Chad Riley 2024-25 Men's Soccer Staff
McFarland Family Head Men's Soccer Coach
CAREER HIGHLIGHTS
- Has led Irish to two College Cups (2021 & 2023) and the national title match (2023)
- First Notre Dame head coach to go undefeated in ACC play, finishing 6-0-2 in 2023
- Led Irish to first ACC Championship title in 2021
- Has led ND to three NCAA tournament quarterfinals is six seasons in South Bend
- Has reached eight NCAA tournaments in 11 seasons as a head coach
- First head coach in Notre Dame program history to reach the NCAA quarterfinals in his debut season
- First head coach in 32 seasons to win four straight Ivy League titles (2014-17)
- 47 all-conference selections over 10 seasons (32 Ivy League, 15 ACC)
- Four-time Notre Dame monogram winner
- Ranks second in career assists (32) in the Notre Dame record book
McFarland Family Head Men’s Soccer Coach Chad Riley enters his seventh season as the McFarland Family Head Men’s Soccer Coach in the fall of 2024.
In his six seasons at the helm, Riley has led the Fighting Irish to two College Cups (2021 & 2023) and three NCAA quarterfinal appearances.
Under Riley the Irish had one of their most successful seasons in program history, reaching the NCAA national title match as the No. 2 overall seed in the tournament. Notre Dame recorded its first ever undefeated season in ACC play, finishing with a record of 6-0-2 to clinch the ACC Coastal Division crown and earn the top seed in the ACC tourney. In the NCAA Championship the Irish advanced past Kentucky, Western Michigan, Indiana and Oregon State to reach the final.
The Irish were dominant on the year, outscoring their opponents by a combined 44-15 during the 2023 campaign to finish with a record of 13-3-6. The 15 goals allowed were the fewest for Notre Dame since giving up just nine during the 2004 season and the second-fewest overall in program history.
Notre Dame picked up a number of national honors during the 2023 season, as Riley and assistant coaches Mike Graczyk and Jeff Rowland and director of operations Chris Rolfe were named the United Soccer Coaches National Coaching Staff of the Year and Riley was also named the ACC Coach of the Year.
Starting goalkeeper Bryan Dowd was selected as a United Soccer Coaches First Team All-American and was named the TopDrawerSoccer National Player of the Year to go along with ACC Goalkeeper of the Year honors. The Irish totaled six All-ACC selections, headlined by Dowd and Matthew Roou on the first team. Eno Nto picked up second team honors while Bryce Boneau and Kyle Genenbacher featured on the third team. Nolan Spicer earned an ACC All-Freshman citation.
The 2021 season was a historic one for the program in Riley’s fourth year at the helm. For the second time in program history, the Irish made a run to the College Cup after earning the No. 4 seed in the NCAA Tournament. Notre Dame also captured its first ACC Championship title in program history, winning four consecutive tournament games without allowing a goal en route to lifting the trophy. The Irish finished the season with a record of 14-5-5, the most wins in a season since totaling 17 in 2013 when they won the College Cup.
Notre Dame finished the season with 52 goals while only allowing 19 over the 24-game season. The 52 goals are tied for the most the Irish have scored in a season since the beginning of the 1995 season, matching the 2012 season output. The goal differential of +33 was the largest margin since the team had a +44 margin during the 1988 campaign.
Individually, Jack Lynn became the 17th player in program history to earn All-America honors, garnering United Soccer Coaches Association Second Team All-America honors. Lynn also joined Philip Quinton as CoSIDA Academic All-Americans, as Quinton earned second team honors while Lynn was placed on the third team. Lynn was named All-ACC First Team while Quinton was selected to the third team. Josh Ramsey and Matthew Roou earned All-ACC Freshman Team accolades. After scoring two goals in the ACC title game, Dawson McCartney was named ACC Tournament MVP. McCartney was joined on the ACC All-Tournament Team by Lynn, Quinton and Bryan Dowd.
Riley led the Irish to the 2019 NCAA Tournament for the second straight year under his direction. Notre Dame reached double-digit wins, finishing the year with a record of 10-8-1 against a loaded schedule that saw 12 of its 18 opponents make the NCAA Championship field. Sophomore Jack Lynn earned second team All-ACC honors while graduate student Felicien Dumas earned third team accolades.
The head coach made an instant impact with the Irish in his debut 2018 season, leading the team to the NCAA Quarterfinals. The Irish went 11-7-3 during the 2018 campaign, defeating six ranked opponents, and earned the No. 7 seed in the NCAA Championship. Two student-athletes were named CoSIDA Academic All-Americans, as Thomas Ueland earned first team honors and Jack Casey took home second team accolades. Four Irish student-athletes earned All-ACC distinctions.
Riley served as the head coach of the highly successful Dartmouth men’s soccer program from 2013-17 and was a former standout Irish men’s soccer player and assistant coach. Riley was officially named the sixth head men’s soccer coach at the University of Notre Dame on January 4, 2018.
Riley’s Dartmouth teams won a combined 51 games over his five seasons (51-26-14 in 2013-17) and captured Ivy League titles each of the last four years. He claimed Ivy League Coach of the Year honors three of the last four years, including on a unanimous basis in 2017 as a highlight of a 12-3-2 season.
Dartmouth’s four consecutive league titles mark the first time that happened in the Ivy League in 32 years. Riley’s 2014 and 2015 campaigns accounted for the first back-to-back 12-win seasons in Big Green history, and his teams’ 45 combined victories from 2014-17 are a high-water mark for Dartmouth men’s soccer.
Riley has been part of NCAA Championship competition in 13 seasons—each of the last four years while head coach at Dartmouth, once as a St. John’s assistant coach, five times as an Irish assistant coach and each of his last three seasons as a player at Notre Dame. His Big Green teams won first-round NCAA Championship games in 2014 (Fordham), 2015 (Hartwick) and 2016 (St. Francis Brooklyn) and earned the number-15 NCAA national seed in 2017.
Riley replaced the legendary Bobby Clark who retired in late November following 17 seasons as Notre Dame head coach (2001-17). Riley played for Clark in 2001-03 during his final three Irish undergraduate years (and Clark’s first three seasons in South Bend) and remains one of the all-time Notre Dame leaders in assists (32 in 78 games). He also spent six seasons as an Irish assistant coach (2006-11) under Clark, and his official title at Dartmouth was the Bobby Clark Head Coach of Men’s Soccer in recognition of Clark’s nine seasons as Big Green head coach (82-42-13 record in 1985-93).
“Chad Riley not only brings to Notre Dame a track record of winning titles and regularly qualifying for NCAA Championship play, but having both played and coached for Bobby Clark he already has a great understanding of the culture this program has built over the last two decades,” said Notre Dame vice president and James E. Rohr director of athletics Jack Swarbrick.
“We expect Chad to have a seamless transition into his new assignment in great part because he has a perfect sense of the expectations and opportunities both on and off the field at Notre Dame. This is a program that has achieved at the very highest levels, including an NCAA title four years ago, and we are confident Chad has what it takes to continue that sort of achievement.”
Dartmouth finished with a combined 22-3-3 mark in Ivy League play over the last four seasons, and Riley’s 2013 and 2014 Big Green squads both enjoyed eight-game unbeaten streaks, with the 2013 version marking the first time that had happened at Dartmouth since 1978. Thirty-two Big Green players have earned some sort of all-Ivy League recognition over Riley’s five seasons as head coach. His 2014 and 2015 league champion squads permitted a combined seven goals in conference play over those two seasons. Riley’s last four Dartmouth teams achieved final NCAA RPIs of 16 (2017), 25 (2016), 20 (2015) and 23 (2014).
In 2012 Riley joined head coach Jeff Cook’s Dartmouth staff as an assistant coach, helping the Big Green to second place in the Ivy League standings and an undefeated home pitch mark for the second consecutive season.
Riley came to Dartmouth after spending the previous six seasons at his alma mater as an assistant coach at Notre Dame. He helped the Irish compile a 71-37-21 record with five NCAA Championship appearances and two NCAA Championship Quarterfinal appearances.
The Irish captured BIG EAST Blue Division titles in 2007 and 2008, the first time Notre Dame captured back-to-back BIG EAST crowns. Notre Dame reached the semifinals of the BIG EAST Championship in five of Riley’s six seasons as an assistant coach.
A 2004 Notre Dame graduate with a degree in theology, Riley helped mentor four All-Americans, including 2006 MAC Hermann Trophy recipient Joseph Lapira as well as three Academic All-Americans while in South Bend.
Prior to returning to South Bend, Riley made coaching stops at Oberlin College in Ohio during the 2004 season and at St. John’s in 2005. While at Oberlin he helped guide the squad to a 9-8-3 record and helped five players earn all-North Coast Athletic Conference honors. During his season at St. John’s, the Red Storm posted an 11-6-5 record and a berth in the third round of the NCAA Championship.
Riley, a Houston, Texas, native (Cypress Springs High School), was a four-time monogram winner and a three-time all-BIG EAST award winner (second team in 2003, third team in 2002 and 2001) during his collegiate career. He tallied 52 career points on 10 goals and 32 assists as a midfielder. He led the Irish in assists in three seasons (including 12 in 2002), still ranks second on the Irish all-time assists list and served as an assistant team captain as a senior. Riley led the 2000 Notre Dame team in scoring with 12 points and was a BIG EAST Academic All-Star in 2000 and 2001.
Riley received his NSCAA Advanced National Diploma in 2009 and also received his USSF A and B licenses.
He and his wife, Caitlin (also a Notre Dame graduate), are parents of two daughters, Georgina and Bernadette, and a son, Prescott.
CHAD RILEY YEAR-BY-YEAR AS A HEAD COACH
DARTMOUTH | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Year | W | L | T | PCT. | Ivy W | Ivy L | Ivy T | PCT. | Postseason |
2013 | 6 | 7 | 4 | .471 | 1 | 6 | 0 | .143 | N/A |
2014 | 12 | 5 | 2 | .684 | 5 | 1 | 1 | .786 | IVY LEAGUE CHAMPION/NCAA Round of 32 |
2015 | 12 | 6 | 1 | .658 | 6 | 1 | 0 | .857 | IVY LEAGUE CHAMPION/NCAA Round of 32 |
2016 | 9 | 5 | 5 | .605 | 5 | 1 | 1 | .786 | IVY LEAGUE CHAMPION/NCAA Round of 32 |
2017 | 12 | 3 | 2 | .765 | 6 | 0 | 1 | .929 | IVY LEAGUE CHAMPION/NCAA Round of 32 |
(5 yrs) | 51 | 26 | 14 | 637 | 23 | 9 | 3 | .671 | Four Ivy League Championships/Four NCAA Appearances |
NOTRE DAME | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Year | W | L | T | PCT. | ACC W | ACC L | ACC T | PCT. | Postseason |
2018 | 11 | 7 | 3 | .595 | 4 | 3 | 1 | .563 | NCAA Quarterfinal |
2019 | 10 | 8 | 1 | .553 | 3 | 5 | 0 | .375 | NCAA First Round |
2020-21 | 8 | 9 | 0 | .471 | 3 | 7 | 0 | .300 | |
2021 | 14 | 5 | 5 | .688 | 4 | 2 | 2 | .625 | ACC Championship Title College Cup |
2022 | 8 | 7 | 2 | .529 | 3 | 4 | 1 | .429 | |
2023 | 13 | 3 | 6 | .727 | 6 | 0 | 2 | .875 | College Cup Final |
(6 yrs) | 64 | 39 | 17 | .604 | 23 | 21 | 6 | .520 | Four NCAA Appearances Two College Cup Appearances One ACC Championship Title One ACC Coastal Division Title |
AS A HEAD COACH | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Year | W | L | T | PCT. | CONF W. | CONF L | CONF T | PCT. | Postseason |
OVERALL (11 yrs) | 115 | 65 | 31 | .618 | 46 | 31 | 9 | .587 | Five Conference Championships/Eight NCAA Appearances/Two College Cup Appearances |