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Lafayette College Athletics

Jason Toedter

Jason Toedter is currently serving as the interim head coach of Lafayette men's and women's tennis for the 2025-26 season.

In July 2018, he was named as the head men’s and women’s tennis coach at Muhlenberg College. Both Mule programs showed immediate improvement in Toedter's first year. The men won six matches, their most in 10 years, and were alive for a Centennial Conference playoff berth in the last week of the regular season. The women's squad recorded a pair of wins, including their first league victory in two years.

From 2016-18, Toedter sat at the helm of the fledgling Delaware Valley University tennis programs. He coached the Aggie women to their first-ever MAC Freedom win in 2017.

Toedter returned to his alma mater, Moravian University, to serve as assistant coach for both teams from 2005 to 2007 and associate head coach for women’s tennis from 2010 and 2014. He helped the Greyhound women to the MAC championship and an NCAA Tournament bid in 2007 and the Landmark Conference championship and an NCAA Tournament berth in 2011. In 2014 he was part of the Landmark coaching staff of the year.

Toedter, who was an assistant at Lehigh University for the 2004-05 tennis campaign, additionally has been an instructor at various local clubs. He is a Professional Tennis Registry Certified Instructor and a United States Racquet Stringers Association Certified Stringer.

One of the most successful men’s tennis players in Moravian University history, Toedter was the Middle Atlantic Conference (MAC) champion and player of the year in 2004. A four-time all-league selection, Toedter remains as the all-time wins leader for the Greyhounds with 54. He was named to the MAC 100-Century Team for the 1994-2003 era.

Toedter graduated from Moravian in 2006 with a Bachelor’s in Political Science and a minor in English and Philosophy. He went on to earn his Master’s in Public Policy with a concentration in Labor Market Policy from the Bloustein School of Public Policy at Rutgers University in 2010.


Updated 2/26