Named the 39th coach in Franklin & Marshall football history
on March 22, 2006, Troxell took the reins of the Diplomats
following five seasons (2001-2005) as an assistant coach at
Lafayette during which he served as video coordinator, running
backs coach, recruiting coordinator and special teams coach for the
2004 and 2005 Patriot League champion Leopards.
During his tenure, he mentored 2004 Patriot League Offensive
Player of the Year Joe McCourt '05 to a record-setting career.
Under Troxell's tutelage, McCourt, the 2001 Patriot League Rookie
of the Year, concluded his career as Lafayette's and the Patriot
League's all-time leader with 50 rushing touchdowns, and second on
the school's all-time rushing list with 4,474 yards while earning
All-America honors in 2002 and 2004.
Named the Leopards' recruiting coordinator prior to the 2003
season, Troxell landed 24 freshmen for the 2005 season, including
10 who were all-state players, He joined the Lafayette staff after
serving as an assistant coach and recruiting coordinator at
Muhlenberg College from 1997-2000.
He served as special teams coordinator (1997-99), quarterbacks and
wide receivers coach (1997-2000) and offensive coordinator (2000)
at Muhlenberg as the Mules went from a 1-9 season in 1997 to the
Eastern College Athletic Conference title with a record of 9-2 in
2000.
In 2000, his offense ranked 22nd in Division III and led the
Centennial Conference in total offense (427.8 yards per game) while
averaging 31.0 points per game.
In his first three seasons at Muhlenberg, Troxell coordinated the
Mules' special teams. Under his guidance, Muhlenberg led Division
III in kickoff returns. Josh Carter, Lafayette's offensive
assistant in 2004, was the Football Gazette specialist of the year
under Troxell's tutelage. He also coached the quarterbacks and
receivers all four seasons, including Muhlenberg's all-time leading
passer and Carter, the program's first Centennial Conference player
of the year.
Troxell joined the Muhlenberg staff after serving as an assistant
coach for three seasons at Columbia University. He assisted with
the Lions' defensive backs from 1994-96, helping them record the
third-best pass defense in Division I-AA in 1996.
The assistant recruiting coordinator his final two seasons at
Columbia, he was elevated to running backs coach in the spring of
1997.
A 1994 Lafayette graduate with a B.A. in government and law,
Troxell was the starting free safety on the Leopards' 1992 Patriot
League championship team and received the program's Unsung Hero
Award as a senior. He went on to earn an M.A. in sociology and
education from Columbia in 1997.
A native of Phillipsburg, N.J., Troxell and his wife, Pamela, have
two daughters: Summer and Capri.


