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Funeral ads on World champ stream
MPhillips replied to Dark Energy's topic in International Wrestling
Hookers, liquor and blow... -
I agree they should get rid of him
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When I get back from vaca, I am going to break your heart. I take no pleasure in this and did not go looking for it. So spend the next week getting your shots in. I wll not defend myself (even if pinfall is beautiful).
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That has never stopped an opinion...
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I get it, but at the same time we have another thread where some people are diagnosing Spencer Lee's problem as going too hard for too long. Having dealt with burnout as a distance swimmer, I am of the opinion that he would be fine pacing himself.
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Sounds like International Metcalf syndrome. I still like Spencer's chances to be our guy in 2028 and a World medalist before then. Plenty of time.
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I heard Ionel has a new pickleball training partner. Coincidence?
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Good plan!
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But ... if he wants to get a good date to prom maybe focus on the high schoolers.
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But he didn't find it ... why ... because it doesn't exist except in Wkn's fantasy data world.
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Do you see Spencer Lee leaving Iowa?
Interviewed_at_Weehawken replied to H82Lose's topic in College Wrestling
Funny, I heard Zahid say the same. He prefers to play pickleball. -
go to the 40 second mark and let it play….
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Someone compared it to when Dake got buzzsawed by Kadi at the 2020ne olympics and was left scratching his head. I would strongly agree with that. I also think that if they meet again, Lee will have a better gameplan. I'm not getting off the Lee bandwagon just yet.
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Why We Suck at Debate (And How to Do It Better)
jross replied to jross's topic in Non Wrestling Topics
Are you talking about CK or all conservatives? CK was very intelligent. He leveraged data all the time; often correct and often wrong. I'll grant you that he is not known for admitting his mistakes and sources after the fact. The claim about context is important because its relevancy to honest arguments. The claim about clinging to veracity of claims and not admitting their error is a human condition rather than conservative condition. There are so many instances of people being proven wrong with data and nothing comes beyond insults, strawmen, and silence. -
And I'm proud of it.
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Azarpira vs kyle Will be another low score match. A late takedown will decide the winner !!
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An otherwise rough day for the US men’s and women’s freestyle team at the 2025 World Championships ended on a spectacularly high note as Trent Hidlay staged a remarkable comeback to win the world title at 92 kg. In addition, veteran Kyle Snyder locked up his 10th world/Olympic medal and will wrestle for the gold medal at 97 kg in Tuesday’s set of gold medal matches. Snyder is a story for another day as Monday belonged to the NC State alum, Hidlay. Wrestling in his first Senior World Championship event, Hidlay was rarely challenged on his way to the finals. Standing between him and a gold medal was Amanula Gadzhimagomedov, representing the UWW/Russian team. Gadzhimagomedov was also making his Senior world debut. The overarching theme of the finals contest was Hidlay’s aggressiveness and his control of the action. As he’s been known to do, early in the first period, Hidlay used an underhook to get to a leg attack. He wasn’t able to finish cleanly and Gadzhimagomedov chest wrapped him for four points, plus two more later in the same sequence. Less than :30 into the bout, Hidlay trailed 6-0. A half minute later, Hidlay got on the scoreboard by blasting through Gadzhimagomedov after setting the hold up with his signature underhook. In the final minute of the opening stanza, Hidlay went for a double leg and was exposed again for four points with a chest wrap. Initially, Hidlay was given two points for exposure himself, making the score 10-4. After Hidlay’s corner challenged the exchange, the score was adjusted to 10-2 in the Russian wrestler’s favor. Facing match termination with another takedown for the Russian, Hidlay stayed aggressive and struck with an ankle pick. Once again, Gadzhimagomedov tried a chest wrap. This time, Hidlay was given two points for the takedown. This sequence was challenged by the Russian corner. Ultimately, the original decision was upheld and Hidlay was awarded a point for the lost challenge, making the score 10-5 heading into the break. One of the hallmarks of Hidlay’s run to the finals was his incredible pace. That proved to be the difference-maker in the second period as he never wore down. With about 75 seconds remaining in the contest, Hidlay was able to finish a double leg without any questions about back exposure. The hold cut his deficit to 10-7. As the clock moved under a minute remaining in the match, Hidlay powered his way through the Russian with an underhook to a knee pick. The pair went out of bounds and Hidlay found himself trailing 10-9. Right the :30 second mark of the match, Hidlay executed a duckunder to a double. Once again, as he was working to finish the takedown, Gadzhimagomedov tried a chest wrap. This time it was scored four points for Hidlay. For the first time, he was ahead, 13-10. The Russian corner was unable to challenge since their first period challenge was lost. Hidlay was able to avoid Gadzhimagomedov during the final seconds of the bout and became a world champion. It’s an incredible achievement for any wrestler, but even more unique because Hidlay never was able to make it to the top of the podium during his storied career at NC State. He also earned a pair of age group world medals, but neither were gold. Hidlay’s passion and his never-say-die attitude are a personification of the positive stereotypes we have about American wrestling. Those traits have also made him one of the fan favorites for USA wrestling. In other news, Penn State senior Levi Haines also wrestled in the gold medal match on Monday. Unfortunately, Haines was not able to solve the hand fighting of his opponent, Greece’s Georgios Kougioumtsidis. Typically, Haines is able to wear down his opponents with his hands and it leads to other openings. This time, Kougioumtsidis controlled the Penn State star. The final score reads 3-2, but Kougioumtsidis stopped wrestling in the final few seconds and Haines got a takedown. This was the first world championship in men’s freestyle for Greece. Haines comes away from his first Senior World Championship event with a silver medal. He was a member of the 2021 Cadet World team and did not earn any hardware at that tournament. As mentioned above, Kyle Snyder will be seeking his third world title and first since 2022 on Tuesday. Snyder put together a methodical 9-1 victory over Japan’s rising star Arash Yoshida. Earlier this year, Yoshida defeated Snyder at the Albanian Ranking Series event. In order to win his fourth gold, Snyder will have to defeat Iran’s Amirali Azarpira. Azarpira has two wins over Snyder, the most important coming in 2024 in the bronze medal match at the Olympic Games. The Iranian pulled one of the biggest upsets of the tournament when he knocked off World/Olympic champion Akhmed Tazhudinov (Bahrain) in the semifinals, 5-2. The other American to wrestle for a medal on Monday was David Carr at 74 kg. He became the latest American to fall victim to the late match exploits of Russian superstar Zaurbek Sidakov. With Carr lead 2-1 with under :10 remaining in the bout, Sidakov drug out of a front head lock and pushed Carr out of bounds for a step out point. That point tied the match at two, but Sidakov held criteria. That’s the way the match would end and Carr came up a match shy of a medal in his Senior debut. Finally, on the men’s freestyle side, Real Woods will be in tomorrow’s repechage. He’ll need to win three matches to claim a bronze medal. His journey through repechage will start with a match against Kyrgyzstan’s Ikromzhon Khadzhimuradov. Also on Monday, the first two women’s weights got underway. Unfortunately, both Cristelle Rodriguez (55 kg) and Jacarra Winchester (59 kg), were beaten in the first matches of the day. Rodriguez fell 6-3 to U23 world champion Andreea Ana (Romania) and Winchester was pinned by China’s Hong Liang. Unfortunately, neither wrestler made the gold medal match at their respective weights, so both Americans have been eliminated. Men’s freestyle 65 kg Round of 32: Real Woods over Maxim Sacultan (Moldova) 14-2 Round of 16: Rahman Amouzad (Iran) over Real Woods 12-1 74 kg Repechage: David Carr over Tugsjargal Erdenbat (Mongolia) 10-0 Bronze Medal Match: Zaurbek Sidakov (UWW - Russia) over David Carr 2-2 79 kg Gold Medal Match: Georgios Kougioumtsidis (Greece) over Levi Haines 3-2 92 kg Gold Medal Match: Trent Hidlay over Amanula Gadzhimagomedov (UWW - Russia) 13-10 97 kg Round of 16: Kyle Snyder over Cristian Sarco (Venezuela) 10-0 Quarterfinals: Kyle Snyder over Zbigniew Baranowski (Poland) 5-0 Semifinal Matchup: Kyle Snyder vs. Arash Yoshida (Japan) Women’s Freestyle 55 kg Andreea Ana (Romania) over Cristelle Rodriguez 6-3 59 kg Hong Liang (China) over Jacarra Winchester Fall 2:05 Final Results Men’s Freestyle 57 kg Gold Medal Match: Chongsong Han (North Korea) over Bekzat Almaz Uulu (Kyrgyzstan) 12-9 Bronze Medal Match: Arsen Harutyunyan (Armenia) over Roman Bravo-Young (Mexico) 7-4 Bronze Medal Match: Gulomjon Abdullaev (Uzbekistan) over Vladimir Egorov (North Macedonia) 3-1 74 kg Gold Medal Match: Kota Takahashi (Japan) over Chermen Valiev (Albania) Injury Default Bronze Medal Match: Zaurbek Sidakov (UWW - Russia) over David Carr (USA) 2-2 Bronze Medal Match: Taimurax Salkazanov (Slovakia) over Yones Emami (Iran) 3-1 79 kg Gold Medal Match: Georgios Kougioumtsidis (Greece) over Levi Haines (USA) 3-2 Bronze Medal Match: Mohammad Nokhodilarimi (Iran) over Dzhabrail Gadzhiev (Azerbaijan) 4-2 Bronze Medal Match: Khidir Saipudinov (Bahrain) over Suldkhuu Olonbayar (Mongolia) 9-2 92 kg Gold Medal Match: Trent Hidlay (USA) over Amanula Gadzhimagomedov (UWW - Russia) 13-10 Bronze Medal Match: Osman Nurmagomedov (Azerbaijan) over Miriani Maisuradze (Georgia) 5-1 Bronze Medal Match: Amirhossein Firouzpourbandpei (Iran) over Kamil Kurguliyev (Ukraine) Fall 1:51 Tuesday's Gold Medal Matches Men's Freestyle 65 kg: Kotaro Kiyooka (Japan) vs. Rahman Amouzad (Iran) 97 kg: Kyle Snyder (USA) vs. Amirali Azarpira (Iran) Women's Freestyle 55 kg: Kyong Ryong Oh (North Korea) vs. Ekaterina Verbina (UWW - Russia) 59 kg: Sakura Onishi (Japan) vs. Mariia Vynnyk (Ukraine)
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Spencer is incredibly strong, but at this level he seems not very flexible nor very quick. I think it just gets harder for him as each year passes. I'd bet against him being our 2028 rep.
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So was the Starocci thing a fluke...???
Antitroll2828 replied to The_KC_Godfather's topic in College Wrestling
No The article came out 6 weeks after graduation and the writer hasn’t graduated from Penn state and resigned from his position the day the article went out -
IMO it’s not about being in a hurry or not. It’s about continuing to develop or not. Based on what little I know, it seems like a top-five-in-the-world talent would benefit more from training with other elite wrestlers rather than high schoolers.
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Why We Suck at Debate (And How to Do It Better)
jross replied to jross's topic in Non Wrestling Topics
"That was actually the best point somebody made..." -
In real time I didn't think Greece did anything wrong at the end of the match other than stop wrestling a second too early and instead of giving 1 point on a step out, gave up two and looked like he was could have been sucked back for 2 more if another second was on the clock.
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@nhs67 You officially have a stalker...
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Why We Suck at Debate (And How to Do It Better)
JimmySpeaks replied to jross's topic in Non Wrestling Topics
I believe you’ve got a few questions from me that went unanswered from our last discussion. I’ll get on this one when those have all been taken care of. -
Man, you guys just ran away with the world title, and it isn't particularly close.... and you're calling for the coach's head? Tough crowd! :]