Wrestling is the hardest sport. Though, that doesn’t mean you don’t have what it takes, but you should go over three things before trying it out. To start, think about how you handle losing. Next, you have to look at your mentality. Lastly, are you physically prepared? First, think about how you handle losing. Losing in wrestling is more personal than any other sport. Baseball, soccer, football, etc. There are many players on a team and they all must contribute. However, on the mat, it’s only you responsible for every single move, every single mess-up, and every single win. Losing a match drains you beyond a point of return, and you start overthinking. You cannot let your emotions get the best of you after a match, however, as it is seen as unsportsmanlike by many. Getting angry, throwing your headgear, cursing at anything that moves will not only make you disliked but usually punished in most scenarios. Most believe crying after a match is a sign of weakness and will also get you punished. Being level-headed, calm, and collected is usually the best way to handle a loss. Doing this, however, is easier said than done. In personal experiences and first-hand accounts, people tend to be more mad at themselves and just take it out in different ways, resulting in several things happening. …show more content…
Wrestling isn’t a sport where you can skip practices and take off for a couple of days, because there will always be someone working harder than you. If you aren’t ready to spend hours at practice, get yelled at to work harder and drill faster, this sport is not for you. Taking criticism to heart in this sport is important, everything must be a learning experience on the mat. You have to be able to have the most obscene thing yelled at you and brush it off like it was nothing more than wind in the air because wrestling mad will be your biggest downfall in a
When the father slaps his son, he is doing it out of fear that his son will be better than him. He is scared that there will always be someone better than him. He used violence so that it would not seem like his son was better than him. Inside he was starting to realize that his son is better than him. He did not want those three hundred people to think that he was not the best. Crutcher writes, “Three-year three-sport letterman at Coho High School in the mid-1950s and number two wrestler at 177 at the university of oklahoma after that. Number two is mysteriously absent from his version.” In the father’s wrestling career he was always number two, and not the best. He is scared of that, especially if it is his son who is better than him. This proves that the father is a fearful character because he is scared of being weak, and not being the
Then, high school came along and I received a rude awakening that I was no longer top dog on the wrestling team. I lost more matches that first year of highschool wrestling then I had my whole junior high career combined. I was devastated that year I thought that I would never want to wrestle again. However, when wrestling rolled around that next year I was the first in line to show
Today I am taking a break from the series of articles I usually write, to bring you a subject I have thought about for a long time. I only started paying attention to wrestling in my teen years, so the "Attitude Era" was what I considered wrestling. I won't go into what made the era special, because that would be insulting to your intelligence, everyone knows what made the era successful, and why some fans still pine for it. Needless to say, it was "cool", it suited the times, and it broke the mold formed over the previous decades.
My personal family was extremely big in basketball. Both of my parents played basketball in highschool, my father has coached basketball for over fifteen years. So naturally I played basketball as a young child, my childhood was centered around basketball. I would go to watch my dad coach his high school almost everyday when I was younger. I played in recreational leagues when I was young, i was eventually invited to play on a traveling basketball. After all this you can imagine the shock when I did not show up to my first middle school practice, and told my parents I was going to wrestle. My parents were upset and said I was a waste of talent, they eventually got use to my decision and support me in my new endeavour. This decision took a lot of courage, and caused a lot of backlash, but I have never regretted it for a
"They (wrestlers) think they are indestructible. But I’ll tell you what -- those three athletes thought they were indestructible, too. And they aren’t around to talk about it."Wrestlers believe that it is mind over body; they can accomplish anything and nothing bad will ever happen to them. So, LaRosa’s behavior on that fatal day in November wasn’t anything out of the ordinary for many college wrestlers. He was wearing sweats over a rubber suit and riding a stationary bike in a steam-filled shower room. His body temperature reached 108 degrees. He was trying to make weight for his match the next day, and wrestling’s rules did little to discourage such dangerous practices. The logic in wrestling is to make the lowest weight you can in the weigh-ins, which are 24 hours before the match. Then you can replenish and rehydrate your body over the course of the 24 hours between the weigh-in and the match. This will give you an advantage in the competition because you really will be bigger and stronger then most of the wrestlers in that lower weight class.
Of the 258,000 athletes that wrestle in high school, only 7,408 are able to continue their career as a wrestler in college (NCAA 1). 2.7% of wrestlers are faced with multiple adversities from weight gain, to the long seven minutes of nonstop action on the mat. Although the seven minutes go by quick when spectating, when you’re on the mat it seems never ending. A lot of work goes behind one's success on the mat. To be successful in college wrestling one must cut weight efficiently, lift weights, and warm up effectively before every match.
All my life I’ve been quiet and inhibited. All my life I’ve regretted not saying or doing things because of my self-doubt. Camp made me realize that as long as I have the determination, I can accomplish anything. Wrestling camp was difficult, nerve-wracking, painful, and most of all, fun. But the best part is that now, after nearly seventeen years of shyness, I’m finally breaking out of my shell.
In the first 20 seconds of the match, I had the first take-down. I was working crossfaces, cheap tilts, and everything else I knew after my takedown. Then, I did what I do best and gave him a swift, hard crossface and cradeled him up. Squeezing with all my strength and might it took about 7 seconds of him being on his back and he was pinned! It took a total of 55 seconds to pin my first opponent at state.
...ve. You cut too much weight for too long and you don 't want to wrestle anymore. The fun is gone and dread and hatred sets in. I’ve seen it happen and i have experienced it myself. Id go to practice with one thing on my mind, lose this much weight today and this much weight tomorrow, didn 't care if i got better just that i lost the pounds.
Ever since the previous season I had my standards set high. I had placed fifth, which was all right for the time being, but I knew as time went on I needed to push myself and increase my level of wrestling. I decided that I would do whatever it took, through thick and thin. I traveled to small local tournaments in Colorado, and a couple out-of-state tournaments, I even traveled to Delaware. It didn't really matter how I did at these tournaments because it was just all practice until February. So, I lifted and wrestled just about every chance I got. It was all in preparation for one match, six minutes.
The Hotchkiss High School Wrestling room, though bland through out most of the year, transforms during the winter sports season. By itself, the room is nothing. It could be used for many things, but happens to be the perfect size and shape for a wrestling mat to be laid down with a little room on either side. What makes the room so significant is not the shape, size, color or any other dimension. It is the people; the atmosphere during a wrestling practice that makes the room so infamous.
When I was a Freshman, I was curious about the sport of Wrestling. When I tried out for it, I was eager to learn more about it. It is not just rolling around on the mat it is a form of combat using grappling techniques such as throws, takedowns, pins, holds, and joint locks. In addition into this sport, there are a variety of ways to use these grappling techniques. Wrestling has many rich memories of it is history with a variety of wrestling styles and rules.
“Today can be the day of my first wrestling match, I absolutely hope I win , what if I don't and It's embarrassing? I’m overthinking it, I’ll be fine, I just need to use the knowledge and skills I’ve learned from the past couple months.” I thought to myself as I walked to my sixth period class which was wrestling. It was the third week into the wrestling season and the first two league duels I defaulted because there was no one in my weight class.
When a person walks into a building to see a live wrestling event they do not know what to expect. They wonder who will be wrestling. They wonder where their seats are. All of the suspense gets them ready for the show. The suspense gets them pumped and ready to for the show to start.