Texas American football coach Dan BaranikBiographical detailsBorn (1962-02-28) February 28, 1962 (age 62)Coaching career (HC unless noted)1984–1985Shippensburg (WR)1987Lock Haven (OLB)1988–1989Maryland (RB)1990Olivet Nazarene (DB)1991–1993Lehigh (WR/TE)1994–2000Waynesburg2001–2004West Point Prep (NY)2005–2008Army (WR)2010Guilford (OC/QB)2011–?Fishburne Military (VA) Head coaching recordOverall32–32 (college)Accomplishments and honorsChampionships1 PAC (1998) Dan Baranik (born February 28, 1962) is an American football coach. He served as the head football coach at Waynesburg University from 1994 to 2000, compiling a record of 32–32.[1] Head coaching record College Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl/playoffs Waynesburg Yellow Jackets (Presidents' Athletic Conference) (1994–2000) 1994 Waynesburg 4–5 2–2 T–2nd 1995 Waynesburg 5–4 2–2 3rd 1996 Waynesburg 2–7 2–3 4th 1997 Waynesburg 5–4 3–2 3rd 1998 Waynesburg 5–4 3–1 T–1st 1999 Waynesburg 5–4 2–2 3rd 2000 Waynesburg 6–4 2–2 3rd Waynesburg: 32–32 16–14 Total: 32–32 National championship Conference title Conference division title or championship game berth References ^ "Waynesburg's Baranik leaving for West Point". USA Today. June 26, 2011. Retrieved August 16, 2011. External links Guilford profile Archived 2015-12-10 at the Wayback Machine Waynesburg Yellow Jackets head football coaches Thomas D. Whittles (1895) Unknown (1896) William B. Seaman (1897) Unknown (1898–1900) No team (1901) Unknown (1902–1906) Harrison Kauffman (1907) Unknown (1908) Edward Martin (1909) Clemence W. Frietag (1910) F. "Doc" Van Doren (1911) Unknown (1912) Hook (1913) Unknown (1914) Garrett (1915) Edward H. McCleary (1916) No team (1917–1920) Frank N. Wolf (1921–1922) Red Roberts (1923) Britain Patterson (1924) Katy Easterday (1925–1927) Frank N. Wolf (1928–1941) Mark L. Booth (1942) No team (1943–1945) Asa G. Wiley (1946) Stan Keck (1947–1950) John F. Wiley (1951–1954) John Popovich (1955–1958) Peter Mazzaferro (1959–1962) Mike Scarry (1963–1965) Carl DePasqua (1966–1967) Darrell Lewis (1968–1972) Hayden Buckley (1973–1982) William Tornabene (1983–1986) Ty Clarke (1987–1993) Dan Baranik (1994–2000) Jeff Hand (2001–2004) Rick Shepas (2005–2016) Chris Smithley (2017–2021) Cornelius Coleman (2022– )