Looking ahead to 2019-2022 NCAA Division I Championships
The 2019 NCAA Division I Championships will take place at PPG Paints Arena in Pittsburgh
As we start a new year — and enter the heart of the college wrestling season — there might not be a better time to set our sights on the next four NCAA Division I Wrestling Championships. Here’s a sneak peek at the 2019-2022 NCAAs …
2019 NCAAs: Pittsburgh
The biggest event in collegiate wrestling returns to Pittsburgh for the first time in over six decades.
Where: The 2019 NCAAs will take place at PPG Paints Arena, in the heart of downtown Pittsburgh. First opened in 2010 as Consol Energy Center, this facility which is normally the home of the NHL Pittsburgh Penguins has a seating capacity of approximately 19,700 fans.
Hosted by: University of Pittsburgh
Last time in Pittsburgh: Steel City hosted the NCAAs was back in 1957, at Fitzgerald Field House on the Pitt campus. This championship event — which welcomed 213 athletes from over 60 schools — was special for a number of reasons … including as the first to crown an African-American national mat champ (Simons Roberts of the University of Iowa) … and the last college appearance of Dan Hodge, the Oklahoma Sooner fall guy, with a 46-0 overall record, with 36 of those wins by pin. The Sooners pinned down the team title that year.
2020 NCAAs: Minneapolis
The 2020 NCAA D1 championships will be the … Rest of the story and details at http://intermatwrestle.com/articles/21093?mc_cid=376ecdb5ed&mc_eid=2ef7cbca4b
ECU Open Workout
A reminder that ECU is having its 2nd free Open Workout of the year Sunday the 13th from 2:00 – 4:00. We will work technique and do some live situations. The event will be in the Student Rec Center on campus at 7th & Cotanche Streets near downtown. Parking is available in the college lot at 9th & Cotanche across from McDonald’s.
This is a great opportunity to get free college instruction, meet ECU coaches and wrestlers, and see the ECU facilities. Arrghh! It’s helpful to have the 2nd page of the attached release form signed in advance. You get “Hall of Fame coaching” at ECU.

Berger, Huskers Connect With Local Wrestler
TDR Editor’s Notes ; Great positive human interest story from the land of the Cornhuskers.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Walk through an airport wearing a T-Shirt that indicates you’re affiliated with wrestling, and you’re bound to have some stranger strike up a conversation with you about the sport. It’s representative of a strong bond between competitors and coaches, and even wrestling fans; a special connection that’s arguably different from more mainstream sports, like football or basketball. “The wrestling family is that – it’s a family,” Nebraska senior wrestler Tyler Berger said. “We take care of each other.” It’s especially true at Nebraska. That family feel is also a big reason Berger felt honored to be able to connect with 16-year-old Harley Kessler, a wrestler at North Star High School diagnosed in August with Osteosarcoma. It’s the same type of rare bone cancer that brought national awareness to Purdue student and football fan Tyler Trent. “When I reached out to Harley,” Berger said, “I wanted him to know he has a family here, that it’s not just the Division I program, the Huskers and then the high school programs. We’re all in it together.”
Kessler had begun experiencing severe leg pain when a bone scan revealed a mass in his tibia. The cancer became so severe that in mid-December, doctors had to amputate his left leg below the knee. When Kessler awoke from that surgery, he saw a pair of wrestling shoes. They were from Berger, who’d sent them to the hospital via the North Star coaches. Berger also wrote Kessler a letter of inspiration. And on Sunday, Kessler’s dream of a Nebraska wrestling experience, granted through Union Bank and Trust’s Magic Moments, culminated when he served as an honorary captain during the Huskers’ dual with Northwestern. “It’s what our sport teaches us,” Nebraska coach Mark Manning said. “Wrestling is a tough, one-on-one sport that requires a tremendous amount of discipline and commitment. We really love that Harley loves our sport. “That’s what it’s all about. It’s about giving yourself. We wanted to give back to Harley. He loves Nebraska wrestling, and we want him to be a part of it.” Manning first met Kessler through the initial Magic Moments ceremony at the North Star gymnasium on Dec. 10, before Kessler had his surgery. A family neighbor had nominated Kessler and his family for the Miracle Moment.
“Wrestling is his life,” said Stephanie Duley, Kessler’s mother. “You get into wrestling, and you breathe nothing but wrestling.” Kessler said he was excited and honored to serve as an honorary captain. The Nebraska program also saluted him in this tribute video. “It’s had a big impact,” he said. “It’s something I’ve really enjoyed and am thankful for.”

Connecting with Kessler has helped Berger remember that collegiate student athletes have a responsibility outside of a sport that doesn’t revolve around them. After all, Berger doesn’t want his entire Husker experience as a wrestler to be 100 percent about him. He wants to reach out. He wants to help. “It’s good to have Harley, a kid who looks up to guys like us,” Berger said. “It kind of makes us take a step back and see a bigger picture of a bigger family of Husker wrestling and Huskers athletics. To have him come, it’s a good way to humble us. We get to see how much he enjoys us and how much he enjoys wrestling.” Rest of the Story, pictures and details at http://www.huskers.com//ViewArticle.dbml?DB_OEM_ID=100&ATCLID=211785905&mc_cid=376ecdb5ed&mc_eid=2ef7cbca4b

