For Eagles, a Historic Takedown
Wrestling Champion Glenn Gives AU Its First Division I Title
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, March 20, 2007; Page E01
On the first day back from spring break, Josh Glenn passed one American University classmate after another without turning a head. Apparently, being a school pioneer doesn't get the same attention it used to.
"They were more interested in the parties they went to in Cancun," Glenn said. "Some people don't even know we have a wrestling program."
![]() "They were more interested in the parties they went to in Cancun," said redshirt junior wrestler Josh Glenn, after walking across the AU campus in near anonymity after winning the 197-pound title at the NCAA championships. "Some people don't even know we have a wrestling program." (Bill O'Leary - The Washington Post) |
Perhaps by the end of the week, they will. On Saturday night, Glenn, a redshirt junior wrestler, won the 197-pound title at the NCAA championships in Auburn Hills, Mich., with a 6-4 overtime victory over Iowa State senior Kurt Backes, to become American's first national champion in any sport since Ray Crowe won a Division II diving title in 1966. Later that year, the school began moving its sports into Division I, making Glenn's title the school's first in the nation's top echelon.
"This is huge for the university overall," American's interim athletic director Athena Argyropoulos said. "We have successes in a number of our programs, but this can really help put us on the map nationally. What this means to us is there's no boundary to our success."
Glenn's ascension to the top is an improbable journey, with two dedicated coaches riding shotgun. Growing up in Johnson City, N.Y., just outside of Binghamton near the central Pennsylvania border, Glenn and his two older brothers were raised by their mother, Jeanine Bowers, after she and her husband divorced when Josh was 4.
All three boys eventually were placewinners at the New York state tournament in high school. They learned plenty from Pete Capone, the coach at Johnson City High School. Capone, a dentist who just completed his 17th season coaching, has a special bond with his wrestlers.
A runner-up in the 1985 NCAA championships while wrestling for Hofstra, Capone dedicated the basement of his home to teaching the sport to future generations. He has a 16-by-16-foot wrestling mat, a weight room, and a wall of fame of his former wrestlers. There is also a foosball table, a bubble hockey game and a plasma screen TV.
Capone's bond to Glenn, however, was particularly close. For about six months each year from when Glenn was in sixth grade until he left for American, he would live with Capone and his wife, Sue. When the Capones built a new house when Glenn was in the ninth grade, the guest room was essentially designated his.
"I'm sure a lot of coach-athlete relationships are really good, but Josh is like family to me," Capone said. "We built a house, and that's an open door to my wrestlers. They can come home, and they can feel comfortable."
And that's what Capone wanted Glenn to feel when college recruiters called. Glenn won the 152-pound state title as a senior, and felt a strong desire to follow in his coach's footsteps at Hofstra. But Hofstra couldn't give Glenn more than half a scholarship, and Glenn couldn't afford the rest.
That's when second-year American coach Mark Cody stepped in and made what appeared to be an unfathomable offer, especially for a program that had fallen on hard times in the 1990s and was in danger of being cut altogether.
American has just five scholarships annually, each valued at $42,000, according to Cody. Nevertheless, Cody thought Glenn was worth a full scholarship -- 20 percent of the financial support he can offer his entire roster each year.

