Coaches

Brian Rowland

Assistant Coach

The latest on everything
College Soccer

Illustration of a rocket coming out of a mobile phone

Get our 5-minute, daily newsletter on what matters in college soccer.

Brian Rowland returned to Maryland as an assistant coach in March 2024. He was previously on staff in College Park for eight seasons from 2010-2017.

Prior to spending the 2023 season with UMBC, Rowland was the head coach at Temple University for five seasons (2018-2022). Rowland led the Owls to notable wins over No. 2 SMU, Louisville, UConn and Tulsa during his tenure and helped the Ows achieve a No. 3 seed in the 2021 American Athletic Conference Tournament, the highest postseason seed in program history as a member of that league. 

In Rowland's eight seasons in College Park (the final three as associate head coach), he helped the Terps win 123 games, 10 conference trophies and advance to two College Cups, including the national championship game in 2013. Rowland aided the Terps in recruiting a pair of number one classes and helped mentor 15 picks in the MLS SuperDraft and four MLS homegrown signees. 

The Terps boasted 27 All-ACC selections and 25 All-Big Ten picks during Rowland's tenure. 

The former UMBC goalkeeper holds the program's single-season (11, 2002) and career shutouts record (25). He earned First Team All-Northeast Conference honors in his senior season of 2002. 

Following Rowland's career at UMBC, he played professionally with the Toronto Lynx of the USL (2003-04), the Baltimore Blast and Milwaukee Wave of the MISL (2003-07) and finally with Crystal Palace USA of the USL from 2007 to 2009. Prior to landing at UMBC, Rowland competed on the Canadian Youth National U-20 team and trialed at Manchester United and Fulham.

Rowland is a native of Toronto, Ontario and earned his bachelor's degree in economics from UMBC in 2003. Rowland holds a USSF A License (2012) and is involved with US Soccer as a scout for their Youth National Teams.

#1 College Soccer Newsletter

Join thousands of current readers and get our 5-minute, daily newsletter on what matters in college soccer.

Illustration of a rocket coming out of a mobile phone