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Andy Geiger


Ferdinand "Andy" Geiger (born March 23, 1939) is a former athletic director at six different institutions, most recently holding that position for 11 years at Ohio State University, which contained the largest athletics department in the country.

A native of Syracuse, New York, Geiger graduated from Syracuse University in 1961 and was a member of the crew team as an undergraduate. He also was a member of the U.S. squad that captured a gold medal in the 1959 Pan American Games.

After graduation Geiger accepted the job of freshman rowing coach at Dartmouth College in 1961. His first administrative role was as an assistant athletics director at his alma mater in 1964. He left Syracuse in 1970 to become assistant commissioner of the Eastern College Athletic Conference.

In 1971, at age 32, Geiger became athletics director at Brown University. He held that position until 1975, when he moved to the University of Pennsylvania in a similar capacity.

Geiger accepted the head athletics position at Stanford University in 1979. During his 11-year stay at the Pac-10 school, the Cardinal won a total of 27 national championships and Stanford was considered one of the elite programs in intercollegiate athletics.

In 1990, Geiger left Stanford to take over a Maryland program that was on NCAA probation. He spent a little more than three years at Maryland working to return the athletics department to stability.

On April 29, 1994 Geiger was named athletic director at Ohio State. He officially assumed the responsibilities of the position on May 16, 1994, succeeding former NACDA President Jim Jones.

Geiger's enduring legacy in Columbus was a building program, sometimes referred to as "Andy-land," that resulted in a number of new athletic facilities on campus, most notably the 4,450-seat Bill Davis Stadium (baseball); the 10,000-seat Jesse Owens Memorial Stadium (track, soccer and lacrosse); and the 19,200-seat Schottenstein Center (basketball, hockey) as well as a $194 million renovation & expansion of Ohio Stadium in 1999 & 2000. The resulting debt service on "the Schott" was so burdensome that operation of the building was eventually transferred to the Office of Student Life which was in a better position to service the debt.


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