Gia Kvaratskhelia 2023-24 Fencing Staff

Head Coach


phone 631-4840
Email gkvarats@nd.edu
Gia Kvaratskhelia
Bio

Highlights

  • 2018 USFCA Varsity Collegiate Coach of the Year
  • 2023, 2022, 2021 USFCA Men’s and Women’s Collegiate Coach of the Year
  • 2023, 2022, 2019, 2015, 2020 ACC Men’s Coach of the Year
  • 2023, 2022, 2019 ACC Women’s Coach of the Year
  • 2023, 2022, 2019, 2017, 2016, 2015 ACC Women’s Fencing Championship
  • 2023, 2022, 2019, 2017, 2016, 2015 ACC Men’s Fencing Championship
  • 2023, 2022, 2021, 2018, 2017 NCAA Team Champions
  • 2017, 2016, 2020 Co-ACC Women’s Coach of the Year
  • 2016 Co-ACC Men’s Coach of the Year
  • 2013 Midwest Fencing Conference Varsity Coach of the Year
  • 2010 U.S. Olympic Committee Coach of the Year
  • 2002 US Olympic Committee Developmental Coach of the Year
  • 54 Foil All-Americans
  • 20 NCAA Individual Champions

Guiorgie “Gia” Kvaratskhelia (GEE-uh KVA-ra-SKELL-ee-uh) became the seventh head coach in Notre Dame fencing history in 2014, succeeding Janusz Bednarski after having spent the previous three years as associate head coach and five as an assistant. Kvaratskhelia is a foil specialist, and has already cemented his legacy as one of the nation’s top collegiate coaches after leading the Irish to five national championships in 2017, 2018, 2021, 2022 and 2023.

He has earned National Coach of the Year honors by the United States Fencing Coaching Association in 2018 and both men’s and women’s National Coach of the Year from the organization in 2021, 2022 and 2023.

Since joining the Irish staff in 2007, Kvaratskhelia has overseen a thriving foil program. Irish foilists have qualified the maximum of four foilists each year for NCAA championship play. Since 2008, seven foilists have achieved four-time All-America status with Kvaratskhelia at the helm. Irish foilists have captured eight NCAA individual championships since 2010, including a four-time winner in Lee Kiefer (2013-’14-’15) and two-time winners in Gerek Meinhardt (2010, 2014) and Nick Itkin (2018, 2019). Ariel DeSmet also captured a men’s foil championship as a freshman in 2011.

In six of his first seven seasons at the helm of the Irish, Kvaratskhelia steered his program to ACC titles on both men’s and women’s sides, while both teams placed second in the conference in 2018. The Irish have claimed 38 of 42 individual weapons titles since the conference was re-formed prior to the 2014-15 season and the Irish have swept all individual ACC titles on three occasions (2019, 2020, 2023).

Kvaratskhelia has been named the ACC Men’s Coach of the Year six times, coming in 2015, 2016 (co-coach of the year), 2019, 2020, 2022 (co-coach of the year) and 2023. He has been named the ACC Women’s Coach of the Year six times, occurring in 2016 (co-coach of the year), 2017, 2019, 2020 (co-coach of the year), 2022 and 2023.

Prior to joining the Notre Dame coaching staff, Kvaratskhelia spent 10 years as coach of the Kanza Fencing Club in Salina, Kansas. In that time, Kvaratskhelia transformed Kanza from a small recreational club into one of the nation’s top foil centers. His fencers at Kanza combined to win three USFA national men’s open foil team championships, with six of his Kanza fencers going on to compete at the Division I level as scholarship athletes. His Kanza fencers combined to be national finalists 15 times, while receiving nearly 50 national medals.

Kvaratskhelia — who became a U.S. citizen in 2004 — immigrated to the United States in 1994 from the former Soviet Republic of Georgia. After coming to the U.S., he remained active in his own fencing career by competing in domestic and international events. He first ventured into coaching in 1994, assisting Vladimir Nazlymov (now head coach at Ohio State) at Central Fencing Club in Kansas City and at the satellite Lawrence Fencing Club. Two years later, he accepted the challenge in Salina and spent 10 years building Kanza into a nationally recognized club.

Noted for his tremendous communication skills, Kvaratskhelia is fluent in Georgian, English and Russian. He received his bachelor’s degree in physical education and sport in 1993 from the Georgian State Physical Training Institute in his hometown of Tbilisi. He also earned a sports journalism certificate from that institution (’92) and pursued graduate studies in journalism at Tbilisi State University in 1993 prior to coming to the United States.

Kvaratskhelia and his wife, Dani Edson, have one daughter, Maya, and one son, Alexander.