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Austin Young

Austin Young

  • Title
    Head Men's & Women's Fencing Coach
  • Email
    coachy@jhu.edu
  • Phone
    410/340-6269

The Young File

Personal
Hometown Clinton, NJ
Education Rutgers, 1996 (Bachelor's)
Wife Judy
Children Leo
Professional
2003-Present Johns Hopkins University
Men's Fencing Head Coach
2009-Present Johns Hopkins University
Women's Fencing Head Coach
1997-1999 Rutgers University
Assistant Coach
 
Accolades
2023 MACFA Coach of the Year (Men)
2017 EWFC Coaching Staff of the Year (Women)
2011 EWFC Coaching Staff of the Year (Women)
Updated: May 2024
First Day at Johns Hopkins:
October 1, 2003


Austin Young was named just the fifth head coach in Johns Hopkins men's fencing history in August 2003. Six years later, in July 2009, he was named head coach of the women's program. 

Young has coached the Blue Jay men to 382 wins and nine MACFA Championships. The Blue Jays have posted nine 20-win seasons during his tenure and won five MACFA titles in six seasons from 2013 to 2018. JHU has also finished as the league runner-up six times under Young. The Blue Jays have won back-to-back MACFA titles and posted 55 wins in the last two seasons.  

The winningest coach in the history of the Blue Jay women's fencing program, Young has led the Blue Jays to 255 wins and 11 EWFC Championships. Hopkins won an impressive five straight league titles from 2010 to 2014 and has currently won five straight titles, beginning in 2019 (no championship awarded in 2021). Young coached JHU to a school-record 27 wins in 2022 and has the only five 20-win seasons in school history (2017, 2018, 2022, 2023, 2024).

Young has coached 82 All-EWFC selections and 16 EWFC Fencers of the Year (4 Epee, 4 Foil, 8 Sabre) as well as 32 USFCA All-Americans (16 women, 16 men). In addition, he was named the EWFC Coach of the Year in 2011 and 2017.

Prior to taking over the men's program in 2003, Young served as the owner and head coach of the Clinton Fencing Club in Lebanon, NJ for six years. His duties included planning and leading group practices for all skill levels and giving individual lessons in all three weapons.

Additionally, Young was an assistant men's fencing coach at Rutgers University during the 1997 through 1999 seasons. At Rutgers Young organized and led practices, gave individual lessons, recruited high school athletes, and organized all home meets. He helped lead the Scarlet Knights to ninth and 13th place finishes at the NCAA Championships.

Young is a 1996 graduate of Rutgers University with a degree in finance. He and his wife, Judy, reside in Towson with their son, Leo.