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athlete photoAssistant Coach Jim Hofher
(Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks)
Email Coach Hofher

Updated 6/1/09

Jim Hofher, a veteran of 28 seasons as a head coach and assistant at both NCAA Division I levels of college football, was named offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at the University of Delaware in February, 2009.

Hofher, who most recently served as quarterbacks coach at Bowling Green State University during the 2008 campaign under coach Gregg Brandon, becomes just the fifth person to serve in the capacity of offensive coordinator for the Blue Hens since the 1950’s.

He replaces UD veteran coach Brian Ginn, who remained on the staff after serving in that role for the first time this past fall. Ginn moved to the new position as passing game coordinator and serves as wide receivers coach.

Hofher teams with fourth-year Delaware defensive coordinator Nick Rapone to give the Blue Hens one of the most experienced coordinator tandems in the NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision.

The two have a combined 56 seasons of college football coaching experience under their belts with Rapone having served in college coaching for 28 of the last 30 years. Of those 56 seasons, 43 have been at the highest level of college football.

“We talked to a lot of people and when Jim walked out of a two-hour interview that turned into a five-hour interview, I turned to Nick Rapone and said ‘we have our guy’,” said Keeler in making the announcement. “We needed to do something to insure that we were moving in the right direction on offense and I thought we needed to upgrade the staff in terms of experience. He has experience not just in the one-back offense but in putting guys in the right positions to be successful and tweaking an offense to fit the personnel. We were so impressed with Jim’s background and what he did last season at Bowling Green. He is an outstanding person and leader and has a great offensive mind. I know our offense will grow next season.”

The Jim Hofher File

How You Say It: ha-fur
College: Bachelor of Arts, Consumer Economics and Public Policy, Cornell University, 1979
College Coaching Career:
1979-80:
Graduate Assistant, Wake Forest University
1981-82: Quarterbacks/Wide Receivers, Miami (Ohio) University
1983-86: Running Backs, Wake Forest University
1987-88: Running Backs, Syracuse University
1989: Quarterbacks, University of Tennessee
1990-97: Head Coach/Offensive Coordinator, Cornell University
1998-99: Quarterbacks, University of North Carolina
2000: Quarterbacks, Syracuse University
2001-05: Head Coach, University at Buffalo
2008: Quarterbacks, Bowling Green University
2009-Present: Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks, University of Delaware
Family: Wife, Cathy; Daughters, Tara, Shannon, Molly.
Recruiting Areas: New Jersey (Mercer, Middlesex, Monmouth, Morris, Somerset, counties); North Carolina

Hofher, who helped lead Mid-America Conference contender Bowling Green to a 6-6 mark this past fall, has served as a head coach twice during his career, leading the University at Buffalo for five seasons in 2001-05 and Cornell University for eight seasons in 1990-97.

He posted a record of 45-35 while at Cornell, including a mark of 33-23 in Ivy League play. The 33 league victories are the most of any Cornell head coach in program history and his winning percentage of .589 also ranks No. 1.

During his tenure as head coach, the Big Red played for two league titles, winning one, and set 170 team or individual records for game, season and career standards at Cornell. In addition, he had two players selected in the NFL Draft and two players sign NFL free agent contracts.

Prior to his time at Buffalo, he spent the 2000 season coaching quarterbacks at Syracuse and the 1998 and 1999 season coaching that same position at North Carolina. During the 2007 season he worked as a color analyst for ESPN Regional Television.

Hofher has also been an assistant coach at Wake Forest (1983-86), Miami (Ohio) (1981-82), Tennessee (1989) and Syracuse (1987-88). He was the quarterbacks coach at Tennessee in 1989 when the Volunteers won the Cotton Bowl and were SEC tri-champions. He mentored former NFL quarterback Andy Kelly while at Tennessee.

Prior to his stint at Tennessee, he served three seasons as running backs coach at Wake Forest from 1983-86 prior to his first appointment at Syracuse. Hofher's first full-time collegiate coaching experience was at Miami where he served as the quarterbacks and wide receivers coach from 1981-82.

During his collegiate coaching career, Hofher has coached in five bowl games (Cotton, Sugar, Hall of Fame, Las Vegas and Tangerine).

A three-year letterwinner at Cornell, Hofher was the starting quarterback and led the team in passing yardage from 1976-78. He played two years under two-time Super Bowl champion head coach George Seifert.

A 1979 graduate of Cornell's College of Human Ecology, Hofher graduated with a bachelor's degree in Consumer Economics and Public Policy. An All-ECAC player for the Big Red, he also earned academic scholarships through Cornell, Psi Upsilon and the Sphinxhead Honorary Society.

He was selected to the Xavier (Conn.) High School Hall of Honor in 1992 and the Middletown (Conn.) Sports Hall of Fame in 1998.

Hofher and his wife, Cathy, have three children, Tara, Shannon and Molly.

Head Coach K.C. Keeler
Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks Coach Jim Hofher
Defensive Coordinator/Safeties Nick Rapone
Associate Head Coach/Linebackers Coach Ben Albert
Assistant Head Coach/Run Game Coordinator/Offensive Line Coach Damian Wroblewski
Passing Game Coordinator/Receivers Coach Brian Ginn
Defensive Line Coach Phil Petitte
Tight Ends Coach Gregg Perry
Running Backs Coach Aaron Harris
Defensive Assistant Frank Law
Defensive Assistant Jason Hescock
Graduate Assistant Drew Nystrom
Graduate Assistant Stephen Thomas
Strength & Conditioning Coach Jay Beaulieu
Head Athletic Trainer John Smith
Associate Head Athletic Trainer Joan Couch
Assistant Athletic Trainer Dan Watson
Director of Football Operations Jerry Oravitz
Personal Development Coach David Baylor
Assistant Director of Athletics for Sports Medicine Dr. Andrew Reisman
Sports Medicine Physician Dr. Geoffrey Gustavsen
 
 
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