2024

Taylor named eighth wrestling coach

Oklahoma State University Director of Athletics Chad Weiberg has announced wrestling great David Taylor as the eighth head coach in OSU history. "With 34 national championships, the Oklahoma State wrestling program is the most successful in the country by any metric, regardless of sport. We began this search knowing there is no goal that is unattainable for Cowboy wrestling. No expectations are too high," Weiberg said. "The ambitions we have for ourselves led us to the hiring of David Taylor, someone of equally high goals and ambitions." Taylor — an Olympic gold medalist, three-time winner at the World Championships, two-time Dan Hodge Trophy winner, two-time NCAA champion, four-time NCAA finalist and four-time Big Ten champion — holds one of the most impressive résumés of any wrestler in history. "It's an honor to be in this position and I'm extremely grateful," Taylor said. "I'm looking forward to the future of Oklahoma State wrestling. It has an unbelievable tradition and I'm excited to be part of it moving forward. I've achieved everything I have wanted in my personal career, and this is no longer about me. I am just thrilled to be in the position to help others achieve their goals, and truly make an impact in the wrestling world and on the lives around me." Taylor most recently served as the owner and operator of the M2 Training Center, which he created to help wrestlers learn and achieve their goals on and off the mat while he competed at the world level. As a Penn State wrestler from 2009-14, Taylor put together a record of 134-3, totaling 50 pins, 42 technical falls and 29 major decisions on his way to earning the 2012 and 2014 NCAA titles at 165 pounds. He earned Hodge Trophies each of those years to become the third multiple-time recipient of the honor. Taylor's final collegiate match saw him win a title in Oklahoma City. His accolades helped lead the Nittany Lions to NCAA team titles all four years he competed, the first of which was the Nittany Lions' first in nearly 60 years. He was also a multiple-time academic All-America and academic all-conference honoree at Penn State. At the world level, Taylor most recently won his fourth World/Olympic gold medal at 86 kilograms in 2023, dominating the field. He went 5-0 at the event and pinned Iran's Hassan Yazdani in the world title bout, leading 9-3 at the time of the fall. The five wins included three falls and two technical falls. Prior to that, he won gold at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics that were held in 2021, as well as world titles in 2022 and 2018 to go with a World silver medal in 2021. He holds a senior world freestyle career record of 152–21. Taylor and his wife, Kendra, have three girls: London, Ivy and Birdie.

  • From left: David Taylor and Chad Weiberg.