Nebraska Cornhuskers wrestling

The Nebraska Cornhuskers wrestling team represents the University of Nebraska–Lincoln in the Big Ten Conference of NCAA Division I. The program has won seven conference titles and 11 individual NCAA championships.

Nebraska Cornhuskers wrestling
UniversityUniversity of Nebraska–Lincoln
Head CoachMark Manning (21st season)
ConferenceBig Ten
LocationLincoln, NE
ArenaBob Devaney Sports Center
(Capacity: 13,595)
NicknameCornhuskers
ColorsScarlet and Cream[1]
         
NCAA individual champions
11
All-Americans
112
Conference Tournament championships
1911, 1915, 1924, 1949, 1993, 1995, 2009

The team has been coached by Mark Manning since 2000.[2]

Coaches

Coaching history

No. Coach Tenure Overall Accomplishments
1 R. G. Clapp1911–2617–17–1 (.500)WIAA champion (1911,1915,1924)
2 John Kellogg1927–3113–15–1 (.466)
3 R. G. Lehman1931–322–3 (.400)
4 Harold Ecklund
C. E. Thomas
1932–330–2 (.000)
5 Jerry Adam1933–4716–72–4 (.196)
6 B. R. Patterson1947–5013–18–1 (.422)Big Seven champion (1949)
7 Al Partin1950–5415–24–4 (.395)
8 Don Strasheim1954–573–25–0 (.107)
9 Bill Smith1957–602–31–1 (.074)
10 Mickey Sparano1960–615–3–1 (.611)
11 Robert Mancuso1961–6415–23–1 (.397)
12 Orval Borgialli1964–7872–106–6 (.408)
13 Bob Fehrs1978–8595–51–2 (.649)
14 Tim Neumann1985–2000199–77–6 (.716)Big Eight champion (1993,1995)
15 Mark Manning2000–246–93–3 (.724)Big 12 champion (2009)

Coaching staff

Name Position First year Alma mater
Mark ManningHead coach2000Omaha
Bryan SnyderAssociate head coach2011Nebraska
Robert KokeshAssistant coach2019Nebraska
Tyler BergerVolunteer assistant2019Nebraska

All-Americans

Nebraska has produced 101 All-Americans.

Newt Copple – 1942 (145 – 4th)
Herb Reese – 1949 (175 – 3rd)
Max Kitzelman – 1954 (HWT – 3rd)
Dan Brand – 1958 (HWT – 4th)
Harold Thompson – 1962 (147 – 3rd)
Mike Nissen – 1962 (123 – 2nd); 1963 (123 – 1st)
Joe George – 1971 (167 – 6th)
Al Freeman – 1981 (142 – 8th); 1983 (142 – 2nd)
Johnnie Selmon – 1982 (142 – 5th)
Jim Scherr – 1982 (177 – 6th); 1984 (177 – 1st)
Bill Scherr – 1982 (190 – 4th); 1983 (190 – 3rd); 1984 (190 – 1st)
Gary Albright – 1982 (HWT – 7th); 1984 (HWT – 2nd); 1986 (HWT – 3rd)
Ray Oliver – 1983 (167 – 4th)
Gil Sanchez – 1987 (134 – 2nd)
Jason Kelber – 1989 (126 – 2nd); 1990 (126 – 2nd); 1991 (126 – 1st)
Scott Chenoweth – 1989 (167 – 8th); 1990 (167 – 7th); 1991 (177 – 7th)
Paul Herrera – 1990 (142 – 7th)
Corey Olson – 1990 (177 – 3rd); 1992 (177 – 2nd); 1993 (177 – 2nd)
Chris Nelson – 1990 (190 – 5th); 1992 (190 – 6th)
Joe Malecek – 1990 (HWT – 7th)
John Buxton – 1993 (118 – 8th)
Tony Purler1993 (126 – 1st)
Frank Velazquez – 1993 (134 – 7th)
Mike Eierman – 1993 (142 – 5th)
Rulon Gardner – 1993 (HWT – 4th)
Scott Gonyo – 1994 (118 – 6th)
Brad Canoyer – 1995 (118 – 6th)
Steve Baer – 1995 (126 – 5th)
Temoer Terry – 1995 (150 – 4th); 1996 (158 – 3rd); 1998 (158 – 6th)
Ryan Tobin – 1995 (190 – 8th); 1996 (190 – 3rd); 1998 (190 – 4th)
Tolly Thompson1995 (HWT – 1st); 1996 (HWT – 3rd); 1997 (HWT – 3rd)
Chad Nelson – 1996 (167 – 8th)
Jose DeAnda – 1999 (141 – 8th)
Bryan Snyder – 1999 (157 – 4th); 2000 (157 – 5th); 2001 (157 – 2nd); 2002 (157 – 2nd)
Brad Vering – 1999 (184 – 4th); 2000 (197 – 1st); 2001 (197 – 7th)
Paul Gomez – 2000 (125 – 8th)
Todd Beckerman – 2000 (133 – 5th); 2001 (133 – 4th)
Ati Conner – 2001 (174 – 8th)
Jason Powell – 2002 (197 – 5th); 2003 (125 – 3rd); 2004 (125 – 1st)
Justin Ruiz – 2002 (118 – 6th); 2003 (197 – 5th)
Matt Murray – 2004 (141 – 2nd)
Travis Shufelt – 2004 (149 – 7th)
Jacob Klein – 2004 (165 – 7th); 2006 (174 – 5th)
Travis Pascoe – 2005 (184 – 6th)
B. J. Padden – 2005 (197 – 5th); 2006 (197 – 3rd)
Paul Donahoe2007 (125 – 1st); 2008 (125 – 3rd)
Jordan Burroughs – 2008 (149 – 3rd); 2009 (157 – 1st); 2011 (165 – 1st)
Stephen Dwyer – 2008 (165 – 8th); 2010 (174 – 4th)
Brandon Browne – 2008 (174 – 4th); 2009 (174 – 4th)
Craig Brester – 2008 (197 – 4th); 2009 (197 – 2nd); 2010 (197 – 2nd)
Vince Jones – 2009 (184 – 6th)
James Green – 2012 (157 – 7th); 2013 (157 – 7th); 2014 (157 – 3rd); 2015 (157 – 3rd)
Josh Ihnen – 2012 (184 – 8th)
Robert Kokesh – 2013 (174 – 3rd); 2014 (174 – 4th); 2015 (174 – 3rd)
T. J. Dudley – 2015 (184 – 8th); 2016 (184 – 2nd); 2017 (184 – 3rd)
Eric Montoya – 2016 (133 – 5th); 2017 (133 – 6th)
Austin Wilson – 2016 (165 – 7th)
Tyler Berger – 2017 (157 – 5th); 2018 (157 – 3rd); 2019 (157 – 2nd)
Aaron Studebaker – 2017 (197 – 5th)
Chad Red Jr. – 2018 (141 – 7th); 2019 (141 – 8th); 2020 (141)
Taylor Venz – 2018 (184 – 4th); 2020 (184)
Isaiah White – 2019 (165 – 5th); 2020 (165)
Mikey Labriola – 2019 (174 – 6th); 2020 (174)
Ridge Lovett – 2020 (133)
Collin Purinton – 2020 (149)
Peyton Robb – 2020 (157)
Eric Schultz – 2020 (197)

Season-by-season results

Conference tournament champion
Year Coach Record Conf. NCAA Rank
WIUFA (1910–1915)
1910–11R. G. Clapp0–01st
1914–151–01st
MVIAA (1915–1928)
1915–16R. G. Clapp0–1–1
1918–190–1
1921–222–1
1922–234–1
1923–242–31st
1924–251–45th
1925–264–23rd
1926–273–44th
1927–28John Kellogg3–45th5th
Big Six Conference (1928–1947)
1928–29John Kellogg3–3–13rd
1929–305–33rd
1930–312–54th
1931–32R. G. Lehman2–34th
1932–33Harold Ecklund
C. E. Thomas
0–25th
1933–34Jerry Adam1–4–1T–5th
1934–351–75th
1935–362–66th
1936–374–4–15th
1937–381–7–14th
1938–393–6–14th
1939–401–74th
1940–410–94th
1941–420–8CanceledT–12th
1945–460–8T–9th
1946–473–73rd
Big Seven Conference (1947–1957)
1947–48B. R. Patterson2–82nd
1948–496–4–11stT–7th
1949–505–62nd
1950–51Al Partin4–6–1T–4th
1951–520–9–14th
1952–539–1T–4th
1953–542–85thT–14th
1954–55Don Strasheim0–125th
1955–562–65th
1956–571–75th
Big Eight Conference (1957–1996)
1957–58Bill Smith1–96thT–17th
1958–591–9–16thT–39th
1959–600–136th
1960–61Mickey Sparano5–3–16thT–21st
1961–62Robert Mancuso9–2–14th9th
1962–632–146th13th
1963–644–77th
1964–65Orval Borgialli5–11–16th
1965–662–135th
1966–673–106th
1967–684–12–17th
1968–694–97th
1969–706–5–25th
1970–718–54th
1971–729–5–14th
1972–734–104th21st
1973–747–66th
1974–758–34thT–45th
1975–766–65th
1976–772–66th
1977–784–6–16thT–55th
1978–79Bob Fehrs9–106th
1979–8016–9–26th39th
1980–8116–44th32nd
1981–8214–54th6th16
1982–8317–43rd6th6
1983–8415–54th4th14
1984–858–144th41st
1985–86Tim Neumann16–54th12th13
1986–8712–64th14th
1987–888–9–14th39th
1988–8912–6–24th17th9
1989–9021–2–12nd5th4
1990–9111–63rd10th9
1991–9213–43rd11th8
1992–9310–21st3rd2
1993–9412–63rd29th7
1994–9517–31st6th3
1995–9615–3–12nd5th3
Big 12 Conference (1996–2011)
1996–97Tim Neumann15–64th12th10
1997–9810–63rd21st10
1998–9917–64th15th4
1999–0010–7–14th8th11
2000–01Mark Manning11–64th8th9
2001–028–94th8th9
2002–0316–74th13th17
2003–0419–32nd5th2
2004–0519–2–13rd19th3
2005–0612–53rd16th5
2006–0710–7–14th16th18
2007–0814–32nd4th4
2008–0917–3–11st4th4
2009–109–115thT–12th
2010–1114–54th12th13
Big Ten Conference (2011–present)
2011–12Mark Manning15–48thT–21st8
2012–1311–67th13th12
2013–1412–25th11th8
2014–1514–17th9th11
2015–1611–64th8th12
2016–1712–44th9th5
2017–1810–45th9th13
2018–1912–55th10th8
2019–2011–32ndCanceled4

[3]

See also

References

  1. The Power of Color (PDF). Nebraska Athletics Brand Guide. July 1, 2019. Retrieved March 16, 2020.
  2. "Mark Manning - Head Coach". Huskers.com. Retrieved February 3, 2016.
  3. "2020 Media Guide". Huskers.com. Retrieved 2020-07-11.
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