Daniel Greg Kerkvliet is getting restless.
The state's top high school wrestler was training for the World Junior Wrestling Championships in Trnava, Slovakia, in September, determined to rid himself of the unsatisfactory flavor of a runner-up finish at the Cadet World Championships in July, when the unthinkable happened.
Practicing a single-leg takedown, he had his partner hooked when his left knee caved in. A torn ACL. A change in plans.
"They had me stay home," said Kerkvliet, a 6-3, 240-pound trunk of sinewy strength. "I was hoping to right a wrong and prove that I'm better than I showed at the Cadet Juniors. It was pretty disappointing."
Priorities changed quickly. At one time this fall, it was believed that Kerkvliet, a three-time state champion at Simley, was done with high school wrestling and would spend his senior season training at the Olympic Training Center (OTC) in Colorado Springs.
Now, he's working out in the Simley wrestling room, hoping to get back on the mat in January with a goal of leading the Spartans to their first state team title since he was a middle-schooler.
"I think we've got a really good team," he said. "And we haven't done that since I was in eighth grade."
Mostly, however, Kerkvliet is just itching to get back out and show his stuff. Called by Flowrestling.org "the No. 1 pound-for-pound recruit in the Class of 2019," wrestling is not only his passion, it runs through his veins.