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Bob Molle was born in Saskatoon on Sept. 23,
1962, and grew up in the Evan Hardy Collegiate area where he experienced
his first success in wrestling and football.
As a wrestler, he won the Saskatoon
heavyweight championship and then the provincial title before enrolling
at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver.
He was the Canadian heavyweight champion four times,
1983, 1984, 1985 and 1987. He was bronze medallist at the Pan-American
Games and a fifth-place finisher at the world championships at Kiev,
Russia, in 1983. He was a bronze medallist at the World Cup in
Toledo, Ohio in
1984.
Bob won the silver
medal in the heavyweight division at the Olympic Games in Los Angeles in
1984. Twenty-one days before he flew to the Olympics, he underwent back
surgery in Vancouver. After getting to Los Angeles, he was a day-to-day
basis and won his first four matches to reach the final.
In 1986, Bob became
the first heavyweight wrestler in history to win four straight American
National Amateur Intercollegiate titles. He was inducted into the NAIA
Hall of Fame in 1991 and the Canadian Wrestling Hall of Fame in 1992.
In football, he played
on four Evan Hardy teams, winning the provincial in 1980, and played one
year with Saskatoon Hilltops before going to Simon Fraser. After
becoming the first Canadian to win All-American honors as an offensive
lineman at SFU, he was a first-round draft pick of the Winnipeg Blue
Bombers in 1985. He played on the 1988 Bombers, who won the Grey Cup,
and was captain of the 1990 Bombers, who beat Edmonton in the Grey Cup
final.
He remains active in
wrestling, having been named Canadian Intercollegiate Athletic Union
Wrestling coach of the year in 1992 and 1993. |