About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 41. Chapters: Andrew Weber, Andrew Wright (footballer), Bojan Vu kovi (footballer), Brian Levey, Bryan Harkin, Chris Corcoran (soccer), Dan Stratford, David Bulow, David Mahoney, Dayton O'Brien, Drew McAthy, Dwight Barnett, Edens Chery, Eoin Lynch, Ethan Zohn, Evan Bush, Felix Brillant, Francis Okaroh, Jake Ouimet, Jason Massie, Jim Manganello, Joel Theissen, Joey Worthen, John Krause, Joseph Ngwenya, Kevin Coye, Kevin Gnatiko, Kevin Wylie, Kurt Morsink, Lee Kouadio, Luke Vercollone, Matthew Nelson (soccer), Matt Horth, Methembe Ndlovu, Michael Brady, Michael Coburn, Nathaniel Short, Neil Krause, Neil Warren Jones, Paul Chase (soccer), Ricardo Pierre-Louis, Ricky Schramm, Russell Payne (soccer), Ryan Johnson (soccer), Ryan Pierce (soccer), Scott Palguta, Shawn Kuykendall, Stanley Nyazamba, Tom Poltl, Troy Perkins, Yan Klukowski. Excerpt: Ethan Zohn (born November 12, 1973), or "Ethan Z" as he is more commonly called, is an American professional soccer player, and a reality television series contestant who won $1,000,000 on Survivor: Africa, the third season of the reality TV series Survivor. He also appeared on the All-Stars edition of the show. After winning Survivor he co-founded Grassroot Soccer, which uses soccer to raise money and awareness to fight HIV/AIDS. On August 20, 2008, he began a 500-mile soccer dribble from Foxboro, Massachusetts to Washington, D.C. for that cause. On January 22, 2010 he was ranked 14th in the USL Second Division Top 15 of the Decade, which announced a list of the best and most influential players of the previous decade. In 2011, Zohn and his longtime girlfriend and fellow Survivor winner Jenna Morasca participated in the 19th season of The Amazing Race. They were eliminated 10th on the second (double elimination) episode. Zohn was a soccer goalkeeper at Vassar College, and played professionally for the Hawaii Tsunami and Cape Cod Crusaders of the United Soccer Leagues and in Zimbabwe for Highlanders F.C.. He donated some of his winnings from Survivor to starting Grassroot Soccer, an organization whose goal is to "mobilize the global soccer community to combat the AIDS epidemic in Africa." Shortly after winning Survivor Africa, Ethan was hired by ESPN to serve as a sideline reporter for the US National Team's matches in the 2002 FIFA World Cup. In 2005, Zohn began to co-host the Metro Soccer Report (later renamed MSG Soccer Report) on the MSG Network, a weekly show dedicated to New York Red Bulls (formerly MetroStars) of Major League Soccer. As of April 2006, Zohn hosts FC Fox on the Fox Soccer Channel. For his combined humanitarian efforts to spread HIV education throughout Africa via soccer teams for youth and young adults, Zohn received the Courage of Conscience Award from The Peace Abbey in Sherborn, Massachusetts. As part of the Boran tribe, Zohn did not become