texas is not traditionally known as a college wrestling state but there are options for high school wrestlers who want to compete at the next level.
NCAA Division I:
- limited D1 options in Texas but they exist
- the programs that do exist are investing and growing
- Texas is becoming a recruiting target for out-of-state D1 programs because of the improving talent pool
NCAA Division II and III:
- more options at the D2 and D3 level
- several Texas schools have competitive programs
- D3 is important because there are no athletic scholarships but you can still compete at a high level and get academic financial aid
NAIA and Junior College:
- multiple NAIA programs in Texas with wrestling
- JuCo wrestling is a path for athletes who need to develop before D1
- Collin College (Plano area) and other DFW junior colleges could potentially add programs as the sport grows
the future:
- as Texas high school wrestling grows, college programs will follow
- the demand is there — DFW alone produces enough talent to support multiple college programs
- adding wrestling to existing Texas universities would be relatively low cost compared to football
for DFW high school wrestlers:
- if you want to wrestle in college, start the recruiting process early (freshman/sophomore year)
- attend national tournaments where college coaches scout (Super 32, Fargo, etc)
- your grades matter. especially for D3 schools where academic scholarships replace athletic ones
- reach out to coaches directly. wrestling is a small community and coaches respond to athletes who show initiative
any DFW wrestlers who went on to compete in college? share your experience.
my son is being recruited by out of state D2 programs because there arent enough Texas college options. he wants to stay in state but the opportunities just arent here yet. hopefully that changes