Staff Directory
Rosenbaum, Mark

Mark Rosenbaum
- Title:
- Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks Coach
- E-Mail:
QUICK FACTS ON MARK ROSENBAUM |
• helped lead Princeton to undefeated 2018 season, top-ranked offense in the Ivy League |
• moved to quarterbacks coach/recruiting coordinator in 2019; Promoted to Offensive Coordinator for 2024 season |
• coached Jesper Horsted to Ivy League Offensive Player of the Year finalist honor |
• coached two All-Ivy League receivers in 2018 (Horsted, Stephen Carlson) |
• spent two seasons working with wide receivers at Rutgers |
• named Team MVP as a quarterback at Susquehanna |
PRINCETON RECRUITING AREAS — Arizona, Colorado, Utah, Wyoming, New Jersey (Hunterdon, Warren, Somerset), New York (Long Island, Westchester County, New York City)
Mark Rosenbaum is coaching his eighth season with Princeton in 2025.
Rosenbaum coached three All-Ivy honorees in 2024 in Tommy Matheson, Nicholas Hilliard and John Volker. Volker finished fifth in the Ivy League in rushing (57.1 yards per game), and he capped his career in style, rushing for 130 yards, including a 75-yard touchdown, in a season-ending win over Penn.
Jalen Travis '24 was selected in the fourth round of the 2025 NFL Draft by the Indianapolis Colts.
Travis (127th overall) is the highest selection of a Princeton football player in the modern NFL Draft era surpassing Seth DeValve who was picked 138th overall in the fourth round of the 2016 draft by the Cleveland Browns.
The Tigers recorded 10 All-Ivy selections with Ozzie Nicholas and Liam Nicholas earning First-Team accolades in 2023. Travis, in addition to second-team All-Ivy honors, collected the 2024 Coach Wooden Citizenship Cup and won the Princeton University Art Lane ’34 Cup. Blake Stenstrom earned an invitation to the Philadelphia Eagles' rookie minicamp.
Princeton went 8-2 and was in contention for the Ivy League title into the final week of the 2022 regular season. The Tigers had 16 All-Ivy selections tied for second-most at Princeton since 2013. The Tigers had the No. 1 passing offense (274.2) and No. 2 scoring offense (27.6) in the Ivy League.
The 2021 season saw Princeton go 9-1 and earn an Ivy League title, its third in five seasons. The Tigers had 16 All-Ivy selections including 10 first-team honorees, a program record. The offense ranked first in the Ivy League in scoring (33.4), second in passing offense (265.5), second in passing efficiency (147.0) and third in total offense (392.4).
In 2018, the Tigers set an Ivy League record for points scored (470), and they produced the program's first perfect season since 1964. Rosenbaum coached a pair of All-Ivy League players in Jesper Horsted and Stephen Carlson. Horsted set Princeton career records in both catches and touchdown receptions, and he was named a finalist for Ivy League Offensive Player of the Year honors — an award that went to teammate John Lovett.
Horsted and Carlson combined for 133 catches for 1730 yards and 18 touchdowns during the 2018 Ivy championship season. Horsted ended his career by catching three touchdowns and rushing for a fourth, which earned FCS National Player of the Week honors.
Prior to Princeton, Rosenbaum spent two seasons primarily working with the wide receivers at Rutgers. Previous to that, he coached wide receivers at Moravian College.
Rosenbaum previously worked at his alma mater, Susquehanna, as an offseason student assistant from Nov. 2010 to March 2014. He was a four-year letterwinner for the Crusaders as a quarterback and named Team MVP as a senior after completing 87-of-132 passes for 1,129 yards with eight touchdowns.
Rosenbaum graduated from Susquehanna in 2014 with a double major in finance and economics. He is originally from Long Valley, N.J.
PVC Student-Athlete Welcome BBQ (Fall 2025)
Friday, September 12
Ally Murphy's Goal vs. Villanova, 9-11-25
Thursday, September 11
Women's Soccer Highlights at Miami, 9-4-25
Thursday, September 04
Inside Training Camp: Princeton Football 2025
Thursday, September 04