Barry Goldberg |
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College:
Pittsburgh '84
Years at American:
21st Season (498-187)
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Position:
Head Coach
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Barry Goldberg, the coach who has built a Patriot League dynasty
by winning the league championship eight years in a row, didn't
begin his volleyball career with a bang. He was cut from his team
as a freshman both in high school and as a player at the University
of Pittsburgh and before his senior season the program was dropped
entirely by the Athletics Department. Luckily for AU, Goldberg has
always thrived on challenges.
The two-time Patriot League and three-time Colonial Athletic
Association Coach of the Year's record speaks for itself:
- 109-3 Patriot League record over eight years
- 498 career wins
- .727 career winning percentage
- 10 NCAA Tournament appearances in the last 12 years
- Conference championships in 11 of the last 12 years
Indeed, in the past 10 years of league play, the Eagles have
lost only six matches. Yet the man who has come to epitomize AU
volleyball was not recruited as a player out of Peabody High School
in Pittsburgh, Pa. In college, he joined the team at Pitt as a
walk-on, and after getting cut as a freshman, he thought his
playing days were over. But a call from the coach, inviting him to
join the team as its 10th man, brought him back to the court.
Goldberg worked hard in practice but rode the bench until the
season was nearly over. Then he got his chance. Faced with player
absences because of final exams, Goldberg's coach had no choice. He
was forced to use the 10th man.
Goldberg outplayed the other starters and earned a spot on the
team. From then on he started at middle blocker for the Panthers.
His junior year, the team he captained was ranked No. 13 in the
nation. As it turned out, though, 13 was an unlucky number: At the
end of the season, Pitt cut the varsity men's volleyball
program.
Undeterred, as a senior Goldberg worked as a player/coach for the
club team. After graduating from Pitt with a BA in communication
and rhetoric, and while pursuing his master's in counseling
education, he became assistant coach for the Pitt women's varsity
team.
A History of Success
The same determination that drove him to persevere at Pitt
continues today. During the 2008 season, Goldberg led the Eagles to
their eighth-consecutive Patriot League Championship and finished
the year with a 24-9 overall record, 13-1 in conference play, and a
12-1 mark at home. AU's performance was so impressive throughout
the year that the team was honored with four PL major awards.
Senior Rubena Sukaj was named the Player of the Year for the third
straight season while classmate Christina Nash earned her second
Setter of the Year honor, junior Ivana Cebakova was named Defensive
Player of the Year for the second time and freshman Rebecca Heath
garnered Rookie of the Year plaudits.
In 2006, Goldberg coached his way to a second Patriot League Coach
of the Year award and his team won its sixth-consecutive league
regular season and tournament titles. Despite being a young squad,
with just one senior and three juniors, the Eagles were heavy on
talent and determination. Led by Sukaj, AU recorded a 14-1 record
at home in Bender Arena and a 14-0 record against conference
opponents. The Eagles played so masterfully during the second half
of the season that none of their opponents could manage to win more
than one game in any match, a record that stood until they fell to
top-ranked Nebraska, 3-1, in the NCAA Tournament.
Because his teams have achieved so much since his arrival, it's
hard to remember what AU volleyball was like before Goldberg. Since
the day he came on as coach in 1989, the Eagles have accumulated a
209-37 (.850) record in Bender Arena. He has produced 34
All-Patriot League selections in eight years and 15 PL Player of
the Year recipients.
Throughout the years his players have excelled both on and off the
court. Since 1995, Goldberg's teams have averaged a 3.33 combined
grade point average per semester. AU women's volleyball has had
five Academic All-America selections, including most notably Karla
Kucerkova's selection as the 2002 and 2003 CoSIDA Academic
Volleyball Player of the Year. In 2003, AU graduate Natalie Hand
was awarded a prestigous Marshall Scholarship, which pays for
American students to study in Great Britain. Seventy-four Eagles
have earned an in-season GPA above 3.2 and been named to the
All-Patriot League Academic Honor Roll in the team's eight years in
the conference.
In 12 seasons in the Colonial Athletic Association, before AU
joined the Patriot League, Goldberg coached 36 players to All-CAA
teams, including 20 All-CAA First Team selections, two CAA
Championships MVP accolades, and a CAA Rookie of the Year winner.
Goldberg has also coached three GTE/Academic All-Americans and
three American University Student-Athletes of the Year. Five of his
student-athletes have been named Verizon District II Academic
All-Americans.
A Tradition of Winning
A look back at the Goldberg era of AU volleyball shows the same
pattern of consistent success:
- In 2004, the Goldberg-led Eagles compiled a 24-7 overall record
while staying undefeated in league competition. The Eagles made
their fourth straight NCAA Tournament appearance, and junior
Cutrina Biddulph was named the Patriot League Co-Player of the Year
and Honorable Mention All-America. Freshman Chelsa Brooks was named
the league's Rookie of the Year. In addition, AU was the best
represented school on the All-Patriot League Team with six athletes
selected.
- From 2001 to 2003, Karla Kucerkova earned three straight
Patriot League Player of the Year and Scholar-Athlete of the Year
awards. Nationally, she was named Academic All-America Player of
the Year twice. The team's success was almost as brilliant, with
victories in 48 straight league matches and trips to three straight
NCAA Tournaments.
- In 2000, AU competed in its final season in the Colonial
Athletic Association before moving to the Patriot League in 2001.
Although the switch made the team ineligible for the NCAA
Tournament, the Eagles finished 26-4 and had an 11-1 conference
record. In its final season in the CAA, the team received many
honors, including Goldberg's third CAA Coach of the Year award.
Ajola Berisha, the CAA Player of the Year, was selected as an AVCA
Regional All-American, and Judit Szekelyhidi joined her on the CAA
First Team.
- In 1999 the Eagles faced six NCAA Championship participants en
route to a then AU record .288 hitting percentage, placing the
Eagles among the top-10 hitting teams in the country. AU garnered
five postseason awards on its way to a third consecutive CAA
Championship match appearance and finished the season ranked
regionally for the fourth time in the previous five seasons. The
Eagles finished the regular season with a 14-match win streak and
posted a school-record 14-1 CAA mark.
- In 1997 the Eagles went 30-4, earning the school's first NCAA
Tournament berth.
- The 1994 season, when the Eagles compiled a 34-8 record that
included an unprecedented 23-match winning streak, saw the team's
first postseason competition, at the National Invitational
Volleyball Championship. While in Kansas City, AU commanded
national attention by winning two of its four matches.
The Road to the Top
Such accomplishments would have seemed unlikely, to say the least,
when Goldberg graduated from Pitt. He traveled next to Washington,
where he coached the Capital Junior Volleyball Club in the District
of Columbia and led the Under-18 team to a top-20 finish at the
Junior National Championships. All 10 of the players he coached
that year went on to receive NCAA Division I scholarships. Seeing
his success at that level,
Georgetown University hired him as an assistant, where he coached
until joining American University to take its program to the next
level.
Along the way to the top, Goldberg has worked with several
prestigious volleyball camps and committees. In 1997, he was the
United States representative, along with the Tampa Bay Juniors
Volleyball Club, at a four-nation international camp in Europe.
Elite junior national teams from Switzerland, Slovakia, and the
Czech Republic hosted the camp. During his summers, Goldberg
conducts individual and team volleyball camps at AU and other
locations in the Mid-Atlantic region. He has also held seminars in
the National Mizuno Coaching Clinic Series. Goldberg now serves as
a voting member of the national AVCA/USA Today Top-25 Coaches Poll
and is also a voting member of the All-American committee. He lives
in Maryland with his wife, Bonnie; daughter, Arielle, 19, who plays
volleyball at the University of Pacific; and two sons, Jared, 17,
and Mitchell, 14.