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Alan Soloman |
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A graduate of SUNY Geneseo in New York has been a wrestling official for 48 years. Alan has officiated in high school, AAU, USAW, and many other tournaments throughout his career including 17 Scholastic Duals. Alan and his wife moved to Florida in 1979. He is a retired teacher of American history, civics, and government. He became an official in a very unique way. He returned home from work one evening in 1979 and his wife told him he had a meeting to attend that evening. Alan asked, “what meeting” and she replied, “a wrestling officials meeting, I signed you up!” Not one to disagree with his wife, Alan attended the meeting, and a hall of fame officiating career began.
Alan also coached several teams during his years as a teacher with numerous district, regional and state placers. The 3x captain at SUNY Geneseo has also been inducted to his alma mater’s Hall of Fame and in 2016 he was inducted into the Florida Wrestling Official’s Hall of Fame. |
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James Tanniehill |
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Born in Alabama and moved with his family when he was 15 years old to Minnesota. The move was life changing for a young African American man in the 1960’s but with the strong support from his mother, he strived to make his mark. A wrestling coach noticed his strong physique and asked him to give wrestling a try. James remembered seeing wrestling on TV back in Alabama, and he proceeded to body slam and stomp on his opponents that day. The coach quickly helped James learn that amateur wrestling was quite different, and James had found something that would change his life. He went on to win the district and regional titles, and place 3rd at the state tournament. His success afforded him the opportunity to attend Winona State College where he received a BA in Art. While there, he won 52 of 56 duals, scoring 48 falls, and was a two time Dll All-American. James continued his post collegiate career winning 9 interservice Freestyle tournaments and 5 Greco-Roman titles while serving in the military. James was also a winner of the prestigious Midlands tournament and is the first African American to win 12 national championships. Olympic Champion and 2x NCAA Champion Ben Peterson noted that, “James Tanniehill taught me more about hand fighting than anyone else.”
Upon receiving his award, a very emotional and humbled Mr. Tanniehill said, “I am very honored, and I loved my mother and coaches who supported me, Coach McCann, Bobby Douglass, and many others.” |
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