Gymnastics

- Title:
- Assistant Coach
- Email:
- blorenz@ia.ua.edu
- Phone:
- 205-348-2875
Bill Lorenz joined the Alabama gymnastics coaching staff as an assistant coach prior to the 2015 season.
“Bill is a tremendous coach, but more than anything, he understands the tradition of excellence that Alabama’s championship legacy is built on,” UA head coach Dana Duckworth said. “Most importantly, his coaching style is built on the sense of family that has made Alabama gymnastics so great for so many years.”
Lorenz made an immediate impact for the Crimson Tide, helping lead the 2015 team to its ninth Southeastern Conference title.
“It’s one thing to see what Alabama gymnastics is from the outside, to see how they win championships and produce amazing gymnasts, it’s quite another to be a part of it from the first practice on,” Lorenz said. “It is an amazing experience. I can’t wait to get to work every day.”
Lorenz was named the 2020 WCGA Region 1 Assistant Coach of the Year following a Covid-19 shortened season. The 2020 season also saw the Tide post its 37th top-10 finish, finishing eighth nationally. In 2016, he helped coach Alabama to its NCAA-best 31st regional championship, 32nd top-six finish at the NCAA Championships. The 2017 season saw another trip to the NCAA championships and an NCAA-best 23rd Super Six team finish for the Tide, while 2018 saw Alabama win its NCAA-best 32nd regional title and earn its 36th-consecutive NCAA championship berth. The Tide posted its 37th-consecutive top-12 finish, becoming one of just two schools in NCAA gymnastics history to never finish outside the top-12.
In his second year with the Tide, he helped coach Katie Bailey to the 2016 NCAA vault title, Alabama’s fifth national vault championship and 26th individual NCAA title overall. Mackenzie Brannan won the 2016 SEC vault title after winning the NCAA Auburn Regional vault championship in 2015. In 2018, Lexi Graber won the NCAA Tuscaloosa Regional vault title as a freshman, while also taking top honors in the all-around. The 2020 season saw Makarri Doggette become the 75th UA gymnast to earn All-America honors.
He worked with Shallon Olsen on her way to a silver medal on the vault at the 2018 FIG World Championships and a fourth-place finish at the 2019 World Championships as well as a bronze medal on the vault at the 2019 Pan American Games.
Lorenz came to Alabama after spending a decade at Ohio State, where he was named the National Assistant Coach of the Year in 2012 and the Central Region Assistant Coach of the Year in 2011 and 2012.
“I always knew there was something special about Tuscaloosa and The University of Alabama, but after seeing it firsthand, their tradition of excellence is unparalleled in college athletics,” Lorenz said.
Lorenz served as chair of the National Association of Collegiate Gymnastics Coaches competition committee from 2011-15.
“Through my work with the competition committee, I had the opportunity to meet and get to know coaches all over the country, and I can tell you that one of things that makes Alabama so special is the extraordinary people here,” Lorenz said. “From the coaches to the athletes and the incredible support staff, everyone here is incredibly driven not only to see our ladies be successful in the gym but in the classroom and in life beyond college as well. I think it’s what makes the Crimson Tide so successful.”
During his tenure in Columbus, he helped lead the Buckeyes to their first NCAA Championship appearance in 22 years in 2012. The Buckeyes also produced seven All-Americans, including their first in more than a decade while Lorenz was on staff, as well as 19 All-Big 10 gymnasts and two Big 10 Freshmen of the Year
Prior to joining Ohio State, Lorenz spent two seasons as an assistant coach at Penn State, a stint that included a runner-up finish at the Big 10 Championships.
He started his collegiate coaching career with a year each at Maryland and George Washington.
At the club level, Lorenz coached at Chantilly Gymnasium, Nassau Gymnastics and the legendary Woodward Gymnastics Camp.
Lorenz earned a bachelor’s degree in journalism at the University of Massachusetts, in 1998, where he competed as part of the Minutemen’s gymnastics team. He is married to the former Andrea Scialdo. The couple has two daughters, Madeline and Courtney.
“As excited as I am to be a part of this amazing program, my wife and I are equally excited about raising our family in a community that is so nurturing and giving,” Lorenz said. “And of course, to have the opportunity for our girls to be around this team and to have such wonderful role models is a tremendous plus as well.”





