The Club Team/Regional Training Center approach was introduced many years ago to the great benefit of 1 team: Iowa. Roy Carver, the inventor of the Bandag cold recapping process, donated a mint of money to The Hawkeye Wrestling club. This money was used to retain the top Iowa wrestlers after graduation. The story went that they held separate practices with a curtain separating the Club team from the college team. When the official college practice was over the curtain was drawn and the 2 teams would practice together - perfectly legal by NCAA rules. Iowa went on to win an unprecedented string of National Championships.
Later the Cowboy wrestling club and Sunkist Wrestling clubs formed and benefited Okie State and Arizona State.
It was only a matter of time before other colleges started to embrace a similar system in order to remain competitive.
It is not an easy call to say that no one should be allowed to do this because it is unfair to those that can't. There are many positive results from these clubs. Besides helping to bring the sport to a higher level due to clinics and additional coaching of the younger wrestlers, they have provided a home and financing for those that aspire to become Olympians and pursue their dream. These athletes also become positive role models for the collegians and youth wrestlers.
http://wrestlingreport.com/current_news/viewtopic.php?f=14&t=47144&start=15
Carver-Hawkeye Arena at the University of Iowa is named after a Quad-City area industrialist who graduated with a degree in engineering from the University of Illinois.
Roy J. Carver donated $9.2 million during his lifetime to Iowa, including $2 million to help fund construction of the arena that bears his name.
Carver’s passion was not basketball. It was wrestling, a sport he competed in at the collegiate level, and his donation was intended as much as anything to help provide new facilities for an Iowa wrestling program that was growing at the time.
http://qctimes.com/sports/college/c...cle_dea3250c-bd48-5acf-b300-d01537912180.html
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Shirley Davis/QUAD-CITY TIMES The Cannes, France, villa of Muscatine, Iowa, millionaire Roy Carver was a dazzling place overlooking the harbor where his yachts were docked. The photo was taken in 1977; Carver died in 1981.
... Carver posed for a few pictures at the pool table, then left, flying his own plane to a wrestling meet at the University of Iowa. He was the team’s No. 1 fan.
http://qctimes.com/travel/a-million...cle_fa91bc14-ff2a-5e74-8442-f6e41f7c0c65.html
MUSCATINE, Iowa - Lucille Carver was known to thousands of people for her philanthropic ventures, including the millions of dollars she and her husband, the late Roy J. Carver, donated to the University of Iowa's medical school. ........
Carver, who was born in Muscatine on July 27, 1917, to Merle A. Young Sr. and Marie Kollman Young, died on Dec. 18 at her Muscatine home, at age 93. ......
Roy Carver began making high-quality contractor pumps in the 1930s at the Carver Pump Co. in Matherville, Ill., and later in Muscatine. Carver Foundry Products was established in the 1950s to supply molds for Carver Pump.
Bandag Inc., a tire retreading company, was established in 1957.
In June 2007, the company was sold to Bridgestone and became Bridgestone Bandag Tire Solutions.
The Carvers began their financial support of the University of Iowa in 1969.
Boyd was president of UI when he met Lucille Carver in 1970.
"She was very gracious," Boyd said. "Her family made some very generous gifts to the university and she was very much part of that."
Lucille Carver, a University of Iowa alum, received the Distinguished Service Award from the UI Alumni Association in 1972.
Roy Carver died in 1981 at age 71, and in accordance with his will, the Roy J. Carver Charitable Trust, one of Iowa's largest private philanthropic foundations with annual grant distributions of more than $11 million, was created.
Lucille Carver served on the board of trustees from November 1985 through her retirement on April 19, 2002.
In addition to the work she did through the Charitable Trust, she was a former board member of Carver Pump Co., Carver Foundry Products, and Bandag Inc.
The past 10 years have been marked by recognition of the contributions of Lucille Carver and her family.
She and her husband had four sons; one, Clayton C. Carver, died in 1983. Two of her sons, Roy J. Carver Jr. and wife, Pat, and Martin G. Carver and his wife, Ruth, live in Muscatine. Son John A. Carver lives with his wife, Marsha, in Rapid City, Ill. There are 15 grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren.
The University of Iowa located the Lucille A. Carver Mississippi Riverside Environmental Research Station at the Fairport Fish Hatchery on Iowa Highway 22 in 2001. The 7,500-square-foot building is used by hydraulics experts, biologists, geologists and other environmental scientists, as well as students, who conduct collaborative research.
Lucille Carver oversaw the largest gift ever made to the University of Iowa up to that time in 2002, through the Roy J. Carver Charitable Trust in the form of a $63 million commitment to the university's college of medicine through the University of Iowa Foundation.
That donation added to other gifts from the trust totaled $90 million and led UI President Mary Sue Coleman to request the Board of Regents to name the university's college of medicine the "Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine."
http://muscatinejournal.com/news/lo...cle_83032f76-0cc2-11e0-8533-001cc4c002e0.html
Yet they are still top 5 in the country. Iowa has never taken a step back like ISU has recently.
And how exactly did they manage that 'double class', when taking into account the scholarship constraints you laid out above?
Saw this posted on another board. Iowa has stayed pretty stagnant in the 2-5 range. We have been in the top 15 every year except 11-12, but haven't been competitive with Iowa. Here is a breakdown of statistics vs Iowa since KJ started. Kind of tells the wholes story.
It tells the story that Queso wanted to tell. Since he's back now and was the one who made it. Two matches accounted for most of those takedowns and stalling calls. Would it have been better if those guys had just turned over and gotten pinned quick to help the stats?
I used to sit in a row with 4 central Iowa high school wrestling coaches. They have all dropped their season tix.Attendance to duals in ames steadily dropping. Really ugly.
Didn't realize it was from one of quesos alias. I deleted it, I know his agenda.
It wasn't an alias. He posted it under his main account.
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TI think we should have every member of the team donate one testicle and kidney. That way they can supplement the lost weight with added muscle. You don't need two.
Thoughts?
I think we should have every member of the team donate one testicle and kidney. That way they can supplement the lost weight with added muscle. You don't need two.
Thoughts?
For whatever reason just watched the ISU-U of I match replay. It validated what I saw Sunday. There was such a discrepancy in strength and conditioning. The problem is systemic and the coach speak of CKJ is meaningless. I've emailed JP in the past and voiced a reasonable displeasure on the state of ISU wrestling and rec'd no response. Has anyone else emailed JP and rec'd a response?