Angela Berry White
Women's Head Coach
Angela Berry White was named the third head coach in IU Indianapolis women's soccer program history in December 2024. White, an Indianapolis-native, brings experience as a former All-American player, U.S. Women's National Team player, college assistant coach and high school head coach to the Jaguar sidelines.
She was the first former player inducted into the Indiana Soccer Hall of Fame and was a two-year member of the U.S. Women's National Team alongside Mia Hamm and Julie Foudy, among others.
Most recently, White piloted nearby Brebeuf High School to a historic 11-year run where she amassed a 168-49-23 record (.748 winning percentage), including a 2015 MaxPreps National Championship and IHSAA State Championship. She also captured an IHSAA State runner-up finish while at Brebeuf and earned a record eight Marion County Tournament titles. She became the only coach in history to win five straight Marion County titles in 2018. Her 2015 Brebeuf squad was the smallest school (by enrollment) in state history to win the 2A title. She mentored and helped develop back-to-back Gatorade State Player of the Year honorees Reilly Martin (2014) and Alia Martin (2015), both of whom continued their careers at the University of Michigan. She also coached former Wake Forest standout Ryanne Brown, who currently plays for Seattle in the NWSL.
White began her coaching career at Butler University as an assistant coach, where she helped the start of the program and saw the Bulldogs post back-to-back winning seasons. She later helped usher in the Indiana University women's soccer program as an assistant, helping them to a 50-46-1 record over five seasons, which included the lone Big Ten title in the Hoosiers history.
White starred at George Mason University where she was an All-American, helping the Patriots to a 48-25-8 record during her four-year career. She helped George Mason advance to the NCAA Tournament in three of her four seasons. She later played for the U.S. Women's National Team in 1992 and 1993 and for Cincinnati and Columbus in the USWISL. She also played in four Olympic festivals during her career.