Tag: Andy Steinfeld

Big Central’s first off-season hire comes in Spotswood, where Andy Steinfeld is promoted to lead Chargers after one year as an assistant

Andy Steinfeld played at East Brunswick for Marcus Borden, and coached there under him, then led the program now on his own. Last season was the first he spent with another program besides that of the Bears in three decades, working as an assistant under Chris Meagher, and alongside his son, Matt.

Now, he’s his son’s boss.

Andy Steinfeld was appointed as the tenth football coach in Spotswood history Tuesday night, when his hiring was approved by the Board of Education. He’ll take over a program that has had great on field success in the past several years, going 8-1 in each of the last three seasons under Chris Meagher.

Meagher stepped down at the end of the 2025 season, in which the Chargers – inexplicably – finished 8-1 but failed to make the playoffs, losing out on the 16th and final seed on the third tiebreaker, OSI, to Camden Eastside, a 3-5 football program that had lost its last four games by a combined total of 160-20.

Frustration aside, Steinfeld was thrilled to be a part of the program last season, and is excited to be the new head coach, citing what he calls “the it factor” about the Spotswood kids, and falling in love with a true family atmosphere around the program and district.

Steinfeld was 18-29 in five seasons as East Brunswick head coach, going 4-5 his first year in 2019, then 4-4 in the shortened 2020 COVID season, before coming out of it with an 8-2 campaign and a playoff appearance in 2021, losing 28-14 in the opening round of the playoffs to Toms River North.

But he was let go two weeks before camp started in July of 2024, even though he had good performance reviews, after being asked to re-interview for the job. That session, Steinfeld told Central Jersey Sports Radio at the time, included “community members” who were “against our program, bashed our program,” and had complaints about East Brunswick’s middle school football program siphoning players away from their own league.

After a year off, Steinfeld joined Meagher’s staff at Spotswood, and now he’s back where he belongs: as a head coach.

Click below to hear Central Jersey Sports Radio’s Mike Pavlichko and Marcus Borden talk with new Spotswood football head coach Andy Steinfeld:

Andy (lt.) and Matt (rt.) Seinfeld

Spotswood keeps it in the family, as ex-EB coach Andy Steinfeld joins his son, Matt, as assistant with the Chargers

Chris Meagher believes “he hit a home run” by adding former East Brunswick head football coach Andy Steinfeld to the Chargers coaching staff. 

With 31 years of coaching football, five as a head coach, Steinfeld joins his son Matt, affectionately called “Coach Stein” by the Chargers’ players and staff.

Matt Steinfeld enters his fourth season with Spotswood and is a guidance counselor at the high school. He did not play football in high school, but he was a member of the baseball team at East Brunswick.

His first year at Spotswood he was offered a position with the football program and made a smooth transition learning the subtleties of the game while possessing a genuine care for the student athletes he would be coaching or advising for the Chargers.

Now, with the addition of his father to the coaching staff, Matt’s quarterbacks will spend plenty of time meshing with the running backs as Meagher intends to use “Coach Steinfeld” as his running backs coach, while Andy has plenty of experience with the zone read offense.

With returning quarterback Senior Se’mir Tolbert-Brimage orchestrating the offense and Senior Sebastian Saracino, a three-year starter at running back, the Steinfelds will play an integral role in the team’s offensive development and success.

Furthermore, Spotswood’s mentor intends to utilize his most experienced assistant coach in the press box on game day as he will be “my eyes in the sky,” since Andy brings a wealth of knowledge, which includes playing for championships in December.

Watch CJSR analyst Marcus Borden talk with Spotswood assistant Andy Steinfeld.

As for Matt, he will be on the sidelines as the Special Teams Coordinator, with the responsibility of getting the correct personnel on the field when needed in a timely fashion.  He will also have time to personally talk to his quarterbacks as they come off the field about any reads or adjustments needed for the offense.

When asked about how unique this opportunity was to coach with his father, Coach Stein said “I may not have the words right now, but one day we are going to look back on this and it’s going to be cool.  I get to coach with the man I idolized growing up.”

Watch CJSR analyst Marcus Borden talk with Spotswood assistant coach Matt Steinfeld.

For Andy, it was a no-brainer to accept the offer to coach at Spotswood for several reasons. They are a talented team with plenty of experience and the desire to take the program to new heights, but more importantly, it was the chance to coach with his son.

“There is nothing better than working every day with my son. To see him coach a sport he didn’t play, I can be a proud dad and if I can end my career as a coach doing it with Matt, there is not a better situation for me personally.”

As the season gets underway in earnest on August 11, the Chargers will have a practice run with the experienced eyes of Coach Steinfeld in the press box as they take on South Plainfield in a final tune-up before their season opener at home on Thursday August 28 at 7 p.m.

Steinfelds
Former East Brunswick football head coach Andy Steinfeld (left) has joined his son, Matt, on Chris Meagher’s staff at Spotswood. (Photo: Marcus Borden)

East Brunswick coaching change saga ends with few answers, and questions about Bears’ future

The East Brunswick Board of Education – complying with a vastly watered-down request from Central Jersey Sports Radio, at the district’s asking – has fulfilled its OPRA request, providing dozens of emails related to the unceremonious dismissal of Bears football coach Andy Steinfeld in July.

The emails shed some light on the process, but with redactions citing “deliberative process privilege,” “personnel records” and “attorney-client privilege,” they still leave many questions unanswered.

The main takeways include:

  • St. Bart’s Buffalos President Chad Seyler questioned the Board’s posting for the football head coaching job, citing a lack of publicity over it to attract qualified candidates.
  • Superintendent Dr. Victor Valeski saw Steinfeld’s retirement from teaching as an opportnity to re-evaluate the football program.
  • The head football coach position was originally posted in February, with only four applicants, only one of whom – Steinfeld, himself – actually interviewed.
  • Parents in the district expressed their concerns to school administrators and didn’t appreciate Steinfeld being let go just two weeks before preseason camp was to begin.

The main questions, however, still remain, including why the Board of Education didn’t seek a new coach relatively quickly after the season, as typically is the case, as well as why Selyer and Buffalos treasurer Dave Lonski were on the committee that re-interviewed Steinfeld, since they had no connection to – and no children involved in – any of the district’s football programs.

In an email dated July 29th, with the Subject “Confidential Board Updates,” Dr. Valeski updated the Board on multiple subjects, including the “Football Head Coach Vacancy.”

He wrote: “Andy Steinfeld retired from EBPS last school year. While coaching positions are never guaranteed, Andy’s action created an opportunity to make sure we had the best Head Coach candidate as we look to build our football program with Dr. Bucior as our new high school principal. The position was posted in February and we initially had four candidates. We established an interview committee with community membership and district leadership.”

The email then named all the members of the committee, which included Seyler, Lonski and Vito Tropeano – whose son graduated from East Brunswick the month before, in June, and played for Steinfeld his senior year after transferring back home from Elizabeth. Tropeano told Central Jersey Sports Radio earlier this fall he was in favor of Steinfeld being retained.

Also on the committee was Ed Bucior, the new East Brunswick High School Principal, as well as Athletic Director Frank Malta, director of HR Nicole Tibbets and Valesky.

Central Jersey Sports Radio initially reported those names earlier this month.

After mentioning that Steinfeld’s interview date was “shifted due to vacation conflicts,” he added that “as we got closer to the interdate [sic] date, three of the four candidates decided not to participate.”

The next nine lines of text in the first email are redacted, but Valeski followed by saying that the administrators on the panel agree that they should keep Matt Pazinko, previously an assistant, as interim head coach to have an “easier transition without a pause in the summer season with it being so close to our first game.”

Tibbets followed up asking about the three candidates who eventually did not interview for the position, saying “do you know what contributed to their decision or what their reason was for not moving forward?”

Valeski replied by indicating one of the candidates had “applied for the wrong job,” another got an offer elsewhere, while the third simply didn’t respond to a request for an interview, something he noted was “odd.”

Seyler appeared to address the issue of a lack of candidates weeks earlier, clearly unhappy about how the whole process was going. In an email dated July 19, he wrote to Valeski and Board of Education President Laurie Lachs: “Is this a joke. Closed application process with zero publicity. And I’m going to be a conspiracy guy here and think the other applicants might be the assistant coaches at Eb [sic] and they pulled out. Sent from my iPhone. Farce once again.”

Seyler asked Tibbets again via email, three days later, “Just a quick question. Why was the job opening application closed so quickly and not publicized? I know a few coaches that would have been interested but had no idea there was an opening.”

Tibbets replied that the position had been posted on February fifth, adding “It was open until we began scheduling interviews earlier this month.”

The job was never posted for publicly, however – only internally. Sources with knowledge of the situation told CJSR that Pazinko had initially been askes to hold down the fort as interim coach until they could post for the job publicly and make a permanent hire, having had no other internal candidates. When Pazinko refused, the sources said, the decision was made to retain him for the year.

But since coaches are on a one-year agreement in New Jersey – although State Assemblyman Benjie Wimblerly (D-Paterson) has a measure to change that – Pazinko would have to reapply for the job if he wishes to come back as East Brunswick football coach next year.

The Bears finished 2-7 this year, a slight improvement over the past two seasons under Steinfeld, with wins over Hamilton and South Brunswick. The Bears finished 1-9 last season, and 1-8 in 2022, but were 8-2 in 2021, coming off a COVID-shortened year that hurt many local programs, but apparently not as much in East Brunswick.

High school sports are often cyclical, and even longtime coach Marcus Borden – now an analyst for Central Jersey Sports Radio – had similar down years around his two state championships in 2004 and 2009. That included an 0-10 season in 2001, a 2-8 campaign in 2005 and a 1-9 season in 2011, after the second title. Borden spent 30 years as Bears’ head coach, retiring after the 2013 season – on his own accord – with a lifetime record of 142-131-1.

While Valeski’s desire to re-examine the football program is not without merit considering the team’s record over the past two seasons – a combined 2-17 during that span – typically that evaluation is done immediately after a season, with new coaches being hired in December, January and even as late as March.

When Joe LaSala left Woodbridge in March, even that was considered late in the game, and the coaching carousel hit several other schools, as South Brunswick’s Joe Goerge left to take the Barrons’ job, and Roselle’s Ibrahim Halsey left Roselle to coach the Vikings, with the Rams hiring Tyrone Turner.

On July 30th – the day Central Jersey Sports Radio broke the story of Steinfeld’s dismissal – Valeski wrote in an email ostensibly to the Board (though no “To” emails or names are shown in the files shared with CJSR): “I got word that our former Head Football Coach Andy Steinfeld is giving an interview to Central Jersey Sports Radio this afternoon. At this point, I do not intend to give remarks to the media on this issue. Andy was not fired. He fulfilled his contract and retired from the district.”

The night before, a parent of a football player – who asked that his name not be used when contacted by CJSR – wrote to Valeski after having attended a meeting with parents and players about Steinfeld’s dismissal, saying “Now that the players have been participating in voluntary workouts since the middle of June, we have had (2) 7 Vs 7 games and we are scheduled to hand out the gear this week, we now find out that our coach has not been hired for the 2024 season. I have a few questions concerning the decision that has been made at the 11th hour.”

Among the questions:

  • “If there was no intention of hiring Coach Steinfeld back, why did we wait until now to make that decision? Since, he has already started planning for the 2024 season, including, but not limited to, team events, team dinners, meetings with the quarterback club, starting the push the limit fund raiser, just to name a few things that are already in motion at this point of the season.”
  • “Since when are non-district staff/board members permitted to sit in on interviews, ask questions and provide feedback on district personnel decisions?”
  • “Since there was a committee to conduct the interviews and provide recommendations, was this committee approved by the board?”
  • “If there was a creation of a committee, why was no one that is currently involved in the football program invited to join such a committee? Considering the people that are part of this committee were people that currently do not have anyone involved in the High School/Middle School football programs.”

He also called the decision not to retain Steinfeld “completely unfair for everyone involved in the football program.” Reached by Central Jersey Sports Radio today, the parent said he never received as much as a word from Valeski even acknowledging his email.

Reached for an interview request on several occasions, the district said it could not comment on the matter, including questions about the interview and committee process and whether it followed district policy or New Jersey state law.

Ultimately, while Steinfeld says the main complaint from Seyler and Lonski during his interview were about the East Brunswick middle school program, which starting in 2022, had seventh graders playing with eighth graders. That program remains as is, just without Steinfeld as head coach.

So what changed from the winter and spring to July that necessitated a coaching change just two weeks before preseason practice got underway? The season was well over by then, there appear to have been no new developments to or complaints from parents to speak of, and the district never removed seventh graders from the program.

But there was one person missing. That’s Lou Figueroa, the assistant superintendent who was let go as a “cost-cutting measure” when the East Brunswick school district face a major budget shortfall. We spoke to him off-the-air in October, and while he couldn’t discuss any internal conversations, he had one stirring response to the whole situation: “This wouldn’t have happened on my watch.”

Figueroa is running for a seat on the Board of Education this November 5th, along with a slate of two other candidates, all seeking full three-year terms: his wife, Jennifer Figueroa, and Jamie Falco. Anna Braun is running on the same slate for a one-year unexpired term.

As far as actual football goes, should Pazinko not seek the head coaching job after this season, the East Brunswick students in the Bears football program will be playing for their third different head coach in three seasons.

Not everyone on Steinfeld interview committee opposed East Brunswick coach getting rehired

When then-East Brunswick football coach Andy Steinfeld re-interviewed for his job in July, three “community members” were on the interview committee, but not all of them opposed the coach’s rehiring.

Multiple sources have told Central Jersey Sports Radio that those members included St. Bart’s Buffalos president Chad Seyler and treasurer Dave Lonski, as well as Vito Tropeano, Sr., whose son played quarterback for East Brunswick.

And reached this week after the names had been revealed to CJSR, Steinfeld says Tropeano was the only one of the three who had anything positive to say.

“He was pro-Andy Steinfeld,” the coach said this week. “He thanked me for what he did for his kid.”

Vito Tropeano, Jr., was in the East Brunswick program, then transferred to Elizabeth for his junior year, but came back to the Bears for his senior season, throwing for over 1,700 yards with 17 touchdowns. Steinfeld says he was able to help him draw interest from Wagner College on Staten Island, to which Tropeano signed a National Letter of Intent back in February.

Reached this week by Central Jersey Sports Radio, Tropeano – like Seyler, who we reached out to in July – said he couldn’t discuss the meeting, as he had signed a confidentiality agreement. But he did say he and his son had nothing but good experiences with Steinfeld, and confirmed the coach’s statement that he appreciated all Steinfeld had done for them.

Tropeano also was once involved in St. Bart’s youth sports programs, but hasn’t been for the last several years. But he was involved with their 2018 American Youth Football 12U national championship team. He saw himself as perhaps a bridge between the district and St. Bart’s, where Seyler had previously had conversations with the East Brunswick district about working together on the middle school football program.

Indeed, at a June 2022 Board of Education meeting, Seyler spoke during the public comment period, and said he had approached school officials three or four years prior to discuss a working agreement between the programs, but “nothing has ever came from that.” He said that in the immediate aftermath, there had been “zero communication” between the East Brunswick program and St. Bart’s about the issue.

Steinfeld was not rehired in late July, when all his other assistants were approved by the Board of Ed. Told he would have to re-interview for his position, soon after that interview he was told there were not enough votes to approve his hiring, though no vote was ever held.

Offensive Coordinator Matt Pazinko was named Interim Head Coach for the season.

Steinfeld got stellar evaluation from East Brunswick AD Malta a month before being let go

“Andy takes great pride in the organization of the program.”

“He has a standard for his team when it comes to their behavior and character on the field and off.”

“His is respected by his peers and coaches.”

“Andy provides the high ethical and character skills that allow him to lead our student athletes the right way.”

Those comments seem ripped right out of a letter of recommendation for someone seeking a high school football coaching job.

But a little more than a month after receiving such high praise from East Brunswick Athletic Director Frank Malta – and despite such a glowing review – Andy Steinfeld found himself out as Bears head coach, prompting many in the township – including his own players and their parents – to wonder why.

Steinfeld was let go in late July after re-interviewing for his position, just two weeks before preseason camp. And Steinfeld says while he had the full support of Malta, the AD eventually had to break it to him that he didn’t have enough votes on the Board of Education to be approved as head coach.

In New Jersey, high school coaches must be approved for their job on an annual basis. And though Steinfeld says he never had to re-interview after any of his first four seasons, he assumed it was par for the course since he had retired in January after more than 23 years as a physical education teacher, and figured as football coach he’d be considered an “outside employee.” That interview took place on July 23rd. “I had no problem doing it,” Steinfeld told Central Jersey Sports Radio at the time.

Steinfeld was not informed ahead of time who he would be interviewing with. When he arrived, it turned out to be a seven-member committee he that included what he called three “community members” who were “against our program, bashed our program,” and had complaints about East Brunswick’s middle school football program.

There were no parents of any current East Brunswick football players on the committee, yet there were 52 players on the varsity roster for a game Central Jersey Sports Radio broadcast on September 27th at Old Bridge from which they committee could have selected.

The complaints from the community members, Steinfeld says, had nothing to do with wins and losses, treatment of players, or how the program is run. Steinfeld says their issues were that his expansion of the middle school football program to include seventh-graders was chipping away at the numbers in St. Bart’s own program.

Since then, multiple sources confirmed to Central Jersey Sports Radio the identities of those three community members.

They include Chad Seyler – the President of the St. Bart’s Buffalos – along with Dave Lonski, the organization’s treasurer. The third member was Vito Tropeano, Sr., whose son began his scholastic career with the East Brunswick high school football team, transferred to Elizabeth for one year, but returned to the Bears’ program for his senior campaign in 2023.

Seyler – reached for comment in July – declined to speak about the issue to Central Jersey Sports Radio, saying he had signed a confidentiality agreement.

Steinfeld told CJSR recently he was never asked to sign such an agreement.

The revelations continue to prompt questions that, so far, have been unanswered by school officials in East Brunswick, including why those with outside and competing interests with the East Brunswick football program were allowed to have what appears to be an undue influence on the re-hiring of a football coach, and why the district waited so long to address them and head in a new coaching direction, especially when seventh graders remain on the middle school team to this day.

Typically, when districts let go of coaches – unless there are extenuating circumstances – it happens within a month or two after the season, to allow the new staff to work with and get familiar with players in the off-season.

The Board of Education was scheduled to vote in July on the entire coaching staff, and approved all of the Bears’ assistants at that meeting, but tabled the matter of Steinfeld pending the interview, meaning there was no chance for public comment after his re-hiring became a potential issue. No vote was ever held on the record about Steinfeld’s job status by the Board of Education.

More questions than answers: Why were St. Bart’s youth football leaders on committee that lead to dismissal of East Brunswick football coach Steinfeld?

Central Jersey Sports Radio has confirmed through multiple sources with knowledge of the situation that two officers of the St. Bart’s youth football program – and the parent of a former East Brunswick player who had transferred out of the district for one season before returning – were on the committee that re-interviewed Bears football coach Andy Steinfeld this July, and ultimately influenced his dismissal just two weeks before preseason practice was set to start.

Just how they influenced that decision is unclear.

Chad Seyler is the President of the St. Bart’s Buffalos, and Dave Lonski is the organization’s treasurer. Both sat on the committee that re-interviewed Steinfeld, along with Vito Tropeano, Sr., whose son began his scholastic career with the East Brunswick high school football team, transferred to Elizabeth for a season, then came back for his senior year in 2023.

Seyler served one term on the Board of Education, from 2017 through 2019.

Steinfeld told Central Jersey Sports Radio in late July that he was informed he would not be returning as coach because he didn’t have enough votes to be approved by the Board of Education, though no public vote was ever cast on the record.

When coaches – who by state law must be approved on a year-to-year basis – are not retained, it is not typical to hold a vote; they are simply not brought back. However, except for extenuating circumstances, most dismissals occur shortly after the season is finished, to allow the next coach to be hired in time to get familiar with the program and work with them in the offseason.

Steinfeld further explained back in July that the seven-member committee he interviewed with included three “community members” who were “against our program, bashed our program,” and had complaints about East Brunswick’s middle school football program. Steinfeld did not name the community members, and the full interview can be heard here.

According to Steinfeld, there were no complaints about his coaching, treatment of players, or even the fact the team had won only two games in two prior seasons, following an excellent 8-2 campaign in 2021, coming off the “COVID season” that disrupted many programs’ development.

Steinfeld told CJSR in July that the middle school team had recently allowed seventh-graders to participate. And he says the community members – who he only identified as people who were involved in youth football leagues in town that aren’t affiliated with East Brunswick schools – told him they were against that concept, saying those students “shouldn’t be playing for the middle school” and believe that the Bears program is “taking players away from them.”

Steinfeld also says he was not informed in advance what community members would be on the committee.

And yet, questions remain, including why those with competing interests – St. Bart’s is seeking the same players from the same group of kids the middle school is – would be allowed to influence how the East Brunswick program is run?

The St. Bart’s Buffalos do not fall under the jurisdiction of the East Brunswick school district, nor the township; it is simply an independent youth football league, and the only connection is that some St. Bart’s players typically end up playing for the Bears.

However, many from neighboring towns like Spotswood, Milltown and Helmetta also participate, as they don’t have their own youth programs in town. Some students end up going to Spotswood High School – including those from that town, Milltown, and Helmetta, which also attend the district.

According to a roster posted on MaxPreps.com, Seyler’s son plays football, but not for East Brunswick. He is a freshman at St. Joseph of Metuchen.

Central Jersey Sports Radio reached out to Seyler for comment in July, and he told us he could not speak to the media, as he had signed a confidentiality agreement.

We also reached out for comment from the Superintendent, Dr. Victor Valeski district in July. We were told by the district to submit a request via email. That request and a subsequent follow-up were ignored. CJSR then filed an OPRA request for emails related to the situation, which has been scaled down as the district said the request was initially too large. A third request to speak to the Dr. Valesky was denied; the district said he could not discuss personnel issues.

It should be noted that Steinfeld technically was no longer “personnel” by the time his appointment came before the board in July – and was ultimately tabled – because he had retired from teaching in July, and his “one-year contract” would have expired at the end of the fiscal year on June 30th.

Having to re-interview for a job is not necessarily standard operating procedure in most districts, but one ex-official told CJSR it is always an option, though usually reserved for some type of extenuating circumstance.

One area football coach we talked to said they never had to interview in front a seven-member committee to begin with, noting that when they were hired, the interview included a couple of administrators, a coach from another sport, a board member, and one parent, whose son was on the football team.

Steinfeld said interviewing before a group so large seemed out of the normal.

The timing of the decision also has been called into question, coming just two weeks before preseason practice was set to begin.

Unless a coach was fired for a particular incident that would be of an emergency nature – none of which were the case with Steinfeld – many wondered why the decision was not made in December or January, in time to conduct a proper coaching search. Especially since, according to Steinfeld, the complaints about the middle school program had been going on for quite some time, at least back to the beginning of the 2022 football, when Steinfeld was still the coach, and first brought seventh graders from Churchill onto the middle school team.

CJSR files OPRA request with East Brunswick Board of Education on Steinfeld’s departure

With no response from East Brunswick school officials for comment on the recent departure of Bears’ football coach Andy Steinfeld – who was not retained after five years as head coach and some two decades involved with the program, including as a player and assistant – Central Jersey Sports Radio has filed an Open Public Records Act request with the East Brunswick school district for more information related to the decision.

While all Steinfeld’s assistants were approved at the July Board of Education meeting, Steinfeld’s reappointment – all high school coaches must be reappointed annually in New Jersey – the board tabled a vote on Steinfeld himself, and he was requested to interview before a committee.

That committee was comprised of seven members, according to Steinfeld, and included four members of the administration, plus three “community members,” at least one of which is connected to a local youth football program unaffiliated with East Brunswick schools.

Steinfeld says during his interview, those community members “bashed” his program, including a decision last year to allow seventh-graders onto the East Brunswick district’s middle school team.  Steinfeld says those community members complained that the decision was cutting into participation in their youth football programs.

Winning 2022 Marisa Rose Bowl coach Andy Steinfeld of East Brunswick and Team Marisa (Photo: Mike Pavlichko)

Steinfeld says he was told by Athletic Director Frank Malta he still likely had enough votes for approval and would be recommended for hiring, but something changed, and Malta – who the coach credits for supporting him throughout the entire process – eventually informed him he would no vote was be held and that he was being let go.

Offensive coordinator and Steinfeld’s “right-hand man” Matt Pazinko – who like Steinfeld, played for and coached with longtime EB head coach Marcus Borden, now a high school football analyst with Central Jersey Sports Radio – has been named interim head coach for the year.

CJSR’s OPRA request asks for emails and communications involving district officials, the entire Board of Education, Steinfeld, Pazinko, and community members on the committee believed to be influential in the decision to not retain Steinfeld. Those community members are not being named by Central Jersey Sports Radio, since their identities have not yet been made public by the district or Board of Education.

That is the main crux of the OPRA request: that a committee put together to re-interview the coach after five season on the job – which is not standard practice – was not publicized or revealed to the public. In addition, the Board of Education did not officially vote on whether to retain Steinfeld. Rather, the lack of a vote simply means he was not reappointed.

The OPRA request seeks to identify why the committee was created, who sat on the committee, how the Board of Education was influenced, and why the Board chose not to conduct an on-the-record vote as to his appointment; instead, it simply let his appointment as head football coach lapse..

The timing of the move was also controversial, coming just two weeks before the start of pre-season practice, which begins all across New Jersey next Monday, August 12th. Typically, coaches not being retained are informed shortly after the season, in December of January, and new coaches are hired by the first month or two of the New Year.

According to the New Jersey Open Public Records Act, the East Brunswick School district has seven business days – starting the day after the request is received – to provide the requested documentation or deny the request – either actively, or by not responding – though it may ask for an extension.

In that instance, the district would need to respond either way by Monday, August 19th.

UPDATE: The East Brunswick Board of Education has informed Central Jersey Sports Radio it would need additional time – three weeks – to fulfill our request, due to the “voluminous” nature of documentation requested, including more than a dozen individuals over a more than eight month period dating back to December 1, 2023. The extension sets a new deadline of September 9th.

Two weeks before camp, Steinfeld is let go as football coach in East Brunswick stunner

Football practice begins all across the state of New Jersey on August 12th, but just two weeks before camp gets underway, Andy Steinfeld has been unceremoniously let go as East Brunswick football coach after five seasons.

Matt Pazinko, Steinfeld’s Offensive Coordinator and “right-hand man,” as he calls him, has been named interim head coach for the coming year.

Why the late change? In an exclusive interview with Central Jersey Sports Radio, Steinfeld says it was all a surprise to him.

He says it started a couple of weeks ago when Athletic Director Frank Malta told him he would have to re-interview for the job.

In New Jersey, coaches must be approved for their job on an annual basis. And though Steinfeld says he never had to interview for it after any of his first four seasons, he didn’t question it, given that he had retired in January after more than 23 years as a physical education teacher, and figured as football coach he’d be considered an “outside employee.” That interview took place on July 23rd. “I had no problem doing it,” Steinfeld says.

Steinfeld says the seven-member committee he interviewed with included three “community members” who were “against our program, bashed our program,” and had complaints about East Brunswick’s middle school football program.

Steinfeld says the middle school team recently allowed seventh-graders to participate. And he says the community members – who are involved in youth football leagues in town that aren’t affiliated with East Brunswick schools – told him they were against that concept, saying those students “shouldn’t be playing for the middle school” and believe that the Bears program is “taking players away from them.”

Steinfeld says Malta still believed that he would be approved, but this past weekend, visited him personally to deliver the news that there were not enough votes on the Board of Education to approve him, and that he was no longer the coach.

Steinfeld addressed his team and team parents Monday night, getting nothing from support in return. Malta also addressed the parents, and Steinfeld says Malta has been “nothing but professional and supportive,” both during his five-year tenure in East Brunswick, and during “this unfortunate situation.”

Malta, reached Monday morning, said he could not comment on the matter. A request for comment from the Superintendent’s office was not immediately returned.

Steinfeld was 18-28 in five seasons, but in one less year, had four more wins than his predecessor, Bob Molarz, who saw the Bears go 14-47 under his watch, never winning more than four games in any of his six seasons at the helm from 2013-2018.

Steinfeld’s Bears went 4-5 his first year, then 4-4 in the wacky COVID year, coming out of it with an 8-2 campaign and a playoff appearance in 2021, losing 28-14 in the opening round of the playoffs to Toms River North.

And East Brunswick has been cyclical with talent over the years. Marcus Borden won titles in 2004 and 2009 as Bears’ head coach. The first of those teams won the Central Jersey Group 4 title over Jackson, finishing 10-2, but they went 2-8 in 2005, and 5-5 each of the next two seasons.

In the 2009 title season, when they beat Brick Memorial 9-0 to win the CJ4 title in the snow at The College of New Jersey in Ewing, East Brunswick finished 8-4, and went a respectable 6-4 the next season, before going 1-9 in 2011 and 2-7 in 2012, Borden’s last season at the helm.

Click below to hear Andy Steinfeld talk with Mike Pavlichko of Central Jersey Sports Radio:

East Brunswick looks to turn around winless start with a trip to Piscataway Friday night

After going 8-2 in the 2021 season, things have not gone to plan for East Brunswick and fifth-year head coach Andy Steinfeld.

Following a 1-8 campaign in 2022, the Bears are off to an 0-6 start with time running out to get back in the win column, with two of the final three games coming against teams in Central Jersey Sports Radio’s Top Ten, as they close out the season with matchups against top-ranked North Brunswick and fourth-ranked Phillipsburg.

Before that gauntlet is a matchup with the Piscataway Chiefs, a team looking to gain some consistent footing in their own right.

It’s a game that kicks off Friday night at 6:00, and can be heard here on Central Jersey Sports Radio, starting with the pregame at 5:45. Mike Pavlichko and Alec Crouthamel will call all the action; click here to listen.

Vito Tropeano joined the team this season at quarterback after spending his first three seasons at Elizabeth. He has helped lead a new offensive gameplan leaning more pass-heavy after relying on the run game in years past, but it has yet to translate to wins on the scoreboard.

Led on offense and defense by seniors Derrick Christie and Ryan Bennett, as well as Faruq Tajudeen on the ground, the Bears are looking to take it one game at a time as the season begins to hit its back nine.

With many of the starters being seniors, the veteran-laden East Brunswick squad is looking to end their high school careers on a high note.

Click below to hear Central Jersey Sports Radio’s Alec Crouthamel talk with East Brunswick head coach Andy Steinfeld about the Bears’ season and Friday night’s matchup with Piscataway:

East Brunswick seeks first win when Sayreville visits Friday night

The long series between the teams hasn’t always been kind to East Brunswick.

The Bears have had their moments against Sayreville, like a great revenge win in 2019, avenging a regular season loss with an upset of the top-ranked Bombers in the semifinals of the Central Jersey Group 4 playoffs en route to East Brunswick’s second state title under longtime head coach Marcus Borden.

Now, one of his many proteges will try to get his team’s first win of the season against a Sayreville team jockeying for position in the middle of the North 4 playoff race.

The Bears (0-4) and 8th-ranked Bombers (2-2) will square off in East Brunswick Friday night in the Big Central Game of the Week on Central Jersey Sports Radio, with kickoff from Jay Doyle Field scheduled for 7:00, and pregame at 6:45 pm.

Mike Pavlichko and Dom Savino will call all the action; click here to listen.

East Brunswick has struggled to put points on the board this season, but has been in all but one of its four games. After dropping their opener on a Thursday night in Hillsborough, 42-6, they were within ten points in a loss at Monroe, 15 in a home loss to South Brunswick, and lost 17-7 last week at Old Bridge in the Battle of Route 18.

While last year’s group was a senior squad with experience (read: many two- and three-year starters), this year’s senior-laden group has less time under their belt, and that’s shown. Fourth-year head coach Andy Steinfeld is just focused on them getting better, and avoiding costly and untimely mistakes.

Running an option with some spread, the BEars are easily led offensively by Ben Solimini, a senior quarterback who’s more of a threat to run than pass. He’s the team’s leading rusher with 506 yards in four games – three over 100 – and has scored five touchdowns, the only rushing touchdowns the team has.

He’s only thrown for 123 yards and one touchdown this season, and his longest connection went for 17 yards.

Click below to listen to Central Jersey Sports Radio’s Mike Pavlichko talk with East Brunswick head coach Andy Steinfeld about the 2022 Bears: