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  1. John Kowalski (born December 22, 1951, in Miłków, Poland) is a former coach of the professional United States soccer clubs Tampa Bay Mutiny (Major League Soccer), Pittsburgh Riverhounds and Pittsburgh Spirit . He also briefly managed the United States national team in 1991, compiling a 2–0–1 record.

  2. John Kowalski. During the series, Kowalski inhabits bodies of those about to die, not necessarily of the same side or sex, during World War II, including both the European and Pacific theatres, and needs to change things for the better before he is killed.

  3. Nov 9, 2023 · A unanimous six-person jury in Sarasota County determined Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital in St. Petersburg was liable for the incidents leading up to the January 2017 death of Beata Kowalski, 43. Also, unanimously, jurors determined the hospital had to pay the Kowalski family well over $210 million for the losses they endured.

  4. In early 2015, Jack and Beata Kowalski's 9-year-old daughter Maya begins experiencing breathing problems, headaches, blurred vision, skin lesions, lower limb dystonia, and debilitating chronic pain. The family visits various doctors and hospitals, but receives no firm diagnosis.

  5. Nov 23, 2022 · Learn about John Kowalski's contributions to U.S. soccer as a coach of national teams, indoor and outdoor, and a college program. He led the U.S. to its highest FIFA finish in futsal and won the first Gold Cup in 1991.

    • John Krysinsky
  6. Feb 18, 2018 · Learn about the life and career of John Kowalski, a Polish-American soccer coach who has won multiple awards and honors in the U.S. and abroad. From playing in New York to coaching the Pittsburgh Spirit and Riverhounds, Kowalski has been a pioneer and a fixture in the Pittsburgh soccer scene for over 40 years.

  7. Jan 22, 2024 · Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital was found liable for all civil claims in the “Take Care of Maya” Trial and the jury preliminarily awarded the Kowalski family $211,451,174. The same jury then awarded the family an additional $50 million in punitive damages.