Off-topic: New wrestling coach

Big Old Booger

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I know this is a basketball board, but those of you who follow all things OU, like myself, will be excited to know we have a new wrestling coach who I think will make bedlam like it used to be, with us winning our share of matches with OSU.

from soonersports:

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Mark Cody Named OU Wrestling Coach

Reigning national coach of the year comes to OU after nine years at American.
Mark Cody

Welcome Coach Cody on OU's Official Facebook Page


The Cody File
Hometown Binghamton, N.Y.
College Bellevue University, 1985
Family wife, Holly
sons George, Charlie and Henry



Coaching History
2011- Oklahoma Head Coach
2002-2011 American Head Coach
2000-2002 Oklahoma State Assistant Coach
1988-2000 Nebraska Assistant Coach
1986-1987 Oklahoma State Assistant Coach
1985-1986 Bloomsburg Assistant Coach
1984-1985 Missouri Assistant Coach



Coaching Accomplishments
2011 NWCA National Wrestling Coach of the Year
Led American to a fifth-place finish at NCAAs in 2011
His 2011 team also posted a school-record 3.48 GPA
Has produced 14 All-Americans in the last seven years
21 of his wrestlers have earned Academic All-America honors


NORMAN, Okla. -- Mark Cody, the reigning national college wrestling coach of the year, has been named the head wrestling coach at the University of Oklahoma. He succeeds Jack Spates, who retired from the position following the 2011 season, his 18th with the Sooners.

Cody, who comes to OU after nine years at American University, led the Eagles to a program-best fifth-place finish at the recently completed NCAA Championships. The team produced three All-Americans after qualifying six for the tournament, while also posting a school record 3.48 grade point average.

"The wrestling community has watched Mark Cody do remarkable things with his teams at American," said Joe Castiglione, Oklahoma's Vice President for Intercollegiate Athletics and Athletics Director. "He has maximized limited resources to take a program that was once struggling and transform it into one of the strongest in the country. Along the way, he has earned the respect of his peers as not only a great program builder, but an outstanding teacher and leader.

"We have watched Mark's work and spoken with a number of people in the profession who are familiar with him. He is held in very high regard and has proven his ability to operate a program at an extremely high level."

Cody said it was tradition and the people of the Sooner state that attracted him to the job.

"I think back on Tommy Evans, Stan Abel, Jack Spates and the other men who coached there and I really appreciate the tradition they established," Cody said. "It's a responsibility to take that over, but it's also encouraging because it's a school that appreciates and expects success."

Two stints at Oklahoma State taught the New York native all he needed to know about Oklahomans.

"People make the place and I have always loved the people in Oklahoma," he said. "I lived there twice and always felt they were some of the nicest people in the world."

Recent improvements at OU's wrestling facility caught Cody's attention and said things like the upgrades at the Port Robertson Center send a strong message.

"The improvements to the facilities indicate a commitment to the sport and that's something that has a great impact on recruiting," he said. "The cupboard is full there in terms of the resources and I look forward to getting started."

Cody's work at American has been impressive. He took over the program just after it had been dropped and then resurrected. Just 4.5 scholarships were available for seven wrestlers. Finally, in 2005, the Eagles broke through with their first national qualifiers. It went on to post top 25 team finishes in the NCAA Tournament from 2006-2011. In 2008, American added wrestling as only its third fully-funded sport.

"People thought I was crazy when I took the job, but we always had a plan for recruiting, fund-raising and running the program," said Cody.

Some $180,000 were raised in the programs first year and that total has risen to nearly $1 million over the length of Cody's nine seasons.

Now he can look back on a tenure that included the school's first national champion, 14 All-Americans and 16 NCAA qualifiers (all since 2005) and 21 academic All-Americans.

Cody came to American after spending two seasons as an assistant coach at Oklahoma State. He helped OSU to a Big 12 Championship and a fifth-place finish at the 2002 NCAA Championships. In addition, the squad earned recognition from the NWCA as a top-25 academic team, and two were named Academic All-America by the NWCA. Nine were also named to the Academic All-Big 12 team.

Before joining Oklahoma State, Cody served as the upper-weights coach for 12 years at the University of Nebraska. During that time, he was responsible for bringing in some of the nation's top recruiting classes, including national champions Tolly Thompson (Hwt.) and Brad Vering (197). Vering later became a two-time Olympian with Cody in his corner.

While Cody was at Nebraska, 23 Cornhuskers were named All-America, including Rulon Gardner, who later captured the heavyweight gold medal at the 2000 Sydney Olympic Games.

Cody spent the 1986-87 season as an assistant coach at Oklahoma State. He was also an assistant at Bloomsburg University during the 1985-86 season and for the University of Missouri in 1984-85.

As a student-athlete, Cody was a three-time All-American. He spent two years at the State University of New York at Delhi before transferring to Missouri in 1983. His greatest success came during his senior season, 1984-85, when he earned All-America status and was named the team's Most Outstanding Wrestler. Cody still ranks in Missouri's single season top-10 for falls (17) and winning percentage (.875). He graduated from Bellevue University with a Bachelor of Science degree in business.

A member of the New York Athletic Club, he was a 198-pound finalist at the 1988 U.S. Olympic Trials.

A native of Binghamton, N.Y., Cody and his wife, Holly, have three sons, George, Charlie and Henry.

http://www.soonersports.com/sports/m-wrestl/spec-rel/041211aaa.html

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FYI -- I think Joe made a great hire here. :clap
 
Joe has been busy! And I agree .. this looks to be an excellent hire.

Back in my school days, I played football, wrestled and played baseball. Wrestling is a great sport. Like you BOB, I follow all things OU and I try to catch some wrestling matches, even traveling to Stillwater occasionally for Bedlam up there.

I hope Mark Cody can get the OU wrestling program back to competing for the NC.

Good job Joe!

:OUbball-logo:
 
Sounds like a good hire I follow everything OU aswell but have a junior high level of knowledge about wrestling lol so I hope it works for us.
 
Wrestling is going to have a serious renaissance with the growing popularity of MMA.
 
A lot of collegiate wrestlers are going into MMA. Besides the olympics, it's about the only place for them.
 
I see positives and negatives about this hire. He did make American something to be reckoned with during his time there. But before that he was on the staffs that got canned in Stillwater and Lincoln. 2002 was was the last season before OSU brought in Smith. He's also never qualified more than six wrestlers for national tourney although he will have more slots to be able to qualify them at OU and in the Big 4 unless the NCAA starts to dismantle our bids because of Nebraska leaving.

Truthfully the Big 12 needs to relinquish its affiliation with wrestling and allow the programs to do what they have with gymnastics and form a wrestling only conference. The NCAA isn't going to allow the Big 12 to just send all four wrestlers to the tournament from virtually every weight class which is what is the option with conferences current number of bids into the field at each class. The Big 4 adding Boise State and Wyoming to a wrestling only conference would be a good start.
 
Wrestling is going to have a serious renaissance with the growing popularity of MMA.

At least in the upper weight classes but I'm not so sure about in the lower classes where they have more options.


The best upper weight MMA fighters in the world are almost to a man former wrestlers.
 
At least in the upper weight classes but I'm not so sure about in the lower classes where they have more options.


The best upper weight MMA fighters in the world are almost to a man former wrestlers.

There are plenty of heavy weight guys who are not, including the best of the last ten years, Fedor.

Lets look at the current top ten:

Heavyweight

1. Cain Velasquez (9-0)
2. Brock Lesnar (5-2)

3. Fabricio Werdum (14-4-1)
4. Junior dos Santos (12-1)
5. Shane Carwin (12-1)
6. Frank Mir (14-5)
7. Antonio Silva (16-2)
8. Fedor Emelianenko (31-3, 1 NC)
9. Alistair Overeem (34-11, 1 NC)
10. Roy Nelson (15-5)


While the rankings are debatable the majority of the top ten are not former high level wrestlers. You have standup specialists like Dos Santos and Overeem and the rest are submission grapplers.
 
I see positives and negatives about this hire. He did make American something to be reckoned with during his time there. But before that he was on the staffs that got canned in Stillwater and Lincoln. 2002 was was the last season before OSU brought in Smith.

John Smith has been there since 1992.
 
Looks like OU had to go out and get a former Cowboy so they can learn to win.:D
 
I think will make bedlam like it used to be, with us winning our share of matches with OSU.

That would be like an OSU fan saying the new football coach will make Bedlam like it used to be, with OSU winning its fair share of games.

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But it looks to be a solid, long overdue hire.
 
That would be like an OSU fan saying the new football coach will make Bedlam like it used to be, with OSU winning its fair share of games.

------------

But it looks to be a solid, long overdue hire.

Well, at one time, OU was just as good at wrestling as OSU was and OU won their share of bedlam matches. Now, that was a good 30 years ago, but it was the case at the time.

Don't forget, OU has 7 national championships in wrestling so OU has been very good at wrestling in the past.

OSU doesn't have any national championships in football. Heck, they only have 1 conference championship of which was a 3 way tie with OU, so comparing bedlam in football and wrestling is not a valid comparison.
 
There are plenty of heavy weight guys who are not, including the best of the last ten years, Fedor.

Lets look at the current top ten:

Heavyweight

1. Cain Velasquez (9-0)
2. Brock Lesnar (5-2)

3. Fabricio Werdum (14-4-1)
4. Junior dos Santos (12-1)
5. Shane Carwin (12-1)
6. Frank Mir (14-5)
7. Antonio Silva (16-2)
8. Fedor Emelianenko (31-3, 1 NC)
9. Alistair Overeem (34-11, 1 NC)
10. Roy Nelson (15-5)


While the rankings are debatable the majority of the top ten are not former high level wrestlers. You have standup specialists like Dos Santos and Overeem and the rest are submission grapplers.

You need to check your facts and I never said how high just that wrestling would improve with MMA.

Roy Nelson, Fedor Emelianenko, and Alistair Overeem all have limited backgrounds in Freestyle or Greco-Roman wrestling though it is not their main discipline.

Frank Mir was the Nevada State heavyweight champion at Bonanza HS his senior year in 1998. He had scholarship offers from Arizona State, Boise State, Cal-Poly, Oregon State, Nebraska, Indiana, and Illinois.
 
Holy smokes, MMA smack-talk on OUHoops.com! Not complaining, just random.
 
Well, at one time, OU was just as good at wrestling as OSU was and OU won their share of bedlam matches. Now, that was a good 30 years ago, but it was the case at the time.

Don't forget, OU has 7 national championships in wrestling so OU has been very good at wrestling in the past.

OSU doesn't have any national championships in football. Heck, they only have 1 conference championship of which was a 3 way tie with OU, so comparing bedlam in football and wrestling is not a valid comparison.

Only Iowa and Oklahoma State have more National titles in wrestling than Oklahoma. Iowa State is tied with us at 7. In 1971, 1968, 1961, 1959, 1956, 1954, 1939, and 1937 Oklahoma was the only team in the country who defeated Oklahoma State/Oklahoma A&M. From 1954 until 1964 Oklahoma and Oklahoma State finished 1 and 2 at the NCAA tournament every single year.
 
Well, at one time, OU was just as good at wrestling as OSU was and OU won their share of bedlam matches. Now, that was a good 30 years ago, but it was the case at the time.

Don't forget, OU has 7 national championships in wrestling so OU has been very good at wrestling in the past.

OSU doesn't have any national championships in football. Heck, they only have 1 conference championship of which was a 3 way tie with OU, so comparing bedlam in football and wrestling is not a valid comparison.

I was speaking specifically to the meets between the two schools, where OSU wins 80% of the time (much like OU wins 80% of the time in football).

OU obviously has a fantastic wrestling history, whereas OSU's football history is sporadically mediocre, at best. In that regard, the comparison is admittedly flawed.
 
I was speaking specifically to the meets between the two schools, where OSU wins 80% of the time (much like OU wins 80% of the time in football).

OU obviously has a fantastic wrestling history, whereas OSU's football history is sporadically mediocre, at best. In that regard, the comparison is admittedly flawed.

Gotcha.
 
Does this mean that Sammy Henson won't be with OU anymore? He is a great coach and I would hate to see him go somewhere else.
 
this is an excellent hire. We need a coach who can get some studs and teach then how to win.
 
Only Iowa and Oklahoma State have more National titles in wrestling than Oklahoma. Iowa State is tied with us at 7. In 1971, 1968, 1961, 1959, 1956, 1954, 1939, and 1937 Oklahoma was the only team in the country who defeated Oklahoma State/Oklahoma A&M. From 1954 until 1964 Oklahoma and Oklahoma State finished 1 and 2 at the NCAA tournament every single year.

Interesting that the OU wrestling program has the same number of team national championships as the OU football program.

It has been a long time since Stan Able and 1974.

:OUbball-logo:
 
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