Coaches
Tim Barrera
Head Coach
tim.barrera@unco.edu
970.351.1758
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Tim Barrera enters his 28th season as a head coach and in his 23rd season at UNC. He has more than doubled the previous Northern Colorado record for wins by a soccer head coach and now has more wins than the rest of the UNC soccer coaches combined.
Barrera led UNC to the NCAA Tournament in 2015 and 2019 and the program has been in the Big Sky Championship game in four of the past five years. He is the longest-tenured head coach at Northern Colorado.
Since the program joined the Big Sky in 2006, Barrera has coached two Offensive MVPs, four Defensive MVPs, three Goalkeepers of the Year and two Top Newcomers. He has placed a student-athlete on the All-Big Sky team 47 times.
To go along with his most recent Big Sky championship, Barrera has also led Northern Colorado to a pair of North Central Conference championships (1999 and 2001) and a pair of Division II NCAA tournament berths (2001 and 2002). His squads have also won six National Soccer Coaches Association of America academic awards and four NSCAA team ethics awards. His teams also have won 13 or more games four times. In his first year at the helm of the Bears program in 1999, Barrera was named NCC coach of the year.
Barrera helped Northern Colorado's Mandy Nilsen become a two-time All-American, in 1999 and 2001. She was the only Division II athlete to make the NSCAA/Adidas All-American Scholar first-team, and she graduated from Northern Colorado holding virtually every Bears scoring record.
Before joining the Northern Colorado staff, Barrera served as head coach at Elmira College in Elmira, N.Y. In five years there, he led the Soaring Eagles to five consecutive winning seasons, posting a 58-31-3 (.647) record overall. During Barrera's tenure, Elmira earned its first NCAA and Eastern Collegiate Athletic Conference (ECAC) postseason appearances (1997 and 1998). In the process, Barrera produced six NSCAA Regional All-American performers and six NSCAA All-Academic Scholars, while his squads received team academic and ethics awards from the NSCAA in 1997 and 1998.
While at Elmira, Barrera was also active in the governance of collegiate women's soccer, as he served as the chairman of the New York State Women's Collegiate Athletics Association (NYSWCAA) Soccer Committee. He was also a member of the New York Regional Ranking Committee.
Prior to arriving at Elmira, Barrera got his collegiate head coaching start at Wilkes University, serving alongside legendary men's head coach Phil Wingert.
Barrera earned his bachelor's degree from Virginia Tech in 1986 and his master's degree from Elmira College in 1998. While at Virginia Tech, he was a four-year starter (1981-84) and graduated as the program's all-time leading scorer with 19 goals. He was named to the Virginia all-state team as a senior (1984) and was also honored as the team's most valuable player after helping the Hokies to an 8-8-2 record under legendary coach Jerry Cheynet (238 career wins).
Barrera, who was born in Ithaca, N.Y., but raised in Freehold, N.J., serves as Northern Colorado's director of soccer camps and also works with the Northern Colorado Soccer Club. Additionally, he's a member of the Colorado State Youth Soccer Association (CSYSA) State Olympic Development Program staff.
His 2022 team earned wins over North Dakota, North Dakota State, Omaha, and Wyoming.
In 2021, the Bears finished their season 10-8-2 overall and 8-1-0 in the conference. They also claimed the Big Sky regular season title out right, before advancing to the Big Sky Tournament semifinals, hosted on their home field in Greeley.
Multiple players also received post-season honors in 2021 as well. Lexi Pulley won the Golden Boot Award. She and teammate Olivia Seddon were also named to the All-Region Team and the Scholar All-Region Team. Multiple Bears were also honored on the Big Sky All-Conference Team, including Offensive MVP Lexi Pulley (1st team), Defensive MVP Maddie Duren (1st team), Taylor Bray (1st team), Olivia Seddon (1st team), Erika Hall (2nd team), and Lucy Hart (honorable mention). Along with this, Lexi Pulley was awarded Big Sky Player of the Week honors three times throughout the season. Tim Barrera was also awarded the Big Sky Coach of the Year.
Despite the challenges of the shortened 2020 season, Northern Colorado still made its way to the Big Sky Tournament final. They concluded their season with an overall record of 3-3-3 and a conference record of 3-2-2.
UNC players that recieved awards and honors in 2020 include Maddie Barkow who was chosen as a Big Sky Scholar Athlete, became the first player in school history to be named the CoSIDA Academic All-American first team honors, and was named to the CoSIDA Academic All-District Team. Barkow, along with Lindsi Jennings and Olivia Seddon were named to Scholar All-Region Teams. Six players were also awarded Big Sky All- Conference honors, including Co-defenvisve MVP Lindsi Jennings (2nd team), Maddie Barkow (1st team), Mackenzie Bray (1st team), Olivia Seddon (2nd team), Maddie Duren (honorable mention), and Kaitlyn Meeder (honorable mention).
Northern Colorado earned its second-ever trip to the NCAA Division I Tournament in 2019 by winning the Big Sky Tournament in Greeley. The Bears entered as the No. 4 seed defeating Northern Arizona and Montana in overtime before beating Eastern Washington 1-0 in the championship match. UNC went on to face Colorado in the first round of the NCAA Tournament finishing the year with a 9-11-4 record. Maddie Barkow was named co-Big Sky Defensive Player of the Year and a spot on the All-Big Sky first team. Three other Bears made second team All-Big Sky in Lindsi Jennings, Lexi Pulley and Olivia Seddon. Three more earned honorable mentions.
The 2018 season was one of the best in the history of the Bears program. They made history by becoming the first Big Sky program to make the conference tournament in six consecutive seasons. The Bears made it to the title game for the second-straight season. With a win over Idaho in the second round of the tournament, UNC notched its 300th win in school history.
Mariel Gutierrez won the Golden Boot Award, Conference MVP and First Team All-Conference. Maddie Roberts was also named First Team All-Conference. Lindsi Jennings was named co-conference newcomer of the year. In all, six Bears earned postseason awards.
In 2015, Barrera led the Bears to a 13-8-2 overall record, 7-2-1 in the conference, and a Big Sky championship after defeating Idaho in penalty kicks. Barrera’s first conference title, it earned the Bears a berth in the NCAA tournament, where they faced the Pac-12’s Arizona Wildcats.
Five UNC players collected postseason honors in 2015, while Madeline Chase and Kassy Castillo made the NSCAA All-West Region team. Thirteen players were given Big Sky All-Academic honors.
Adrienne Jordan also became Berrera's first player drafted in the National Women’s Soccer League (NWSL), going in the fourth round to the Chicago Red Stars. She has since signed to play with Sweden’s Ostersund and earned a spot on the United States's under-23 national team.
In 2014, Barrera and the Bears made a trip back to the Big Sky Championships for the fourth time. The team also was recognized for the fourth straight year for academic performance by the National Soccer Coaches Association of America. Seven Bears earned all-conference selections while Natalie D'Adamio garnered Co-Goalkeeper of the Year, her second consecutive award. Thirteen were also named to the Big Sky All-Academic team.
Following a banner 2011 season, Barrera’s team got off to a strong start in 2012, going 3-0 to open Big Sky Conference play and earning a ranking in a national poll before falling shy of qualifying for the conference tournament via a fourth-place tiebreaker with Weber State.
The Big Sky recognized eight members of the 2012 team as all-conference, including D’Adamio, Goalkeeper of the Year. Twelve student-athletes were named academic all-conference.
Led by several gifted seniors, 2011 was one of Barrera's best with the Bears as he helped lead Northern Colorado to a share of its first Big Sky soccer championship. The Bears finished the season 8-7-5 (4-1-2 Big Sky) and tied with Portland State for the best conference record. Since the Bears defeated Portland State earlier in the year, they earned the right to host their first Big Sky Women's Soccer Championship. Eventually, Barrera saw his team's season end in a penalty-kicks loss to Montana in the tournament semifinals.
Barrera's 2010 campaign also was a success, as he led the Bears to a 10-6-3 overall mark and a fourth-place finish in the Big Sky. The team qualified for its second trip to the Big Sky Conference tournament after the season.
After leading the Bears to back-to-back NCAA tournaments at the Division II level, Barrera helped Northern Colorado through the reclassification process to Division I, which the athletic department completed before the 2007 school year. He proceeded to lead the Bears to the Big Sky Conference championship game in their first year of postseason eligibility since the reclassification. It was the first time in school history that any sport had accomplished such a feat.
Year
Overall Record
Conference Record
Notes
1999
15-3
6-0 NCC
NCC Champion
2000
13-5
8-1 NCC
2001
15-7
8-1 NCC
NCAA Division II Tournament Second Round
2002
13-5-1
6-2 NCC
NCAA Division II Tournament First Round
2003
6-9-1
First year of reclassification to Division I
2004
3-13-2
2005
7-9-2
2006
6-12
2-5 BSC
First year in Big Sky Conference
2007
8-9-3
3-2-2 BSC
Big Sky Tournament Runner-Up
2008
7-13
2-5 BSC
2009
6-10-1
2-5 BSC
2010
10-6-3
3-2-2 BSC
Big Sky Tournament Semifinals
2011
8-7-5
4-1-2 BSC
Big Sky Regular Season Champions
2012
6-7-5
4-2-3 BSC
2013
9-6-5
5-2-2 BSC
Big Sky Tournament Quarterfinals
2014
10-9-2
5-4-1 BSC
Big Sky Tournament Quarterfinals
2015
13-8-2
7-2-1 BSC
Big Sky Tournament Champion/NCAA Tournament First Round
2016
10-8-2
5-4-1 BSC
Big Sky Tournament Quarterfinals
2017
13-7-2
5-3-2 BSC
Big Sky Tournament Final
2018
12-8-1
6-2-1 BSC
Big Sky Tournament Final
2019
9-11-4
4-2-3 BSC
Big Sky Tournament Champion/NCAA Tournament First Round
2020
3-3-2
3-2-2 BSC
Big Sky Tournament Final
2021
10-8-2
8-1-0 BSC
Big Sky Tournament Semifinals
Total
(212-183-45)
(68-44-22)
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