Philip Slone


A member of the U.S. World Cup team in Montevideo in 1930.

Personal Information

Class of 1986

Born: January 20, 1907 - New York, NY

Died: 2004 - West Palm Beach, FL

Position: Midfielder
Int'l Caps: 1 Int'l Goals: 0

Attended Manhattan's High School of Commerce and lettered in soccer, baseball and basketball and was dubbed "Soccer's Lou Gehrig" after the school's most famous alumnus. Slone later attended St. John's University on Long Island where he earned a degree as a lawyer in 1929. Before that time he had begun playing for New York Hakoah in the Eastern Soccer League the only Americans on a team that contained many international stars from Austria and Hungary. He later switched to New York Giants and then back to Hakoah after the World Cup. He played for the U.S. against Brazil in Rio de Janeiro in 1930 when the team was on its way home in a game that ended in a 3-3 tie. Throughout the 1930s he played for New York Brookhattan in the American Soccer League, but in 1935 was a guest player with New York Americans on their tour to Mexico. He also played for the ASL All-Stars against Maccabi Tel Aviv in 1936. At the age of 95 in 2002, and living in West Palm Beach, Philip is the lone survivor of the 1930 World Cup team.

U.S. National Team Statistics

Years Caps Goals
1930 1 0
 

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