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John Strollo

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John Strollo
Biographical details
Born (1954-01-20) January 20, 1954 (age 70)
Long Branch, New Jersey
Playing career
1974Boston College
Position(s)Offensive tackle
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1977–1979Middletown HS South (NJ) (assistant)
1980Springfield (MA) (GA)
1981–1982Northeastern (assistant)
1983Washburn (assistant)
1984Northeastern (OL)
1985–1990Northeastern (OC/OL)
1991–1995UMass (OL)
1996–2000Lafayette (OL)
2001–2003Cornell (OC/OL)
2004Maine (assistant)
2005–2007Duke (assistant)
2008Elon (TE)
2009–2010Elon (OL)
2011Ball State (OL)
2012–2013Penn State (TE)
2014–2016Ball State (assistant)
2017Louisburg College (OL)

John Strollo (born January 20, 1954) is an American football coach who has worked 14 different assignments over his coaching career, which has spanned over 35 years, both at the high school and collegiate level. After serving two seasons as tight ends coach at Penn State, he returned to Ball State to become the offensive line coach for the 2014 season.

Early life and playing career

Raised in Long Branch, New Jersey Strollo attended Long Branch High School.[1]

Strollo lettered once while playing football at Boston College, and graduated in 1976, after which he got his masters degree in 1980 at Springfield College.[2]

Coaching career

Strollo began coaching directly out of college as an assistant coach at Middletown High School South on the Jersey Shore, prior to moving to the collegiate level to Springfield, at which he got his master's degree working as a graduate assistant. From there, he had his first stint at Northeastern University, Washburn University, and his second stint at Northeastern before being hired to assistant coach at Massachusetts. He had three more coaching stops – Lafayette College, Cornell, and Maine – before first working with Bill O'Brien when they were assistants together at Duke from 2005-2007.[3] He then spent three seasons at Elon and one season at Ball State prior to O'Brien hiring him to coach on his new staff at Penn State, a decision that drew some criticism within the media for his lack of experience in big-time college football.[2] His first season at Penn State, however, saw freshman tight end Kyle Carter excel, and Strollo consequently received some accolade and acceptance for his role as position coach, including speculation that Penn State could become "Tight End U", a reference to Penn State's Linebacker U, for their consistent success and strength at linebacker.[4] He considers coaching at Penn State a "dream job".[3]

When Bill O'Brien left Penn State to go to the Houston Texans, Strollo did not go with him, nor did new coach James Franklin retain him on the staff at Penn State. Consequently, Strollo returned to Ball State as offensive line coach.[5]

References

  1. ^ John Strollo, Duke Blue Devils football. Accessed April 28, 2020. "A native of Long Branch, N.J., and graduate of Long Branch High School, Strollo earned a degree in education from Boston College in 1976."
  2. ^ a b Junstrom, Jeff (January 23, 2012). "Meet the Coaches: John Strollo". Black Shoe Diaries - SB Nation. Vox Media. Retrieved September 24, 2013.
  3. ^ a b Pickel, Greg (November 15, 2012). "Penn State football: Tight end coach John Strollo uses unique advice to prepare his unit". The Patriot News. Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. Retrieved September 24, 2013.
  4. ^ Giger, Cory (November 15, 2012). "Could PSU become 'Tight End U' (John Strollo Q&A)". Altoona Mirror. Retrieved September 24, 2013.
  5. ^ "Football announces return of John Strollo to staff". Ball State Cardinals. Ball State University. January 21, 2014. Retrieved January 24, 2015.