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North Dakota State Wrestling Hall of Fame

Mandy Antony, seen keeping stats Saturday, Feb. 13, 2016, at the EDC wrestling tournament at Fargo South, will become the second female ever inducted into the North Dakota High School wrestling Hall of Fame next week at the state tournament in Fargo.Dave Wallis / The Forum

Mandy Antony, seen keeping stats Feb. 13 at the EDC wrestling tournament at Fargo South, will become the second female ever inducted into the North Dakota High School wrestling Hall of Fame next week at the state tournament in Fargo. Dave Wallis / The Forum

FARGO - Mandy Antony remembers the days of producing prep wrestling results with pen and paper when she was a student manager at Plains High School in Montana. Those days seem archaic considering all the bells and whistles one can find at a wrestling tournament these days. Pen and paper have been replaced with computers and results are now compiled in real time on websites like trackwrestling.com. Antony, 39, can be credited with leading the way in modernizing many wrestling tournaments around the region for nearly two decades-including the North Dakota high school wrestling tournament, which begins today at the Fargodome. Antony's expertise working in the computer software industry came in handy as technology became a bigger part of tournaments. For her efforts, Antony is being inducted into North Dakota's High School Wrestling Hall of Fame this weekend, becoming just the second woman to receive that honor. "I'm totally honored," Antony said "I'm speechless that I was nominated for something like this because I do this because I love it. I help coaches out because I love it. I love working with computers so it was always a passion of mine to get everything to go electronic." Antony lives in West Fargo and is hired by the North Dakota High School Activities Association to run the state tournament. She has now worked 11 state tournaments in North Dakota and manages all the mats from her spot at the head table.
Prior to the tournament, Antony serves as the state's seeding coordinator, gathering all the brackets and entering them into the computer. Simply put, Antony does a little bit of everything and Fargo Public Schools Activities Director Todd Olson said it is reassuring seeing Antony get set up at the head table. "Truth be told, Mandy is the most important individual at the state wrestling tournament and it's not even close," Olson said. "She is very efficient at what she does and she enjoys it." After attending college at Dickinson State and Valley City State, Antony approached Bucky Maughan, then the wrestling coach at North Dakota State, about helping out with the Bison Open tournament. Maughan is also being enshrined in the hall of fame this weekend. "I started helping out with the Bison Open in 2000 and ever since I've run that tournament," Antony said. "Every year after that I would have another coach or an AD ask, 'can you come and run my tournament?'" Word spread and technology evolved. Antony began using Trackwrestling software for managing results at the Rumble on the Red tournament in 2007 and never looked back. This season alone, Antony and Nick Walton-her tournament manager colleague-will run over 70 tournaments. Along the way Antony has gradually helped coaches, ADs and others modernize-her claim to fame. "There has been some hand holding, but they have all moved their tournaments over to Trackwrestling from paper," Antony said. "They all prefer it now."FARGO - Mandy Antony remembers the days of producing prep wrestling results with pen and paper when she was a student manager at Plains High School in Montana.Those days seem archaic considering all the bells and whistles one can find at a wrestling tournament these days. Pen and paper have been replaced with computers and results are now compiled in real time on websites like trackwrestling.com.Antony, 39, can be credited with leading the way in modernizing many wrestling tournaments around the region for nearly two decades-including the North Dakota high school wrestling tournament, which begins today at the Fargodome.Antony's expertise working in the computer software industry came in handy as technology became a bigger part of tournaments. For her efforts, Antony is being inducted into North Dakota's High School Wrestling Hall of Fame this weekend, becoming just the second woman to receive that honor."I'm totally honored," Antony said "I'm speechless that I was nominated for something like this because I do this because I love it. I help coaches out because I love it. I love working with computers so it was always a passion of mine to get everything to go electronic."Antony lives in West Fargo and is hired by the North Dakota High School Activities Association to run the state tournament. She has now worked 11 state tournaments in North Dakota and manages all the mats from her spot at the head table.
Prior to the tournament, Antony serves as the state's seeding coordinator, gathering all the brackets and entering them into the computer.Simply put, Antony does a little bit of everything and Fargo Public Schools Activities Director Todd Olson said it is reassuring seeing Antony get set up at the head table."Truth be told, Mandy is the most important individual at the state wrestling tournament and it's not even close," Olson said. "She is very efficient at what she does and she enjoys it."After attending college at Dickinson State and Valley City State, Antony approached Bucky Maughan, then the wrestling coach at North Dakota State, about helping out with the Bison Open tournament. Maughan is also being enshrined in the hall of fame this weekend."I started helping out with the Bison Open in 2000 and ever since I've run that tournament," Antony said. "Every year after that I would have another coach or an AD ask, 'can you come and run my tournament?'"Word spread and technology evolved. Antony began using Trackwrestling software for managing results at the Rumble on the Red tournament in 2007 and never looked back.This season alone, Antony and Nick Walton-her tournament manager colleague-will run over 70 tournaments. Along the way Antony has gradually helped coaches, ADs and others modernize-her claim to fame."There has been some hand holding, but they have all moved their tournaments over to Trackwrestling from paper," Antony said. "They all prefer it now."

North Dakota State Wrestling Hall of Fame

Source: https://www.inforum.com/sports/mix-tech-expert-to-be-inducted-into-nd-high-school-wrestling-hall-of-fame

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