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Ida Crown Jewish Academy Takes First Place Team Trophy at Wittenberg Wrestling Tournament

Feb 19, 2009
-- Though they wouldn’t be weighing in until the next morning, scores of eager high school wrestlers began arriving at Yeshiva University early on Thursday, Feb. 12, for the 14th annual Henry Wittenberg Wresting Tournament. Then, following a round of opening matches the next day, hundreds of wrestlers and their coaches were united for a special YU Shabbaton. Rested and champing at the bit, everyone was ready to roll by Sunday morning. View a gallery of photos from the tournament. The Henry Wittenberg tournament, named for the legendary Olympic medalist who once coached the Yeshiva College team, is the highlight of the yeshiva high school wrestling year. The competition this year was better than ever as returning champions and new faces met to square off for the final match this season. By the time the finals were over on Monday and all the points were totaled up, Chicago’s Ida Crown Jewish Academy had taken its second First Place team trophy. But everyone there knew that the real victory went to YU’s head wrestling coach Neil Ellman ’68YC, who has put together the fastest growing athletic program in the yeshiva world. “This was our biggest tournament ever,” said Ellman, who pioneered yeshiva high school wrestling. “Every year, we get a few dozen more wrestlers from all over the country.” This year, teams came in by the busload from as far away as Atlanta and Cleveland—a dozen teams in all. Coach Ellman, who wrestled under Wittenberg’s personal coaching, has had a hand in founding most of the current high school programs. Each year, another team or two emerges. “Wrestling is becoming increasingly popular in the high schools because the teams can handle many students,” Ellman said. “There are 14 different weight classes and nine of them are for kids too small to play basketball,” he adds with a grin. Fourteen weight classes meant 14 first place winners at this year’s tournament, but the finals saw some impressive victories from Erez Kahan (119 lbs., three-time first place winner) and Yoni Kranzler (145 lbs., and son of Moshe Kranzler, director of admissions), both of the Frisch School in Paramus, NJ.