Dean Morrison, a native of Amityville, New York, who competed for the Mountaineers from 1991-94, produced the West Virginia University wrestling program’s second individual national title at the 1994 NCAA Championships held in Chapel Hill, N.C.
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Morrison accumulated 103 wins during the course of his career, the sixth-most in WVU history at the time, became the first wrestler in program history to win three consecutive Eastern Wrestling League titles and qualified for the NCAA Championships three times.
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During Morrison’s run to the national title, he notched 33 victories, which then stood the 10th-most in a season by a WVU grappler, second-most at 177/184 pounds and fifth-most by a senior.
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At the 1994 NCAA Championships, Morrison entered his bracket as the No. 2 seed and defeated three ranked opponents to reach the finals. In the championship match, Morrison beat Wyoming’s Reese Andy, 3-2, to cap a season that saw him win 22 of his final 23 matches and earn his second straight season of 30 wins or more.
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Following a redshirt season in 1991, Morrison qualified for the NCAA Championships for the first time and recorded 25 total victories.
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Morrison had yet another solid campaign in 1993 when he put his name in the WVU record books for the first time, recording his first of two 30-plus win seasons. Morrison’s 32 wins during the 1993 season were the third-most by an individual at 177/184 pounds and seventh-most by a junior.
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Following his career with WVU, Morrison competed for USA Wrestling, where he held a national ranking as high as No. 2 in the 96 kg/211.5 lbs weight class.
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Among his achievements at the professional level are a 1995 University Nationals championship, a 2003 Pan American Games championship and a Gold medal at the 2003 World Team Trials.
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After completing his career in 2004 as a resident athlete at the U.S. Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs, Colorado, Morrison went to work with Beat the Streets Wrestling Inc., and started his own non-profit organization called Prodigal Sport.
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He was inducted into the WVU Sports Hall of Fame in 2013 and was named an inaugural member of the Mountaineer Legends Society in 2018.
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