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  Gary Sievers
Gary Sievers
Player Profile
Position:
Assistant Director of Track & Field

Experience:
4th season

Alma Mater:
Oregon '77

Beginning his fourth track season at Wake Forest, Gary Sievers continues to fuel the fire that has the distance programs running so fast. In his third year as the men's cross country coach, Sievers also serves as the Assistant Director of Track & Field. Prior to combining the men’s and women’s track & field programs at Wake Forest in the summer of 2001, Sievers worked two track seasons as an assistant men's track coach.

Last fall, Sievers led the Deacon harriers back to the NCAA Cross Country Championships again, where they finished in 19th place. Led by ACC Champion Nathan Sisco, three Wake runners captured all-conference honors in route to the Demon Deacons placing second at the ACC Championships.

This past spring, Sievers saw his distance runners really take off. The men’s distance medley relay team broke the school and conference records, won its second straight ACC Championship and finished ninth at the NCAA Championships for the second year in a row. Nathan Sisco defended his ACC title in the mile and broke the school record in the 1,500m. Chris Estwanik won the ACC Championship in the 3,000m and earned All-ACC honors in the 1,500m and the outdoor 5,000m. Ted DeVos (10,000m) and Mike Altieri (mile) both garnered All-ACC honors as well.

In 2000-2001 Sievers directed the Deacs to fourth-place at the ACC Cross Country Championships, qualify for the NCAA Championships and then guided Wake Forest to an 18th place finish, ahead of 11 ranked teams. The men’s DMR broke the school record, ACC record, won the ACC Championship and finished ninth at the NCAA Championships. Under his supervision, Wake Forest runners captured ACC Championships in the mile, 1,500m and the 10,000m. Twelve distance Deacons earned All-ACC honors on the track.

Prior to his arrival at Wake Forest, Sievers served as the cross country coach at the College of Southern Idaho, where he led the Golden Eagles to two combined national championships, as well as a runner-up finish at four Cross Country National Championships. Between the cross country and the track & field programs, The College of Southern Idaho finished in the top 10 nationally 17 times during Sievers' time there. The head coach from 1992-1999, Sievers coached 109 All-Americans and two individual national champions. Twenty-two school records fell while Sievers was the coach and in 1997 his men's squad were ranked the number one academic team in the nation.

Before taking the head coaching position at Southern Idaho, Sievers was the assistant coach at Louisiana State, where he helped the Tigers to three national championships. In only three seasons spent at LSU, Sievers directed the Tigers to five SEC Championships and 16 school records were broken along the way. Seventeen of his athletes earned All-America honors while Sievers was on board, including two individual national champions. Sievers coached seven SEC individual champions as well as the world's second fastest women's 4x800m indoor relay team.

Sievers began his coaching career at Oregon State, where he worked from 1981-1986. During his stint with the Beavers, he produced six All-Americans, one National Champion, five Pac-10 Conference Champions and one Pan-American Junior Champion. Sixteen school records were broken during Sievers' reign at Oregon State.

A two-time all-conference selection at the University of Oregon, Sievers was a member of the 1974 national championship cross country team. While at Oregon, Sievers trained with some of the great Oregon long distance legends, such as Steve Prefontaine, Alberto Salazar, Rudy Chapa and Matt Centrowitz. Sievers was coached by the Ducks' track & field legendary hall of fame coach, Bill Dellinger, whom Sievers succeeded at Wake Forest in 2000.

Sievers, who hails from Twin Falls, Idaho, graduated from Oregon with a bachelor's degree in physical education in 1977 and earned a master's degree in Cardiovascular & Respiratory Physiology at Oregon State in 1983. He resides in Winston-Salem with his wife Kimberly. They have three children, Kara, Nika and Sarah.

Send an E-Mail to Coach Sievers: sievergk@wfu.edu