EAST BRUNSWICK – The late athletic director of the Middlesex County Vocational and Technical Schools (MCVTS) has been honored with a field in his honor.
The baseball field on the MCVTS East Brunswick Campus was renamed Raymond J. Cipperly Field at a ceremony that was held on May 14.
The event featured members of Cipperly’s family, Middlesex County freeholders, representatives of sports organizations, MCVTS administrators and faculty and the members of eight high school baseball and softball teams, according to a statement prepared by the school.
Freeholders Charles Kenny and Kenneth Armwood presented Cipperly’s wife, Susan, and his daughter, Lauren, with a proclamation declaring May 14 Raymond Cipperly Day. They then unveiled a plaque on the side of the third-base dugout designating the new name of the field, according to the statement
Cipperly, a Monroe resident who died Oct. 11 at the age of 66, was an MCVTS employee for 45 years, starting as a physical education teacher and varsity baseball coach in East Brunswick and then serving as athletic director for the district for almost 20 years. He also was the head groundskeeper for the Somerset Patriots professional baseball team from 1999 to 2010, according to the statement.
Cipperly was the Greater Middlesex Conference (GMC) MC Coach of the Year in 1989-90 and a five-time GMC Gold Division Coach of the Year. He received the New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association (NJSIAA) Service Award and was inducted into the New Jersey State Baseball Coaches Hall of Fame in 1990, the statement said.
With the teams lined up around the infield, MCVTS Athletic Director Michael Pede introduced Superintendent of Schools Brian J. Loughlin; Larry White, assistant director of the NJSIAA; Carl Buffalino, president of the GMC; and Frank Noppenberger, a member of the GMC Executive Committee.
“This place will always be special to me because, when I look around, I see him,” Lauren Cipperly said in the statement.
Loughlin praised Cipperly as “a great educator, a great coach and a great human being.” He said, as athletic director, Cipperly increased the number of sports teams in the district and improved the professional development of coaches.
“He raised the bar for our interscholastic sports teams and coaches,” Loughlin said.
Buffalino hailed Cipperly as a founder of the Greater Middlesex Conference. Noppenberger, a friend of Cipperly’s for almost 40 years, said “the GMC wouldn’t have existed without Ray Cipperly.”
“Ray had knack for taking things from the bottom and building them,” Buffalino said. “He put together one of the most beautiful baseball facilities in the state of New Jersey.”
White said the East Brunswick field is “the best in the state at any level.”
The ceremony was followed by a junior varsity softball tournament featuring teams from the East Brunswick Campus, the Perth Amboy Campus, the Piscataway Campus and the Middlesex County Academy for Allied Health and Biomedical Sciences in Woodbridge, and a JV baseball tournament with teams from the East Brunswick, Perth Amboy and Piscataway campuses and Sussex County Tech.