The sound of bodies slamming the mat and the roar of wrestling fans cheering last-second takedowns aren't inherently associated with Eden Prairie athletics.
Eagles coach Scot Davis plans to change that.
As the nation's winningest high school wrestling coach, Davis has returned to Minnesota in hopes to build a program that has arguably the most raw resources at its disposal: numbers, facilities and a growing championship culture in the halls.
"Here, there's so many good sports, and wrestling's not the sport. Changing that is something that's going to take time; it doesn't just happen in a year or two," Davis said.
Davis has the pedigree to build a program. He won more than 1,000 dual meets in a career spanning 35 years and five high schools. Most of those victories, along with two state championships, came during a 25-year run at Owatonna.
He retired after the 2010-2011 season amid allegations that he tried to recruit a wrestler from California. The matter resulted in him getting suspended from coaching, including a year-long ban in Minnesota. He spent that year as the wrestling coach at a high school in Kalispell, Mont.
Now at Eden Prairie, Davis' challenge is building up wrestling and getting more wrestlers, which brings more talent, victories and enthusiasm. Davis wants to create a prideful wrestling culture, focused on self-improvement and dedication. Then, the championships and accolades will come.
"You earn everything you achieve in the sport of wrestling," he said. "There's no money, it's just self-satisfaction and what you achieve with work ethic. It's about shaping lives and building kids and helping them become better at what they do."