Sam Bick

Sam Bick (born St. Louis, Missouri) is a former American soccer midfielder. He spent nine seasons in the North American Soccer League and seven seasons in the Major Indoor Soccer League. He also earned two caps with the United States men's national soccer team in 1976.

Sam Bick
Personal information
Date of birth (1955-01-30) January 30, 1955
Place of birth St. Louis, Missouri, United States
Playing position(s) Midfielder
Youth career
1972–1975 Quincy University
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1976–1978 Minnesota Kicks 29 (0)
1979–1980 San Jose Earthquakes 31 (1)
1979–1987 St. Louis Steamers (indoor) 300 (41)
Total 360 (42)
National team
1976 United States 2 (0)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

Youth and college

Bick grew up in St. Louis, Missouri where he played in the St. Louis Celtics youth club and for De Smet Jesuit High School. He then attended Quincy University, playing on the men’s soccer team from 1972 to 1975. In 1973, 1974 and 1975 Quincy won the NAIA Championship. Bick not only experienced success with his team, he also experienced personal recognition, earning both NAIA All Tournament and first team All American recognition in 1975. He graduated from Quincy in 1976 and was selected to the Quincy Athletic Hall of Fame in 1984.[1]

Professional

In 1976, the Minnesota Kicks signed Bick. He played three seasons with the Kicks before moving to the San Jose Earthquakes in 1979. He played two seasons with the Earthquakes, leaving the NASL in 1980. After leaving the Earthquakes at the end of the 1980 season, Bick signed with the St. Louis Steamers of Major Indoor Soccer League (MISL). He remained with the Steamers until they folded at the end of the 1987-1988 season, becoming the team captain in 1984 after Steve Pecher broke his leg.

National team

Bick earned two caps with the U.S. national team in 1976. His first game came in a scoreless tie with Mexico in an October 3, 1976 World Cup qualifier. He was subbed out for Steve Ralbovsky in the 58th minute. He then played in another scoreless tie with Haiti on November 12, 1976.[2]

gollark: I mean, the atmosphere isn't very dense.
gollark: It *might* be possible to make it somehow, but it wouldn't *weigh* the same as it somehow could on Earth.
gollark: That's not really valid in the context of the entire observable universe.
gollark: *Weight* is mass times acceleration from gravity. The acceleration from gravity is probably going to change wildly across the whole observable universe, but I guess you could sample it at various bits and average it. In any case, that average acceleration probably won't be at the Earth level of 10-ish m/s².
gollark: No it wouldn't.

References


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