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West
Jordan Journal:
September 2007
Local Wrestler Grabs National Medals
West Jordan resident Justin Schwendiman,
12, won several medals in the national State Games of America, held
in Colorado Springs, Colo., Aug. 4 and 5.
He won titles in both styles of
wrestling featured at the biannual national competition: freestyle,
one of the international styles practiced in the Olympic Games; and
folkstyle, the style practiced in high school and college in the
United States.
“Justin works so hard,” coach Bill
Kilpack said. “He gets everything he’s got through determination.”
Justin, a seventh-grader at West Jordan
Middle School, also finished out a great season, with an
All-American finish at the U.S. Folkstyle Nationals, where he placed
third; two AAU state championships; and two USA Wrestling-Utah state
third-place finishes. He finished second behind his teammate for the
Novice Intermountain Champion title. These were Justin’s first two
national titles, although he is a four-time All-American.
Justin is one of three Utahns competing
in wrestling at the State Games of America. Athletes from 21 states
competed in the wrestling tournaments, after qualifying in their
respective state games in one or both of the previous two years.
Justin is a member of Mountain Top
Wrestling Club, a nonprofit organization operating through Salt Lake
County Recreation, which practices at Jordan High School. He has
been recognized by the club coaching staff as one of the team’s Most
Improved wrestlers in 2005 and the Most Dedicated Wrestler in 2006.
He is currently the No. 6-ranked Novice-division wrestler in Utah
and No. 17-ranked Kids division wrestler in the state. He is a Utah
Summer Games champion in Greco-Roman, a runner-up in freestyle and
bronze-medalist in folkstyle. Where his teammate has been wrestling
since before he could ride a bicycle, Justin just finished his third
season on the mat.
“He’s had to start out in some of the
toughest weights, playing catch-up with some of the best in the
state but he just goes out and goes after it,” Kilpack said. “And
it’s paid off. Kids who beat him early on get a whole different
story about every time he walks out on the mat. For those who were a
nightmare for him not very long ago, now he’s theirs.”
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