Eric Hamilton
Head Coach
Year of Service: 27th
Trenton State College '75
Birthdate: September 19, 1953
Hometown: Bordentown, NJ
High School: Bordentown Regional
Education: BS, Industrial Arts; MEd, Student Personnel Services
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The most successful head football
coach in school history, Eric Hamilton is now in his 27th season as
the head coach for The College of New Jersey Lions. The coach of seven
New Jersey Athletic Conference (NJAC) championship teams, Hamilton is
now in his third decade in the league, making him the dean of the league
at only 49 years of age, which he will reach on September 19, 2002.
Hamilton has been tapped as the
NJAC Coach of the Year five times during his career, while guiding the
Lions to seven league championship titles. Five times he has directed
the Lions to postseason appearances in both the ECAC and the NCAA Division
III Tournament. In 1990 the Lions advanced to the NCAA Division III
Quarterfinals, while in 1995 the team captured its first-ever ECAC Championship
crown. The 1996 season saw the Lions earn the program's second NCAA
Tournament bid, advancing once again to the Quarterfinals. The 1997
Lions returned to the NCAA Tournament and once again advanced to the
Quarterfinals. The 1998 Lions earned the program's fourth NCAA Tournament
appearance as well as their fourth straight postseason appearance commencing
with a bid to the 1995 ECAC Championships. Hamilton continues to turn
out quality teams and is a frequent participant at both athletic and
educational clinics geared toward young student-athletes.
In 1977, then Trenton State College
made perhaps its most daring coaching assignment ever in the selection
of 23-year old Hamilton, who had starred for the Lions between 1971-74.
At the time, he was the youngest collegiate head coach in the country.
Nine seasons later on November
16, 1985, that selection gained further credence in TSC's 28-0 victory
over Ramapo College at Lions' Stadium. The win, Hamilton's 56th, made
him The College's winningest gridiron coach, moving him ahead of Bob
Salois, his former coach. Hamilton enters the 2002 season with an overall
win-loss-tie record of 153-93-6 after guiding the Lions to The College's
first-ever Eastern College Athletic Conference Southeast Championship
in 1995 and followed up the next three seasons with NCAA berths.
Not only has Hamilton established
stability in a program that had gone through four head coaches in five
years between 1972-1976, but he has also established a winning tradition.
From 1978 through 1983, Trenton State enjoyed six consecutive winning
seasons, the longest success streak of its kind in the 75 years that
the intercollegiate program has been alive. In the highly-competitive
NJAC, Hamilton's teams have put together an 92-44-4 record, highlighted
by league championships in 1980 (the first in TSC history), 1983 (shared
with Montclair State and Glassboro State), 1988, 1990, 1994 (shared
with Kean), 1996 and 1998.
After 25 seasons, his career
winning percentage is .617, the highest of any TCNJ coach with more
than five years of duty. His accomplishments have not gone unnoticed,
as he has twice been selected Coach of the Year by the New Jersey College
Football Writers Association (1980 & '81) and as NJAC Coach of the
Year by the conference coaches in 1983, 1990, 1994, 1996 and 1998.
To date, Hamilton has produced
18 All-American performers (two Kodak All-American, nine Associated
Press All-Americans, one AFCA, and six Football Gazette), 57 Eastern
College Athletic Conference (ECAC) All-Star selections, and 113 All-NJAC
first team performers.
Active in the local community,
Hamilton was honored in 1986 by the Delaware Valley Chapter of the National
Football Foundation and Hall of Fame. The 1975 TSC graduate was cited
as the organization's 1986 recipient of its Contribution to Amateur
Football Award. Specifically, the Bordentown, NJ native was honored
for his efforts in organizing and promoting the Mercer County area's
12th man Touchdown Club, which honors outstanding high school athletes
each week during the regular season. Named the President of the Delaware
Valley Chapter of the National Football Foundation and College Hall
of Fame in 1995, Hamilton also serves as the chair of the NJAC Football
Coaches Committee and will represent the NJAC on the Division III Football
Council. In 1995, Hamilton was inducted into the TSC Athletic Hall of
Fame for his accomplishments as an All-American center with the Lion
football team.
This past December, Hamilton
was named the recipient of the National Football Foundations Chapter
Leadership Award for the Eastern Region and was recognized by the organization
for his contributions to the sport. He has devotedly served the game
of football in the Delaware Valley and in particular for almost three
decades. He has served as president of the highly successful Delaware
Valley Chapter since 1995. In the 39-year history of the chapter, they
have awarded over a quarter of a million dollars in scholarships to
local scholar-athletes and continue to operate as one of the most productive
chapters in the country. The $37,000 awarded annually is the most by
any NFF&CHF chapter in the country.
The scholarship money is raised
throughout the year, but primarily at the popular William Pearce Memorial
Golf Tournament. Headed by Hamilton and a strong board of directors,
The Delaware Valley Chapter also administers the Sunshine Football Classic
game that helps grant the dreams and wishes of terminally ill, chronically
ill, and handicapped children whose parents are under financial strain
due to the child's illness.
Also a 1974-75 National Football
Foundation and Hall of Fame Scholar-Athlete, Hamilton is a 1971 graduate
of Bordentown Regional High School, where he earned all-area and all-league
honors as an offensive center, in addition to participating in track
and field. While at TSC, Hamilton earned all-conference awards three
times and All-ECAC citations as a junior and senior. As team captain
in 1974, he capped his playing career with an All-America berth (Kodak,
Associated Press, United Press International. In 1975, Hamilton graduated
from TSC with a bachelor of science degree in industrial arts. The following
fall, he joined coach Carmen Piccone's Lion football staff as a graduate
assistant. He moved up to assistant coach in 1976.
Hamilton, who has earned a master
of education degree (M.Ed.) in student personnel services, is also assistant
director for athletic development and alumni relations. Hamilton is
a member of the American Football Coaches Association, as well as the
New Jersey Football Coaches Association and the New Jersey Scholastic
Coaches Association. In the spring of 2001, he was elected to serve
a second term three-year on the Hamilton Township, (NJ) School District
Board of Education.
He and his wife Kathleen have
five children, sons Matthew, age 23, Jeffrey, age 20, daughter Kaitlin,
age 17, and sons Ryan Douglas, age 12, and Colin Reid, who is now ten.
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