| Medal record | ||
|---|---|---|
| Men's Wrestling | ||
| Competitor for the |
||
| Olympic Games | ||
| Gold | 1984 Los Angeles | Freestyle (– 74 kg) |
| World Championships | ||
| Gold | 1983 Kiev | Freestyle (– 74 kg) |
| Silver | 1985 Budapest | Freestyle (– 74 kg) |
| Silver | 1987 Clermont | Freestyle (– 74 kg) |
| Silver | 1993 Toronto | Freestyle (– 74 kg) |
| Bronze | 1982 Edmonton | Freestyle (– 82 kg) |
| Bronze | 1986 Budapest | Freestyle (– 74 kg) |
| Pan American Games | ||
| Bronze | 1995 Mar del Plata | Freestyle (– 74 kg) |
David Leslie Schultz (June 6, 1959 – January 26, 1996) was an Olympic and World champion freestyle wrestler.
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Schultz was born in Palo Alto, California to Phillip Gary Schultz and Dorothy Jean St. Germain. He had one brother named Mark, and has two half-siblings – Michael and Seana. As a young child he was a little chubby (nick named "Pudge"), and was often bullied at school by classmates for his weight and appearance. He also suffered from dyslexia, which many of his teachers mistook for mental disabilities.
Schultz began wrestling in junior high school, and would win both his first national and international wrestling titles in 1977 – the same year he had become a state champion as a senior at Palo Alto High School. As a high school senior he pinned 2-time NCAA champion and NCAA "Outstanding Wrestler" Chuck Yagla at the Great Plains Championships.
His high school wrestling records had qualified him to compete on his first U.S. international team in the Tblisi Tournament in Soviet Georgia, considered by many in the wrestling community as the "toughest tournament in the world." Schultz earned a silver medal and was the highest-placing American at the tournament. Due to the timing of Tblisi, Schultz failed to qualify for the California State Championships. His legendary coach Ed Hart petitioned the California Coaches Association to allow Dave to compete without qualifying. Competing at 2 weight classes above his normal weight, Schultz's closest match in the California State Championships was 12-1 in the finals. Later that year he won his first national title by winning the U.S. National Open Greco-Roman Championships and won the award for most falls in the least amount of time. Schultz's senior year is considered by most experts as the most successful senior year in U.S. high school wrestling history.
In college Schultz was a three-time NCAA All-American, first at Oklahoma State University and then twice at the University of Oklahoma. In 1982, he was the 167-pound weight class NCAA Champion defeating Mike Sheets from Oklahoma State University in the finals by criteria tie-breaker in overtime.
Dave Schultz would go on to win 10 Senior National titles (eight in Freestyle and two in Greco-Roman) over a 19 year span, at three weight divisions: 149.9 lb, 163 lb and 180.5 lb. In international competition, Schultz won a 1983 World Championship and then a 1984 Olympic gold medal. He won four World Cup and two Pan American Games titles, and is the only American ever to win the prestigious tournament in Tbilisi, Georgia twice. In all, he was a seven-time World and Olympic medalist. Together, Dave and his brother Mark Schultz were the first American brothers to each win gold medals in the same Olympics, and likewise the only American brothers to win World and Olympic Championships.
At various times, he also served as an assistant coach at the University of Oklahoma, Stanford University, and the University of Wisconsin–Madison.
Training for another Olympic bid and coaching the private Team Foxcatcher squad in Newtown Square, Pennsylvania, Dave Schultz was shot and killed on January 26, 1996 by the team's sponsor, John E. du Pont. A member of the Du Pont family, du Pont had exhibited bizarre and threatening behavior preceding the murder. At the trial, neither the prosecution nor the defense suggested a motivation for the crime. A jury rejected du Pont's request to be found not guilty by reason of insanity, and he was found guilty but mentally ill. Du Pont was sentenced by Judge Patricia Jenkins to 13-30 years incarceration.
Dave's body was cremated. His surviving family includes his wife, Nancy; his son, Alexander; his daughter, Danielle; all his siblings; and both parents. In 1997, he was inducted into the National Wrestling Hall of Fame as a Distinguished Member.
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