Last summer, Michael Bradley was back at work in northern New Jersey, returning to the Major League Soccer organization that two decades earlier had paved his way to a long and prosperous playing career.
Eager to remain involved in the sport that had consumed his family since his birth, he had taken the reins of the developmental squad at Red Bull New York, following in the footsteps of his father, Bob, who over 43 years had coached at the amateur, pro and international levels.
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Less than two years removed from anchoring Toronto FC’s midfield, Michael got his head-coaching feet wet in the U.S. third division, shaping teenagers before small crowds at a cozy college complex in suburban New Jersey.
It wasn’t a lot, but it was a start.
Coaching the first team someday, though, wasn’t a distant thought, either.
“It was in the back of my mind, for sure,” the two-time U.S. World Cup midfielder said Monday. “It was something I hoped to, with time, earn [and] work for. I didn’t think it was something that was going to come necessarily this quickly.”
Half a year was quick, indeed. Promoted last month by an MLS founding member that 30 years later is still seeking its first league championship, the 38-year-old Bradley shared his thoughts about his big leap at an introductory news conference Monday at Sports Illustrated Stadium in Harrison, New Jersey.
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When approached about the first-team job, Bradley did not hesitate — even though his coaching portfolio was thin. (His experience consisted of assisting his father at a Norwegian club and being a guest assistant with the Canadian national team.)
“How in the world could you say no?” he said. “It’s like anything in life: You could ask yourself a million questions. Is it the right time? Am I ready? What about this? What about that? But certain things come, and you’ve got to go for it. And so this one took me like a half a second to basically realize we’re going for this one.”
Bradley is very much his father’s son — the shaved head, the intense eyes, the deliberate way he speaks. Bob Bradley was Michael’s first pro coach in 2004-05 with the New York/New Jersey MetroStars, who, upon an ownership change in 2006, became the New York Red Bulls. (They are now Red Bull New York, matching the naming style of the conglomerate’s soccer teams around the world.)
Throughout his playing career, Michael displayed unmistakable leadership qualities, most notably as the longtime national team captain. Coaching seemed like a natural next step, and combined with Michael’s immediate success with the developmental squad, Red Bull officials believed he was ready for MLS.
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“You see what he’s able to do,” said Julian de Guzman, the team’s head of sport. “He’s young, he’s hungry, he’s fresh, he’s ready to go. Those are the simple things that get you started to say, ‘Yeah, this is the right person.’”
Many former American MLS players have gone on to coach in the league. A few former U.S. national team players have followed such a path as well. Except for goalkeeper Brad Friedel, no one matches Bradley’s long list of accomplishments.
His 151 caps rank third in U.S. history, and his 17 goals are tied for 10th. Over 19 years, he appeared in almost 600 pro matches, starting and ending in MLS, with stops in the Netherlands, Germany, England and Italy in between.
A box-to-box midfielder with attacking and defending responsibilities, Bradley was admittedly an unglamorous player who used his smarts as much as his might and footwork to get the job done. Those qualities, he believes, prepared him for a coaching career.
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“I was never a player that could step on a field … score two goals and win the team the game,” he said. “That was never going to be me. And so from a young age, I knew that to be at my best, I needed to make sure everybody around me was at their best, that the team was functioning in the best possible way.”
Given that starting point, Bradley says he thought about the game in different ways.
“When you have roles in teams that challenge you to think about others, that challenge you to be a leader, that challenge you to think about more than just yourself,” he said, “then the part of when you get the opportunity moving into coaching — how you connect the dots in those ways, how you engage a group, how you take the ideas you have in your head and try to instill them in a team — those thought processes have been going on for a lot of years. Obviously, now, I get the opportunity to run with it.”
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Bradley will take over a team that missed the playoffs for the first time since 2009, snapping the longest streak in MLS. He replaces Sandro Schwarz, who in 2024 guided the club to its second MLS Cup appearance in 30 seasons but was fired in October after a 12-15-7 campaign.
Bradley’s path back to the club began more than a year ago, when he engaged with Mario Gomez, who oversees strategy for Red Bull’s soccer ambitions worldwide. Soon, Bradley was meeting with New York executives and Jürgen Klopp, the former Liverpool coach who had just joined Red Bull’s global operations.
Bradley spent time in Red Bull circles in Europe before he was offered the developmental squad.
“I literally said, ‘When do I get to start?’” he said. “As a young coach, I was so excited for the next step in my career. I love the game. I’m proud of what I’ve done. I’m proud of the career I had as a player, but there is a big part of me that wants more.”
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Bradley’s work with young players, not to mention winning the championship, raised his profile within the organization. And when the first-team job opened, the club turned to him again.
“This is an incredible opportunity,” Bradley said. “It’s a huge honor, and it is something that I am going to commit my absolute life to to make sure we are able to put a team on the field that our fans are proud of, to represent our club, this community in a way where everybody who comes into this stadium feels a part of.”