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Ohio


Akron wrestler goes for gold
Justin Lester failed to qualify for Beijing in 2008, and hopes to redeem himself this week in London
Story by RICK JACKSON


 

Knowing your nation is anticipating Olympic gold in your individual event must bring unimaginable pressure. But even the world’s top ranked athletes sometimes fail to qualify for the games. That happened in 2008 to Akron’s Harry Lester - A two time world team trials wrestling medalist, who surprisingly failed to make the team for the Beijing games.... London, as he told member station WCPN’s Rick Jackson, will be a different story.

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He started wrestling at eight years old, following the steps of his big brother. But he was seemingly born to grapple -- and people around him noticed, including an assistant coach at Cuyahoga Valley Christian Academy. Dave Bergen first heard of then-10-year-old Harry from one of his team’s own wrestlers, Damien Lester.

“He kept telling me ‘Coach, my little brother is awesome,’ and I heard how good he was from folks that were in the wrestling community,” Bergen says. “He’d start tagging along at some of our events and he’d roll around with some of the mat, some of our varsity guys, and I thought then ‘OK, I sure hope he comes to CVCA with his brother, because he’s good.’ …didn’t know how good at the time.”

Harry did enroll, and his potential was realized at CVCA. When he graduated in 2001, it was as a four-time Ohio High School wrestling state champion.

But his dreams were bigger, and once gravitating to the Greco-Roman style of wrestling, with its focus on technique and the limitations to using only the upper part of the body, he soared and began to focus on Olympic wrestling gold.

“That’s the highest you can get in our sport, is to go to the Olympics and to win a gold medal. I think for most people who are serious about the sport, most wrestlers, you have to have those aspirations.”

Being the top seed and a projected gold-medal favorite for the games four years ago, Harry and the tight-knit Greco-Roman wrestling community were stunned when Harry was defeated in the semi-final round at the 2008 U.S. Wrestling Team Trials.

His Beijing dreams shattered, Harry Lester invoked the wrestler retirement rite of leaving his empty shoes on the mat.

The 24-year-old Lester left gym that evening for the first time since his childhood in Akron, with wrestling no longer his life’s focus.

“The previous 15 years of my life was all wrestling, wrestling, wrestling, wrestling… Wrestling from January to January, that’s what I was doing and I wanted to try something different, to go out and work a real job."

For nearly a year he went to an office job every day… and hated it.

"Once I did that, I realized that I wanted to wrestle again, so now here I am."

 “It was difficult. When he stepped away from the sport that was sad, but at the end of the day that was his decision, and I think the right decision for him to have a have a break and to enjoy life not as Harry Lester the wrestler, but Harry Lester the human being,” Coach Bergen says.

Lester eventually joined the U.S. Army and its elite Greco-Roman squad, which placed three members on the 2012 US Olympic Wrestling team.

Even more focused, he won the 2009 U.S. Nationals Championship, the World Team Trials championship in 2009 and 2011, and was the 2011 U.S. Open Champion.

With skills honed in the military, Justin Lester (as he now bills himself) regards his sport differently.

Soft spoken, but with an inner fire, Lester believes he gains strength from representing America, and being part of the Army’s World Class Athlete Program.

“It runs through your mind anytime you put on the black and gold uniform. Anytime you put on anything with W-CAP or Army, you know you gotta represent your team, you gotta represent your family, but more importantly you gotta represent those guys who are over there sacrificing, to make sure that we have this opportunity,” Lester says. “So—wrestling for a lot more than just yourself and the immediate people around you. You got a lot of people over there ducking bullets and eating sand, and every time you win, you thank them, and you thank them for giving you that opportunity."

He’s tremendously proud to be from Akron, Ohio, and returns as often as possible to see his family and his coaches’ family, his mainstays.

Last month, when Akron honored him with a Justin Lester Day, the champion was overwhelmed.

“It’s awesome that you get a little bit of appreciation from the place you come from, and the people around you, so I am very excited for it and very thankful,” he says. “I thank God all the time that I ran into people like coach, and had the opportunity to go to CVCA, and meet a lot of the wrestling families that helped me out through North Akron and all that. Because without those people, there is no way I’d be here.”

And that effort to thank them includes coming home from London as their Champion.

“It was great making the team, and I love it - not a lot of people do it. But you gotta bring back the hardware,” Lester says. “That’s the second part. It was great - that moment - but then right away I realized… I’m on the team. Now I gotta bust my butt and get this gold medal."

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