
Thomas W. Cahill (December 25, 1864 — September 29, 1951) was one of the founding fathers ofsoccer in the United States,[1] and is considered the most important administrator in U.S. Soccer before World War II.[2] Cahill formed the United States Football Association in 1913, which later became the United States Soccer Federation. In 1916 he became the first coach of the United States men's national soccer team. Cahill was enshrined in the U.S.National Soccer Hall of Fame in 1950.
Thomas Cahill was born inNew York City, but moved toSt. Louis, Missouri in 1871. He was of Irish descent. He attendedSt. Louis University and built a reputation as one of the pre-eminent amateur athletes in the country. Originally favoringrunning andbaseball, he became interested in soccer after witnessing a game involving a team visiting fromToronto.
In 1897, Cahill foundedSt. Louis Shamrocks which competed in theSt. Louis Association Foot Ball League. They won the league title in 1899 and 1900. Although he owned Shamrocks, he also managed several other teams including St. Louis Spalding's in 1903-04 and Diel F.C. during the 1904–05 season.[3]
Cahill returned to theEast Coast and settled inNewark, New Jersey in 1910.
Cahill decided to establish a national governing body for soccer. He was the secretary and one of the founders of the American Amateur Football Association,[4] one of the governing bodies vying for sole status as the nationally recognized governing body. He traveled toStockholm in 1912 to attendFIFA's ninth annual congress where he applied for the American Amateur Football Association, to become the U.S. national governing body. Cahill's efforts were opposed by a representative from the American Football Association, a rival also attempting to become the nationally recognized body.[5] FIFA did not immediately resolve the dispute, and urged Cahill and the AAFA to work with the AFA to create a solution.
Cahill ultimately achieved his goal, however, when theUnited States Football Association was formed on April 5, 1913, at a meeting at the Astor House hotel in New York.[6][7] The USFA later became theUnited States Soccer Federation. Cahill served three separate terms as the Executive Secretary of the USFA; 1913–1921, 1923–1924 and a final term in 1928.[8]
Cahill was the editor of Spalding's annual Official Soccer Football Guide from 1912 to 1924.[9]
In 1916 he became the first coach of theUnited States men's national soccer team, taking a team for a tour ofScandinavia. The United States played its first official international match under the auspices ofU.S. Soccer on August 20, 1916, againstSweden in Stockholm, which the U.S. won 3–2, with goals fromDick Spalding,Charles Ellis andHarry Cooper.[10]
In 1921 Cahill was instrumental in forming theAmerican Soccer League, which was the first serious attempt to establish a professional league in the United States. He served as the organization's secretary from 1921 to 1926.[11] The American Soccer League was established in 1921 by the merger of teams from theNational Association Football League and theSouthern New England Soccer League. For several years The ASL's popularity rivaled the popularity of the National Football League.[12] Disputes with theUnited States Football Association and the onset of theGreat Depression in 1929 led to the league's collapse in spring 1933.
Cahill's star faded, however. He was passed over for manager of the U.S. national team at the 1928 Olympics and the 1930 World Cup.[13]
Cahill died in 1951 inSouth Orange, New Jersey.
Cahill was editor of several books in theSpalding Athletic Library collection which was published by American Sports Publishing Co.