Ray Robinson joined the University of Iowa track and field coaching staff in July 2021. He leads Iowa’s throws group.
In 2024, Robinson led two Hawkeyes to Big Ten Championships. Kat Moody won the discus with a 59.31-meter toss, while Mike Stein claimed the javelin title with a school-record 81.19-meter mark. Stein was named the Big Ten Outdoor Field Athlete of the Championships. Stein was also joined by Jordan Johnson at the NCAA Outdoor Championships. Robinson guided both to All-American honors. Sophomore Sean Smith set Iowa’s school record in the weight throw at 22.28 meters. Moody and Stein qualified for the U.S. Olympic Trials under Robinson’s direction.
In his second season, Robinson coached senior Amanda Howe to second-team All-America honors in the hammer throw at the NCAA Outdoor Championships. Howe earned Iowa’s best placing at the Championships. Freshman Mike Stein knocked down the program record in the javelin, which he would break again in 2024. Robinson coached several student-athletes to point-scoring finishes at the Big Ten Indoor Championships in Geneva, Ohio.
In 2022, his first season with Iowa, Robinson coached three Hawkeye First Team All-Americans (Tyler Lienau, weight throw; Nik Curtiss, shot put; Jordan Johnson, discus). Additionally, Robinson coached Curtiss to Second Team All-America honors in shot put during the indoor season. Before competing at Iowa during his senior season, Curtiss competed under Robinson at Tiffin, where Robinson coached him to trio of NCAA DII runner-up finishes in shot put and seven total All-America honors. Making an immediate impact on the program, Robinson’s throwers took down four school records during the 2022 season (Indoor: men’s weight throw, men’s shot put; Outdoor: men’s shot put, women’s hammer throw). Robinson also coached freshman Sean Smith, who finished his season sixth at the USATF U20 Outdoor Championships in the hammer throw.
Robinson joined the Hawkeyes following an 11-year stint as associate head coach at Tiffin University in Tiffin, Ohio. Robinson coached both the men and women at Tiffin University. His student-athletes captured four NCAA Division II national championships and five NCAA silver medals. He coached 40 first-team All-Americans and saw the school record in each of Tiffin’s 12 throwing events broken during his tenure.
Tiffin won two national titles and has captured seven trophies at the NCAA Championships since 2015.