Mark Cody |
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College:
Bellevue University '87
Years at American:
8th Year
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Position:
Head Coach
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Head Coach Mark Cody is the man behind the American University
Wrestling team's rise to national prominence. In just seven years
of coaching, Cody has rebuilt a program that was on the brink of
elimination from collegiate athletics into a team producing both
athletic and academic All-American's, EIWA Champions and the
program's first ever National Champion.
Last season, the Cody led Eagles were named the NWCA Champions
of the Classroom, having attained the highest team GPA in all of
Div. I wrestling. AU combined for a team GPA of 3.335 and had four
individuals who posted a GPA of 3.5 or higher. Jasen Borshoff, Mike
Cannon, Josh Glenn and Christopher Stout were each named NWCA
Academic All-Americans, marking the most individual Academic
All-America honors AU had ever received in a single year.
The 2007-08 Eagles also excelled on the mat, sending all four
Academic All-American's to the NCAA Championships where Cannon and
Glenn both earned All-America status. Cannon became just the second
underclassmen in AU history to earn AA status with a sixth-place
finish at 165 lbs. and Glenn earned the distinction for the third
straight year with a fifth-place showing at 197 lbs.
During the 2006-07 season, Cody's wrestling team built upon their
successes from the previous year to reach an unparalleled high.
Junior Josh Glenn repeated as the EIWA Champion in the 197 lbs.
weight class and swept through the field at the NCAA Championships
as the No. 2 seed, going 5-0 and earning a 6-4 overtime decision
over No. 1 Kurt Backes of Iowa to capture AU wrestling's first
National Championship. Glenn was joined by freshmen No. 10 Mike
Cannon and Kyle Borshoff and sophomore Rudy Rueda at the NCAA
Tournament, making for AU's largest showing at the championship
event and tying its best finish of 17th from a year earlier. At the
EIWA Tournament, Cody's squad tied for sixth place with Harvard and
put two wrestlers in the finals, Glenn and Cannon. The `06-'07
squad also boasted two Academic All-American's in Damian Swietlik
and Mike Cannon, and was awarded the Sportsmanship Award at the
EIWA Tournament.
The foundation that was laid in Cody's first four years at American
paid off during the 2005-06 season as the team had its best
individual and team performance in program history. For the first
time, two Eagles were recognized with All-America honors. Senior
Muzaffar Abdurakhmanov took third place at 165 lbs. at the NCAA
Championships and sophomore Josh Glenn became the first
underclassmen in AU wrestling history to earn All-America with his
fourth-place finish at 184 lbs. The pair's individual performances
coupled with Adam LoPiccolo's one win by fall earned the team a
program-best 17th-place finish at the NCAA Championships. Two weeks
prior to that, at the EIWA Championships, Abdurakhmanov was named
Most Outstanding Wrestler as he and Glenn each won individual
titles for the Eagles. In the classroom, Abdurakhmanov and Matt
Morkel earned National Wrestling Coaches Association Academic
All-America honors and the team earned the NWCA Team Academic
All-America Award. In addition, the Eagles won 13 of their 19 dual
matches and placed three wrestlers in the top-10 during the
year.
Each year prior to the 2005-06 season offered a glimpse at the
program's future success. In the 2004-05 season, American earned
its first ever All-American award when senior Daniel Waters' placed
eighth at the NCAA Championships. After an injury-riddled career at
Penn State, Waters flourished under the guidance of Cody. Had it
not been for an injury, Waters run at the NCAA Tournament could
have gone longer but the injury forced him into an early exit.
Joining Waters at the NCAA Championships that year was a then
school-record three teammates, including AU's first-ever EIWA
champion, fourth-ranked Abdurakhmanov. Abdurakhmanov compiled a
22-1 regular season record, but, hampered by a knee injury, fell in
the tournament's early rounds. The EIWA 2004 Freshman of the Year
and runner-up at 184 lbs., Glenn, and heavyweight LoPiccolo also
qualified for the big stage by way of their high placings at EIWAs.
As a team the Eagles had their highest finish ever at EIWAs,
placing sixth out of 13 teams in one of the country's toughest
conferences.
A year earlier, Cody led his Eagles team to many bright moments as
the program continued to show improvement. Waters recorded the most
wins in Division I that year, compiling a 32-5 overall record.
Senior Jared Hyman finished his final season with 24 wins,
including finishing the season by winning 10 of 11 matches.
Sophomore Tom Kneizewski had a solid year at 149 lbs., finishing
with a team best seven pins.
In his first year, Cody led AU to the EIWA Tournament and was also
a coach for the 2003 U.C. National Championship Gator Club team.
That same year Cody introduced the highly successful Mark Cody
Wrestling Camp, providing a series of individualized workouts for
athletes of all ages and abilities.
Cody came to American after spending two seasons as an assistant
coach at Oklahoma State, a national powerhouse and owner of more
NCAA Championships than any other school. As an assistant, Cody
helped Oklahoma State to a Big 12 Championship and a fifth-place
finish at the 2002 NCAA Championships, where the Cowboys crowned an
individual national champion and four All-Americans. In addition to
Oklahoma State's success on the mat, the team's wrestlers were
proficient in the classroom. The squad earned recognition from the
NWCA as a top-25 academic team, and two Cowboys were named Academic
All-America by the NWCA. Nine of Cody's wrestlers were also named
to the Academic All-Big 12 team.
Before joining the ranks at Oklahoma State, Cody served as
upper-weights coach for 12 years at the University of Nebraska.
During his time in Lincoln, Cody was responsible for bringing in
some of the nation's best recruiting classes, including two
National Champions, heavyweight Tolly Thompson, who won the title
in 1995, and 197-pounder Brad Vering, who won it in 2000. Vering
later became a two-time Olympian and had Cody in his corner with
him at the 2008 U.S. Olympic Team Trials when he qualified for the
2008 Beijing Olympic Games. While at Nebraska, 23 Cornhuskers were
named All-America.
Prior to his time as a member of the Nebraska staff, Cody spent a
season in Stillwater, Okla., as an assistant coach of Oklahoma
State for the 1986-87 season. Cody spend the 1985-86 season as an
assistant at Bloomsburg University and for his alma mater, the
University of Missouri in 1984-85. In his season with the Tigers,
Cody helped develop Rulon Gardner, who later went on to capture the
heavyweight gold medal at the 2000 Sydney Olympic Games, and
trained with Matt Lindland, an Olympic silver medalist in 2000.
As a student-athlete, Cody was a three-time All-American. He spent
his first two years of college 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), major decisions (9) and twice for winning percentage
(.875 and .857). Cody graduated from Bellevue University with a
bachelor of science degree in business.
A member of the New York Athletic Club, he was a 198 lbs. finalist
at the 1988 U.S. Olympic Trials.
A native of Binghamton, N.Y., Cody and his wife Holly now reside in
the Washington, D.C., metro area, with their sons George, Charlie
and Henry.