Here's our list of top ten freshmen of the past ten years.
Honorable Mention:
Hunter Stieber (Ohio State)
Logan Storley (Minnesota)
James Green (Nebraska)
Devin Carter (Virginia Tech)
Alan Waters (Missouri)
Quentin Wright (Penn State)
Kellen Russell (Michigan)
Coleman Scott (Oklahoma State)
Cashe Quiroga (Purdue)
10. Nick Gwiazdowski (Binghamton/North Carolina State)
Summary: Winning as a freshman is always difficult, but special consideration has to be paid to any wrestler who can come out of high school at 18 and mix it up with 285-pound goliaths for five months. Nick Gwiazdowski was as unlikely an All-American as there ever was when he took home a plaque in 2012, and his performance against bigger and stronger men proved that true freshman success could stretch to heavyweights.
9. Cam Tessari (Ohio State/Hofstra)
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8. Tyler Caldwell (Oklahoma/Oklahoma State)
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7. Lance Palmer (Ohio State)
Summary: Lance Palmer, a four-time Ohio state champion, was a top ten wrestler all season, and at NCAAs found himself facing Matt Coughlin (Indiana) in the quarterfinals. He won 2-1, and thought he'd drop his semifinal match to Josh Churella (Michigan), 5-2. Palmer would go on to earn a respectable fourth-place finish. Palmer was tremendous on the mat, which allowed him to make a smooth transition to Division I college wrestling.
6. J.P. O'Connor (Harvard)
Summary: Wrestling in the shadow of Harvard NCAA champion Jesse Jantzen could have been crippling for four-time New York state champion J.P. O'Connor. But by the end of the 2007 season it was obvious that O'Connor had learned that you could win an NCAA title by being better on the mat. With arguably the best ride in the history of NCAA wrestling, O'Connor managed his way into sixth place in a loaded 149-pound weight class in 2007.
5. Nico Megaludis (Penn State)
Summary: A surprise NCAA finalist two seasons ago, Nico Megaludis has since become the type of top-tier wrestler every program wants. He's fun to watch, aggressive on his feet, and puts on stunning displays of flexibility and creativity in shot defense. Whether he's hitting the splits, or working counter-offense, Megaludis was, and still is, a top contender.
4. Troy Nickerson (Cornell)
Summary: The first five-time state champion from New York State, there was plenty of hype following Troy Nickerson to Ithaca in 2005-06. For the most part, Nickerson delivered on that hype. Under the guidance of Cornell head coach Rob Koll and then-assistant Steve Garland, Nickerson utilized a brutal top game and aggressive counter offense to make a run to the NCAA finals.
3. Andrew Howe (Wisconsin/Oklahoma)
Summary: Though he's now in his sixth season and growing roots at the NCAA tournament, there was a time (last decade) when Andrew Howe was fresh on the scene. A Donny Pritzlaff duplicate, Howe excelled at Wisconsin in his true freshman season by doing what Donny had done years earlier -- working the head, keeping position, and giving up stunningly few points. He's the favorite to win in 2014, and with two championships and four top-three NCAA finishes, Howe will go down as one of the best of all time.
2. Dustin Schlatter (Minnesota)
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1. Kyle Dake (Cornell)
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