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Miami University Cross Country Camps
Warren Mandrell Men's Head Coach
Entering
his 16th season at helm of the Miami University men's cross country and
track and field programs, head coach Warren Mandrell continues to lead
a pair of teams that have been a model of consistency. Mandrell's cross
country teams have not finished lower than fourth in the Mid-American
Conference since 1996, winning a pair conference titles in 1997 and
1998, and his track and field squads have produced 12 MAC gold
medalists, including seven conference titlists over the past six
seasons.
With the Miami cross country squad, Mandrell has
produced three All-Americans, with David Mitchell taking home
All-America honors in 2004 and Dan Huling and Chris Swisher both
earning All-America plaudits in 2005. Mitchell was one of the most
decorated runners during Mandrell's tenure as a two-time MAC runner-up
and national qualifier in 2003 and 2004. Huling, meanwhile, became the
first Miamian under Mandrell to take home the conference's individual
title in 2005. He also placed 26th at the 2005 NCAA Championship, the
highest finish for a RedHawk at the national meet since Bob Reef
finished 17th in 1972. Pat Sovacool placed 65th at the 2008 NCAA
Championship, as he competed in the race for a second straight year.
Under
Mandrell, the RedHawks have won a pair of MAC Cross Country
Championships and posted eight runner-up finishes, two third-place
finishes and a fourth-place showing. He has guided Miami to a runner-up
finish at the league championships each of the last two seasons (2007
and 2008). Prior to finishing fourth at the MAC meet in 2006, Miami
finished as the conference runner-up for the second straight season in
2005, as Huling and Swisher placed first and third, respectively. Miami
also placed 10th in the notoriously tough Great Lakes Region.
The
2004 season saw Mandrell lead the RedHawks to a second-place finish in
the MAC--the team's highest finish since 2001--and a ninth-place finish
at the Great Lakes Regional, one spot short of a national bid. Three of
Mandrell's runners were All-MAC First-Team selections, and Mitchell
earned an invitation to the NCAA Championship after a 12th-place
regional finish.
Mandrell's squad reached new heights in 2003
when the RedHawks qualified as a team for the NCAA Cross Country
Championship. After taking third at the MAC Championship and entering
the meet ranked No. 25 in the nation, Miami finished as the top MAC
school at the national meet, taking 14th, its highest final national
ranking since 1997.
From 1999-2002, Miami posted three
runner-up finishes and one third-place finish at the conference meet.
In 1998, Mandrell was honored as the Ohio Cross Country Coach of the
Year after guiding the RedHawks to their second consecutive MAC
Championship and a berth in the NCAA Championship. Mandrell earned MAC
Coach of the Year honors in 1997 when his RedHawks ended their 12-year
MAC Championship drought and finished the season ranked in the nation's
top 25. Miami climbed as high as 11th in the 1997 polls.
As
the head of the Miami track and field team, Mandrell has coached 11
MidEast Regional qualifiers in the last three seasons alone, helping
two of those reach the NCAA Championships. Sovacool finished 16th in
the 5,000 meters at the 2008 NCAA Championships and Kevin Dwyer has
made back-to-back trips to the Championships, finishing in the top-20
in the decathlon each of the last two seasons. Dwyer claimed the MAC
decathlon title in 2008, becoming the first RedHawk to do so since
2001, while Michael Veatch earned the 3,000-meter steeplechase league
title that same year.
One of the most successful mentored by
Mandrell was distance runner Dan Huling, who turned in one of the most
impressive individual track seasons in 2006. Huling won the 5,000
meters, 10,000 meters and 3,000-meter steeplechase at the MAC
Championships, becoming the first athlete in program history to win
three individual conference titles at the same meet, and he was the
named the meet's Most Outstanding Performer. Huling then went on to
place sixth in the 5,000 meters at the NCAA Championship, earning
All-America honors and becoming the first athlete since the 1944-45
seasons to be named a dual All-American in both cross country and track
and field.
During the 2005 season, both Jake Dunkleberger and
Huling won MAC titles. For the second year in row, Dunkleberger
captured the conference hammer title and went on to become an
All-American at the NCAA Championships. Huling was the MAC Champion in
the 5,000 meters and set a Miami record in the 3,000-meter steeplechase
at the Mideast Regional. Five other athletes also have won conference
titles during Mandrell's tenure, including Bryan Hawkins (1996, 1997),
Fitz Read (1999), Chris Swank (1999), Nick Somerville (2001) and Erik
Reynolds (2004).
Mandrell's student-athletes also have
achieved success in the classroom. Since Mandrell's arrival in 1994,
Miami has produced over 100 Academic All-MAC and MAC Honor Roll
selections, including seven Academic All-MAC athletes last season, with
two earning CoSIDA/ESPN the Magazine academic all-district honors.
Following the 2005-06 season, the RedHawks were honored by the National
Collegiate Division I Track Coaches Association for having the
16th-highest team grade-point average in the nation (3.02). Mandrell
has guided three Academic All-America selections during his tenure,
including Sovacool in 2007-08.
Prior to taking over at Miami,
Mandrell spent 12 years as the top assistant coach for the men's and
women's cross country and track and field teams at Northern Arizona
University. He was a part of the school's five men's and six women's
Big Sky Conference Championships in cross country, as well as the 14
men's and six women's indoor and outdoor league titles.
With
Mandrell as an assistant, NAU's men's cross country squad finished in
the top 20 at the NCAA Championships six times between 1984 and 1991,
including a second-place finish in 1988, and the women's program
finished in the top 20 every year from 1986 to 1992. He coached seven
men's and seven women's All-Americans while at NAU.
Outside of
coaching, Mandrell served more than 20 years as an Army officer in both
active duty and reserve forces. He is a graduate of the U.S. Army
Command and General Staff College. Mandrell commanded a basic training
company on active duty, and he also served as the Director of Plans and
Operations for the Arizona National Guard Navajo Army Depot.
Born
in Lincoln, Ill., Mandrell graduated with honors from Michigan
Technological University in 1978 and was Most Valuable Performer of the
Michigan Tech cross country team in 1974. Mandrell also competed in
track and field and cross country skiing as a student-athlete. He
earned his master's degree in physical education from Northern Arizona
in 1984.
Mandrell, who is a lieutenant colonel in the Army
National Guard, resides in Oxford, Ohio, with his wife, Peggy, and
children, Heather, Nathan and Adam.

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