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Florida State Coach Mark Krikorian Wins Third National Title

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  • Florida State Coach Mark Krikorian Wins Third National Title

    Florida State Coach Mark Krikorian Wins Third National Title

    By Tom Vartabedian on January 28, 2015
    http://armenianweekly.com/2015/01/28/krikorian/


    TALLAHASSEE, Fla.--Add the name to the venerable list of prominent
    Armenian-American coaches who have made an imprint on the national
    scene.

    He's Mark Krikorian and he just coached Florida State University to
    its first-ever NCAA Division 1 women's soccer championship.

    Mark Krikorian

    Krikorian joins such iconic coaches as Jerry Tarkanian, who led the
    University of Nevada/Las Vegas to a national title in basketball in
    1990. The Running Rebels that year defeated Duke in the finals,
    103-73, representing the largest point difference in an NCAA final
    ever.

    And let's not forget Ara Parseghian, who won two national football
    titles with Notre Dame in 1966 and 1973 before turning to the
    announcer's booth.

    With Krikorian, make that one better than Parseghian, when you
    consider the two Division 2 national soccer crowns he secured in 1994
    and 1995 while with Franklin Pierce College in rural Rindge, N.H., at
    the advent of his coaching career.

    The title game was a 1-0 nail-biter against fourth-ranked University
    of Virginia. The Seminoles were ranked second in the polls going into
    that showdown.

    It was not only the talk of the Florida State campus but the entire
    soccer scene in America. Krikorian is being hailed for such an
    achievement at a time when the Seminoles were blown away by Oregon,
    59-20, in the Rose Bowl.

    "I'm truly honored to be mentioned in the same breath as Tarkanian and
    Parseghian," he said. "They are great leaders of their respective
    sports and did it their way. It's great to follow in their footsteps.
    Women's soccer is on the rise."

    Comparatively speaking, there's no way women's soccer is being
    upstaged by men's sports at FSU, Krikorian feels. And he likes to
    think that perhaps he's played a role in that perception.

    The 54-year-old mentor was born and raised in Malden, Mass., and
    graduated from St. Anselm's College in Manchester, N.H., prior to
    graduating from Pinkerton Academy in Derry, N.H., where he starred in
    soccer, basketball, and lacrosse.

    "Being from New Hampshire is essential to who I am today," he
    confirms. "I learned an awful lot from my high school coaches. A lot
    of my success at FSU is tied to my direct roots in New Hampshire."

    He's been inducted into the Saint Anselm's Athletic Club Hall of Fame
    as a former two-time captain and team Most Valuable Player, as well as
    an All-New England First-Team selection. He helped guide the college
    to a share of the Northeast-8 championship his senior year.

    "By winning the national championship at Florida State, Mark is as
    good a coach as anyone in the country," says his former coach Ed
    Cannon. "He has been one of the best coaches in America at any level."

    Krikorian started coaching soccer in 1990 and the Seminoles are his
    fifth team. In 2004, he piloted the United States Women's Under-19
    team prior to joining FSU.

    He led that 2004 team to a world championship in Thailand. With 10
    years of Top Ten finishes, it's as close to a dynasty as you'll ever
    find in his sport.

    "I appreciate the support from my family and being at FSU where they
    value excellence as much as I do," Krikorian adds. "My Armenian
    heritage taught me a great work ethic and family mentality."

    Krikorian and his wife Linda are parents to two children, Allie, 14,
    and Michael, 12. They live in Tallahassee not far from the school and
    remain bullish toward campus activity.

    As far as women's sports are concerned, he sees an open window of opportunity.

    "The best opportunity to coach at the college level was on the women's
    side," he notes. "That's why I got into it. I hope to be here until I
    retire."

    ***

    PERSONAL FAVORITES

    Armenian coaches: Jerry Tarkanian and Ara Parseghian

    American coach: Bobby Bowden (retired FSU football coach)

    Athlete: Larry Bird

    TV show: "NCIS"

    Movie: "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest"

    Screen star: Jack Nicholson

    Hobby: Reading

    Singer: Whitney Houston

    Vacation spot: Maine

    Pet peeve: Apathy

    Book: Five Dysfunctions of a Team

    Proudest accomplishment: Birth of my children and three national championships

    Something that may surprise others: I was previously a high school teacher.

    Quote: "Seek first to understand, then be understood" by Stephen Covey

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