Early career In 1989, Dir began his coaching career as an assistant with the
Colorado Foxes of the
American Professional Soccer League. In 1990,
Regis University hired Dir as head coach of the men's soccer team, and his teams won the
Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference in his first two seasons with a record of 10-5-2 in 1990 and 9-5-4 in 1991. He was voted the 1990 RMAC Coach of the Year. In 1992, Dir left Regis to become head coach of the Colorado Foxes. In his two and a half seasons with the team, he won the APSL championship twice, as well as regular season championships each year and the 1992
Professional Cup involving
Canadian sides. In May 1994, he resigned as head coach when his wife, who was a flight attendant, was transferred to a new location.
Dallas Burn Dir was approached by
Major League Soccer, which was preparing for its first season, to become the head of player personnel in charge of all scouting and creation of the original MLS player pool. He was the first employee hired by MLS. Dir worked with
Sunil Gulati as a director of player personnel for the new league for two years. In 1994, Dir left the league position and became the first head coach of the
Dallas Burn, a position he held from 1996, the club's inaugural year, until 2000. In 2000, the club fired Dir. He was the longest serving of the original ten MLS head coaches and won the
1997 U.S. Open Cup. Dir remains in the top ten for all-time MLS wins as a head coach with eighty-four.
Later career Dir served as an assistant coach with the
U-20 men's national team from 2002 to 2011. He was a coach with the team through four cycles of the U-20 program with various head coaches. In 2002 Dir became a partner and served as president of the Associated Soccer Group, a national soccer education company which operates and oversees the operations of clubs in
Dallas,
Georgia and
Florida. Dir served as chief scout for the
Vancouver Whitecaps from 2011 to 2012. He then was an assistant coach with the Colorado Rapids from 2012 to 2014. ==Broadcasting career==