Gregor Gillespie ready to make run at becoming Edinboro's first two-time NCAA champion

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Craig Sesker (USA Wrestling)
02/28/2008


Watch the Gillespie-Churella NCAA finals match

Gregor Gillespie was back home in New York on a hot summer night, grilling out with his family when the phone rang.

The person on the other end tried to disguise his voice, but Gillespie knew exactly who was calling.

It was Edinboro coach Tim Flynn.

"Coach Flynn calls me the summer after my freshman year and says, 'This is Dustin Schlatter, I just did 300 sit-ups. Can I get my second gold medal now?'" Gillespie says with a laugh. "He wasn't trying to knock Schlatter, he was just trying to motivate me to work hard and get me to believe I could beat him. Flynn kept telling me every day I was going to be the guy who was going to be on the top of the podium."

Flynn's frequent summer calls and his daily assurances to Gillespie that he was good enough to win a national title became reality late last March in Auburn Hills, Mich. That's when Gillespie stunned many wrestling observers by winning the NCAA title at 149 pounds.

Seventh at the NCAAs as a true freshman at 149 pounds, Gillespie knocked off Schlatter 3-2 in the semifinals and halted the Minnesota wrestler's 65-match winning streak. Schlatter won the NCAA title as a true freshman in 2006.

The fifth-seeded Gillespie followed by beating No. 3 seed Josh Churella of Michigan 3-1 in overtime in the finals.

Now a junior, the 21-year-old Gillespie has bumped up to 157 pounds and has his sights set on becoming Edinboro's first two-time NCAA champion. Gillespie is 29-2 this year and ranked No. 1 by InterMat.

"It has made a world of difference for me," Gillespie said of the move up to 157. "Life's a lot easier now. I am eating more and eating better, I have more energy in practice, I can lift more and my schoolwork is a lot better this year. It was a tough cut to 149."

His losses this season came to All-Americans Mike Poeta of Illinois and C.P. Schlatter of Minnesota. Poeta and Schlatter, Dustin's older brother, also have been ranked No. 1 this season.

"I learned a lot from wrestling those guys," said Gillespie, who is 103-8 in his career. "It was huge for me to see them during the season. I don't want to face that caliber of wrestler for the first time at nationals. I watched film of those matches and I know there are some areas I can improve on against those guys."

Gillespie, from Webster, N.Y., was not heavily recruited despite winning a pair of New York state high school titles. He placed third at Senior High School Nationals after falling to Brent Metcalf in the semifinals. Metcalf, now at Iowa and ranked No. 1 at 149 this year, then lost to Dustin Schlatter in the finals.

Edinboro has provided the perfect fit for Gillespie.

"I didn't really have a lot of schools chasing me," he said. "Buffalo, UNC-Greensboro, Bloomsburg, they were recruiting me. I had a great time on my visit to Edinboro and I loved the coaching staff. It's only three hours from home. I can go home and my parents can come watch me wrestle."

Gillespie, an explosive and physical wrestler, burst onto the college scene quickly. He knocked off a returning starter to win the 149 starting spot for Edinboro as a true freshman.

"We had another pretty good kid at 149 and we figured we would redshirt Gregor if those two were pretty even," Flynn said. "Gregor was good in practice. But after he beat a pretty good kid 8-0 in the wrestle-off, I was like, 'Wow, he's really impressive.' Lou Rosselli, my assistant at the time, and I looked at each after the match and almost said at the same time, 'He's wrestling, we need him.' You never know how kids are going to transition from high school to college. He jumped in right away and started dominating."

Gillespie won his first 23 college matches en route to a 40-4 freshman season that culminated with a seventh-place finish at the NCAA Championships in Oklahoma City.

Gillespie entered the 2007 NCAAs as the No. 5 seed with a 30-2 record. After downing No. 4 seed Jordan Leen of Cornell 6-2 in the quarterfinals, he received his shot at the top-seeded Dustin Schlatter.

"Schlatter had been winning a lot of close matches and wasn't scoring as many points as he did his freshman year," Gillespie said. "I felt like if I put together a full seven-minute match I could beat him. I knew if I went after him in the first period and scored offensively I could win the match."

A first-period takedown by Gillespie proved to be the difference in the one-point match.

"I shot in on a single and he pulled his knee back," Gillespie said. "I kept a hold of his leg and turned it into a double and got the takedown."

Flynn said Gillespie had the perfect mindset for the match.

"When you're a returning national champion and you've won 65 straight matches, you obviously have a certain air of invincibility going and Schlatter did," Flynn said. "The biggest key for Gregor was just believing he could beat a guy like Schlatter. He really believed he could prove everybody wrong and beat him."

Gillespie had little time to celebrate his big Friday night win over Schlatter. He had to come back strong the next night to beat Churella in front of his home fans in Michigan.

"I was ecstatic the rest of the night after I beat Schlatter, but by the next morning all my focus was on Churella," Gillespie said. "I didn't want my claim to fame to be beating Schlatter, I wanted it to be winning the NCAA title."

Flynn said Gillespie wrestles the way you are supposed to.

"He's a pleasure to watch," Flynn said. "He wrestles hard. He's fast and he can score a lot of points. The fans like watching him compete."

Gillespie is a unique talent on the mat with a unique personality off it. His name also is unique.

His parents, Susan and Brad, chose to name him Gregor because his mother is 100 percent German. His brother, Torsten, Edinboro's starting 141-pounder, also has a German name.

Gillespie also is constantly changing his appearance.

He has four tattoos. He has a cross tattooed on his upper left arm and a Superman tattoo on his right arm. After he won his first state title, he had a big American flag with "New York State Champ" tattooed on his left thigh. He also has a pair of praying hands on the inside of his biceps.

"The tattoos are just kind of an expression of my personality and who I am," he said.

Gillespie said he spent about a month of this season sporting a bleached-blonde Mohawk.

"We're kind of a goofy team," Gillespie said. "We're serious about wrestling, but we like to have a little fun too. Edinboro is a small town, so we have to find a way to have some fun. Coach Flynn and some of the guys on the team didn't believe me when I said I was going to get a Mohawk, so I did it. My girlfriend is a hairdresser and she gave me one."

Flynn said Gillespie definitely keeps things interesting.

"He's quite the character, but above all he's just a very nice kid," Flynn said. "He's real happy-go-lucky and good to be around. He's also taken on a leadership role on our team."

Gillespie often can be found with his headphones on before a big match, listening to a variety of music. His music of choice is Country. A big fan of Toby Keith and Kenny Chesney, Gillespie traveled to Las Vegas to see Tim McGraw in concert at the MGM Grand.

"I don't really listen to music to pump me up," he said. "It's more just to help me relax and to keep me from getting too distracted."

Gillespie is focused on repeating his magical feat from 2007 when he competes at the 2008 NCAA Championships on March 20-22 in St. Louis.

"I'm going to follow the same routine I did last year at nationals," Gillespie said. "I'm going to do exactly what I did as far as training, eating, getting rest and preparing for the tournament. I'm going to do all the right things. And I'm going to put faith in Tim Flynn's coaching system and do what he tells me to do. He got me to believe I could beat Dustin Schlatter and now he has me believing I can reach the top of the podium again."