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He graduated from San Diego Christian College in 2007 with a degree in kinesiology and obtained a master's degree in education from Australian Catholic University in 2008. [5] He played as a guard for three years at San Diego Christian [6] and was a member of their NCCAA championship team. [4]
In January 1970, Tim F. LaHaye, pastor of the former Scott Memorial Baptist Church of San Diego and co-author of the fictional Left Behind series of books, Art Peters and Henry M. Morris discussed the need for a Christian college on the West Coast where studies could be developed within the framework of creationism based on the Genesis creation narrative.
Taylor began his coaching career at William & Mary as a tight ends coach in 2008 and served as the Tribe's quarterbacks coach in 2009. He was hired as an offensive assistant at San Diego State by head coach Brady Hoke in 2010. [3] Taylor followed Hoke to Michigan after he was hired as the Wolverines' head coach in 2011. [4]
Van Scoyoc began his coaching career in 2008, working with youth hitters in the Santa Clarita Valley and as a part-time assistant coach for Valencia High School. [2] From 2010 to 2011 he was the hitting coach and recruitment coordinator for San Diego Christian College. [2]
Three coaches had a previous head coaching stint at their current school: Greg Schiano at Rutgers (2001–2011, 2020–present), Scott Frost at UCF (2016–2018, 2025–present), and Rich Rodriguez at West Virginia (2001–2007, 2025–present) Coaches' records updated through week 14 of the 2024 college football season.
The following is a list of current NCAA Division I baseball coaches. Currently, 302 programs compete at the Division I level in NCAA college baseball. [1] Each program employs a head coach. The longest-tenured head coach is Bob Whalen, who has been the head coach at Dartmouth since the start of the 1990 season.
Donald David Coryell (/ k ɔːr ˈ j ɜː l / kor-YEL; October 17, 1924 – July 1, 2010) was an American football coach. He coached in high school, college, and the professional ranks; his most notable NCAA post was with the San Diego State Aztecs, then he moved on to the National Football League (NFL), first with the St. Louis Cardinals from 1973 to 1977 and then the San Diego Chargers from ...
From February to July 2019, Enriquez played semi-professionally with NPSL side ASC San Diego. [5] [6] He won the NPSL Golden Ball with seven goals and six assists in 19 games. [7] Later in the year and in early 2020, Enriquez appeared for NISA side San Diego 1904, making 8 appearances. [8]