Aaron Fox
Aaron Fox
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Quick Career Highlights
· 2010 NCAA Division I-AAA Indoor Champions
· 2008 & '11 USTFCCCA South Central Region Indoor Coach of the Year
· 28 All-Americans
· 50 All-America certificates
· 3 Academic All-Americans
· 14 conference championships
· 17 conference runner-up finishes
· 13-time conference coach of the year
· 187 individual/relay conference championships
· Flagstaff Sports Foundation Hall of Fame Inductee (2023)

Aaron Fox is in his 16th season as UTSA's director of track & field and cross country. An integral part of Roadrunners track & field for more than two decades, Fox has been in charge of the men since 2003 and he added the women to his list of responsibilities following the merging of the two programs in July 2008. His career in the Alamo City began as an assistant for both the men and women in 2000.

A former All-America decathlete at the University of Texas, he has tutored several high-profile athletes at UTSA, including five-time All-American Richard Garrett Jr., four-time All-American Teddy Williams, three-time All-Americans Keyunta Hayes and Justin Youngblood, four-time Southland Champion Will Vese and 2008 Southland Cross Country, six-time indoor and three-time outdoor league champion Dana Mecke.

Under his watchful eye, Roadrunners student-athletes have broken or tied nine conference records and more than 80 school marks. They also have won 187 league titles and earned 50 All-America certificates.

There has been just as much success in the classroom, as multi-event performer Bryan Wolfe swept Southland Student-Athlete of the Year honors in 2005 and ’06 and he also was a third-team College Sports Communicators (CSC/formerly CoSIDA) Academic All-American as a senior. Meanwhile, Mecke was a four-time Southland Conference Student-Athlete of the Year selection (2008 cross country/’09-10 indoor/’10 outdoor) in addition to earning third-team Academic All-America accolades in 2010. Maddie Boswell added her name to that illustrious list after earning a spot on the Academic All-America Third Team in 2022.

In 2022-23, Fox guided the Roadrunners to five All-America honors and 14 conference crowns. The UTSA men earned runner-up finishes at both the Conference USA Indoor and Outdoor Championships, while the women finished third outdoors and fourth indoors.

Individually, Oreolowa Adamson collected All-America certificates in the long jump at both the NCAA Indoor (second team) and Outdoor (honorable mention) meets. She also captured three conference gold medals including sweeping the long jump crowns and winning the outdoor triple jump title. Bashiru Abdullahi picked up second-team All-America accolades in the men’s 110-meter hurdles for the second straight season, while Jack Turner and Joel McFarlane earned first team and honorable mention recognition in the decathlon. Turner swept the C-USA Field Performer of the Meet awards while Mike Roth was the C-USA Indoor High Point Scorer in 2023.

The men’s and women’s cross country and men’s and women’s track & field teams received USTFCCCA All-Academic Team awards while Abdullahi, Adamson, McFarlane, Roth, Turner, Michael Campbell, Ingeborg Gruenwald, Jemuel Miller, Dennis Phillips and Alanah Yukich were named USTFCCCA All-Academic Athletics. Adamson, Abdullahi, Gruenwald, McFarlane, Miller, Phillips, Roth, Sigrid Kleive and Maren Wilms were named Academic All-District, while Abdullahi, Adamson, Gruenwald, Miller and Roth all landed on the C-USA All-Academic Team.

In 2021-22, Fox mentored the Roadrunners to six All-America certificates and seven conference gold medals while leading both teams to top-four finishes at both the C-USA Indoor and Outdoor meets. The women finished second at the outdoor championships, their best showing in a decade, while they were third indoors for the second straight season. The men also placed third indoors and fourth outdoors while claiming a combined four All-America honors and five league crowns.

Individually, Miller enjoyed a spectacular freshman campaign by sweeping the C-USA men's triple jump titles and earning first-team All-America accolades indoors and second-team plaudits outdoors. Abdullahi (110m hurdles) and Christiaan Le Roux (long jump) also achieved All-America status outdoors, while Gruenwald collected second-team honors in the indoor long jump. Abdullahi captured the conference title in the indoor 60m hurdles and completed the sweep by posting a school, meet and facility record 13.53 clocking in the 110m hurdles at the C-USA Outdoor, which UTSA hosted at Park West Athletics Complex. Turner struck gold in the decathlon for the second consecutive year, while Gruenwald (indoor long jump) and Yukich (400m hurdles) also earned a spot atop the podium.

In addition to Boswell's CoSIDA Academic All-America and Academic All-District honors, she joined Gruenwald, McFarlane and Diego Pettorossi on the C-USA All-Academic Team. The men's and women's cross country and track & field teams all received USTFCCCA All-Academic Team accolades, while 11 student-athletes were named USTFCCCA All-Academic Athletes.

Under Fox's tutelage, the UTSA women finished third at both the 2021 C-USA Indoor and Outdoor Championships, while the men also logged a third-place showing indoors. Turner earned C-USA Indoor Men's Field Performer of the Meet after winning the heptathlon and capturing bronze in the long jump, while Grant Szalek took top honors in the triple jump top help lead the men to their seventh consecutive top-three showing at the meet. Meanwhile, Ingeborg Gruenwald's long jump victory helped propel the women to their best league indoor placing since 2014. Maia Campbell, who earned honorable mention All-America accolades in the shot put, Faith Roberson and Amaya Scott all claimed gold medals at the C-USA Outdoor to lead the women to third, the best conference finish since 2012. Turner made it a clean sweep of the men's multi-event crowns with a school-record performance in the decathlon at the league's outdoor meet.

Fox led the UTSA men to a runner-up finish and the women to a fourth-place showing at the 2020 C-USA Indoor Championships. Abdullahi won the 60-meter hurdles with a school-record time of 7.80 seconds, Andre Douglas captured the triple jump crown and Turner took top honors in the heptathlon to pace the men, while Maia Campbell struck gold in the weight throw with a UTSA-record mark of 16.12 meters to lead the women. The 2020 NCAA Indoor Championships and entire outdoor season were canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, but NCAA Indoor heptathlon qualifier Gary Haasbroek still was recognized as an All-American.

In 2019, Fox mentored a trio of All-Americans in Luca Chatham, Danielle Spence and Haasbroek, who was a second-team honoree indoors with a 10th-place finish in the heptathlon. Spence was a second-team honoree with a 13th-place effort in the triple jump at the NCAA Indoor, while Chatham placed 18th in the 800 meters outdoors.

Haasbroek also broke a pair of school records during the indoor season. The Australian scored 5,949 points to set new heptathlon standards for UTSA and his native Australia, along with Houston Invitational and Bill Yeoman Fieldhouse records, and he also eclipsed the program's long jump record with a leap of 7.65 meters at the same meet.

Meanwhile, Spence shattered school records in the triple jump both indoors and outdoors during her sophomore season, while Chatham broke the outdoor 800m mark.

Four Roadrunners combined to collect five Conference USA gold medals during the 2019 season. Haasbroek swept the league's multi-event crowns, winning the indoor heptathlon and outdoor decathlon en route to being named C-USA Freshman of the Meet at both championships. Spence claimed top honors in the women's indoor triple jump, Chatham crossed first in the men's indoor mile and Gabriyella Torres secured gold in the women's indoor pentathlon. Additionally, eight Roadrunners advanced to the NCAA West Preliminary Round with Chatham and Haasbroek moving on to the NCAA Outdoor in Austin.

UTSA also took care of business in the classroom. A league-high four Roadrunners — Olivia Esemena, Charlette Janicek, Andrew Pirog and Steven Thomas — were named to the C-USA Track & Field All-Academic Team. Additionally, 52 student-athletes made the C-USA Commissioner's Honor Roll and nine earned the C-USA Academic Medal (3.75 GPA).

Fox coached three All-Americans during the 2018 campaign, as Patrick Prince, Adrian Riley and Ty Anderson all earned the prestigious honor during the outdoor campaign. Riley and Anderson were second-team honorees in the decathlon and high jump, respectively, while Prince picked up honorable mention accolades in the 110-meter hurdles. Overall, 13 Roadrunners advanced to the NCAA West Preliminary Round. 

UTSA claimed three Conference USA individual crowns in 2018 as Desmond Jefferson won the indoor 400m title and Prince won both the indoor 60m hurdles and outdoor 110m hurdles championships. The men placed second and third, respectively, in the C-USA indoor and outdoor meets, while the women claimed sixth in both. 

Off the track, Jennifer Arinze received the C-USA Spring Spirit of Service award, while 21 men and 14 women were named to the 2017-18 C-USA Commissioner's Honor Roll, including 15 that earned academic medals.

The 2017 outdoor season featured five men's individual C-USA titles as Anderson (high jump), Tyler Finke (shot put), Randy Bermea (400m hurdles), Prince (110m hurdles) and Barrett Brock (pole vault) brought gold medals back to the Alamo City. In addition, 14 men and eight women earned berths to the NCAA West Preliminary Round with Riley advancing to the NCAA Outdoor Championships in the long jump, where he earned second-team All-America honors with a 15th-place finish.

The 2017 indoor season saw four Roadrunners win C-USA crowns. Gabe Vargas (shot put) and Anderson (high jump) claimed men's titles in guiding the Roadrunners to a third-place showing at the conference meet. Meanwhile, Syd Howells (60m) and N'Dia Warren-Jacques(shot put) took first in their respective events, as the women finished fourth overall. 

Off the track, Bermea received the C-USA Spring Spirit of Service award and was named an USTFCCCA All-Academic honoree along with Brock and Victor Perez, while 24 men and 16 women were named to the 2016-17 Conference USA Commissioner's Honor Roll, including 15 that earned academic medals (3.75 GPA).

UTSA captured three individual C-USA titles during the 2016 season, as Dusan Makevic won both the 3,000m and 5,000m at the league's indoor meet in addition to Barrett Brock bringing home a gold medal in the pole vault. Meanwhile, high jumper Ty Anderson advanced to the NCAA Outdoor Championships and earned second-team All-America accolades with his 12th-place performance. The Roadrunners also continued their success in the classroom, as Victor Perez earned C-USA All-Academic laurels and 39 athletes were named to the Commissioner's Honor Roll, including four that earned academic medals (3.75 GPA).

The 2015 year saw the UTSA men successfully defend their C-USA Outdoor Championship on the strength of four individual titles and Fox was named the circuit's Coach of the Year for the second year in a row. Keyunta Hayes swept both hurdles events for the second consecutive campaign, Ty Anderson won the high jump and Jared Tyler captured gold in the discus. It marked the program's 10th straight campaign with either an indoor or outdoor crown. Hayes and Jurmarcus Shelvin went on to earn honorable mention All-America accolades in the 400-meter hurdles 

The outdoor achievements followed yet another successful indoor season. The Roadrunners finished second at the league's indoor meet and were led by Andrew Akens, who successfully defended his shot put crown, and Hayes, who raced to victory in the 60m hurdles. Dionte Robinson was UTSA's leading scorer in his inaugural conference championship meet and he was tabbed C-USA Freshman of the Meet.

Meanwhile, the women were led by Whitney Flannel, who matched UTSA's 19-year-old record in the high jump and became the program's first All-American in eight years following her 11th-place finish at the NCAA Outdoor Championships. That came on the heels of a C-USA title in her specialty event and she was joined by Stephanie Wangui's victory in the 800m. The indoor campaign saw Wangui collect a pair of gold medals at the conference meet, first in the 800m and later as a member of the distance medley relay that also featured Grace Kohler, Shantel Swift and Emily Perez.

The accolades also carried over to the classroom, as five Roadrunners earned C-USA Academic Medals and a total of 23 were named to the Commissioner's Honor Roll. Lindsey Pew landed on the league's all-academic squad for the second consecutive year and Perez earned All-Academic honors from the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association.

The inaugural campaign in C-USA got off to a great start in 2013-14, as the women's cross country team won UTSA's first-ever C-USA Championship in November. Led by Nina Herrera's fourth-place finish, the Roadrunners captured the program's first league crown since 1996 and sixth overall in school history (1991-93, '95-96 Southland Conference). Emily Perez went on to post the best individual finish by a Roadrunner in 17 years and her performance helped lead UTSA to fifth place at the 2013 NCAA South Central Regional.

The success carried over to the track & field seasons, as the men captured the C-USA Outdoor Championship and the women finished second at the league's indoor meet. All told, UTSA athletes earned three All-America certificates (Akens/Richard Garrett Jr./Hayes), won eight conference individual/relay crowns (five outdoor/three indoor) and set a total of 10 program records (five indoor/five outdoor). Garrett Jr. also was tabbed the circuit's outdoor Field Athlete of the Year and Field Performer of the Meet, while Fox was named the league's Coach of the Year.

The honors were not limited to the track, as seven Roadrunners earned C-USA Academic Medals (3.75 GPA) and 35 student-athletes were named to the Commissioner's Honor Roll. Samantha Fish earned C-USA All-Academic laurels in both cross country and track & field, while Nate Brunette and Pew were track & field honorees.

Fox led UTSA's successful transition into the Western Athletic Conference (WAC) in 2013 following unprecedented success in the program's former home, the Southland Conference.

The men captured the WAC Indoor Championship in February behind a school-record-tying six individual/relay titles. The victory was UTSA's eighth consecutive indoor league title and Fox was named WAC Coach of the Year (his eighth straight indoor coaching award). Garrett Jr. was tabbed the conference's Outstanding Field Performer and he went on to match the program's highest national indoor finish with his fourth-place performance in the shot put. Outdoors, Joshua Smith advanced to the NCAA Championships semifinals in the 400m hurdles and his 13th-place performance earned him second-team All-America accolades 

Meanwhile, the women just missed out on their first indoor league crown in 19 years when they finished second to I-35 rival Texas State by just six points. That came on the heels of a runner-up effort at the WAC Cross Country Championships, which featured the closest race in meet history (Idaho won by only three points).

All told, UTSA won a total of 12 conference gold medals (eight indoor/four outdoor) in their first and only season in the circuit and Jonas Gutierrez also earned WAC Men's Outdoor Freshman of the Year honors.

Fox led the men to a league-record seven consecutive Southland Indoor Championships and he was named the league's Coach of the Year from 2006-12 (only coach in conference history to earn seven straight awards). The Roadrunners also won three outdoor titles in their final five years in the circuit (2008, '10 & '12) and he picked up Coach of the Year accolades following each of those indoor/outdoor sweeps. Fox’s other honors include the 2008 and '11 U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA) South Central Region Indoor Coach of the Year and he also represented Team USA as an assistant coach at the 2010 Thorpe Cup (annual United States/Germany decathlon competition).

In a tight team race that came down to the final event, the Flagstaff, Ariz., native led UTSA to its first-ever Southland Indoor Championship in 2006 behind individual championships from Buteaux (heptathlon) and Mthobisi Baloyi (800m). His Roadrunners successfully defended that title a year later on the strength of gold medals by Brooks (800m), Gaston Griffin (400m) and Vese (60m hurdles) and UTSA completed the three-peat in 2008 when a league-record six athletes — Steven Brown (200m), Luke Johnson (shot put), P.J. McGowen (high jump), Vese (60m hurdles), Williams (60m) and Tommy Wolfe (heptathlon) — came back to the Alamo City with individual crowns.

The Roadrunners picked up their fourth consecutive title in February 2009 when Vese (60m hurdles), Johnathan Whittaker (high jump), Williams (60m/200m) and Tommy Wolfe (heptathlon) finished first in their respective events. Williams collected Southland Athlete of the Year and Outstanding Track Performer honors after becoming the first athlete in five years to sweep the short sprints at the conference meet. He went on to post the third-fastest preliminary heat time, a league record 6.59, at the NCAA Indoor Championships and picked up his second All-America certificate with his eighth-place showing. He went on to post the world’s fastest 100m time in any condition, 9.90, at the UTEP Invitational in April, which stood for two-and-a-half months. Meanwhile, Vese also picked up his third title in a row in the 60m hurdles and Tommy Wolfe won his third straight conference multi-events championship.

Crown number five came the following season when the Birds received winning performances from Williams (60m/200m), Keith Benford (high jump), Bond (triple jump) and the distance medley relay team of Brandon Chiuminetta, Canel Cole, Bryan Ugochukwu and Albert Cardenas. Williams was tabbed the league’s Athlete of the Year and Outstanding Track Performer for the second season in a row, while Benford and Bond were named Freshman and Newcomer of the Year, respectively.

UTSA matched Lamar's 26-year-old Southland record in 2011 with its sixth straight title and that came on the strength of the Roadrunners equaling their conference record with a half dozen gold medals — Benford (high jump), Bond (triple jump), Cardenas (mile), Garrett Jr. (shot put), Taylor Reed (pole vault) and Williamson (long jump). That helped the Birds score 153 points, which was the second-highest total in the meet's 32-year history. Garrett Jr. was named the Outstanding Field Performer and he went on to earn second-team All-America honors at the NCAA Indoor.

The unprecedented seventh championship in a row came a year later with another half dozen individual crowns, as Benford (high jump), Garrett Jr. (shot put), Hayes (60m hurdles), Chrisshun Jamerson (800m), Steinert (weight throw) and Williamson (long jump) all were victorious. Benford went on to earn second-team All-America honors with his 14th-place finish at the national indoor championships.

UTSA ended a streak of back-to-back second-place finishes at the conference’s outdoor meet in 2008, giving the program its first-ever indoor/outdoor sweep in school history. First-place efforts by Williams in the 100m and 200m, Vese in the 110m hurdles, Tommy Wolfe in the decathlon and the 400-meter relay team vaulted the Roadrunners to their second Southland Outdoor Championship in school annals. Following that meet, the team entered the USTFCCA Top 25 Poll, which was the first national ranking by any program in UTSA Athletics history.

Williams earned All-America honors in the 100m following his seventh-place performance at the 2008 NCAA Outdoor Championships and he went on to advance to the quarterfinals at the United States Olympic Trials. The fifth All-American in school history had a year to remember, as he set a total of four school records — 60m (6.66), 100m (10.16), 200m (20.60) and 400m relay (39.84) in addition to winning the NCAA Midwest Regional 100m title, the Southland Outdoor 100m, 200m and 400m relay crowns and the Southland Indoor 60m gold medal. Williams, who led 1-2-3 finishes in both short sprints at the conference’s outdoor meet, was named the league’s Outstanding Outdoor Track Performer. He also set a new conference record in the 60m dash in January and competed at the NCAA Indoor Championships two months later. The Tyler native capped his season by running on the 400m relay team that ran the world’s fastest time (38.39) at the NACAC Under-23 Championships. Meanwhile, Brown collected All-Midwest Region honors in the 100m, was named the Southland Indoor Athlete of the Year and was the high-point scorer at both league meets and Tommy Wolfe became the first athlete to sweep both multi-event competitions in league history.

The program’s second sweep in three years came in 2010 when Williams (100m), Bond (high & triple jumps) and Williamson (long jump) won individual titles at the Southland Outdoor. The Birds scored a then-school-record 148 points en route to their seventh title under Fox’s tutelage and Williams recorded the nation’s top 100m time (10.03w) in his gold-medal performance. Bond went on to post the third-best national finish in program history with his fifth-place effort in the triple jump, while Williams became UTSA’s first-ever four-time All-American with his ninth-place showing in the 100m. He went on to sign a free agent contract with the Dallas Cowboys in July 2010, becoming the first UTSA athlete to play in the National Football League.

Three Roadrunners — Benford (high jump), Bond (triple jump) and Hayes (400m hurdles) — won conference crowns at the 2011 Southland Outdoor, as UTSA finished second to Stephen F. Austin by 16 points. Hayes was tabbed the conference's Freshman of the Year, a first in program history, after accounting for 16.75 points, which was the highest total among league frosh. Ten athletes qualified for the NCAA Outdoor Preliminary Rounds and a school-record three — Benford (high jump/honorable mention), Bond (triple jump/second team) and Garrett Jr. (shot put/second team) — went on to earn All-America honors.

UTSA left the league in style in May 2012 with its third indoor/outdoor sweep in the last five years. Hayes swept both hurdles events on the final day of the meet, while Garrett Jr. won the shot put for the program's first-ever outdoor throws gold medal in its 21-year history in the conference. Those two and Williamson went on to earn All-America accolades at the national meet. Hayes (400m hurdles) posted the best finish of the three, fourth, and that was the second-highest outdoor finish in school annals. He went on to advance to the semifinals of the U.S. Olympic Trials.

On the women’s side, Fox immediately turned the Roadrunners into Southland contenders in just four seasons.

UTSA nearly won its first Southland Outdoor Championship since 1997 in its last campaign in the league and it ended up posting its best finish, second, in 15 years. The Roadrunners won a total six individual/relay titles — Katie Bragg (hammer), Jhorden Hunter (100m), Eboni Johnson (triple jump), Zaquita McClanahan (shot put), Mecke (1,500m) and the 400m relay quartet of Shahira Ehiemua, Chiugo Okonkwo, Krystal Wynn and Hunter. Meanwhile, Ehiemua was tabbed Southland Freshman of the Year. All that came on the heels of a fourth-place effort at the conference's indoor meet where Chenale Smith (high jump) and the distance medley relay of Isabel Balbontin, Grace Williamson, Nina Herrera and Alyssa Diaz captured gold medals.

The 2011 campaign saw Aimee Jonas win the program's seventh Southland pentathlon title, which helped lead UTSA to a third-place finish. Meanwhile, Bragg picked up the school's first-ever hammer crown during the outdoor season.

Mecke helped lead the program to a five-place improvement at the 2010 Southland Outdoor and she was named the league’s Athlete of the Year after winning the 800m and 1,500m titles. Her middle distance sweep was the first in the conference in seven years. Jessica Jones was the Birds’ other champion, as she won her third consecutive 100m hurdles crown, joining former UTSA All-American Ryanne Dupree as the circuit’s only three-time winners in the event.

UTSA posted its highest indoor finish — third — in a half dozen years in February 2010 on the strength of a school-record-tying six individual/relay crowns. Jones successfully defended her 60m hurdles title, Mecke swept the 800m and mile for the second straight year, Pernilla Savestrand and Kayla Pratt were victorious in the 3k and 5k, respectively, and the DMR collected gold for the second year in a row. Meanwhile, Savestrand was tabbed the circuit’s Newcomer of the Year after earning the same award during the cross country campaign.

In his first season, Mecke became the fourth female in school history and first in a dozen years to win the Southland Cross Country Championship. She won her first seven races of the season before finishing the campaign with a 23rd-place showing at the NCAA South Central Regional, which was the highest finish by a Roadrunner in at least 12 years. The league’s Student-Athlete of the Year also was a five-time Southland Athlete of the Week honoree. Mecke went on to win Southland Indoor Championships in the 800 meters and mile in addition to running the anchor leg on UTSA’s first-place distance medley relay squad and she was tabbed the meet’s Outstanding Track Performer and circuit’s Student-Athlete of Year. Meanwhile, Jones swept the circuit’s hurdles crowns, including successfully defending her 100m hurdles title, to become the first female in school history to do so and she went on to compete at the NCAA Midwest Regional. Pratt later raced to All-America honors in the 5k at the USA Junior Championships.

Brooks completed a rare double for the Roadrunners in 2007, becoming just the second male athlete in school history to earn All-America accolades at both the NCAA Indoor and Outdoor Championships in the same season, matching Youngblood’s feat from 2004 (heptathlon/decathlon). Additionally, Buteaux advanced to the 2005 NCAA Indoor Championships and became the program’s third All-American with a seventh-place finish.

In 2004, Youngblood won the Southland Indoor heptathlon title en route to being named the league’s Indoor Men’s Athlete of the Year and earning All-America honors with a seventh-place finish at the NCAA Championships. He then picked up his third All-America certificate with a seventh-place showing in the decathlon at the national outdoor meet in Austin.

In his first season as interim head coach in 2003, Fox led the Roadrunners to a pair of individual league titles and a fifth-place finish at the Southland Indoor. Additionally, Carl Johnson was named the meet's Outstanding Track Performer.

The 2002 season saw Fox tutor his student-athletes to several more honors. Both Youngblood and Ray won their respective pentathlons at the Southland Indoor Championships, while Youngblood also was the high jump champion, high-point scorer and Outstanding Field Performer. Ray went on to repeat as the heptathlon (outdoor) champion and the pair both finished seventh at the NCAA Championships to earn All-America accolades.

The UTSA men won the 2001 Southland Outdoor title and Fox also guided Ray and Youngblood to multi-event league titles during the season. Ray claimed pentathlon (indoor) and heptathlon (outdoor) crowns, while Youngblood was the indoor pentathlon champion.

Fox, a team captain at Texas in 1998-99, was an All-American and the first-ever Big 12 Champion in the heptathlon and decathlon. He also holds the U.S. Junior first-day total and long jump records and held the Big 12 Outdoor meet record in the decathlon from 1997-2009. In 1995, he broke Daley Thompson’s junior 100-meter dash mark in the decathlon and was the No. 1-ranked U.S. Junior and third-ranked junior decathlete in the world. Fox also still owns the Arizona Class 4A state record in the long jump (24-7) and his 10-year-old triple jump mark of 49-1 was broken in 2007.

A 1999 graduate with a bachelor's degree in kinesiology, Fox served as an assistant with the Texas track & field camp from 1997-98 and with the Longhorns program until 1999.

Fox is a native of Flagstaff, Arizona, and a 1994 graduate of Sinagua High School, where he starred for the track & field program and also played basketball and soccer. He was a three-time Grand Canyon Conference MVP in 1992-94 and the Arizona state champion twice in the long jump and as a senior in the triple jump. He still holds the Arizona Class 4A state record in the triple jump of 49-1. He also was the 1994 National Scholastic Indoor long jump champion with a leap of 24-5. He was inducted into the Flagstaff Sports Foundation Hall of Fame in August 2023.

Fox is married to the former Sarah Vestal and the couple has two children, June and Jacob. 

The Fox File
· Hometown: Flagstaff, Ariz. (Sinagua HS)
· College: Texas 1999

Coaching Experience
· Head Coach: UTSA, 2008-present (men & women); 2003-08 (men)
· Assistant Coach: UTSA, 2000-02 (men & women) 

Coaching Highlights
· UTSA's men won the 2014 and '15 Conference USA Outdoor Championships
· UTSA's women won the 2013 C-USA Cross Country Championship
· UTSA's men won the 2013 Western Athletic Conference Indoor Championship, which was the program's eighth consecutive indoor league title
· Led the men to 2006-12 Southland Conference Indoor Championships & three Southland Outdoor Championships (2008, '10 & '12)
· 2010 NCAA Division I-AAA Indoor Champions
· 2008 & '11 USTFCCCA South Central Region Indoor Coach of the Year
· 2014-15 C-USA Outdoor Coach of the Year
· 2013 WAC Indoor Coach of the Year
· 2006-12 Southland Indoor Coach of the Year (only coach in league history to earn seven in a row)
· 2008, ’10 & '12 Southland Outdoor Coach of the Year
· 25 All-Americans (Bashiru Abdullahi, Andrew Akens, Ty Anderson, Keith Benford, Devon Bond, Larry Brooks, Brandon Buteaux, Maia Campbell, Luca Chatham, Richard Garrett Jr., Ingeborg Gruenwald, Gary Haasbroek, Keyunta Hayes, Christiaan Le Roux, Jemuel Miller, Patrick Prince, Adrian Riley, Jurmarcus Shelvin, Joshua Smith, Teddy Williams, Tyler Williamson, Justin Youngblood, Whitney Flannel, Rhonda Ray, Danielle Spence)
· 2022 C-USA Outdoor Women's Freshman of the Meet Thennelle Williams
· 2021 C-USA Indoor Men's Field Performer of the Meet Jack Turner
· 2019 C-USA Indoor & Outdoor Freshman of the Meet Gary Haasbroek
· 2015 C-USA Indoor Freshman of the Meet Dionte Robinson
· 2014 C-USA Outdoor Field Athlete of the Year & Field Performer of the Meet Richard Garrett Jr.
· 2013 WAC Outdoor Freshman of the Year Jonas Gutierrez
· 2013 WAC Indoor Outstanding Field Performer Richard Garrett Jr.
· 2012 Southland Outdoor Freshman of the Year Shahira Ehiemua
· 2011 Southland Outdoor Freshman of the Year Keyunta Hayes
· 2011 Southland Indoor Outstanding Field Performer Richard Garrett Jr.
· 2010 Southland Outdoor Athlete of the Year Dana Mecke
· 2008 & ’10 Southland Outdoor Outstanding Track Performer Teddy Williams
· 2009-10 Southland Indoor Athlete of the Year & Outstanding Track Performer Teddy Williams
· 2010 Southland Indoor Newcomer of the Year Devon Bond
· 2010 Southland Indoor Freshman of the Year Keith Benford
· 2010 Southland Cross Country & Indoor Newcomer of the Year Pernilla Savestrand
· 2009 Southland Indoor Outstanding Track Performer Dana Mecke
· 2008 Southland Indoor Athlete of the Year Steven Brown
· 2008 Southland Indoor Freshman of the Year P.J. McGowen
· 2004 Southland Indoor Athlete of the Year Justin Youngblood
· 2003 Southland Indoor Outstanding Track Performer Carl Johnson
· 2002 Southland Indoor Outstanding Field Performer Justin Youngblood
· 56 C-USA Champions (30 indoor/26 outdoor)
· 12 WAC Champions (8 indoor/4 outdoor)
· 105 Southland Champions (60 indoor/44 outdoor/1 cross country)
· Served as an assistant coach for Team USA at the 2010 Thorpe Cup
· Former UTSA sprinter Teddy Williams signed a free-agent contract with Dallas Cowboys in July 2010, becoming the first Roadrunner to play in the NFL. The defensive back also played for the Arizona Cardinals, Carolina Panthers, Chicago Bears, Indianapolis Colts, Jacksonville Jaguars and New York Giants.