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Tuesday, May 5, 2026

Dave Studer Story

 For the Love of the Game

“If you do what you love, you’ll never work a day in your life.”

—-Mark Anthony


A career of working with our youth can provide contentment and joy spread out over multiple decades. Even with the moments of fulfillment, teaching, coaching, and mentoring can be exhausting. For many in our profession, retirement planning begins as we near the thirty-year mark. The rewards are much appreciated, but there comes a time when a new chapter must be written, and a change of pace is needed. Harper Creek varsity wrestling coach Dave Studer has taken a unique approach in his career. He has almost doubled the thirty-year mark with Harper Creek. His love for his craft is what keeps him coming back year after year.


Dave is unique among our employees in many ways, but perhaps what sets him apart most from the rest of us is his age. At 82, he may have a few decades or more on most of us, but his years as a teacher and a coach have kept him young. He reflected on his childhood. “I was born in Port Huron, Michigan, in 1944, the second oldest of six siblings. We grew up in Port Huron, went to school in Port Huron School District, and graduated from Port Huron High School, which at that time was a three-year high school for 10th through 12th grade.”  


Dave was small in stature compared to the other athletes attending his high school, but he didn’t let this deter him from participating in sports. “I played football my sophomore year, but found a more suitable sport for me after this,” Dave said. “A friend of mine encouraged me to try out for wrestling. At this time, there were no divisions for high school wrestling in Michigan. We had a really solid team that competed with some of the state’s bigger schools. I had some very talented teammates who pushed me to be a better wrestler. They always dominated me during our practices, but this only helped me achieve success during our competitions. I went undefeated in our league, the Eastern Michigan League, for my entire three-year career.” Some of Dave’s high school teammates and coaches were successful in their sport beyond the high school level. “For my last two years, we had an excellent coach, Anthony Benito, who had wrestled at Bowling Green,”  Dave explained. “He was a small guy but tough, and he knew what he was doing. I had teammates who competed for Miami of Ohio, and another for Eastern Michigan. Two who graduated a year before me went to wrestle at Michigan.” Dave competed at the collegiate level after high school. “I wrestled in the 95-pound weight division in high school and was recruited by coaches from Western Michigan, U of M, and Eastern Michigan,” Dave noted. “I considered going to Michigan, but decided to go to WMU because I was unsure if I could handle the academics at Michigan.” Dave graduated from high school in 1962 and went to WMU to compete in the 123-pound weight division.


Dave was a dedicated athlete in high school, but he quickly found out that competing at the DI collegiate level required a higher level of commitment. “I found out in college that the coaches and team owned my time,” Dave explained. “Between off-season conditioning and the regular season, we were preparing for the competition year-round. We couldn’t even go home for Thanksgiving. The dorms were closed for the holiday weekend, but our coaches would find people we could stay with. When I was in college, the only athletes who used the weight room were the wrestlers and the track team's throwers. The football team never used the weight room. At that time, it was believed that bulking up would hurt the skill level required for football.” 


Dave enjoyed participating in athletics during his high school days and wanted to continue in this capacity as an adult. “Ultimately, I wanted a career as a coach,” he said. “I would coach Little League Baseball when I came back home from college each summer. When I enrolled at WMU, I decided to major in physical education and minor in health and psychology.” 


Dave finished at WMU in 1968 with everything completed except for student teaching. I was working for the government in the Job Corps Division, so I decided not to do my student teaching,” Dave noted. “Harper Creek was looking for a fill-in wrestling coach in 1968 as the middle of the school year approached. The AD contacted my college coach for references, and he gave them my name. I received a call to come coach for Harper Creek. This was supposed to be temporary, but it turned into a lifetime career.” 


Because of the opportunity presented by Harper Creek, Dave was doing what he wanted to do. He was in his element. “I continued to coach and work for the Job Corps but eventually quit the Job Corps to do my student teaching in physical education at Harper Creek High School,” Dave recalled. “My first season as wrestling coach was a success. My athletes wanted to win but were kind of soft. I brought some of my Job Corps kids to practice with them to help build their mental toughness. Through the season, they learned to become tough. We won the regionals meet that year. It was exciting as a first-year coach. I can still remember the names of all of the kids on this first team. The development of each of them as wrestlers carried over to other sports.” 


After Dave took over as wrestling coach, Harper Creek administrators also wanted to hire him as a teacher. “After I began coaching, I did my student teaching in the physical education department at the high school,” Dave explained. “The next school year, I started my first teaching position, traveling between Beadle Lake, Sonoma, and Wattles as the district's first elementary PE teacher. Other job duties included running the 6th-grade camp for Beadle Lake.” Dave met his wife, Julianne, while working as Harper Creek’s district elementary PE teacher. Julianne was a sixth-grade teacher at Beadle Lake at the time. “Julianne was an outstanding teacher and has received several awards as a teacher,” Dave said. “We were married in Las Vegas in July of 1975. I have one daughter, Julie Ann Sims, and a son, David G. Studer, and Julie has a son, David R. Studer. We have four grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.”


Wrestling has always been Dave’s passion, but he spent his teaching career coaching three sports seasons each year. “I was the JV football coach my first year of teaching. I coached football for about three years,” Dave shared. “I was also coaching boys' tennis in the spring. When Harper Creek added a girls’ tennis team for the fall, I quit football and started coaching girls’ tennis. I coached tennis up until I retired from teaching.” Dave enjoyed his role as boys and girls tennis coach and the success his teams experienced. “The last girls’ tennis team I coached had two girls receive full-ride scholarships,” Dave said. “Marie Cameron went to Grand Valley as their number one singles player all four years, and Nicky Schwarz attended Saginaw Valley, where she was their number one singles player all four years. In their senior year, they met at their college conference finals, where Nicky won.” Dave’s tennis teams won more regional championships through the years than his wrestling teams have won, with three for the boys’ program and two for the girls' program. “My last ten years of coaching tennis, the boys' team went to the state meet every year, and the girls went eight out of my last ten years,” he noted. “I had some success coaching tennis and really enjoyed it.” 


Dave started his tenure at Harper Creek as the district elementary PE teacher, but the bulk of his teaching career was spent at the secondary level. “After leaving the elementary schools, I split my time between the Middle School and High School, teaching physical education,” Dave explained. “Eventually, I was just teaching at the high school. I have also taught health and psychology. I taught weightlifting classes. I started the Bigger, Faster, Stronger Program at Harper Creek. For several years, I also taught gymnastics classes at the high school. Eventually, the equipment began to deteriorate and became unsafe. The district couldn’t afford to get new equipment, so gymnastics was dropped.” Dave is a firm believer that the skills involved in gymnastics are important for development in all sports. Through the years, he has incorporated the tumbling components of gymnastics into his wrestling practices.


For the bulk of his career, Dave’s schedule spilled over from the school day to evenings and weekends with athletic practices and competitions. He even took on a hobby beyond teaching and coaching that consumed much of his time. “I had always had a desire to raise cattle,” he explained. “Julianne and I owned a farm near Marshall, where I was able to raise a small number of cattle, but over time, this farm became too small. Eventually, we found a bigger farm near Albion and bought it. I still raise cattle today, but on a much smaller scale. For several years, I was teaching, coaching three sports seasons, and raising cattle.”


After more than three decades, Dave was ready for his life to slow down some, but not to go on full pause. “When I retired from teaching in 2001, I had spent about 35 years in this role,” Dave said. “I gave up coaching tennis, but still wanted to coach wrestling. I have seen over the years what wrestling and athletics can do for the development of kids. You are on your own on the mat, but you still have teammates. It gives me a sense of satisfaction to see young kids mature and graduate from high school and become active members of the community. I tell the kids that if they can wrestle, they can do anything in life. I’m grateful that I can still do this. I will be 82 in May. I know that coaching has kept me young. What I have noticed is that there is a community in wrestling. The kids compete on the mat, but they are a community off the mat.”


Like many coaches, Dave has witnessed the impact of his sport on future generations. Athletics teach our kids specific skills aligned to their sport, but the common thread for all sports is the life lessons that are learned that mold young athletes into productive adult workers, dedicated spouses, and loving, supportive parents. He has seen many of his former athletes come back to Harper Creek to make their mark on our community. This list includes Beadle Lake 2nd Grade teacher, Nicole Schwarz, one of Dave’s former tennis players. Former wrestlers for Dave who currently work for the district or have in the past include Joe Yurisich, who has served as teacher, administrator, and coach; Jim Robinson, who has coached and filled the role of maintenance supervisor for many years;  Larry Quick, who has been a teacher and coach for his alma mater since 1993, as well as Tony Evans and Joe Ramos who have come back to their home school to coach.


Dave’s passion for teaching and coaching has been the driving force for his years of dedication to Harper Creek, but there are other factors. “Next year will be my 60th year of coaching,” Dave shared. “I will keep doing it as long as I feel that I am making a difference for my athletes. My expectations for kids have never changed. I have had opportunities at both the high school and college level to leave, but I have always enjoyed it here and never really had any desire to pack my bags. I have had a lot of support from the administration, staff, and community here at Harper Creek.” 


Going to work each day is an integral part of life for most individuals in our society. If you hate your job, then your life will be one of misery. If your job does not bring you joy but is still tolerable, then your life can be manageable. If you are lucky enough to have a passion for your job and benefit from the joy that it brings you each day, then your life is blessed. Nearly 60 years into his career as a teacher and coach, it appears that Dave’s chronological age does not match his biological age. The joy that his job has given him is likely a major ingredient in Dave’s recipe for slowing the aging process. This joy has also kept him coming back every year for nearly six decades.











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Dave Studer Story

  For the Love of the Game “If you do what you love, you’ll never work a day in your life.” —-Mark Anthony A career of working with our yo...