Moustafa Hamada enters his third season as Trinity College Head Men’s Squash Coach for the 2025-26 season.
During his tenure at Trinity, Hamada has coached six All-American selections, 11 New England Small College Athletic Conference (NESCAC) All-Conference honorees, and back-to-back NESCAC Players of the Year in Mohamed Sharaf (2024) and Joachim Chuah Han Wen (2025).
Last season, the Bantams logged a 13-4 record en route to their 18th straight NESCAC Men’s Squash Championship. The Bantams earned a berth in the CSA Potter Cup National Championship Tournament, defeating the University of Virginia (7-2) in the Quarterfinals before falling to the University of Pennsylvania, 9-0, in the Semifinals. Hamada and his staff received NESCAC Coaching Staff of the Year honors for the second straight season.
In his first season, Trinity posted a 19-1 record, including a 9-0 victory over Tufts in the NESCAC Men’s Squash Championship match for the program’s 17th conference crown. The Bantams advanced to the Potter Cup Finals for the 24th time in program history, but fell to UPenn, 7-1. Hamada became the second coach in program history to earn NESCAC Coach of the Year honors
Hamada, a former Trinity captain who helped the Bantams win two CSA National titles, returned to Trinity as an assistant coach in the spring of 2022 and played a pivotal role in the Bantams' CSA National Team Championship runner-up finish. Hamada previously served as an assistant men's squash coach at Princeton University from 2018 to 2022, helping the Tigers finish among the nation's top eight teams each year and he has coached numerous top-level clubs and teams of all ages, including stints with both the United States National Team and the Egyptian National Team.
Hamada earned his bachelor's degree from Trinity in 2015 as a political science major, and was a four-year starter for the Bantam men's squash squad. He helped Trinity win four NESCAC titles, National crowns in 2013 and 2015, and is tied for seventh all-time at the college with 66 career wins against just 12 losses.