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Wrestling - Brandon Totten
215-489-2356; Brandon.Totten@delval.edu
A two-time Division III national champion and one of the greatest
wrestlers to ever hit the Delaware Valley mats, Brandon Totten has
captured championships and earned coaching accolades in each of
his five years as head coach, en route to a 74-23 record.
During Totten's tenure, the Aggies won four straight Middle Atlantic
Conference (MAC) crowns in the last four years of the tournament's
existence. Last season, the team went to the Midwest Regional as
the qualifying tournament for the NCAAs and captured that title
as well. Three of Totten's squads have placed in the top 10 at the
NCAAs with one - the 2003-04 edition - finishing fourth for a national
trophy.
Individually, Totten's crew has sent 23 wrestlers to the NCAA Division
III Championships with 10 returning home as All-Americans (top eight
finishes). One wrestler - Jamall Johnson - captured a national title
in his weight class while three others finished as the national
runner-up.
Totten took over the program when legendary head coach Robert Marshall
retired following the 2001-02 season. He directed the squad to a
17-3 record and they easily defended their MAC championship and
placed 13th at the NCAAs. Totten was honored as both the NCAA Division
III Rookie Coach of the Year and the MAC Coach of the Year for his
efforts.
2004 topped Totten's first campaign as the Aggies won their third
straight MAC crown (with Totten earning the MAC Coach of the Year
Award once again) and sent five wrestlers to nationals. Four wrestlers
came back as All-American as Delaware Valley finished fourth in
the team standings.
In 2004-05, Delaware Valley made it four conference titles in a
row and Totten shared MAC Coach of the Year honors. Six Aggies went
to nationals, three earned All-American honors and the team finished
in seventh place for the national tournament.
The Aggies once again were crowned conference champions in 2005-06
as Totten won his fourth Coach of the Year Award. Five Aggies qualified
for nationals, including Johnson who captured the 197-pound national
championship and led the team to a seventh-place finish.
Last season's edition went 17-2 in the regular season, including
a perfect 6-0 mark against Division I and Division II opponents.
They then captured the NCAA Midwest Regional crown with Totten earning
the Coach of the Year honor.
Totten wrestled at Delaware Valley from 1993 to 1996 after transferring
in from Division I Rutgers University. He captured back-to-back
NCAA Division III championships in 1995 and 1996 and is one of just
two wrestlers (assistant coach Shaun Smith is the other) in school
history to capture multiple national titles.
Totten is Delaware Valley's all-time leader with 122 victories in
just three seasons. He also holds the single-season record for wins
with 50 in 1995-96. He won three NCAA East Regional titles and two
MAC crowns during his career, and helped Delaware Valley win the
conference and regional team championships in both 1995 and 1996.
All of those accolades helped Totten become the first Aggie wrestler
to be inducted into the National Wrestling Coaches Association/NCAA
Division III Wrestling Hall of Fame in March of 2002.
After graduating in 1996, Totten went to Western Maryland College
and earned a Master's in physical education general studies two
years later. While at Western Maryland, Totten served as a graduate
assistant coach and the team produced back-to-back winning seasons
for the first time in nine years, including the Centennial Conference
Championship in 1998.
Totten spent head coaching stints at Allentown High School (NJ)
and Middlesex County Community College (Middlesex, NJ) and was the
head assistant coach at Seton Hall University for two years.
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