Sarah Hogan’s journey from Long Island to the Washington Commanders

Sarah Hogan was an eighth-grader at Merrick Avenue Middle School in the fall of 1995 when she and her best friend Jessamyn McIntyre came up with an idea. Their track season had just been postponed until the spring and they didnât have a sport to play so they decided to try out for a new pursuit.
Football.
This was long before flag football was an option for girls, and a little before it became more common for females to participate in boys sports. Still, the coaches said they could give it a try.
âBut the guys didnât want us to play,â she said of her would-be teammates. âThey didnât want to tackle us. So we decided to run cross-country instead.
âThat stinks,â she added, still miffed by the lost opportunity.
She may not have played, but that experience did not stop her from a lifetime spent in the sport. And on Sunday, Hogan will get yet another opportunity to scoff at that three-decade-old slight. Sheâll spend her day on the sideline and in the booth at the NFC Championship Game in Philadelphia as the coaching chief of staff for the Commanders, the right-hand person for head coach Dan Quinn, one win away from reaching the Super Bowl.
Sarah Hogan at Washington Commanders training camp with Colonel Greg Gadson. Credit: Washington Commanders
âItâs incredible,â she told Newsday this week of being so close to footballâs biggest stage. âItâs been a really incredible season with a lot of amazing people. Donât make me cry. But itâs been awesome, it really has been. And itâs not over yet.â
Hoganâs job is to make sure all the other coaches and departments are in line with Quinnâs goals and expectations. As a first-year head coach in an organization with a lot of newness, from ownership to management to quarterback, thatâs a really important job ⊠even if Hogan downplays it.
âIt was not hard for everybody to buy into what DQ was doing,â she said. âHe is just such a good person and he has such a great vision, I think it was kind of a shock to everyone to have that sort of a leader come in no matter if you were new or already here. The players especially, to see this person bring everyone together and have this mentality of brotherhood, everybody bought in so quickly and it helped. There were no outliers pushing against the grain. Everybody wants to be on the same track moving all together and all living it together.â
Did she think it would happen as quickly as it has?
âNothing is out of the question with this group, man,â Hogan said.
‘Closest-knit group’ at Hofstra
Football was in Hoganâs blood long before she took this job. Her father is Greg Gigantino, the long-time college coach who was the defensive coordinator at Hofstra from 1990-97 and then returned from 2001-05. Thatâs where she met Quinn, who was a defensive line coach on those staffs. Itâs also where she found her love for the sport.
âShe grew up with it,â said Gigantino, who still coaches and is the defensive coordinator at Division III Massachusetts Maritime. âShe always said all her uncles were all the guys I coached with and all the players that I coached.â
Quinn isnât the only familiar face from those days along for this ride with the Commanders. Dave Gardi, who grew up in Sayville and whose father Joe was the head coach at Hofstra, is also on the teamâs staff. Gardi serves as the senior vice president of football initiatives, which is a fancy title for being Quinnâs consigliere. He is on the headsets and talks Quinn through strategies and rule interpretations during the games.
âThere were probably many times in that tenure when DQ was the defensive coordinator [at Hofstra]Â and I was on the headset with him back then,â Gardi said of often wearing the apparatus while his father was coaching. âFast forward to 2024 and I think we just have a rapport and a calmness to our back-and-forth that helps both of us during the game. We just kind of manage the game together. I help him with decision-making, clock management, challenges, etc. But itâs his show. Iâm just there to provide some resources and walk him through some things during the game.â
Commanders senior VP of football initiatives Dave Gardi, right, with his son, Chase, at the team’s minicamp in spring 2024. Credit: Washington Commanders/Emilee Fails
Hogan has been working with and for teams since she began helping out in the football office at James Madison as an undergraduate. For Gardi, this season is a new adventure. He spent the previous 21 seasons in the NFL office, the last 10 as senior vice president of football operations. His jobs ranged from embedding with teams during their Super Bowl runs (he was with the Giants when they won Super Bowl XLVI in Indianapolis) to most recently working with officials and editing the NFLâs rule book.
âI probably could have been a lifer at the NFL,â he said. âThat was where my career was headed. And then [Quinn]Â presented this unique opportunity to be involved and wear a lot of hats too. I believe in him as a leader. I was sold. I was ready for something to energize me and this certainly has.â
The fact that it could serve as a sort of Hofstra outpost in the NFL was significant, too. While Hofstra shuttered its football team in 2009, it still has plenty of alumni and former coaches in high profile positions in the business, from Quinn to Falcons head coach Raheem Morris to Texas offensive coordinator Kyle Flood.
The team may be gone but the legacy of the program lives.
âThat staff at Hofstra, all those years in the 1990s, we were the closest-knit group,â Hogan said. âI can still remember almost every person on every single year of the staff. DQ was one of those guys in that big Hofstra football family. We still, all of us, stay in touch with each other. Itâs incredible the family that still exists within a program that doesnât exist.â
âI wish my dad was still alive,â Gardi said (Joe died in June 2010). âI miss not being able to talk to him about this stuff, me coming here and the craziness of how that all happened, but I know heâd be really proud of the whole group.â
All in the family
Both Hogan and Gardi still have links to Long Island. Hogan went to Sacred Heart Academy in Hempstead for two years of high school before her family moved to Ithaca when her father took a job at Cornell in 1998, but her sister Laura Siddons lives in Islip and her brother Charles Gigantino lives in Freeport. Gardiâs mother, Audrey, is still in Sayville and his mother-in-law is in Garden City.
âMom watches our games,â he said. âShe claims Iâm going to give her cardiac arrest because of the way we are winning some of these games. Iâm like âMom, you donât have to watch.â But sheâs all in on us right now and enjoying it.â
So is Hoganâs family.
âSheâs picking up the pieces for me,â Greg Gigantino said. âSheâs where I always wanted to go. I always wanted to coach in the NFL but it never happened. So this is exciting. Iâm keeping my fingers crossed. Weâll see if we can get one more game and see what happens.â
Sarah Hogan, far right, with the Washington Commanders’Â 2024 Bill Walsh fellows at training camp. Credit: Washington Commanders/Emilee Fails
The two with Long Island roots have also thought about what it might be like to win Sundayâs game and get to the Super Bowl with a first-year staff, first-year front office, first-year quarterback, first-year just about everything. Hogan was on Quinnâs staff in Atlanta when the Falcons went to Super Bowl LI and lost to the Patriots.
For Gardi, it could be a familiar setting, too, but one seen from a different perspective. Heâs worked about 20 previous Super Bowls as a league employee.
âI feel like I know how the sausage is made when it comes to how the Super Bowl operates,â he said. âIâve seen them from every angle. But this thing is kind of surreal right now and to possibly have that experience and be involved in it that way? Itâs gonna be pretty damn cool.â
When Hogan was still working with the Falcons before she took the job with the Commanders last offseason, the team came back to the area to play the Jets in a 2022 preseason game. During that night the Jets honored local championship girls flag football teams from the region. One of them was the Bellmore-Merrick team, the same school district where Hogan had wanted to play but didnât.
âI was crying seeing that,â she said. âWhat could have been if they had had that back in the 1990s.â
Now, all these years later, Hogan is just a few weeks away from possibly earning a championship for the Commanders, for Long Island, for a dormant Hofstra program, and for the eighth-grade girl who just wanted to play football.
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