| Lincoln College Wrestling finds 
			new life at Lincoln Arts Institute 
 [August 18, 2025] 
            The spirit of Lincoln College 
			wrestling is finding new life in downtown Lincoln. At a recent 
			alumni reunion, former wrestlers and coaches announced plans for a 
			new space: the Red Panda Wrestling Club.
 
 On Friday, August 15, the Lincoln Arts Institute was filled with 
			stories of old matches, tools, and mats to wrestle on. Old teammates 
			met up to team up again and put together the new area for the 
			wrestling club. In the hot summer heat members worked to hang up 
			wooden boards and drag in supplies for the new room.
 
 The owner of the building Jason Hoffman, who coached at Lincoln 
			College from 2005 until 2018, said the idea came gradually. “The 
			whole purpose was me getting back into it [wrestling] and to kind of 
			open the space to the community in some ways,” he said. He explained 
			that the room won’t be fully open to the public until next year at 
			the earliest, once the local high school and junior high wrestling 
			seasons wrap up.
 
 The project took shape over conversations with Olympic competitor 
			and Hall of Fame coach Dave Klemm, who led Lincoln College wrestling 
			for decades. Klemm’s legacy in the sport is substantial: a four-time 
			NCAA All-American at Eastern Illinois, a member of the 1979 USA 
			World Team, and later a coach who produced 58 All-Americans and nine 
			national champions during his years at Lincoln College. He was 
			inducted into the NJCAA Hall of Fame in 2003 and received the 
			Lifetime Service to Wrestling award in 2012.
 
			 
			 Klemm also safeguarded much of 
			Lincoln College’s wrestling history when the school closed in 2022. 
			“Coach Klemm already had the trophies that you saw up there when 
			they closed, he was able to get most of that stuff,” Hoffman 
			explained. “Now, the boards that we hung, they were still up on the 
			wall [in the college] until recently. We went back into the college 
			to get those down.” Those boards, listing generations of wrestlers’ 
			names, hold special meaning for Hoffman. “There’s an attachment in 
			that way to those names that are up on the wall. They each have a 
			story,” he said.
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				 At first, the third floor of the Arts Institute was discussed as 
				a possible gallery or even a small museum. “We talked about 
				maybe just setting it up as a wrestling museum of the college,” 
				Hoffman recalled. But over the last six months, the idea 
				expanded into a full wrestling room, blending history and 
				practice.
 
 The unusual name of the club comes from Hoffman’s interest in 
				conservation. He recently submitted a proposal to Miller Park 
				Zoo in Bloomington that tied in the story of Lincoln College 
				wrestling with the protection of red pandas, an endangered 
				species. The name is both a playful mascot and a reminder that 
				the club hopes to give back beyond the mat, connecting athletics 
				with awareness of conservation causes.
 
 The club will remain in its early stages for now, but Hoffman 
				hopes it will grow into a nonprofit open to wrestlers of all 
				ages. “It’s going to take some time for that to evolve as far as 
				opening it to the public,” he said, but the foundation has been 
				laid.
 
 For Lincoln College alumni, the Red Panda Wrestling Club 
				represents more than mats and memorabilia. “Wrestling is a very 
				important sport and group. It’s like a family,” Klemm said.
 [Sophia Larimore] 
 
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