Andrew Breiner – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu The official news site for Fordham University. Wed, 04 Oct 2017 15:13:03 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://now.fordham.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/favicon.png Andrew Breiner – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu 32 32 232360065 Fordham Alumni Join Forces for Football Office Challenge https://now.fordham.edu/athletics/fordham-alumni-join-forces-football-office-challenge/ Wed, 04 Oct 2017 15:13:03 +0000 https://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=78450 Three Fordham alumni have begun a fundraising challenge to support the construction of state-of-the-art office and conference rooms for the football program’s coaches and student-athletes.

Donors John Zizzo, FCRH ’69, John Costantino, GABELLI ’67, LAW ’70, and John Lumelleau, FCRH ’74, have joined forces to launch the Costantino, Lumelleau, and Zizzo Football Office Challenge.

As part of the challenge, any gift earmarked for the Football Office Renovation and Improvement Project of at least $1,000, to a total of $625,000, will be matched by them on a 2:1 basis.

“Providing the best facilities to‎ our students, student-athletes, and coaches is an important element which enhances their experiences at Fordham and also drives the journey to excellence in all aspects,” said Costantino, a trustee emeritus.

A rendering of a room for the Football Office Renovation and Improvement Project.
A rendering of an office and conference room for the Football Office Renovation and Improvement Project.

It’s a move that could advance recruitment and help to build a championship-level football program at Fordham, said head football coach Andrew Breiner.

“It would enable us to house the entire coaching staff in one location and provide more meeting space for the players,” he said. “This project would be a major step forward for the future of Fordham football.”

Over the past five years, the Fordham Rams have made many strides. In 2014, a record-breaking year for Fordham athletics, the football team made an NCAA appearance and was awarded the Patriot League Championship.

“Given the success of our program, we want to provide our students and coaches the necessary tools to remain competitive,” said David Roach, director of intercollegiate athletics.

For Zizzo, a former defensive tackle who helped lead the Rams to the 1968 National Club Football Championship, playing football is about more than just winning and losing.

“Football taught me discipline, courage, responsibility, and leadership,” said Zizzo, a retired real estate attorney and member of the University’s Board of Trustees.

Looking back at his years playing football at Fordham, Zizzo said teamwork was the main ingredient of the Rams’ success. Through the Football Office Challenge with Costantino and Lumelleau, that couldn’t be truer.

“Those kinds of collaborative skills, and working together to succeed in any business or any aspect of life, are very important attributes,” he said. “Student-athletes have to understand what it takes, and playing football teaches you that.”

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Drafted by Canadian Pro Fooball, Senior Follows Father’s Footsteps https://now.fordham.edu/athletics/drafted-by-canadian-pro-fooball-senior-follows-fathers-footsteps/ Wed, 17 May 2017 19:06:32 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=67656 As a child growing up in Hamilton, Ontario, Justin Vaughn dreamed of playing professional football just like his father, a former running back for the Hamilton Tiger Cats of the Canadian Football League.

On May 7, Vaughn’s dream came true. The Rose Hill senior was drafted in the 5th round by the Tiger Cats, as the 38th overall pick in the draft.

“I’m excited to be heading home and playing for my hometown team,” said Vaughn.

At 6-foot-5 and 287 pounds, Vaughn said he’d always been told by friends and family that he had the size to go pro, and his mix of size and athleticism earned him a scholarship offer from Fordham. (He impressed a coach during recruiting by dunking a basketball despite the frame of a defensive lineman.) By his junior season, he was a starter for the Rams, but it was during his senior year last season when he really began to think a pro career could become a reality.

“Senior year is when you realize, man, if I want to keep playing football, I’ve gotta do something. And it just clicked.”

He says his attitude began to change before Fordham played Lafayette on Oct. 8—a game his family had travelled down from Canada to attend.

“That one day, I woke up, and something was just different,” he said. “Like, I want to do well for my little brothers, show them that they can come out of Canada too, and go to the NCAA. I started playing for something more than myself that day, and that just changed my mindset for the rest of the season.” Vaughn recorded five solo tackles in that game (and six overall), and his confidence continued to grow as the season went on and he turned in one stellar performance after the next. “I started realizing, this is actually a real possibility.”

During his senior year, he recorded 40 tackles, including a team-high 11 for a loss, and was named the Rams’ defensive player of the year. His standout play also earned him First-Team All-Patriot League honors. “I didn’t want to let the opportunity slip away from me,” he said. “I just did everything I could on and off the field to be productive and help the team.”

Head football coach Andrew Breiner said that Vaughn “went from a guy that had tools and was told he had the tools necessary to be a great player, to a guy that finally believed.”

“When you see a guy like Justin start to have success, you see his confidence grow.”

Breiner said he was impressed with how Vaughn closed out the season, as the team made its case for a postseason berth that ultimately didn’t materialize. Over the Rams’ final three games, Vaughn tallied 15 tackles, including six in an outstanding performance against Colgate.

Now, as Vaughn enters the next phase of his career, Breiner believes his skill set will translate well to the pro game. “He’s a big guy that’s really athletic, can make explosive movements, and cover ground quickly on the football field. Those guys are hard to find.”

–Joe DeLessio, FCLC ’06

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