One-legged wrestling champ named Most Courageous

January 31, 2012|BY MARK KRAM, kramm@phillynews.com
  • NCAA wrestling champion Anthony Robles, who has only one leg, was honored as the Most Courageous athlete by the Philadelphia Sports Writers Association.

EARLY IN his improbable career, Anthony Robles, who was born with one leg but with a heart far larger than his 125-pound body, would occasionally hear people comment: Look how hard he is trying! It seemed enough to some that he was even out there competing. But it was never just enough for Robles, who wanted people to see him for his athletic ability and not his handicap.

That changed when Robles began winning. In the eyes of some, the absence of a leg seemed to be an "advantage," that it gave his opponents one fewer area on which to gain a hold. But Robles always remembered what one of his coaches had told him: "You know you are getting somewhere when the haters come out."

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The personable, young Robles would indeed go far. In his senior year at Arizona State, Robles, 23, won the NCAA wrestling championship at 125 pounds last March at the Wells Fargo Center.

Last evening at the Crowne Plaza in Cherry Hill, the Philadelphia Sports Writers Association bestowed on him the 2012 Most Courageous Athlete Award.

Robles called it "just a huge honor."

"I looked up the previous winners on the Internet," said Robles, who won the Jimmy V Award for Perseverance at the ESPYs last summer. "I feel like I don't deserve the attention. I wasn't in my sport for the attention. I just love to wrestle. I just feel very fortunate."

Robles compensated for his missing leg at a young age by strengthening his upper body. As a sixth-grader, he set a school record for pushups. He played some football as a boy, but turned to wrestling in eighth grade. Although he did not do well early on, he fell in love with the sport, which he said has always been something that has allowed him to feel free.

"I can forget about everything else, and just have fun," he said.

"Even when I was losing, it was still that place where I could find solitude," he said, adding that it has helped him fulfill "the purpose I always believe I had in life."

Robles began to excel in wrestling at Mesa (Ariz.) High School. Going 96-0 in his junior and senior years, he won two state wrestling championships. But that was not enough for colleges to overlook his disability and offer him scholarships.

"I was disappointed," Robles said. "I thought I would get some offer. The reason [coaches] gave was that I was a risk. I had done well in high school, but this was the elite level. Only two schools even called: Drexel and Arizona State."

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