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Mark Trakh
American basketball player-coach

Mark Trakh

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
American basketball player-coach
Work field
Gender
Male
Age
69 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Mark Ozeir Trakh (born May 31, 1955) is a Jordanian-American college basketball coach who is currently in his second stint as women's basketball head coach at the University of Southern California (USC). Before his first stint at USC, he was head coach at Pepperdine University, and was head coach at New Mexico State University before returning to USC in 2017.

Early life and education

Trakh was born in Amman, Jordan and moved to the United States with his family at age 4. Trakh's grandparents are from the Caucasus Mountains and moved to Amman in 1918 to escape Communist rule in Russia. Trakh can speak Circassian and Arabic in addition to English.

In the U.S., the Trakhs first lived in Connecticut and Paterson, New Jersey before settling in Wanaque, New Jersey. A baseball and basketball student-athlete, Trakh graduated from Lakeland Regional High School. After high school, Trakh attended Fairleigh Dickinson University, before joining his family in Southern California and transferring to Fullerton College in 1977. A journalism major, Trakh was sports editor at the Fullerton College student newspaper and freelancer for the Fullerton News-Tribune. In 1979, Trakh transferred to California State University, Long Beach (Long Beach State) to pursue a teaching credential. Trakh graduated from Long Beach State in 1981.

Coaching career

While in high school, Trakh coached junior high and youth basketball. Trakh was boys' sophomore head coach for Western High School in Anaheim in the 1979–80 season before becoming girls' varsity head coach at Brea Olinda High School, a position he would hold from 1980 to 1993. Inheriting a program that won only four games in the previous two seasons, Trakh had a 354–45 overall record with four state titles (1989, 1991–93). At Brea Olinda, Trakh also was an English teacher.

From 1993 to 2004, Trakh was head coach at Pepperdine University. He led Pepperdine to four West Coast Conference regular season titles (1999, 2000, 2002, 2003) and had consecutive NCAA or WNIT appearances in his final six seasons.

Trakh was head coach at USC from 2004 to 2009, during which he had a 90–64 overall record with NCAA Tournament appearances in 2005 and 2006. Although Trakh recruited four top-12 recruiting classes, including the USA Today number-one class in 2006, USC never finished above fourth place in the Pac-10 in Trakh's five years and did not make any postseason tournaments after 2006. On April 8, 2009, Trakh resigned from USC.

On April 8, 2011, New Mexico State hired Trakh as head coach. Trakh's time at New Mexico State began with three consecutive losing seasons before the first of three consecutive first-place finishes in the Western Athletic Conference in 2015.

After six seasons at New Mexico State, he returned to USC during the 2017 offseason, replacing Cynthia Cooper-Dyke, who had resigned for unspecified reasons after the 2016–17 season.

Personal life

Mark Trakh's younger brother Maz is also a basketball coach; at the time of Mark's return to USC, Maz was an assistant with the NBA's Washington Wizards.

Head coaching record

This section covers Trakh's head coaching record in NCAA Division I.

Source for Pepperdine records:

SeasonTeamOverallConferenceStandingPostseason
Pepperdine Waves (West Coast Conference) (1993–2004)
1993–94Pepperdine14–126–8T–5th
1994–95Pepperdine10–164–10T–6th
1995–96Pepperdine15–137–7T–4th
1996–97Pepperdine15–136–85th
1997–98Pepperdine21–1010–42nd
1998–99Pepperdine21–911–3T–1stWNIT First Round
1999–2000Pepperdine21–1012–21stNCAA First Round
2000–01Pepperdine20–1110–4T–3rdWNIT First Round
2001–02Pepperdine23–811–31stNCAA First Round
2002–03Pepperdine22–812–21stNCAA First Round
2003–04Pepperdine17–1310–4T–2ndWNIT First Round
Pepperdine:199–123 (.618)99–55 (.643)
USC Trojans (Pacific-10 Conference) (2004–2009)
2004–05USC20–1112–6T–4thNCAA Second Round
2005–06USC19–1211–75thNCAA Second Round
2006–07USC17–1310–85th
2007–08USC17–1310–8T–4th
2008–09USC17–159–9T–4th
USC (first stint):90–64 (.584)52–38 (.578)
New Mexico State Aggies (Western Athletic Conference) (2011–2017)
2011–12New Mexico State6–243–11T–7th
2012–13New Mexico State15–167–118th
2013–14New Mexico State11–207–9T–6th
2014–15New Mexico State22–813–11stNCAA First Round
2015–16New Mexico State26–513–11stNCAA First Round
2016–17New Mexico State24–714–01stNCAA First Round
New Mexico State:104–80 (.565)57–33 (.633)
USC Trojans (Pac-12 Conference) (2017–present)
2017–18USC
Total:393-267 (.595)

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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