Nikki Franke
Fencing
Temple's legendary Fencing coach
Dr. Nikki Franke put the
finishing touches on an
amazing 50-year career
with her recent retirement
as Temple University's
head fencing coach.
Franke brought national attention to
the Owls' fencing program, and now
receives well-deserved recognition for
her longevity and coaching prowess with
her induction into the Philadelphia Sports
Hall of Fame.
Franke is Temple University's all-time
winningest women's athletics coach.
She put together 898 victories in
her coaching career, which included
the 1992 NCAA title. The Owls were
consistently rated among the top
fencing teams in the country as Franke
directed the program to 26 consecutive
National Intercollegiate Women's
Fencing Association Championships.
In addition, 37 of her fencers were
selected for 66 NCAA competitions, and
25 of those 37 athletes picked up All-
America recognition.
A pioneer in her own
right as an Olympic
athlete, Franke saw
the game change for
female fencing on
Temple's campus 50
years ago (1972) with
the passing of Title IX, the landmark
US gender equity law banning sex
discrimination in federally funded
education programs.
Title IX is most famous for its impact on
expanding opportunities for women and
girls in sports. "Title IX has made such
a difference in the opportunities that
women have," Franke explained. "When I
first came, the funding and the facilities
were not equitable to what the men had."
Franke had a sensational 48 winning
seasons during her five-decade coaching
career. She was named the United States
Fencing Coaches Association Women's
Fencing Coach of the Year in 1983, 1987,
1988 and 1991. The sport has made a
huge impact on her life.
"It changed my life," Franke said in an
interview with ESPN.com in 2011. "I got
to travel the world. I've been places I
never even dreamed about. My very first
international trip was to Russia. My very
last international trip was to China and a
lot of places in between. I've been very
fortunate to be involved with fencing for
a long time as a person who competed
for years and as a coach."
Franke was not only a magnificent
coach but a tremendous fencer, too. She
grew up in Harlem and took up fencing
because she wanted to try something
new before she graduated from high
school. "I did pretty well. I was told that
Brooklyn College had a good fencing
coach and program.
"They think of Zorro and people fighting
up and down stairways, but fencing's
not like that. It's much more refined.
You're not out to kill the other person.
You're out to outsmart them," she told
the Philadelphia Daily News in a May
1976 article.
During her four years at Brooklyn College
(1968 through 1972), Franke's fencing
skills grew by leaps and bounds. She
was an All-American, and in her senior
year she took third at
the NIWFA collegiate
championship. She
was a member of the
1976 and 1980 United
States Olympic teams.
In 1975 and 1980,
she captured the
United States Fencing
Association's National
Foil Championship. Franke was runnerup
in the 1978 national finals and placed
third in 1976, 1977 and 1979.
Franke was a member of the U.S. team
that finished in fifth place at the 1973
World University Games in Moscow, and
the American team that participated
in the 1977 World University Games in
Bulgaria. She was also a member of two
U.S. delegations that were a part of the
1975 and 1979 Pan American Games,
winning the silver medal in the
1975 individual field competition
and the bronze in 1979, and
helping to lead the team to third
place finishes in both Games.
In 1975, Franke earned a Master
of Science in Health Education at
Temple University, followed by a
doctorate degree in 1988.
Nikki Franke
is one of the
co-founders
of the Black
Women in Sport
Foundation, along with Alpha Alexander,
Linda Greene, and Philadelphia Sports
Hall of Fame (Class of 2013) inductee
Tina Sloan Green. Based in Philadelphia,
the Foundation encourages black girls
and women to participate in ALL areas
of sport, such
as coaching and
administration.
Prior to her induction into the
Philadelphia Sports Hall of Fame, Nikki
Franke has been enshrined in the
International Sports Hall of Fame, Temple
Athletics Hall of Fame, the US Fencing
Association Hall of Fame, and the
Brooklyn College Hall of Fame.
By Donald Hunt - Philadelphia Sports Hall of Fame inductee