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Nov 21, 2008 Aycock Named UNCP Cross Country Head Coach PEMBROKE – Athletic department officials at the University
of North Carolina at Pembroke announced Thursday afternoon that
Gary Aycock will assume the duties of head coach for both the
men’s and women’s cross country teams, while also
retaining his position as director of compliance and assistant
track and field coach.
Larry Rodgers, who has taken on double duties as head coach of both
the cross country and track and field programs at UNCP for the past
28 years, will remain as head track and field coach for the Braves.
The move was initiated in order to separate the head coaching
responsibilities of the two programs and allow the respective
coaches to focus on just one athletic program.
“We are excited to appoint Gary Aycock as head men's and
women's cross country coach,” said UNCP director of athletics
Dan Kenney. “Gary will also server as assistant track and
field coach for UNCP. Coach Larry Rodgers has done a great job for
the last 28 years of coaching cross country and track and field for
both the men and women. The addition of Gary will allow coach
Rodgers to focus on the track and field program and receive help
with the distance runners.
“Gary proved himself as an outstanding coach at St Andrews
and we are glad to have a UNCP grad heading up our cross country
programs.”
Aycock joined the UNCP staff in July as director of compliance,
assistant cross country and track and field coach and lecturer in
the Health, Physical Education and Recreation department.
Prior to assuming his posts in Pembroke, Aycock served as the
skipper for the cross country programs at nearby St. Andrews,
leading both the men's and women's teams to their most successful
era in the program's NCAA Division II history both on the race
paths and in the classroom. Aycock, a Scotland county native,
served as the Knights' assistant coach in 2001-02. He had also
served as the head track and field coach since the inception of the
program in 2005 to his departure in 2007.
The 2005 Carolinas-Virginia Athletics Conference & 2006
Southeast Region Coach of the Year at SAPC, Aycock guided the
Knights’ cross country teams to countless individual and team
milestones in his six seasons at the helm.
On the men's side, Aycock led St. Andrews to its first-ever
conference title in 2005 and first-ever Southeast Region crown in
2006. Under his guidance, the men's teams won nine races and had
nine other runner-up finishes. Aycock led the Knights to their
first-ever No. 1 ranking in the Southeast and qualified the men's
team for the NCAA Division II national championships in both 2005
and 2006.
Aycock recruited the CVAC freshman of the year in three consecutive
seasons (Chris Miller in 2004, Mitch Cooper in 2005 and Pedro
Tapia, Jr. in 2006). He has also coached 15 all-conference, nine
all-region, and six conference runners of the week.
On the women's side, Aycock has tutored an impressive 16 conference
runners of the week while also building the program into contenders
in the region (earning the program's first-ever ranking in the
Southeast Region). Aycock-guided women's teams have won two races
and finished in the top-three places seven times. He has also
coached seven all-conference and three all-region women's
honorees.
Aycock has directed 15 individual academic all-Americans and four
academic all-American teams including the 2004 women's team being
ranked fourth in the nation with a 3.71 team GPA.
An avid runner, Aycock has racing experience on the high school,
collegiate and open levels and is a tri-athlete as well. He was a
member of Scotland High School’s 1989 and 1990 state NCHSAA
Track & Field championship teams and East Carolina
University’s 1995 UPA college national championship Ultimate
Frisbee team where he was a candidate for the Callahan Award, an
honor presented to the UPA national collegiate player of the
year.
Aycock earned a bachelor of science in physical education from UNCP
in 2003 and a master’s degree in physical education in
December, 2007. He completed the NIKE cross-country coaches’
clinic in 2002 and is a certified United States Track & Field
Level I coach in all event areas and a certified United States
Track & Field Level II endurance coach.
Aycock resides in Laurinburg with his wife, Emily, and two
children, Emma Grace and Aaron Douglas.
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