Converting from football
player to soccer player while enrolled at Davidson College
resulted in a career move for Charlie Slagle. As a goalie
for the Davidson Wildcats (Class of ’75) for two seasons,
he developed a fondness for the game. His prowess in the
goal earned him All Southern Conference honors. However,
his influence over a much larger audience took root when
he started coaching the Wildcat soccer team in 1980. It
blossomed when he spearheaded the bid to host the 1992 NCAA
Division I Men’s National Championship semi-finals
and finals at Davidson. And it continues to bear fruit to
this day as he carries out his duties as the Chief Executive
Officer of the Capital Area Soccer League, one of the most
respected soccer clubs in the United States of America.
Charlie Slagle’s extraordinary
contributions as a collegiate soccer coach and as a promoter
and administrator of the game for players of all ages and
all levels have earned him the distinction of being selected
as a member of the eighth class of inductees of the North
Carolina Soccer Hall of Fame on this, the twelfth day of
February, 2005.
Coach Slagle was the head
men’s soccer coach at Davidson College for twenty
one seasons from 1980 until 2000. Numerous Coach-of-the-Year
honors were indicative of the skill of his teams and the
quality of his work. He was named Southern Conference Coach-of-the-Year
seven times and National Soccer Coaches Association of America
(NSCAA) South Region Coach-of-the-Year twice. Under his
direction, the Davidson Soccer Camps grew from a modest
endeavor with fifteen campers to a flourishing enterprise
that sparked the youth soccer explosion in the North Mecklenburg
and South Iredell County area. As a result, the locker room
at the new soccer stadium at the college is named in his
honor.
Despite the fact that soccer
was growing at Davidson College and in the surrounding communities,
Coach Slagle was bothered by a nagging obsession. Year after
year, he was struck by an embarrassing lack of fanfare connected
with NCAA Division I Men’s Soccer’s premier
event – the National Championships. So he took matters
into his own hands by spearheading Davidson’s bid
to host the 1992 Championships. In an incredible convergence
of skill, fate, and opportunity, Davidson not only hosted
the event, but also advanced to compete in the national
semi-finals and earned Coach Slagle NCAA Men’s Division
I National Coach-of-the-Year honors. Even though all 8,000
tickets were sold out before the Wildcats even qualified
for the event, their presence made the championships the
happening that became the precursor to today’s College
Cup. Under Slagle’s direction, Davidson would later
host the 1993 and 1994 championships. As the seating capacity
increased each year, the size of the sellout crowds increased
as well. The NCAA finally found a fitting environment to
showcase the top teams in America. Slagle continues his
role as tournament organizer and promoter to this day. He
directed the NCAA Men’s College Cup in Charlotte in
1999 and 2000, and five ACC tournaments, two NCAA Division
I Women’s College Cups, and four US National Team
games at SAS Soccer Park.
Charlie’s promotion
of soccer helped focus the spotlight held by the general
sporting public onto the game. He was selected as “Sportsman
of the Year” by the Charlotte Sportsman’s Club
in 1992, was honored with the John B. Ross Leadership Award
given by the Greater Raleigh Convention and Visitors’
Bureau, and was named “Tar Heel of the Week”
by the (Raleigh) News & Observer. He also was the recipient
of two prestigious awards presented by the NSCAA –
the 1993 Bill Jeffrey Award, given for service to intercollegiate
soccer, and the Honor Award, given for outstanding contributions
at any level. He also served an appointment as the Division
I representative to the NCAA Soccer Rules Committee.
Since August 1, 2001, Slagle
has been the Chief Executive Officer of the Capital Area
Soccer League, one of the largest “full service”
soccer clubs in the country. CASL delivers programs to boys
and girls and men and women of all ages across a wide range
of skill levels. As CEO, he devotes as much time and energy
to those just learning the game as he does to those with
lots of experience. He is supported by the experience he
gained at Davidson College and by the wide network of people
he has met along the way.
Thank goodness for the conversion.
Football’s loss was soccer’s gain. The North
Carolina soccer community has been a major benefactor of
Charlie Slagle’s never-ending optimism and “can-do”
attitude. His induction into the North Carolina Soccer Hall
of Fame is our way of saying “Thank you Coach.”