Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Chooljian Earns National Acclaim in Wrestling

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Chooljian Earns National Acclaim in Wrestling

    Chooljian Earns National Acclaim in Wrestling

    Armenian Weekly
    Sat, Apr 17 2010

    By: Tom Vartabedian


    Plaistow, N.H. - If Barry Chooljian isn't the top high school wrestling
    coach in America, then he's certainly creating a strong case for
    himself.


    Barry Chooljian talks strategy with half-Armenian Eric Bradley, a
    two-time All-American at Penn State after leaving Timberlane Regional
    High School.
    In his 24 years at Timberlane Regional High School, he has fashioned a
    very respectable mark of 402-41-5, led his Owls to a record 8 New
    England championships, no fewer than 18 New Hampshire divisional state
    titles, and 7 Meet of Champions (All-State) crowns.

    Over the duration, he's never experienced a losing season.

    It was only fitting that he be selected National Coach of the Year by
    two organizations - both unanimous picks.

    Just before Christmas, Chooljian was selected as the National High
    School Coaching Association's Wrestling Coach of the Year. A month
    later, he was accorded similar honors by the National Federation High
    School Coaches Association.

    If that didn't suffice, add the National Wrestling Coaches Association
    Regional Coach of the Year and the fact that he was USA Wrestling's
    New Hampshire Man of the Year.

    Chooljian has won so many honors, his school and home would qualify
    for an awards distributorship.

    `I'm really quite humbled by it all,' says Chooljian, a proud Armenian
    American who takes no exception to his heritage. `National recognition
    is not something I ever envisioned happening. I coach because I love
    working with kids. All the success we've had is due to their hard work
    and dedication.'

    Much of it is the good fortune of working inside a school that has
    been extremely supportive of its wrestling program. Of all the major
    sports like football and basketball, it's wrestling that traditionally
    rises to the surface, thanks to Chooljian. He packs the stands like an
    NCAA play-off game.


    Barry Chooljian congratulates a young wrestler - a familiar gesture en
    route to a 402-41-5 record over 24 years as head coach of Timberlane
    Regional High School.
    `This is good for the kids and good for the program,' he adds. `That's
    what I care about the most.'

    It's so good, Timberlane often jets forth with both an `A' and `B'
    squad. Each complements the other when it comes to high-level
    competition. A middle school feeder system is unlike most districts.
    In short, prospects come to Timberlane anxious to wrestle and land
    that elusive college scholarship.

    Among them was Eric Bradley, one of three brothers enamored by the
    sport. Chooljian considers the half-Armenian (Fundeklian on his
    mother's side) the greatest he's ever handled over his span. Bradley
    landed a scholarship to Penn State, proceeded to win two Big Ten
    titles and was a two-time All-American. Today, he's in Las Vegas,
    working toward a professional ring career.

    `For me, being Armenian has really made a big impact on who I am as a
    person,' Chooljian points out. `I have my Dad to thank for all that.
    My athletes understand well that the team comes first, not the
    individual. You don't cut corners. Hard, sustained effort without
    making excuses gives you the best chance to succeed. We challenge the
    athletes and teach them how to overcome adversity through intense
    work.'

    This past season could very well have been his best. The Owls went
    23-1, barely losing to Blair Academy, N.J. - the Number 1 ranked team in
    the country - in a Pennsylvania tournament. Prior to the title match,
    Chooljian's chargers defeated four other Pennsylvania schools. Another
    invitational in New York produced two national champions.


    Barry Chooljian has coached wrestling since 1986 at Timberlane
    Regional High School, has won eight New England championships,
    runner-up four other times, and has been named National Coach of the
    Year by two organizations.
    `Being from a small community and having our success supported in such
    a positive way says a lot,' Chooljian brought out. `Coaching takes a
    tremendous amount of time and energy. I never want to feel the pain of
    regret for not doing everything I can for my athletes.'

    In his case, success breeds success. Chooljian graduated from
    Timberlane in 1977 as a New Hampshire state champion. He attended the
    University of Rhode Island and helped the Division 1 Rams to the New
    England title as a scrappy 150-pounder.

    `Competing at the NCAAs with my Dad watching is still one of my most
    memorable experiences as an athlete,' Chooljian admits. `He's always
    been there for me.'

    After college, Chooljian returned home and fell into coaching when he
    visited a nephew's practice at Timberlane and helped him train one
    day. The school invited him to return the following year and help
    coach. Three years later (1987), Chooljian won his first state crown
    and it's been a steady stream ever since.

    `Two decades later, I still look forward to coaching every day,' he
    says. `I believe in helping young men with their growth and
    development. Wrestling provides me with a great avenue for that. It's
    what still keeps me in coaching.'

    With the thousands that have filtered through his program, many
    continue to reciprocate, whether through college or community
    endeavors. Several have come to assist or gone elsewhere to carve
    their own niche in the sport. Nearly all have become model citizens.

    Timberlane principal Don Woodworth, a former coach, couldn't
    compliment his mentor enough for the acclaim he's brought to the
    school and district.

    `Barry is a consummate professional and is on top of everything,' said
    Woodworth. `Soup to nuts, he's 100 percent invested in each kid both
    on and off the mat. He's organized a program that speaks for itself.
    He shows kids where they are, what they can accomplish and how to get
    there. They come out of it as better human beings.'

    Chooljian lives in nearby Hampstead with his wife Carrie. A daughter
    Lauren is a senior at St. Anselm's College. Another daughter Cara is a
    freshman at East Carolina University. The sport never dilutes his
    family interests.

    As to the future, Chooljian has no plans to retire, not as long as the
    spirit keeps prevailing. In his spare time, he enjoys a good workout
    and a round of golf.

    `It only gets better with time,' he quips. `Every day represents a new
    challenge for me - and that's the way I like it.'

    ***

    The Chooljian Record
    Years Coaching: 1986-present
    School: Timberlane Regional High School, Plaistow, N.H.
    Record: 402-41-5
    NH Divisional State Titles: 18 (state record), including 11 straight
    (state record)
    NH Runner-Up: 3
    Meet of Championships (All-States): 7 straight titles
    New England Championships: 8 (record)
    New England Runner-Up: 4
    National Coach of the Year: By two organizations
    Miscellaneous: Has coached five NHSCA Senior All-Americans including
    one national champion
Working...
X