Ed Young grew up in Charlotte
and graduated from West Mecklenburg High School in 1969.
His introduction to the game of soccer came while attending
Brevard Junior College where friendships built with Bill
Barfield and Ralph Lundy drew him to the game. Upon enrolling
at Western Carolina University in 1971, he joined a soccer
team for the first time. Ed was a goalkeeper for the Catamounts
for three seasons at Western Carolina, was the team captain
for two of those years, and was the Most Valuable Player
his senior year. These experiences at WCU, under his coach
Dr. Charles Schrader, Lt. Col. USMC, sparked an enthusiasm
that would ignite Young’s imagination for invention
and leadership.
Ed Young’s extraordinary
contributions in a vast array of soccer activities, especially
in his hometown of Charlotte, have earned him the distinction
of being selected as a member of the tenth class of inductees
into the North Carolina Soccer Hall of Fame on this, the
sixth day of January, 2007.
In the summer of 1972, Young
bemoaned the lack of an environment that would enable him
to train for his senior season at WCU. He took matters into
his own hands and organized the Charlotte Summer Soccer
League. Pick-up games eventually led to the formation of
a six-team league composed of players like Ed who would
disperse to play at various colleges in the fall.
After graduating from WCU,
Young returned to Charlotte and continued to influence the
growth of adult amateur soccer. He served the dual role
of player and manager for three well-known clubs in the
mid-seventies and early-eighties: the Charlotte Soccer Club
(1975), Press Box Soccer Club (1976-80), and Lowenbrau Soccer
Club (1981-82). The Charlotte Soccer Club was the only adult
men’s club in Charlotte at the time. Press Box (later
Lowenbrau) earned a combined six North Carolina Soccer League
Governors Cups and qualified for the National Open Cup.
Supported by the sponsorship from Lowenbrau, the team eventually
operated on a budget in excess of $20,000 per year.
In addition to his involvement
with adult soccer, Young officiated high school and college
games and served as a director of the Charlotte Junior Soccer
Foundation.
During the same period of
time, Young was involved with bringing professional soccer
to the citizens of Charlotte and Mecklenburg County. He
was the co-organizer of the first exhibition match between
professional teams held in the state when the Kansas City
Chiefs and the Minnesota Kicks of the NASL faced each other
at Memorial Stadium in 1979. The event was accompanied by
another first - a youth indoor tournament held at the Park
Center.
The success of the NASL exhibition
match showed that Charlotte was fertile ground for professional
soccer. It did not take long for this to be confirmed. The
Charlotte Lightnin‚ joined the American Soccer League
(ASL) in 1981 and promptly won the championship that year.
The final game was witnessed by 24,000 fans in Memorial
Stadium where the Lightnin‚ defeated NY United 2-1
in double overtime. Young was the assistant to the team’s
coach and general manager, Rodney Marsh. He remained with
the team in that capacity through the 1983 season. Highlighting
his time with the Lightnin‚ was the time he spent
with Bobby Moore, the captain of England’s 1966 World
Cup team and the MVP of that tournament and his relationship
with team owner, Bob Benson. Following his stint with the
Lightnin‚, Young became the general manager of the
Charlotte Gold of the United Soccer League (USL).
Through the decades of the
80s, 90s, and 00s, Ed Young has continued to positively
contribute to the game. He has coached numerous youth and
adult teams for both males and females. He has been an assistant
coach for the boys and girls at Myers Park High School since
1998. He is known around the United States for his role
as the vice-chair of the National Soccer Coaches Association
of America (NSCAA) Soccer Ambassadors program, an effort
born from a vision he shared with another confidant, Jeff
Tipping. The purpose of the Soccer Ambassadors is to give
soccer a strong united voice that will elevate the sport
to a higher level on the American sporting landscape.
What a fitting role for a
man whose voice and whose actions have been such a positive
influence on the advancement of the game in Charlotte and
North Carolina.