Tony Sanneh

Tony Sanneh
Personal information
Full name Anthony Harry Sanneh
Date of birth (1971-06-01) June 1, 1971
Place of birth St. Paul, Minnesota, United States
Height 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m)
Playing position Defender / Midfielder
Youth career
1990–1993 UW–Milwaukee Panthers
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1994 Milwaukee Rampage 18 (14)
1994–1996 Chicago Power (indoor) 43 (31)
1995–1996 Minnesota Thunder 24 (18)
1995–1996 Milwaukee Wave (indoor) 16 (6)
1996–1998 D.C. United 86 (20)
1999–2001 Hertha BSC 31 (1)
2001–2004 1. FC Nuremberg 52 (5)
2004 Columbus Crew 8 (2)
2005–2006 Chicago Fire 31 (0)
2007 Minnesota Thunder 2 (0)
2007 Colorado Rapids 9 (0)
2009 Los Angeles Galaxy 13 (0)
Total 333 (97)
National team
1997–2005 United States 43 (3)

* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only and correct as of February 2, 2010.

‡ National team caps and goals correct as of November 4, 2007

Anthony "Tony" Sanneh (born June 1, 1971) is a retired American soccer player who last played for the Los Angeles Galaxy of Major League Soccer.

Career

Youth and college

Tony Sanneh was born in Saint Paul, Minnesota to an African father from Gambia and an American mother from Wisconsin.[1] He attended the St. Paul Academy and Summit School and played for the local soccer team, St. Paul Blackhawks. He graduated in 1990 having been selected twice to the All State team. He went on to play college soccer for the NCAA Division I University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee Panthers in the Horizon League, where, as a striker, he became the school's all-time scoring leader, with 53 goals and 32 assists from 1990 to 1993. He was named an NCAA Second-Team All-American in 1993.

Professional

In 1994, his first year out of college, Sanneh played with USISL's Milwaukee Rampage, where he scored 14 goals and 14 assists while teaming up with Brian McBride. After Brian McBride converted Sanneh's cross for the game-winning goal in the US' opening 2002 World Cup match against Portugal, McBride referenced their partnership in the postgame interview, saying he and Sanneh had run that play "100 times with the Milwaukee Rampage." That winter, Sanneh joined the indoor soccer Chicago Power of the National Professional Soccer League (NPSL). He played 34 games, scoring 27 goals in the 1994–95 season. He also played goalkeeper in four games for a total of 79:15 minutes.[2] In the 1995–96 indoor season, he played in only nine games, scoring four goals, but also played 4:19 minutes as a goalkeeper.[3] In 1995, he played with a former UWM Panthers teammate, Manny Lagos, on the Minnesota Thunder, amassing 18 goals and 22 assists with the team. He also played the 1995–96 indoor season with the Milwaukee Wave.[4] In 1996, midway through the inaugural MLS season, Sanneh was signed by D.C. United. Originally a forward, Tony played a variety of positions for United, mostly at right midfield. He went on to score goals in the first two MLS Cup, leading DC to consecutive titles. Sanneh ended his original MLS stay after the 1998 season, signing with Bundesliga club Hertha BSC in January 1999.

Sanneh spent the next three years with Hertha, where he was a starter when healthy. His playing time was limited at times due to many injuries and a national team tug of war. He scored just one goal in league play, and is remembered for assisting on Ali Daei's first Champions League goal in a 2–1 victory over Chelsea. He transferred to 1. FC Nuremberg in 2001, where he played nearly every game the first year and a half leading the back line until he sustained a back injury that kept him out of action for 13 months. During his injury layoff Nuremberg was demoted to the second league. Upon his return Sanneh started the last seven games, winning five in a row, to give Nuremberg promotion and the second Bundesliga crown. He tallied a total of five goals. In 2004, he came back to MLS, signing with the Columbus Crew, to play alongside long-time friend, college and Thunder teammate Manny Lagos. The crew finished the season with the league's best record and a 19-game unbeaten streak but lost in the playoffs after they missed two penalty kicks, one of which marred Sanneh's time there. Sanneh was traded following the end of the season to the Chicago Fire, in exchange for Ante Razov and part of an allocation. He play out the 2006 season assisting on the final goal of the Fire's 3–1 Open Cup win over the L.A. Galaxy. Sanneh's MLS league totals stand at 16 goals and 27 assists.

However, following the 2006 season, Sanneh and the Fire failed to reach a new agreement on his contract, prompting his release from the team. On July 24, 2007, USL First Division team Minnesota Thunder announced that they had signed Sanneh. The Colorado Rapids then acquired his rights from the Fire. He made his debut for the Rapids on August 16, 2007 against the New England Revolution at Dick's Sporting Goods Park. He played in 10 out of their final 12 games but did not agree to terms the following season.

After sitting out the 2008 season, he signed with Los Angeles Galaxy in February 2009. He made 13 appearances with the Western Conference champions (including five starts) but struggled with injuries the latter half of the season and was not invited to 2010's training camp.

International career

Sanneh made his debut for the United States national team on January 29, 1997 in a 2–1 loss to China but failed to make Steve Sampson's final squad and was left out of the 1998 FIFA World Cup in France.

Sanneh then had very good seasons from there on out, enough to impress new USA coach Bruce Arena scoring his first international goal in a shock 3–0 win over Germany. Eventually, he became an important part of the team by the time the 2002 FIFA World Cup came around and was one of the USA's best players in the tournament, playing every minute of every game. In the USA's first game of the tournament, a 3–2 upset of Portugal, his precise cross from the right side of the field provided an assist to Brian McBride's goal. He was also instrumental, both defensively and offensively, in the USA's narrow 1–0 loss to Germany in the quarterfinals, barely missing an equalizing goal on two occasions in the 47th and 89th minute.

After the 2002 FIFA World Cup, Sanneh was rarely picked due to injury and an influx of young talent into the national team pool. However, after playing impressively for the Columbus Crew and Chicago Fire in MLS, he was recalled for the 2005 CONCACAF Gold Cup, starting in group games against Cuba and Costa Rica. The USA later won the tournament upon beating Panama in the final. Following the tournament he was never called back into the national team and Sanneh finished his career for the USA national team with three goals in 43 appearances.

International goals

Goal Date Venue Opponent Score Result Competition Ref.
1. February 6, 1999 Alltel Stadium, Jacksonville, United States  Germany
2 – 0
3 – 0
Friendly
2. May 12, 2002 RFK Memorial Stadium, Washington, D.C., United States  Uruguay
1 – 0
2 – 1
Friendly
3. June 2, 2004 Gillette Stadium, Foxboro, United States  Honduras
4 – 0
4 – 0
Friendly

Post career

Sanneh operates his own soccer camp system in the Midwest and U.S. Virgin Islands. He also is a coach and consultant for the club soccer team Minneapolis United. In addition to overseeing youth development, Tony is the founder and Executive Director of his own charitable foundation headquartered in St. Paul (www.thesannehfoundation.org) which, among other initiatives, aims to help urban youth and also assists in recovery efforts in Haiti.

As of 2013, Sanneh has been playing with Brits Pub FC a local recreational team in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

In the Summer of 2013, Sanneh formed a Minnesota Thunder Legends team for a match against the Stegman's Old Boys of Minneapolis in partnership with The Free Beer Movement to help raise money for The Sanneh Foundation.[5]

Mr. Sanneh has also been an active participant in the SportsUnited Sports Envoy program for the U.S. Department of State. In this function, he has traveled to Bangladesh, Bolivia, Cyprus, Haiti, and Malaysia, where he worked with to conduct soccer clinics and events that reached more than 3000 youth from underserved areas. In so doing, English helped contribute to SportsUnited's mission to reach out to youth populations in order to promote growth and a mutual understanding through sports.[6][7][8][9][10]

Honors

United States

References

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