Kevin Coleman named Woodbridge High School's head football coach : Woodbridge Football - 2017, The 94th Season!






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Kevin Coleman named Woodbridge High School's head football coach

by WoodbridgeFootball.com / MyCentralJersey.com / NJ.com on 04/22/16

Greg Tufaro@GregTufaro 9:45 p.m. Feb 18, 2016

Kevin Coleman, who served as a defensive coordinator at Woodbridge the past three seasons, was approved as the high school’s new head football coach during the township’s board of education meeting on Thursday night.

Coleman succeeds highly respected veteran mentor Bill Nyers, who resigned in December.

“Coach Coleman has served us very well as an assistant under Coach Nyers and he’s earned this position,” Woodbridge Athletics Director Joe Ward said. “We look forward to continued success under him.”

Coleman, who plans to meet with the Barrons on Friday, inherits a team that finished 6-4 last season while reaching the NJSIAA playoffs for a second consecutive year.

He previously coached at Snyder, from which he graduated in 1993, as well as at Plainfield and Bishop Ahr high schools.

Coleman starred at linebacker for Kean College in the early 1990s and led the team in tackles while helping the Cougars capture an ECAC championship in 1994. He currently teaches chemistry and special education at Woodbridge.

“I want to thank the board and the administration for the opportunity,” Coleman said. “I’m going to work really hard. I want to make a statement to make sure that they made the right choice. I’m going to be organized and make sure I follow all the things I was taught from all the coaches I worked for. I love the kids. I want to make sure the kids have an opportunity to succeed in life.”

Nyers coached the Barrons from 1994 to 2002, leading Woodbridge to a sectional title in 1997 before being named Kean University’s offensive coordinator, a post he held for six seasons prior to becoming the head coach at Plainfield, where he spent two years with Coleman as his assistant.

Nyers returned to Woodbridge in 2012, the same year Coleman served as an assistant coach at Bishop Ahr under Don Sofilkanich.

“He’s one of the finest coaches I have ever worked with at any place,” Nyers said of Coleman, who has been a special teams, defensive and offensive coordinator.

“His attention to detail and knowledge of the game is unsurpassed in all phases. What I find is a perfect fit for Woodbridge is his no-nonsense approach to discipline and his work ethic. No one is going to outwork him.”

Nyers’ son Nick, a sophomore linebacker, is one of several returning starters from a defense that scored five touchdowns on interception and fumble returns and allowed a total of 26 points during a season-opening four-game winning streak and that held five opponents to two or fewer scores last year.

“I would rather have nobody else coaching my kid in his final two years than Coach Coleman,” Nyers said. “I know he’s going to hold him accountable for his decisions, he’s not going to sugar-coat anything and he’s going to get the best out of him.”

Nyers and Coleman led Plainfield – which finished 2-8 prior to Nyers’ arrival – to an NJSIAA playoff berth in 2010 and to a stunning 22-21 Thanksgiving Day upset of a Westfield (7-3) the following season.

Woodbridge enjoyed a similar turnaround under Nyers and Coleman in 2014, snapping a 10-game losing streak that dated back to the previous season by winning seven of the team’s final nine contests while advancing to the sectional semifinals.

“I think he’s a good young coach that will continue to maintain a program that is hard-nosed and has been for years,” MyCentraljersey.com football analyst Marcus Borden said of Coleman.

Woodbridge will graduate starting quarterback Tracy Fudge, a first-team Home News Tribune All-Area selection who passed for 1,499 yards and 17 touchdowns, and star running back Nate Lanier.

“Offensively we are going to miss some pieces,” Coleman said, "but I think we have some young guys that are going to compete and step in.”

The Barrons return Quaasim Glover, who led the Greater Middlesex Conference with 723 receiving yards, and team-leading rusher Keshaun Henry, who amassed 590 yards on the ground.

“As an alum, I am so happy that my school picked such an outstanding candidate for the head football job,” said Nyers, a 1984 Woodbridge graduate. “The administration and the board (made) a top-notch selection. I couldn’t be happier.”

“He’s a great guy,” Sofilkanich said of Coleman. “This is a long time coming. He deserves to be a head coach. He works hard at the game. He’s going to do a great job.”

The Barrons open the 2016 campaign against intra-township rival Colonia,


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Back in the early years, WHS utilized the nickname "Red Ghosts"!   In 2003, WoodbridgeFootball.com was created.  Utilizing that piece of history,  the web site mascot you see on our pages was adopted.
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