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  2. He is possibility white but 110% going to die.
  3. Frank was asking if there are ways to bring in more international wrestlers today, not 10 years ago. Re-read the last paragraph of the post you just quoted.
  4. yes, everything over $600.
  5. ... would have to be a freestyle bag
  6. I think in basketball the loophole was to compensate international players with "no labor" gigs, like dropping their name or image somewhere without the athlete having to actually do anything. Dunno how it would work now if the institutions rather than just the athletes bear the risk. Would love to see more of it, though. The RTC model is a great entry point
  7. 110% certain
  8. I can say with a high degree of certainty that yes you are going to die.
  9. He’s a U20 world champ. Surely a Bob bag is fair.
  10. Didn't the rules on NIL change and everything has to be approved as "fair market value" by a third party?
  11. As previously mentioned, the degenerate in me will take that action. Name your wager
  12. bnwtwg

    Illini

    It was previously brought up that the request was denied.
  13. What do the wingers propose to do about people like this? Make this sort of behavior illegal? Or is this just a thread for insecure people to denigrate people that are different?
  14. Kid is a straight up stud. Hard to not imagine he doesn't finish his career in a Big 10 singlet. Nichols has got to get the kid a bag.
  15. More deflections. More moral bankruptcy.
  16. Just that abherrent behavior is abherrent. Now you have numerous video artifacts showing something you probably didn't know. And they are crazy. To think about this is just crazy. Here in the Seattle area I live in the woods not in Seattle. My wife has toyed with making the woods a paid sniffing area for "furries" to frolic in. We did not do that. What a mspart
  17. Monday is 63 and hasn't wrestled since 96. I would gather most of these kids only know Kenny because of his kids.
  18. You're probably getting all your information from right wing sources still loyal to Trump.
  19. Obviously there's more to the story here lots more because there is no information here.
  20. I’ve never heard of hurricane Erin. Am I going to die?
  21. I realize you have been getting updates. That's the real issue here. Somewhere in the Trump administration there is a leak. I was informed right here on this forum that we would not have a warning of severe weather and people would die. Now I want to get to the bottom of this.
  22. Today
  23. So your premise is that Trump caused Hurricane Erin? Really? Biden in office for the last 4 years most of which was all about stopping global warming and Trump was able to reverse all of that within 8 months? Pulllllllleeeeeaaaaasssseeeee. I have been getting updates regularly about the hurricane so I think you are wrong there as well. mspart
  24. https://intermatwrestle.com/forums/topic/8100-are-hyperboles-true/?do=getNewComment
  25. I agree with you. Would like to see Lockett let his coaches handle the refs. If he has an issue with the how things are being called or not called, communicate it to his coach. Focus on getting back to center and getting the next score.
  26. You seem to be taking this personally and are adamant on fighting a semantics battle 3 hours later and I'm not looking to waste my time and everyone else on here's eyeballs fighting you over word choice so I'm going to try to wrap my thoughts succinctly here and leave it at that. We both agree that to some extent Lockett's complaining to the official affected his wrestling in Bulgaria (I'm making that assumption off of you just now saying "I think you could say he got caught up in complaining and it affected how he wrestled"). However you want to classify it, I believe that is what both the original poster and myself were referencing and I am at least of the opinion that on a wrestling mat if Lockett focuses on wrestling than the sky's the limit but if he gets caught up in everything else like he appeared to show at this tournament then he'll also run the risk of having a repeat of how he placed at this tournament. Mental toughness; something else - tomato; potato.
  27. The first set of medals were awarded on Monday at the U20 World Championships and the American men’s freestyle team claimed hardware in three of four weight classes. Two of those medals were of the gold variety. PJ Duke (70 kg) and Justin Rademacher (97 kg) both won gold medals at their respective weights. Each is now a two-time U20 world medalist. Both earned bronze medals at this tournament in 2024. Cole Mirasola also got into the mix with a bronze medal at 125 kg. In addition to the wrestlers who completed their tournaments on Monday, there were four others who started this morning. From that group, Luke Stanich (65 kg) and Will Henckel (79 kg) locked up a world medal after advancing to Tuesday's finals. We’ll find out tomorrow what color their medals will be. In addition, Connor Mirasola will wrestle for the bronze. Duke took the mat first in the finals and had to contend with a stingy Aleksandr Gaidarli of Moldova. In the first period, the only points awarded were to the American as a result of a shot clock violation from Gaidarli. Duke put some distance between himself and Gaidarli in the second period as he got a takedown and, after a restart, exposure points from a scramble to lead 5-1. Gaidarli briefly took the lead after a high-crotch to a double, followed by a gut wrench. The two pairs of two points knotted the match at five, but gave the Moldovan a lead on criteria. That lead only lasted for about :30 seconds, as Duke hustled to put himself in position to grab a single leg and converted the takedown at the edge. For the last :49 seconds of the bout, Duke was able to nullify any attacks that Gaidarli could muster and took the bout, 7-5. In the second gold medal matchup featuring an American, Oregon State’s Justin Rademacher squared off with Russian Magomedgadzhi Magomedov. Rademacher struck early in the first period with a four-pointer that ended up being the difference in the match. The American got in on a single leg, initially tried to switch to a double and then tried for an elevated finish. Rademacher didn’t get the air that he intended on; however, he drove Magomedov out of the circle and onto his back for four points. Magomedov was able to manage a step out point in the second period, but that was the extent of the scoring for either wrestler. Rademacher’s win gave the United States a 2-0 record in gold medal matches thus far in the tournament. A pair of Americans will try to run that record to 4-0 tomorrow as Stanich and Henckel are slated to wrestle for gold. Stanich made the semifinals after edging fellow New Jersey native (wrestling for Italy) Alex Nini, 3-3. In the semifinals, a throw-by to an ankle was responsible for the only takedown of the contest and a 3-1 win over Russia’s Amal Dzhandubaev. In the 79 kg semifinals, a late first-period burst that included five points was responsible for pushing Henckel past India’s Amit, 5-4. The anchor of the US lineup, Cole Mirasola, was able to earn his bronze medal after a first-period tech fall over Mongolian Narantulga Darmaabazar. After Mirasola locked up his second takedown of the match, he was able to expose Darmaabazar three times with a leg lace to end the match at 12-2. At 74 kg, Ladarion Lockett won a pair of repechage matches and earned a place in a bronze medal match against Japan’s Kanata Yamaguchi. Yamaguchi struck early with a takedown and quickly ended the bout with a series of exposures from a leg lace. The 57 kg representative, Anthony Knox, earned a win in the qualification round; however, he was downed by Kazakhstan’s Nurdant Aitanov, 14-3 in the Round of 16. Aitanov ended up losing in the semifinals, which eliminated Knox from medal contention. 57 kg Round of 32: Anthony Knox over Mykola Bratov (Ukraine) 11-0 Round of 16: Nurdanat Aitanov (Kazakhstan) over Anthony Knox 14-3 65 kg Round of 32: Luke Stanich over Abdullah Toprak (Turkiye) 18-8 Round of 16: Luke Stanich over over Omurbek Asan Uulu (Kyrgyzstan) 9-3 Quarterfinals: Luke Stanich over Alex Nini (Italy) 3-3 Semifinals: Luke Stanich over Amal Dzhandubaev (Russia) 3-1 Gold Medal Matchup: Luke Stanich vs. Reiji Uchida (Japan) 70 kg Gold Medal Match: PJ Duke over Alexandr Gaidarli (Moldova) 7-5 74 kg Repechage #1: Ladarion Lockett over Vatan Annaorazov (Turkmenistan) 10-0 Repechage #2: Ladarion Lockett over Manuel Wagin (Germany) 8-5 Bronze Medal Match: Kanata Yamaguchi (Japan) over Ladarion Lockett 10-0 79 kg Round of 32: Will Henckel over Maksat Tabyldyev (Kyrgyzstan) 8-5 Round of 16: Will Henckel over Bohdan Oleksiienklo (Ukraine) 10-0 Quarterfinals: Will Henckel over Davit Tchetchelashvili (Georgia) 11-5 Semifinals: Will Henckel over Amit (India) 5-4 Gold Medal Matchup: Will Henckel vs. Mahdi Yousefihajivar (Iran) 92 kg Round of 32: Connor Mirasola over Zixu Yuan (China) 10-0 Round of 16: Kamil Kurugliyev (Kazakhstan) over Connor Mirasola 7-5 Repechage Matchup: Connor Mirasola vs. Teimuraz Kochkiani (Georgia) 97 kg Gold Medal Match: Justin Rademacher over Magomedgadzhi Magomedov (Russia) 4-1 125 kg Bronze Medal Match: Cole Mirasola (USA) over Narantulga Darmaabazar (Mongolia) 12-2 Final Medal Round Results 70 kg Gold Medal Match: PJ Duke (USA) over Alexandr Gaidarli (Moldova) 7-5 Bronze Medal Match: Ebrahim Elahichouran (Iran) over Abdoullah Nakaev (France) 6-4 Bronze Medal Match: Nurlan Aghazada (Azerbaijan) over Goga Otinashivili (Georgia) 4-0 74 kg Gold Medal Match: Ismail Khaniev (Russia) over Adilet Akylbekov (Kyrgyzstan) 11-0 Bronze Medal Match: Kanata Yamaguchi (Japan) over Ladarion Lockett (USA) 10-0 Bronze Medal Match: Dosszhan Kul Gaiyp (Kazakhstan) over Raul Caso (Italy) 6-3 97 kg Gold Medal Match: Justin Rademacher (USA) over Magomedgadzhi Magomedov (Russia) 4-1 Bronze Medal Match: Samir Dursanov (Kazakhstan) over Vishal (India) Fall 1:22 Bronze Medal Match: Konstantine Petriashvili (Georgia) over Ibrahim Benekli (Turkiye) 8-3 125 kg Gold Medal Match: Yedige Kassimbek (Kazakhstan) over Abolfazl Mohammad Nezhad (Iran) 4-1 Bronze Medal Match: Cole Mirasola (USA) over Narantulga Darmaabazar (Mongolia) 12-2 Bronze Medal Match: Yusif Dursunov (Azerbaijan) over Levan Lagvilava (France) 3-1 Tuesday’s Gold Medal Matchups 57 kg: Magomed Ozdamirov (Russia) vs. Sumit Malik (India) 65 kg: Luke Stanich (USA) vs. Reiji Uchida (Japan) 79 kg: Will Henckel (USA) vs. Mahdi Yousefihajivar (Iran) 92 kg: Kamil Kurugliev (Kazakhstan) vs. Sherzod Poyonov (Uzbekistan)
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