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Showing content with the highest reputation on 11/16/2023 in Articles

  1. We're officially in the midst of the collegiate wrestling season and have a semi-full schedule of DI duals this week. A total of 43 duals will be contested. Since it can be difficult to figure out where and when to watch all of these events, InterMat has put together a list of all of the live-streamed events occurring this week. Below are the dates/times and how to watch each match (with links). Thursday, November 16: NC State at Army West Point 7:00 PM FloWrestling Minnesota at Bucknell 7:00 PM ESPN+ West Virginia at Clarion 7:00 PM FloWrestling Friday, November 17: Liberty at Lindenwood 5:00 PM Dakota Wesleyan at South Dakota State 6:00 PM Binghamton vs. NC State at Albany, NY 6:30 PM FloWrestling Buffalo vs. Northern Colorado at Albany, NY 6:30 PM FloWrestling LIU vs. Virginia at Albany, NY 6:30 PM FloWrestling Presbyterian vs. Sacred Heart at Albany, NY 6:30 PM FloWrestling Campbell vs. Wyoming at Centennial, WY 7:00 PM UFC FightPass Utah Valley at American 7:00 PM ESPN+ Michigan at Columbia 7:00 PM ESPN+ Virginia Tech at Rutgers 7:00 PM B1G+ California Baptist vs. Embry-Riddle at Vanguard 7:00 PM Northern State at South Dakota State 7:30 PM Oklahoma at Little Rock 8:00 PM Little Rock Sports Network Binghamton vs. LIU at Albany, NY 8:30 PM FloWrestling Buffalo vs. Virginia at Albany, NY 8:30 PM FloWrestling NC State vs. Sacred Heart at Albany, NY 8:30 PM FloWrestling Northern Colorado vs. Presbyterian at Albany, NY 8:30 PM FloWrestling Augustana at South Dakota State 9:00 PM California Baptist at Vanguard, 10:00 PM Vanguard Athletics Live Saturday, November 18: Bellarmine, Lindenwood, Little Rock, Northern Illinois, Northwestern, SIU Edwardsville at Lindenwood Open 10:00 AM Franklin & Marshall, West Virginia at Shorty Hitchcock Classic, hosted by Millersville 10:00 AM Air Force, American, Bloomsburg, Bucknell, Cleveland State, Davidson, Edinboro, Kent State, Lock Haven, Navy, Nebraska, Ohio, Princeton, The Citadel at Navy Classic, Owings Mills, MD 10:00 AM FloWrestling Sacred Heart at Cornell 12:00 PM ESPN+ Morgan State at George Mason 12:00 PM ESPN+ Minnesota vs. Morgan State at George Mason 1:30 PM ESPN+ Minnesota at George Mason 3:00 PM ESPN+ Sunday, November 19: Appalachian State, Drexel, Duke, Franklin & Marshall, Harvard, Indiana, Penn, Sacred Heart, Utah Valley, Virginia Tech at Keystone Classic, hosted by Penn, 9:30 AM FloWrestling Army West Point, Binghamton, Brown, Buffalo, Gardner-Webb, LIU, Michigan State, Northern Colorado, Penn State, Rutgers at Black Knight Invitational, hosted by Army West Point, 10:00 AM FloWrestling Ohio State at Columbia, 11:00 AM ESPN+ Minnesota, Northern Iowa, South Dakota State at Daktronics Open, hosted by South Dakota State, 11:00 AM FloWrestling Cal Poly, California Baptist, CSU Bakersfield at Roadrunner Open, hosted by CSU Bakersfield, 12:00 PM Indianapolis at Purdue 12:00 PM B1G+ Utah Valley at Spokane Open 12:00 PM Central Michigan vs. North Carolina at Illinois 1:00 PM B1G+ Oregon State at Iowa 1:00 PM B1G+ North Dakota State at Oklahoma 1:00 PM ESPN+ Pittsburgh at Lehigh 2:00 PM FloWrestling Arizona State at Missouri 2:00 PM FloWrestling Northern Illinois at Purdue 2:00 PM B1G+ Michigan at Rider 2:00 PM ESPN+ Limestone at VMI 2:00 PM ESPN+ Iowa State vs. Wisconsin at Humboldt, IA 3:00 PM UFC FightPass North Carolina at Illinois 3:00 PM B1G+ Ohio State at Hofstra 4:00 PM Hofstra Pride YouTube Northern Illinois vs. Indianapolis at Purdue 4:00 PM Central Michigan at Illinois 5:00 PM B1G+ Marymount at VMI 5:00 PM ESPN+
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  2. One of my favorite elements of the first month of a new collegiate season is seeing how freshmen work their way into their respective lineups and, in some cases, the national rankings. With wrestlers competing at a higher level, younger than ever, it’s not as much of a surprise that young wrestlers are able to compete against, and beat, fourth and fifth-year seniors. Through two weeks of action, we’ve singled out some of the top freshman performances. 20 to be exact. Not only have we singled them out, but we’ve ranked ‘em too! These rookie (freshman) rankings are just based on 2023-24 results. They are not a projection of things to come. There are wrestlers on the list that will rise here, and in the national rankings, as they wrestle more and face higher-ranked competition. Also, we’ve tried to stick with wrestlers that are going starting for the entire season and not redshirting. After a brief synopsis of each wrestler’s 2023-24 season, we’ve listed his team’s schedule for this weekend. 20. Danny Wask (Navy - 174) The record (1-2) doesn’t necessarily look good for Danny Wask, but you have to look a little deeper than that. Both of Wask’s losses have come against wrestlers currently ranked in the top-21 nationally. In both contests, he was very competitive, going to sudden victory with #5 Edmond Ruth (Illinois) and losing a back-and-forth affair with #21 Luca Augustine. Wrestling isn’t necessarily a sport for moral victories, so he’ll have to start banking wins soon. That doesn't figure to be an issue with the Navy Classic on the horizon. Next Up: Navy Classic (Saturday) 19. Nic Bouzakis (Ohio State - 133) The first member of Ohio State’s top-ranked recruiting Class of 2022 we’ll discuss, Nic Bouzakis came in with very high expectations in a weight class that has cleared out a lot. His performance at the Clarion Open was a bit surprising, with losses to Angelo Rini (Columbia) and fellow freshman Vince Santaniello (Pittsburgh). Last weekend, Bouzakis was able to hang with two-time All-American Sam Latona (Virginia Tech), but ultimately lost. The good news is he’ll have the opportunity to avenge one of his losses this week. Next Up: Columbia, Hofstra (Sunday) 18. Brody Conley (West Virginia - 174) A 15-4 redshirt campaign led to high expectations for Brody Conley, who was the first top-30 recruit to ink with WVU during the Tim Flynn-era. In his debut, at the Southeast Open, Conley posted a win before having to injury default out of a match with Oregon State’s TJ McDonnell. Any fears about Conely’s status were erased by a 3-0 Sunday at WVU’s quad. Conley posted two falls and a tech fall against opponents from Duke, Cleveland State, and Kent State. Next Up: Clarion (Tonight) 17. Vince Santaniello (Pittsburgh - 133) Vince Santaniello came into the year near the bottom of the 133 lb rankings and showed immediately why he should probably be ranked higher. Santaniello put together an impressive 11-4 win over the highly-regarded redshirt freshman Nic Bouzakis on his way to the Clarion Open finals. Additionally, Santaniello defeated Pablo Castro (Kent State), which is the only loss for Castro in eight matches. In the finals, Santaniello fell to high school star Bo Bassett (which doesn’t officially count). At the Navy Quad, Santaniello went 2-1 with a one-point loss to Navy’s returning qualifier, Brendan Ferretti. Next Up: Lehigh (Sunday), Maryland (Monday) 16. Finn Solomon (Pittsburgh - 149) NC State transfer Finn Solomon has hit the ground running at ACC-rival Pittsburgh, by compiling an 8-1 record after two weeks. In his first competition as a Panther, Solomon edged 2023 EIWA runner-up Dylan Chappell (Bucknell) in tiebreakers and won five of his six bouts. The only loss came to returning All-American Dylan D’Emilio (Ohio State). Solomon recently went 3-0 at the Navy Quad on Sunday with his best win coming over fellow freshman Nick Vafiadis (Navy) in sudden victory. Next Up: Lehigh (Sunday), Maryland (Monday) 15. Garrett Thompson (Ohio - 165) With all due respect, perhaps the most surprising name on this list is Ohio redshirt freshman Garrett Thompson. The redshirt freshman burst onto the scene in week one earning MAC Wrestler of the Week honors with a title at the Southeast Open. There he knocked off West Virginia All-American Peyton Hall, 8-5. In his second outing, Thompson edged Chattanooga’s Kamdyn Munro by a point and teched Ashland’s Sevi Garza. Next Up: Navy Classic (Saturday) 14. Mitchell Mesenbrink (Penn State - 165) Perhaps the most questions surrounding Penn State’s 2023-24 lineup revolved around the 165 lb weight class with U20 world champion Mitchell Mesenbrink and U20 medalist Alex Facundo, the incumbent. Some expected Mesenbrink to take and Olympic redshirt; however, that wasn’t the case as he was in Bethlehem for the Journeymen Collegiate Classic Sunday. In his first match, Mesenbrink survived Arizona State blue-chip signee Nicco Ruiz before turning in a pair of techs. Mesenbrink certainly will rise from here, he just hasn’t faced top competition quite yet. Next Up: Black Knight Invite (Sunday) 13. Nasir Bailey (Little Rock - 133) Nasir Bailey came to Little Rock as the highest-ranked recruit (#21 in the Class of 2023) in the short history of Trojan wrestling. Bailey did not see action in Little Rock’s season-opening dual meet, but was entered at the TigerStyle Invite. He’d advance to the finals after three dominating wins; including a :14 fall. In the finals, Bailey used a beautiful duck under to beat Missouri’s tough redshirt freshman #25 Zeke Seltzer in sudden victory. Next Up: Oklahoma (Friday) 12. Antrell Taylor (Nebraska - 165) We haven’t seen a whole lot from Antrell Taylor just yet; however, his most significant win came in an unofficial bout when he defeated Nebraska’s returning starter, Bubba Wilson. In Taylor’s two dual wins this season, he’s been completely dominant, tallying a first-period fall and a major decision. We’ll have a little bit better of a read on just how good Taylor is after this weekend. He has the opportunity to face a pair of really solid freshmen with #27 Garrett Thompson and #31 Noah Mulvaney (Bucknell) expected to enter the Navy Classic, along with veterans #24 Andrew Cerniglia (Navy), #25 Giano Petrucelli (Air Force), and more. Next Up: Navy Classic (Saturday) 11. Gavin Drexler (North Dakota State - 141) Here’s another name you may not have expected to see in this feature, but after two weeks, Gavin Drexler has gotten the job done. Drexler’s season debut saw him pick up a dual win against Nebraska’s Blake Cushing as All-American Brock Hardy was reacclimating to folkstyle after U23’s. Last weekend, Drexler picked up a tournament title at NDSU’s Bison Open. His biggest win came against Minnesota’s Vance Vombaur, who was ranked #24 at the time. Next Up: Oklahoma (Sunday) 10. Clayton Whiting (Missouri - 184) As a high school senior, Clayton Whiting introduced himself to the college wrestling world when he defeated Iowa starter Abe Assad at the Luther Open. Two years later, Whiting is fighting for a spot in the Mizzou lineup at 184 lbs. He stated his case at the TigerStyle Invite with head-to-head wins over his two teammates in the running for the starting position, Colton Hawks and Sean Harman. Hawks was a national qualifier for the Tigers last season and Harman has spent time in the national rankings. 9. Meyer Shapiro (Cornell - 157) Remember, before you get upset, this is based on college results to date. InterMat hasn’t been shy about how highly we think of the U17 and U20 world champion. It’s not a stretch to think he could be number one on this list at the end of March. For now, Shapiro made his debut at the Journeymen Collegiate Classic and did what was expected of him. He went 3-0 with his best win coming via tech fall over Jude Swisher (Penn), who is competing to be the Quaker’s starter. Next Up: Sacred Heart (Saturday) 8. Luke Geog (Ohio State - 197) The development of Luke Geog at 197 lbs was one of the reasons why it made sense for 2022 All-American Gavin Hoffman to move down to 184 lbs for Ohio State this year. Geog has only seen action in two duals this year, but has been very good in both. His 11-7 win over NCAA qualifier Andy Smith locked up the Buckeyes upset win over Virginia Tech last Friday. Two days later, he teched Edinboro’s Jack Kilner in just under 4:00. Next Up: Columbia, Hofstra (Sunday) 7. Nick Feldman (Ohio State - 285) As we were breaking down the Ohio State/Virginia Tech dual, it was expected that Nick Feldman would need to win for Ohio State to pull off the upset. That didn’t end up being the case as the dual was clinched before Feldman even stepped on the mat. He did have a successful outing with a late takedown that pushed him past the Hokies national qualifier Hunter Catka. Feldman finished his weekend with a 21-6 tech over Edinboro’s Nick Lodato. Next Up: Columbia, Hofstra (Sunday) 6. Mac Stout (Pittsburgh - 197) Filling in for a graduated NCAA champion is no small feat, but Mac Stout has done as good as could be expected replacing Nino Bonaccorsi at 197 lbs for Pitt. Stout is 8-0 on the year with a title at the Clarion Open during his first competition. Over the weekend, Stout had three more wins as his team traveled the Navy Quad. Stout pinned his first two opponents before grinding out a hard-fought victory over the host squad’s Cael Crebs. He’ll have his hands full on Sunday and Monday, as he’s slated to meet All-American, Michael Beard (Lehigh), then Round of 12 finisher Jaxon Smith (Maryland). Next Up: Lehigh (Sunday), Maryland (Monday) 5. Ty Watters (West Virginia - 149) One of only two true freshmen in the top-five, Ty Watters has solidified his place in the WVU lineup after two weeks. In his first collegiate competition, Watters advanced to the Southeast Open finals, a run that included a sudden victory win over redshirt freshman Derek Raike (Ohio), who was ranked at the time, and 2023 national qualifier Tom Crook (Virginia Tech). The finals saw Watters fall to returning All-American Caleb Henson (Virginia Tech), but that didn’t slow him down going forward. At last Sunday’s quad, Watters went unbeaten with three falls, two in the first period. Next Up: Clarion (Tonight) 4. Brendan McCrone (Ohio State - 125) Just like we all expected, the top performance from a star-studded Ohio State freshman class belongs to….Brendan McCrone? Right? That’s why they wrestle the matches. McCrone set the tone for the Buckeyes upset of Virginia Tech with his major decision victory over Hokie All-American Eddie Ventresca, then ranked #4 in the nation. Not only did McCrone emerge from the deciding sequence to put the returning AA on his back, but he also was able to garner a point via riding time. Last weekend, McCrone had a 4-2 showing at the Clarion Open. He suffered losses to a pair of veterans at the weight (Nick Babin - Columbia, Tristan Lujan - Michigan State). Lujan and the Spartans are the very last dual of the regular season, so it’ll be interesting to see how McCrone progresses and if he can reverse that result. Despite having two losses on the year, McCrone’s margin of victory and the fact that he sparked Ohio State against a very strong Virginia Tech squad places him above others on the list. Next Up: Columbia, Hofstra (Sunday) 3. Stephen Little (Little Rock - 197) Last year, Stephen Little put together a 13-4 redshirt season that saw him utilize all five attached dates. Had he gotten the call in the postseason, Little likely would have qualified for Tulsa. Now with another offseason under his belt, Little is extremely impressive. That was on display at the TigerStyle Invite where he pinned Cal Poly starter Jared Priest before downing Maryland’s bloodround finisher Jaxon Smith. At the time, Smith was ranked eighth in the nation. Next Up: Oklahoma (Friday) 2. Joey Blaze (Purdue - 157) The bright spot in Purdue’s 37-3 loss to #5 NC State came at 157 lbs when true freshman Joey Blaze knocked off returning All-American Ed Scott in sudden victory. Earlier in the day, Blaze had picked up a win over #29 Nathan Lukez (Army West Point). In his first taste of collegiate action, Blaze went 5-1 at the Clarion Open. The only blemish was a loss to Pittsburgh’s Jared Keslar. In those five wins, Blaze has two falls and a tech. Coming into the weekend, there were some doubts about whether Purdue would redshirt Blaze or not. A pair of wins over returning national qualifiers probably helped make the case that Blaze should go right away. Next Up: Indianapolis, Northern Illinois (Sunday) 1. Ryan Crookham (Lehigh - 133) And the least surprising member of this list, Ryan Crookham. Lehigh’s redshirt freshman started Sunday with a sudden victory win over teammate Connor McGonagle, who was ranked sixth in the nation and was selected to compete in the All-Star Classic. That wasn’t enough for Crookham. He notched the upset of the young season when he downed returning NCAA champion Vito Arujau (Cornell) 8-4 on the strength of two takedowns. The win stopped a 17-match winning streak for the 2023 World Champion. Crookham rose to the #5 ranking nationally and is now one of the key contenders at 133 lbs; a weight that many had already conceded to Arujau again. Oh yeah, Sunday’s matches weren’t the first of the year for Crookham. In week one, he captured a title at the Princeton Open with bonus points in all four matches. Two of his wins came against past national qualifiers (Richie Koehler - Rider, Gable Strickland - Lock Haven). Crookham will have every opportunity to seize control of the top ranking at 133 lbs and prove his win was no fluke. Within the next month, he’s slated to meet #1 Daton Fix (Oklahoma State) and #3 Aaron Nagao (Penn State). Lehigh also has a dual scheduled against Cornell and would face them at the EIWA Championships. Next Up: Pittsburgh (Sunday) Honorable Mentions (for now): Noah Mulvaney (Bucknell), Kannon Webster (Illinois), Gabe Arnold (Iowa), Dylan Fishback (NC State), Troy Spratley (Oklahoma State), Gabe Whisenhunt (Oregon State)
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  3. Hi besties, I hope y’all had a marvelous first few weeks of wrestling - I know I did. We kicked off the season on the first of November, when the Fighting Camels made their debut against Army West Point at The Battle at Liberty, pulling forward with a 25-9 victory. The upset of the evening came from #20 Caleb Hopkins (184) over #13 Ben Pasiuk via an 8-0 major decision, meanwhile freshman Chris Earnest (157) started his career with a bang, defeating #25-ranked Nate Lukez 9-6. Heavyweight Taye Ghadiali served up a fall for the crowd, earning the Outstanding Wrestler belt for the evening. This was the first event of the season streamed on UFC Fight Pass, which has been uploaded to watch again. Presbyterian College wrestled in this event as well, facing off against #3-ranked NC State. The Blue Hose lost the dual 48-0, notably with a forfeit at 125. Unsure of Dom Chavez’s whereabouts this season, but hopefully we see him return to the mat soon. The Citadel hosted Allen University and Montreat College - grabbing their first dual wins of the season. The Bulldogs bested Montreat 50-4, scoring bonus-point victories in all their wins for the evening. The wins kept coming for The Citadel, as they served up the first #SoConShutout of the season against Allen University, with bonus point victories at all weights. Moving on to Friday, App State hosted the then-ranked #3 NC State Wolfpack in Varsity Gym. This was my first time watching the new rules in practice this season - and the three-point takedown (in my humble opinion) has really helped to reward tough wrestling. It’s definitely making a difference in the point spread, and is fun to hear people get mixed up and yell “TWOOOO” but quickly correct themselves to “THREEE.” Varsity Gym, described as a “hostile environment” by many, was rocking and rolling - standing room only, t-shirt tosses, a push-up contest, and deluxe mat-side seating. Watching the evolution of the fan experience for college wrestling is truly exciting - for the individual programs and the sport alike. But back to the match - the Mountaineers dropped a tough dual 40-3, with their sole win of the evening coming from Ethan Oakley (133), who came through with a 4-2 decision over three-time NCAA qualifier Jarrett Trombley. Saturday the action kicked back up at the Southeast Open - where Campbell, Chattanooga, Davidson, and VMI competed. The Camels took home fifteen placewinner, with two champions at heavyweight and 165 - Taye Ghadiali and Dom Baker were undefeated for the day. Chattanooga racked up the hardware as well, with seven placements in the freshman/sophomore division - with redshirt freshmen Kamdyn Munro (165), Sergio Desiante (174) placing second, leading true freshman Isiah Powe (141) and redshirt freshman Austin Paradise (157) to third place finishes. Keydet Braxton Lewis took home the title in the 174 freshman/sophomore division, behind him were seven other placers ranging from senior Tyler Mousaw, making his debut at heavyweight, to the fresh faces of the program. Last but not least, Davidson had two second-place finishes in the freshman/sophomore division - Tyler Xavier McKnight (149) and Wyatt Ferguson (184). Bellarmine brought the action with four first-place finishes at the Patriot Open - two of those from freshmen Shay Korhorn (133) and Gray Ortis (157) in the freshman/sophomore division, while in the open division, Cole Nance beat teammate Grant O’Dell (165) for the title, and Sam Schroder won the 184 bracket. The Clarion Open was truly an event to behold - upsets upon upsets, but the SoCon’s star of the show was Brayden Palmer. He made his debut at 125 lbs, but not in a Chattanooga singlet - it’s looking like Palmer could redshirt for part of the season. My new bold prediction is that his redshirt (depending on his performance prior to the Scuffle) could be pulled as early as January - but that’s if he’s redshirting this season. We love the “what if” game. This title earned Palmer SoCon Wrestler of the Week for the first week of the season. Gardner-Webb’s Zach Price (149) brought home a third-place finish for the Runnin’ Bulldogs, with his lone loss of the day coming from Ohio State’s Dylan D’Emilio. The Battle at the Citadel took place, where three Bulldogs had podium finishes for the weekend: John Chesser (285) battled for a second-place finish against George Mason’s Chad Nix, while Josh Stillings (174) and Patrick Brophy (197) earned third place finishes. App State true freshman Tomas Brooker took home the 184-pound title, wrestling against teammate Hunter Adams in the final. Mountaineers Noah Luna (125, 2nd place), Chad Bells (125), Kaden Keiser (141), and Jeremiah Price (149) placed third, and Ike Byers had a fourth-place finish at 141. Bellarmine shut out Kentucky Wesleyan at their home opener this past Friday, with just shy of 2,000 fans in attendance. Again - it’s so awesome to see the growth of our sport and to see programs have that investment from their athletic departments. True freshman Kalob Johnstone (197) started his career with a bang - racking up a 15-0 technical fall over Cameron Fleming. Campbell fell to Nebraska 37-4, with the lone win from Taye Ghadiali - picking up a 24-12 major decision win. 184-pound Caleb Hopkins lost a close 6-5 bout against Lenny Pinto. The Camels will be back in action at the Battle at the Barn on UFC Fight Pass - which will be wrestled against Wyoming in a barn. It’s slated to be a great matchup, and a great production, be sure to tune in. The Mountaineer Invitational was a SoCon-Studded event - where Cody Bond (149), Tommy Askey (157), and Jacob Sartorio (285) all won individual titles, resulting in Bond being awarded SoCon Wrestler of the Week for the second week of the season. Six runners-up and five third-place finishes later, the Mountaineers will be back in action at the Keystone Classic this weekend. Presbyterian had eight in action at the Invitational, with one fourth-place finish from sophomore Caleb Roe. Davidson senior Dan Yetsick took home a first-place finish at 157 pounds, while freshman Brock Carey (149) placed second, and John Hager (133) finished in third place. Gardner-Webb came out with a pair of second-place finishes, Jha’Quan Anderson (184) and Todd Carter (141) were the two placewinners for the Runnin’ Bulldogs. Chattanooga wrestled a doubleheader against Ohio University and DII program Ashland. The Mocs battled hard, though losing the Ohio dual 23-19. Noah Castillo (149) picked up a ranked win over then-ranked #19 Derek Raike, 16-0. The team turned around to dominate against Ashland, winning 32-9, dropping a decision at 184 and an injury default at 197. The Citadel had a strong showing at the George Mason duals. After their first loss against George Mason (18-17), the Bulldogs turned around and defeated Williams College (39-10), and Clarion 17-17 (64-62 tiebreaker), and ended the day with another shutout against Millersville (55-0). A nail-biter match, the Clarion dual went into total points scored in tiebreaker criteria. The Citadel will be back in action this weekend at the Navy Classic. VMI traveled to the Navy Quad, picking up a dual win over the Morgan State Bears (33-9) following back-to-back losses from Navy (40-6) and Pitt (47-0). Standout performances from the Morgan State match include Braxton Lewis (174) winning by technical fall, while Josh Yost (157) scored a major decision win over his opponent. It was a family affair in Hilton Coliseum on Sunday evening - head coach Nate Carr, Jr. alongside Marcus Coleman - headed home to Ames as the Wildcats wrestled the #10 Iowa State Cyclones. Coach Carr was in the corner coaching against his brother, National Champion , and All-American David Carr, with Coleman and Director of Ops Erica Andorf at his side. The ‘Cats lost the dual 50-0, with the Cyclones picking up bonus-point wins at every bout. Besties - next week I’ll have an extra-special recap/preview for y’all. And I hope to see y’all out and about real soon…until then, be safe, be well, kick your feet up and go check out our Live Streaming Guide for all your wrestling needs this weekend. Xoxo, Rachel G
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