U.S. men’s national soccer team coach Jurgen Klinsmann has sold his Craftsman-inspired, four-bedroom Newport Beach house for $2 million.

The remodeled, single-level house, set on a large corner lot in the Cliff Haven area, was listed at $2.399 million in March before dropping to $2.099 million in September.

Klinsmann bought the home for $1.476 million in March 2011, property records show.

The 3,000-square foot house is framed by a white picket fence. A Dutch door leads to a family room and formal living room, which share a fireplace. The house boasts an eat-in gourmet kitchen and a formal dining room.

Interior highlights include skylights, high ceilings and hardwood floors. The master retreat, which opens to a patio, has a large bathroom with a claw-foot bathtub, freestanding shower and dual sinks.

Klinsmann, 52, and his wife Debbie have other property in the local area.

A German World Cup star, Klinsmann helped West Germany win the bronze medal at the 1988 Olympics. He became the coach of the U.S. men’s national team in 2011.

In a A Register story in June 2010, Scott M. Reid wrote that the soccer star was regarded as just one of the regulars by the workers at a Newport Beach coffee house: “They’re oblivious to the fact that if Klinsmann were standing in a coffee shop in Berlin or London or Johannesburg during the 2010 World Cup … he would be mobbed by fans.”

Adrienne Brandes of Surterre Properties was the listing agent. The identity of the agent representing the buyer was not available.

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