Rhodie Moss
Rhodie Moss
WGOLF_Bio
Wesley “Rhodie” Moss was hired as UTSA Associate Athletics Director for Sports Medicine on Jan. 9, 2023.

Moss rejoins the Roadrunners directly on the heels of an 18-month stint as head athletic trainer for football at SMU, serving as a senior staff member with direct oversight over both the full-time and student athletic training staff assigned to football, as well as daily management and communication for all aspects of SMU sports medicine’s roles and responsibilities within the program. His time with the Mustangs also provides first-hand insight for the Roadrunners on the best practices and protocols in sports medicine within the American Athletic Conference beginning on July 1, 2023. 
 
Moss arrived in Dallas following nearly four years with the Arizona Wildcats as the associate athletic trainer for football. In Tucson, he helped coordinate the sports medicine efforts for the football team, including training room management, sports coverage, treatment and rehabilitation protocols, while also maintaining strong lines of communication between team physicians, strength and conditioning and the football staff. 
 
Moss first joined UTSA in 2007 and worked with the Roadrunners’ softball and soccer programs, before moving into the role of head trainer for men’s basketball and men’s tennis and an assistant athletic trainer position with the newly formed football team two years later. Moss supervised the Student Athletic Training Program, was the faculty advisor for the UTSA Sports Medicine Society and served as the rehab coordinator for the football program. He was the head athletic trainer for UTSA summer football camps (2010-17), sharing the same role for basketball camps, (2010-15) and he was head athletic trainer for the Valero Alamo Bowl Youth Clinic for four years (2012-16).
 
While working at UTSA originally, he capitalized on opportunities to support championship events, serving as a host athletic trainer for an NCAA Men’s Final Four (2008), DiGiorno College All-Star Game (2008), NCAA Women’s Final Four (2010) and NCAA Men’s Basketball Southwest Regional (2011). He also was the associate director of sports medicine for the 2014 NCAA Men’s Basketball Southwest Regional Round at the AT&T Center. 
 
Moss first arrived in San Antonio after serving as a training camp intern with the Denver Broncos, following two years as a graduate assistant at BYU. With the Cougars, his primary responsibility was with football, while providing winter coverage for men’s tennis and both track & field teams. 
 
A published member of the National Athletic Trainers’ Association, Moss started his career as a student trainer while earning his undergraduate degree from Texas State in exercise sports science with an emphasis in athletic training (2005). He carries a master’s degree in the same field from BYU (2007).
 
Moss was born and raised in Mission, Texas, and attended Sharyland High School. He and his wife Aerin, who was born and raised in San Antonio, have a son, Nolan.