Erik Wince enters his sixth year as head coach of the Fort Hays State men's wrestling program in 2025-26. Wince came to FHSU from NCAA Division I affiliate American University in Washington D.C., where he served as assistant coach in 2019-20. Prior to that, he was head coach at Greensboro College, a Division III program in Greensboro, North Carolina, for four years.
In his first five years at Fort Hays State, Wince has coached six All-America performances in A.J. Cooper (285 pounds, 2021 and 2022), Marty Verhaeghe (184 pounds, 2022), Tereus Henry (197 pounds, 2023 and 2025) and Cade Lindsey (174 pounds, 2023) in addition to nine national qualifiers. His wrestlers have picked up six All-MIAA honors over the last five seasons. Wince guided the Tigers to 19 dual wins over his first five seasons, including six wins over nationally ranked teams. He has coached 28 NWCA Scholar All-America selections, 88 MIAA Academic Honor Roll honorees, seven MIAA Academic Excellence Award recipients, three MIAA Scholar-Athlete Award winners and five CSC Academic All-District honorees.
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In 2019-20, Wince helped American University produce four national qualifiers for the NCAA Division I championships. Three of the four held national rankings entering the championships, which ultimately was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Two of the wrestlers earned All-America Honorable Mention status by the NWCA following the season, while three members of the team earned NWCA Scholar All-America honors. The program was strong academically, producing a team GPA of 3.55, which was second-highest among NCAA Division I programs. At American University he assisted head coach Teague Moore, who has built a strong program athletically and academically for nearly a decade.
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Wince was the first head coach in the history of the Greensboro College wrestling program, which began in 2015-16. In his four years of building Greensboro’s program from 2015-2019, Wince coached one All-American, three conference champions, and multiple academic all-conference performers and individually ranked wrestlers.
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Before beginning his head coaching journey, Wince served two assistant coaching stints at Davidson College in North Carolina from 2005-2008 and 2012-2015. The pair of three-year stints as an assistant at Davidson bookended a four-year role as head coach of the Forsyth County Day School, a prep school in Lewisville, North Carolina. During his second stint at Davidson, Wince helped the program produce four NCAA national qualifiers. At Forsyth County Day School, he coached two national prep All-Americans, multiple individual state champions, and led the program to three consecutive team state championships. While serving at Forsyth, Wince was named the Piedmont Athletic Conference of Independent Schools (PACIS) Wrestling Coach of the Year.
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Wince was the USA Wrestling State Chairman for North Carolina for seven years. He also served as the national team head coach for the Junior National Duals (2006), Cadet Nationals (2007), and Junior Nationals (2008-10). Wince served as coach of the North Carolina USA Wrestling National Teams from 2004-2016.
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Before beginning his coaching career, Wince attended Gardner Webb University in Boiling Springs, North Carolina, where he earned a Bachelor's Degree in Physical Education in 2004. He was a four-year member of the Gardner-Webb wrestling team and finished his senior year with a 27-5 record. This earned Wince the University's Male Athlete of the Year and the University's Outstanding Wrestler Award in 2003, while becoming the program’s first athlete to qualify for an NCAA Division I Tournament since the institution changed their affiliation to Division I in 2001.
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Wince is a native of Lattimore, North Carolina. He and his wife Hannah, who is a native of Wilson, Kansas, have two daughters, Kersee and Sydney. Wince is the 14th head coach in the history of the Tiger men's wrestling program.
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