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  • 2025 Senior World Championships: Day Six Session One Results

    Here are the results from the first session of day six at the 2025 Senior World Championships. We'll have a more thorough recap after the medal matches this afternoon.
     
    Women’s Freestyle
    68 kg
    Repechage: Kennedy Blades over Manola Skobelska (Ukraine)  9-2
    Bronze Medal Matchup: Kennedy Blades vs. Buse Tosun (Turkiye)
     
    Greco-Roman
    55 kg
    Round of 32: Jayden Raney over Koriun Sahradian (Ukraine)  2-1
    Round of 16: Jayden Raney over Sajjad Albidhan (Iraq)  Fall 4:26
    Quarterfinals: Eldaniz Azizli (Azerbaijan) over Jayden Raney  5-1
     
    77 kg
    Round of 32: Malkhas Amoyan (Armenia) over Kamal Bey  2-1
     
    82 kg
    Round of 32: Shahin Badaghimofrad (Qatar) over Beka Melelashvili  6-4
     
    130 kg
    Round of 32: Sergei Semenov (UWW - Russia) over Cohlton Schultz  5-2

    Earl Smith -

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    Tomasello/Bravo-Young to Take Place on RAF 02 Card

    The RAF 02 card is starting to come together as a second bout for the event was released on Wednesday. Bantamweight champion Nathan Tomasello will face a challenge from Mexican Olympian and two-time NCAA champion Roman Bravo-Young.
    RAF 02 will take place on October 25th at Penn State’s storied Rec Hall.
    It will be a homecoming, of sorts, for Bravo-Young, who starred for the Nittany Lions from 2018-23. Bravo-Young earned NCAA All-American honors on four occasions and was named an NWCA first-team All-American in 2020. In each of his final three seasons, Bravo-Young claimed Big Ten titles. During that span, he also made the NCAA finals each year, winning in 2022 and 2023. Both NCAA titles came at the expense of Oklahoma State’s Daton Fix.
    Speaking of Oklahoma State, after graduation, Bravo-Young moved out to Stillwater to train with OSU’s Cowboy RTC and represent Mexico on the international stage. Bravo-Young qualified for the 2024 Olympic Games and was recently in action at the World Championships. In Zagreb, Bravo-Young was a match away from earning a world medal, losing to Armenia’s Arsen Harutyunyan, the same opponent who beat him at the Olympics. At the World Championships, Bravo-Young picked up a win over 2017 NCAA champion Darian Cruz, who was representing Puerto Rico.
    Tomasello has the distinction of being the first wrestler to ever win a match (and a belt) in RAF competition. He held off 2023 NCAA runner-up, Matt Ramos, 4-3, to get the win and the bantamweight title.
    Tomasello was a 2015 NCAA champion for Ohio State. He got on the NCAA podium four times and never finished lower than third. In each of his four years with the Buckeyes, Tomasello captured a Big Ten championship. Tomasello was also an integral part of the Buckeyes NCAA title-winning squad in 2015.
    During his time at Ohio State, Tomasello never lost to a Penn State wrestler and finished with a 100-8 career record.
    As of now, the RAF 02 card looks like this:
    Bantamweight (135 lbs) - Nathan Tomasello (champ) vs. Roman Bravo-Young
    Heavyweight (Unlimited) - Mason Parris vs. Kyle Snyder

    Earl Smith -

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    Maroulis Uses Late Heroics to Win Fourth World Title

    The queen is back in her rightful place! Helen Maroulis climbed to the top of the World Championship podium for the fourth time in her illustrious career on Wednesday afternoon. She was one of two American women’s freestyle wrestlers to claim medals today in Zagreb, Croatia.
    Yesterday, we remarked on Maroulis’ dominant run to the gold medal match. She pinned all three of her opponents, two of which came in the opening period. The 57 kg gold medal bout was different. This contest saw her and North Korea’s Il Sim Son handfight and take little risk for much of the first four minutes of the bout. The North Korean held the lead. Both wrestlers earned points from the activity clock expiring on their opponents; however, Son was the last wrestler to receive a point and held criteria.
    Son got ahead on the scoreboard with about :90 seconds remaining in the bout when she forced Maroulis to step out. Once the match hit the one-minute mark, Maroulis turned up her attack rate and intensity. Son was still able to deny the American and hold her position for most of those 90 seconds.
    At the :20 mark, Maroulis nearly got to a single leg off of a reshot. After the pair got back to their feet, with time ticking down, Maroulis resorted to an inside trip, grabbed a leg, and hustled around the back of Son to secure the takedown with less than five seconds on the clock.
    Maroulis now has five gold medals combined from the Olympic/World Championships and 11 total. Her first world medal was a silver in 2012. Her first Senior world team appearance was in 2008. This is her first world championship since 2021. 
    Win or lose, Maroulis’ status as an all-time great in USA Wrestling was already cemented. The win just continued to build her legacy. At this point, we can have the “Greatest of All-Time” discussion, between her and six-time world champion Adeline Gray.
    At the other end of the spectrum, someone at the beginning of a promising career is the other medalist on the day, Kylie Welker at 76 kg. Welker was obviously still upset about her quarterfinal loss and took it out on Ukraine’s Anastasiya Alpyeyeva. The American jumped out to a quick lead with a takedown via a single leg and a gut wrench for two exposure points.
    In the second period, Alpyeyeva got on the board with two step-out points and looked like she might seize control of the match. Those thoughts were quashed as Welker side-stepped an Alpyeyeva leg attack and spun for an insurance takedown. Shortly after the takedown, time expired and Welker was the winner, 6-2.
    With her win, Welker claimed bronze medals in back-to-back World Championships. In 2024, Welker was a bronze medalist at the non-Olympic World Championships competing at 72 kg.
    Also wrestling for a bronze medal on Wednesday was Welker’s Iowa teammate, Macey Kilty. Kilty dropped a tight, 4-2 match to Mongolia’s Enkhjin Tuvshinjargal to finish fifth at the 65 kg weight class.
    One American woman will be in action on Thursday as Kennedy Blades is alive in the 68 kg repechage. Blades was stunned in the quarterfinals by Japan’s Ami Ishii, 12-1. She will need to win two matches tomorrow to come away with a bronze medal.
    In addition to Blades, the Greco-Roman competition will get underway and four weight classes will be contested. Jayden Raney (55 kg), Kamal Bey (77 kg), Beka Melelashvili (82 kg), and Cohlton Schultz (130 kg) take the mat tomorrow. 

     
    Women’s Freestyle
    53 kg
    Round of 32: Jin Zhang (China) over Felicity Taylor  10-0

     
    57 kg
    Gold Medal Match: Helen Maroulis over Il Sim Son (North Korea)  3-2

     
    62 kg
    Round of 32: Adaugo Nwachukwu over Selvi Ilyasoglu (Turkey)  7-3
    Round of 16: Adaugo Nwachukwu over Johanna Lindborg (Sweden)  13-6
    Quarterfinals: Orkhon Purevdorj (Mongolia) over Adaugo Nwachukwu  5-2

     
    65 kg
    Repechage: Macey Kilty over Grace Bullen (Norway)  Fall 4:38
    Bronze Medal Matchup: Enkhjin Tuvshinjargal (Mongolia) over Macey Kilty  4-2

     
    68 kg
    Round of 16: Kennedy Blades over Radhika Jaglan (India)  11-0
    Quarterfinals: Ami Ishii (Japan) over Kennedy Blades  12-1

     
    72 kg
    Round of 32: Alex Glaude over Svetlana Oknazarova (Uzbekistan)  Fall 3:30
    Round of 16: Alex Glaude over Masako Furuichi (Japan)  3-2
    Quarterfinals: Nurzat Nurtaeva (Azerbaijan) over Alex Glaude  8-4

     
    76 kg
    Repechage: Kylie Welker over Elmira Yasin (Turkiye)  10-0
    Bronze Medal Matchup: Kylie Welker over Anastasiya Alpyeyeva (Ukraine)  6-2

     
    Final Results
    50 kg
    Gold Medal Match: Myonggyong Won (North Korea) over Yu Zhang (China)  8-2
    Bronze Medal Match: Elizaveta Smirnova (UWW - Russia) over Remina Yoshimoto (Japan)  3-3
    Bronze Medal Match: Evin Demirhan (Turkiye) over Munkhnar Byambasuren (Mongolia)  3-2
     
    57 kg
    Gold Medal Match: Helen Maroulis (USA) over Il Sim Son (North Korea)  3-2
    Bronze Medal Match: Olga Khoroshavtseva (UWW - Russia) over Himeka Tokuhara (Japan)  4-1
    Bronze Medal Match: Kexin Hong (China) over Iryna Kurachkina (UWW - Belarus)  10-0
     
    65 kg
    Gold Medal Match: Miwa Morikawa (Japan) over Alina Kasabieva (UWW - Russia)  8-0
    Bronze Medal Match: Irina Ringaci (Moldova) over Iryna Koliadenko (Ukraine)  6-3
    Bronze Medal Match: Enkhjin Tuvshinjargal (Mongolia) over Macey Kilty (USA)  4-2

     
    76 kg
    Gold Medal Match: Genesis Reasco Valdez (Ecuador) over Aiperi Medet Kyzy (Kyrgyzstan)  4-2
    Bronze Medal Match: Kylie Welker (USA) over Anastasiya Alpyeyeva (Ukraine)  6-2
    Bronze Medal Match: Milaimys Marin Potrille (Cuba) over Priya Malik (India)  10-0

     
    Thursday’s Gold Medal Matches
    53 kg: Lucia Yepez Guzman (Ecuador) vs. Haruna Okuno (Japan)
    62 kg: Sakura Motoki (Japan) vs. Ok Ju Kim (North Korea)
    68 kg: Ami Ishii (Japan) vs. Yuliana Yaneva (Bulgaria)
    72 kg: Alla Belinska (Ukraine) vs. Nesrin Bas (Turkiye)

    Earl Smith -

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    • 2025 Senior World Championships: Day Six Session One Results

      2025 Senior World Championships: Day Six Session One Results

    • Tomasello/Bravo-Young to Take Place on RAF 02 Card

      Tomasello/Bravo-Young to Take Place on RAF 02 Card

    • Maroulis Uses Late Heroics to Win Fourth World Title

      Maroulis Uses Late Heroics to Win Fourth World Title

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