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Tabaré Ricardo Ramos Ricciardi, known as Tab Ramos (born September 21, 1966 in Montevideo, Uruguay) is a retired U.S. Olympic Team and National Team soccer midfielder. He played professionally for 13 seasons in Spain, Mexico and the United States. Ramos was the first player to sign with Major League Soccer, where he played seven years with the MetroStars. Now a member of the National Soccer Hall of Fame.
[edit] Early career[edit] Youth and high schoolBorn in Uruguay and of Spanish and Italian heritage, Ramos emigrated to the United States with his family when he was 11. His father played professional soccer in Uruguay and instilled a love for the game into Tab from an early age. While living in Uruguay, he played for the Union Vecinal Youth Soccer Club in Montevideo. When his family arrived in the U.S., they settled in New Jersey where Ramos lived in Harrison and Kearny.[1] he attended Saint Benedict's Preparatory School, the same high school attended by Claudio Reyna a few years later. In 1982, he became U.S. citizen. He also played for local youth club Thistle FC where he played with future Hall of Fame player John Harkes. Ramos and Harkes played together from their youth, through the U.S. National Team. They were both inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2005. He was a two-time high school All-America and the 1983 Parade Magazine National High School Player of the Year. That year, he led St. Benedict's to the New Jersey State Championship. Ramos still holds the New Jersey High School boy's soccer career scoring record of 161 goals, 57 of which he scored his senior year. In 1999, he was named by The Star-Ledger as one of the top ten New Jersey high school soccer players of the 1980s.[2] Apart from playing soccer, Ramos also ran indoor track at St. Benedict's (60yrd. dash and 4x100 relay). In 1984, the New York Cosmos of the North American Soccer League drafted Ramos with the 10th. pick of the first round, but he chose to go to college instead. The NASL folded about six months later. [edit] CollegeRamos attended college at NC State where he played NCAA soccer for four years. He was All ACC his four years and a three time All American. He was tied with Bruce Murray for the Atlantic Coast Conference scoring title his senior year. In 1988, he left school briefly to play for the U.S. team at the 1988 Summer Olympics. However, he returned in 1989 to leave again when he signed with the United States men's national soccer team. He finally graduated in 2001 with a Bachelor of Arts in Foreign Language (Spanish) and Literature after taking years of correspondence courses. [edit] Professional career[edit] American Soccer League / MISLRamos played with the New Jersey Eagles of the American Soccer League in 1988. That same year the Tacoma Stars of the MISL selected him with the #1 pick in the draft. He never played a game as he decided to only play the outdoor game. He then moved to the Miami Sharks for the 1989 season. He was selected as a league All Star that year. [edit] SpainRamos, and several other national team players, had signed contracts with the United States Soccer Federation (USSF) to play exclusively for the national team as it prepared for the 1990 FIFA World Cup. Following the World Cup, USSF began seeking club opportunities for the national team players. On July 27, 1990, USSF agreed to loan Ramos to Spanish Second Division club Figueres for the 1990-1991 season.[3] In his first season with the team, he played 38 games, scoring 5 goals. On June 23, 1991, Figueres purchased Ramos' contract from USSF for $250,000.[4] His excellent play continued during his second year with the Figueres, bringing considerable attention from several first division clubs. However, Ramos sabotaged this interest when he was ejected from a Nov 24, 1991 game with Rayo Vallecano. He was suspended for three games and interest in him dried up until the end of the season.[5] On July 31, 1992, Figueres sold Ramos to fellow Second Division club Real Betis for $400,000.[6] In the 1993-1994 season, Real Betis won the Spanish Second and earned promotion to the First Division. While Ramos remained with Betis for the 1994-1995 season, he never played a game in La Liga as he recovered from a skull fracture suffered during the 1994 World Cup game with Brazil. In 1994, Ramos was chosen as the CONCACAF Player of the Year. [edit] MexicoOn January 3, 1995 Ramos became the first player signed with Major League Soccer (MLS).[7] The league had intended to begin play in the fall of 1995, but difficulties forced it to delay its start for a year. Rather than letting players such as Ramos sit idle, the league loaned him and several others to foreign teams. For Ramos, MLS sent him to Mexican First Division club Tigres for the second half of the 1994-1995 season. Ramos became the first American player to appear for the side seeing time in twelve games. He remained on loan with Tigres for the 1995-1996 season, playing twenty-three games and scoring two goals as the team ran to the 1996 Mexico Cup champsionship, one of two Mexico Cups won by Tigres and its first title in 20 years. [edit] MetroStarsWhile Ramos was in Mexico, MLS allocated him to the future New York/New Jersey franchise, eventually known as the MetroStars. Following the end of the Mexican season in April 1996, Ramos returned to the United States for the inaugural MLS season in 1996.[8] He would play seven season for the MetroStars, earing All Star recognition in 1996, 1998 and 1999. On May 14, 2002, he announced his intentions of retiring at the end of the 2002 season.[9] When he retired, he was the last original member of the team. Unfortunately, his flashes of brilliance were interrupted by long injury spells, as he never lived up to his potential in a MetroStars jersey.[10] Tab totaled just eight goals and 36 assists in MLS play (ten goals and 39 assists in all competitions). [edit] U.S. national team[edit] 1983 FIFA U-20 World CupRamos began his national team career playing at the U-20 level in 1982, just after gaining his U.S. citizenship. Ramos was 15 when he scored two goals in regional qualifying for the 1983 FIFA U-20 World Cup. However, the U.S. went 0-2-1 and failed to advance out of group play in the champsionship tournament. [edit] Cut from 1984 Olympic team as a 17 year oldIn 1984, he was the last player cut from the U.S. 1984 Summer Olympics soccer team. He had just left high school, but was already known as an up and coming player. However, the International Olympic Committee had opened the Olympic soccer tournament to professionals for the 1984 games. The U.S., as the host nation, did not need to qualify, but had assembled a team of amateurs, mostly college players. When the IOC announced their decision, USSF dumped most of the team, except for Paul Caligiuri for professionals. Ramos had further disappointment a year later when the U.S. failed to qualify for the 1985 FIFA U-20 World Cup, despite a 3-2-2 record in the qualifying tournament. He went on however, to play on the U.S. team which went 1-1-1 at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, South Korea. [edit] National teamsIt would be another year before Ramos earned his first cap for the senior U.S. team. It came on January 10, 1988 against Guatemala. He soon became an integral part of national team. After playing for the US in the 1990 FIFA World Cup, he was named U.S. Soccer Athlete of the Year in 1990. Early in his national team career, the coaches had difficulty finding a role for Ramos. At the time Hugo Perez was the creative force on the team and for some reason he and Ramos never gelled as midfielders. It seemed that Ramos would disappear during games when Perez was also playing. It wasn't until Perez faded from the national team scene that Ramos became a force and his attacking creativity came to the forefront. Among his career highlights were his two assists in the June 9, 1993 2-0 World Series of Soccer victory over England. Later that year, he also a member of the U.S. team which went 1-1-1 at the Copa America In 1994, Tab once again played in the World Cup, being a starting player for the USA National Team in all its matches. Late in the round of 16, Ramos had to be replaced after suffering a skull fracture caused by a vicious elbow to the head by Brazilian leftback Leonardo on the first half of the game. USA came to be eliminated of the World Cup in the end of the match, as Bebeto scored Brazil winning goal. Tab Ramos went on to spend 3 and half months in hospital before finally returning to training, late in 1994. Leonardo apologized to him in English, stating that he did not intentionally hurt him. Ramos saw more success in 1995 as a member of the U.S. team when it placed fourth at the Copa America. On September 7, 1997, Ramos scored one of the most important goals in US history, against Costa Rica in a 1-0 World Cup qualifier win. In 1998, he played in his third World Cup. With coach Bruce Arena looking for veteran leadership for a must-win qualifier against Barbados, Ramos made his last appearance in a 4-0 US win on November 15, 2000. Two days later he announced his retirement from the national team. He finished his national team career with 81 caps and eight goals. Ramos also played 8 games, scoring 3 goals, for the U.S. Futsal team which finished 3rd at the 1989 FIFA Futsal World Championship.[1] Ramos was elected to the National Soccer Hall of Fame on the first ballot, in 2005. He lives with his children Alex and Kristen in Holmdel Township, New Jersey.[1] [edit] References
[edit] External links
Categories: American expatriate soccer players | United States men's international soccer players | Uruguayan footballers | Uruguayan immigrants to the United States | Uruguayan Americans | Naturalized citizens of the United States | Real Betis footballers | UE Figueres footballers | MetroStars players | Major League Soccer players | La Liga footballers | American futsal players | Primera División de México players | UANL Tigres players | American Soccer League (1988/89) players | New Jersey Eagles players | Miami Sharks players | National Soccer Hall of Fame members | Olympic soccer players of the United States | Footballers at the 1988 Summer Olympics | 1990 FIFA World Cup players | 1992 King Fahd Cup players | 1994 FIFA World Cup players | 1998 FIFA World Cup players | People from Hudson County, New Jersey | People from Middlesex County, New Jersey | 1966 births | Living people | North Carolina State University alumni | NC State Wolfpack soccer players | Soccer players from New Jersey | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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