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Rory Dames
Rory Dames
from Wikipedia

Rory Dames Jr. (born February 10, 1973) is an American soccer coach who most recently was the head coach of the Chicago Red Stars in the National Women's Soccer League (NWSL). He is the owner and former president of Chicago Eclipse Select, a youth soccer club in suburban Chicago.[2][3] In 2023 Dames was banned for life from the NWSL because of alleged misconduct concerning players in his charge.

Key Information

Early life

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Dames was born and raised in Chicago, Illinois. He played soccer at St. Viator High School in the suburb of Arlington Heights, where he graduated in 1991. He attended Saint Louis University and played for the men's soccer team.[4] In four seasons, Dames made 52 appearances as a defender, scoring one goal and recording 3 assists.[1][5] Dames then joined the Rockford Raptors for one professional season.[4]

Managerial career

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Dames was the director of coaching and player development for Chicago Eclipse Select, which consisted of three teams when the Illinois native took over. The club has more than 50 male and female teams, and more than 750 players ranging in age from 8 to 19.[6] The club produced players who have earned Division I scholarships, professional contracts and roster spots on all levels of the U.S. women's national teams.[7]

Dames began coaching the Chicago Red Stars in 2011, reaching the WPSL finals and losing in overtime. In 2013 the Chicago Red Stars began playing in the National Women's Soccer League.[8]

For four consecutive years, 2015 to 2018, Dames coached the Red Stars to National Women's Soccer League postseason playoffs, losing in the semi-finals on each occasion.[9][10][11][12] In 2019, Dames and the Red Stars defeated the Portland Thorns 1–0 to advance to the NWSL Championship for the first time in team history, where they eventually fell to North Carolina Courage 4–0. In 2021, the Red Stars again advanced to the NWSL Championship held in Louisville but lost to the Washington Spirit 2–1.

On November 22, 2021, the Red Stars announced that Dames had resigned.[13] In February 2022, Red Stars owner Arnim Whisler, stated Dames was allowed to resign because it “didn’t have any reason to believe that there was a safety issue in our environment.” Whisler noted that if Dames did not resign, he would have been terminated.[14]

Misconduct allegations

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On November 22, 2021, The Washington Post published an article with allegations from players, both previous and current, of abuse by Dames. The Post provided documentation of reports made to the United States Soccer Federation by players, such as Christen Press, as far back as 2014, detailing abuse, harassment, and inappropriate use of power as head coach to manipulate players.

“Three former Red Stars players, including one who played on the team at the time of the investigation, told The Post that they had wanted to speak to U.S. Soccer investigators but had never heard from them,” reported Hensley-Clancy. “Two had left the team because of Dames’s abuse, they said.”[15]

In February 2022, the Washington Post published a follow-up story reporting claims of misconduct dating back to the late 1990s, including a 1998 police report involving a youth player Dames coached at Chicago Eclipse Select. The allegations went further, including multiple players claiming to have had a sexual relationship with Dames when they played for him at Eclipse. An accuser claimed that sex “felt almost expected”. The verbal abuse also included constant name-calling, such as pussies, fucking idiots, fat ass, and retards.[7]

Dames’ role in the founding of Elite Clubs National League, an elite group of youth soccer clubs of which he sat on the Board of Directors, and his role with the Chicago Red Stars and NWSL, played a role in players not speaking up, according to accusers. Players and parents were afraid Dames “could ruin the chance at a scholarship or a spot in the professional league,” if they spoke up. “But the monopoly over Chicago soccer, our belief that his connection to the college world was the only connection we would have — he used all of that to get away with doing and saying whatever the hell he wanted to us,” said an accuser.

Dames’ attorney claimed the allegations from the report were “unfounded.” Dames stepped down as the President of Eclipse after resigning from the Red Stars. The organization "did not respond to questions about whether Dames still owned Eclipse or was involved in its governance,” suggesting he is still the owner and the majority controlling interest in the club's operations.

On January 9, 2023, Dames was banned from the NWSL for life, along with three other coaches named in the scandal.[16]

Coaching record

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Team League Year Record Result
G W D L Win % League Playoff
Chicago Red Stars WPSL 2011 13 11 0 2 85% 1st Runners-up
Chicago Red Stars WPSLE 2012 22 15 2 5 73% 4th Runners-up
Chicago Red Stars NWSL 2013 22 8 6 8 50% 6th X
Chicago Red Stars NWSL 2014 24 9 8 7 54% 5th X
Chicago Red Stars NWSL 2015 21 8 9 4 59% 2nd semi-final
Chicago Red Stars NWSL 2016 21 9 6 6 57% 3rd semi-final
Chicago Red Stars NWSL 2017 25 11 6 8 56% 4th semi-final
Chicago Red Stars NWSL 2018 25 9 10 6 56% 4th semi-final
Chicago Red Stars NWSL 2019 26 15 2 9 58% 2nd Runner-up
Chicago Red Stars NWSL 2021 24 11 5 8 58% 4th Runner-up
Career total 223 106 54 63 60%

Personal life

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Dames is married to Sarah Uyenishi. Uyenishi played soccer for Chicago Eclipse Select starting at age 14,[17] where Dames was her coach. They have two children. A SafeSport investigation was opened in March 2019 based on receiving “a report alleging that Responding Party Rory Dames had a relationship with a former player, while she was a player on his team, and subsequently married and had a child with her.”[3]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Rory Dames is an American soccer coach recognized for his role as the head coach of the Chicago Red Stars in the National Women's Soccer League (NWSL) from the league's inaugural 2013 season until 2021. During his tenure, Dames led the Red Stars to the playoffs in each of the league's first five seasons, a unique achievement among NWSL coaches at the time, and was named a finalist for Coach of the Year in 2017 after guiding the team to an 11-7-6 regular-season record. The team advanced to its first NWSL Championship under his direction in 2019 and reached the final again in 2021, though it lost to the Washington Spirit. Dames' career also included developing youth talent through the Eclipse Select Soccer Club, where he contributed to winning eight national championships and producing players who advanced to professional and national team levels. His professional standing was significantly impacted by allegations of verbal and emotional abuse toward NWSL players, detailed in the 2022 Yates Report commissioned by U.S. Soccer, which cited numerous complaints and led to his resignation in November 2021 and a lifetime ban from the NWSL. Additional reports uncovered claims of sexual misconduct from former youth players dating back to the 1990s during his time at Eclipse Select. In 2024, the U.S. Center for SafeSport, tasked with investigating abuse allegations in sports, closed its case against Dames citing insufficient evidence, though some affected athletes reported not being interviewed by investigators. This followed an earlier reopening of the probe, highlighting ongoing scrutiny despite the lack of substantiation for formal sanctions beyond the NWSL's league-specific ban.

Early life and education

Childhood and family

Rory Dames was born around 1973 in Chicago, Illinois, and raised in the suburb of Arlington Heights. Limited public records detail his immediate family, with no verified information on parents or siblings available from contemporary sources. Dames attended St. Viator High School in Arlington Heights, a private Catholic institution known for its emphasis on athletics in the competitive Chicago-area suburban sports scene. There, he developed an early involvement in soccer through the school's varsity program, reflecting the region's strong youth and high school soccer culture supported by local leagues and facilities. He graduated in 1991, marking the end of his secondary education amid a period when Illinois suburbs like Arlington Heights hosted growing organized youth sports ecosystems.

College years and soccer playing career

Dames attended Saint Louis University from 1991 to 1994, majoring in an unspecified field while competing as a midfielder and defender for the Billikens men's soccer team. As a freshman in 1991, he wore jersey number 19 and hailed from Arlington Heights, Illinois, having graduated from St. Viator High School. By his senior year in 1994, he had switched to jersey number 6, with official records listing him at 6 feet tall and 165 pounds, though earlier profiles noted him as 5 feet 9 inches and 140 pounds. Detailed performance statistics, such as appearances or goals, are not available on the university's athletics website. Upon concluding his college eligibility, Dames transitioned to professional play, joining the Rockford Raptors for one season in a lower-division league. This brief stint marked the end of his playing career, after which he pivoted toward coaching roles.

Coaching career

Youth and club-level coaching

Dames commenced his coaching career in the mid-1990s following his college years, joining the Eclipse Select Soccer Club in Illinois as director of coaching and head coach for elite girls' youth teams. The club, established around 1996, quickly gained prominence under his guidance in competitive youth circuits, including the Elite Clubs National League (ECNL). His teams demonstrated consistent success, securing three consecutive Illinois state championships from 2007 to 2009 and contributing to the club's overall record of multiple national titles. In 2009, Dames-led Eclipse Select won the U.S. Youth Soccer National Championship in the U16/U19 division, marking his second such victory with the program. These achievements highlighted his emphasis on tactical development and player progression, with Eclipse Select recognized as one of the top youth clubs nationally, fostering advancement of athletes to collegiate levels. Through roles in high-profile showcases and recruiting, Dames built a reputation for enhancing team performance in regional and national competitions, laying the groundwork for his transition to higher-level opportunities. Specific win rates from youth tournaments remain undocumented in available records, but the program's sustained placements in ECNL playoffs and championships underscored empirical progress in Illinois youth soccer.

Tenure with Chicago Red Stars

Rory Dames was appointed head coach of the Chicago Red Stars in 2011, ahead of the team's transition to the newly formed National Women's Soccer League (NWSL), which launched its inaugural season in 2013 following the dissolution of Women's Professional Soccer (WPS), where the Red Stars had competed from 2009 to 2011. In preparation for the NWSL debut, Dames oversaw roster construction through the league's allocation process, which assigned national team players to teams, supplemented by the inaugural college draft and free agency signings; the initial squad consisted of 21 players, drawing continuity from WPS holdovers and emphasizing a mix of domestic talent and international experience to establish competitive footing in an eight-team league. Throughout his tenure, Dames managed player acquisitions via annual college drafts, trades, and international signings, often handling negotiations directly as the club lacked a separate general manager role, which facilitated strategic roster adjustments amid league expansion from eight to fourteen teams between 2013 and 2021. The Red Stars qualified for the playoffs in 2013's late stages but fell short, then achieved consecutive postseason berths from 2015 through 2021, including contention for the NWSL Shield (regular-season title) in seasons like 2019 when they finished second in standings. Dames' longevity as the Red Stars' sole NWSL head coach—spanning all nine seasons of his involvement—positioned him as the league's longest-tenured coach at the time, enabling sustained operational continuity through format changes, such as the shift to a single-table standings and expanded playoffs, while adapting to increased competition from new franchises like the Utah Royals and North Carolina Courage. Attendance at home games varied, with notable growth in later years, including a single-game record of 17,388 spectators during the 2019 season at SeatGeek Stadium.

Achievements and performance metrics

Rory Dames coached the Chicago Red Stars from the National Women's Soccer League's inaugural 2013 season through 2021, establishing the franchise as a consistent playoff contender during his nine-year tenure. By July 2018, he had secured his 50th league win, ranking him among the NWSL's most victorious coaches at that point. His overall record included multiple seasons with double-digit victories, such as 11 wins, 7 losses, and 6 draws in 2017, and 11 wins, 8 losses, and 5 draws in 2021. The Red Stars qualified for the postseason in six of Dames' eight eligible seasons, achieving streaks of five consecutive appearances from 2015 to 2019 and another in 2021. This consistency positioned Chicago as one of the league's stable performers, with the team advancing to the NWSL Championship final in both 2019 and 2021, though falling short in each title match. Dames' coaching contributed to the development of players who achieved international success, including U.S. national team forward Christen Press, who topped Red Stars scoring in 2017 with key contributions during her tenure from 2015 to 2018, and goalkeeper Alyssa Naeher, who anchored the defense en route to 11 wins that year and earned repeated USWNT call-ups. Similarly, Australian star Sam Kerr thrived under Dames from 2018 to 2020, highlighting the program's role in elevating talent within a nascent professional league. These outcomes underscore empirical metrics of player progression and team competitiveness prior to subsequent controversies.

Resignation and misconduct allegations

2021 resignation from Red Stars

Rory Dames resigned as head coach of the Chicago Red Stars on November 22, 2021, two days after the team's 2-1 loss to the Washington Spirit in the NWSL Championship final on November 20, 2021, held at Lynn Family Stadium in Louisville, Kentucky. The Red Stars' announcement, issued shortly after midnight Eastern Time, stated that the club had accepted Dames' resignation effective immediately. In his statement, Dames cited personal reasons for the decision, expressing dedication to the club over 11 years and a desire to focus on family matters. The Red Stars' ownership responded by affirming support for players and committing to an internal review of team culture, while emphasizing continuity in operations. The timing coincided with emerging media scrutiny of player experiences under Dames' tenure, including reports from outlets such as ESPN and The Washington Post that referenced dissatisfaction among current and former players regarding team dynamics and coaching approach, based on accounts from unnamed sources. These inquiries had prompted the Post to contact the Red Stars prior to the resignation announcement, highlighting preexisting concerns within the league about coaching practices. The NWSL responded promptly by launching preliminary assessments into the circumstances surrounding the departure.

Specific allegations of verbal, emotional, and sexual misconduct

In 1998, parents of three teenage players at Eclipse Select Soccer Club lodged complaints with Illinois Youth Soccer, alleging that Rory Dames engaged in inappropriate comments, physical contact, and boundary-crossing behaviors toward the minors. More than a dozen former youth players described Dames as verbally and emotionally abusive during their teenage years, citing patterns of belittling and intimidation. One former player, now in her 40s, claimed Dames groomed her as a youth on an elite girls' team and leveraged his coaching authority to initiate a sexual relationship with her decades ago. From 2011 to 2021, during Dames' tenure as head coach of the Chicago Red Stars in the NWSL, players reported extensive verbal abuse, including "horrific tirades" of screaming, condescension, and derogatory insults such as "cunt," "fat ass," "fucking stupid," and "trailer trash." Racially charged remarks targeted Black players by labeling them "thugs," while criticisms extended to players' mothers' parenting skills. Emotional abuse allegations encompassed manipulative "mental games," exploitation of insecurities, erratic shifts between praise and degradation, and a resultant "culture of fear" among players. Retaliation followed complaints, such as benching or trading players like Christen Press after her reports in 2014 and 2018, and providing negative references branding them as "troublemakers." Sexual misconduct claims from Red Stars players included a sexualized environment fostered by Dames' comments on foreplay, oral sex, players' sex lives, and physical appearances (e.g., "nice ass" or "nice shorts"). He allegedly requested massages from players, sent late-night texts declaring "I love you," pressured for private dinners or meetings, and engaged in inappropriate post-game physical contact like thigh touching and dancing. Christen Press specifically alleged inappropriate advances, sexually charged comments, and a hostile work environment stemming from these behaviors. Samantha Johnson reported manipulation intertwined with inappropriate relationships. The 2022 Yates investigation referenced nearly 400 instances of such misconduct attributed to Dames across his coaching history, drawn from over 200 interviews and player surveys where nearly 70% of 2021 Red Stars respondents indicated experiencing abuse.

Denials, defenses, and contextual viewpoints

Dames has publicly denied engaging in sexual misconduct or grooming, asserting that such claims lack substantiation and that his interactions with players remained professional. While acknowledging a demanding coaching style characterized by high expectations and direct feedback, he has framed it as necessary for elite athletic development rather than abusive intent, pointing to the absence of any criminal charges or admissions. Prior to the 2021 allegations surfacing, elements of Dames' approach received supportive commentary from within the soccer community, with some viewing the intensity as purposeful for building resilience in a results-driven sport. For example, the Chicago Red Stars under Dames achieved sustained success, including a 2019 NWSL regular-season title, multiple playoff berths from 2015 to 2019, and the development of players like Julie Ertz into U.S. national team stars, metrics that defenders cite as evidence of motivational efficacy over harm. Contextual defenses emphasize scrutiny of evidence standards in allegation narratives, particularly the heavy dependence on delayed recollections without real-time corroboration, such as formal complaints during active tenures or independent witnesses. This raises first-principles concerns about causal attribution in retrospective claims, where post-hoc interpretations may conflate rigorous coaching—common in high-stakes environments—with misconduct, amplified by #MeToo-era dynamics that incentivize reframing ambiguous past events through modern sensibilities of power imbalances or grooming without contemporaneous behavioral shifts or exits by affected parties.

NWSL and U.S. Soccer probes

In October 2022, former U.S. Deputy Attorney General Sally Yates released an independent report commissioned by U.S. Soccer, detailing systemic failures in the National Women's Soccer League (NWSL) that enabled patterns of coach misconduct, including those associated with Rory Dames. The report documented multiple complaints against Dames dating back to 2014, such as those from player Christen Press regarding a hostile work environment, verbal abuse, sexist and racist remarks, and retaliation, which were reported to U.S. Soccer and the NWSL but not acted upon despite surveys from 2014, 2015, and 2017 consistently rating his coaching as abusive and evoking fears of reprisal among players. A 2018 U.S. Soccer investigation identified a "cycle of emotional abuse" in Dames's approach, including excessive shouting, belittling (e.g., calling players "cunt," "fat ass," or "thugs"), and manipulative tactics like creating a culture of fear, yet findings were not shared with the NWSL or Chicago Red Stars (CRS) ownership, and no disciplinary measures followed, with CRS owner Arnim Whisler reportedly dismissing concerns as "Rory being Rory." The Yates Report highlighted empirical discrepancies in complaint handling, noting that while U.S. Soccer and the NWSL received player surveys and direct reports spanning years—such as a 2021 CRS cultural review where 70% of 22 interviewed players reported emotional abuse—actions were delayed until public scrutiny in late 2021, mirroring league-wide patterns seen in cases like Paul Riley's sexual coercion and Christy Holly's retaliatory firings, where oversight lapses allowed rehiring of flagged coaches. These institutional shortcomings, including the absence of mandatory reporting protocols and inadequate follow-up on youth-to-pro pipeline issues (e.g., Dames's sexualized comments at his Eclipse club), contributed to a broader environment where over a dozen coaches faced similar allegations without timely intervention. In response to the report's findings, U.S. Soccer implemented recommendations for enhanced participant safety, including requirements for the NWSL to conduct timely investigations into abuse allegations and impose discipline, alongside policy mandates for anti-harassment training and reporting mechanisms. The NWSL followed with a lifetime ban on Dames effective January 9, 2023, alongside bans for Riley, Holly, and Richie Burke, citing corroborated patterns of misconduct from the probes. Whisler's role in ignoring Dames complaints prompted his removal as CRS chairman on October 6, 2022, by the board, amid pressure from players and sponsors for accountability in ownership oversight failures.

SafeSport investigations and recent developments

The U.S. Center for SafeSport began investigating Rory Dames in response to complaints of misconduct reported as early as 2019, focusing on allegations of emotional, verbal, and sexual abuse within U.S. soccer programs. These probes operated under SafeSport's mandate to enforce evidence-based standards for abuse claims, requiring corroboration beyond uncorroborated testimony to sustain sanctions. In September 2024, Dames' name was removed from SafeSport's centralized disciplinary database, indicating no active sanctions or ongoing listing at that time. On October 3, 2024, the agency formally shelved the primary investigation, citing insufficient evidence to proceed, a decision aligned with procedural thresholds emphasizing verifiable proof over volume of claims. However, multiple former athletes contacted by investigators or aware of the process reported that SafeSport had not interviewed them despite their prior statements to league or federation inquiries, raising questions about the completeness of the probe's scope. SafeSport reopened the investigation on October 7, 2024, mere hours after a Washington Post article highlighted the shelving and athlete feedback on unconducted interviews, prompting renewed scrutiny of procedural thoroughness. This reversal underscored tensions between rapid closure for evidentiary shortfalls and external pressures to ensure athlete input, without altering the underlying requirement for corroborated findings. As of October 2025, the reopened case remains unresolved publicly, with no documented final sanctions or exoneration from SafeSport, amid broader agency challenges including the April 2025 dismissal of its CEO over investigative scandals that referenced inconsistencies in high-profile cases like Dames'. These developments highlight SafeSport's evidence-driven framework, which prioritizes due process but has faced criticism for perceived gaps in victim engagement, potentially impacting enforcement of athlete safety protocols across Olympic and Paralympic sports.

Broader league reforms and implications

The resignation of Rory Dames in June 2021, amid allegations of misconduct, contributed to a cascade of scrutiny that accelerated systemic reforms in the National Women's Soccer League (NWSL), as his case exemplified longstanding power imbalances between coaches and players documented in subsequent investigations. This event, alongside parallel scandals, prompted the league's adoption of enhanced anti-harassment policies, including mandatory independent investigations for complaints and prohibitions on romantic relationships between staff and players, aimed at mitigating risks inherent in hierarchical coaching structures. These measures built on the 2022 Sally Yates report, which identified failures in oversight, but Dames' high-profile tenure with the Chicago Red Stars—spanning over a decade—underscored the need for proactive vetting and zero-tolerance enforcement against verbal and emotional abuse. Empirical indicators of reform efficacy include league-wide attendance reaching approximately 414,000 fans in 2022—a 35% year-over-year increase—and 944,000 in 2023 with a 24% rise in average attendance, alongside sponsorship revenue surges of approximately 55% in 2022, suggesting that heightened player protections correlated with broadened appeal rather than diminished interest. However, while these changes targeted root causes like unchecked authority—evident in pre-reform tolerance of intense coaching dynamics—data on competitive outcomes shows no evident stifling of performance intensity. Post-2021 seasons featured record goal tallies and sustained playoff competitiveness, with teams like the Portland Thorns maintaining high win percentages amid policy shifts, indicating that reforms addressed misconduct without broadly eroding tactical rigor. Attendance in 2025 showed some games with lower averages compared to 2024 peaks, potentially influenced by factors like scheduling and venue changes, though overall league interest remained strong, as single-game records continued to break. Overall, Dames' case catalyzed a pivot toward player-empowered governance, fostering verifiable gains in transparency and financial health, though long-term causal attribution requires monitoring enforcement disparities across clubs.

Personal life

Family and relationships

Dames has maintained a low public profile regarding his family and personal relationships. In his resignation statement from the Chicago Red Stars on November 21, 2021, he indicated a desire to refocus on his family, though specific details such as marital status or children have not been disclosed in public records. No verifiable information exists on family involvement in soccer or other relational aspects of his life.

Post-coaching activities and residence

Following his 2021 resignation from the Chicago Red Stars, Rory Dames has maintained a low public profile, with no verified involvement in professional coaching roles. In January 2023, the National Women's Soccer League imposed a lifetime ban on Dames for engaging in sexual misconduct, verbal and emotional abuse, and sexist and racist remarks toward players, effectively barring him from league-affiliated positions. This ban remained in effect as of October 2024. Dames continues to own Chicago Eclipse Select, a youth soccer club based in suburban Chicago, though direct coaching activities have faced scrutiny and temporary restrictions on working with vulnerable youth players as of mid-2023. His wife, Sarah Dames, remained listed on an Eclipse contract with local park districts in August 2025, indicating ongoing family ties to the organization. No public records show pursuits in non-soccer fields, private consulting, or community involvements beyond this ownership. Dames resides in the Chicago area, consistent with the location of his youth club operations. As of October 2025, no criminal charges have been filed against him stemming from the allegations, and civil suits remain limited to his own 2025 lawsuit against the U.S. Center for SafeSport challenging its investigative processes.

References

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