Jump to content

Which was the toughest 165 bracket this century?  

6 members have voted

  1. 1. Which was the toughest 165 bracket this century?

    • 2005
      0
    • 2008
      0
    • 2018
      2
    • 2024
      4
    • Other
      0


Recommended Posts

Posted
165 2005 2008 2018 2024
1st Johny Hendricks Mark Perry Vincenzo Joseph David Carr
2nd Mark Perry Eric Tannenbaum Isaiah Martinez Mitchell Mesenbrink
3rd Troy Letters Nick Marable Evan Wick Keegan O'Toole
4th Ryan Churella Mack Lewnes Chance Marstellar Michael Calideno
5th John Sioredas Moza Fay David McFadden Isaac Olejnik
6th Matt Nagel Michael Cannon Alex Marinelli Hunter Garvin
7th Tyron Woodley Jonathan Reader Jonathon Chavez Peyton Hall
8th Matt Palmer Stephen Dwyer Chandler Rogers Antrell Taylor

 

It will be extremely interesting to see where the 2024 bracket winds up in WKN's all time points list when they have all completed their careers. I'm not saying it's the toughest weight, but they will have racked up a LOT of tournament points when they it's all said and done. 

I'm sure some of you will argue for other weights that should be considered, but 165 tends to be very top heavy without a lot of depth many years.

  • Bob 1
Posted
3 hours ago, BruceyB said:
165 2005 2008 2018 2024
1st Johny Hendricks Mark Perry Vincenzo Joseph David Carr
2nd Mark Perry Eric Tannenbaum Isaiah Martinez Mitchell Mesenbrink
3rd Troy Letters Nick Marable Evan Wick Keegan O'Toole
4th Ryan Churella Mack Lewnes Chance Marstellar Michael Calideno
5th John Sioredas Moza Fay David McFadden Isaac Olejnik
6th Matt Nagel Michael Cannon Alex Marinelli Hunter Garvin
7th Tyron Woodley Jonathan Reader Jonathon Chavez Peyton Hall
8th Matt Palmer Stephen Dwyer Chandler Rogers Antrell Taylor

 

It will be extremely interesting to see where the 2024 bracket winds up in WKN's all time points list when they have all completed their careers. I'm not saying it's the toughest weight, but they will have racked up a LOT of tournament points when they it's all said and done. 

I'm sure some of you will argue for other weights that should be considered, but 165 tends to be very top heavy without a lot of depth many years.

2024 is a tough one to place because you have a bunch of guys who got five tournaments and had their highest ever finish in the fifth year (Carr, Olejnik, Hall) and O'Toole with a third place. I am sure there are some others in the non-AA spots. I will have to take a more in depth look tomorrow.

Drowning in data, but thirsting for knowledge

Posted
5 minutes ago, Wrestleknownothing said:

2024 is a tough one to place because you have a bunch of guys who got five tournaments and had their highest ever finish in the fifth year (Carr, Olejnik, Hall) and O'Toole with a third place. I am sure there are some others in the non-AA spots. I will have to take a more in depth look tomorrow.

I was considering the 5th year points as a part of why they would be one of the highest scoring brackets ever. But to be fair, Olejnik and Carr each still only had 4 tournaments, and you could just take away the points that Hall and O'Toole earned their TRFR years, assuming they would have redshirted otherwise, for a more accurate picture.

Unless we are going to take away Aaron Brooks' fourth title, we can't discredit Olejnik and Carr for their extra year of eligibility after losing their 2020 tournament.

Posted
31 minutes ago, BruceyB said:

I was considering the 5th year points as a part of why they would be one of the highest scoring brackets ever. But to be fair, Olejnik and Carr each still only had 4 tournaments, and you could just take away the points that Hall and O'Toole earned their TRFR years, assuming they would have redshirted otherwise, for a more accurate picture.

Unless we are going to take away Aaron Brooks' fourth title, we can't discredit Olejnik and Carr for their extra year of eligibility after losing their 2020 tournament.

My bad. I was looking at the NQ and forgetting it was 2020.

But with regard to O'Toole and Hall, it is not clear to me they would have taken a redshirt year under different circumstances. Many people have pointed out that studs want to go, they don't want to sit. But even if they would have redshirted I think having a fifth tournament is an advantage in that fifth tournament as long as it does not come with injury (Eierman).

Drowning in data, but thirsting for knowledge

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...