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Mook Zimmerman has a long resume filled with plenty of successes as a football coach. Undefeated season. Arena League champions. Arena League Coach of the Year awards. But he says his greatest wins have come off the field.
“I have a lot of wins and losses on the field, but a having young man who I taught how to tie a tie when he was on my middle school team now sending me a video of himself doing it while getting ready for the Senior Prom and singing the song I taught him, that’s a win,” Zimmerman said last week. “I am most proud to have been able to push them to the next level, whether as players or as men. I’m proud that I’ve been able to do that and I’m proud of the young men who have taken it.”
Zimmerman will be looked upon to win both on and off the field again, this time at Putnam Science Academy where he was named last week as the football coach of the new program set to play its first season in the fall of 2024. The 35-year-old Zimmerman was most recently the head coach of the West Virginia Rough Riders of the Arena Pro Football League and the American Arena League.
“The excitement is the challenge,” said Zimmerman, a native of Waterbury. “It’s the challenge of not having all the resources we may need but the school saying, ‘We’re giving you the keys and we’re going to back you and some day we are going to have all those things.’ I’m real big on challenges and I want to make this football program great. I’m excited for the challenge, for the recruiting, and for drawing exposure to Putnam Science and building the student body and fan base across the country.
“Even if we don’t get everybody we recruit nationally right away, our name will be national. I want people to start having it in their heads, just like they do for our basketball, baseball, and soccer programs, that Putnam Science up there in New England is a place we can go to.”
PSA Dean of Athletics Tom Espinosa said starting a football program is, in a word, stressful. But he received quality resumes from candidates across the country. Zimmerman’s stood out though. His extensive experience was one thing. The fact that he is from Connecticut and has New England ties is another. Espinosa appreciated too hearing of the work Zimmerman and his team did in the community. When they met for an interview, Espinosa was sold.
“He just blew me away with his energy, his ideas,” Espinosa said. “His experience speaks for itself. It’ll be great to have someone who has coached at all levels, including professionally. And speaking with his references, one of them was an owner of an arena league team, who talked about how he holds his guys accountable on and off the field. I’m excited to have Mook on board. I really feel comfortable that we got the right guy to build this program.”
After playing collegiately at Sacred Heart University, Zimmerman played professionally in arena leagues in both South and North America. He began his coaching career at Sacred Heart Catholic High School in Waterbury before moving into the arena league, where he led the Rough Riders to an undefeated season and league championship in 2017 when he was named Coach of the Year. He lost just two games the next year, before going undefeated and winning another league title and Coach of the Year award in 2019.
Stephen Nalbandian
Sports Information Director
Putnam Science Academy

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