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Cindy Walsh

Canadian soccer player From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Cindy Walsh (born September 13, 1979) is a Canadian retired soccer player who played as a defender. She has been a member of the Canada women's national team.

Quick Facts Personal information, Date of birth ...
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College career

She attended the University of Hartford,[2] playing for the NCAA Division 1 Hartford Hawks on a full athletic scholarship. She started 80 games, missing only 3 because of emergency surgery to remove a ruptured appendix in 2000. She was voted Rookie of the Year[3] and named to the conference 1st team in 2000, 2001 and 2003 and named 2nd team in 2002.[4] She had a career high of 11 assists and 7 goals in 2002, and played a variety of positions from defender, midfielder and striker.[5]

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Club career

Between 2001 and 2014 she competed in the now defunct semi-professional W-League, which was among the top leagues in North America. In 13 years she played with the Laval Dynamites, Toronto Inferno, Western Mass Lady Pioneers, and Laval Comets.[6] She was named to the W-League All-Conference team in 2008. She was also named league all-star team and named as W-League Defender of the Year in 2012.[7] In 2019, she played with FC Sélect Rive-Sud in the Première Ligue de soccer du Québec.[8]

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International career

She joined the Canadian senior national team when she was 18 years old.[9] In 1998, she played in the CONCACAF Women's Championship, which they won and secured a qualifying spot for the 1999 FIFA Women's World Cup.[10] She was captain of the U20 Women’s national team in 1999 at the Pan American games, participating in all games, and helping the team to a 4th place finish. In 2010, Walsh was called back to the senior national team for a training camp in Cyprus and helped contribute to winning the 2010 Cyprus Cup after a 10 year absence with the team.[11]

Coaching career

She began her coaching career with the Laval Comets in 2013, serving as a player-coach,[12] making it all the way to the W-League finals in first season and being named coach of the year.[7] From 2009 to 2016, she was assistant technical director at the Association régionale de soccer de la Rive-Sud and School Programs Educator at Collège-Français de Longueuil, De Mortagne School in Boucherville and Heritage Regional High School.[13][14] She has also led the women's selection for the Quebec Games on several occasions[10] and work at Soccer Quebec's High Performance Center.[15]

In 2020, she was announced as the head coach of the women's team of CS St-Hubert, making them the first club in the PLSQ with a female head coach.[16]

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Personal life

Her sister Amy Walsh was also a player for the Canadian women's national team.[17]

References

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