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2018-2019 Castleton Preview

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Team: Castleton University
Head Coach: Scott Legacy
Years at School as Head Coach: 2
Career Record at Current School: 22-23
Assistant Coaches: Steve Forrest, Joe Duca, Jeff Whitesell, Jared Costa

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2017-2018 Dual Meet Record: 11-9

Top Returning Starters:
Nick Camcho (27-16)
Mitch LaFlam (26-22)
Cameron Milliken, (23-17)
Cedrick Stephens (28-8), JC all american 2017
Max Tempel (44-12) 5th NEregion
Jesse Webb (36-8) 5th NE region

Top Incoming Wrestlers:
Alexander Green (MD Finalist), Andrew Fountain (Section 2 champ NY, state qualifier), Anhtony Laniewski (sect 2 champ 2x, NY state qualifier, 5th eastern states, NY FS champ) Chance LaPier , (2nd and 3rd NY State), Colin O’Brien (2 time Section 2 Champ NY, 2 time state qualifier) Dan Haverty, (Mass All- State Champ), Deyker Edwards (sect 2 champ NY, state qualifier), Joseph Becker (NY state qualifier out of Long Island), Macon Edwards (3 time state champion Alabama, FS and Greco All-American), Owen Kretschmer (NJ State qualifier), Michael Gonyea (4 time NY State place winner, 5th, 4th, 5th, 4th, 2 time NHSCA All-American, 5th senior Nationals), Mason LaFlam (2 time CT., class M state champion), Enrico DeBernado (NH Div. 2 State Champ), Cooper Fleming (2 time CT. Small school champion, 2nd CT. All-State, 3rd New England, Lowell Holiday Champion)

Season Outlook:
Castleton Looks to capitalize on many returning starters from their first two years of as a college wrestling program. With a blend of veteran talent and an outstanding group of freshmen coming in, breaking into the national nankings is a realistic goal for 2018-19.











2018-19 Huntingdon Preview

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Team: Huntingdon College
Head Coach: Craig Duncan
Years at School as Head Coach: 3
Career Record at Current School: 15-30
Assistant Coaches: DeAndre Beck

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2017-2018 Dual Meet Record: 6-9

Top Returning Starters:
Sr. 125 Ryan Brooks
Jr. 149 Quin Pearson
Soph. 157 Kaleb Fontenot
Jr. 165 Pierce Erhardt
Sr. 174 Wyatt Miller
Sr. 184 Cody Dixon

Top Incoming Wrestlers:
Fr. 125 Andrew Smith, 2x Alabama State Champion
Fr. 133 Saied Ejmali Florida State Qualifier
Transfer 141 Toren Pollard Alabama State Champion
157 Matt King, 3x Alabama State Champion
165 Reagan Prevatt, Texas State Qualifier
197 Connor Saint Florida State Qualifier
285 DJ Adams, Alabama State Qualifier
285 James Lucas Georgia State Qualifier











2018-19 Southern Virginia Preview

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Team: Southern Virginia University
Head Coach: Logan Davis
Years at School as Head Coach: 3
Career Record at Current School: 10-53
Assistant Coaches: Brandon Flood

2017-2018 Dual Meet Record: 7-14

2018 NCAA Qualifiers: Nico Ramirez, 285

Returning NCAA Qualifiers: Nico Ramirez

Top Returning Starters:
285- Nico Ramirez 19-7 (9 pins) National Qualifier
184- Gordon Whitaker 17-15 (7 pins)
174- Keaton Gomez 21-12 (8 pins, 5 tech falls)

Top Incoming Wrestlers:
133- Hayden Hewitt, Utah State Qualifier
141- Ethan Workman, 2x Arizona State Champion
141/149- Easton Whitaker, Utah State Placer
149- Morgan Peterson, Ohio State Qualifier
165- Kyle York, NJCAA Transfer
174/184- Kage Tomlin, Virginia State Placer
184- Brayden Funn, Virginia State Placer
184- Avery Rabb, Virginia State Qualifier
197/285- Joyden Madriaga, Hawaii State Qualifier
285- Dylan Sackett, NJCAA Transfer











2018-19 Heidelberg Preview

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Team: Heidelberg University
Head Coach: Tony Patrizi
Years at School as Head Coach: 4
Career Record at Current School: 35-35
Assistant Coaches: James Buss and Chris White

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2017-2018 Dual Meet Record: 8-8

2018 NCAA Qualifiers: Tyler Hammack, 184

Returning NCAA Qualifiers: Tyler Hammack

Top Returning Starters:
Hayden Bates-141-4th Region(149)
Mason Brainard-133- 5th Region(125)
Tyler Hammack-184-NCAA qualifier

Top Incoming Wrestlers:
Zach Blaskiston-OH-3x placer
Dante Colza-IN state qualifier
Pacer Quire-OR State Champ
Devin Miller- MI State Placer
Jacob Horsch-IL state qual
Austin Smith- OH State Qual

Season Outlook:
Heidelberg Wrestling is extremely excited for the upcoming season. The Student Princes return nine starters from last year’s lineup. Their experience and leadership will certainly play an important role in developing a very talented group of incoming freshman.











2018-19 RIT Preview

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Team: Rochester Institute of Technology
Head Coach: Jason Bovenzi
Years at School as Head Coach: 2
Career Record at Current School: 17-14
Assistant Coaches: John Martin Cannon, Torsten Gillespie, Mike Nevinger

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2017-2018 Dual Meet Record: 8-7

2018 NCAA Qualifiers:
157 Kaidon Winters
184 Joe Cutugno
285 Connor Calkins

Returning NCAA Qualifiers:
Dempsey King (157 2017)
Kaidon Winters (157 2018)
Joe Cutugno (184 2018)
Sam Weinger (285 2017)
Connor Calkins (285 2018)

Top Returning Starters:
Dempsey King (NCAA 157 2017)
Kaidon Winters (NCAA157 2018)
Joe Cutugno (NCAA184 2018)
Sam Weinger (NCAA285 2017)
Connor Calkins (NCAA285 2018)
Alex Prunoske (21 wins last year)

Top Incoming Wrestlers:
Chris Dean, Chris Horton, Ian Houck, Shane Thompson, Doug Simmons












2018-19 Greensboro Preview

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Team: Greensboro College
Head Coach: Erik Wince
Years at School as Head Coach: 4
Career Record at Current School: 15-45
Assistant Coaches: Kevin Birmingham, Daniel Ownbey, Josh Greer

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2017-2018 Dual Meet Record: 5-16

Top Returning Starters:
125- Gabe Wilson (6th @ NCAA Regional)
141- Zak Rainess (4th @ NCAA Regional, 4th @ Ithaca)
157- Conan Wilson (5th @ NCAA Regional at 149)
165-Quaevon Cannon (Blood Round @ NCAA Regional)
174-Ty Dudley (6th @ NCAA Regional)
197-Carlos Ortega (Blood Round @ NCAA Regional)

Top Incoming Wrestlers:
125- Robbie Snyder, Fr, Blood Round NHSCA Nationals
133- Paul Bauberger, Jr JUCO Transfer, Ranked as high as 3rd Nationally
133- Tony Locke, Fr, NCHSAA State Runner Up
141/149- Hai Sui, Fr, NCHSAA State Champ
149- JR Banks, Jr Transfer, NCHSAA Runner Up
157- Mike Jones, Jr Transfer, NCHSAA Runner Up
165- Joel Kanagy, Fr, NCHSAA Top 6
174- Tyler Boles, Fr, NCHSAA State Runner Up
184- Daniel Pearce, Fr, NCHSAA Runner Up
197- Luis Oropesa, Fr, NCHSAA 3rd Place
285- Brandon Williams, Fr, NCHSAA State Champ

Season Outlook:
This will undoubtedly be the best team Greensboro College has put together in their short 4 year existence. With a core group of upperclassmen to lead the way for the deepest recruiting class in program history, they are poised to surprise quite a few people this year. After losing just one starter to graduation from last years regional top eight team, this group looks to continue to claw its way to national recognition.











2018-19 Williams Preview

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Team: Williams College
Head Coach: Scott Honecker
Years at School as Head Coach: 7
Career Record at Current School: 68-46
Assistant Coaches: Thomas Foote

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2017-2018 Dual Meet Record: 7-10

2018 NCAA Qualifiers: Brendon Seyfried (149)

Returning NCAA Qualifiers: Brendon Seyfried (7th, 2017, 141)

Top Returning Starters:
Brendon Seyfried 2nd NE Region
Yo Akiyama 6th NE Region
Sebastian Dziadkiewicz 5th NE Region

Top Incoming Wrestlers:
David Yeh, Nobles School, MA
Nick Stefanelli, Punahou, HI
Stephen Willis, Salisbury School, MA
Nasir Grissom, Phillips Exeter, CA
Ian Darling, Starrs Mill, GA












2018-19 Augustana Preview

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Team: Augustana College
Head Coach: Tony Willaert
Years at School as Head Coach: 1
Career Record at Current School: 1-11
Assistant Coaches: Tyler Willers, Tristen Deshazer, Rocco Borg, Brian Kerr, John Malvik

2017-2018 Dual Meet Record: 1-11

2018 NCAA Qualifiers:
133 Brendan Gould
184 Christos Giatras (5th)

Returning NCAA Qualifiers: 285 Adarios Jones (3rd in 2017)

Top Returning Starters: 285 Adarios Jones (3rd in 2017)

Top Incoming Wrestlers:
125 Ben Gruenstein – MN State Qualifier
125 Zach Chang
133 Tristan Curtis – CO State Qualifier
133 Ambrose Poduska
141 Joon Lee
174 Hunter Jarvis
184 Hunter Holdcraft – IL State Qualifier
197 Alex Reils
197 Triston Richardson – Iowa State Placer
285 Eric Hoffeditz
285 Jacob Ramos











2018-19 St. John’s Preview

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Team: Saint John’s University
Head Coach: Kevin Schiltz
Years at School as Head Coach: 1
Career Record at Current School: 1-3
Assistant Coaches: Chad Henle, Scott Frenholz

2017-2018 Dual Meet Record: 1-3

Returning NCAA Qualifiers:
Noah Becker (133, 2017)
Luke Dodd (184, 2017)

Top Returning Starters:
Luke Dodd
Noah Becker

Top Incoming Wrestlers: Jacob Scherber 2nd place MN state tournament, Joshua Clark 2x state entrant

Season Outlook:
Saint John’s will be looking for forward progress from last year as only one senior graduated. An expanded schedule this year will allow the Johnnies to see more DIII competition. This extra travel to Chicago, Iowa, and Florida will let the team know where they stand at the end of the season. The team will have the opportunity for individual and team success in 2018-2019.











Mike Schmidt takes over MSOE

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Mike Schmidt has been elevated to head coach at Milwaukee School of Engineering. He had been an assistant with the program since 2013 and has been part of a coaching staff that had four NCAA qualifiers and a 2018 All-American who was the program’s highest ever finisher. Schmidt wrestled for the University of Minnesota and the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater, and was a University National All-American in Freestyle and Greco-Roman.

Schmidt Chosen to Lead Wrestling Program

Oct 02, 2018
MILWAUKEE – MSOE director of athletics Brian Miller has announced the hiring of Mike Schmidt as head wrestling coach.

Schmidt takes over for Matt Zwaschka, who stepped down earlier this month to become the head coach at UW-Whitewater. Schmidt had been an assistant with the Raiders since 2013.

“We are excited about Mike becoming our new head wrestling coach,” Miller said. “He has a familiarity with the program and our school, which is great, but he also has a clear vision for MSOE Wrestling going forward. We are excited about what he will bring in his new role.”

Schmidt has played a key role in MSOE’s success in recent years, as four wrestlers have qualified for the NCAA Championships with one All-American award. Last season, Austin Bellile made his second-straight national meet appearance and placed seventh at 285 pounds. It was the highest-ever finish for a Red & White wrestler and was the program’s third All-American

“I am extremely excited for this opportunity,” Schmidt said. “I would like to thank Brian Miller and the university for entrusting me with the next era of MSOE Wrestling.”

Schmidt is a former collegiate wrestler, beginning his career at Minnesota. There, he was a member of a team that won a Big Ten championship was finished second at the NCAA Division I National Championships. He was a University Freestyle and Greco All-American, as well as a FILA Junior Freestyle and Greco All-American.

He completed his collegiate career at UW-Whitewater, serving as team captain and qualifying for the NCAA championships. He graduated from UWW in 2008 with degrees in accounting and finance.

Away from his coaching duties, Schmidt is a mutual fund compliance officer with US Bancorp Fund Services.

The Raiders start their season Nov. 10 at the Dan Gable Open and Luther Open.












Matt Zwaschka returns to Whitewater as Head Coach

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Matt Zwaschka graphic September 18

Matt Zwaschka has been named interim head wrestling coach at Whitewater. He returns to Whitewater after five seasons as head coach at Milwaukee School of Engineering. He was an assistant coach at Whitewater from 2005-2011. Zwaschka replaced Ned Shuck who left Whitewater to be an assistant coach at the U.S. Military Academy.

Matt Zwaschka Named Head Wrestling Coach

Matt Zwaschka, a former assistant coach for the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater wrestling team, has returned to the program to be the interim head coach of the Warhawks, Director of Intercollegiate Athletics Todd Garzarelli announced.

“We are thrilled to welcome Matt Zwaschka as our head wrestling coach,” Garzarelli said. “His familiarity with our program as a former assistant, combined with his passion for building on the rich tradition of Warhawk wrestling and his recruiting experience in the area, make him a great fit here at UW-Whitewater.

Zwaschka served as an assistant coach for the Warhawks from 2005-11, working in all aspects of the program. He helped the team tie for 12th at the 2009 NCAA Championships and coached seven All-Americans, eight Academic All-Americans and six individual Wisconsin Intercollegiate Athletic Conference champions.

After leaving UW-Whitewater, Zwaschka was hired as head wrestling coach at the Milwaukee School of Engineering in 2013, helping four Raiders reach the NCAA Championships during his five years at the helm. He coached one All-American and seven Academic All-Americans while overseeing all aspects of the program and serving as assistant director of recreation at MSOE.

Zwaschka also worked as an assistant wrestling coach and assistant football coach at Port Washington High School during his tenure at MSOE. He was a physical education and health education teacher in the Port Washington Saukville School District from 2011-13.

Zwaschka is currently the Junior Greco Roman National Team coach for the Wisconsin Wrestling Federation, a position he has held since 2012.

A native of Marshfield, Zwaschka wrestled at UW-La Crosse during his undergraduate career, earning four letters and claiming the WIAC championship and a spot at the NCAA Championships at 165 pounds in 2003. He earned his bachelor’s in exercise and sports science (physical education) in 2003 and his master’s in exercise and sports science in 2005 at UW-La Crosse.












Bill Racich passes away

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Bill Racich, head coach of Ursinus College since 1980, passed away suddenly Friday. He is fourth all-time in college dual meet wins and was second among active coaches. His teams at Ursinus never had a losing season, and he coached the team to 11 Centennial Conference Championships. See the release below from Ursinus College for a full recounting of his long list of accomplishments.

I met Bill for the first time sometime during my freshman year at Messiah College in 1999. I do not remember the exact day or event, I just know that we saw his teams at a lot of events. In the nearly 20 years since then, I have seen a lot of Bill at various events where I was competing or coaching. For the past eleven seasons, we have been in the Centennial Conference together, and I have had the pleasure of standing across the mat from Bill as our wrestlers competed. Bill was always gracious, easygoing, and invested in the success and lives of his wrestlers.

There are three things that I will remember about Bill that I want to mention here. First, he was the kind of person who always seemed glad to see you. If you walked into a cold gym on a dreary Saturday morning in January and Ursinus was there, you could count on a warm greeting from Bill. He was glad to be there coaching the sport he loved, and you know that must have been true for him to continue as a part time college wrestling coach at Ursinus for 38 seasons. He was always kind to me no matter which of our team’s wrestlers was winning at that particular moment.

Second, Bill took wrestling seriously, but he took it seriously to the right degree. He wanted to win as badly as any coach, and he worked hard to recruit and train wrestlers that helped him win over 500 dual meets as a coach. However, it was clear that, to Bill, nothing about this is life and death. He had a perspective on wrestling and coaching that put everything in its proper place. Winning, training hard, and doing things the right way all mattered to Bill, but they were not the only things that mattered. The sun will come up tomorrow whether you have won or lost, and wrestling is just one of the many important things in an athlete’s or coach’s life.

Finally, Bill made an impact upon countless wrestlers and coaches. He always had big teams and big coaching staffs, and all of those associated with his program had the chance to learn from his vast reservoir of knowledge and experience. His influence reached beyond his own teams, though. He was involved with the NWCA Leadership Academy as a mentor where he had the chance to help develop the next generation of college coaches. I believe all coaches want to be able to say that they impacted the lives of their athletes beyond the wrestling mat, and Bill is an example all of us can follow.

He will be greatly missed. When I saw Bill at a recruiting event a few weeks ago, I could not have imagined it would be the last time I would see him. He has been a part of my college wrestling career since I first went to college and then moved on to coaching, and this season will not be the same without him.

Longtime Wrestling Coach Racich Passes Away
Sep 21, 2018

A legend in collegiate wrestling, Racich has been the Bears’ head coach since 1980. He ranks first in wins among all men’s single-sport coaches ever to serve at the college, fourth on the NCAA’s all-time list for all divisions, and second among all active coaches.

Under Racich, Ursinus established itself as the flagship program of the Centennial Conference. The Bears won 11 CC championships, including five in a row from 2003-07 to become the only school in league history to accomplish that feat.

Racich coached 56 Centennial Conference champions and over two hundred Middle Atlantic and Centennial Conference place-winners, and has seen 17 All-Americans and two CoSIDA Academic All-Americans go through his program. Five Ursinus wrestlers have won the prestigious Chris Clifford Award, while six others were named Outstanding Wrestler at the CC championship meet.

A coach for the better part of four decades, Racich brought an incredible enthusiasm for his role as a teacher and mentor, and leaves behind a legion of student-athletes who were forever changed for the better by his presence.

“Bill always used to talk and joke about ‘living the dream’ and how great it was to coach kids,” said Director of Athletics Laura Moliken. “He’d say, ‘they don’t’ really change; you just have to adjust how you teach the sport.'”

“Every time we spoke, he couldn’t help but gush and show pictures of his granddaughter wearing dresses and bows and wondering if she might be a wrestler one day.”

Racich twice coached at the prestigious NWCA All-Star Classic, with All-Americans Chris Donaldson (125, 2013 at George Mason University) and Derek Arnold (149, 2015 at Georgia Tech University) representing the Bears.

In 2001, Racich was inducted into the Ursinus College Hall of Fame for Athletes. Perhaps even more impressive is the academic success his student-athletes have enjoyed through the years. Under Racich, 91 Ursinus wrestlers have been named NCAA Division III Scholar All-Americans, including nine in 2017. All senior letter winners Racich coached have graduated from Ursinus.

As a head coach, Racich was named Coach of the Year 13 times over his time in the Pennsylvania Ches-Mont League, Middle Atlantic Conference, Centennial Conference, and NCAA East Regional. During Racich’s storied career at Ursinus, the Bears never had a losing season; his 1988-89 team set the current standard of 21 dual-meet wins.

Under Racich’s direction, Ursinus is the home of three highly prestigious wrestling tournaments in the Fall Brawl, North-South Duals, and the Will Abele Invitational. Racich also directed the Citrus Invitational held in Fort Lauderdale, Florida each December.

Internationally, Racich was the head coach of the 2013 Division III Cultural Exchange team that visited France, Bulgaria, and Turkey and won the George Kalchev International Freestyle tournament held in Varna, Bulgaria.

Ursinus College was host to the USA-Russia World Dual meet in 1997, which was televised by ESPN2. Following that historic event, Racich received a Certificate of Special Congressional Recognition for his outstanding and invaluable service to the community from United States Congressmen Jim Fox. He is a USA Wrestling Bronze Certificate coach and in 1998 guided a College Exchange Team to the Dominican Republic which competed in Greco-Roman and Freestyle against the Dominicans and Cuba.

In 2003, Ursinus College was an International Training site for the Freestyle World Championships. Teams training at Ursinus included the Men’s and Women’s 2003 World Freestyle Champions, Georgia Republic and Japan. The French Men and Women’s Freestyle teams also trained at Ursinus. Several Ursinus College wrestlers have travelled to Bulgaria, Turkey and Siberia to train with the Division III Cultural Exchange teams.

Racich was also a standout in his own right. At West Chester University, he was a four-year varsity performer and a team captain in 1974-75. He was a four-time conference finalist and a two-time NCAA Division I qualifier. In 1974 Racich won the 118-pound Middle Atlantic Conference championship, and his West Chester team was MAC champions in 1971, 1972 and 1974.

In 1975, Racich was the East Coast Conference Champion at 126 pounds and captained the team that defeated Minnesota, Northwestern, Purdue, Illinois, and Indiana on a Midwest tour. In 1978 he placed fourth in the USA National Open Freestyle Championships at 136.5 pounds, helping his New York Athletic Club win United States Wrestling Federation Championships.

In addition to his wrestling accomplishments, Racich was a high-level rugby player since competing for Plymouth-Whitemarsh High School in 1971, and a founding member of the West Chester University Rugby Club. Following college he continued his rugby career by playing for Turks Head RFC and then for national power Philadelphia-Whitemarsh Rugby Club. His PWRFC team won the East Penn Rugby Union multiple times, captured the Can-Am Championships and USA East Region titles, placed second in the 1989 Men’s USA Rugby Championships, and in 1999 won the USA Rugby 7’s National title. He served as a 12-term President of the Philadelphia Whitemarsh Rugby Club and played on two tours to Europe, the North Sea Tour (1992) and the Stockholm International 10’s Championships (1996).

Racich is a member of the Conshohocken Sports Hall of Fame (1986), West Chester Wrestling Hall of Fame, Philadelphia-Whitemarsh Rugby Hall of Fame (1999), Plymouth-Whitemarsh Distinguished Graduates Hall of Fame, Ursinus College Hall of Fame for Athletes (2001), Southeast Pennsylvania Wrestling Hall of Fame (2003), Pennsylvania Wrestling Coaches Association Hall of Fame (2003), and the Division III National Wrestling Coaches Association Hall of Fame (2003).

Racich was the longtime District Chair for Health and Physical Education (K-12) in the Spring-Ford Area School District. He also served as the Middle School Athletics Coordinator and coached cross country and track in the district. His son, Cole, is a 2007 Ursinus College graduate and received his Doctorate of Physical Therapy from Temple University in 2012.

The eighth of nine children, Racich is survived by his wife, Julia, and his son, Cole. An Ursinus alum, “Jules” is a fixture at every Ursinus match and is beloved as a team mother, friend to all coaches, and a matriarch of Ursinus wrestling.

Information about funeral arrangements will be provided soon.

Goretsas promoted to head coach at McDaniel

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After four years as an assistant coach Mason Goretsas has been promoted to Head Wrestling Coach at McDaniel College to take over for the recently departed Davey Blake. Goretsas is also a graduate of the school, earning his degree in 2015. In three seasons as a wrestler, he was a two time Centennial Conference placewinner and won 67 matches for the Green Terror after transferring in from the University of Maryland.

Goretsas promoted to head wrestling coach

Aug 15, 2018
WESTMINSTER, Md. – Mason Goretsas has been named McDaniel College’s head wrestling coach, announced by Director of Athletics Paul Moyer on Wednesday.

“As we made our way through this search process, we quickly determined that elevating Mason was a strong option,” Moyer said. “The knowledge he has of the program and wrestling in Carroll County is unmatched. From growing up around Green Terror wrestling to his time as a student-athlete and coach at McDaniel, we know that Mason will continue the proud tradition of our program.”

Goretsas, a 2015 graduate of the College, is elevated to head coach after spending the last four seasons as an assistant on staff.

“I am very excited for this opportunity to continue my journey with McDaniel College and this program,” Goretsas said.

A local product, Goretsas was a two-time Maryland State Champion for North Carroll High School before starting his collegiate career at the University of Maryland. Goretsas returned home in the fall of 2011.

He wrestled for the Green Terror for three seasons, posting a 67-27 record at McDaniel. He was a two-time placefinisher at the Centennial Conference championship.

He finished fourth at 141 in 2012 before also earning a fourth-place showing at 149 in 2014.

Goretsas graduated with his bachelor of science degree in exercise science in 2015 and completed his masters in kinesiology this past spring.

Goretsas assumes the duties of head coach immediately.












Regional Alignment Presented at NWCA Convention Today

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The NCAA Division III Wrestling Committee presented the following regional alignment to the coaches at the NWCA Convention today in Daytona Beach, Florida. Barring any changes, this is how the 108 teams competing this season will be arranged for the NCAA qualifying tournaments. Three regions remained unchanged, while three ended up with a net gain of teams to account for the gain of five new teams and loss of one (Hampden-Sydney). Defiance, Ohio Wesleyan, Wilmington, Pitt-Bradford, and Alfred State are new for 2018-2019, while Washington & Jefferson and Waynesburg are the two teams that are changing regions from Central to Southeast.

Lower Midwest (17, no change) Upper Midwest (17, no change) Central (19, +1)
Augustana Augsburg Adrian
Buena Vista Concordia Wisconsin Alma
Central Concordia-Moorhead Baldwin Wallace
Coe Eau Claire CWRU
Cornell Elmhurst Defiance
Hungtingdon La Crosse Heidelberg
Loras Lakeland John Carroll
Luther MSOE Manchester
MacMurray Oshkosh Mount St. Joseph
Millikin Pacific Mount Union
Nebraska Wesleyan Platteville Muskingum
North Central St. John’s Ohio Northern
Simpson St. Olaf Ohio Wesleyan
University of Dubuque Stevens Point Olivet
University of the Ozarks University of Chicago Otterbein
Wartburg Wheaton Thomas More
Westminster Whitewater Trine
Wabash
Wilmington
Southeast (20, +2) Mideast (18, +1) Northeast (17, no change)
Averett Alfred State Bridgewater State
Delaware Valley Brockport Castleton
Ferrum Centenary Coast Guard
Gettysburg Cortland Johnson & Wales
Greensboro Elizabethtown New England College
Johns Hopkins Hunter Norwich
King’s Ithaca NYU
Lycoming Keystone Plymouth State
McDaniel Merchant Marine Rhode Island
Messiah Mount St. Vincent Roger Williams
Penn College Muhlenberg Southern Maine
Penn State Behrend Oneonta Springfield
Pitt-Bradford Oswego Trinity
Southern Virginia RIT Wesleyan
Thiel Scranton Western New England
Washington & Jefferson Stevens Williams
Washington & Lee TCNJ WPI
Waynesburg Ursinus
Wilkes
York

Wilmington College Intern

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Wilmington College is accepting applications for a two year, 10 month position of Wrestling Intern at our main campus in Wilmington, Ohio.

This position will assist the Head Coach in organizing and running practices, assist in competition management for dual meets and tournaments and will assist with the recruiting of student athletes in the sport of wrestling. This would include arranging visits for prospective student athletes.

Successful candidates will possess a bachelor’s degree or equivalent, College wrestling experience, excellent interpersonal skills, ability to work independently as well as part of a team. Strong organizational and time management skills are required in addition to the ability to handle multiple priorities in a fast paced environment.

Housing and a meal card are included with this position.

We encourage you to review our website and learn about our history, what we are doing today and how we are preparing for tomorrow. It is an exciting time here at Wilmington College.

Interested applicants should submit a detailed cover letter and resume unless otherwise indicated in the position information below. Please specify position of interest in the letter of application and subject line of email (if submitting electronically). For positions requiring degrees, unofficial transcripts of college work are helpful. Submit materials to the Director of Human Resources, Wilmington College, Pyle Center 1187, 1870 Quaker Way, Wilmington, OH 45177-2499 or email to humanresources@wilmington.edu or follow instructions in the position information below.

Wilmington College is an equal opportunity employer and will not discriminate unlawfully in employment matters on the basis of race, religion, gender, color, ancestry, national origin, age, disability or any other category protected by law. EOE

Wilmington College conducts background investigations including criminal, work history and credential confirmation on all employees as a condition of continued employment. Some positions may require additional motor vehicle record review and drug screening.











Longtime W&J Coach Jim White Passes Away

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Jim White, who spent over three decades coaching at Washington & Jefferson College, passed away on July 25th at the age of 84. White coached wrestling, football, tennis and served as Associate Director of Athletics during his long career with the Presidents. As wrestling coach, he led the team to 212 wins, three conference championships, coached 25 individual PAC champions, and had five NCAA All-Americans. He was inducted into the NWCA Division III Hall of Fame in 1997.

W&J mourns passing of former coach James (Jim) White

WASHINGTON, Pa. — Legendary Washington & Jefferson College coach and administrator James (Jim) A. White passed away Wednesday, July 25 at the age of 84.

White impacted the lives of Washington & Jefferson College student-athletes for over three decades. He was inducted into the Pennsylvania Sports Hall of Fame in 1994 and was a 2013 inductee into the Washington & Jefferson College Athletic Hall of Fame.

White served as the head men’s tennis and wrestling coach from 1965-1997 and also spent 21 years as an assistant football coach at the college. For over 20 years, he coached a sport during every season of the academic year: football (fall), wrestling (winter), tennis (spring). He served as head or assistant coach on 89 different W&J athletic teams.

“Jim White was beloved by the student-athletes he coached and the colleagues he worked with,” said Director of Athletics Scott McGuinness. “Our current coaching staff strives to make meaningful impacts like Jim accomplished every day of his career. A true W&J President, he will be greatly missed by the W&J community.”

White, who also served as Associate Director of Athletics during his W&J career, guided the Presidents’ wrestling program to three of the program’s five Presidents’ Athletic Conference championships (1965, 1966, 1995). The 1965 title came during his first year as a coach.  White’s tennis teams also enjoyed tremendous success, winning the only four conference team, championships in school history (1967, 1968, 1969, 1986). White coached 66 PAC individual tennis or wrestling champions, five NCAA All-Americans and two CoSIDA Academic All-Americans.

“He was more than a coach, but also a mentor and a father figure,” said Angelo Morascyzk ’77, who wrestled for White and also served as an assistant wrestling coach with White when starting his coaching career. “As an 18 year old trying to make a decision on where to attend college, I knew I’d be in great hands with Coach White. His caring and compassionate side was easy to see. Coach White was a natural fit for NCAA Division III athletics. His teams had a lot of success, but it wasn’t about the wins and losses. For Coach White, he wanted his athletes to enjoy the entire student experience at W&J.”

Upon his retirement, White received an honorary doctorate from W&J and with his wife, Claire, relocated to Long Beach Island, New Jersey in 1997. For the next 17 years, White was employed at Loveladies Tennis Foundation every summer, where he lived out his dream of playing tennis every day. Two of his daughters, Laura Anne Bartley ’89 and Lisa White ’91, are Washington & Jefferson College graduates.

James White obituary – https://www.dignitymemorial.com/obituaries/manahawkin-nj/james-white-7943595











Cornell Seasonal Assistant Post

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Cornell College(IA)—Seasonal Asst. Coach

Cornell College, a NCAA Division III, a 4 year liberal arts undergraduate college with around 1,000 full-time students. Cornell College is located north of Iowa city, in Mount Vernon, Iowa.

Responsibilities
*This is a 5-month Position starting the middle of October to the middle of March. There will be option for renewal upon evaluation at the end of the year.
*Assist the coaching staff with recruiting, social media, practice, and competitions.
*Position will report to the Head Wrestling Coach.

Compensation will vary depending on experience and amount of time available. Option for a meal plan may be available.

Apply using the following Link
https://cornellcollege.applicantpro.com/jobs/847089.html











Brent Hamm named interim coach at Cornell

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Brent Hamm has been elevated from assistant coach to interim head coach at Cornell College. Hamm has served on staff for three seasons and will take over for the recently passed Mike Duroe. A 2015 Cornell graduate, Hamm was a two-time NCAA qualifier for the Rams and helped coach five All-Americans over the past three years.

Hamm named interim head wrestling coach

Sat, Jul. 21, 2018 at 10:35 AM
MOUNT VERNON – Brent Hamm will maintain his title as Interim Head Coach of Cornell College’s wrestling program for the 2018-19 season, it was announced Saturday by Director of Athletics Keith Hackett.

Hamm, a 2015 Cornell graduate and two-time NCAA qualifier for the Rams, has been on Cornell’s coaching staff the past three seasons. The Iowa City native served as the team’s head assistant coach during the 2017-18 season.

Hamm takes over Cornell’s storied program for legendary coach Mike Duroe, who passed away July 6 after a nine-month battle with cancer.

“During the past eight months I have watched Brenton Hamm grow as a leader and coach under challenging circumstances,” Hackett said. “Brenton did an exceptional job of leading our wrestling team when Coach Duroe was going through medical treatments. After all things were considered, my decision was that Brenton had earned the opportunity to continue in this role for the 2018-19 academic year. He is a very capable and committed young coach who will do an outstanding job.”

Hamm held an increased role on Cornell’s staff in 2017-18, during which the Rams crowned three all-Americans and placed 17th at the NCAA Division III Championships. It was the program’s ninth Top 20 national team finish in 12 years.

Hamm was a four-year starter for the Hall of Famer Duroe, Cornell’s winningest wrestling coach with 144 dual wins over 13 seasons. The Rams landed 47 NCAA qualifiers, 22 all-Americans, five NCAA finalists and one NCAA champion during the Duroe Era.

“Brenton certainly learned a great deal from Coach Duroe as a wrestler and assistant,” Hackett said. “I am confident in Brenton and know that the program is in very good hands as we move forward. He has also proven to be a very capable recruiter, bringing in an excellent class of freshmen and transfers this fall.”

In Hamm’s three seasons as an assistant, Cornell had nine NCAA qualifiers and six all-Americans.

Hamm was a two-time team captain for the Rams and recorded 90 victories over his four-year career from 2011-15. He qualified for the NCAA Championships at 174 pounds in 2014 and 2015. A four-time regional placewinner, Hamm captured the Central Region title in 2015.

Hamm also excelled in the class room, earning three NWCA Scholar All-America awards as a student-athlete. A member of the Dean’s List, Hamm received team Most Dedicated, Most Improved and Most Valuable awards. He earned a bachelor’s degree from Cornell in exercise science.

Hamm was head coach of Lisbon Matpack Wrestling Club from 2015-17. He was a personal trainer at GRIT Gym in Iowa City for two years (2015-17).

Cornell will conduct a national search for its full-time head wrestling coaching position following the 2018-19 season.











Delaware Valley part time assistant

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Click Here to Apply

Assistant Coach of Wrestling
Seasonal Coach Part-Time
Doylestown, PA, US

Job Summary:

This is a part-time position working 20 hours per week for six months in our Athletics Department. Position will assist the head coach in organizing, supervising, and controlling all the activities related to the sport.

Primary Responsibilities:

Assisting the head coach in organizing, supervising, and controlling all the activities related to the sport
Demonstrating leadership, sportsmanship, and conduct becoming of the coaching profession
Annually reviewing any rule changes relative to wrestling; always adhering to all rules, regulations, and policies of the NCAA and MAC
Assisting the head coach with an annual recruiting goals and attempting to enroll a diverse group of qualified student athletes capable of participation at the Division III varsity level
Assisting in organizing and conducting an appropriate number of practice sessions and directing all activities during contests
Advising and mentoring team members and directing the activities of captains, team managers, and Student Advisory Committee representatives
Preparing a schedule of team activities in conjunction with the Assistant Athletic Director that complies with departmental policies, goals, and objectives
Coordinating team travel, housing, meals, and money with the Athletic Sports Program Assistant and submitting a travel itinerary at least two weeks prior to each overnight event after approval by Athletic Director
Administering the sport budget in a fiscally responsible manner
Communicating and cooperating with the training staff regarding athletic medical clearances, injury prevention, rehabilitation, and status of injured athletes
Communicating and cooperating with the equipment room staff regarding the distribution, providing an environment that supports the achievement of the academic goals of the student athlete
Cultivating alumni groups associated with the wrestling program in conjunction with the office of Alumni Programs
Scheduling the use of game and practice facilities in cooperation with the Assistant Athletic Director and/or Athletic Director
Other duties and responsibilities as assigned

The above job responsibilities are intended only to describe the general nature of the job and should not be construed as an all-inclusive list of position responsibilities.

Working Conditions/ Frequently Used Tools:

Office, library, computer room
Typically sitting at a desk or table
Intermittently sitting, standing, stooping
Typically standing or walking
Typically bending, crouching, stooping
Occasional lifting 25 lbs. or less

Required Knowledge, Skills, and Abilities:

Working knowledge of NCAA rules and regulations
Strong managerial, administrative, organizational and interpersonal skills
Computer proficiency
CPR/First Aid certification is preferred

Required education/experience/license:

Bachelor’s Degree
Prior playing or coaching at the college level is preferred

Delaware Valley University reserves the right to revise, change or modify job responsibilities and position qualifications as the need arises. This job description does not constitute a written or implied contract of employment.

Delaware Valley University is an equal opportunity employer fully committed to a diverse workforce.











Shuck leaves Whitewater for West Point

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After four years a Whitewater, head coach Ned Shuck has left to become the top assistant at Army West Point. He joins Head Coach Kevin Ward’s staff after compiling a 47-17 record at Whitewater and winning the 2015 regional championship. Prior to Whitewater, he was the head coach at Heidelberg for three seasons. Between the two schools, Shuck has put 12 wrestlers on the podium at the NCAA Division III Championships. He moves from Wisconsin to the banks of the Hudson to join a West Point team that finished 8th in the EIWA last season and sent three wrestlers to the NCAA Division I Championships in Cleveland.

Shuck Welcomed to Wrestling Staff

WEST POINT, N.Y. – Army West Point head wrestling coach Kevin Ward has announced the addition of head assistant coach Ned Shuck to his staff.

Shuck spent the last four years at the helm of Wisconsin-Whitewater, guiding the Warhawks to a 47-17 record in duals and finished in the top-25 each year at the NCAA Division III Championships. Additionally, UW-Whitewater collected two WIAC titles in the 2014-15 and 2015-16 seasons, as well as the Upper Midwest Regional crown in 2014-15. The 2015-16 Wisconsin Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (WIAC) Coach of the Year trained 11 All-Americans, including two-time national champion and d3wrestle.com’s 2018 National Wrestler of the Year Jordan Newman, as well as 17 WIAC individual champions and seven regional champs. Eleven Warhawks earned National Wrestling Coaches Association (NWCA) Scholar All-America honors, including five Chancellor’s Scholar-Athletes.

“I couldn’t be more excited to have Coach Shuck join our staff,” Ward said. “To build a successful program you have to have the right people, and Ned is one of the best people in the sport of wrestling. His reputation as a proven leader, a man of strong character and integrity, and his unique background as an athlete and a coach will greatly benefit our program. Coach Shuck brings a wealth of experience, maturity, and leadership to our program, and I am excited about the impact he will have on the lives of our cadet-athletes.”

In addition to his coaching duties, Shuck was an instructor for UW-Whitewater’s Health, Physical Education, Recreation and Coaching department.

Prior to UW-Whitewater, Shuck spent three years as the head coach at Division III Heidelberg University in Tiffin, Ohio. During his tenure at Heidelberg, Shuck led the Student Princes to back-to-back Ohio Athletic Conference (OAC) championships in 2012-13 and 2013-14 and mentored 22 All-OAC selections, four academic all-conference honorees, seven National Wrestling Coaches Association Academic All-Americans and six individual NCAA qualifiers, including one All-American. He was selected OAC Coach of the Year following the 2013-14 campaign.

During his career, Shuck has also served as an assistant coach at perennial national power Augsburg (Minn.) from 2009-11 where he helped lead the Auggies to the 2010 NCAA Division III championship and a runner-up performance at the 2011 national championships. Shuck helped coach 13 All-Americans, four national finalists and one national champion during his time at Augsburg. He was also an assistant coach with the Ohio Cadet/Junior National Team (2012-14) and as head coach for the Minnesota Storm Freestyle Cadet team (2009-11). He was a full scholarship recipient for the NWCA Leadership Academy in 2011.

Shuck wrestled at the University of Iowa from 2000-05, earning a degree in elementary education. He was a four-time letter winner and three-time Academic All-Big Ten selection for the Hawkeyes.

For more information on Army West Point wrestling, visit GoArmyWestPoint.com and follow @ArmyWP_Wres on Twitter.