Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

West Allis firefighter, wrestling coach receives the Hometown Hero Award

- Zac Bellman Milwaukee Journal Sentinel USA TODAY NETWORK – WISCONSIN

WEST ALLIS - Local firefighter and West Allis Hale assistant wrestling coach Antonio Gibilian was recognized this week by the Wisconsin State Legislatur­e with a ‘ Hometown Hero Award' for his contributi­ons to his community in both roles.

“I felt like I was just doing my job,” Gibilian said. “It was a very grand experience going there, and they really give you a moment on the floor in their busy schedule of voting and just trying to work on stuff for the state.”

Gibilian has served as an assistant coach of West Allis Fire Department deputy chief Armando Suarez Del Real's coaching staff for the past three seasons, along with fellow WAFD firefighter AJ Ottow and Milwaukee Fire Department firefighter Jonah Rodriguez. The 2014 Hale grad Gibilian was inspired to join the staff by an outreach from his former wrestling coach.

“The past head coach had left to go to another school, and there was really no one they were able to find,” Gibilian said. “It was getting down to the wire and they hadn't had any applicatio­ns yet.”

A workplace conversati­on about filling the vacancy led to a lunch meeting with Suarez Del Real, Ottow and Rodriguez, in which the four discussed their visions for leading a program. One common sentiment expressed among each was a desire to place a premium on academics over athletic performanc­e.

“This is developing people of the future, these are contributi­ng members of society,” Gibilian said. “This isn't just about wrestling, this is about the things it teaches you - the determinat­ion, the drive, but you have to apply those things in other places.”

One of the initiative­s highlighte­d in Gibilian's nomination for the award by Suarez Del Real is the focus during the first hour of practice on remedying any shortcomin­gs with an athlete's schoolwork. The coaching staff stays in communicat­ion with teachers on academic performanc­e, and an athlete with missed assignment­s or an unsatisfac­tory grade is not permitted to participat­e in practice or events until work to reconcile that has been completed.

“Before they can even put on the wrestling shoes, before they can warm up and start learning new moves, they have to sit at this homework table and start finishing the work, show us that it's finished for the class they are having difficulty with,” Gibilian said. “Obviously if they're having difficulty juggling both tasks, schoolwork comes first.”

It is an approach that similarly guides how Gibilian and his fellow firefighters balance their work and extracurri­cular obligation­s. The 24 hours on, 48 hours off schedule of a firefighter provides for more flexibility than a traditiona­l 9-to-5, but there are neverthele­ss logistical challenges.

“It can be difficult to get that other day off when there's a meet on Saturday, then we've got to flip or trade with other guys in the department,” Gibilian said. “Because three of us are in the (West Allis) Fire Department, and another coach who is in Milwaukee Fire Department, it allows us to where someone will always be there even if we're on different shifts working different time slots.”

The results have included not only more well-rounded student athletes, but a more competitiv­e program. Gibilian describes an uphill battle in gaining trust and buy-in early-on, but West Allis Hale wrestling has become a contender once again. The program sent sophomore Tristan North to WIAA individual state wrestling this week at 138 pounds, which Gibilian hopes is just the beginning for a program with its sights set higher in years to come.

“In the next year we're trying to expand even more and take conference, and we're trying to set up a girls wrestling team as well. We're growing incredibly fast with the kids that we have and the staff that we have, and we're very proud of the success that we are seeing in the program,” Gibilian said.

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