Through his father’s death and battle with leukemia, wrestler Aidan Halloran never gave up

ORDWAY — The nurses at Children’s Hospital Colorado wanted to see if Aidan Halloran could sit up in bed.

The Crowley County teen was determined to do more than that. He wanted to re-learn to walk, right then and there.

“Let’s do it now. Let’s go,” Aidan told the nurses as he rose from the same bed he’d just spent weeks laying in while on life support.

He stood up, and took one step. There were still many more hurdles to come. But after being put into a coma and nearly dying multiple times, Aidan had already cleared the most important one: Regaining the resolve to put himself back together.

“He’s been like that ever since,” Aidan’s mom, Jessica Halloran, said. “He wouldn’t ever stop trying to get his life back, because he lost a year and a half. He spent so much time just trying to survive and make it through each day.”

Now Aidan, a senior 157-pounder set to compete in this weekend’s state wrestling tournament at Ball Arena, is on the other side of a trying three years that tested him physically and emotionally.

He lost his father to a car crash as a sophomore. Tore his knee in the state quarterfinals a few months later. Then that summer, another big blow: the start of a long battle with leukemia that pushed him to the brink.

Through it all, he never stopped thinking about getting back on the mat.

“It all really put into perspective the value of every day,” Aidan said. “It gave me more perspective about not just my family members’ mortality, but my own. And about how much life meant to me and that every day is a blessing and a gift, and that I need to make the most of it.

“Wrestling gave me hope, and it gave me a tangible objective to reach for. It was something to make me never give up.”

Crowley County High School wrestler Aidan Halloran, center, jogs around the mats during practice at Ward Middle School in Ordway on Thursday, Feb. 8, 2024. Fellow wrestlers, John Rusher, left, Harley Rusher, second from left, Derreck Buford, fourth from left, and Keegan Halloran, fifth from left, stretch. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)
Crowley County High School wrestler Aidan Halloran, center, jogs around the mats during practice at Ward Middle School in Ordway on Thursday, Feb. 8, 2024. Fellow wrestlers, John Rusher, left, Harley Rusher, second from left, Derreck Buford, fourth from left, and Keegan Halloran, fifth from left, stretch. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)

Losing his father

A former soccer player and ballet dancer, Aidan didn’t start wrestling until seventh grade, after his family moved from Pennsylvania.

Right away, he showed promise in football and on the mat, where he qualified for state as a freshman at Crowley County High.

But his life changed Dec. 15, 2021, when his father, Randal, was killed in a single-vehicle crash on Highway 71. Randal’s sudden death hit the Halloran family — Jessica, Aidan and his siblings Curran, now 19, Keegan, 16, and Brielle, 13 — hard.

Aidan took a month off from wrestling. His dad’s passing affected him in ways he couldn’t communicate at the time, as Aidan’s friend Tel Buford explained.

“He withdrew, and he wouldn’t talk to many people,” Buford said. “… Even I didn’t see him a lot during that time. But he knew his dad would want him to be on the mat. That drove him back out there.”

By the time Aidan made his way back to state, he was cruising, having just won the regional title at 145 pounds with a 22-7 record. One particular memory of his father — when Randal came to Aidan’s wrestling tournament days before his death — motivated him.

“If he didn’t get back to wrestling, he would’ve been swallowed in his grief,” said Allie Buford, a Crowley County wrestling mom and friend of the family. “So his mentality was, ‘Alright, let’s wrestle.’ What other choice did he have? It was keep going, or give up.”

Crowley County High School wrestler Aidan Halloran leaves his advanced algebra class in Ordway on Thursday, Feb. 8, 2024. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)
Crowley County High School wrestler Aidan Halloran leaves his advanced algebra class in Ordway on Thursday, Feb. 8, 2024. (Photo by Andy Cross/The Denver Post)

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