Tars find inspiration in Landers’ success
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Steve Virgen
The payoff for all of Paul Landers’ hard work as a wrestler came
earlier this season in an early-season match at Orange High.
During the four-way meet, Landers, an inspirational leader of the
Newport Harbor High wrestling team, earned his first varsity win.
And it came in dramatic fashion.
Landers recorded a five-second pin, the fastest takedown by a
Newport wrestler in the last five years and one of the quickest in
the program’s history.
Landers’ teammates cheered wildly for him, as he stood in the
middle of the mat with his hand being raised in victory. After all
the hard work Landers has put into wrestling throughout his four
seasons at Newport, some sort of personal celebration might have been
expected. But Landers quickly put the memorable moment behind him.
“I had another match right after that,” Landers said. “Even if I
do win, I have to forget because there’s more to come.”
Committed and determined are labels that Landers wants to be
associated with. He doesn’t want people to know the story of his
disability. But for the sake of inspiring teammates and others, he’s
willing to share his story.
Landers has attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. But he said
that is not an issue in whatever he does.
“I’m not one of those people who think, ‘I have something wrong
with me. I can’t do it,’ ” Landers said. “I overlook my disabilities.
I look at my disability as if I don’t have it and I just do what
everyone else does.”
When Landers was 11, his parents and teachers came to realize his
learning disability. In social settings, he can be extremely shy, yet
he is friendly. ADHD also involves inattention and impulsiveness,
which Landers deals with daily.
Landers’ learning disability is not severe, yet still challenging.
He is working toward continuing his education in college, at Cal
State Fullerton or Orange Coast College, he said.
He has had the ability to tone down his hyperactivity and his
attentiveness has also improved while working out with the wrestling
team, Newport Coach Dominic Bulone said.
When Landers completed the five-second pin, Bulone also reveled in
the moment. He, too, cheered for the wrestler who has provided a
greater sense of purpose for coaching.
“He has been with me for four years,” Bulone said. “He works hard,
and he has taken his fair share of beatings. But he just keeps coming
back for more. He brings the team a lot of satisfaction when he does
well.”
Whether it be in training or during a match, Landers always brings
his best effort, Bulone said. And with that, the Newport Harbor
senior has been an example for his teammates.
“He’s very dedicated,” said fellow senior Kyle Codey, who has also
been in the program for four seasons. “Every day he comes to
practice, he always has a determined look on his face. He always
wants to get better. Usually when people see him work hard, that
makes people want to work harder.”
Both Bulone and Codey have seen the improvements Landers has made
each season. That’s why the five-second pin proved to be so special
for the Sailors. Aside from the victory, Landers is simply pleased to
be in the sport and possesses a sense of pride in the fact that he
will never quit.
“I feel as if wrestling is something that I have to be a part of,”
Landers said. “It’s one of those things that I have to do. I don’t
want to quit. If I quit, it’s not going to feel right.”
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