wrestling medals
Who won the 2000 Sydney Olympics Gold Medal for Wrestling?

Freestyle
54 kg Namig Abdullayev
58 kg Alireza Dabir
63 kg Mourad Oumakhanov
69 kg Daniel Igali
76 kg Brandon Slay
85 kg Adam Saitiev
97 kg Sagid Murtazaliev
130 kg David Musulbes

Greco-Roman
54 kg Sim Kwon-Ho
58 kg Armen Nazarian
63 kg Varteres Samourgachev
69 kg Filiberto Azcuy
76 kg Murat Kardanov
85 kg Hamza Yerlikaya
97 kg Mikael Ljungberg
130 kg Rulon Gardner


Engraved Wrestling Medal


Engraved Wrestling Medal



Available in antique gold, silver or bronze, this 2″ wrestling medal comes with an attached red/white/blue neck ribbon. Medal includes 3 lines of engraving, 18 characters each….


Wrestling Medals - 2 Quick-Ship


Wrestling Medals – 2 Quick-Ship



Quick-Ship 2″ wrestling medals include 7/8″x30″ red/white/blue ribbon and are available with gold finish. These medals ship in just 1-2 business days with or without engraving! If engraving option is chosen, enter up to three lines. Engraving is done on mylar disc which is added to the back of the medal. Quick-Ship – ships in 1-2 business days (from Michigan)! Shipping Info…


ASICS Men's Rulon Wrestling Shoe


ASICS Men’s Rulon Wrestling Shoe


$119.95


ASICS pinnacle level shoe that combines high performance materials with a more traditional design approach…

Ken Chertow® Coaches' Clinic Volume 1 (2 Disks)


Ken Chertow® Coaches’ Clinic Volume 1 (2 Disks)


$49.99


Step inside Ken Chertow’s Home Training Center and get a firsthand look at the key teaching points and many finer details of thi highest percentage techniques in wrestling. In addition to covering a highly successful system of wrestling techniques, Coach Chertow also shares extensive details on many of the essential ingredients necessary to build a championship program.The information on this 2 D…

Hiro Yamagata Olympic Wrestling 1996 Atlanta Official Sports Poster Print


Hiro Yamagata Olympic Wrestling 1996 Atlanta Official Sports Poster Print





 The Sky Is Not the Limit


The Sky Is Not the Limit


$20.98


And so he did. This is the absorbing story of Neil de Grasse Tyson’s lifelong fascination with the night sky, a restless wonder that began some thirty years ago on the roof of his Bronx apartment building and eventually led him to become the director of the Hayden Planetarium. A unique chronicle of a young man who at one time was both nerd and jock, Tyson’s memoir could well inspire other similarly curious youngsters to pursue their dreams. Like many athletic kids he played baseball, won medals in track and swimming, and was captain of his high school wrestling team. But at the same time he was setting up a telescope on winter nights, taking an advanced astronomy course at the Hayden Planetarium, and spending a summer vacation at an astronomy camp in the Mojave Desert. Eventually, his scientific curiosity prevailed, and he went on to graduate in physics from Harvard and to earn a Ph.D. in astrophysics from Columbia. There followed postdoctoral research at Princeton. In 1996, he became the director of the Hayden Planetarium, where some twenty-five years earlier he had been awed by the spectacular vista in the sky theater. Tyson pays tribute to the key teachers and mentors who recognized his precocious interests and abilities, and helped him succeed. He intersperses personal reminiscences with thoughts on scientific literacy, careful science vs. media hype, the possibility that a meteor could someday hit the Earth, dealing with society’s racial stereotypes, what science can and cannot say about the existence of God, and many other interesting insights about science, society, and the nature of the universe. Now available in paperback with a new preface and other updates, his engagingmemoir will enlighten and inspire an appreciation of astronomy and the wonders of our universe.

 The Way It Looks from Here: Contemporary Canadian Writing on Sports


The Way It Looks from Here: Contemporary Canadian Writing on Sports


$9.63


In the first ever anthology of its kind, Canada’s premier sportswriter — Globe and Mail columnist and author of the internationally acclaimed bestseller Facing Ali — brings together the best writing on sport in this country, with a strong contemporary flavour. It’s all here: classic reports on Canada’s great sporting triumphs, from Joe Carter’s World Series-winning home run for the Toronto Blue Jays in 1993 to the excitement of the back-to-back men’s and women’s hockey gold medals in Salt Lake City. Stephen Brunt gives an entire section to writers who, unlike those covering other beats, must work tightly by the clock, submitting their stories just as soon as the action for the day is over. But he has also chosen our best writers’ more thoughtful pieces on our national obsessions — such as Ed Willes on the WHA’s seven tumultuous years and Wayne Johnston on the Original Six — and a good sampling of the great sportswriters such as Trent Frayne, Peter Gzowski and Milt Dunnell. The net effect is an examination of the deep role sport plays in our lives and imaginations, in our sense of self and nationhood. Stephen Brunt has cast his net widely. He includes superb stories of lower profile Canadian sports such as wrestling and horse racing, even Monster Truck battles, and allows space for his own unequalled and unforgettable profiles of Muhammad Ali and Mike Tyson, as well as his post-mortem on Ben Johnson’s fall from grace. Full of triumph and heartbreak, great writing and great passions — and a few wonderful surprises — this book will be essential reading for every serious sports fan. Including: – Ian Brown on the stud-horse business- Christie Blatchford on the2003 Women’s Olympic Hockey Gold- Rosie DiManno on the Men’s- James Christie on Ben Johnson’s 1988 Olympic triumph in Seoul- Michael Faber on Pat Burns- Red Fisher on Lemieux and Gretzky at the 1987 Canada Cup- Trent Frayne on Canadian Open golf champ Ken Green deci