Friday, June 12, 2026
48.0°F

Friends, coaches and teammates remember Jaeger Hall

JOSH McDONALD | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 1 hour, 43 minutes AGO
by JOSH McDONALD
Staff Writer | June 12, 2026 1:07 AM

The Silver Valley was rocked in late April when news broke that Jaeger Hall had passed away following a tragic accident at his home.

Just 20 years old, Hall was attending Missouri Baptist University in Creve Coeur, Mo., where he was a scholarship wrestler at the time of his passing.

I didn’t know Jaeger very well … or at least, I didn’t think I did.

As a local broadcaster with Wildcats Live, I had the privilege of calling every home football game he ever played. I watched him make countless big plays and haul in numerous touchdowns. In my day job with the Shoshone News-Press, I was there when he and his teammates won the 3A Golf Championship in 2021. And because I’m a basketball coach at Kellogg High, he was always one of those kids around the gym during practices and games — a wrestler who still showed up to support his basketball-playing friends.

The truth is, in communities like ours, you come to know people in pieces before you ever realize how much of them you’ve actually seen.

Jaeger Hall had a lot of friends because he made friends with everyone he met. People gravitated toward him because he had a way of making everyone around him feel included.

Kellogg football coach and principal Dan Davidian said Hall was “the definition of coachable.”

“He always did what we asked him to do,” Davidian said. “More importantly, he was a high-quality kid. He had his fun and liked to talk smack, but he was a great teammate, and he ultimately cared about those around him.”

Kolter Wood had a front-seat view for all of it. As one of Jaeger's closest friends, he was usually right there in the thick of things when it came to Jaeger.

The memories are almost too numerous to count, and Kolter admits that he's had a tough time over the past few weeks revisiting these highlights.

He recalled the epic party up French Gulch before their senior year, where a 32-team pong tournament featuring kids from St. Maries, Coeur d'Alene, Bonners Ferry, Timberlake and everywhere else, ended with Jaeger taking over in the finals like he couldn’t miss; the early mornings spent hunting and fishing, when they’d go hours without seeing anything but still come home with stories; and, most of all, the wrestling room, where the two pushed each other from the time they were kids, growing side by side into the competitors — and people — they became.

"Our life together was full of memories because he made everything we did together fun," Kolter said.

Former Kellogg High School wrestling coach Scott Miller said Hall’s character revealed itself most during the adversity of his senior season.

“After suffering a heartbreaking semifinal loss at the state tournament, Jaeger faced a choice between giving up or continuing to fight,” Miller said. “True to who he was, he chose the harder path.”

“Wearing Juddy’s (older brother, Judson) old singlet, he returned to the mat, wrestled with courage and pride, and helped secure Kellogg’s first team trophy since 2001.”

Jaeger was part of several group interviews I conducted with Kellogg athletes over the years, many alongside people like Riply and Kolby Luna or large groups of wrestlers. But I only interviewed Jaeger one-on-one a single time.

It was the week after he won the state wrestling championship during his junior year, and despite my best efforts to get him to talk about himself, he simply wouldn’t do it. Instead, he went out of his way to credit the people he believed helped elevate him to the top of the podium.

Assistant wrestling coach Travis Berti recalled Hall’s decision to continue competing despite a knee injury during his senior season.

“In true Jaeger fashion, he was the first Kellogg athlete on the mat warming up for the next round and set the tone for his team to finish the tournament strong,” Berti said.

And when he wasn’t giving others credit for his success, he was giving glory to God — a faith he seemed far more grounded in than many of his contemporaries.

“God was with me through all of this,” Hall said of winning the tournament. “I try to pray before every match and all I ask is that God works through me — because I know that I couldn’t have done it without him.”

On Saturday, hundreds — if not thousands — will gather inside Andrews Gymnasium at Kellogg High School to remember Jaeger Hall.

This quality young man was more than beloved. He left a lasting impact on everyone he came into contact with. No matter how limited.



Remembering Jaeger Hall

“Jaeger was a great friend and teammate who everyone respected. He was genuine, hardworking, and always positive to be around. At only 20 years old, he made a lasting impact on so many people. He’ll always be remembered for the character he was and the way he treated everyone around him. Rest easy, Jaeg, You’ll never be forgotten.” — Riply & Kolby Luna

“We sat down as a family, reminiscing about Jaeger and realized that Jaeger was a pain in the butt whose mouth got him and us in trouble (more than once) but who we loved deeply and miss dearly. The world will not be the same without you Jaeger Clark Hall. May you be the sting pong champion of Heaven!” — Cory, Nicole, Andrew, and Porter Lewis



    Jaeger Hall appreciated nature and looked for adventure whenever and wherever he could.
 
 
    Jaeger Hall won a 132-lb state championship in 2023. A three-year wrestling team captain, he is among Kellogg High School's most decorated athletes. In 2021, he was part of a state championship golf team.
 
 
    Even at an early age, Jaeger Hall was nothing but spunk and tenacity.
 
 




 


ARTICLES BY JOSH MCDONALD

Friends, coaches and teammates remember Jaeger Hall
June 12, 2026 1:07 a.m.

Friends, coaches and teammates remember Jaeger Hall

Friends, coaches and teammates remember Jaeger Hall
However you knew him
June 12, 2026 1 a.m.

However you knew him

Friends, coaches, and teammates remember Jaeger Hall