How a bit part in a Will Ferrell film inspired a pro soccer player's move to Hollywood

Andy McDermott was an elite college soccer player and played pro for seven years. But all he really wanted to do was be an actor. 

And he made it happen. 

Since retiring from the game, he’s gone on to appear in the Will Ferrell film Everything Must Goand TV shows The Mosquito Coast and Chicago Med, among others. 

K+S caught up with McDermott recently.


K+S: You played college soccer at Northwestern. What position did you play and what kind of player were you?

McDermott: I'd say I was a "box-to-box #10." Ha. At NU those days, we struggled to compete in the Big 10, since we had to recruit incredible students who also happened to be good at soccer. It was an uphill battle. I loved the challenge, and I benefited hugely by playing every minute of every game during my four years, but I left the field after every match completely shattered by trying to do too much. 

Funny, my first coach as a professional, Bret Hall, re-taught me the game at age 21 - he told me that all great teams have Piano Players and Piano Carriers; in college I was the Piano Player, but if I wanted to play professionally, I needed to become the Carrier. And I did. I was that mediocre talent who could run all day and would rather die than lose, so they kept me putting me in the starting 11.

K+S: After college, you played pro in the American lower leagues for seven years, then retired. How did the transition to acting come about?

McDermott: After 9/11, I knew I was going to serve somehow. Then we started our family. We wanted to live somewhere warm, so I ended up working for the tactical response unit of the Phoenix Police Department. I loved it. 

But then they started filming Everything Must Go in Scottsdale. I was asked to audition for the cop role because, well, I was a cop. After a day of filming on a big set like that, and working with Will Ferrell and hearing him encourage me to keep going — the worst thing you can tell to a wannabe actor, like gasoline on a fire — I started getting calls from LA for different projects. I was 37 and had four little kids. But we made the insane decision to move to LA. We sold our house. I gave up the job. And we went for it. 

K+S: Have your acting and soccer passions ever crossed?

McDermott: Not really. Actually, one show for which I did a couple of episodes was called Matador. Ironically, even though it was a soccer show and I had been a professional player, my character had no interaction with the soccer story. I had auditioned for one of the lead roles earlier — the British arrogant prick — but they gave that role to a younger Australian actor. Shocker. 

K+S: Ever get any roles because of a soccer connection?

McDermott: Funny story. I met a close friend in Hollywood through a men's league connection, and he's now president of a huge studio. He invited me to play in the secret industry soccer game in Santa Monica — invite only, directors, writers, producers. I went once, scored 4 goals, and probably played a bit too dominantly for their liking. But, you know, I was trying to get in a room with these guys and begging to break into their stupid Hollywood nonsense so I could feed my family. And now all of a sudden here we are on a soccer field. So…dig it out, right?

K+S: What renowned soccer player, current or past, would you love to play in a biopic?

McDermott: Oh man, this is a great question. I have so many heroes and anti-heroes and legends, from George Best — the name of my bulldog, actually — to Lothar Matthaus to Roy Keane. 

But I'm on a weird connection with David Beckham. We are the same age, we both have 4 kids, we both have a son named Cruz — he copied me — and we were both living in LA at the same time. Oh, and we are both bazillionaires. Ha!

K+S: What’s your favorite soccer film of all time, and why?

McDermott: Easiest question: Victory. Because Sly and Pele and Michael, and because I'm 46, and because beating Nazis, and because has there even been any other soccer movie like it? 

Last story. This is what inspired me to write Mack, a soccer film. On set with Will Ferrell, waiting for them to move cameras and lighting and everything else, he handed me a baseball glove and we were having a catch. 

I asked him, "Man, think about The Natural, Hoosiers, Remember The Titans. How come no one has ever made that great drama movie with soccer at the heart of it?" 

And he said, straight-faced, "What, you never saw Kicking and Screaming?"

Actors who played soccer (kinda) seriously, from Cristo Fernandez to Julia Stiles

Eric Cantona, Pele, Vinnie Jones,…

Over the years, a few accomplished footballers have made the jump to acting.

In our minds, though, those names will always be players first, actors second. (Note: That might change for Cantona if the rave reviews for an upcoming Netflix drama are any indication.)

There are also actors who tried to make it on the field before they decided that the big screen was their true calling.

The game was their first love, their first passion. And a few even played at a decent level.

Here are a few actors and on-screen personalities who played soccer seriously before they decided they were better off on a set than a field.


Cristo Fernandez

Ted Lasso star Cristo Fernandez, who plays Dani Rojas

By now, Dani Rojas’s catchphrase on Ted Lasso — “Futbol Is Life” — has become a global phenomenon. But it has some basis in reality for the man behind Rojas, Cristo Fernandez. Before he became an actor, Fernandez was an up-and-coming talent in the academy at Tecos, a club in his hometown of Guadalajara, Mexico. A knee injury forced a career change when he was 15.


Elisabeth Shue

Elisabeth Shue's soccer story came to life in 2007's Gracie

Long before she won our hearts in The Karate Kid and received an Oscar nomination for Leaving Las Vegas, Shue was a talented soccer player in New Jersey. Times were different then, though — she had to play on a boys’ team. "Every time I played, I knew everyone was watching me,” she said. “And they definitely hit me a little harder. But I would always hit them a little harder back.”

In 2007, Shue and her brother, Andrew — who actually played for the LA Galaxy in 1996 — made Gracie, a soccer film about her experiences growing up.

Watch Gracie on Amazon.


Jon Stewart

Jon Stewart played soccer at William & Mary

To get the scoop on the legendary Daily Show host, we actually contacted his former coach at The College of William & Mary in Virginia. “Jon was a good player, a walk-on who became a three-year starter. He scored the goal in 1983 at UConn in a huge 1-0 win for us. And, as you can imagine, he was very funny in the locker room.”


Colin Farrell

Colin Farrell as a schoolboy footballer

In Bruges star Farrell dreamed of following his father and uncle, both of whom played for Irish club Shamrock Rovers, into footy fame. But the young Farrell’s skills weren’t quite as strong as his acting talent. “Certainly, when I was 13 or 14, I knew for sure that I'd dropped the ball, so to speak," he said. Footy’s loss. Hollywood’s gain.


Julia Stiles

Julia Stiles brought her soccer chops to her breakout role in 10 Things I Hate about You

It’s probably a coincidence that Stiles’s breakthrough on-screen performance came in 10 Things I Hate about You, which just happened to have several soccer scenes. But we choose to think otherwise. She was mad about the game, and even as an undergrad at Columbia was playing some serious footy in an Irish league in the Bronx. She often showed up at soccer practice after a film shoot and her makeup and fake tattoos “would get all smeared.”

Watch 10 Things I Hate About You on Apple TV.


BONUS: A young Tom Cruise playing soccer

Tom Cruise playing soccer as a boy

TRAILER: “Hidden Dynasty: The Story of Carolina Women’s Soccer” from ESPN

The University of North Carolina women’s soccer team is arguably the most dominant dynasty in college sports history. The program, under legendary coach Anson Dorrance, has won 21 national championships in the past 40 years and reached the final another five times.

Now, their story will be told in a one-hour original documentary, Hidden Dynasty: The Story of Carolina Women’s Soccer. The film, produced by Emmy and Peabody Award winner Ross Greenburg, will by premier on ACC Network as part of ESPN’s Fifty/50 initiative on Thursday, June 23 — the 50th anniversary of the landmark Title XI law.

The Tar Heels program built by Dorrance provided the foundation for the US Women’s National Team for decades, producing World Cup stars such as Mia Hamm, Kristine Lilly, Tobin Heath, and Heather O’Reilly, among many others.

Check out the trailer: