Athletics - Wrestling

During the 2007-08 season, the Bulldogs look to make their first legitimate run at a national title for the Cumberland University Wrestling program. This season's squad boasts a strong freshman class, including two-time Wisconsin state champ Joshua Chappa, transfer/former two-time Ohio state placer Mikey Davis and California community college state placer Eddie Sanchez.

Along with their freshman teammates, Chappa, Davis and Sanchez join an already powerful program that will include All-Americans Corey Bleaken and Theo Dotson. Coming off of a successful red-shirt season will be four-time Alaska state champ David Wiese and Louisiana state champ James Casadaban. Based on returning nationals points, the Bulldogs are ranked ninth for pre-season 2007.


 
With another great recruiting class and a roster that includes eight returning national qualifiers, CU Wrestling head coach Jarad Swint – winner of the 2006 Bob Bubb Coaching Excellence Award - has high hopes for the program’s future. The 2007 season will be the Bulldogs' first in a brand new, 4,800-square-foot wrestling facility.

Like all Cumberland coaches, Swint also ensures his athletes remain dedicated in the classroom. Since 2004, he has had four top ten team GPAs and nine individual Daktronics Scholar Athletes who achieved a 3.5 or higher cumulative GPA as a junior or senior.
 

The Latest Bulldog Wrestling News

Jordan Powers and Kyle Knox

Powers named All-American, Knox becomes two-time Scholar-Athlete

Sioux City, IA -- The Cumberland University Bulldogs provided an exciting first session at the Tyson Events Center by getting eight of the school-record 12 national qualified wrestlers to win their first match. At the end of Thursday's first session, the Bulldogs were in eighth place. Unfortunately, the Bulldogs did not have a good second and third day, dropping to 20th with 22.5 points by the end of the tournament on Saturday, March 8.

Junior Jordan Powers led the Bulldogs at the 2008 NAIA national tournament, becoming the sole All-American.

"Even though we did not do as well as we had set out to do at the beginning of the year, I am proud of our national tournament. The character of the team is what I am proud of most. We had four guys out there who could barely walk. Three will be having knee surgery, and one wrestled with a broken bone," CU Head Coach Jarad Swint said. "They all had a great chance of being All-Americans or national champs. For these guys to want to wrestle for their team shows me that the future of this program is going to be great. The results weren't there, but I believe they will be in the near future."

Powers, at 184, was practically a walk-on wrestler three years ago. He did not qualify for the state tournament in his senior year of high school. He was working masonry when he decided to pursue his education at Cumberland University and to give wrestling one more shot. Over the past three years, Powers has worked very hard to get his grades up close to a 'B' average and consistently better himself as a wrestler, Swint noted. Each year, the team has a pre-season distance run on the first day back to campus, and Powers has won it for the past two years.

"We are so proud of Jordan for being an All-American, but also for the man that he has become on the mat and in the classroom," Swint said. "It always feels great to get a guy like Jordan to be so successful. He had a lot of adversity to overcome."

Powers won his first two matches by defeating Richard Farrell from Southern Oregon 2-1 and Trey Jackson from York College 11-2. He advanced to the quarterfinal round and lost to Chris Thompson from Montana State University Northern 13-4. Powers then had a must-win match to become an All-American and did so convincingly by defeating Lindenwood University's Neil Kemp 8-1. Powers lost his next two matches to take eighth place. He will be one of three returning All-Americans from the national tournament at this weight. The other All-Americans were seniors.

Junior Kyle Knox became a two-time Academic Scholar-Athlete with a cumulative GPA of 3.51. Hailing from Alpharetta, Georgia, Knox is a business major in the Labry School of Business and Economics at CU.

"Kyle is a very bright guy, and we are lucky to have him on our team," Swint said. "To see him on that stage for the second time is a proud moment. He transferred to Cumberland after one year at another school. He was ineligible to wrestle in his first semester at Cumberland. He turned his grades around and never looked back."