Gordon Bierschenk was in the Army's Special Forces and received a Silver Star during the Gulf War. He started as an enlisted man and retired as a major in military intelligence. He now teaches in that field at Fort Leonard Wood in Missouri.
Bierschenk's son, also Gordon, was asked if Dad was hard-nosed around the home front.
"He's not a loud person, but he did let you know the meaning of hard work," the younger Gordon said. "We were at Fort Bragg when I was in grade school. I think we had the biggest yard in the state.
"My job on Saturdays was to rake that lawn. I don't know if you're aware, but in North Carolina, it's all pine needles. My friends would ride past on their bikes and say, 'Gordie, come on, let's play.' I'd say, 'I have to rake these dang pine needles.' "
Bierschenk smiled at the memory of those moments and said: "I didn't like my father much as I raked for five, six hours, but it taught me you have to take care of your responsibilities."
He learned another lesson years later in the University of Minnesota wrestling room.
He had been a high school wrestler in Waynesville, Mo. "I was completely unsatisfied with the way I finished my senior year," he said. "I didn't even place in the state tournament. I wanted to prove to myself that I was better than that. And there was no wrestling program to top Minnesota for testing yourself."
The Gophers have an open walk-on program and Bierschenk did so after enrolling for fall semester in 2003. On Day 1 in the wrestling room, he was put on the mat with Jake Volkmann.