Dana Veth

Dana Matthew Veth (born 1 September 1987 in Nassau) is a former Bahamian footballer.

Dana Veth
Personal information
Full name Dana Matthew Veth
Date of birth (1987-09-01) September 1, 1987
Place of birth Nassau, Bahamas
Height 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m)
Playing position(s) defender
Youth career
New Castle FC
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
2006 Bowling Green Falcons 7 (0)
2007–2009 UMM Cougar 35 (3)
National team
2006–2007 Bahamas U-20[1] 6 (1)
2007 Bahamas U-23[2] 3 (1)
2008– Bahamas[3] 4 (0)
Teams managed
2007 BFA National Academy
2008 Blaine Tiger Tales Bengals
2010–2013 Spring Hill Badgers (Assistant coach)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

Early life

Veth was born in the Bahamas but has dual American-Bahamian citizenship. His father is from Minnesota, his mother is Bahamian.

Club career

He played one season for the Bowling Green Falcons, then transferred to UW-Green Bay in the off season. The following year he teamed up with the UMM Cougars in 2007. Veth also worked at the 2010 Total Performance Soccer Camp in Minnesota.

International career

When still at Blaine High School, Veth earned a call-up to the Bahamas U-20 team.[4]

Veth made his debut for the Bahamas in a March 2008 World Cup qualification match against the British Virgin Islands.[5] He also played in the return match, making it two caps in total, scoring no goals.[6]

In 2011, Veth joined the national team once again to compete in preliminary World Cup qualifying rounds. As captain, he led the team to two victories over Turks and Caicos Islands national football team. Even though the team earned a place to advance, the country decided to opt out of further competition, ending their World Cup run.

Coaching career

In September 2010 was named as the Assistant coach of the Spring Hill Badgers Women Soccer team.[7]

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gollark: Bluetooth Low Energy, apparently, which is still problematic but better than... not having data, I guess, or having it in a really bad for privacy way.
gollark: The privacy-respecting scheme involves using Bluetooth on individual phones to send anonymized tokens or something, and any privacy regulations around phone tower data (in the US) appear to basically be a joke.
gollark: There's been a proposal for privacy-friendly phone-based contact tracing, and it seems pretty good, so I'd accept that if the application is open-source, and doesn't send excessive data.
gollark: The UK doesn't seem to actually have very much of a plan to stop the lockdown thing either.

References

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