Personal information | |
---|---|
Full name | Herbert Morris Cohen |
Born | New York City, New York, U.S. | June 7, 1940
Sport | |
Country | United States |
Sport | Fencing |
Event | Foil |
College team | New York University |
Club | Fencers Club |
Herbert Morris Cohen (born June 7, 1940) is an American Olympic foil fencer. [1]
Cohen is Jewish, was born in New York City, grew up in Brooklyn and has lived in Holmdel, New Jersey. [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] His elder brother was the Olympic fencer Abe Cohen, who competed for the United States in the 1956 Summer Olympics. [1]
Cohen started fencing at the age of 15, and fenced at Abraham Lincoln High School in Brooklyn, New York. [5] [6] [7] He was captain of the fencing team, which included his best friend, future singer Neil Diamond. [8] [9]
He then fenced at New York University (Class of 1962), alongside, among others, Neil Diamond and future Olympian Eugene Glazer. [10] [11] [12] [3] In 1961, he went undefeated during the year and won both the NCAA foil championship and the NCAA saber championship. [13] [14] Fencing for NYU in 1962 he won his second straight NCAA Championship in foil, while being named national Fencer of the Year. [15] He was a three-time All-American. [11]
He fenced for the Fencers Club in New York. [1] [16] Cohen won a gold medal in team foil and a bronze medal in individual foil at the 1963 Pan American Games. [17] In 1964, Cohen won the US National Fencing Championship in foil, while Albie Axelrod took the silver medal and Eugene Glazer took the bronze medal. [4] [18]
Cohen competed in both the individual and team foil events at the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo at the age of 24, and the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico at the age of 28. [1] [19] At the 1964 Olympics in Tokyo, he defeated Romania and Argentina but lost to France and did not advance to the semifinals. [20]
As to his philosophy of fencing, Cohen said: "I always fought as if my life depended on it." [21]
He was the head fencing coach at NYU from 1975 to 1977, and led the team to the 1976 NCAA Championship. [11] In 1977 he coached the fencing team at Stuyvesant High School in Manhattan, New York. [21] In 2016, he coached Teaneck High School. [22] In 1995, Cohen was inducted into the NYU Hall of Fame. [11]
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