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Program History


Varsity Awards







Junior
Varsity
Awards


Freshman Awards 
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On a cold December evening
in 1975, a despondent Voorhees Wresting Team was on its way back from a
brutal beating at the hands of Delaware Valley. The bus was silent, for
it was the first wrestling match in Voorhees history and nobody was
pleased with the outcome. Immediately after parking the bus at
Voorhees, the driver and soon-to-be devoted supporter of the program, Al
Dittmann, stood before the team and said, “I see a bright future for
this program; keep your heads up and keep working hard…good things will
follow.” And right he was.
While struggling with some
of the more established programs in the area, the newly established
Voorhees Wrestling Program was able to battle through the early years
with a record that never fell below .500. Voorhees Head Coach, along
with his assistants Dave Miers and Tom Heilman, managed to tread water
with primarily underclassman in the lineup the first two years with
back-to-back 9-9 records, and by the time the late-70’s rolled around,
Voorhees Wrestling was producing winning seasons, district champions,
and even a couple state qualifiers. The program was poised to make a
statement. The 1977-78 team was the first to make its mark.
When asked what made this team so exceptional, the coaches remember what
was known as the “murders row” lineup. The first six or seven
weight classes consisting of legendary Voorhees Wrestlers Mark
Zehnbauer, Kevin Adesso, Eric Lobell, Fred Peoni, Greg Lobell, and
Jim Holthaus were virtually unbeatable.
The decade of the
80’s was the most dominate era of Voorhees Wrestling, and it started
with the 1979-80 squad. The team finished a perfect 20-0 beating
state powerhouses such as Hunterdon Central, North Hunterdon, Ridge, and
Delaware Valley on their way to winning the conference title, the
District 17 championship, and the Central Jersey Group II Sectional
Title. They finished the season ranked second in the state of New
Jersey. Many devoted followers of the program
argue that this team was the best Voorhees has ever produced.
The 1979-80 team was the
beginning of an extraordinary run of success. In March of 1981, junior
Glen Hall became the program’s first state champion when he defeated
Doug Taylor of Millville in the 101-lb final. The following year
featured two Voorhees wrestlers in the state finals at Princeton’s
Jadwin Gym; while Glenn Hall was unable to repeat as champion,
heavyweight Lee Getz capped off his perfect season with a state title.
1983 featured yet another state champion for Voorhees with Dan Moody
striking gold at the 122-lb weight class. In all, Voorhees had
forty-five district champions, nineteen region champions, and placed
over twenty wrestlers in the top eight in the state tournament in the
decade of the 80’s.
Voorhees won Sectional
Championships in every year of the 1980’s with the exception of 1983,
the first year Voorhees went up from a Group II to a Group III school.
The Group Championship was introduced in 1982, and Voorhees was right
there to win its first Group II Championship. Voorhees won its second
Group title in the 1984-85 season; this time in Group III. The
following three years Voorhees found itself in the Group III
Championship Finals, winning again in 1987. The 1986-87 team went
undefeated and was ranked second in the state and seventh in the
nation. A total of six wrestlers on that team (Greg Evans, Roger
Juntilla, Chris Wolkwitz, Steve Rich, Dave Bowbliss, and Eric Zobian)
finished top-eight in the state at some point in their careers.
Voorhees was ranked in the top-twenty every year of the ‘80’s and, more
often than not, they found themselves in the top-ten.
The 1990’s was not as
successful as the ‘80’s, but the Viking Wrestlers continued to display
dominance. The program continued its run of being ranked in the
top-twenty all the way through the 1996 season. Voorhees won a
Group III Sectional Championship in 1991 and three more in Group II in
’95,’96, and ’98. The program thrived again in the mid-90’s.
From the 1993-94 season through the 1995-96 campaign, Voorhees lost only
six matches and was ranked in the top-ten each of the three years.
Voorhees also picked up the 300th win in program
history, thus solidifying a mark of success. The 1995
team brought home won the Group II State Championship, thereby giving
the program its fourth Group Title. Two wrestlers from that team
continued to promote the wrestling program with their individual
accomplishments.
Eric Hall set the school
record for wins with 126. He also became the programs first four-time
district and region champion while managing to place eighth, fourth, and
second in the state tournament. He would soon go on to earn
All-American honors, placing 3rd at the NHSCA HS National Tournament. John Brienza also came up big for the
program in that time period. John finished his career with 112 wins
(second all-time) and an all-important 130-lb State Championship with an
electrifying pin in the first period over Dave Santamaria of Christian
Brothers Academy. It was the Voorhees’s fourth state champion, and it
was the last bout the legendary Bob Hall coached.
At the conclusion of the 1997-98 season, renowned former
Phillipsburg coach Rick Thompson took the reigns of the program for a
three-year stint. The whole-sale coaching changes took their toll on
the program in terms of participation. However, despite having few
bodies to work with, Coach Thompson and his staff were able to keep the
program competitive. In all three of Coach Thompson’s years at the
helm, the Vikings qualified for the Sectionals, advancing all the way to
the finals in 2001. In the 2000 season Voorhees had two region
champions, one of which, Matt Brienza, battled through the wrestle backs
of the state tournament winning five straight matches in route to a
third place finish 145 pounds.
After Coach Thompson left
the program at the conclusion of the 2001 season, former assistant coach
Bob Angstadt took the helm. The Vikings steadily improved in Coach
Angstadt’s first two seasons and came into the 2003-04 season with a
group of experienced wrestlers ready to make another long-awaited run at
a team title. After a fine regular season two convincing wins in the
Sectional Tournament, Voorhees ended a six-year title drought with a
North Jersey Section II Group II Sectional Championship. Voorhees also
qualified two wrestlers for the individual state championship tournament
and has had a least one wrestler qualify every year since.
Despite having a couple
individuals put on impressive post-season performances, the 2007-08 team
suffered through the kind of season no other before them had to endure.
However, rather acknowledge this as the official end of Voorhees’s
dominating presence in New Jersey Wrestling, the coaching staff,
wrestlers, boosters, junior program and loyal members of the community
are looking at this era as a new beginning. Voorhees Wrestling is in
the process of being re-approached, reorganized, and restored; it is a
program that cherishes the past, learns from the present, and always has
the future in mind and it is an institution that is committed to
reestablishing itself as a source of pride in the community. While Al Dittmann is no longer around to drive the bus and address the team, his
famous words wisdom now, more than ever, apply to Voorhees Wrestling:
“Keep your heads up and keep working hard…good things will follow.”
Only
the Tough Survive
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