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  2. I wonder if Nokhodi will want to move up to 86…
  3. For first day -2 in the finals and Ghassempour realistically should get a bronze so we are about on par with the best we could have hoped for.
  4. I didn't think Zahid was gassing, I think he was going in to defense mode. He looked just fine at the end from what i could see.
  5. Zahid Valencia is going to the world finals! The 86 kg star stole the show for the United States on the first day of the 2025 Senior World Championships. Valencia outscored his four opponents on Saturday 37-0 on the way to the gold medal match. While Valencia’s first three opponents did not have a long track record of success at the world level, his semifinal foe was highly credentialed. To the tune of a pair of world titles. Iran’s Kamran Ghasempour was seeking his third gold medal - his first at 86 kg, after winning two at 92 kg, but was stopped in his tracks by Valencia. The American opened the scoring with a point from a shot clock violation. The match quickly got out of hand late in the first period as Valencia used lightning quick low leg attack to lock up a pair of takedowns and a 5-0 lead. Valencia got a pair of step out points in the second period to bring the score to 7-0. He also showed some incredible defense and refused to surrender a takedown when it looked imminent. The match finished with the Iranian refusing to initiate contact during the last :13 seconds. He stood defeated with his hands on his knees as Valencia sensed his victory and implored the crowd to cheer as the final seconds ticked off the clock. In tomorrow’s gold medal matchup, Valencia will face Japan’s Hayato Ishiguro. Ishiguro had a wild semifinal win that saw him score 16 unanswered points in the final three and a half minutes to win 17-7. The first American to take the mat in the semifinal round was high school senior Jax Forrest at 61 kg. Forrest and three-time world/Olympic champion Zavur Uguev (UWW - Russia) had an entertaining back-and-forth first period that ended 2-2 - with Uguev in the lead on criteria. There were more fireworks and scrambles in the second stanza; however, Uguev’s strength and experience eventually rose to the top and he pulled away for a 10-3 victory. With the loss, Forrest drops down to a bronze medal match. He’ll face the winner between Manvel Khndzrtsyan (Armenia) and Assylzhan Yessengeldi (Kazakhstan). The semifinal round also saw Penn State freshman PJ Duke’s 70 kg medal chances erode with a loss by 2024 world champion Nurkozha Kaipanov (Kazakhstan). Kaipanov’s loss also meant that Wisconsin and Michigan All-American Austin Gomez was eliminated from metal contention. Along with Valencia and Forrest’s medal round matches tomorrow, Spencer Lee (57 kg), David Carr (74 kg), Levi Haines (79 kg), and Trent Hidlay (92 kg) will start competition in their respective weight classes. Saturday’s American Results 61 kg Round of 32: Jax Forrest over Sangboum Kim (South Korea) 10-0 Round of 16: Jax Forrest over Takara Suda (Japan) 7-2 Quarterfinals: Jax Forrest over Tairyrbek Zhumashbek Uulu (Kyrgyzstan) 13-8 Semifinals: Zavur Uguev (UWW - Russia) over Jax Forrest 10-3 Bronze Medal Match: Jax Forrest vs. Manvel Khndzrtsyan (Armenia)/Assylzhan Yessengeldi (Kazakhstan). 70 kg Round of 32: PJ Duke over Shuang Chen (China) 11-0 Round of 16: Nurkozha Kaipanov (Kazakhstan) over PJ Duke 11-7 86 kg Round of 32: Zahid Valencia over Mukul Dahiya (India) 10-0 Round of 16: Zahid Valencia over Fateh Benferdjallah (Algeria) 10-0 Quarterfinals: Zahid Valencia over Ivars Samusonok (Latvia) 10-0 Semifinals: Zahid Valencia over Kamran Ghasempour (Iran) 7-0 Gold Medal Match: Zahid Valencia vs. Hayato Ishiguro (Japan) 125 kg Round of 32: Abdulla Kurbanov (UWW - Russia) over Wyatt Hendrickson 14-4 Sunday’s Gold Medal Matches: 61 kg: Zavur Uguev (UWW - Russia) vs. Ahmad Mohammadnezhad (Iran) 70 kg: Yoshinosuke Aoyagi (Japan) vs. Tulga Tumur Ochir (Mongolia) 86 kg: Zahid Valencia (USA) vs. Hayato Ishiguro (Japan) 125 kg: Giorgi Meshvildishvili (Georgia) vs. Amir Zare (Iran)
  6. The guy in Zahid's corner has that dad strength that stops anyone at 86 who doesn't piss hot multiple times
  7. I imagine jimmy is about 12 years old. Incapable of any sort of mature discussion. A post out of twitter with no corroboration.
  8. If he goes to 97 he will have to deal with Azarpira,Yazdani and probably Firouzpour. I don’t like his chances there. i think Iran should hire David Taylor to coach team.
  9. Zahid and who?
  10. Tough to top the Davidson trio. I like the Zalesky x2 + Davis triad too. Some tough Blair trios too. But the McCort trio is right there and I wouldn't be surprised the top them all. For all the fuss about Bo's recruitment, and how he was (for a while) the savior of Iowa wrestling, he may well be the third best of the three.
  11. Kid is a tranny lover
  12. Trip N Tranny is my stalker
  13. Everyone knows it’s a constitutional given right
  14. Poor little Jimmy is so lonely he has to talk to himself.
  15. That's more disturbing than I imagined.
  16. Kid was a groyper. Take a longer look into Nick Fuentes and the online 4chan crowd.
  17. Your answer seems to have this level of class …. Another one condoning violence for words I see
  18. So if Zahid dominates the final what are the odds the US has the best 2 86KGs in the world?
  19. D3 up super early during time off to provide play x play to those of us without access. Thank you!
  20. Today
  21. Damn I was close.
  22. Yes, I think it will be Rahmani going forward. Unfortunately we have 0 depth at 86 now. But I think Rahmani can be good. I wouldn't be surprised if Ghasempour tries to build himself to a 97 for 2028. The list of 86/84 guys who have done well at 97 is miles long. I don't think he really went full force on gaining weight when he was at 97 briefly last year. It seemed half hearted. Firouzpour has to be kicking himself. At least he got 1 year break from Ghasempour keeping him off the team, lol.
  23. Pretty sure I called the tranny thing. I love looking smart. The entertainment I give is just icing on your cake.
  24. My thoughts. Jax: Wrestling fearlessly. Love seeing him go for big moves, and his offensive variety is so impressive for his age. His leg defense has improved massively, which we saw against Japan, and he showed great mat smarts against the Kazach. Uguev was just too experienced and savvy. Jax has a great chance to get bronze. PJ: No medal but he wrestled tough. Looked good against China and had a couple beautiful TDs against the world champ. Especially loved seeing that judo trip he throws in there sometime. Seem to wrestle not to lose in the 2nd, or maybe he just faded a bit, but it's the world champ. Tough break he didn't get pulled back in. Zahid: Looking super sharp and confident, just as he did in the Open and Final X. Not many guys in the world are as good as Zahid in his first 4 minutes. So stoked to see him take out Ghasempour. You can tell Zahid faded and was at risk, but Ghas was out of gas too. I wonder if the cut's affecting Ghas's cardio? Will be interesting to see him against the Japanese kid who teched him a couple years ago. Wyatt: Not much to say, 1 and done. I can't really get too upset at Wyatt as it looks to me that Wyatt's just been overhyped. His technique has improved the past year, but the truth is he's kind of slow. He's at risk against quicker heavyweights. It's a little embarrassing that he was put up on the UWW presser alongside Zare, as there was never reason to think he's on Zare's level. Still, it's a shame we didn't get to see more Wyatt matches to get a fuller picture.
  25. Day 1 is done... Don't have team standings yet (UWW site simple refuses to put advance points up until they're done... grrrrrr!) Tomorrow is Day 2... stay tuned! D3
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