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Bruce Baumgartner affirmed his
status as the greatest freestyle heavyweight wrestler in American
history by winning the bronze medal at the Centennial Olympic
Games at Atlanta after capturing the 1995 World Championship.
Baumgartner was honored by his fellow United States Olympic
athletes when he was chosen to be captain of the USA Olympic
Team and to carry the American flag for the Games Opening
Ceremonies. He was honored as the winner of the James E. Sullivan
Award in 1995 as the outstanding amateur athlete in the United
States. He was inducted into the National Wrestling Hall of
Fame in 2002. Baumgartner had not lost to an American wrestler
from1981 through his retirement from competition in 1997,
a span of more than 17 years. He captured the bronze medal
in Atlanta; he is one of just eight athletes in U.S. history
to medal in four different Olympiads. He won his first gold
medal in Los Angeles in 1984, America's first in 60 years
of super heavyweight wrestling. He followed with a silver
medal performance at the 1988 Games in Seoul, South Korea,
four years later, and then became the first American wrestler
to ever medal in three consecutive Olympics when he won the
gold for the second time in Barcelona, Spain in 1992. During
the span, Baumgartner competing for the New York Athletic
Club, he also won World Championships in 1995, 1993, and 1986
and added several other medals. With the bronze medal from
Atlanta, Baumgartner has now captured 13 World and Olympic
medals, more than any other freestyle wrestler in history.
He shared the mark of 12 world-level medals with Alexander
Medved of the former Soviet Union, but now stands alone at
the top. Before winning the Sullivan Award in 1995, Baumgartner
was one of the ten finalists for the prestigious honor four
previous times in 1986, 1992, 1993 and 1994. The 42-year-old
from Edinboro, Pa., was head wrestling coach at Edinboro University
before becoming Director of Athletics in 1998. Baumgartner
coached for 13 years at Edinboro, 7 as a head coach. In 1997,
he led the Fighting Scots to a 14-0 dual meet record, the
best in the school history, and an 6th-place team finish at
the NCAA Division I national championships. |
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