"Any body can wrestle."
It's a popular phrase in the wrestling world, illustrating the idea that, unlike other sports that are designed for a specific body-build, wrestling is open to athletes of all shapes, sizes, heights and weights. (One of the National Wrestling Hall of Fame's most popular exhibits is a display showing life-size images of a wide range of amateur wrestlers where visitors can compare themselves to Stephen Neal or Adeline Gray or the other three wrestling champs featured.)
A similar image could be created for NCAA heavyweight champions ... as athletes who won this prestigious title in nearly 90 years of the Nationals have stood 5'10" up to 6'6" ... and tipped the scales from 190 pounds to nearly 450. (As you can imagine, these champs had a wide range of body-builds, from shredded musculatures that made them look like Greek statues ... to something more resembling the Michelin man, Teletubbies, or the Pillsbury Doughboy ... and everything in between.)
In fact, a handful of NCAA heavyweight titlists weighed in at more than 300 pounds.
How is this possible, you ask? After all, there's an upper weight limit of 285 pounds for the top weight class. But it hasn't always been so ... as the weight class nicknamed "heavyweight" was once called "unlimited" because there was no top limit until about 30 years ago.
Kyle Snyder and Adam Coon battled in the NCAA finals (Photo/Tony Rotundo, WrestlersAreWarriors.com)
InterMat thought it would be fun to do some research into the actual heights and weights of the best big men of college wrestling, going back to 1928, the year of the first NCAA college wrestling championships. It's an expansion of a feature story we did back in February 2018 about the heftiest of the heavyweight champs ... after Michigan's Adam Coon handed Ohio State's Kyle Snyder his first loss in three years in a regular-season dual meet. (Much had been made of the weight difference, as the Wolverine outweighed the Buckeye by 55 pounds in that February bout. Snyder avenged that regular-season loss in the 2018 NCAA heavyweight finals.)
Along the way, you'll meet a menagerie of men with animalistic nicknames – the Bear, the Zebra Kid, Pig, Moose, Goose… along with Wojo, Farmboy and other champs who earned the ultimate title “NCAA heavyweight champ.â€
Note: Most of this data has been verified by the school or other reliable sources (including, in one case, the son of one of the champs). We were unable to locate pertinent information on some of the past champs; hence, the blank space at the end of some of the capsule bios. If you have this data, please email this writer at mark@intermatwrestle.com.
1928-1942 NCAAs: Big men in the beginning
The very first NCAA wrestling championships took place at Iowa State in Ames. During the next decade-and-a-half, Oklahoma State wrestling was THE dominant program in terms of individual champs and official team titles (when awarded).
Jack Riley
Charles McDaniel
Lloyd Ricks
1946-1962: After World War II, through the Nifty Fifties
The NCAA championships were not held during the height of World War II, as large numbers of college athletes -- and students in general -- enlisted in the war effort. Once the war concluded in 1945, veterans enrolled in college in record numbers, fueled in part by the GI Bill which opened the door to educational and competitive opportunities which may not have been available prior to the war.
Dick Hutton
Bob Norman
1963-1985: Innovation, integration ... and era of the biggest big men
This era was a time of great change in college wrestling. It was an era of innovation, with Resilite foam-core mats, shoes specifically designed for wrestling, and synthetic-fabric uniforms (and beginning of the end of wrestlers competing bare-chested). It was also a time of integration, with the first African-American heavyweight champs, starting in 1963. (The first black college champ was Iowa's Simon Roberts, 147-pound champ at the 1957 NCAAs.)
It was also the era of the heftiest of the heavyweight champs, including Chris Taylor and Tab Thacker, each weighing more than 400 pounds.
Joe James
Chris Taylor (Photo/NWHOF)
Jimmy Jackson (Photo/NWHOF)
Tab Thacker (Photo/NWHOF)
1985-2000: New weight limits don't limit the possibilities
Tab Thacker was the last of the "supersize" 300+ pound heavyweight champs. By the mid-1980s, the NCAA installed new top weight limits for what had been officially called the "unlimited" weight class ... starting with a top limit of 265 pounds, later increased to 285. Even with these new requirements, heavyweight champs of the past 30+ years have remained a diverse group of athletes of widely varying weights and heights.
Carlton Haselrig
Brock Lesnar wrestled Stephen Neal in the NCAA finals
2001-present: The best big men of the new century
At the dawn of the 21st century, NCAA Division I heavyweight champs came in all shapes and sizes, from lean-muscled guys who competed around 225 pounds ... to some big men who barely made it under the 285-pound top limit.
Tommy Rowlands
Nick Gwiazdowski wrestling Kyle Snyder in the NCAA finals (Photo/Tony Rotundo, WrestlersAreWarriors.com)
Heavyweight fun facts
Heftiest heavyweight champs:
Lightest heavyweight champs:
(A good number of champs tipped the scales at 215-225 pounds)
Tallest heavyweight champs:
Shortest heavyweight champs:
Most titles: Five NCAA Division I heavyweight champs have earned three individual titles in that weight class:
Note: This weight class has the fewest three-time NCAA champs of all weight classes
Two-timers: Nearly two dozen NCAA champs won exactly two heavyweight titles:
Multiplier effect: Schools with the multiple Division I heavyweight champs:
Orphans: Heavyweight champs from schools that no longer have intercollegiate wrestling:
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