THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, November 29, 1985 39 • very, very devoted." Originally Cogan looked as if he Kopsch feels Cogan is the might become a swimmer. When he strongest wrestler at Lathrup this was 13, Mrs. Cogan said, he went to year, including the heavyweights. the Jewish Community Center pool in "He's very personable," the coach West Bloomfield and they drafted added. He has a strong respect factor him for the swim team." He ended up for his coach. And he's a nice person to swimming for the Center at the Mac- be around." cabiah Youth Games in August 1982 "He's a fabulous athlete, and a in Memphis, Tenn. nice boy, too," according to Sandra Co- "I swam in them and got killed," gan. Of course, what would one expect Cogan said with a laugh. "I was a pre- a mother to say about her son, any- tty good swimmer, but never great." way? So when, during his freshman Cogan's expectations are bol- year at Lathrup, a friend asked him to stered by his past accomplishments on go to a wrestling meeting with him, he went. the Lathrup team. Last year he had a It sounded pretty cool," Cogan – 40-8 record. He won the 105-pound championship in the Metro Suburban said. "It sounded like a lot of fun and there was a good group of guys. I went Athletic Association, was Oakland to the swim meeting, but wrestling County champion at 98 pounds, was second in the district meet and second sounded better." From the start he went into the in the regionals, as well as finishing sport determined to do whatever it among the top ten in the state meet. As a sophomore he had a 24-10 took to be the best. "He always has a record and won the league 98-pound lot of drive, dedication and determina- tion," Mrs. Cogan said. title. "Sol has a plan for whatever he He has been captain of the team since his sophomore year — after earn- does. He figured if he did extremely well he'd get a full-ride scholarship — ing a varsity letter as a freshman, al- or at least a partial. I guess that's been _ though he won only four matches. "He's probably the best Jewish his goal all along." Knocking on the door the loudest, wrestler I've seen come along," said Kopsch. The only other Jewish wres- right now, according to Cogan, is ' tler (that) good was Bob Budman. He Drake University in Iowa, a state was the only one with the same dedica- where wrestling rivals the popularity of football in Michigan. Montana, tion (as Sol)." Kopsch trained with Budman for Georgis Tech, North Carolina, Swar- thmore and Clemson also have ex- the 1968 Olympics. Lathrup's wrestling season begins pressed some interest in the Lathrup Dec. 3 and runs into February, with star, according to Larry Fisher, who the state tournament the first helps place local athletes in college on weekend in March. There will be per- scholarship. Michigan schools recruit- ing Cogan include Oakland Univer- haps two dozen wrestlers on the team, sity and Olivet College. - 13 on the varsity. "I'd like to get into sports "I have to practice with the bigger medicine," said Cogan, who added that guys," Cogan said, "one weighs 126, there's a good 119-pounder, and one is his high school grade-point average of 2.8 (C-plus) would be better had it not a 132-pounder." Cogan relishes the challenge been for poor grades his freshman though, and hopes such workouts with year. "He knows his chance for an edu- bigger teammates will one day pro- ., duce the same results as those earned cation is through wrestling," said by another Kopsch protege — Olympic Fisher. "He eats, lives, breathes wrestling." gold medalist Steve Fraser of Ann Ar- "I call him 'Cogan the De- bor. (The Lathrup coach worked with stroyer,' " Fisher jokingly added. the former University of Michigan Cogan chuckled when he remem- star when Fraser was a member of the Michigan Wrestling Club at School- bered his first year of wrestling. "I was terrible . . .," he said. "The only reason craft Community College.) I was on the varsity was I was stronger than the other kids my size." He im- proved, he said, through "good coach- ing and a lot of work. I worked hard all summer and the coach helped me out." Today, Cogan said, he can bench press 195 pounds — quite a load for someone who weighs as much as a joc- key. Cogan's typical schedule during the season besins with a workout with the swim team at 5:30 every morning. Then he goes to school. After school, he runs and then he goes to wrestling practice until 6:30 p.m. He goes home to eat, do homework, and sleep. That's the way it is five days a week, except on meet days (Tuesdays or Thursdays) when there's no practice. The wrestler's off-season schedule is no picnic either. He's up at 5:45 a.m., lifting weights at school at 7. Then there's more weightlifting, running and other workouts after school. He goes home for early supper, then work from 5 to 9 p.m. at United Electronics in West Bloomfield, a company which sells satellite dishes. Cogan said he does telephone work, calling back tentative customers based on leads supplied by others. Cogan's running is a vital part of his training. He runs between three and five miles a day, and does addi- tional sprints. When her son began wrestling, Mrs. Cogan said she "sat for the first year with my heart in my mouth. But Sol assured me as long as he was in extremely good condition the chances of him getting an injury were slim. (But) I was worried. You see a lot of kids go off the floor with injuries." Cogan's older brother, Kevin, did not wrestle in high school. Said Kopsch, He seems to have the wiry strength most people need for sports." Mrs. Cogan is her son's number one fan, cheering him on at Lathrup wrestling meets. "There was one meet I didn't yell," she said, and you know, he asked me afterward why he didn't hear me yel- ling. I guess that is important." No doubt she is hoping, like her son, that their devotion pays off with some 1985-1986 championships and a full college scholarship. ❑ Today, Cogan said, he can bench press 195 pounds - quite a load for someone who weighs as much as a jockey. r.