J. D. Bergman

JD Bergman (born September 7, 1984)[1] of Oak Harbor, Ohio, is an American wrestler for New York Athletic Club who represented the United States at the 2010 World Wrestling Championships and 2013 World Wrestling Championships. He is the son of Jim (James) and Donna Bergman. He is the second oldest child of 5.

Early Life

Bergman was born in Fremont, Ohio, to James Daniel Bergman, the owner of Henry W. Bergman, Inc., and Donna (Fahrbach) Bergman, an artist. In 1996, The family moved from Genoa to Oak Harbor where he lived with his siblings, Paul, Wesley, Rachel, and Halie.

High School

Bergman attended Oak Harbor High School in Oak Harbor, Ohio, from 2000 to 2003. He was twice champion in the Ohio High School Athletic Association (OHSAA) Division II state tournament, winning state titles in 2002 and 2003. After an injury during his sophomore year, Bergman finished his junior and senior years undefeated (85-0), and holds the school record for most wins in a row, with 86.[2]

College

At The Ohio State University, Bergman was a four-time NCAA qualifier and three-time NCAA placer, including finishing second in the 2008 NCAA Division I Wrestling Championships. Bergman also placed third as a true freshman in 2004 and fourth in 2007 as a junior. He finished his college career with 129 wins against 36 losses, for a winning percentage of 78%.[3]

International

In 2010, Bergman represented the United States at the 2010 World Wrestling Championships in Moscow in the 96 kilogram weight class. Bergman split his matches, finishing in 10th place with a 1-1 record (besting Farkhod Anakulov of Tajikistan and losing to Iranian Erfan Amiri). Bergman again represented the US in the 2013 World Wrestling Championships, finishing 0-1 and in 25th place.

Bergman has been on seven USA World teams (top three finish in the World/Olympic trials); 2009–2011, 2012–2016 and 2005-2006 in Greco-Roman. Bergman is also a two-time Cerro Pelado champion (2010 and 2015) and a 2014 Brazil Cup champion.

Foxcatcher

Bergman was an extra in the movie Foxcatcher (2013), credited with the role of "Wrestler #3" in one of the training scenes.[4]

gollark: This *does* essentially mean that if I spent a lot of money on some 10TB disks I could outvote all esolangs ever, though.
gollark: I mean, you can hash the data with some information which isn't available until the current timestamp, sure.
gollark: How do you prove storage and verify that without having the original data? Hmm.
gollark: That makes no sense.
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References

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