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Showing content with the highest reputation on 12/05/2023 in all areas
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I am thinking something like 30% Mendez, 30% Bartlett, 30% Woods, 10% all others combined4 points
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All times Eastern, with local times in parenthesis. *-Indicates event is believed to be eligible for a one-pound weight allowance Thursday, December 7: Michigan State at Buffalo, 7:00 PM Friday, December 8: VMI at Kent State, 1:00 PM Gannon at Kent State, 2:30 PM VMI vs. Mount Union at Kent State, 2:30 PM Mount Union at Kent State, 4:00 PM Princeton at Rutgers, 6:00 PM Duke at Davidson, 7:00 PM Columbia at Iowa, 8:00 PM (7:00 PM) Wyoming at Missouri, 8:00 PM (7:00 PM) Lehigh at Oklahoma State, 8:00 PM (7:00 PM) West Virginia at Air Force, 9:00 PM (7:00 PM) Saturday, December 9: *Army West Point, Cleveland State, Kent State, Northwestern, VMI at Cleveland State Open, hosted by Cleveland State, 9:30 AM Wisconsin at Rider, 12:00 PM Central Michigan at Indiana, 2:00 PM Bloomsburg at LIU, 4:00 PM Wisconsin at Drexel, 6:00 PM Sunday, December 10: Pittsburgh at Ohio State, 12:00 PM Hofstra at Penn State, 1:00 PM Navy vs. Ohio at Jefferson, PA, 2:00 PM Buffalo at Rutgers, 2:00 PM North Dakota State at Minnesota, 3:00 PM (2:00 PM) Maryland at Morgan State, 3:00 PM West Virginia at Northern Colorado, 3:00 PM (1:00 PM) Columbia at Northern Iowa, 3:00 PM (2:00 PM) Oklahoma State at Oklahoma, 3:00 PM (2:00 PM)2 points
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His teammate Jarad Priest wants to be a firefighter - I've always thought that was a very noble job2 points
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The mob that is screaming that Trump will end democracy is trying to throw their political opposition in prison.2 points
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@ionel has a thing for typos. But Crookham could get 3rd this year then be the favorite next year when Vito and Fix graduate2 points
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I only know because I use them in the back ground of my wrestling podcast “Slap the Mat” on youtube. Including NCAA team wrestling mascots, there are 36 in total as of December 2023. There was 32 up until yesterday when Penn St created and gave out a set of 5 “2022 individual champs” at their home opener vs Lehigh. Penn St seems to be the king’s of bobble head as you will see below they have nearly half of all ncaa/usa wrestling bobble heads with 15 total. Many of these are given out to fans at home meets which is where I got the Yianni Diakomihalis won (Penn at Cornell). So in total there are 36 which include - 7 USA/olympic wrestling theme - 22 NCAA wrestler theme (14 Penn St/ 8 other) - 7 NCAA wrestling mascots theme totaling 36 ** There are 4 guys (Cael Sanderson/Dan Gable/Carter Starocci/RBY) who have two different ones each and David Taylor has 3 bobble heads (2 USA/ 1 Penn St) You would be very hard pressed to find any others outside of the 36 listed. If anyone is aware of any please list in this thread with pic or site where it is listed. There is an old Jeff Prescott (Penn St), David Taylor (Penn St) and Ed Ruth (Penn St) but they look like more of a figurine of some sort than they do bobble head. The Prescott looks bronze or something. The Taylor and Ruth look like a child’s art class clay project gone all wrong. I am sure there will be additional ones added in 2024. USA/Olympic 1 - Larger David Taylor holding flag 2- Smaller David Taylor holding flag 3- Jden Cox holding flag(size of DT#2) 4- Bruce Baumgartner 5- Kurt Angle 6- Daniel Cormier 7- Dan Gable (iconic 1972 podium) NCAA 8- Dan Gable (Iowa coach) 9-Cael Sanderson (Iowa St singlet) 10-Cael Sanderson (Iowa St robe) 11-Yianni Diakomihalis (Cornell) 12-Ben Askren (Mizzou) 13-Jon Trenge (Lehigh) 14- Nick Gwiadsowski (NC State) 15- Coach Cliff Keen (Michigan) Penn St Wrestlers 16-David Taylor 17-Roman Bravo Young 18-Zain Retherford 19-Carter Starocci 20-Bo Nickal 21-Jason Nolf 22-Anthony Cassar 23-Vincenzo Joseph 24-Mark Hall Penn St 2022 Champions set 25-Aaron Brooks 26-Carter Starocci ** see below 27- RBY ** see below 28-Nick Lee 29-Max Dean Mascots 30-Penn St “Lion wrestler” 31- Arizona St “Sparky wrestler” 32-Minnesota “Goldy wrestler” 33- Ohio st “Brutus wrestler” 34- Mizzou “Tigers wrestler” 35-Princeton “Tiger wrestler” 36- Iowa “Herky the Hawk wrestler” See pics below2 points
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He was able to beat McDonogold, Aruja and Nogao Might need to see how he does with Ficks2 points
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I'm a little confused by the Steveson comparison... Is Crookham for real? Yes. Is Crookham Gable Steveson? No.2 points
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Correct throw is the most trash move ever. Didn’t hit your move? Don’t worry no problem you can have a couple points or at least just start over. Doesn’t matter about defense. Garbage. It’s the one time where folk is superior to free.2 points
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So far, he's been asked if he'll be a dictator (he didn't actually answer at the time) and then, when asked a second time about abusing his power he said "only on day 1". Here's that second exchange: Even with Hannity running cover for him, he can't help himself.1 point
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There needs to be some consistency in how the perimeters are set up. I don't like the fact that a person with long legs can move his foot off the mat. That needs to be fixed. Have secondary mats at least three feet around the official mat.1 point
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This week saw most of the attention go to CKLV, while some great duals occurred as well. Iowa State ended up winning the tournament with seven on the podium, while Oklahoma State and South Dakota State made the top ten as well. Northern Iowa and Wyoming both had some individual under-the-radar performances. The Big 12 had the most conference champs with four, all being from different schools (OKST, SDSU, UNI, ISU). On the duals side, we saw Oklahoma on the road at Missouri and West Virginia. North Dakota State had a tough dual against Virginia and continues to look like a young developing team. The conference flexed its top-end strength and depth this weekend, and next week has a mix of teams taking the week off plus some more great conference duals. Air Force: CKLV Brackets | Bob Smith Open Brackets Air Force was without Wyatt Hendrickson this weekend, but still had a wrestler break out at CKLV. Sam Wolf came in as the 15 seed but finished in 5th place, going 3-2. His only losses were to Dustin Plott (OKST) and Will Feldkamp (ISU) who finished 3rd and 2nd respectively. He had big wins over Chris Foca (CORN) and Gavin Hoffman (OHST). Giano Petrucelli didn’t make the podium at 165, but got an upset win himself over Antrell Taylor (NEB). Tucker Owens suffered two upset losses, to Brendan McCrone (OHST) and Troy Hohman (NCST). Not the tournament that was expected, but Wolf breaking out shows that he could be another All-American contender for the Falcons. The team also had some backups compete at the Bob Smith Open where Joe Fernau came back with a title at 149lbs. Next Up: The Falcons have their first conference dual at home, taking on West Virginia. California Baptist: No Competition Next Up: The team has a week off before taking on NIU and Kent State. Iowa State: CKLV Brackets If you were looking for a way for the Cyclones to win this tournament it likely would have involved a David Carr title and wrestlers like Kysen Terukina and Cody Chittum making the podium. Well the team flexed their depth and overall lineup strength by winning with only one champ in Yonger Bastida. Terukina, Chittum, and Broderson all missed the podium. Chittum had tough matches against Bryce Andonian and Daniel Cardenas while going 2-2. Evan Frost and Will Feldkamp both made the finals, and Anthony Echemendia (7th), Casey Swiderski (5th), and MJ Gaitan (8th) also made the podium. Feldkamp bounced back after his loss to Gabe Arnold with a massive first-period pin over Trey Munoz (ORST) to make the finals. David Carr took a shocking loss to Julian Ramirez (CORN), losing a scramble late in the third period to give up the only takedown. He bounced back with a decision over Cam Amine (MICH) to place 3rd. Yonger Bastida introduced himself as a title contender, scoring a major over Nick Feldman (OHST), a tech over Grady Griess (NAVY), and a wildly entertaining decision over Lucas Davison (MICH). Winning CKLV the way they did shows that this team isn’t just looking to place top ten in March, but also compete for a team trophy. Next Up: The team takes a week off before competing in the Collegiate Duals on December 18th. Missouri: Dual Results | Cougar Clash Brackets The Tigers stayed at home and got their first conference win against Oklahoma 30-12. They won seven matches, giving up a forfeit at 197lbs. Logan Gioffre got his first ranked win of the season, taking out Willie McDougald in overtime. Outside of 149 and 285, every wrestler scored bonus points. Keegan O’Toole got a ranked pin, Clayton Whiting dominated another ranked opponent in his second start, and Peyton Mocco picked apart Tate Picklo in a tech fall. Rocky Elam didn’t wrestle in the dual but made his debut the next morning at the Cougar Clash. He won a title with a 4-2 decision over Garrett Joles (MINN). Joining him with titles were Zach Elam, Josh Edmond, and Nate Pulliam split the title with Joel Mylin at 149lbs. Current starter Zeke Seltzer had a tough weekend, dropping a close match in the dual then going 0-2 at the Clash. Colton Hawks got another big win at 184, taking out Isaiah Salazar (MINN) before losing to undefeated freshman Max McEnnely (MINN) in the finals. The Tigers have some depth at 184lbs, in a lineup battle that is likely to continue this year. Next Up: The Tigers host another Big 12 member at home, taking on Wyoming on Dec. 8th. North Dakota State: Dual Results NDSU stayed at home this week and suffered a close out-of-conference loss to Virginia 21-18. Gavin Drexler and Max Petersen had close matches with the Gioffre twins, but came up just short. Petersen continues to start after Kellyn March suffered an injury earlier this year. The Bison scored two pins to grab some momentum, one at 165 and 184. Gaven Sax had a razor-close loss to top-ten Justin McCoy. Next Up: NDSU hits the road for a dual against Minnesota on December 10th, their first against the Golden Gophers since 2011. Northern Colorado: Cougar Clash Brackets The Bears sent a handful of wrestlers to the Cougar Clash and came away with three titles. Dom Serrano won at 133, winning the title over a tough freshman in Ty Wells (MINN). Vinny Zerban won at 157, taking out Missouri’s J Conway in the semis and getting an injury default over Cam Steed in the finals. Baylor Fernandes was the last wrestler to win, going 4-0 at 165lbs and outplacing typical starter Ayden Rix-McElhinney who finished 4th. Next Up: The team hosts West Virginia at home on December 10th for their first conference dual. Northern Iowa: CKLV Brackets | Jim Koch Open Brackets The Panthers came in projected to finish 9th on preseeds and finished just outside of the top ten at 12th, but were missing Lance Runyon and Tyrell Gordon. Parker Keckeisen won his first CKLV title, taking out conference opponent Will Feldkamp (ISU) with a major decision in the finals. Julian Farber came in unseeded at 133, and got ranked wins over Gabe Whisenhunt (ORST) and Ethan Oakley (APP) to make the podium and finish 7th. Cael Happel was the last Panther to make the podium, finishing 4th with ranked wins over Brock Hardy (NEB), Anthony Echemendia (ISU), and Sergio Lemley (MICH). Ryder Downey didn’t make the podium at 157, but had back-to-back upset wins over Trevor Chumbley (NW) and Paddy Gallagher (OHST). He ended up dropping regular decisions to Ed Scott and Jacori Teemer. Other Panther wrestlers competed at the Jim Koch Open and came away with five titles. RJ Weston, Connor Thorpe, Jack Thomsen, Izzy Moreno, and CJ Walrath all won with a number of bonus point victories. Next Up: The Panthers host Columbia for their first dual of the year on December 10th. Oklahoma State: CKLV Brackets | Bob Smith Open Brackets Coming in I thought OK State had a solid chance to surprise people and win the tournament. Unfortunately, a combination of injuries and some underperformance outweighed excellent results at other weights. Daton Fix was a late scratch, so Reece Witcraft entered and got a big win over Julian Chlebove (ASU) before dropping his next two. Jordan Williams, Brayden Thompson, and Daniel Manibog were bounced surprisingly early after some upsets and tough draws. I liked Troy Spratley’s path, but he dropped two wild matches to Tanner Jordan and Caleb Smith. Injuries hit Luke Surber and Konner Doucet, who ended up having to forfeit out of the tournament. There were impressive performances from Dustin Plott and Izzak Olejnik. Plott and Lenny Pinto (NEB) had two must-watch matches that saw Plott avenge a quarterfinal loss to place 3rd. Olejnik upset Cam Amine (MICH) and won a title over Julian Ramirez (CORN) with some clutch third-period takedowns. With David Carr (ISU) dropping a match, Olejnik has put himself right in Big 12 and national title discussion. Next Up: OK State has two big duals, first at home against Lehigh on December 8th, followed by the first Bedlam of the year on December 10th. Oklahoma: Dual Results (Mizzou) | Dual Results (WVU) The Sooners had two road duals, coming home with a 1-1 record. At Mizzou, they got ranked wins at 133 and 141, but struggled to slow down the Tigers to drop the dual 30-12. They then went to Morgantown to take on West Virginia in a dual that came down to the last match. Conrad Hendriksen got his first ranked win at 125 over Jett Strickenberger, and looks like a quality starter for the Sooners. Mosha Schwartz appeared to suffer a significant shoulder injury on a mat return gone wrong and was seen in a sling after the match. Willie McDougald got an upset win over Ty Watters after an upset loss against Mizzou. John Wiley got back in the win column with a solid win over Caleb Dowling. Carlson went 0-2 on the weekend, getting pinned by both Hall and O’Toole. Nijenhuis started at 174, he didn’t win but Picklo’s struggle at Missouri could indicate a lineup battle. Buchanan scored a tech fall to bring the decision to the last match, where Heindselman and Wolfgram squared off for the sixth time. The two had alternated wins and losses over the years and continued here as Heindselman got the 9-7 win with a late neutral danger takedown to win the dual 21-19. The Sooners have struggled with regular-season consistency, and are still trying to find it with lineup changes at multiple weights. Next Up: It’s Bedlam week, as the Sooners prepare to take on OK State in Norman on December 10th. South Dakota State: CKLV Brackets South Dakota State came in and had a solid team performance to finish 10th, without Tanner Cook or Bennett Berge. Last year, Cook was a finalist here and provided valuable points. Cade DeVos won a title as the three seed, including wins over Carson Kharchla (OHST) and Travis Wittlake (ORST). Tanner Sloan had a solid run to finish 3rd, dropping a match to Jaxon Smith (MARY) but dominating Silas Allred (NEB) with a 12-1 major and a one-sided 7-2 decision over Jacob Cardenas (CORN). Derrick Cardinal had a breakout performance, finishing 6th after coming in unseeded. He ran to the semis with a decision over Brendan Ferretti (Navy) and majored Dom Zaccone (CAMP) before dropping matches to Kai Orine (NCST) and Nic Bouzakis (OHST). After going 11-15 last season, Cardinal looks like he could be a big point scorer for the Jackrabbits. Another wrestler who impressed was Tanner Jordan, who beat Troy Spratley (OKST) and Brendan McCrone (OHST) to finish 8th. Cael Swensen missed the podium at 157, dropping matches to Peyton Robb (NEB) and Bryce Andonian (VT). Next Up: SDSU gets a week off before another Big 12 vs Big 10 dual against Nebraska on December 16th. Utah Valley: CKLV Brackets Utah Valley didn’t get anyone on the podium, but had some positive individual match results. Evan Bockman got an upset win over Nick Stemmet (STAN), but dropped his bloodround match to Joey Novak (WYO). Haiden Drury was seeded 8th, but had a tough tournament going 0-2. Jacob Armstrong scored a solid pin over Zayne Lehman (Ohio) at 184lbs, and Mark Takara had a narrow one-point loss to eventual finalist Travis Wittlake (ORST). Next Up: The Wolverines get a week off before the Reno TOC on December 17th. West Virginia: Dual Results The Mountaineers took on Oklahoma at home and came razor close to pulling off the upset. A pin at 165 and an injury default at 141 gave them a great opportunity, but bonus point losses at 133 and 197 plus upset losses at 125 and 149 were too much to overcome. I’m still high on WVU’s potential, and young wrestlers like Ty Watters, Brody Conley, and Caleb Dowling to continue to develop and be impactful throughout the season. Next Up: West Virginia heads to Colorado to take on Air Force in another conference dual on December 8th. Wyoming: CKLV Brackets Wyoming quietly had a very solid tournament, placing top 20 with three on the podium. Jore Volk led the way, wrestling to his 5th seed spot. He took out Brendan McCrone (OHST) and Caleb Smith (NEB), but ran into the red-hot Nico Provo (STAN) and dropped a one-takedown match to Brandon Kaylor (ORST) on the backside. Gabe Willochell at 149 made the podium, highlighted by a win over 2023 qualifier Isaiah Delgado (UVU). True freshman Joey Novak had a breakout at 197, winning four straight matches after dropping his first one. It included wins over Luke Geog (OHST), Evan Bockman (UVU), and Jack Wehmeyer (COL). The young Cowboy squad is clearly developing and looking to be even more dangerous throughout the year. Next Up: Wyoming heads to Columbia, MO for another conference dual against Missouri. November Takeaways We’re somehow already through the first month of the season, and November saw plenty of action in the Big 12. Pre-CKLV the conference had five teams in the top 15, and eight in the top 30. While not every team has hit a ton of action in the first month, there are already some takeaways and things to watch for. Iowa State - Lost the Cy-Hawk dual, but could still be a trophy team The Cyclones frustratingly dropped the dual against Iowa with close calls in multiple matches. However, they looked good in a number of other matches. #8 Evan Frost has been a breakout wrestler for them as a redshirt freshman, the coaches were able to get both Echemendia and Swiderski into the lineup, and David Carr looked dominant. The team is sitting outside of the top 10 currently, but I expect them to make a climb back up throughout the season. North Dakota State - Rebuilding or Reloading? Last year the Bison had one of their best years in nearly a decade, with two All-Americans and a top 25 finish. The offseason saw Roger Kish head to Norman, OK and Obe Blanc was elevated to the head coaching position. They brought in a solid recruiting class, and have built around returning starters Kellyn March and Gaven Sax. The team may not be ready to jump back into the rankings yet, but Gavin Drexler (141), Landon Johnson (157), Adam Cherne (184), and Maxwell Petersen (149) have all notched ranked wins this year. All of those wrestlers are either redshirt freshmen or true freshmen. Watch this team continue to develop throughout the season and if they can have an impact at Big 12’s. West Virginia - Wildcard or Contender? When I did my Big 12 Breakdown, I thought the Mountaineers had a high upside if things worked out, but it would take a team effort. In November, the team was 4-0 with no team scoring double digits against them. It’s not the strongest competition and it hasn’t been flawless, but the team looks to be better than last year. New starters Jett Strickenberger, Ty Watters (149), Brody Conley (174), and Dennis Robin (184) have added consistency and depth to the roster. The team is still looking for a big point scorer, as 2022 All-American Peyton Hall has taken some surprising losses to fall to #13 at 165. If he can get back to winning consistently against top competition, and a handful of others can start to break into the top 12, the team could be looking at their first top-25 NCAA finish since 2015. Rest of the Big 12 Not every team has hit the ground running early, but that is changing with December. The CKLV has had significant impacts on rankings and how some of these teams are viewed. Many schools are starting conference duals, and should start to establish tiers within the Big 12. Missouri is still the favorite early, but haven’t seen enough competition to have truly separated. Iowa State and OK State appear right on their heels as teams battle for a team trophy in March. Schools like SDSU, OU, and UNI could give those top teams a tough fight in duals and shouldn’t be counted out either. Don’t count individual wrestlers from some of the smaller affiliate members, as they continue to develop against tough competition. Air Force and Wyoming are two schools that have stood out and are looking to build throughout the season with some of their unranked wrestlers. December starts fast with CKLV, and the landscape could look very different by New Year’s.1 point
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because they don't realize that rankings are supposed to reflect passed results and not predict future ones. and they need to maintain that state because pyles isn't gonna make a meaningfully bold prediction ever, because he's trying to maintain the illusion that he's an expert.1 point
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Please elaborate on him trying to become a dictator and how it was that he was thwarted? mspart1 point
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Yes this was a text book case straight out of Homer Ref'n 101. If you don't want to make a call make sure you are in a position where you can't see the call. Well played!1 point
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i just meant I thought it was going to, but to your point if it went to saturday night, which i now remember it did because that was NIckal vs martin i think, then I was right. I guess I should admit i must have just wanted PSU to lose.1 point
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I think the actual "best" rivalry game is the Egg Bowl, personally, and I'm dead serious.1 point
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Oh, damn. Woof, that sucks. Speedy recovery for Van Ness who really seemed to find something at NCAAs last year.1 point
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Why are illegal aliens allowed to flood into the United States? --- I've thought about the open borders as a long-term Democratic power play. In 20 years, immigrant children with birthright citizenship will vote Democrat... and the illegal elders will gain citizenship over time. The recent immigration flood is not primarily about asylum. What other reasons might there be a flood of immigrants to the USA and elsewhere? --- I couldn't fathom it might be destabilizing the country to reduce republicanism, support for the US Constitution concerning liberty and justice, etc... Consider my mind blown by coincidences! There is a 'fictional' blueprint for one world government that imposes strict control over all aspects of society. This control includes limitations on population size, restrictions on individual freedoms, the abolition of family life, control of information, and the concentration of wealth and power. Digital currency, engineered wars, state-raised children, US, flooded with illegal aliens for destabilization purposes, guns taken away, organized epidemics of fatal rapid-acting diseases, etc. How many actions in the extract have or are occurring in the USA or elsewhere? See pages 103 through 107 of this book on CIA gov for the extract.1 point
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If VT can get points at 125 and 165 in March, they will likely finish slightly higher. I’m very skeptical that’ll happen at 125 right now but think 165 will end up being okay. Who knows maybe Sasso ends up snagging the starting spot at 197 too. He’s not a giant slayer yet but he did knock off 3 ranked guys this weekend1 point
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Good job. Didn't even address what I wrote. Just went on a left bented screed. 3 points for you!! mspart1 point
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One way to change public perception is to charge more politicians for the crimes the public knows about. #Consistency1 point
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It isn't that people think Trump is high character and innocent of all charges. There is inconsistency in who is charged and for what. Most US citizens disbelieve that Biden received 81M legit votes. Of course the political hunt for Trump has only increased the people's support for him. Remember they said Trump would be a dictator in 2016? Drain the swamp 2024.1 point
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It will be very close . Woods is in like his 8th year and a very seasoned pro. Mendez is settling in at a knew weight. He is just starting his second year as a true sophomore. These are all extremely good wrestlers mentioned. Its a very long season and we are just getting started.1 point
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Oregon State The Beavers led the pack with a fifth-place finish with 98.5 points. Oregon State’s Brandon Kaylor cruised to the quarterfinals before losing 2-1 to Brett Ungar. Kaylor bounced back and finished fourth, defeating Wyoming’s Jore Volk before losing to Nebraska’s Caleb Smith. Cleveland Belton was one match away from placing at 141 pounds. He lost to Cornell’s Vince Cornella and Iowa State’s Anthony Echemendia. Nash Singleton stunned the nation as an unranked wrestler who finished sixth at 149 pounds. Singleton lost his first match to Iowa State’s Casey Swiderski 13-4. However, he bounced back with wins over James Latona, Quinn Kinner, and Isaiah Delgado. Matthew Olguin finished seventh at 165 pounds with wins over Stoney Buell, Brevin Cassella, Brett McIntosh, and Isaac Wilcox. Travis Wittlake finished second at 174 pounds. Wittlake battled his first three matches, before falling 9-8 in the finals to South Dakota State’s Cade DeVos. No. 2 seed Trey Munoz was stunned with a 2-2 finish. His losses came to North Carolina State’s Dylan Fishback 9-6 and pinned by Iowa State’s Will Feldkamp. Lastly, Boone McDermott finished fourth at heavyweight. He defeated Seth Nevills, Lewis Fernandes, Owen Trephan, and two more, but lost to Campbell’s Taye Ghadiali. Stanford The Cardinal finished seventh with 85.5 points. No. 9 seed Nico Provo has started a debate for the best 125-pound wrestler in the country. Provo won the tournament over Matt Ramos, Kysen Terukina, Ungar, Volk, and Trever Anderson. Unranked true freshman Tyler Knox also turned heads with a fourth-place finish at 133 pounds. Knox upset Nic Bouzakis 11-3, Richie Koehler 8-4, and Reece Witcraft 2-1. He lost 2-1 to Evan Frost and 16-6 to Dominic Zaccone. Daniel Cardenas reached the semifinals at 157 pounds but fell to fifth place. After a dominant first round, Cardenas snuck past Cody Chittum 9-8 and Meyer Shaprio 8-5. However, he lost to Jacori Teemer and Bryce Andonian. Hunter Garvin lost in the round of 16. Yet, he responded with a sixth-place finish over Scott Jarosz, Isaac Wilcox, Giano Petrucelli and Cassella. True freshman Lorenzo Norman finished seventh at 174 pounds. He defeated former Cardinal national champion Shane Griffith, MJ Gaitan, Brayden Thompson, and Riley Davis. Nick Stemmet finished seventh at 197 pounds over Max Shaw, Calvin Sund, Joey Novak, and three more opponents. Arizona State The Sun Devils finished 14th with 51 points. Julian Chlebove entered the 133-pound division as the third seed but failed to place. He lost to Zaccone and Witcraft However, Kyle Parco finished third at 149 pounds and Jacori Teemer finished second at 157 pounds. Parco earned wins against Dylan D’Emilio, Marcos Polanco, Nash Singleton, Casey Swiderski, and Ethan Fernandes. Teemer defeated Daniel Cardenas 14-6, Brooks Gable 19-3, Chris Earnest 6-3, and Ryder Downey 7-2. Cal Poly The Mustangs finished 24th with 22.5 points. None of the wrestlers placed at the tournament. However, Dominic Mendez ended with a 3-2 record at 125 pounds and Chance Lamer went 2–1 with his loss coming to the eventual runner-up. CSU Bakersfield The Roadrunners finished 31st with 7 points. Richard Castro-Sandoval earned a couple of wins at 125 pounds over Kysen Terukina 7-4 and Evan Tallmadge 12-9. Santino Sanchez also earned two wins over Patrick Adams and Dylan Acevedo-Switzer. Little Rock The Trojans competed in the Cougar Clash Saturday and had three duals instead of making the trip to Las Vegas. Joshua Sarpy went 3-1 at 133 pounds with victories over Mikey Kaminski, Zeke Seltzer and Marcel Lopez. Joseph Bianchi went 3-2 at 165 pounds with victories over Blaine Brenner, Derek Matthews, and Jake Evans. Kodiak Cannedy also went 3-2 at 174 pounds with victories over Ricardo Salin, Dominic Lopez, and Antonio Torres. In dual competition, the Trojans went 2-0 in Drexel’s Dragon Duals. Nasir Bailey, Matt Bianchi, Tyler Brennan, Stephen Little, and Josiah Hill all went 2-0 individually.1 point
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no way the Cornell staff pushes their golden goose out their if he's significantly concussed. Unless he hid it from them... To repeat myself in the form of a question, how often has he lost in the last 5 years? I think he just isn't used to it.1 point
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Watch the replay of the pin again. The ref was in perfect position to see the pin but instead he jumped to the otherwise where he couldn't see it. Smart move by a Homer ref knowing that a pin is not reviewable but back points are. This actalually delayed the start of his back point swipes. He jumped back over to finish the swipes but the pin was gone, it disappeared into the night like one of Wkn's elusive pinfalls. Yes, you could say it was outstanding.1 point
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