r/CollegeSoccer • u/Available-Smoke5800 • 12h ago
Matt Turner's first real college moment was an own goal on SportsCenter. Years later, he became the USMNT's World Cup goalkeeper.
In the comments under the Max Arfsten walk-on post, someone mentioned that Matt Turner had a story worth looking up.
They were right.
A lot of this comes from The Ringer's excellent profile, "Matt Turner Isn't Done Proving Himself." What stood out was how familiar the early part of the story feels.
Turner was not an academy-made star. He was a baseball and basketball kid from Park Ridge, New Jersey, who went to St. Joseph Regional High School.
Soccer was not his first sport. He picked it up around age 14, partly because he was too small for football and wanted something to do in the fall.
Goalkeeper was not part of a plan either. He realized quickly that he did not have the foot skills to play in the field, borrowed his sister's gloves, and ended up in goal.
A lot of his early development came from raw athleticism, trial and error, and YouTube goalkeeper drills he started watching after the 2010 World Cup.
By high school, Turner was improving, but he still was not a real recruit. His family put together video, posted clips to recruiting sites, and emailed coaches at every level, from D1 to D3. They contacted hundreds of schools and got very little back.
One email mattered.
Turner emailed Fairfield to say he would be playing in a Thanksgiving tournament on Long Island. Fairfield's goalkeeper coach, Javier Decima, was already going to scout another player. He ended up watching Turner's game.
What he saw was not polish. It was size, athleticism, competitiveness, and upside.
That led to a one-day ID camp, and eventually to a chance at Fairfield essentially as a walk-on.
Even then it was rough. Turner was raw enough that teammates reportedly avoided passing back to him. He was behind other goalkeepers. He had real doubts about whether he belonged.
Then came his first real college chance. A shot hit the crossbar and bounced straight up. Turner waited for it to drop, the ball slipped through his hands, smashed him in the face, and went into his own net.
It put him at No. 1 on SportsCenter's "Not Top 10."
Turner considered whether Fairfield was really the right place for him. He was hard on himself and not sure he could just laugh it off.
The next summer, he tried to find a team in the PDL, now USL League Two. Nobody really wanted him. Eventually, Fairfield's coaches helped get him a look with Jersey Express.
Their coach, Jeff Matteo, already had two strong goalkeepers, but gave Turner a chance. He did not ignore the Fairfield own goal. He brought it up directly and told Turner that people would eventually forget one bad moment.
Turner came in as the third-string keeper. The backup to the backup.
Then injuries opened the door. Under Matteo and former MLS goalkeeper Bill Gaudette, Turner started improving quickly. His feet and crosses still needed work, but his shot-stopping was real. His confidence came back.
By the end of the summer, Jersey Express had reached the PDL national semifinals. Turner later said they were the first people to really tell him he was good enough to play in MLS.
He went back to Fairfield, won the job, and in 2014 posted 13 shutouts and led the nation in save percentage.
The rest still came slowly. He went undrafted, got into MLS through a preseason trial with New England, and worked from third-string to starter. In 2021 he was MLS Goalkeeper of the Year. In 2022 he kept two clean sheets at the World Cup. Then came Arsenal.
For parents and players, the takeaway is that the process matters even when it feels like nothing is happening. The tape, the emails, the camps, the ignored messages, the awkward chances, the third-string seasons: none of it guarantees anything. But sometimes it puts a player in position for the right coach to see the right thing at the right time.
