Only four coaches in Ocean City High School history have won more games in a single sport than Craig. Two of them (Trish LeFever & Phil Birnbaum) are in the OCHS Hall of Fame and the other two (John Bruno & Paul Baruffi) are not eligible for induction yet. Craig's teams won 360 games, including 154 in his last nine years. His teams won seven titles in the Cape-Atlantic League and the school's first two South Jersey championships in baseball. He also established the annual spring training trip to Florida in his final nine years. After retiring as head coach and teacher, he remains a volunteer assistant with the Raiders.
Coaches Hall of Fame
To nominate a former Red Raider for the OCHS Athletic Hall of Fame, use this Nomination Form.
Coach Craig Mensinger (Baseball - Inducted 2021)
Coach Bill Moreland (Cross Country & Track - Inducted 2021)
Bill's boys cross-country teams won 281 meets, the most in school history, and his 336 total wins (including girls track) is the ninth most by an Ocean City High School coach in any sports. His boys cross country teams won 24 county championships in 29 years, eight titles in the Cape-Atlantic League, a pair of South Jersey crowns and two second place finishes in the state meet. His girls track teams won eight county championships in his eight seasons as head coach. Since retiring, Bill has continued to work regularly with OCHS distance runners.
Coach Bill Nickles (Wrestling - Inducted 2021)
Bill basically established the Ocean City High School wrestling program. His teams won 311 matches in 31 seasons. He coached 41 district champions, six region champions and two-time state champion Patrick Lynch. During his tenure, OCHS finished in the top 5 at the district championships 21 times, including a district team title and five second place finishes. Bill also coached two of the four Ocean City teams that qualified for the NJSIAA Team Tournament, including the team that advanced to the quarterfinals in 2002.
Tom Williams (Sportscasting - Inducted 2021)
Tom first covered Ocean City High School sports in November of 1961 for the Sentinel-Ledger. His play-by-play coverage began in 1964. Through the years, his coverage has also appeared in the Philadelphia Inquirer, the Ocean City Gazette and, currently, online at OceanCitySports.com. His play-by-play has been heard on many radio stations and currently on live video streaming on PrimeEvents.net. Tom has been inducted into the South Jersey Football and Basketball Halls of Fame and was named New Jersey's Sportscaster of the Year 10 times, the most in the state's history.
Coach Gary Degenhardt (Football - Inducted 2019)
After investing many seasons as an assistant football coach at OCHS, Gary became the head coach in 1991. He had two losing seasons in his first three, sandwiched around a Cape-Atlantic League champion, but things started to happen in 1994. He put together a string of eight straight winning seasons that produced five CAL champions and three South Jersey champions. That included the 1996 team, inducted into the OCHS Sports Hall of Fame in 2018, that finished 11-0 and won the South Jersey Group 4 title by outscoring two opponents, 75-14. The team was ranked No. 1 in South Jersey, No. 3 in the state and No. 8 in the East by USA Today. Gary finished his career with a school record 101 wins, the 10th highest total in CAL history.
Coach Trish LeFever (Field Hockey - Inducted 2018)
Trish started field hockey at Ocean City High School and built it into one of the school's most successful sports programs and one of the finest field hockey programs in South Jersey. In 28 seasons her teams were 486-76 with 54 ties. They won 13 Cape-Atlantic League championships, nine South Jersey championships and seven state titles. During one stretch, her teams reached the South Jersey championship game in 11 of 13 seasons. LeFever's 486 victories are the most by any coach in any sport in Ocean City High School history. She has previously been selected to many coaching and field hockey Halls of Fame.
Coach Mike Pellegrino (Soccer - Inducted 2018)
Mike helped elevate boys soccer, not only at Ocean City High School but in the Cape-Atlantic League as CAL teams enjoyed more success throughout South Jersey. In 12 years as the head coach at OCHS, Mike's soccer teams were 228-35 with 19 ties. They won 10 CAL championships, seven South Jersey crowns and either won or shared four state championships. His teams reached the South Jersey final 10 times. He also coached two teams - in 2005 and 2007 - to the championship of the prestigious South Jersey Soccer Coaches Invitational Tournament. Those two championships are equal to the number of Coaches Tournament titles won by all the other schools in the CAL, combined, as of 2017. Mike has previously been inducted into numerous Halls of Fame.
Coach Phil Birnbaum(Tennis - Inducted 2017)
Phil came to OCHS after a successful tennis career at Glassboro State College. He became head coach of the boys tennis team in 1970 and compiled a 441-205 record in 31 years, including 10 Cape-Atlantic League titles and five South Jersey championships. He also became the girls tennis coach in 1986, compiling a 221-101 record in 15 seasons, winning four more South Jersey titles. His overall total of 662 wins is the most by any OCHS coach in any sport. After retiring as a high school coach, Phil started the womens tennis program at Stockton University where his teams were 49-19 in the NJAC. The longtime director of Ocean City's summer tennis program, Birnbaum has won numerous Coach of the Year awards in high school and college.
Coach Ralph Carson (Golf - Inducted 2017)
Colman was a two-way football star for the Red Raiders. He amassed 1,272 yards rushing in his career as a linebacker. Colman was named South Jersey Defensive Player of the Year in 1990. Colman continued his career in college the NFL where he appeared in Super Bowl XXXIV.
Coach Jack Boyd (Football - Inducted 2002)
His teams won 227 games, also winning the South Jersey Group 2 championship in 1971-72 and Cape-Atlantic League title in 1972-73. His teams also lost in CAL playoffs in 1969 and 1983. Boyd won 20 state tournament games and he coached 381 games, setting a record for a boys basketball coach at OCHS. He took over when Dixie Howell retired in 1968.
Coach Mike Naples (Track - Inducted 2002)
Slaveski became head coach in 1969. It took a few years but his 1972 team was 8-1, starting a string of winning seasons and a 28-9 record over his final four seasons. When he stepped down as head coach, Slaveski's record was 36-26-1. But he developed a systematic approach to Ocean City football that had an influence on all four of his successors - Ed Woolley, Tony Galante, Wayne Colman and Gary Degenhardt.
Coach Pat Dougherty (Basketball - Inducted in 1990)
Dougherty finished her remarkable career with a 269-65 record, including 119 straight victories and nine CAL championships in 14 seasons. She came to OCHS from Atlantic City, her alma mater, where she was head coach for two seasons. Her 1978-79 team won the South Jersey championship in their fourth straight appearance in the final, but lost in the state final to Paramus Catholic, led by 6-7 Anne Donovan, a two-time Olympic gold medalist.
Coach Dixie Howell (Basketball - Inducted 1989)
Over 16 seasons, Dixie's basketball teams won two state championships, three South Jersey titles and nine CAL crowns. His teams were 277-69, including 48 straight wins and eight consecutive league championships, still a record for the CAL's National Conference. Howell's baseball teams were 122-41 over 11 seasons from the mid-50s to the mid-60s, when he was succeeded by Fred Haack. His .748 won-lost percentage is the best in OCHS baseball history and his clubs won a half-dozen CAL championships. Dixie went on to become Ocean City's first Director of Athletics.
Coach Fenton Carey(Football, Swimming, Track & Basketball - Inducted 1989)
Carey, a player at Ocean City in the 1930s, coached football for 10 seasons, winning 61 games and losing just 26. He got off to a great start, winning 31 games over his first four seasons. His coaching career was interrupted for one year when he spent 1951 on active duty with the US Navy. The high school's field at Sixth Street was re-named in honor of Carey and his brothers, John and Lou, in the 1980s. Carey brought swimming back to OCHS in 1956, resuming a full schedule in 1958, and promptly guided the Raiders to new heights. His teams had 11 consecutive winning seasons. Overall, he was 115-33 as a swim coach, mostly against big schools from throughout the Delaware Valley. Carey's swim teams also won five relay titles and two New Jersey Seaboard championships. His track teams were 52-13 with seven CAL titles. And his basketball teams were 41-17 with one league title.