Jason Farrell
{{Short description|American soccer player (born 1970)}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=August 2023}}
{{Infobox football biography
| name = Jason Farrell
| image =
| full_name =
| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1970|12|31}}
| birth_place = Seattle, Washington, United States
| height = {{height|ft=5|in=10}}
| position = Midfielder
| collegeyears1 = 1989
| collegeyears2 = 1990
| collegeyears3 = 1991–1992
| college1 = Skagit Valley Cardinals
| college2 = Washington Huskies
| college3 = Seattle Pacific Falcons
| years1 = 1994–1996
| years2 = 1995–1997
| years3 = 1997–2000
| years4 = 2000–2001
| years5 = 2001–2004
| years6 = 2001
| clubs1 = Seattle Sounders
| clubs2 = Kansas City Attack (indoor)
| clubs3 = Columbus Crew
| clubs4 = Wichita Wings (indoor)
| clubs5 = Seattle Sounders
| clubs6 = → LA Galaxy (loan)
| caps1 = 69
| caps2 = 71
| caps3 = 98
| caps4 = 19
| caps5 = 88
| caps6 = 0
| goals1 = 9
| goals2 = 47
| goals3 = 11
| goals4 = 8
| goals5 = 9
| goals6 = 0
| totalcaps = 345
| totalgoals = 84
| manageryears1 = 2005
| manageryears2 = 2006
| manageryears3 = 2022–2023
| manageryears4 = 2023-
| managerclubs1 = Seattle Redhawks (assistant)
| managerclubs2 = Seattle Sounders (assistant)
| managerclubs3 = Ballard FC
| managerclubs4 = Seattle Redhawks (assistant)
}}
Jason Farrell (born December 31, 1970) is an American former soccer midfielder and current coach who spent four seasons in Major League Soccer, two in the American Professional Soccer League, one in the A-League, three in the National Professional Soccer League and four in the USL First Division. As a player he won two outdoor and one indoor championships.
As a manager he led Ballard FC to the USL League Two championship in 2023. He currently coaches collegiate soccer as an assistant with Seattle University.
https://goseattleu.com/news/2023/7/10/mens-soccer-announces-addition-of-jason-farrell-to-staff.aspx?ref=sounderatheartcom
High school and college
Farrell was born and grew up in Seattle, Washington, attending Shorecrest High School and playing in the Seattle Youth Soccer Association. After graduating from Shorecrest in 1989, he attended Skagit Valley College for one year before transferring to the University of Washington for another year. While he played soccer at both Skagit and UW, he did not gain significant recognition until transferring to Seattle Pacific University. Farrell played two seasons with SPU, graduating in 1992.[http://www.spufalcons.com/Pdfs/msoc/2007/8/29/MSOC_2007_RecBk.pdf SPU Men’s Soccer Record Book]
Professional
Following his graduation from SPU in 1992, there is a two-year gap in his career before Farrell signed with the expansion Seattle Sounders of the American Professional Soccer League in 1994. He played three seasons in Seattle, winning the 1995 and 1996 championships. Farrell scored the final goal of the 1995 A-League Championship, which would also prove to be the final goal scored in the first tier of American Soccer prior to Major League Soccer's formation and takeover of that slot the following year. In the 1996 championship, he assisted on Joey Leonetti’s first goal in a 2–0 victory over the Rochester Raging Rhinos.[http://seattlepitch.tripod.com/matches/96/oct06.html 1996 Championship Match] In 1995, Farrell signed with the indoor Kansas City Attack of the National Professional Soccer League (NPSL). He would play two seasons in Kansas City, alternating between them and the outdoor Sounders. In 1996, the Attack lost in the finals, but took the championship in 1997, giving Farrell his third title. While he Farrell is listed in some sources as playing the 1997–1998 season with the Attack, he is not listed in their end of year statistics.[http://www.howesportsdata.com/howesportsdata/stats/soccer/misl/misl98.txt National Professional Soccer League Final Official Statistics: 1997-1998] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160128003213/http://www.howesportsdata.com/howesportsdata/stats/soccer/misl/misl98.txt |date=January 28, 2016 }} In March 1997, the Columbus Crew of Major League Soccer selected Farrell in the second round (13th overall) of the 1997 MLS Supplemental Draft. He played eighteen games, starting ten that season. Just more than three months after being the fourth player picked by the Chicago Fire in the 1997 MLS Expansion Draft on November 6, 1997,[http://www.chicago-fire.com/news/2011/11/looking-back-%E2%80%9897-expansion-draft Crandall, Jeff. "Looking back on the '97 Expansion Draft," Chicago Fire Soccer Club, Tuesday, November 22, 2011.] he was sent back to the Crew in exchange for Frank Klopas on February 19, 1998.[https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9D0DEFD6103FF933A15751C0A96E958260 February 20, 1998 New York Times] Despite playing twenty-four games in the 2000 season, the Crew released Farrell after his relationship with head coach Tom Fitzgerald became acrimonious. In January 2001, Farrell was signed by the Wichita Wings of the NPSL after his good friend Jason Dunn was lost for the season due to a neck injury. Farrell helped solidify the midfield for the Wings, and he helped lead them to the playoffs. Unfortunately after the season, the Wings' franchise folded after 22 years, and Farrell moved back to the Pacific Northwest to rejoin the Sounders. On January 30, 2001, he signed with the sounders, playing the 2001 season with them. However, on August 31, 2001, he was loaned to the Los Angeles Galaxy of MLS when Brian Ching was injured. Farrell remained an unused substitute during his short stint in Los Angeles. On September 14, 2004, announced Farrell intention to retire at the end of the season.[http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/sports/2002034646_sounders14.html Massey, Matt Farrell seeks title in finale]
Coaching
On February 20, 2006, Farrell joined the Sounders as an assistant coach. He spent only one season in that position before leaving to become an assistant at Seattle Pacific University in April 2007, but was not on the coaching roster during the 1997 collegiate season. He has also served as an assistant coach with Seattle University and youth clubs in the Seattle area. In 2007 Farrell joined Pacific Premier FC [http://www.pacificpremierfc.com] in Northern Snohomish County as their Coaching Director. In January 2010, he was named Technical Director of the Seattle United youth soccer club,[http://www.seattleunited.com/doclib/Farrell_PR.pdf "Jason Farrell Selected as Technical Director for Seattle Youth Soccer's Unified Advanced Development Club"]{{Dead link |date=November 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}{{cite web | url=https://justuk.club/jason-farrell-blog/ | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200930222826/https://justuk.club/jason-farrell-blog/ | url-status=usurped | archive-date=September 30, 2020 | title=Jason Farrell Blog }} as part of a coaching leadership team that also includes ex-Seattle Sounder Jimmy McAlister.[http://www.seattleunited.com/doclib/McAlister_PR.pdf "Jimmy McAlister Selected as Director of Coaching for Seattle Youth Soccer's Unified Advanced Development Club"]{{dead link|date=November 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
Farrell was named first-ever head coach of USL League Two side Ballard FC on January 6, 2022.{{cite web |title=Ballard FC Announce Jason Farrell as Head Coach |url=https://www.goballardfc.com/blogs/news/jason-farrell |website=GoBallardFC.com |access-date=January 6, 2022}} The next year, the team won the USL League Two national championship. On July 23, 2023, Farrell stepped down as Ballard FC head coach.{{cite web |title=Head Coach Jason Farrell Taking Next Step in Career, Leaving Ballard FC |url=https://www.goballardfc.com/news/2023/07/03/head-coach-jason-farrell-taking-next-step-in-career-leaving-ballard-fc/ |website=GoBallardFC.com |publisher=Ballard FC |access-date=July 3, 2023}}
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
{{Portal|Biography}}
- {{MLS player|jason-farrell}}
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20080906150437/http://goalseattle.com/gallery/2004-Seattle-Sounders-Information-Guide/2004media_10 2004 Seattle Sounders Media Guide]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Farrell, Jason}}
Category:American soccer coaches
Category:American men's soccer players
Category:American Professional Soccer League players
Category:Columbus Crew players
Category:Kansas City Attack players
Category:Major League Soccer players
Category:National Professional Soccer League (1984–2001) players
Category:Seattle Pacific Falcons men's soccer players
Category:Seattle Sounders (1994–2008) players
Category:Washington Huskies men's soccer players
Category:Wichita Wings (NPSL) players
Category:Seattle Redhawks men's soccer coaches
Category:Soccer players from Seattle
Category:Columbus Crew draft picks
Category:Men's association football midfielders
Category:Seattle Sounders (1994–2008) coaches