Tony DiCicco, who coached the first U.S. Olympic women’s soccer team to gold in 1996 and the 1999 Women’s World Cup winners, died Monday at age 68. “While the health challenges Tony faced were ...
Antonio “Tony” DiCicco, Founder of Tony’s Colonial Food in Providence, passed away Wednesday, December 3, 2025. Husband of Gina (Costantino) DiCicco, father of Adrienne L. DiCicco, grandfather of ...
Tony DiCicco, who guided the United States women’s national team to its famous World Cup win in 1999, died Monday night, his family announced via Twitter. He was 68. DiCicco has the most wins in ...
Tony DiCicco, who coached the U.S. to the 1999 World Cup title before an overflow Rose Bowl crowd in a landmark for women’s soccer, has died at 68. He died Monday at his home in Wethersfield, ...
Women’s sports lost a champion this week. Tony DiCicco was overshadowed by his star-spangled team, which was just the way he liked it. Mia Hamm, Brandi Chastain, Briana Scurry and the rest were the ...
Tony DiCicco is as close to irreplaceable as it gets in women’s soccer. Still, Boston Breakers Board Governor Michael Stoller told Metro today he sees a bright future for the team, even after the ...
The United States of America owes a great debt to Tony DiCicco. Without him and what he accomplished, there might not be a National Women's Soccer League. Current soccer superstars like Alex Morgan, ...