In 1996, as a fifth-year senior at the University of Virginia, Jeremy Raley was named first-team All-Atlantic Coast Conference and started his fourth straight bowl game. He’d become a mainstay in a perennially successful program and was in no hurry to put away his helmet and shoulder pads.
“I had an agent and went through all the workouts and had a desire to continue to play football, but it just did not work out like I thought it was going to,” Raley recalled. “On the second day of the draft, the agent called me and said, ‘Jeremy, don’t worry. You didn’t get drafted, but we’re going to get you into free agency somewhere.’”
Raley laughed. “He still hasn’t called me back. So I probably didn’t make the best choice of an agent, but things happen for a reason. And I’m here where I’m supposed to be right now.”
The 48-year-old Raley is in his seventh year as superintendent of public schools in Goochland County, which is located between Richmond and Charlottesville. He and his wife, the former Cindy Stotler, were married in July 1992, before Raley’s second year at UVA. They have two children: a daughter who’s a sophomore at Virginia Tech; and a son who’s a senior at Goochland High School.
“I’m a very lucky man,” Raley said. “I’m truly blessed, there’s no doubt about it.”
He grew up in Cumberland, Maryland, where he starred at Fort Hill High School. Most people in his hometown pulled for the University of Maryland or West Virginia University in football. Raley rooted for Penn State – until one of UVA’s assistant coaches, Bob Petchel, began recruiting him, Raley said, “I didn’t know that there was a University of Virginia. It was just another school to me until I had the opportunity to come down and visit. It was a really great match, because I had the opportunity to get an amazing education, and at the time the depth chart was a little thin and I had the opportunity to potentially play early. It all worked out.”
When he enrolled at UVA, Raley thought he might become a physical therapist. But UVA head coach George Welsh periodically brought in guest speakers to talk to his team about different majors at UVA, and at one meeting Raley heard from a representative of what was then known as the Curry School of Education (now the School of Education and Human Development). Raley had redshirted in 1992, and he liked the idea of leaving UVA after five years with a master’s degree.
“It was just something that clicked,” he said.

