Corona del Mar cowboy has opponents cowering
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Rick Devereux
Jon Dean is easy to spot at a wrestling tournament.
The Corona del Mar High senior is the only one in the building
wearing a grey cowboy hat.
He is also usually the one with his hand raised at the end of the
match.
Dean, who wrestles in the 152-pound weight class for the Sea
Kings, finished third at the Troy invitational to earn Daily Pilot
Athlete of the Week honors.
“He’s gifted,” Corona del Mar Coach Gary Almquist said. “I taught
him a couple of [moves] and he picks it up really fast. But he also
has that bravado, and I love that.”
Dean also has a work ethic second to none.
He transformed himself into a wrestler after he was the
third-string freshman quarterback on the football team. Dean lifted
weights, attended camps and showed up before and after practices in
order to improve.
“I like wrestling because it’s a sport where how hard you work
directly reflects how good you get,” Dean said. “I stayed focused.
When everyone else was out on Friday nights, I was in the gym.”
His hard work has earned him the “Cowboy” nickname. He saw
wrestlers performing a move called leg riding and he put in extra
practice time to perfect the maneuver.
“In order to do leg rides you have to stay in the saddle,” Dean
said. “That’s kind of how it all started.”
Leg riding needs a particular type of mentality to succeed and
Dean has that type of mentality.
“He will produce pain and that is what wrestling is all about,”
Almquist said. “I’m not going to hurt you but I’m going to persuade
you to rest your shoulders down on the mat for the pin. Persuade is a
four-letter word called pain.”
In order to dish out pain, a leg rider must be able to absorb
pain, something Dean is not afraid of.
“I consider myself the toughest kid in California,” he said.
Tough is one thing, but a winning wrestler is another.
Dean has gotten better and better each year. He wrestled on the
second-day of the CIF Inland Division tournament and finished second
in the Pacific Coast League as a junior in the 140-pound weight class.
“CIF was tough last year,” Almquist said. “He made it to the
second day and lost a tough match. He has really dedicated himself
this year.”
One aspect that needed to be worked on was Dean’s attitude. His
ultra-competitive nature led to problems.
“I used to get angry at anything and started picking fights in the
wrestling room,” Dean said. “But I think I’ve just matured.”
Almquist helped the maturation process along.
“We had a heart-to-heart in September,” the coach said. “He has
probably made the biggest transformation on the team as far as
somebody changing for the better. Jon is making the right choices and
learning how to channel anger the right way.”
Instead of taking it out on teammates or coaches, Dean takes his
anger out on his opponents.
Dean won the district championship in December and was fifth in
the Estancia tournament in January.
He went 3-1 in the Troy invitational for the third-place finish.
He beat his first opponent 8-2, his second opponent -- the fourth
seeded wrestler from Troy -- 6-2 but lost by one point to the No. 1
seeded wrestler from Laguna Hills. Dean pinned his Santa Margarita
opponent in the third-place match.
Dean leads CdM with 24 wins. The school record for wins is 34, set
by current assistant coach Steve Shipman in 2002. There is a board in
wrestling room that has the current team’s individual records and
also the school’s all-time records, so Dean has a visual goal to
knock Shipman’s name off the record books.
“[The team] wants him to make 35 wins,” Almquist said. “Coach
Shipman doesn’t want his name off that board. I think he will be
happy if Dean gets 34 and they both share it, though.”
The first step in breaking the record will be today’s San Clemente
invitational tournament, which draws some of the top wrestlers in
Orange County.
But Dean doesn’t know who he is wrestling.
He rarely does.
“I don’t look at [tournament] brackets and try to analyze who I’m
up against,” Dean said. “I don’t know who I’m wrestling until I shake
their hand before the match most of the time.”
Dean said he is interested in wrestling at Golden West College and
then moving on to a four-year school where this cowboy will ride into
the sunset.
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