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Bill Weick

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Name
  
Bill Weick


Bill Weick Br Rice Head Coach Bill Weick YouTube

Education
  
University of Northern Iowa

Br rice head coach bill weick


Bill Weick (1932 – 16 August 2017) was an American wrestler best known for his athletic and coaching career in the Midwestern United States.

Contents

Bill Weick Bill Weick YouTube

Bill weick


Wrestling

Bill Weick Updated with arrangements Hall of Fame coach and wrestling legend

After winning the 1949 Illinois state title at Tilden Tech High School, Weick won two NCAA titles competing for the University of Northern Iowa in 1952 and 1955.

Bill Weick Wrestling Coach Bill Weick Dies Led Br Rice Mount Carmel And

During 1953–1954, he served in the U.S. Army.

Bill Weick Bill Weick remembered as coaching icon at Mount Carmel Brother Rice

Weick was a member of the first U.S. World Greco-Roman wrestling team in 1961. He was a runner-up at the AAU National Championships three times, and was a seven-time placewinner competing in both freestyle and Greco-Roman. From 1961–65, Weick trained for international wrestling with the San Francisco Olympic Club.

Coaching

Bill Weick Wrestling Coach Bill Weick Dies Led Br Rice Mount Carmel And

Weick coached at San Francisco State in the 1960s, and served a year as the team’s head coach.

Bill Weick Wrestling Coach Bill Weick Dies Led Br Rice Mount Carmel And

He was on the U.S. Olympic team coaching staff in freestyle in 1972, 1980, 1984 and 1988, and worked with the Greco-Roman team in 1976. Weick was head coach of the 1975 Pan American Games team that won the team title, and also coached U.S. teams at the 1975 World Cup, as well as three Junior World Championships (1969, 1977, 1979) and the 1981 World University Games. Among the nations where Weick traveled to coach U.S. teams were Cuba, Mongolia, Panama, Romania, Canada, Russia and France.

His high school coaching career is legendary, with a reported career record of 855–153–2. He started as a coach with Maquoketa High in Iowa, then served most of his career coaching in Illinois at Tilden Tech, Mount Carmel High School, and Brother Rice High School in Chicago, where he currently coaches.

The teams at Mount Carmel, where he coached from 1986–2003, achieved national acclaim. Under Weick, Mount Carmel won the state dual meet title three straight years (1992–94) and was second two times (1998, 2002). He had 22 individual state champions during his tenure, the most of any Illinois school during his time there.

One of the athletes he coached at Mount Carmel was Joe Williams, who went on to win three NCAA titles, two World medals and competed on the 2004 U.S. Olympic Team. In 1999, two of his Mount Carmel wrestlers competed against each other in the NCAA Div. I finals, when T.J. Williams of Iowa beat Tony Davis of Northern Iowa.

Awards

Among the Halls of Fame that he has been inducted are the Helms Hall of Fame, the Illinois Wrestling Coaches and Officials Hall of Fame, the Univ. of Northern Iowa Hall of Fame, the Glen Brand Iowa Hall of Fame, the Mount Carmel Hall of Fame, the Tilden Tech Hall of Fame and the National Wrestling Hall of Fame.

He was the Illinois Coach of the Year in 1984.

He has received the National Coach of the Year award from the National Federation of High School Associations. Weick was named Chicagoan of the Year by the Chicago Parks Department in 1995. He was the Grand Marshal of the 1986 Illinois State High School Wrestling Tournament.

References

Bill Weick Wikipedia