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Marcus McElhenney


Marcus McElhenney


Marcus McElhenney (born July 27, 1981) is an American coxswain and attorney. He won a bronze medal in the men's eight at the 2008 Summer Olympics before a career in law and politics.

Life and career

McElhenney first competed internationally in 2001, representing the United States in Linz, Austria at the Nations' Cup (Under 23 World Championships) where he coxed the men's eight to a silver medal. McElhenney was invited to try out for the 2002 Under 23 World Championship team.

His first major international success at the senior/Olympic level came at the 2003 World Rowing Championships in Milan where he won a gold medal in the coxed four event. A year later at the 2004 World Rowing Championships, he won a bronze medal in the same event. At 2005 World Rowing Championships he coxed both the eights and fours, winning a gold and a silver medal respectively, the first US athlete to have earned two medals at the same World Rowing Championships. In 2007 won both the eights and coxed fours at the 2007 USRowing championships.

McElhenney grew up in Delaware County, Pennsylvania and graduated from Temple University in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He is the cousin of actor Rob McElhenney.

He served as principal architect of the coxswain curriculum at Sparks Rowing, a social business that provides the largest amount of coxswain specific programming in the world. McElhenney graduated from the University of San Francisco School of law, and he currently practices law in California.

In 2017, he joined the Trump administration as part of the now-defunct White House Office of American Innovation. When he took the job, he was quoted as saying "Trump is hands down the greatest president we will ever have in our lifetime. He's a train with no brakes, and now I'm the conductor!" As of 2023, he was working as an attorney in California.

Competitive history

Senior

References

External links

  • Marcus McElhenney at World Rowing
  • Marcus McElhenney at USRowing site at the Wayback Machine (archived August 28, 2008)
  • Marcus Mc Elhenney at 2008 Olympics site at the Wayback Machine (archived September 8, 2008)
  • Marcus Mc Elhenney at Olympics.com
  • Marcus McElhenney at Olympics at Sports-Reference.com (archived)


Text submitted to CC-BY-SA license. Source: Marcus McElhenney by Wikipedia (Historical)