Story By Ike Dodson / Photo By Chace Bryson
The next big thing in U.S. women’s wrestling is a remarkable 15-year-old College Park-Pleasant Hill sophomore with dazzling abilities and uncanny poise. She goes by the name Amit Elor.
The reigning 150-pound CIF girls state wrestling champion with realistic expectations to win a U.S. Olympic gold in freestyle wrestling — a feat that’s only been achieved once before (Helen Maroulis in 2016).
The wide-smiling half-Russian daughter of Eastern European immigrants and youngest of six children, Elor hasn’t lost a match to a U.S. wrestler in nearly four years.
She’s known for her quickness, both on the mat and on the clock. Elor won a section title in just 15 seconds and pinned five straight opponents in last year’s CIF tournament in a combined time of 2 minutes, 19 seconds, averaging under 28 seconds per pin against the best 150-pound wrestlers in the state.
“In the first match I saw her wrestle, she pinned a girl in 15 seconds,” College Park coach Bob Wilhelm said. “All the rest of her matches were the same, so after a while I told her that on her next match to instead try and get some work in, wrestle and let the girl go.
“It was just unnatural for her, and after watching her get into the second round of that match, I could tell I was messing her up. I told her we were never doing that again, and to go out there and do what you do.”
What Elor does best is win. She’s wrestled since she was 4 years old and could smelt her trophies and medals into a life-size Iron Man suit. Here are some of the recent honors:
>> Sept. 15, 2018 — Under-15 Pan American champion in Villahermosa, Mexico, 66 kilograms (about 145.5 pounds)
>> Nov. 9, 2018 — UWW Cadet Saori Cup champion in Mie, Japan, 65 kg
>> Feb. 16, 2019 — North Coast Section champion in Albany, 150 pounds
>> Feb. 23, 2019 — CIF girls state champion at Rabobank Arena in Bakersfield, 150 pounds
>> March 3, 2019 — CAUSA Junior and Cadet Folkstyle state champion in Fresno, 152 pounds
>> April 28, 2019 — Marines Western Regional champion in folkstyle, freestyle and greco (three brackets), 158 pounds
>> May 2, 2019 — U.S. Cadet national champion in Irving, Texas, 69 kg
>> Aug. 4, 2019 — World Cadet Championships bronze medalist in Sofia, Bulgaria, 69 kg
>> Aug. 11, 2019 — Cadet Beach world champion in Odessa, Ukraine, over 50 kg
- Elor will be too young to compete in the 2020 Olympics (you have to be 18 years old), but her success should position her to challenge the world’s best grapplers in 2024. The only wrestler that’s come close is Japan’s Honoka Nakai, who beat Elor in a 3-1 semifinal match at Cadet Worlds in Bulgaria.
- Nakai, 17, is a three-time Cadet world champion and will have to move on to the junior division next year, while Elor has two more shots at the Cadet world title. Nakai survived Elor in the Cadet World semifinals by breaking a 1-1 tie with a scrambling takedown with 20 seconds remaining.
- “I should have attacked more,” Elor relented a month later. “It was still a great experience. I was very nervous beforehand, and I think the next time I go I will be able to treat it as any other tournament.”
- The trek to Cadet Worlds included a surprise entry in the Cadet Beach world championships in Ukraine. It’s where Elor became the first and only American to win a Beach world championship gold.
- It was first time ever wrestling on sand.
- “We wanted to do something fun and saw that Beach Wrestling worlds were happening the weekend after Cadet worlds, so we figured why not,” Elor said. “I almost lost my finals because I kept putting my knee in the sand, which is a penalty point in beach wrestling.
- “But it was just really cool, washing the sand off in the ocean after each match. They had music, giant mascots and it was just a fun atmosphere.”
- Elor could wrestle a hurricane. Her pedigree is so serious, Wilhelm was interrogated for insight before the season even began last year.
- “I guess word had got out and people were asking me what weight Amit was going so they could dodge her weight class for state,” Wilhelm said. “I was like, ‘What are you talking about?’ I didn’t even know she was on the team.”
- Wilhelm said after 13 years of coaching, he is certain Elor is the best wrestler he has ever seen, boy or girl. It’s fitting that her premier entry in the girls state tournament last February was also the debut event for both girls and boys wrestling at the same championship venue, Rabobank Arena.
- After a 15-second pin in the opening round, onlookers decided to have a little fun — Vegas-style — with her quick aggression.
- “I heard that some of the coaches at state were betting on her pin times,” Wilhelm said. “In one of the videos of the finals taken from upstairs you can hear somebody yelling out the time she pinned her in (29 seconds).
- Dual state championship brackets at the same revered arena is a good indicator for how much girls and women’s wrestling has grown in recent years. Twenty years ago you could only find a few girls on any wrestling roster, mostly featured in exhibition matches during team duals, or competing against boys in local tournaments.
- Teams sent girls to compete in small unofficial state tournaments in the early 2000s, before the CIF organized NorCal and SoCal championship tournaments loaded with missing spots in the brackets from 2006-2010. West Covina won the first girls state tourney in 2011 and the event grew into the ultra-competitive showcase that made its way to Rabobank last year.
- It’s the kind of growth that excites Elor, who, despite her youth, has made a serious pledge to help her sport flourish.
- “I think wrestling could become just as popular as sports like soccer and gymnastics for young girls,” Elor said. “How crazy would it be to have kids growing up and having wrestling be something that is taught and shown in P.E., girls doing takedowns during class.
- “I want other girls to be able to wrestle in supportive environments with great partners and coaches who support them.”
- Those ambitions make her big family very proud.
- “It’s her attitude, her work ethic, it’s the whole package,” Amit’s mother, Elana Elor said. “She is really special… like really special. Sometimes it feels almost too good to be true.
- “She’s so smart, and is an excellent student.”
- Amit’s career plans are innovative and carefully planned. She’s seen her older sisters and brothers (Gilly, Ronny, Orry, Aviv and Oshry) compete and educate and she’s determined to learn from that insight. She uses an independent high school program to study part of the year while traveling for elite tournaments or training with famed international coach Valentin Kalika, who coached the only U.S. Olympic women’s champion, Maroulis, at the 2016 Rio games.
- She’s also trained with the likes of 2016 Olympians Elena Pirozhkova and Frank Chamizo (Italy).
- The NCAA is still playing catch-up on women’s wrestling (it’s not even a championship sport), but Elor has bigger plans post-high school. She plans to earn a college degree online while she trains for the 2024 Olympics in Paris, and return to the education system after her wrestling career is over.
- “She definitely knows what the main prize is,” Wilhelm said. “To be that young, thinking like she does is pretty amazing. She’s also such a humble, nice person.
- “If she makes the 2024 Olympics, I’ll be there watching.”
- Even there, bet on quick pins.
This story first appeared Dec. 4 on SportStarsMag.com as part of SportStars Magazines’s Wrestling Preview week. Visit the site for more of their preview week coverage and an array of there local sports content.
Wow! She’s amazing!
You Go Girl!
Remarkable accomplishments and only 15 years old.
Best of luck to her on her high school work and collegiate work.
Fingers crossed to see her in the Olympics in 2024!
And of course, Go Falcons!!!
Cheers for the CP Falcons!
It’s a good article though I wish there was a bit about Elor’s parents and older siblings. For example, Ronda Rousey was a female judoka whose mom’s resume included winning the 1984 World Judo Championships. Mom would wake up Ronda each morning by jumping on her bed and putting Ronda in a judo lock or hold. Ronda also had an older sister who I assume she also roughhoused with. Ronda became an expert at escaping from locks and holds which served her very well in her own judo and subsequent mixed martial arts career.