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University of California - Davis

UC Davis Athletics
Hickey Gym 264 - One Shields Avenue Davis, CA 95616
Division 1 California Southwest
Public Very Large National competitor

Coaches

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Dwayne Shaffer

HONORS & AWARDS


2019 Big West Conference Coach of the Year


2017 United Soccer Coaches Far West Region Coaching Staff of the Year


2017 Big West Conference Coach of the Year


2007 Big West Conference Coach of the Year


With more than two decades of experience guiding the Aggies to consistent success both on and off the field, the 2023 season is UC Davis head coach Dwayne Shaffer’s 27th at the helm of the men’s soccer program.


In April 2022, Shaffer signed a three-year extension that will keep him on the sideline at Aggie Soccer Field through the 2025 season.


In 2021, Shaffer led the Aggies in their return to play after the 2020 season was canceled by the Big West Conference due to the COVID-19 pandemic. UC Davis went 9-10-1 and advanced to the Big West Conference Tournament semifinals, defeating CSU Bakersfield 3-1 in the quarterfinal round.


It marked the fourth straight season Shaffer led the Aggies to at least the semifinal round, a stretch that includes three championship game appearances.


Seven Aggies picked up All-Big West Conference honors under Shaffer's watch in 2021 with Maximilian Arfsten named the Big West Conference Offensive Player of the Year and Robert Mejia named the Big West Conference Midfielder of the Year. Jake Haupt joined those two on the All-Big West First Team, Max Glasser made the second team and Grant Fidler and Andy Velasquez were honorable mentions. Turner Humphrey rounded out the group with a selection to the all-freshman team.


Prior to the Big West canceling the 2020 season, from 2017-19 no Big West team won more overall games than Shaffer's squads. In each year, UC Davis earned a berth in the championship game of the Big West Tournament, and battled for a coveted spot in the NCAA's College Cup.


In 2019, following the program's third Big West regular season title, the Aggies entered the league's playoff as the event's No. 1 seed, and used that home field advantage to earn their inaugural Big West Tournament crown. This marked the first time in program history that UC Davis won the league's double by winning its regular season and Big West Tournament championships.


That victory led to UC Davis clinching the conference's automatic berth at the NCAA Tournament, a First Round bye as the event's No. 14 seed and the first home NCAA Division I Tournament Second Round game in program history when the Big West champions faced Louisville.


Competing in an always difficult Big West Conference, the Aggies posted the second-highest conference win total (61) among all Big West schools. During that span, they have 18 wins and eight draws against nationally ranked competition -- including six results against top-10 competition -- and victories over eventual NCAA semifinalists UCLA in 2011 and New Mexico in 2013.


Shaffer’s career has been highlighted by recruiting and developing top student-athletes since taking over the position in 1997. The three-time Big West Conference Coach of the Year (2007, '17 and '19) led the Aggies to four NCAA Tournament appearances -- including a pair in the program’s first two seasons of eligibility at the Division I level in 2007 and 2008 -- saw two of his student-athletes become Major League Soccer professionals (Mark Schulte and Quincy Amarikwa) and another four — Ryan Shaw, Roy Boateng, Wallis Lapsley and Nabi Kibunguchy — drafted by MLS teams.


Throughout his tenure at UC Davis, Shaffer coached four All-Americans, helped 22 players earn 28 All-Far West Region awards, and 26 first-team all-conference laurels.


In the classroom, men’s soccer student-athletes earned 16 Academic All-District awards, with five of those going on to earn Academic All-America honors. Highlighting that list is two-time Academic All-American Mustafa Chopin (2011-12) and a pair of recipients of the prestigious NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship in Academic All-American Matt DeJong (2000-01) and two-time Academic All-District award winner Brian Ford (2014-15).


Leading the only program to make the Big West Tournament in each of the last nine seasons -- including a North Division title and an appearance in the championship match in 2012, 2017, 2018, and 2019 -- Shaffer was named the conference’s Coach of the Year in 2007 after leading the Aggies to a 12-5-3 overall record, a 7-3-2 mark in conference play, and an NCAA berth in the program’s first official Division I campaign, falling to Bay Area rival California, 2-1, after two overtimes.


The next year, Shaffer led the Aggies to a program Division I-record 13 wins and a trip to the second round of the NCAA Tournament, defeating Denver at home for their first postseason win before falling to No. 14 Michigan, 2-1, in the following round.


In 2017, UC Davis posted a league-high 11 victories overall and a 7-2-1 mark in Big West play to clinch the North Division title by seven points over UC Santa Barbara. In recognition of their accomplishments, Shaffer and his staff of associate head coach Jason Hotaling and assistant coach Chris Leer, were named the United Soccer Coach’s Far West Region Coaching Staff of the Year at the end of the season.


In 2019, the Aggies won their first Big West double by capturing regular season and tournament crowns, competed in their first NCAA Division I Tournament home game, and matched two program records: most D-I victories in a single season with 13 overall (tying the 2008 squad) and five wins against Big West teams (2014).


Individually, the program earned a collective 81 All-Big West honors, including Offensive Player of the Year in Amarikwa in 2008, Midfielder of the Year Dylan Curtis in 2008, Goalkeepers of the Year Omar Zeenni in 2013 and Wallis Lapsley in 2019, Freshman of the Year Matt Wiesenfarth in 2011 and Defender of the Year Roy Boateng in 2017. The eight All-Big West selections and the three first team honorees in 2017 were the most in the program’s history until the 2019 campaign when the Aggies earned 10 All-Big West awards, including three First Team honors.


In addition, Amarikwa and Curtis went on to earn Division I All-America honors in 2008 -- making UC Davis one of just six schools to have multiple All-America selections that season -- while eight student-athletes earned United Soccer Coaches (formerly known as the NSCAA) All-Far West Region laurels since that season, an esteemed list that includes Wallis Lapsley in 2019 (second team), Roy Boateng (second team) and Nabi Kibunguchy (third team) in 2017. Curtis was also named a 2008 Lowe’s Senior CLASS Award First-Team Senior All-America selection.


Professionally, Shaffer helped numerous student-athletes earn professional contracts or invitations to MLS training camps.


Aggie Soccer Field has become one of the toughest for opponents to play in, as shown by a nine game win-streak the Aggies posted from Oct. 27, 2007 until Sept. 13, 2009. Over the past 12 seasons, Shaffer’s teams have posted a big 61-31-18 (.636) home mark and were unbeaten at home during the entire 2008 campaign (7-0-3) and 2019 regular season (5-0-1). The seven wins at home in 2017 matched the 2008 squad for the most victories at Aggie Soccer Field in the program’s Division I history; a total the 2019 roster equaled by winning five regular season and two playoff games on its home turf.


In his career at UC Davis, Shaffer’s teams have nearly averaged double-digit wins and have compiled an overall record of 241-191-62 (.554). He picked up his 200th career coaching win on Sept. 8, 2017, against Loyola Marymount and his 200th win with the Aggies against Sacramento State on Oct. 29, 2017 — both of those coming in front of the hometown crowd.


In the Aggies’ last six years in the California Collegiate Athletic Association, Shaffer guided the team to two first-place and four second-place finishes. In 1999, he led the program to a school-record 16 victories and the school’s first appearance in the NCAA Tournament quarterfinals in 23 years. That year, he was named CCAA Coach of the Year as well as the NSCAA West Region Coach of the Year.


The Aggies set a program record in 1999 by going unbeaten in 13 consecutive games.


In 2006, the university’s final year of the Div. I transition, Shaffer’s program proved itself worthy of collegiate soccer’s highest level. The Aggies won nine games, including a 1-0 victory over the year’s eventual NCAA champion, UC Santa Barbara. That win also served as a milestone for Shaffer -- it was his 100th at UC Davis.


Prior to coming to UC Davis, Shaffer spent one season as the head coach at Dayton, where he recruited future MLS player Mark Schulte. Four more of his players were drafted by the A-League. Shaffer’s season at Dayton followed a three-year stint as assistant head coach at Clemson, where he helped guide the Tigers to a 47-18-3 record and second-round appearances in the NCAA Div. I tournament. On two occasions, Clemson was ranked the No. 1 team in the nation. At Clemson, Shaffer helped recruit and coach a total of nine players who would go on to play in the MLS. He also helped mentor the nation’s leading scorer in 1993 and 1994.


Prior to Clemson, he served four years as head coach at Santa Rosa Junior College where his teams won 52 games. Shaffer coached two All-Americans in his four-year stint at Santa Rosa JC. He also coached the leading scorer in the state as well as the most valuable player of the Northern California region.


Shaffer’s standout collegiate playing career, which featured a .795 winning percentage, began at Santa Rosa JC where he was named all-conference and led the team to a two-year record of 39-7-2 and a pair of conference championships. As a sophomore, Shaffer played central defender on a unit that allowed just seven goals in 24 games, including 13 consecutive shutouts. Following Santa Rosa, he went on to play two seasons at Chico State and helped lead the Wildcats to a 29-9-2 record and an NCAA Div. II Tournament appearance as a junior. He has also served as a Region IV Olympic Development Program staff member.


Shaffer earned his bachelor’s degree and his master’s in physical education with a teaching/coaching emphasis from Chico State in 1988. He enjoys fishing, watching and supporting Major League Soccer. Shaffer and his wife, Lara, have two daughters: Shay and Skye.

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Jason Hotaling

A veteran of the Aggie Soccer Field sidelines, associate head coach Jason Hotaling returns for his 18th season overall with the Aggies in 2022. Elevated to his current position in April of 2014, Hotaling’s duties include coordinating the program’s recruiting efforts, team travel and scouting, while also leading the development of UC Davis’ goalkeepers.


Under Hotaling's watch, UC Davis keepers have posted a combined save percentage over .700 in three straight seasons.


“Jason has been on my staff for many years, working his way up from a volunteer assistant to his new position as the associate head coach,” head coach Dwayne Shaffer said. “He has been instrumental in the development of our outstanding goalkeepers throughout the years and will now assume more responsibility in helping take our program to the next level.”


Hotaling has helped engineer the Aggies’ successful transition to the Division I level and the always difficult Big West Conference, helping lead UC Davis to a consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances in 2007 (first round) and 2008 (second round), and another appearance in 2019 (second round). With Hotaling on staff, UC Davis earned eight consecutive trips to the Big West Tournament, winning the conference’s North Division and a spot into the tournament’s championship match in 2012, 2017, 2018, and 2019. The Aggies advanced to the semifinals in 2011, 2013, 2015, and 2021.


In 2021 with Hotaling on staff, UC Davis returned from a one-year competition absence due to the Big West Conference canceling the 2020 season due to the COVID-19 pandemic and went 9-10-1. The Aggies advanced to the Big West Conference Tournament semifinal, defeating CSU Bakersfield in the quarterfinals to get there. Goalkeeper Derrek Chan posted four shutouts and both Chan and Charles Janssen both had save percentages over .700.


In addition, the Aggies welcomed a 10-member signing class that comes in ready to contribute immediately to the 2022 squad.


UC Davis enjoyed a historic season in 2019, one that saw it win both Big West championships — regular season and the league’s year-end tournament — for the first time in program history, earn a bye and a No. 14 ranking in the NCAA Division I Men’s Soccer Tournament. Men’s soccer also recorded a historic accomplishment that season when it hosted Louisville in Aggie Soccer Field’s inaugural Second Round Tournament match.


With all-region standout Wallis Lapsley in goal, the Aggies’ defense allowed a paltry 13 goals throughout the championship campaign — one of the lowest totals in the nation, among all Division I teams, and in program history. Not only did men’s soccer match a program record with its 13 overall victories, its seven home wins also tie a program-best figure.


Under his tutelage, the Aggies earned a collective 81 All-Big West awards, including 15 first-team honorees. In only its second full season of play at the Division I level, Hotaling also helped tutor a pair of NSCAA All-Americans in 2008, as Quincy Amarikwa and Dylan Curtis earned second- and third-team honors, respectively.


Six other student-athletes: Amarikwa (2008), Dylan Curtis (2008), Brian Ford (2012), Omar Zeenni (2013), Roy Boateng (2017), Nabi Kibunguchy (2017) and Lapsley (2019) were named to the NSCAA All-Far West Region squad during his time on the sidelines, including first-team honors for Amarikwa and Curtis in their respective seasons.


In net, Hotaling has coached some of the Aggies best goalkeepers, including UC Davis’ first Big West Conference Goalkeeper of the Year honoree in Zeenni following the 2013 season, and Lapsley, who received this award in 2019.


With Hotaling as the Aggies' goalkeepers coach, Lapsley ended his senior season with one of the highest shutout totals and lowest goals against averages in the nation, and added his name to numerous all-time and Division I-era lists within the program’s records book.


The 2008 season saw goalkeeper Ryan McCowan allow a program Division I record-low 20 goals (while leading the Big West with a 0.87 GAA), a mark that was later equalled in 2012 behind the combined efforts of Zeenni and Kris Schlutz (eventually topped by Lapsley in 2019), while his keepers have posted a sub-1.00 team goals against average on three occasions, including in two of the last three seasons. The Aggies’ goalkeepers have also stopped better than 70 percent of the shots against them six times, including a Division I-record .780 in 2012.


In addition to his duties at UC Davis, Hotaling is the Davis Legacy Soccer Club’s director of goalkeeping and has worked with the PDP program in District 6. He currently holds an advanced national coaching license and a national goalkeeper license with the NSCAA, and has taken leadership and management courses along the way.


After his collegiate playing career at Santa Rosa Junior College and Chico State, Hotaling was a member of the Chico Rooks of the Premier Development League. He then returned to his hometown of Rohnert Park, Calif., where he finished his undergraduate degree at Sonoma State in 1997. Hotaling majored in speech communication with a minor in English.

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Elliott Hord

Assistant Coach

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