Pool Competition
Time | Pool A | Pool B | Pool C | Pool D |
9 a.m. | ONU 31 Wilmington 8 |
Muskingum 27, UW-Platteville 18 |
Central 40, Knox 9 |
Lincoln 19, Muskegon CC 16 |
10:30 a.m. | Wabash 41, Ohio Northern 3 |
MSOE 33 UW-Platteville 14 |
Manchester 32, Knox 18 |
Lincoln 36, All-Stars 12 |
12 p.m. | Wabash 46, Wilmington 3 |
MSOE 23, Muskingum 12 |
Central 31, Manchester 12 |
Muskegon CC 30 All-Stars 9 |
Placing Rounds
Time | Mat 1 | Mat 2 | Mat 3 | Mat 4 |
1:30 p.m. | Wabash vs. MSOE (Bout 13) |
Lincoln 27, Central 13 (Bout 14) |
Muskingum 27, |
Muskegon CC 38, Manchester 8 (Bout 16) |
3 p.m. | UW-Platteville 32, Wilmington 15 (Bout 17) |
Knox 22, All-Stars 22 Knox wins tiebreaker (Bout 18) |
Central 28, MSOE 7 (Bout 19) |
ONU 25, Manchester 19 (Bout 20) |
4:30 p.m. | Lincoln 23 Wabash 15 (Championship) |
Muskegon CC 46, Muskingum 3 |
UW-Platteville 39 Knox 8 |
Wilmington 29, All-Stars 18 |
All wrestling will take place at Chadwick Court and will start with the 125-pound weight class.
The Max Servies Wrestling Duals are named in honor of the legendary Wabash wrestling coach and athletics director.
Servies spent 40 seasons as the Little Giants' wrestling coach. His motto of “Victory is Sweat” has certainly been proven by the outstanding mark of 38 consecutive winning seasons at Wabash, with a career record of 487-118-8. Two of his wrestling teams were named GPA National Champions at the NCAA Division III Wrestling Championships. Servies guided 21 Phi Beta Kappa graduates, three NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship recipients, and dozens of Coaches Association All-Academic Team members. His .795 winning percentage is among the highest in the nation at any level. He has also coached several All-Americans.
Servies’ teams recorded undefeated seasons in both 1980-81 (23-0) and 1986-87 (18-0) in dual meets. His coaching honors include four conference Coach of the Year awards in two different conferences. He is a member of the Indiana Wrestling Hall of Fame, the NCAA Division III Wrestling Coaches Association Hall of Fame, and the Wabash College Athletic Hall of Fame. His work as an assistant football coach also earned him a place in the Indiana Football Hall of Fame. He received the Wabash Alumni Award of Merit in 1983, the highest honor the alumni of the College can bestow on a graduate. He was the recipient of the Indianapolis Association of Wabash Men’s “Monon Bell” citation in 1994.
Servies’ association with the College began in 1954 when he was a freshman wrestler and football player for the Little Giants. Graduating in 1958, the biology major went on to earn a Master’s degree from Purdue University as well as teaching and coaching at Crawfordsville High School before returning to Wabash in 1960 as head wrestling coach and assistant football coach. He was named Athletic Director in 1965, serving in that post until July 1998.