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Greg Strobel
Residence:
Bethlehem. PA
College: Oregon State
University
High
School:
In less
than five years, he returned Lehigh wrestling to a national stage. In his ninth season, Greg Strobel was
recognized as the NWCA National Coach of the Year. Now entering his twelfth
season as the head coach at Lehigh, Strobel was hired in the spring of 1995 and
holds the title as the Lawrence White Head Coach of Wrestling at Lehigh.
Regarded
throughout the wrestling community as one of the sport’s top ambassadors,
Strobel has reached the pinnacle of success at every level of wrestling in
which he has competed. This includes his days as an undergraduate at Oregon
State where he won two NCAA titles, through his coaching at numerous
international levels culminating with his being named as the 2000 United States
Olympic Head Coach. Strobel led the 1999-2000 Lehigh team to an EIWA
Championship and a seventh place finish at the 2000 NCAA Championships to
further cement his reputation as a leader in his field. Under Strobel’s guidance, Lehigh has won the
last five EIWA team championships, becoming the first team in 70 years to
accomplish the feat, and in 2004 guided the Mountain Hawks to a career-best
third place finish at the NCAA Championships. Strobel has coached two national
champions in Rob Rohn (2002 at 184) and Troy Letters (2004 at 165).
A skilled and dynamic leader, Strobel’s vast
knowledge of the sport is complemented by his deep values in family and his
ability to relate to his student-athletes and peers at any level.
“Coach Strobel was great to wrestle for,” says
2000 All-American Travis Doto, ‘00. “He’s not a coach who’s focused only on
wrestling, but rather trying to make sure that everyone is growing personally,
academically and on the wrestling mat. I think it’s probably hard to find a
coach like that in most places. I always
felt very reassured with Coach Strobel. I trusted his knowledge and instincts
and looking back the trust was well-founded.”
“Coach
Strobel has a strong understanding of the sport of wrestling,” 1998 World Team
member Steve Marianetti says. “He really has helped me adjust to world level
competition. He is able to assess the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and
threats of each of my opponents.”
“One of
Coach Strobel’s best aspects is that he is very adept at picking you apart and
then putting together a game plan to be successful,” three-time NCAA Champion
T. J. Jaworsky says. “He spends a lot of time looking at videos and is a real
student of the sport.”
Strobel has often been recognized for his
outstanding coaching abilities. After
his team scored the most points in school history at the NCAAs in 2004, placing
five All-Americans and a national champ, he was named the 2004 NWCA National
Coach of the Year. Strobel earned three
Coach of the Year awards following the 1999-2000 season. The EIWA and W.I.N.
Magazine honored him for his collegiate success, while USA Wrestling named him
the 2000 Freestyle Coach of the Year. He
has been honored four times as the EIWA Coach of the Year, earning his most
recent award in 2006. Strobel has led Lehigh to five consecutive EIWA crowns. In the past Strobel was named the 1999 United
States Olympic Committee Developmental Coach of the Year, the USOC’s National
Coach of the Year in 1998 and the 1997 National Freestyle Coach of the Year in
1997.
At
Lehigh, Strobel has led the Mountain Hawks to ten straight winning seasons
including a school-record 22 dual wins in 2004. At the national level Strobel
has guided Lehigh to five consecutive top-ten finishes, including third in 2004
– the school’s best since finishing third in 1979. Overall, Strobel has coached
two Lehigh national champions, six Lehigh NCAA finalists, 30 Lehigh
All-Americans, and 26 EIWA Champions. Just as significantly, Strobel’s Lehigh
teams have been very successful off the mat. Strobel’s 1998-99 squad was ranked
ninth nationally in the Academic All-American Poll and each year the team is
among the highest Lehigh men’s teams in academic standing. The 1999-2000 team
was the recipient of the EIWA’s first-ever Team Good Sportsmanship Award.
The
1998-99 team was the first at Lehigh to have all of its NCAA qualifiers (John
Van Doren, Ryan Bernholz and Chris Ayres) return to Bethlehem as All-Americans, and was the first
to compete in the prestigious National Duals Championships. In 2001, Lehigh
placed fifth at National Duals, while in 2005 the Mountain Hawks placed
fourth. Strobel’s 1995-96 team was the
first to participate in the Virginia Duals championships. Lehigh won that event for the first time in
2003. His teams have won five dual meets
against NCAA top ten teams in the last three seasons, equal to the number won
in the previous 21 seasons.
“To make
an impact on people’s lives and to watch them improve both on and off the mat
in so many different ways is extremely rewarding,” Strobel says. “We teach
lifetime good habits in the Lehigh Wrestling program that allow our student-athletes
to be successful in anything they do.”
Strobel’s
success at Lehigh was only part of the equation that led him to be named as the
2000 United States Olympic Coach in Sydney,
Australia. That
same year he coached the 2000 United States World Cup team to a championship.
An
extremely active coach during the summer, Strobel has coached several World and
Olympic champions throughout his career. He coached the Pennsylvania Junior
Team for four years (1997-98, 2001-02)) and has given or assisted in countless
clinics. The 1996 United
States Olympic assistant freestyle wrestling
coach and Pan American head coach, Strobel was also an assistant coach of the
1999 Pan-Am team which finished first.
Strobel
came to Lehigh after serving as wrestling coach for Team Foxcatcher Inc. (an
Olympic-level private club) in Newtown
Square, Pennsylvania.
From
1983-1991 Strobel was the Director of National Team Programs for USA Wrestling,
which included a stint as National Freestyle Coach from 1987-88. As liaison on USA Wrestling’s most active
committee, Strobel helped to design the policies, procedures, team selection,
training and competition for all USA teams including the 1984, 1988
and 1992 Olympic teams. During his time
with USA Wrestling, Team USA
defeated the then-Soviet Union in three World
Cups and the Goodwill Games, while producing more world and Olympic champions
than in any other previous comparable period.
From
1981-83 Strobel served as an assistant coach at Oregon State
University.
From
1977-1981 he was head wrestling coach at Roseburg
(Oregon) High
School where he coached several state champions and future NCAA All-American
and record holder Jim Baumgartner. A 1975 graduate of Oregon State,
Strobel received his bachelor’s degree and master’s in business education.
Strobel
earned NCAA titles in 1973 and 1974 while wrestling at 190 pounds and was fifth
in 1972. In 1973 he was named the tournament’s outstanding wrestler. He
compiled a daunting 126-7-1 record from 1972-74 and still holds the school
record for consecutive wins with 74. Strobel won three Pacific 8 (currently
Pacific 10) Conference championships and earned an NCAA Post-Graduate
Scholar-Athlete Award in 1975. He was inducted into the school’s athletics Hall
of Fame in 1993.
He
remains active in several leadership positions, serving as the EIWA Coaches
Association President. Strobel is also a member of the NCAA Rules Committee and
serves as First Vice-President of USA Wrestling.
Strobel
and his wife Donna have two children, Jennifer and Christine; and three
grandchildren, Mason, Isabel and Evelyn.
Jennifer and Christine are both graduates of Lehigh, Classes of 1998 and
2001, respectively. Greg is also an avid fisherman and golfer.
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