The D.C. United Academy is the youth and development program for the Major League Soccer club D.C. United. The program consists of teams at four age levels:[1] the under-23 and under-20 teams, as well as the Academy (U-17, U-16, and U-15).

D.C. United Academy
Full nameD.C. United Academy
Founded2005
StadiumSegra Field
LeagueMLS Next
Websitehttps://www.dcunited.com/academy

The D.C. United Academy has been one of the most successful MLS academies.[2] Many players have been signed directly from the Academy to the professional team, or have later played professionally. Notable players to have graduated from the D.C United Academy include Bill Hamid, who has been called up by the U.S. national team and who was the MLS 2014 Goalkeeper of the Year, and Andy Najar, who has been capped for Honduras and who was the MLS 2010 Rookie of the Year.[3][4][5]

History

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The D.C. United Academy was created in 2005 in an effort to provide local talent an opportunity to have professional training. D.C. United was one of the first MLS clubs to develop its own academy.[5] The D.C. United Academy gained some press in 2013 when D.C. United Academy graduate Michael Seaton made his league debut with D.C. United; Seaton was the first player to play an MLS game who was born after MLS began play in 1996.[6] D.C. United decided in 2015, however, to reduce its outlays on its academy in part to help defray the expenses associated with the team's new soccer-specific stadium.[7]

Structure

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D.C. United Academy Structure
Level Type League
Senior team Professional Major League Soccer
Reserve team Professional USL Championship
U-19 Academy MLS Next
U-16
U-15
U-14

Like most Major League Soccer teams, United's academy features youth pre-academy teams that ascend to the ranks of the senior team on the professional level. Starting in 2016, United will field their reserve team in the second-division USL Championship. Beneath their reserve and senior squads is the under-23 side, whom play exhibition matches.

 
The U-16 team playing Triangle F.C. in the 2006 Super Y League semifinals.

The teenage brackets represent the main academy as well as the pre-academy structure. Players from the under-15 to the under-18 age level play in MLS Next, playing against other academy teams around the nation. Formerly, the academy played in the USSDA.

Consisting of players aged from under-12 to under-14, the Pre-Academy is a stepping stone for younger players to adapt to an academy setting. This age group of players participates in Northeast Pre-Academy League.[8]

For players at the U-10 level and below, United offers specialty training camps.

D.C. United Academy is fully funded and does not charge any fees for its players.[9]

Notable alumni

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Andy Najar, who transferred from D.C. United to Belgium's Anderlecht for a reported $2 million, was the first player from the D.C. United Academy — and first from any MLS academy — to move to Europe on a permanent contract.[10] The youngest D.C. United Academy signing is Chris Durkin, who signed for D.C. United in 2016 at 16 years old.[11] Furthermore, several D.C. United Academy players have played with U.S. national youth teams.[12]

MLS players

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The following list includes players who, after leaving the D.C. United Academy, have played at least one match in Major League Soccer.

D.C. Academy prospects who played in MLS
Name Turned Pro DCU apps Left DCU Departure National team (caps)
Bill Hamid 2009 240   United States (7)
Andy Najar 2010 100 2013 $3 million transfer to Anderlecht (Belgium).[13]   Honduras (36)
Conor Shanosky 2010 5 2014 Released. Signed with Louisville City FC.   United States U20
Ethan White 2010 38 2013 Traded to Philadelphia for Jeff Parke.   United States U20
Michael Seaton 2013 5 2015 Traded to Portland.   Jamaica (14)
Collin Martin 2013 15 2016 Traded to Minnesota for 4th round draft pick.   United States U20
Jalen Robinson 2014 26 2019 Contract ended.   United States U18
Romain Gall 2014 0 2010 Moved to Real Salt Lake academy.   United States U20
Tyler Rudy 2015 0 2011 Played college soccer for Georgetown.
Chris Durkin 2016 36 2020 $1.1 million transfer to Sint-Truiden (Belgium).   United States U20
Ian Harkes 2017 33 2018 Released. Signed with Dundee (Scotland).   United States U20
Eryk Williamson 2017 0 2018 Traded to Portland Timbers.   United States U23
Antonio Bustamante 2019 2 2019 Released. Signed with Blooming (Bolivia).   Bolivia (2)
Donovan Pines 2019 64   United States (2)
Griffin Yow 2019 36 2022 $100,000 Transfer to K.V.C. Westerlo (Belgium)   United States U18
Moses Nyeman 2019 32 2022 $350,000 transfer to S.K. Beveren (Belgium)   United States U16
Kevin Paredes 2020 41 2022 $7.35 million transfer to VfL Wolfsburg (Germany)   United States U20
Jacob Greene 2021 16   United States U20
Jeremy Garay 2021 1   El Salvador (1)
Ted Ku-DiPietro 2022 39   United States U17
Jackson Hopkins 2022 34   United States U20
Matai Akinmboni 2022 7   United States U17

Notes:

  • D.C. United appearances updated as of November 29, 2020.
  • Where a player has played with multiple levels of a national team (e.g., men's team, under-20 team, under-18 team), only the highest level is listed.

Source: D.C. United

The Academy

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U19 team

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As of November 1, 2024[14]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK   USA Luke Peacock
2 DF   SLV Diego Vásquez
3 DF   USA Justin Melly
4 MF   USA James Snaith
5 DF   USA Dash Papez
6 DF   USA William Jones
7 FW   LTU Gabrielius Mažonas
8 MF   USA Garry Zhang
9 FW   USA Adrian Buri
10 FW   USA Christopher Argueta
11 MF   HON Brian Chavez
12 MF   ETH Michael Dessalegn
13 DF   USA Ramsey Ray
14 DF   HON Alessandro Maldonado
15 DF   BRA Henrique Borges
No. Pos. Nation Player
16 MF   SLV Felipe Rodriguez
17 FW   USA Diego Diaz
18 GK   USA Cameron Marbray
19 MF   GHA Otu Bisong
20 FW   USA Langston Fabiyi
21 FW   USA Sydney Aggrey
22 MF   TUN Teymour Mohammed
23 DF   USA Judah Pritchett
24 GK   USA Alexander Aguilar
25 MF   BUL Glb Bogdanov
26 MF   TUR Tito Segni
27 MF   USA Nelson Martinez
28 FW   SLV Brice Hall
29 FW   USA Brown Huffard

U16/U17 Team

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As of February 19, 2022 [15]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
GK   USA Jason Guevara
GK   USA Luke Peacock
GK   USA Ethan Talapatra
DF   SLV Alexander Aguilar
DF   USA Gleb Bogdanov
DF   USA Gustavo Borges
DF   USA Alexis Gonzales
DF   USA Greg Jones
DF   USA Dash Papez
DF   SLV Diego Vasquez
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF   SLV Jonathan Aguirre
MF   SLV Christopher Argueta
MF   USA David Ayala
MF   USA Isaiah Chisolm
MF   USA Diego Diaz
MF   NCA Luciano Lanzas
MF   USA Nelson Hernandez
MF   HON Alessandro Maldonado
MF   USA Justin Melly
MF   USA Ethan Pendleton
MF   USA Gavin Turner
MF   USA Gary Zhang
No. Pos. Nation Player
FW   USA Ignacio Alem
FW   USA Sydney Aggrey
FW   USA James Ashby
FW   HON Noel Calix Ortiz
FW   PER Gabriel Cossio
FW   USA Wilson Holman
FW   USA Gage Lyons
FW   TUN Teymour Mohammed
FW   USA Hugo Portillo

U15 Team

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Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
GK   USA Jason Guevara
GK   USA Owen Pschigoda
GK   USA Cameron Marbray
DF   USA Michael Bosley
DF   USA Myles Mercer
DF   USA Kemari Kerr
MF   USA Ayaan Ali
MF   USA Emidio Castro-Valdez
MF   USA John Chisholm
MF   USA Ejani Christian
MF   USA Neil Das
MF   USA Kevin Diaz-Blanco
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF   USA Braxton Hayes
MF   USA Brice Hall
MF   USA Jimmy Juarez
MF   USA Jerry Lopez Felix
MF   USA Ada Karatepe
MF   PER Jason Molina
MF   USA Damilola Olupona
MF   SLV Diego Torres
MF   USA Makai Wells
MF   USA Aiden Zarate
FW   SLV Raul Avalos
FW   USA Langston Fabiyi
FW   USA Haadi Khalid
No. Pos. Nation Player
  SLV German Argueta
  USA Jerry Boasmanboon
  USA Julian Dix
  USA Alan Flores
  GUA Gabriel Fuentes
  USA Brown Huffard
  POL Jakub Porada

U14 Team

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Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
  USA Anthony Applewhaite
  USA Mayson Barillas
  USA Braydon Bloom
  USA Jeffrey Bonilla
  USA Austin Brown
  DOM Kamil Castillo
  USA Pascal Crosley
  USA Juani Cuneo
  USA MJ Day
  USA Nate Free
No. Pos. Nation Player
  USA Chase Gould
  USA Luca Nicolacci
  USA Marco Nicolacci
  USA Edwin Ortiz
  USA Dominick Pell
  USA Mateo Pinto
  USA Valentino Quaranta
  PUR Edwin "SJ" Rios Jr.
  USA Austin Roberts
  USA Siji Sowemimo
  USA Brayden Stevens

Coaching staff

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As of August 7, 2023[16]
Position Staff
U-19 Head Coach   Mattar M'Boge
U-17 Head Coach   Phil Gordon
U-15 Head Coach   Marco Etcheverry
U-14 Head Coach   Phil Nana

Reserves

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From 2005 until 2012, D.C. United fielded a reserve team that played in the MLS Reserve Division. The reserve team disbanded when Major League Soccer and USL Pro announced a player development partnership, and United announced Richmond Kickers as their USL Pro affiliate.[17]

Honors

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Seasons

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Season MLS Reserve League Top goalscorer(s)
GP W T L GF GA Pts Pos Name Goals
2005 12 8 0 4 26 21 24 1st Jamil Walker 9
2006 12 6 1 5 22 11 19 5th
2007 12 4 5 3 16 12 17 5th
2008 12 5 1 4 19 21 16 5th
2011 9 6 3 0 21 9 21 Eastern Division
2nd
Joseph Ngwenya 4

See also

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References

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General
  • Academy alumni sourced to: "Alumni & First Team Signings". D.C. United. Retrieved 14 July 2011.
  • Academy rosters sourced to: "Academy Teams". D.C. United. Retrieved 14 July 2011.
Footnotes
  1. ^ "The kids are coming", ESPN, Leander Schaerlaeckens, June 1, 2010.
  2. ^ "DC United Announces Residential Academy", Vavel, Liam McMahon, February 20, 2015.
  3. ^ "D.C. United to launch youth academy residency program in Maryland", Washington Post, Steven Goff, February 19, 2015.
  4. ^ "Orlando City eager to build strong pipeline from developmental academy to MLS level" Archived 2019-10-22 at the Wayback Machine, Orlando Sentinel, Paul Tenorio, July 4, 2015.
  5. ^ a b "D.C. United’s Homegrown talent leads the way in MLS awards", SoccerWire.com, Chris Teale, December 9, 2014.
  6. ^ "D.C. United Loans Michael Seaton to Örebro SK", Last Word on Sports, Alec Rivera, April 1, 2015.
  7. ^ "D.C. United’s bizarre approach to development continues apace", Top Drawer Soccer, Will Parchman, August 5, 2015.
  8. ^ "U–11 & U–13 Training Program: About the Program". D.C. United. Archived from the original on 9 August 2011. Retrieved 15 July 2011.
  9. ^ "DC United academy, now fully funded, aspires to join MLS's best | Charles Boehm | MLSSoccer.com".
  10. ^ "D.C. United selling Andy Najar to Anderlecht", Washington Post, Steven Goff, January 30, 2013.
  11. ^ "Glen Allen native Chris Durkin signs with D.C. United", Richmond Times-Dispatch, June 14, 2016.
  12. ^ "D.C. United to play in U-13 Concacaf Champions League Tournament", Soccer America, Mike Woitalla, August 3, 2015.
  13. ^ "Former D.C. United star Andy Najar extends Anderlecht contract through 2018", Sports Illustrated, Avi Creditor, April 29, 2014.
  14. ^ "D.C. United U19". premier.upsl.com. Retrieved November 1, 2024.
  15. ^ "USA - DC United U17 - Results, fixtures, squad, statistics, photos, videos and news - Soccerway". Soccerway. Retrieved 19 February 2022.
  16. ^ "D.C. United Academy". Retrieved 15 May 2018.
  17. ^ "D.C. United, Richmond Kickers announce landmark affiliation". D.C. United. DCUnited.com. Archived from the original on May 9, 2013. Retrieved May 19, 2013.
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Pre-Academy
Alumni