Bay Terror. He took the team to a 14–26 record in his first season, and took what was described as a "leave of absence" from coaching duties (while maintaining his position as team president) in December 1996. He was replaced first by Perry Van der Beck on an interim basis, then Derrick Marcano, who coached the team to the playoffs. The Terror folded at the conclusion of the 1996–97 season.

Personal[]

He is the father of Kenny Cooper, who also played professionally.

He and Mike Renshaw currently co-own a wine import business.[2]

References[]

External links[]

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