Josh Terao Wrestling
Redshirt junior Josh Terao’s meetings with Levenson help him forge his own path separate from his brother, alumni and All-American wrestler David Terao.
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Eagle's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query.
179 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Redshirt junior Josh Terao’s meetings with Levenson help him forge his own path separate from his brother, alumni and All-American wrestler David Terao.
Google Matthew Centrowitz and the first page will be filled with results related to the younger Matthew Centrowitz, Olympic gold medalist, recent track star and the son of AU head track and cross country coach, Matthew Centrowitz Sr.
I wasn’t going to write this column. I thought I had said everything I needed to say about my AU sports journey in my last column about my dad. That column flowed easily, my emotions and gratitude for my father and my family pouring out of my head like a rushing river. But, as I sat down to write a paper one night in the library with my swim teammates, I became overcome with another sensation of gratitude. And those feelings needed to be documented as well.
Shannon Scovel, the former editor-in-chief and current senior staff writer for The Eagle, reflects on the lessons learned from her time as a student-athlete and reporter.
In 2001, USA Today sports journalist Christine Brennan wrote a column about her relationship with her father, Jim Brennan, in honor of his 75th birthday. These kinds of tributes are not unprecedented, so now it’s my turn to share some thank yous and some thoughts on celebrating sports with my father.
Senior Jason Grimes, junior Jeric Kasunic and sohomore Josh Terao weren't supposed to be watching the finals of the 2017 NCAA Wrestling championships in St. Louis. In head coach Teague Moore's perfect world, all three athletes would have been back in their sweat suits, preparing for another session after Friday's competition.
AU head wrestling coach Teague Moore claps for his team after a dual meet in Bender Arena. Moore said AU “started the dual season well and... finished the dual season well.”
The scene in the athlete tunnel at the end of Friday morning’s NCAA session stood in direct juxtaposition to the scene one year earlier in Madison Square Garden, when head coach Teague Moore jumped with celebration as he congratulated 2016 graduate David Terao on his All-American status.
The NCAA tournament, the prime event for college wrestlers during the season, offered a different kind of stage for AU sophomore Josh Terao. During the regular wrestling season, Terao wrestled in front of a couple dozen fans in Bender Arena. Bender provided Terao a spotlight, but the atmosphere at the NCAA tournament in St. Louis on March 16 offered a new chance to shine. Terao readied himself, shaking out his limbs, on Mat 8 as he prepared for his second contest of the tournament and continued towards his goal of becoming an All-American.
Where the team goes, the camera goes, and where the camera goes, the cameraman goes. Kneeling next to the wrestling mat at nearly every meet, AU senior Tommy Bennett gains a unique perspective of the team, one that comes from behind the lens.
This article originally appeared in The Eagle's February 24, 2017 special edition.
Sunday’s dual against Old Dominion University was the match AU needed to win but wasn’t supposed to win.
Samia Akbar graduated from AU in 2003, seven years before the School of International Service building became the modern AU landmark that it is today. Yet, standing in the new, renovated building during the cocktail hour of the 2017 AU Athletics Hall of Fame dinner on Saturday, Akbar said the memories of her time on campus as both a student and a runner came rushing back to her.