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Charles Guthrie is the athletic director at Fordham University. He previously held the same position at the University of Akron, University of Wisconsin-Green Bay, San Francisco State University, and Clark College.
Pages in category "Fordham Rams athletic directors" ... David Roach (athletic director) This page was last edited on 23 December 2020, at 01:44 (UTC). ...
Marianne Reilly is an American college athletics administrator. Reilly served as an associate athletic director at Fordham University from 1996 to 2016, [1] [2] and as director of athletics for Manhattan College from 2016 to 2023. Reilly attended college at Manhattan College, where she played on the school's women's basketball team. [3]
Peter A. Carlesimo (September 2, 1915 – June 22, 2003) was an American football player, coach of football, basketball, and cross country running, and a college athletics administrator. He coached football, basketball, and cross country at the University of Scranton and served as athletic director there and at Fordham University.
David T. Roach (born September 1949) is a former American college athletics administrator. Roach served as athletic director at Fordham University from 2012 to 2020, [2] [3] as athletic director at Colgate University from 2004 to 2012, as athletic director at Brown University from 1990 to 2004, [1] [4] as head swimming coach at the University of Tennessee from 1986 to 1990, and as head ...
The following is a list of NCAA Division I universities in the United States (listed alphabetically by their schools' athletic brand name) and their current athletic director. This list only includes schools playing Division I football or men's basketball. Schools are alphabetized by commonly used short name, regardless of their official name.
Aug. 17—Eddie Nuñez, vice president and athletic director for the University of New Mexico for the past seven years, has accepted an offer to be the next athletic director for the University of ...
It is the Fordham Rams' home for football, men's and women's soccer, and baseball. The facility opened for baseball 94 years ago in 1930, and was named in 1954 for baseball coach and longtime athletic director Jack Coffey, four years before his 1958 retirement. [1]