Page 1 of 1

KEVIN HUDSON: Taking the reins

PostPosted: Fri Feb 13, 2015 4:20 am
by PonyPride
Former SMU midfielder Kevin Hudson was a standout in the classroom as well as on the soccer field, and embarked on a promising career in finance after graduate school. But when his former coach offered him a chance to return to SMU as an assistant coach, Hudson did, and was named in January to take over his former team as SMU's fourth head coach. Hudson visited with PonyFans.com to his career path, what it's like to coach the team for which he once played and his expectations for the program going forward.

To read this story, please check the link on our home page: http://www.PonyFans.com

Enjoy!

Webmasters
PonyFans.com

Reminder: Due to a change in PonyFans.com's relationship with our ad serving company, please access all PonyFans.com stories and videos via the home page, rather than copying the direct link to the message boards. Doing so allows the ads to benefit the site more, thereby allowing us to continue to operate this site at no charge to our readers.

Re: KEVIN HUDSON: Taking the reins

PostPosted: Fri Feb 13, 2015 1:05 pm
by comfort
Best of luck to Kevin and the SMU men's soccer. The last few years have been difficult....looking forward watching a quality soccer again. Now, if SMU can get the women's soccer back to the elite status it was in the early 2000's.

Re: KEVIN HUDSON: Taking the reins

PostPosted: Fri Feb 13, 2015 8:19 pm
by DanFreibergerForHeisman
I am really excited about Kevin Hudson coach this team and taking us back to the higher levels of college soccer.

Great interview and article. Thanks!

Re: KEVIN HUDSON: Taking the reins

PostPosted: Fri Feb 27, 2015 12:55 am
by Puckhead48E
comfort wrote:Best of luck to Kevin and the SMU men's soccer. The last few years have been difficult....looking forward watching a quality soccer again. Now, if SMU can get the women's soccer back to the elite status it was in the early 2000's.


This! The program back in the 90's was just first class. Both men's and women's teams were stocked with talented, skilled players...a good number of whom played professionally and even for the national team. Time to get the program back to where it was, and beyond. No better time to rejuvenate than with the soon-to-be switch to the year-round schedule.