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Juergen Klinsmann gets four-year extension as U.S. soccer coach

Juergen Klinsmann talks with players during a training session on Oct. 9.
(Jamie Squire/Getty Images)
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Juergen Klinsmann is still six months away from his first World Cup as coach of the U.S. national team. But he’s already looking ahead to the next one after agreeing Thursday to a four-year contract extension that will keep him in place through 2018.

“One of the reasons we hired Juergen as our head coach was to advance the program, and we’ve seen the initial stages of that happening on the field and also off the field in various areas,” U.S. Soccer President Sunil Gulati said. “In the past two years he has built a strong foundation from the senior team down to the youth teams and we want to continue to build up that success.”

Klinsmann, 49, took over as coach in the summer of 2011 after Bob Bradley, who had guided the U.S. into the knockout round of the 2010 World Cup, was fired. The U.S. has gone 27-10-7 under Klinsmann, going undefeated en route to the Gold Cup title this year and winning a national-record 16 matches in 2013.

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Klinsmann led Germany to one World Cup title as a player and coached his homeland to the semifinals in 2006. The U.S. finished first in regional qualifying for next summer’s World Cup, where it was drawn into a tough group alongside Ghana, Portugal and Germany.

“I am very fortunate to continue the work we started more than 2½ years ago,” Klinsmann said. “It’s exciting to see the progress we have made and we continue to make improvements on all fronts.”

Terms of Klinsmann’s new deal were not disclosed. But the base salary from his current contract is $2.5 million a year, a U.S. Soccer record and a significant increase from what Bradley earned. U.S. Soccer’s 2010 tax returns showed Bradley was paid $818,244 in 2010.

Klinsmann can also make up to $10.5 million in bonuses depending on how the U.S. does in Brazil this summer.

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