-
Posts
3,296 -
Joined
-
Last visited
-
Days Won
10
Content Type
Forums
Articles
Teams
College Commitments
Rankings
Authors
Jobs
Store
Everything posted by InterMat Staff
-
We're underway! The 2024-25 season has begun and we have a full slate of DI duals this week. A total of 53 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). All times Eastern Thursday, November 14: Belmont Abbey at Davidson 6:00 PM FloWrestling Bloomsburg at Lock Haven 7:00 PM PSAC Sports Digital Network Chattanooga at Ohio State 7:00 PM B1G+ West Virginia at Rider 7:00 PM ESPN+ St. Andrews at Davidson 7:30 PM FloWrestling Friday, November 15: Nebraska at Campbell 4:30 PM UFC Fight Pass - CFFC Match Day Iowa at Bellarmine 7:00 PM ESPN+ Indiana at Central Michigan 7:00 PM ESPN+ Columbia at Cleveland State 7:00 PM Northern Colorado at Drexel 7:00 PM FloWrestling? George Mason at Edinboro 7:00 PM FloWrestling Morgan State at Lehigh 7:00 PM FloWrestling Appalachian State at NC State 7:00 PM ACC Network Extra Missouri at Virginia Tech 7:00 PM ACC Network Extra Nebraska at North Carolina 8:00 PM Navy at Iowa State 8:00 PM ESPN+ Bucknell at Minnesota 8:00 PM B1G+ Augustana at South Dakota State 8:00 PM Midco Sports Plus Oklahoma State at Utah Valley 9:00 PM FloWrestling Saturday, November 16: Mercyhurst at Findlay Open 9:00 AM Franklin & Marshall at Shorty Hitchcock Classic 9:00 AM Northern Iowa at Grand View Open 10:00 AM IAWrestle Rokfin Northern Colorado at Penn 12:00 PM ESPN+ Stanford at Cal Poly 2:30 PM FloWrestling American vs. Maryland at Sykesville, MD 6:00 PM InterMat Rokfin Eureka at SIU Edwardsville 7:00 PM ESPN+ Northern Illinois at Northwestern 8:00 PM B1G+ Duke at Hofstra 11:30 AM Sacred Heart vs. The Citadel at Hofstra 11:30 AM Duke vs. Sacred Heart at Hofstra 1:30 PM The Citadel at Hofstra 1:30 PM Sacred Heart at Hofstra 3:30 PM NWCA All-Star Classic at State College, PA 7:00 PM FloWrestling Sunday, November 17: Arizona State, Minnesota, North Dakota State, Oklahoma, South Dakota State at Daktronics Invitational 11:00 AM FloWrestling Purdue at Buffalo 10:00 AM ESPN+ Army West Point vs. Purdue at Buffalo 12:00 PM ESPN+ Kent State at Bellarmine 1:00 PM ESPN+ Ohio State at Edinboro 1:00 PM FloWrestling Michigan State at Ohio 1:00 PM ESPN+ Drexel at Penn State 1:00 PM B1G+ Army West Point at Buffalo 2:00 PM ESPN+ George Mason at Clarion 2:00 PM FloWrestling Davidson at Presbyterian 2:00 PM Columbia at Michigan 5:00 PM B1G+ Oklahoma State at Oregon State 5:00 PM FloWrestling Morgan State at Marymount 12:00 PM VMI vs. Averett at Marymount 12:00 PM Morgan State vs. Averett at Marymount 1:45 PM VMI at Marymount 1:45 PM Morgan State vs. VMI at Marymount 3:30 PM The Jersey Jostle LIU vs. Rutgers at Toms River, NJ 2:00 PM - Live Audio NC State vs. Princeton at Toms River, NJ 2:00 PM UFC Fight Pass - CFFC Match Day LIU vs. Princeton at Toms River, NJ 4:00 PM NC State vs. Rutgers at Toms River, NJ 4:00 PM UFC Fight Pass - CFFC Match Day
-
A new week concludes and a new set of Fantasy Wrestling Standings emerge. For these standings, we will be using the Basic Fantasy Scoring through @WrestleStat (Win by Dec +3, Loss by Dec -3, Win by Pin +6, Loss by Pin -6, etc). Only results against D1 competition (starters, backups, and redshirts) will count towards Fantasy Points. Standings are first ordered based on total Fpts, then if tied by Points Per Match (PPM). Week 2 Notes: With the several tournaments available in Week 2, we saw big jumps up and some deep falls down the Standings. We also saw some wrestlers make their presence known (Vincent Robinson of NCST) while others, like Jakob Camacho (also of NCST), had what we like to call an awful, terrible, no-good, very bad day. For the Week 2 Standings, 165 Braden Scoles (ILL) wrestled five matches and won all by bonus. Three pins, one tech, and a major give him the #1 wrestler spot with 27 Fpts. The next four wrestlers all had 21 Fpts, but Keegan O’Toole (MIZZ) separated himself with the better Points Per Match of three techs and a pin to take the #2 spot. The only non-starter to make the Top-10 in the Week 2 standings (technically, tied for 10th), was Lehigh’s Zeke Dubler at 165. Two Redshirts also make the Top-20, both with 16 Fpts, in 133 Richard Murillo (CBU) and 197 Cody Merrill (OKST). Week 2 Leaders Year-Long Fantasy Point Standings
-
Highlights Army dominates dual at Throwdown on the Yorktown event Long Island and Franklin & Marshall each go 1-1 at Wranglemania Navy beats Drexel, falls to North Carolina Lehigh’s Stanich wins Journeymen Collegiate Classic after defeating 2 All-Americans Brignola and Beard of Lehigh both champs at Collegiate Classic American out duals Clarion by 1 point Ebert and Cassella notch ranked wins over Illinois Duals Throwdown on the Yorktown – Mount Pleasant, SC (11/8) – Army (35) vs Gardner-Webb (6) 125 - Charlie Farmer (Army West Point) dec Tyson Lane (Gardner-Webb) 5-4 133 - Ethan Berginc (Army West Point) fall TK Davis (Gardner-Webb) 2:25 141 - Todd Carter (Gardner-Webb) dec Braden Basile (Army West Point) 4-2 149 - Trae McDaniel (Army West Point) dec Joseph Giordano (Gardner-Webb) 7-4 157 - Drew Pepin (Gardner-Webb) dec Dakota Morris (Army West Point) 4-1SV 165 - Gunner Filipowicz (Army West Point) tech Tyler Brignola (Gardner-Webb) 18-3 174 - Dalton Harkins (Army West Point) maj Andrew Wilson (Gardner-Webb) 13-0 184 - Cole Karpinski (Army West Point) maj Edison Flores (Gardner-Webb) 11-0 197 - Wolfgang Frable (Army West Point) maj Joshua McCutchen (Gardner-Webb) 17-4 285 - Brady Colbert (Army West Point) FFT Throwdown on the Yorktown – Mount Pleasant, SC (11/8) *Army vs The Citadel was canceled due to weather conditions Journeymen Wranglemania – Bethlehem, PA (11/9) LIU (38) vs Duke (8) 125 - Robbie Sagaris (Long Island) maj Ethan Grimminger (Duke) 11-0 133 - Kaelen Francois (Long Island) dec Raymond Adams (Duke) 7-1 141 - Devin Matthews (Long Island) tech Noah Kochman (Duke) 16-0 149 - Drew Witham (Long Island) tech Sean O’Donnell (Duke) 15-0 157 - Brayden Roberts (Long Island) fall Nick Tattini (Duke) 2:01 165 - Aiden Wallace (Duke) tech James Johnston (Long Island) 15-0 174 - Blake Bahna (Long Island) FFT 184 - Anthony D’Alesio (Long Island) tech Logan Richey (Duke) 21-5 197 - Gavin Claro (Long Island) dec Vincent Lee (Duke) 7-5 285 - Connor Barket (Duke) dec Chris Powell (Long Island) 3-0 Journeymen Wranglemania – Bethlehem, PA (11/9) #21 Arizona State (38) vs LIU (3) 125 - Richie Figueroa (Arizona State) dec Robbie Sagaris (Long Island) 6-1 133 - Julian Chlebove (Arizona State) tech Kaelen Francois (Long Island) 17-2 141 - Emilio Ysaguirre (Arizona State) dec Devin Matthews (Long Island) 9-5 149 - Jesse Vasquez (Arizona State) dec Drew Witham (Long Island) 11-7 157 - Brayden Roberts (Long Island) dec Michael Kilic (Arizona State) 2-0 165 - Nicco Ruiz (Arizona State) tech James Johnston (Long Island) 21-5 174 - Chance McLane (Arizona State) maj Blake Bahna (Long Island) 12-2 184 - Aziz Fayzullaev (Arizona State) fall Anthony D’Alesio (Long Island) 2:42 197 - Jacob Meissner (Arizona State) dec Gavin Claro (Long Island) 9-8 285 - Cohlton Schultz (Arizona State) Disq Chris Powell (Long Island) Journeymen Wranglemania – Bethlehem, PA (11/9) Franklin & Marshall (23) vs VMI (22) 125 - Jimmy Garcia (F&M) fall Cody Tanner (VMI) 3:49 133 - Mason Leiphart (F&M) dec Dyson Dunham (VMI) 5-0 141 - Bryce Kresho (F&M) fall Phoenix Alyea (VMI) 6:08 149 - Patrick Jordon (VMI) fall Josh Hillard (F&M) 7:11 157 - Luke Bender (F&M) maj Eric Doran (VMI) 14-5 165 - Ryan Vigil (VMI) maj Josh Palmucci (F&M) 9-0 174 - Dominic Wheatley (F&M) tech Tyler Berish (VMI) 19-2 184 - Braxton Lewis (VMI) fall Leo Varga (F&M) 3:50 197 - Toby Schoffstall (VMI) maj RJ Moore (F&M) 9-0 285 - Josh Evans (VMI) dec Brody Kline (F&M) 4-2 Journeymen Wranglemania – Bethlehem, PA #18 Rutgers (41) vs. (11/9) Franklin & Marshall (3) 125 - Jimmy Garcia (F&M) dec Kurt Wehner (Rutgers) 9-4 133 - Dylan Shawver (Rutgers) FFT 141 - Joey Olivieri (Rutgers) dec Bryce Kresho (F&M) 10-8 149 - Michael Cetta (Rutgers) fall Josh Hillard (F&M) 4:03 157 - Conner Harer (Rutgers) maj Luke Bender (F&M) 11-1 165 - Tony White (Rutgers) maj Josh Palmucci (F&M) 11-1 174 - Jackson Turley (Rutgers) maj Dom Wheatley (F&M) 18-4 184 - Shane Cartagena-Walsh (Rutgers) tech Leo Varga (F&M) 21-5 197 - John Poznanski (Rutgers) tech RJ Moore (F&M) 19-4 285 - Yaraslau Slavikouski (Rutgers) maj Brody Kline (F&M) 14-3 Journeymen Wranglemania – Bethlehem, PA (11/9) Buffalo (37) vs. Sacred Heart (5) 125 - Max Elton (Buffalo) maj Mike Manta (Sacred Heart) 14-3 133 - Andrew Fallon (Sacred Heart) tech Troy Guerra (Buffalo) 19-3 141 - Cole French (Buffalo) maj Jake Samuels (Sacred Heart) 12-0 149 - Sam Ewing (Buffalo) fall Vincent Milazzo (Sacred Heart) 1:54 157 - Kaleb Burgess (Buffalo) maj Felix Lettini (Sacred Heart) 8-0 165 - Hunter Shaut (Buffalo) maj Mike McGhee (Sacred Heart) 12-2 174 - Rafael Knapp (Buffalo) dec Aidan Zarrella (Sacred Heart) 8-5SV 184 - Marcus Petite (Buffalo) dec Hunter Perez (Sacred Heart) 6-1 197 - Coy Raines (Buffalo) fall Jake Trovato (Sacred Heart) 1:27 285 - Magnus Bibla (Buffalo) dec Brendan Gilchrist (Sacred Heart) 10-3 Journeymen Wranglemania – Bethlehem, PA VMI (24) vs Sacred Heart (19) 125 - Mike Manta (Sacred Heart) dec Cody Tanner (VMI) 8-2 133 - Andrew Fallon (Sacred Heart) dec Dyson Dunham (VMI) 14-8 141 - Phoenix Alyea (VMI) fall Jake Samuels (Sacred Heart) 4:45 149 - Patrick Jordon (VMI) fall Vincent Milazzo (Sacred Heart) 2:22 157 - Felix Lettini (Sacred Heart) maj Logan Chambers (VMI) 11-3 165 - Ryan Vigil (VMI) dec Mike McGhee (Sacred Heart) 5-0 174 - Aidan Zarrella (Sacred Heart) fall Eric Doran (VMI) 6:25 184 - Braxton Lewis (VMI) dec Hunter Perez (Sacred Heart) 8-2 197 - Toby Schoffstall (VMI) fall Jake Trovato (Sacred Heart) :57 285 - Brendan Gilchrist (Sacred Heart) dec Josh Evans (VMI) 10-6 Journeymen Wranglemania – Bethlehem, PA #13 Illinois (30) vs. Binghamton (10) 125 - Carson Wagner (Binghamton) dec Caelen Riley (Illinois) 10-5 133 - Lucas Byrd (Illinois) dec Micah Roes (Binghamton) 3-2 141 - Danny Pucino (Illinois) maj Nate Lucier (Binghamton) 14-4 149 - Kannon Webster (Illinois) tech Ivan Garcia (Binghamton) 21-3 157 - Jason Kraisser (Illinois) dec Fin Nadeau (Binghamton) 6-4 165 - Braeden Scoles (Illinois) fall Carter Baer (Binghamton) 5:20 174 - Brevin Cassella (Binghamton) maj Danny Braunagel (Illinois) 14-1 184 - Will Ebert (Binghamton) dec Edmond Ruth (Illinois) 2-0 197 - Zac Braunagel (Illinois) tech Andrew Bailey (Binghamton) 17-2 285 - Luke Luffman (Illinois) maj Cory Day (Binghamton) 11-1 (11/9) Navy (29) vs Drexel (9) 125 - Garrett Totten (Navy) dec Desmond Pleasant (Drexel) 9-4 133- Kyle Waterman (Drexel) dec Brendan Ferretti (Navy) 13-10SV 141 - Josh Koderhandt (Navy) tech Jordan Soriano (Drexel) 19-4 149 - Kaemen Smith (Navy) dec Dom Findora (Drexel) 7-6 157 - Luke Nichter (Drexel) maj Devon Deem (Navy) 13-4 165 - Tyler Sagi (Navy) maj Cody Walsh (Drexel) 11-3 174 - Danny Wask (Navy) tech Dom D’Agostino (Drexel) 21-4 184 - Daniel Williams (Navy) dec Giuseppe Hoose (Drexel) 9-2 197 - Payton Thomas (Navy) fall Ethan Wilson (Drexel) 4:37 285 - Dom Petracci (Drexel) dec Alistair Larson (Navy) 4-1 (11/9) #23 North Carolina (33) vs Drexel (0) 125 - Spencer Moore (North Carolina) dec Desmond Pleasant (Drexel) 10-5 133 - Ethan Oakley (North Carolina) dec Kyle Waterman (Drexel) 8-2 141 - Jayden Scott (North Carolina) dec Jordan Soriano (Drexel) 5-2 149 - Lachlan McNeil (North Carolina) maj Dom Findora (Drexel) 14-4 157 - Sonny Santiago (North Carolina) dec Luke Nichter (Drexel) 5-1 165 - Nick Fea (North Carolina) maj Cody Walsh (Drexel) 9-1 174 - Isaias Estrada (North Carolina) dec Jack Janda (Drexel) 6-1SV 184 - Gavin Kane (North Carolina) dec Giuseppe Hoose (Drexel) 15-9 197 - Cade Lautt (North Carolina) maj Ethan Wilson (Drexel) 17-5 285 - Aydin Guttridge (North Carolina) dec Tanner Updegraff (Drexel) 8-2 (11/9) #23 North Carolina (23) vs Navy (16) 125 - Spencer Moore (North Carolina) maj Garrett Totten (Navy) 17-4 133 - Ethan Oakley (North Carolina) dec Brendan Ferretti (Navy) 5-1 141 - Josh Koderhandt (Navy) dec Jayden Scott (North Carolina) 7-2 149 - Lachlan McNeil (North Carolina) tech Kaeman Smith (Navy) 19-4 157 - Sonny Santiago (Navy) maj Charlie Evans (Navy) 13-2 165 - Tyler Sagi (Navy) InjDef Nick Fea (North Carolina) 174 - Danny Wask (Navy) dec Isaias Estrada (North Carolina) 7-2 184 - Gavin Kane (North Carolina) dec Daniel Williams (Navy) 5-1 197 - Payton Thomas (Navy) maj Cade Lautt (North Carolina) 18-6 285 - Aydin Guttridge (North Carolina) maj Alistair Larson (Navy) 11-3 (11/10) Glenville State (27) vs. Morgan State (12) 125: Treshaun Tecson (Morgan State) dec Colton Drousias (Glenville State) 10-4 133: Hunter Ross (Glenville State) maj Kevin Ross (Morgan State) 13-3 141: Gavin Onorato (Glenville State fall Myrin Nixon (Morgan State) 149: Gabe Onorato (Glenville State) dec Yannis Charles (Morgan State) 6-4 157: Loranza Rajanorivelo (Glenville State) dec Shaymus MacIntosh (Morgan State) 3-1SV 165: Gus DeLeonardis (Glenville State) maj Samuel Diggs (Morgan State) 12-2 174: Darrien Roberts (Morgan State) dec Hayden Pummel (Glenville State) 5-4 184: Kyle Hornet (Glenville State) maj Kingsley Menifee (Morgan State) 14-3 197: Caston (Glenville State) dec Cameron Johnson (Morgan State) 5-0 285: Xavier Doolin (Morgan State) fall Devin Gauldin (Glenville State) (11/10) Bucknell (35) vs Morgan State (8) 125 - Treshaun Tecson (Morgan State) maj Kade Davidheiser (Bucknell) 13-1 133 - Kurt Phipps (Bucknell) tech Kevin Lopez (Morgan State) 17-0 141 - Dylan Chappell (Bucknell) tech Myrin Nixon (Morgan State) 17-0 149 - Braden Bower (Bucknell) dec Yannis Charles (Morgan State) 10-7 157 - Cade Wirnsberger (Bucknell) maj Shaymus MacIntosh (Morgan State) 8-0 165 - Creed Thomas (Bucknell) dec Sam Diggs (Morgan State) 11-9 174 - Myles Takats (Bucknell) tech Darrien Roberts (Morgan State) 18-1 184 - Logan Deacetis (Bucknell) tech Kingsley Menifee (Morgan State) 18-2 197 - Dillon Bechtold (Bucknell) tech Cam Johnson (Morgan State) 18-3 285 - Xavier Doolin (Morgan State) maj Logan Shepherd (Bucknell) 12-4 (11/10) American (19) vs Clarion (18) 125 - Coen Bainey (American) dec Weston Pisarchick (Clarion) 4-3 133 - Shamil Kalmatov (American) dec Mason Prinkey (Clarion) 9-6 141 - Gianni Silvestri (Clarion) dec Cael McIntyre (American) 7-5 149 - Kyle Schickel (Clarion) dec Gage Owen (American) 5-3 157 - Jack Nies (American) dec Alejandro Herrera-Rondon (Clarion) 9-6SV 165 - Kaden Milheim (American) maj John Altieri (Clarion) 13-1 174 - John Worthing (Clarion) fall Caleb Campos (American) 2:44 184 - Adrian Gacek (Clarion) dec Lucas White (American) 6-3 197 - Liam Volk-Klos (American) fall Connor Jacobs (Clarion) 4:59 285 - Austin Chapman (Clarion) dec Will Jarrell (American) 4-2 Journeymen Classic Binghamton, Franklin & Marshall, Hofstra, Lehigh, LIU, and Sacred Heart were all participants. This event is unique with wrestlers placed in pools based on comparable skill. The top ranked wrestlers are placed in pool A, the next handful are pool B, etc. Unattached wrestlers were able to participate. 125: (Pool A) Sheldon Seymour, Lehigh – 2nd (Pool C) Luke Sirianni, Army – 6th (Pool B) Carson Wagner, Binghamton – 2nd (Pool B) Caleb Uhorchuk, Army – 5th (Pool D) Noah Tonser, Army – 5th (Pool E) Sawyer Ostroff, LIU – 1st (Pool F) Jack Parker, F&M – 1st (Pool F) James Garcia, F&M – 2nd (Pool F) Jay McDonnell, Binghamton – 4th (Pool F) Dylan Acevedo, Hofstra – 5th (Pool F) Teague Strobel, Hofstra – 5th 133: (Pool A) Nain Vazquez, Army – 4th (Pool A) Chase Liardi, Hofstra – 6th (Pool B) Kaelan Francios, LIU – 5th (Pool C) Braxton Fries-Appello, Sacred Heart – 1st (Pool D) Jake Carlucci, Sacred Heart – 5th (Pool E) Chris Betancourt, LIU – 1st (Pool E) Ryan Arbeit, Hofstra – 2nd (Pool E) Anthony Samuels, Sacred Heart, 4th (Pool F) Jack Kazalas, Binghamton – 3rd (Pool F) Angelo DiPol, Sacred Heart – 4th 141: (Pool A) Luke Stanich, Lehigh-unattached – 1st (Pool B) Carter Bailey, Lehigh – 4th (Pool B) Justin Hoyle, Hofstra – 6th (Pool C) Nate Lucier, Binghamton – 2nd (Pool C) Bryce Kresho, F&M – 3rd (Pool D) Aidan O’Shea, F&M – 2nd (Pool E) Amir Avazov, LIU – 1st (Pool E) Ryan Dal Pizzol, Sacred Heart – 4th (Pool F) Colt Schrader, Army – 3rd (Pool F) Jake Ice, Sacred Heart – 4th (Pool F) Anthony Cadicina, Sacred Heart – 6th 149: (Pool B) Zach Keal, Army – 5th (Pool C) Ivan Garcia, Binghamton – 2nd (Pool C) Noah Tapia, Hofstra – 3rd (Pool C) Shane Percelay, Army – 5th (Pool C) Matt Repos, Lehigh – 6th (Pool D) Drew Munch, Lehigh – 2nd (Pool D) Caleb Sweet, Binghamton – 4th (Pool D) Mason Barvitskie, Army – 5th (Pool D) Nic Gorman, LIU – 6th (Pool E) Cole Stone, Army – 4th (Pool E) Jason Daleo, Sacred Heart – 5th (Pool F) Alex Turley, Hofstra – 3rd (Pool F) Jordan Barry, LIU – 4th (Pool F) Danny Delusant, Sacred Heart – 6th (Pool G) Zach Martin, Lehigh – 2nd (Pool G) Nick Demarco, Sacred Heart – 5th 157: (Pool B) Kyle Mosher, Hofstra – 2nd (Pool B) Juruis Clark, Hofstra – 5th (Pool C) Fin Nadeau, Binghamton – 2nd (Pool C) Micah Hanau, Army – 3rd (Pool D) Dakota Asuncion, Sacred Heart – 1st (Pool D) Taythan Silva, Army – 2nd (Pool D) Luke Bender, F&M – 3rd (Pool D) Nicholas Mackland- Rivera, Sacred Heart – 4th (Pool E) Griffin Gonzalez, Lehigh – 1st (Pool E) Brayden Roberts, LIU – 2nd (Pool E) Mark Metz, Army – 4th (Pool F) Eddie Hummel, Army – 2nd (Pool F) Nolan Hook, Sacred Heart – 5th (Pool G) Jordan Brown, Binghamton – 1st (Pool G) Frank Volpe, Hofstra – 2nd (Pool G) Jamie Rivera, Army – 4th (Pool G) Taigh Merola, Sacred Heart – 6th (Pool H) Ryan Alvarado, Army – 2nd (Pool H) Jake Neill, F&M – 3rd (Pool H) Jack Valentin, LIU – 5th (Pool H) Alex Giuliani, Sacred Heart – 6th 165: (Pool A) Max Brignola, Lehigh-unattached – 1st (Pool A) Thayne Lawrence, Lehigh – 5th (Pool C) Carter Baer, Binghamton – 1st (Pool C) Owen Quinn, Lehigh – 5th (Pool D) Roberto Padilla, Binghamton – 5th (Pool E) James Johnston, LIU – 2nd (Pool E) Richie Grungo, Lehigh – 3rd (Pool E) Anthony Mann, Sacred Heart – 6th (Pool F) Zeke Dubler, Lehigh – 1st (Pool F) Calvin Pineda, Sacred Heart – 4th (Pool G) Josh Palmucci, F&M – 2nd (Pool G) Connor MacDonald, Sacred Heart – 3rd (Pool G) Thomas LaScala, LIU – 4th 174: (Pool A) Jared Schoppe, Lehigh – 6th (Pool B) Cooper Haase, Army – 3rd (Pool C) Owen Ayotte, Sacred Heart – 4th (Pool C) Oscar Aranda, Army – 5th (Pool C) Noah Bash, F&M – 6th (Pool D) Donovan Smith, LIU – 1st (Pool D) Greyson Harris, Hofstra – 3rd (Pool D) Dom Wheatley, F&M – 4th (Pool E) Blake Bahna, LIU – 1st (Pool E) Nick Alvarez, F&M – 5th (Pool E) Nicky Eboli, Sacred Heart – 6th 184: (Pool B) Ross McFarland, Hofstra – 2nd (Pool C) Will Ebert, Binghamton – 1st (Pool D) Jack Wilt, Lehigh – 1st (Pool D) Jake Allred, F&M – 6th (Pool E) Nico Bogardus, Sacred Heart – 6th 197: (Pool A) Michael Beard, Lehigh – 1st (Pool A) Chris Murphy, Army – 4th (Pool A) Jt Davis, Lehigh – 5th (Pool B) Austin Kohlhofer, Army – 2nd (Pool B) Eli Pack, Army – 5th (Pool B) Will Conlon, Hofstra-unattached – 6th (Pool C) Reid Schroeder, Army – 1st (Pool C) Cayden Bevis, Binghamton – 5th (Pool D) Chris DeLena, Sacred Heart – 6th (Pool E) Nik Miller, Hofstra – 1st (Pool E) Quinn Funk, Binghamton – 2nd (Pool E) Thomas Godbee, Army – 6th (Pool F) Jackson Van Kley, Army – 1st (Pool F) Gavin Claro, LIU – 2nd (Pool F) Rj Moore, F&M – 5th (Pool F) Kevin Taylor, Sacred Heart – 6th 285: (Pool A) Brady Colbert, Army – 3rd (Pool A) Nathan Taylor, Lehigh – 6th (Pool B) Sam Sorenson, Army – 4th (Pool B) Chris Powell, LIU – 5th (Pool B) Trent Sibble, Binghamton – 6th (Pool C) Charlie Tibbitts, Binghamton – 3rd (Pool C) Tristen Hitchcock, Army – 5th (Pool C) Matt Walker, Sacred Heart – 6th (Pool D) Marc Berisha, Sacred Heart – 5th (Pool E) Brody Kline, F&M – 3rd (Pool E) Aeden Begue, LIU – 4th (Pool E) Danny Church, Hofstra – 5th (Pool E) Connor White, Sacred Heart – 6th
-
The top prospect in the high school Class of 2026, Bo Bassett, has vowed to keep fans abreast of his recruiting with daily Wednesday updates. After a brief hiatus Bassett is back and has posted an updated graphic which has eliminated one more school from consideration. Earlier this year, Bassett posted a graphic that contained the logos of approximately 80 schools, most of the DI variety, but some DII’s as well, to signify that he’s totally open in the recruiting process. After more than three months of removing schools from the list, he’s down to 13. One school was removed from this week's graphic: Nebraska The following schools remain on Bassett’s graphic and therefore in contention for his services: Arizona State, Cornell, Iowa, Iowa State, Michigan, Missouri, Northern Iowa, Ohio State, Oklahoma State, Penn State, Pitt-Johnstown, Rutgers, Virginia Tech. One school was removed from last week's graphic: Princeton One school was removed from the 10/9 graphic: Air Force One school was removed from the 10/2 graphic: Lehigh One school was removed from the 9/25 graphic: Pittsburgh One school was removed from the 9/18 graphic: Stanford One school was removed from the 9/11 graphic: NC State These three schools were removed from the 9/4 graphic: American, North Carolina, Wisconsin These three schools were removed from the 8/28 graphic: Clarion, Little Rock, Minnesota The following schools were removed from the 8/21 graphic: Penn, Oklahoma, Oregon State The following schools were removed from the 8/14 graphic: Bucknell, Virginia, Wyoming The following schools were removed from the 8/7 graphic: Brown, Northern Colorado, Purdue The following schools were removed from the 7/31 graphic: California Baptist, Michigan State, Navy The following schools were removed from the 7/24 graphic: Army West Point, Campbell, Edinboro, Harvard, Illinois, North Dakota State, South Dakota State The following schools were removed from the 7/17 graphic: Cal Poly, Columbia, Indiana, Maryland, Millersville, The Citadel, and West Virginia The following schools were removed from the 7/10 graphic: CSU Bakersfield, George Mason, Hofstra, Northwestern, Rider, UW Parkside, West Liberty The following schools were removed from the 7/3 graphic: Appalachian State, Central Michigan, Cleveland State, Drexel, Kent State, Ohio, and St. Cloud State The following schools were removed from the 6/26 graphic: Binghamton, Bloomsburg, Duke, Gardner-Webb, Northern Illinois, Sacred Heart, SIU Edwardsville Bassett has already taken on-campus visits to Iowa, Michigan, Ohio State, and Penn State. In Bassett's weekly recruiting update, he noted dates for upcoming official campus visits: Nov 15-17 - Virginia Tech Nov 22-24 - Oklahoma State Jan 24-26 - Rutgers
-
The top uncommitted prospect in the Class of 2025 is no longer uncommitted. Marcus Blaze (Perrysburg, OH), the number-three overall senior, has given a verbal to Penn State. He did so this morning at Perrysburg High School’s signing day ceremony. Blaze is also the top-ranked 138 lb wrestler in the nation, as per MatScouts. Blaze is a three-time Ohio DI state champion and has plenty of domestic and international credentials. He is a three-time Walsh Ironman placewinner (1,3,2) and got on the podium twice at the Super 32 (5,8). Despite being a great folkstyle wrestler, Blaze has really shined in freestyle. He won the 2022 16U national freestyle title in Fargo - after finishing fourth the previous year. Blaze was recently in action at the U20 World Championships, where he grabbed a bronze medal at 61 kg. Last year, Blaze was a U17 world champion at 55 kg. After earning his U20 world medal, Blaze entered the Senior World Team Trials at 61 kg and advanced to the best-of-three finals before a pair of close losses to 2023 world champion Vito Arujau. Along the way, Blaze picked up wins over NCAA champions Seth Gross and Nahshon Garrett, before defeating Senior world medalist Daton Fix. Blaze also was third at the 2024 Olympic Team Trials where he beat the Class of 2024 #1 recruit Luke Lilledahl and Jax Forrest. Blaze already has shown he’s capable of winning at the collegiate level. Last year, he entered the Clarion Open and defeated returning NCAA runner-up Matt Ramos of Purdue. Blaze joins what was already a loaded Penn State Class of 2025 and potentially gives Cael Sanderson’s team the #1 overall recruiting class for a second straight year. This class includes two top-ten recruits (#1 PJ Duke), along with four others ranked in the top 50 overall (#16 Will Henckel, #18 Asher Cunningham, #42 Nathan Desmond, and #47 Dalton Perry). Though Penn State is loaded in the back half of their depth chart, 141 lbs isn’t a weight where they are particularly deep for the future. NCAA finalist Beau Bartlett will wrap up his career this season. The Nittany Lions currently have a handful of 133’s who could potentially move up, but no clear successor at 141. Incoming recruit, Dalton Perry could also be a future 141 lber. Before selecting Penn State, Blaze gave special consideration to the following schools: Cornell, Iowa, Michigan, Ohio State, and Purdue - with Ohio State and Purdue in his final three.
-
Week two of the season continued big events for the Big 12 with multiple duals and tournaments on the docket. West Virginia and Wyoming handled lower division in-state schools in duals. Iowa State lost their home opener in a surprising upset, with an asterisk of missing multiple starters. Utah Valley, North Dakota State, California Baptist, and Air Force had dual losses to ranked teams but had some bright spots. Missouri hosted an invite with positive results. Oklahoma State flexed their depth at the Michigan State Open. Arizona State had a tumultuous weekend between duals and the Journeyman Classic. Let’s take a look at some of the more notable results to come out of this weekend. Notable Results: 11/6: #20 West Virginia over Glenville State (35-10) | Full Results 133: #20 Jett Strickenberger Tech Hunter Ross (17-2 7:00) 184: Kyle Homet Dec. #21 Ian Bush (11-10) The most notable result from this is Strickenberger at 133. He’s a large 125 so a move up wouldn’t be shocking. However, he competed at 133 for a dual last season so this is just a situation to look out for. 11/8: #15 Stanford over #7 Iowa State (23-21) | Full Results 141: Aden Valencia Fall Zach Redding (5:50) 149: #7 Anthony Echemendia Dec. #12 Jaden Abas (11-5) 165: #7 Hunter Garvin Dec. Connor Euton (10-3) 174: #17 Lorenzo Norman Maj. Aiden Riggins (10-1) 197: #32 Christian Carroll Dec. #17 Nick Stemmet (11-7) The Cyclones had a rough home opener with an upset loss to Stanford, who had to forfeit 125, while missing most of their starters. It sounds like Casey Swiderski will eventually man the spot at 141, but Zach Redding started here. He ran into a red-hot Valencia and was pinned in an entertaining back-and-forth match. Anthony Echemendia beat Jaden Abas in an exciting match, firmly establishing himself as a contender up a weight. Like Swiderski, it sounds like Gaitan is making a descent down. In the meantime, Connor Euton had a match with Hunter Garvin that was closer than the score appeared. With Gaitan dropping down it seems like Aiden Riggins may be the starter at 174, who came up short against Norman. That loss looks better after Norman went on to upset Nelson Brands the next day. A bright spot for the Cyclones came at 197, where Christian Carroll showed his athleticism at 197 and a solid gas tank against a game Nick Stemmet. 11/8: #3 Nebraska over Utah Valley (32-7) | Full Results 141: #4 Brock Hardy Dec. #27 Haiden Drury (4-0) 165: #6 Terrell Barraclough Maj. #19 Bubba Wilson (8-0) 285: Jack Forbes Dec. #27 Harley Andrews (5-4) The Wolverines had a high-profile dual against Nebraska and came away with two ranked wins. Barraclough continues to establish why he’s a contender this season with a one-sided bonus point win over Wilson. This is Forbes’ first year as a starter, and he scored a ranked upset to give himself a solid win early in the season. 11/8: #25 Oregon State over North Dakota State (35-6) | Full Results 149: #32 Gavin Drexler Dec. Victor Jacinto 184: TJ McDonnell Dec. #31 Aidan Brenot (9-6) After beating teammate and expected starter Maxwell Petersen last week, Drexler got his chance to start. He impressed with a near-bonus point win over a tough Oregon State team. Drexler is now 8-1 on the season and his only loss was a 5-2 decision to Ty Watters. Aidan Brenot had entered the rankings for NDSU after a solid Southeast open but suffered an upset against McDonnell. Just a redshirt freshman he still has plenty of upside and is one to watch this season. 11/8: #19 Oklahoma over Air Force (32-3) | Full Results 141: #18 Mosha Schwartz Dec. Carter Nogle (16-9) 165: Andrew Harmon Dec. Mannix Morgan (7-3) 197: #23 Bradley Hill Dec. Brian Burburjia (4-1) The second Big 12 dual of the year kicked off here with the Sooners getting a dominant win on the road. Antonio Lorenzo, Cleveland Belton, Carter Schubert, DJ Parker, Bradley Hill, and Juan Mora all made their debuts as expected starters and got wins. Mosha Schwartz made his return after an injury last season, but Nogle scored two takedowns and nearly put Schwartz on his back as time expired. Brian Burburjia gave up a last-second takedown at the end of the first period and was close to getting a match-tying takedown in the third as time expired. Overall an impressive debut for OU, but Air Force showed good fight and has guys to look out for this season. 11/9: Wyoming over Western Wyoming (46-0) | Full Results Like West Virginia, not too much to take from this result, as Wyoming had four falls and four majors in a dominant win over NJCAA Western Wyoming. 11/9: #21 Arizona State over LIU (38-3) | Full Results 184: Aziz Fayzullaev Fall #30 Anthony D’Alesio (LIU) (2:59) 11/9: #13 Illinois over #21 Arizona State (37-6) | Full Results 133: #3 Lucas Byrd Dec. #18 Julian Chlebove (4-0) 149: #10 Kannon Webster Maj. #14 Jesse Vasquez (21-7) 165: #33 Braeden Scoles Fall #30 Nicco Ruiz (2:53) 285: #13 Luke Luffman Dec. #4 Cohlton Schultz (SV 2-1) Aziz Fayzullaev was a name that entered my radar this offseason as a two-time NJCAA champion for Northwest College and a U23 Asian Championship title for Uzbekistan. He made an immediate impact with a pin in his debut over a ranked opponent. He followed that up with an 11-7 decision loss to Illinois and established himself as one to look out for. If you look at the rankings in this article you’ll notice that Arizona State is ranked #12 as a tournament team and #21 in duals. That’s further proven with a surprisingly one-sided loss to Illinois, where the only match they won was a fall by Richie Figs. The only actual upsets came between freshmen with Scoles pinning Ruiz in the first period and Luke Luffman upsetting Cohlton Schultz. Ruiz was up 6-1 at the time with 1:30 of riding time before Scoles got funky to put Ruiz on his back in a high-paced first period. Luffman was the aggressor in the match and actually won on a stall call in overtime. Schultz rebounded later in the week at the Journeyman Classic, which I’ll touch on later. California Baptist over Buffalo (29-6) | Full Results Campbell over California Baptist (27-12) | Full Results 133: #22 Dom Zaccone Dec. Hunter Leake (8-2) 141: #30 Shannon Hanna Dec. Eli Griffin (TB-2 4-2) Leake and Griffin are two names I’m keeping an eye on throughout the season as they were the Lancer’s first-ever NCAA qualifiers last season. They’ve taken losses so far, but are still notable names to look out for. Leake and Griffin improved throughout last season and made a late run to qualify. 11/9: Bison Open (North Dakota State, South Dakota State) | Brackets Nothing too crazy out of this tournament, with a mix of starters, young wrestlers, and backups. Tanner Jordan (125), Derrick Cardinal (133), Drake Rhodes (165), and Luke Rasmussen (285) are all starters who won titles for the Jackrabbits. North Dakota State saw Gavin Drexler win a title at 149, including two tech falls. 11/9: Tiger Style Invite (#8 Missouri) | Brackets 133 SF: #20 Zeth Romney (CP) Dec. #29 Kade Moore (10-4) 149 Finals: #8 Chance Lamer (CP) Dec. #24 Logan Gioffre (10-4) 157 QF: #31 J Conway Maj. #27 Legend Lamer (CP) (18-7) 157 Semis: #18 Joey Blaze (PUR) Dec. #31 J Conway (7-4) 165 Finals: #23 Cam Steed Fall Luka Wick (CP) (0:40) 174 Finals: #1 Keegan O’Toole Tech #30 Brody Baumann (PUR) (21-4 5:09) 184 Finals: #14 Colton Hawks Dec. #13 Brock DelSignore (LR) (2-1) 285 Semis: #23 Seth Nitzel Maj. #20 Trevor Tinker (CP) (8-0) 285 Finals: #15 Seth Nevills (MARY) Dec. #23 Seth Nitzel (SV-1 5-2) The Tigers hosted their third Tiger Style Invite in Kansas City with Purdue, Maryland, Cal Poly, SIUE, and Little Rock. No team brought their full lineups, but there were still a handful of ranked matches to look out for. Missouri came away with titles at 141, 165, 174, and 184 and finalists at 149 and 285. Josh Edmond won a title at 141 but didn’t see any ranked opponents on the way. Logan Gioffre came up short to Chance Lamer in the finals for the second year in a row, but it was an entertaining bout. Cam Steed showed off his dangerous cowcatcher/snake move, getting a quick pin over Wick in the finals. O’Toole continued his Hodge campaign with three more techs and a fall. Colton Hawks navigated a tight match to upset Brock DelSignore in the finals. Seth Nitzel upset Trevor Tinker but lost a battle of the Seth’s in the finals in overtime. 11/9: Michigan State Open (#4 Oklahoma State) | Brackets 133 Finals: Cael Hughes Dec. Zan Fugitt (WIS) (7-4) 157 Semis: #16 Johnny Lovett (CMU) Dec. Caleb Fish (4-2) 157 Consi Semis: Brock Herman (tOSU) Dec. Caleb Fish (11-4) 184 Semis: Jersey Robb Dec. #33 Jared McGill (EDIN) (SV 8-5) 197 Finals: Cody Merrill Dec. #24 Evan Bates (NW) (4-2) 285 Finals: Konner Doucet Dec. #28 Jordan Greer (OHIO) (2-0) The Cowboys only brought one starter here, with Tagen Jamison dominating his way to a title against unranked opponents. They really flexed their depth and young talent here at multiple weights. Cael Hughes could end up the starter at 133 for them and won a title over another young blue chipper Fugitt. Caleb Fish is redshirting, but losses to Johnny Lovett and Brock Herman could be considered upsets. Jersey Robb won a title and scored a ranked win along the way, potentially showing a preview for this weight in the future. Cody Merrill did the same and impressed in his collegiate debut with a win over an NCAA qualifier. Konner Doucet is now behind Wyatt Hendrickson but had a ranked win in the finals. 11/10: Journeyman Classic (#12 Arizona State, California Baptist) | Brackets #12 Arizona State 149: #14 Jesse Vasquez Dec. #29 Finn Solomon (PITT) (12-8) 149: Cross Wasilewski (PENN) Dec. #14 Jesse Vasquez (7-4) 165: Max Brignola (LEH) Dec. #30 Nicco Ruiz (SV-1 6-3) 285: #4 Cohlton Schultz Fall #10 Isaac Trumble (NCST) (1:04) After a tough loss to Illinois, the Sun Devils had mixed results in the tournament setting. Vasquez beat Solomon but had an upset loss to Wasilewski, although that may be more a testament to the talented Penn wrestler. Nicco Ruiz had another loss, this time in overtime to two-time qualifier Max Brignola so not a bad loss by any means. Schultz rebounded in a big way with a quick pin over Trumble. California Baptist 184: Colin Fegley (LH) Maj. #29 Nathan Haas (12-1) 184: Will Ebert (BING) Fall #29 Nathan Haas (2:32) Haas went 2-0 in the duals but had two upset losses in the tournament. Ebert had a big weekend, also beating Edmond Ruth, so that loss shouldn’t hurt him as bad. Upcoming Competitions: Air Force: AT California Baptist (Nov. 22) Arizona State: Daktronics Open (Nov. 17) California Baptist: Air Force (Nov. 22) Iowa State: Navy (Nov. 15) Missouri: AT Virginia Tech (Nov. 15) Northern Colorado: AT Drexel/Penn (Nov. 15/16) North Dakota State: Daktronics Open (Nov. 17) Northern Iowa: Grand View Open (Nov. 16) Oklahoma: Daktronics Open (Nov. 17) Oklahoma State: AT Utah Valley (Nov. 15) South Dakota State: Augustana (Nov. 15); Daktronics Open (Nov. 17) Utah Valley: Oklahoma State (Nov. 15) West Virginia: AT Rider (Nov. 14) Wyoming: AT Oklahoma State (Nov. 22)
-
He’s back! 2021 Olympic gold medalist Gable Steveson and the University of Minnesota announced this afternoon that Steveson will rejoin the Gopher wrestling team for his final year of eligibility in the 2024-25 season. Steveson was last on the collegiate wrestling mat during the 2021-22 wrestling season and captured his second NCAA title after a 6-2 victory over Arizona State’s Cohlton Schultz. At the University of Minnesota, Steveson amassed an 83-2 career record with three Big Ten titles and two Hodge Trophies after each of his NCAA title-winning seasons. Once he takes the mat, Steveson will bring with him a 51-match winning streak. His presence will turn the 285 lb weight class on its head as no active collegiate wrestlers have a career win over Steveson. He defeated the 2024 NCAA champion, Greg Kerkvliet, in both the 2021 and 2022 national tournaments. Steveson also had a brief return to the mat in the spring and summer of 2023, when he won the US Open and Final X, but could not compete at the World Championships due to obligations within the WWE. Since leaving his shoes on the mat in Detroit, Steveson went into the WWE, was drafted to the RAW brand, and appeared on NXT. He also received an invitation to training camp for the NFL’s Buffalo Bills this summer. The University of Minnesota has scheduled a press conference for Monday, November 18th. Steveson and Gopher head coach Brandon Eggum will meet with the media.
-
Top 3 Takeaways and Highlights 1. Dual Spotlight: #1 NAIA Life vs #2 NCAA Iowa A highly anticipated multi-conference dual matchup came early in the season this year as fans tuned in to watch the top-ranked NAIA team, Life University, take on the Iowa Hawkeyes, currently ranked #2 in NCAA competition, at the Eagle Madness Duals over the weekend. Both teams were undefeated in dual competition heading into their matchup with Iowa also defeating Hastings, and Life taking down Lindsey Wilson, Brewton-Parker, and Marymount. This dual started with some real back-and-forth from the teams, with Life losing via pin in the match between Rianne Murphy (Iowa) and Brianna Funakoshi. However, the Running Eagles responded with a tech fall win from freshman Anaya Falcon (Life) over Valarie Solorio (Iowa) and a big 6-0 decision in the much-anticipated match between returning All-American Salyna Shotwell (Life) over returning champ Ava Bayless (Iowa), who was bumped up a weight class here. From there, things turned and points started adding up in Iowa’s favor. All-American Brianna Gonzalez was also up a weight for Iowa when she took out Life’s All-American Anna Krejsa in a surprisingly lopsided 12-3 decision. From there, was the biggest surprise for me in this dual. The matchup at 131 lbs was between two heavy hitters for each team. Here, Life has Sarah Savidge who has made it to the finals of NAIA nationals twice. Iowa has returning All-American Skye Realin who has previously competed at Central Methodist and McKendree. Instead of the nailbiter I was expecting, Realin got a serious takedown against Savidge that took her to her back, getting the pin called in just 45 seconds. From there, we saw the return of Nanea Estrella for the Hawkeyes, taking out freshman Netavia Wickson via tech fall, and returning champ Reese Larramendy for Iowa then took out Christina Jaen with a tech fall of her own. These are two spots where we typically see McBryde sisters for Life. Speaking of which, at 160 lbs we saw reigning champ Latifah McBryde who put some much-needed points on the board for Life with a tech fall over Iowa’s Rose Cassioppi. The rest was all Iowa with a pin for true freshman Naomi Simon over a freshman for Life Ugochi Anunobi. Things wrapped up with Iowa’s All-American Jaycee Foeller winning a close decision 3-2 over Margaret Graham for Life. Overall, neither team sent out their full, most competitive lineups, but the depth of Iowa’s team with backups, including some true freshmen, shows just how lethal they can be even not at full strength. I’d love to see some more of those top-ranked matchups, and if they were to do so, I think you’d see a slightly less-lopsided team score. However, once again, Iowa cannot be discounted, and with some of the talent they have in their lineup like Kylie Welker and new additions Macey Kilty and Kennedy Blades, I feel there is not going to be much that can keep them from the top spot at NCWWC’s again this season. Final results: 103 lbs. – Rianne Murphy (Iowa) fall Brianna Funakoshi (Life), 1:33 110 lbs. – #2 Anaya Falcon (Life) tech. fall Valarie Solorio (Iowa), 12-2 117 lbs. – #6 Salyna Shotwell (Life) dec.#1 (at 110 lbs) Ava Bayless (Iowa), 6-0 124 lbs. – #1 (at 117) Brianna Gonzalez (Iowa) dec. #4 Anna Krejsa (Life), 12-3 131 lbs. – #10 Skye Realin (Iowa) fall #2 Sarah Savidge (Life), 0:45 138 lbs. – #5 Nanea Estrella (Iowa) tech. fall Netavia Wickson (Life), 12-2 145 lbs. – #1 Reese Larramendy (Iowa) tech. fall Christina Jaen (Life), 10-0 160 lbs. – #1 Latifah McBryde (Life) tech. fall Rose Cassioppi (Iowa), 10-0 180 lbs. – Naomi Simon (Iowa) fall Ugochi Anunobi (Life), 2:34 207 lbs. – #1 Jaycee Foeller (Iowa) dec. Margaret Graham (Life), 3-2 2. North Central Dominance at Adrian Duals #3 North Central Cardinals cleaned up at the Adrian Duals with weekend with wins over #8 Sacred Heart, #4 McKendree, #11 Schreiner University, and finally #1 King University. I want to focus on the King dual, but there were so many impressive wins for North Central throughout the tournament. Against, Sacred Heart, #9 Tiera Jimerson got the upset win via tech fall in a high-flying match against #3 Love Daley. At 180 lbs, North Central’s #5 Brittyn Corbishley got the pin over #6 Madison Sandquist of Sacred Heart as well in just under 2 minutes. In the dual with McKendree, freshman Gabriele Tedesco (McKendree) had a huge win over #3 Maddie Avila. Tedesco was a huge add for the Bearcat lineup and I would not be surprised to see her break into the rankings after her wins this weekend. The other win to point out at this dual was #6 Kendra Ryan (North Central) with a pin over #4 Samantha Miller (McKendree), which did take almost 4-minutes, but shows off the danger Ryan poses throughout the match regardless of opponent. Finally, against #1 King, North Central got things started with a win from #3 Madison Avila. Then, #3 Samara Chavez of King got the decision over #6 Kendra Ryan to put King on top. From there, things went back and forth and got close a few times. Each team had ranked wrestlers in the lineup against unranked opponents, but North Central was able to capitalize in a lot of the matches with two ranked wrestlers head-to-head. At 124 lbs #1 Amani Jones showed the level she is at with a decisive 10-0 tech fall over #3 Montana DeLawder (King). King won three in a row at 138, 145 and 160 pounds. #1 Claire DiCungo got a tech fall against her unranked opponent, #2 Aine Drury got a pin over Iowa transfer, #5 Bella Mir (North Central), and #1 Chey Bowman (King) won by a 6-3 decision against #9 Tiera Jimerson. Now, with the dual score separated by 1 point (King 17 - NCC 16), King had to forfeit at 180 lbs against North Central’s Brittyn Corbishley, and then #2 Traeh Haynes of North Central put a definitive stamp on it with a pin in 2 minutes. Similar, to the Iowa/Life dual, you did not have a full lineup for King, but the win for North Central is still very impressive, and could easily bump them up in the rankings. 3. Delaware State adds Women’s Wrestling The first-ever Division 1 women’s wrestling program at an HBCU is coming for the 2025-26 wrestling season at Delaware State University (DSU). DSU is located in Dover, Delaware and made this announcement in coordination with HBCU Wrestling who made a $1.25 million gift to start the program. HBCU Wrestling is an organization whose mission is to establish and/or restore men’s and women’s wrestling to historically black colleges and universities. Results this week in major NCAA, NCWA, and NAIA competitions Colorado Mesa 37 over (NAIA #21) William Jewell 9 Colorado Mesa 41 over Texas Woman’s University 6 (NAIA #21) William Jewell 34 over Texas Woman’s University 13 (NCAA #3) North Central College 41 over Carthage College 0 (NCAA #9) Elmira 29 over (NCAA #13) East Stroudsburg 18 (NAIA #13) Baker 29 over (NAIA #5) William Penn 14 (NCAA #5) Presbyterian 23 over (NAIA #6) Campbellsville 21 Bill Farrell tournament VIEW RESULTS Eagle Madness Duals VIEW RESULTS Adrian Duals VIEW RESULTS Eagle Madness Open VIEW RESULTS Waldorf Open VIEW RESULTS East Stroudsburg Tri-Dual VIEW RESULTS Battle of the Rockies VIEW RESULTS Adrian Invitational VIEW RESULTS Upcoming events for next week Please note that this is not a comprehensive list of all collegiate women’s competitions. Wednesday, Nov. 13: (NCAA #3) North Central College vs Augustana (NCAA #4) McKendree vs (NAIA RV) Missouri Baptist Thursday, November 14: (NAIA #1) Grand View vs (NAIA #20) Central Methodist Friday, November 15: (NAIA #1) Grand View vs (NAIA #16) Wayland Baptist Saturday, November 16: Trailblazer Duals Grand Valley State University Home Duals UWO Titan Duals Blue Hose Open Lindenwood Duals Sunday, November 17: Lindenwood Duals (Day 2) Albion Open Blue Hose Challenge
-
NCAA DI Rankings have been updated for this week and can be found here. There was much more movement this week as opposed to after week one. Individually, we've mentioned it in our "Five Questions" and "Top Ranked Upsets" articles yesterday, but 165 lbs had some major shakeups. The top seven wrestlers remained the same; however, the previous #8 (Garrett Thompson) was moved to 174 lbs. #9 Matthew Olguin and #13 Beau Mantanona were removed because of injury concerns. In addition, Andrew Sparks fell to Will Miller at the Mountaineer Invitational. Strong performances from Cam Steed (pictured) and Bryce Hepner led to both jumping significantly. Expect a lot of movement in this weight class for the foreseeable future. From a team standpoint, NC State was hit hard in tournament rankings. The Wolfpack has many prominent starters suffer losses at the Journeymen Collegiate Classic. We're keeping a close eye on the 125 lb situation. For now, we still have Jakob Camacho as the ranked starter. NC State wrestles Appalachian State, Princeton, and Rutgers this week, so there may be some more clarity regarding this situation in the near future. The Wolfpack are still extremely strong from a dual standpoint and will probably bounce back quickly, individually. Be sure to look at that nine through 20 range in the team tournament rankings. Only nine points separates ninth place from the 18th place tie. A good (or bad) week by one of these team's stars could create weekly shuffling in this area of the rankings.
-
Highlights Penn’s Jude Swisher defeats All-American #6 Ed Scott of NC State Harvard’s Jimmy Harrington knocks off #6 Scott of NC State hours later Nick Incontrera of Penn wins Journeyman Collegiate Classic Journeymen Collegiate Classic (11/10) Cornell, Harvard, Penn all participated. This event is unique with wrestlers placed in pools based on comparable competition. The top ranked wrestlers are placed in pool A, the next handful are pool B, etc. Unattached wrestlers were allowed to compete. *Brown, Columbia, and Princeton were all off this weekend 125: (Pool A) Max Gallagher, Penn – 4th (Pool A) Diego Sotelo, Harvard – 5th (Pool B) Greg Diakomihalis, Cornell – 1st (Pool B) Brady Pruett, Penn – 3rd (Pool B) Logan Brzozowski, Harvard – 4th (Pool C) Marcello Milani, Cornell – 2nd (Pool D) Joe Sciarrone, Cornell – 3rd (Pool E) Ernest Perry, Cornell – 4th 133: (Pool A) Brett Ungar, Cornell – 2nd (Pool A) Tyler Ferrara, Cornell – 3rd (Pool A) Alex Almeyda, Penn – 5th (Pool B) Ryan Miller, Penn – 1st (Pool B) Nico Nardone, Penn – 3rd (Pool C) Foster Cardinale, Cornell – 2nd (Pool D) Ethan Qureshi, Cornell – 1st (Pool D) Spencer Barnhart, Penn – 2nd 141: (Pool A) CJ Composto, Penn – 2nd (Pool B) Evan Mougalian, Penn – 2nd (Pool C) Jameson Garcia, Harvard – 1st (Pool C) Dante Frinzi, Harvard – 4th (Pool C) Myles Griffin, Cornell – 6th (Pool F) Carter Tate, Cornell – 2nd 149: (Pool A) Cross Wasilewski, Penn – 2nd (Pool A) Jaden Pepe, Harvard – 6th (Pool B) Ethan Fernandez, Cornell – 2nd (Pool B) Donny Pigoni, Harvard – 6th (Pool D) Nate Wade, Cornell – 1st (Pool E) Macario Calavitta, Cornell – 2nd (Pool G) Rich Delsanter, Penn – 6th 157: (Pool A) Jude Swisher, Penn – 2nd (Pool A) Jimmy Harrington, Harvard – 3rd (Pool A) Meyer Shapiro, Cornell – 6th (Pool B) Paul Ognissanti, Penn – 3rd (Pool B) Nolan Liess, Harvard – 6th 165: (Pool B) Evan Canoyer, Cornell – 4th (Pool B) Gage McClenahan, Cornell – 5th (Pool B) Brody Oleksak, Cornell – 6th (Pool C) Andy Troczynski, Penn – 2nd (Pool C) Vince Mannella, Penn – 4th (Pool D) Kaleb Williams, Cornell – 4th (Pool D) Michael Bobola, Harvard – 6th (Pool E) Reed Fullmer, Penn – 1st (Pool E) Buzzy Bomberger, Cornell – 5th 174: (Pool A) Nick Incontrera, Penn – 1st (Pool A) Simon Ruiz, Cornell – 2nd (Pool B) Christian Hansen, Cornell – 1st (Pool B) Haden Bottiglieri, Harvard – 4th (Pool C) Alex Whitworth, Harvard – 2nd (Pool D) Xander Koukkanen, Penn – 6th 184: (Pool A) Matt Walsh, Harvard – 6th (Pool B) Colt Barley, Cornell – 1st (Pool B) Justin Mayes, Cornell – 3rd (Pool B) Luke Rada, Harvard – 6th (Pool C) Nate Taylor, Penn – 2nd (Pool C) Matt Furman, Cornell – 2nd (Pool D) Doak Dean, Harvard – 5th (Pool E) Zahir Mclean-Felix, Cornell – 3rd 197: (Pool A) Max Agresti, Harvard – 6th (Pool B) Michael Dellagatta, Cornell – 1st (Pool B) Hudson Skove, Harvard – 3rd (Pool C) Eric Carlson, Cornell – 4th (Pool C) Andrew Connolly, Penn – 6th (Pool E) Denzel Perez. Penn – 5th (Pool F) Josh LaBarbara, Penn – 3rd 285: (Pool A) Matthew Cruise, Penn – 4th (Pool A) Logan Marissal, Harvard – 5th (Pool B) John Pardo, Penn – 3rd (Pool C) Ashton Davis, Cornell – 1st (Pool C) Zach Delsanter, Penn – 2nd (Pool E) Aiden Compton, Cornell – 2nd
-
The MSU Open is always a great time. Anyone available and nearby should start every season by checking out this awesome event. Michigan State wrestling always does an awesome job with hosting and putting on this event, and you can watch some excellent wrestling from the freshman/sophomore division, through the excellent competition in the Open division. A great perk of my position is that I get to interview some of the coaches and athletes while attending. Early on, I had the chance to meet with Dylan Ragusin and talk about how his experience from last season and the summer will lead to additional success this season While floating around and watching the matches, I also had a chance to grab Northwestern’s Trevor Chumbley to talk through what he can expect from him and his squad this season, as well as what the fans can expect from Evanston Illinois as they host the B1G Championships. Shortly thereafter, I had the pleasure of watching Johnny Lovett get some work done on his way to the finals of the deep and talented 157-pound finals, where he ended up dropping a close match to All-American Peyten Kellar of Ohio. Here is Johnny after his quarterfinal victory: Michigan sent a solid contingent of competitors to this tournament, including Chase Saldate who placed 3rd at 157. Some of their other wrestlers had recently competed at the Clarion Open the previous weekend. Here, I connect with Joseph Walker, 174, who is fresh off of winning that tournament. Here he talks about his journey and patience as he prepared year after year for the chance to be a full time starter: Additionally, I grabbed Jack Medley - Director of Operations for Michigan wrestling, to talk about the team this season and what to expect from their squad; Being a B1G correspondent for InterMat, I wanted to try to grab as many competitors as I could reasonably get interviews from. Balancing the interview portion with not bothering the athletes as they battle with some of the best in the country is tough, but I knew I wanted to grab Derek Gilcher, the Hoosier who is battling to get himself in the lineup this season. Here he talks about coming back from injury and his approach to this season; What’s better than interviewing one Gilcher? Interviewing two of them. Here I talk with Dylan Gilcher about his recent experience at the Clarion Open, and his approach headed into his first season with the Wolverines; I wasn’t about to leave East Lansing without grabbing Ben Bennett, who was coaching in his first competition as the Head Coach of the Chippewas. Here he talks about what we can expect from this Central Michigan team as they look to defend their title as MAC Champions, as well as how Johnny Lovett is looking to stay aggressive this season; I genuinely love this tournament, and though I didn’t get to speak with everyone I had hoped to, I got some great insight from athletes and coaches as the 2024/2025 season gets underway. I hope you enjoyed these interviews, and I hope to grab some more as the year continues to unfold.
-
The Highest Ranked Wrestlers at Each Weight who Lost over the Weekend
InterMat Staff posted an article in College
While this was the second weekend of competition in the college wrestling world, it had many more events than week one. More events meant more opportunities for top teams and wrestlers to collide and collide they did! Week two featured a handful of surprising upsets, more than in week one. With upsets becoming more frequent, we’ve highlighted the top wrestlers from each weight class who suffered a loss over the weekend. Of course, not every one of these losses was classified as upsets. In some cases, a high-quality wrestler lost to an opponent who was just ranked higher. Whatever the circumstances, there were some very prominent competitors that put a one or two in their respective loss columns over the weekend. Since we're over four months away from the NCAA Tournament, we've also given a reason why you shouldn't worry much about the loss (or losses). 125 lbs #7 Jakob Camacho (NC State) In our “Five Questions” article we got into Jakob Camacho’s weekend, a bit. What we omitted was that he did pick up a ranked win on Saturday over #27 Anthony Molton during NC State’s dominating win over Campbell. A day later, he lost three times against #13 Diego Sotelo (Harvard), #19 Sheldon Seymour (Lehigh), and #28 Nick Babin (Pittsburgh). The cause for concern may be the lopsided nature of his losses to Sotelo and Seymour (both major decisions). What also makes this situation complicated is that NC State redshirt freshman Vince Robinson looked excellent in winning the top pool at 125 lbs. Robinson downed three returning national qualifiers and posted at least 10 points in all three matches. Why you shouldn’t be worried: Camacho had an ugly skid last year. He was ranked #1 in the nation and then went 0-3 at the Collegiate Duals, followed by a loss to Troy Spratley (Oklahoma State) in his next dual appearance. Camacho has figured out how to snap out of slumps before and even has been challenged by quality teammates (Jarrett Trombley). The losses on Sunday also came on his first attempt at making weight on back-to-back days this year. I can’t imagine it’s easy for the seventh-year senior to make 125 lbs, so that could be a reason for the unusual performance from Camacho. 133 lbs #7 Drake Ayala (Iowa) In only his second match at 133 lbs, 2024 NCAA runner-up Drake Ayala was stunned by Stanford’s redshirt freshman Tyler Knox, 15-10. The match featured some of the best scrambling sequences you’ll see all year. For the most part, Knox came out on top in those flurries. Despite the rankings disparity between the two, Knox is much better than his current ranking of #23. During his redshirt freshman year, he majored Nic Bouzakis (Ohio State) and downed four other past national qualifiers. Before beating Ayala, Knox majored Iowa State’s Garrett Grice on Friday night. Why you shouldn’t be worried: Ayala has two of the best lightweight coaches in his corner. They will certainly analyze the film and make the small tweaks necessary for Ayala to come out on top in similar scrambles in the future. During the 2023-24 regular season, Ayala had a few losses that might have been surprising at the time, but he was ready to go in the postseason. 141 lbs #6 Kai Orine (NC State) Kai Orine made his debut at 141 lbs weekend and dominated the field at the Battle at the Citadel with two pins and a tech fall. On Saturday, he pinned national qualifier Shannon Hanna (Campbell). Sunday saw him go 1-1 with a tight win over Will Baysingar (Illinois) before a 4-1 loss to Luke Stanich (Lehigh). Stanich, a 2024 All-American at 125 lbs, hasn’t been considered for the national rankings at 141 lbs because he intends on redshirting this season. Why you shouldn’t be worried: Stanich might just be one of the elite 141 lbers. In just two weeks of competition, Stanich has already posted wins over Orine, All-American CJ Composto (Penn), and Sergio Lemley (Michigan). His only loss came to the returning national champion, Jesse Mendez (Ohio State). This loss may look funky on paper because Stanich isn’t ranked, but it’s not a bad one. 149 lbs #12 Jaden Abas (Stanford) 149 lbs is one of only two weight classes without a loss from a top-ten wrestler last week. Unlike some of the wrestlers we’ve mentioned already, Jaden Abas didn’t lose to an opponent who is ranked lower than him - his came to #4 Kyle Parco (Iowa). Generally, it shouldn’t impact him much from a rankings standpoint. Abas will actually get a shot to move up after next weekend. He’ll take on Cal Poly’s Chance Lamer an opponent he defeated last year in dual competition. Why you shouldn’t be worried: So, the 15-0 loss to Parco looks ugly. And it was for the most part. Historically, Parco has beaten Abas (now 5-0 in Parco’s favor); however, their most recent matches were very close. In this meeting, Parco blew the match open with his work from the top. This result may say more about Parco’s gains in the Iowa room than anything about Abas. While it seems like Parco’s winning streak over Abas continues should they meet again, I imagine Abas will adjust and not be so lopsided. Abas had a tough two-match road trip with Parco and All-American Anthony Echemendia (Iowa State) on back-to-back nights. At this point in his career, we know who he is. He’s always been a podium threat and will continue to be in his final year of eligibility. 157 lbs #2 Meyer Shapiro (Cornell)/#6 Ed Scott (NC State) I’ll do two here since a pair of top-six wrestlers fell at 157 lbs. One, Meyer Shapiro, was via injury default. We’ll discuss that one in a bit. All-American Ed Scott was 1-2 on Sunday with losses to #20 Jude Swisher (Penn) and Jimmy Harrington (Harvard) sandwiched around a major decision win over #21 Jason Kraisser (Illinois). Harrington was a nice development from this event as he looked solid in his injury default win over Shapiro and he traded blows back and forth with Scott in their third-place match. Why you shouldn’t be worried: Scott’s a veteran. A year ago, in this same town, he fell in sudden victory to true freshman Joey Blaze (Purdue). He responded to that loss with a third-place finish in Vegas in one of the most difficult regular season brackets in recent memory. Just in that CKLV tournament, Scott notched wins over All-Americans Will Lewan (Michigan) and Bryce Andonian (Virginia Tech), along with Big 12 champion Ryder Downey (Northern Iowa) and Round of 12 finisher Tommy Askey (Appalachian State). I’m not concerned. Now onto Shapiro. Actually, I am a bit concerned. Not because of anything wrestling-wise from Shapiro. He’s proven to be worthy of his label as the #1 overall recruit in the Class of 2023, something he validated with a third-place finish at nationals as a true freshman. What concerns me is the injuries. Shapiro missed time after Vegas after dealing with a head injury. He wears the special headgear designed to prevent them and yesterday appeared to have some sort of a scare related to his head. He ended up injury defaulting against Harrington. It’s probably not right to speculate any further about the situation, but very concerning for Shapiro’s health. Hopefully, this was only precautionary. 165 lbs #11 Andrew Sparks (Minnesota) This was the only other weight class without a top-ten wrestler losing. Andrew Sparks suffered his first defeat of the year in the finals of the Mountaineer Invitational where he lost to the host school’s Will Miller, 4-3. Miller is no slouch himself, as he entered the week ranked just a few places behind Sparks at #14. On a good note, Sparks did notch a win over teammate Blaine Brenner. While that may not matter for NCAA qualification purposes, it’s a quality victory over an NCAA qualifier and presumably Sparks’ best competition in-room. Why you shouldn’t be worried: A couple of reasons. As we discussed in the five questions article. The #8-#15 range at 165 lbs is really in shambles. Two wrestlers in that area are feared to have been lost to season-ending injuries. Another may be staying at 174 lbs. I expect there will be plenty of movement all year from the wrestlers within this range. While Sparks may drop in tomorrow’s rankings, I would expect him to move back to this range. Also, this is Sparks' first time competing at 165 lbs since the 2023 NCAA Championships. Something like that can be a factor in November debuts. Note: Technically, #8 Garrett Thompson (Ohio) suffered a loss at the Michigan State Open; however, it was at 174 lbs and we're trying to confirm whether he'll be staying up at that weight. 174 lbs #6 Nelson Brands (Iowa) Saturday afternoon was the setting for #2 Iowa’s home debut against #15 Stanford. A talented young Stanford team took the first two matches contested before the veteran Hawkeyes took over and won three straight bouts. That run ended at 174 lbs as redshirt freshman Lorenzo Norman stunned Nelson Brands, 4-1. That Norman is logging wins over an opponent like Brands shouldn’t be too surprising. He did down Shane Griffith at CKLV last year. That was one of the bigger upsets of the year. Why you shouldn’t be worried: A fact that Willie Saylor has mentioned on the First Word recently. Nelson Brands has only seen action in 63 collegiate matches spread out over six-plus years now. Brands was not able to compete for the entire 2023-24 season and has battled a variety of injuries throughout his career. Between this match and his season-opening 2-1 win over Oregon State’s Sean Harmon, I think Brands is still trying to knock the rust off a bit. Brands’ toughness and hand-fighting will likely keep him in every match he wrestles this year. That could be enough to get him on the podium. Should his offense blossom, Brands could be a key contender at the weight. Also, Norman will be a tough-out for most 174 lbers. He has incredible length for the weight and is difficult to score on. 184 lbs #7 Edmond Ruth (Illinois) Edmond Ruth actually suffered a loss on both Saturday and Sunday. He should be commended for wrestling both days, as sometimes you’ll see a wrestler who loses at WrangleMania not available for the Collegiate Classic on Sunday. In Illinois’ dual win over Binghamton, Ruth was stunned by the Bearcats sophomore Will Ebert in a 2-0 loss. Ebert’s mat skills were the deciding factor as he rode Ruth for the entire second period and earned an escape in the final period, while maintaining the riding time advantage. On Sunday, Ruth was pinned in sudden victory by the high-flying Brian Soldano (Rutgers). The pair were locked up an upper-body and as they hit the mat, each wrestler had an opportunity to get the takedown. Soldano ended up on top and got the fall. It wasn’t all for naught, in Sunday’s third-place match, Ruth posted a win over #10 Dylan Fishback (NC State). Once again, I applaud Ruth for wrestling his final bout of the day. After a pair of losses to lesser-ranked foes, many wrestlers have avoided the potential for a third against Fishback. Why you shouldn’t be worried: Ruth is probably still adjusting to a new weight class and more powerful opponents. Down at 174 lbs, he still engaged in a lot of close matches and when that’s the case, sometimes you get burned. Luckily for Ruth, Rutgers is on the Illinois schedule this year so he may have multiple opportunities to get that loss back. 197 lbs #10 Zac Braunagel (Illinois) Zac Braunagel had two impressive wins on Saturday at WrangleMania and then added a pair on Sunday by defeating Lehigh’s JT Davis and #14 Mac Stout (Pittsburgh. The Stout win was a good one as the sophomore seems poised to make a big jump during his second year in the Pitt lineup. Braunagel’s Sunday ended with a 7-6 loss to Lehigh All-American Michael Beard. Beard is currently ranked sixth in the nation. Why you shouldn’t be worried: Losing to Beard is nothing to be ashamed of. Beard/Braunagel seems like it could be an NCAA quarterfinal or Round of 12 type match. In order to make the podium, Braunagel will have to beat an opponent of his caliber. What’s impressive is that Braunagel was able to slow down the high-scoring Beard, at least slightly. Half of Beard’s eight wins this season have come via tech fall. A close loss to an opponent a few spots ahead of you in the rankings is certainly not a cause for concern. 285 lbs #4 Cohlton Schultz (Arizona State) What an interesting two days for Cohlton Schultz! On Saturday, he suffered an overtime loss to Illinois’ Luke Luffman. The bout was decided on a stalling point. Schultz is another wrestler who continued to compete despite a Saturday loss. He made up for the setback on Sunday by tossing and pinning 2023 U23 World Champion Isaac Trumble. Trumble started the week ranked #10 in the nation but seemed poised to move up after a WrangleMania win over #7 Taye Ghadiali (Campbell). Why you shouldn’t be worried: Cohlton Schultz has been extremely consistent over his collegiate career. He’s already made the NCAA podium on four occasions. Twice he’s advanced to the NCAA semis. This weekend he showed that he can bounce back from a loss by defeating a high-quality opponent. Schultz will be in the mix, as always, when it comes to March. -
Five Questions for This Week's New Set of Rankings (11/11/24)
InterMat Staff posted an article in College
We’re getting into a routine now! Two weekends of wrestling have now made us feel like we’re smack dap in the middle of the season. Lots of tournaments on Saturday, running concurrently with the WrangleMania Duals, and the Journeymen Collegiate Classic made for plenty of action. Plenty of results. Some were surprising, while some may have confirmed suspicions we had about freshmen or new faces in college lineups. As will be the tradition every Sunday night or Monday morning, we’ll throw out five questions that will need to be answered while compiling national rankings for a Tuesday release. 1. What to do about Virginia Tech’s upperweight situation? We said at the beginning of the season that Virginia Tech has a good problem at 197 lbs and heavyweight with a pair of veterans who have made the NCAA Round of 12 - both of which are trying to fend off highly sought-after recruits like Sonny Sasso and Jimmy Mullen. Both Sasso and Mullen had impressive redshirt campaigns and are doing the same (if not, better) in 2024-25. Last week, Sasso showed out with five first-period falls during his dual win at Chattanooga and the Southeast Open. This week it was Mullen who opened eyes. We’ve heard that the battle between him and incumbent Hunter Catka has been very close - with neither taking a significant advantage. That changed in Boone, North Carolina at the Mountaineer Invitational. The two big men were deadlocked at zero after the first period and Catka went under Mullen. Early in the second period, Catka tried to stand up and Mullen locked in a two-on-one tilt, took Catka to his back and secured a fall. This win likely gives Mullen another shot in the lineup this week when the Hokies host #14 Missouri. When those two teams collide, the rankings go out the window, so don’t be confused by a ranking for the Tigers that’s typically lower than normal. Mizzou will also send out a new starter at heavyweight in Seth Nitzel. Nitzel is coming off a runner-up finish at the TigerStyle Invite and posted a major decision victory over 2024 national qualifier Trevor Tinker (Cal Poly). For rankings purposes, we’ll probably go with Mullen this week. Since Sasso did not wrestle and we’ve been told his battle with Andy Smith is very tight, we’ll lean toward the veteran, for now. 2. Is history repeating itself at 125? One of the common themes throughout the 2023-24 season was the unpredictability and chaos at 125 lbs. Is it happening again? With a handful of key players that were in the mix last year, still around in 2024-25 it’s not a huge surprise. It doesn’t count for rankings purposes but #3 Caleb Smith lost a wrestle-off to freshman Kael Lauridsen. #7 Jakob Camacho had a day to forget at the Journeymen Collegiate Classic - going 0-3. His losses were to quality opponents in #13 Diego Sotelo (Harvard), #19 Sheldon Seymour (Lehigh), and #28 Nick Babin (Pittsburgh) - but they were all losses. To make things even more confusing from an NC State standpoint is that Camacho’s teammate, Vincent Robinson, won the top 125 lb pool. Robinson defeated Sotelo and Seymour and majored #16 Max Gallagher (Penn). NC State has a busy week with Appalachian State on Friday, followed by Princeton and Rutgers at the Jersey Jostle on Sunday. It’ll be interesting to see who gets the nod in those matches - particularly Rutgers and #11 Dean Peterson. With Cooper Flynn transferring to Minnesota, I thought we may have seen the last of Flynn and former Virginia Tech teammate Eddie Ventresca going at it. Or at least until March. That proved to be wrong as the two squared off in the finals of the Mountaineer Invitational and Ventresca was victorious. The 2023 All-American typically gets the best of Flynn (in close fashion), but Ventresca was ranked significantly lower after an injury-plagued first month of the 2023-24 season. In other interesting 125 lb related news, #29 Nicolar Rivera (Wisconsin) pinned #18 Blake West (Northern Illinois) in the finals of the Michigan State Open. Rivera acquitted himself well last year competing at 133 lbs, so I thought he might be someone to watch this season at 125. He should move up after that strong win. Once again, Monday night will see a lot of time invested into these 125 lb rankings. 3. Where are the second tier of contenders at 165 lbs? So for now, the top-seven at 165 lbs looks like a pretty solid tier of championship contenders. Anything can happen, but it would be surprising to see more than one of them miss the podium in March. After that top-seven, it’s wiiiide open. And even wider than you may think. Shortly after last week’s rankings were posted, we learned that #9 Matthew Olguin (Oregon State) was lost for the season due to injury. We’re fearing the same may be true for #13 Beau Mantanona (Michigan). For the second consecutive week, #8 Garrett Thompson (Ohio) wrestled up at 174 lbs. We wrote last week’s appearance at 174 lbs off to the fact that Ohio was trying to maximize their talent in order to beat a B1G opponent (Wisconsin). In the preseason, we did receive some reassurance that Thompson was aiming to go 165. Between now and Tuesday morning, we’ll have to ascertain whether Thompson is in the process of cutting down to 165 or maybe he’s just staying at 174. In addition, #14 Will Miller (Appalachian State) took out #11 Andrew Sparks (Minnesota) to win the Mountaineer Invitational. #10 MJ Gaitan (Iowa State) is expected to go 165 lbs, but has yet to make an appearance at the weight. Going a little farther down the list, #17 Maxx Mayfield (Northwestern) was shut out by #26 Bryce Hepner (Ohio State) at the Michigan State Open. My instinct is to not elevate Gaitan any further until he logs some matches at the weight. He finished the year very strongly at 174 lbs, but had some consistency issues. Rewarding Miller is probably the fairest solution, we’ll see how it shakes out after that! 4. Have we underrated Penn? Penn is currently #28 in our tournament rankings and they fall into the “just missed” category for duals. The Quakers took the mat for the first time at the Journeymen Collegiate Challenge and were impressive overall. At 149 lbs, we currently have freshman Cross Wasilewski ranked #19 based off of his exploits while competing unattached last year. Maybe it seemed too high? After Sunday, it’s either just right or perhaps too low. Wasilewski majored national qualifiers Finn Solomon (Pittsburgh) and Jesse Vasquez (Arizona State). Vasquez held the #14 ranking at the weight. Wasilewski finished his day with a respectable 8-7 loss to fellow freshman stud Kannon Webster (Illinois). At 125 lbs, Max Gallagher picked up a key win over Ivy rival Diego Sotelo - though he did drop a pair of matches after the fact. 141 lber CJ Composto had a day that is difficult to judge from a rankings standpoint. He defeated Ryan Jack (NC State) who was in the preseason rankings (in the top five) but now is slated to redshirt, then lost to Luke Stanich (Lehigh). Stanich was an All-American at 141 who is on track to redshirt, as well. The Jack win is very impressive as there are not many guys who have beaten him these last few years, but it’s not a head-to-head win against anyone in the field. At 157 lbs, Jude Swisher went 2-1 - defeating 2023 All-American Ed Scott (NC State) and #21 ranked Jason Kraisser (Illinois). He did suffer a loss to redshirting Jackson Arrington (NC State), but that won’t really ding him in the rankings. Perhaps the best showing of the day from a Penn wrestler came at 174 lbs where Nick Incontrera earned a championship hammer by winning a very tough pool All three of his wins came over ranked opposition, the highest being Cornell freshman #16 Simon Ruiz. After just a week of competition from their wrestlers, I want to say that Penn is properly ranked. Incontrera might move up a spot or two in the rankings and he’s already within the All-American range, so that’s a couple of extra team tournament points. Penn should get a solid test from another team just outside of the rankings on Saturday as Northern Colorado comes to town. 5. How to properly frame the Stanford win over Iowa State? Early season dual results can often make dual rankings extremely difficult to do. Also, duals are more volatile than a tournament, so it’s exactly the reason why we should have a potentially exciting National Dual Championship - but I digress. At the end of the day, #15 Stanford and #7 Iowa State took the mat and the Cardinal pulled off a 23-21 upset. Iowa State fans may point to the numerous notable wrestlers out of the lineup. All-American Evan Frost was missing at 133 lbs. All-American Casey Swiderski is getting down to 141 lbs. 157 lber Paniro Johnson was serving a suspension. MJ Gaitan was not available at 165. Though the Cyclones got the win at 285 lbs, they were missing All-American Yonger Bastida. Now the Stanford staff would probably counter by saying they were without their 125 lbs #10 Nico Provo and had to forfeit - which forced them to start the dual in a 6-0 hole. Making a point for both teams - after what we saw on Saturday against Iowa, Tyler Knox and Aden Valencia may have gotten wins anyway had Iowa State’s top options been available at those weights. They’re both really, really good. At the same time, they may not have achieved bonus-point status, something that happened Friday night. Ultimately, Iowa State will drop a few spots in the team rankings. Stanford….looking at the teams above them, #12 Michigan, #13 Illinois, #14 Missouri - it doesn’t necessarily seem fair to jump those teams. We’ll have to run the numbers again to see how a Mantanona loss would impact the Wolverines in a dual sense. -
Saturday’s DI Dual Results Franklin & Marshall 23 VMI 22 125 - Jimmy Garcia (F&M) fall Cody Tanner (VMI) 3:49 133 - Mason Leiphart (F&M) dec Dyson Dunham (VMI) 5-0 141 - Bryce Kresho (F&M) fall Phoenix Alyea (VMI) 6:08 149 - Patrick Jordon (VMI) fall Josh Hillard (F&M) 7:11 157 - Luke Bender (F&M) maj Eric Doran (VMI) 14-5 165 - Ryan Vigil (VMI) maj Josh Palmucci (F&M) 9-0 174 - Dominic Wheatley (F&M) tech Tyler Berish (VMI) 19-2 184 - Braxton Lewis (VMI) fall Leo Varga (F&M) 3:50 197 - Toby Schoffstall (VMI) maj RJ Moore (F&M) 9-0 285 - Josh Evans (VMI) dec Brody Kline (F&M) 4-2 Long Island 37 Duke 8 125 - Robbie Sagaris (Long Island) maj Ethan Grimminger (Duke) 11-0 133 - Kaelen Francois (Long Island) dec Raymond Adams (Duke) 7-1 141 - Devin Matthews (Long Island) tech Noah Kochman (Duke) 16-0 149 - Drew Witham (Long Island) tech Sean O’Donnell (Duke) 15-0 157 - Brayden Roberts (Long Island) fall Nick Tattini (Duke) 2:01 165 - Aiden Wallace (Duke) tech James Johnston (Long Island) 15-0 174 - Blake Bahna (Long Island) FFT 184 - Anthony D’Alesio (Long Island) tech Logan Richey (Duke) 21-5 197 - Gavin Claro (Long Island) dec Vincent Lee (Duke) 7-5 285 - Connor Barket (Duke) dec Chris Powell (Long Island) 3-0 Buffalo 37 Sacred Heart 5 125 - Max Elton (Buffalo) maj Mike Manta (Sacred Heart) 14-3 133 - Andrew Fallon (Sacred Heart) tech Troy Guerra (Buffalo) 19-3 141 - Cole French (Buffalo) maj Jake Samuels (Sacred Heart) 12-0 149 - Sam Ewing (Buffalo) fall Vincent Milazzo (Sacred Heart) 1:54 157 - Kaleb Burgess (Buffalo) maj Felix Lettini (Sacred Heart) 8-0 165 - Hunter Shaut (Buffalo) maj Mike McGhee (Sacred Heart) 12-2 174 - Rafael Knapp (Buffalo) dec Aidan Zarrella (Sacred Heart) 8-5SV 184 - Marcus Petite (Buffalo) dec Hunter Perez (Sacred Heart) 6-1 197 - Coy Raines (Buffalo) fall Jake Trovato (Sacred Heart) 1:27 285 - Magnus Bibla (Buffalo) dec Brendan Gilchrist (Sacred Heart) 10-3 Illinois 30 Binghamton 10 125 - Carson Wagner (Binghamton) dec Caelen Riley (Illinois) 10-5 133 - Lucas Byrd (Illinois) dec Micah Roes (Binghamton) 3-2 141 - Danny Pucino (Illinois) maj Nate Lucier (Binghamton) 14-4 149 - Kannon Webster (Illinois) tech Ivan Garcia (Binghamton) 21-3 157 - Jason Kraisser (Illinois) dec Fin Nadeau (Binghamton) 6-4 165 - Braeden Scoles (Illinois) fall Carter Baer (Binghamton) 5:20 174 - Brevin Cassella (Binghamton) maj Danny Braunagel (Illinois) 14-1 184 - Will Ebert (Binghamton) dec Edmond Ruth (Illinois) 2-0 197 - Zac Braunagel (Illinois) tech Andrew Bailey (Binghamton) 17-2 285 - Luke Luffman (Illinois) maj Cory Day (Binghamton) 11-1 California Baptist 29 Buffalo 6 125 - Max Elton (Buffalo) dec Mitchell Neiner (California Baptist) 4-1SV 133 - Hunter Leake (California Baptist) fall Aiden Shufelt (Buffalo) 2:47 141 - Eli Griffin (California Baptist) maj Cole French (Buffalo) 16-4 149 - Paul Kelly (California Baptist) maj Sam Ewing (Buffalo) 14-1 157 - Daniel Manibog (California Baptist) dec Kaleb Burgess (Buffalo) 12-5 165 - Drayden Morton (California Baptist) dec Hunter Shaut (Buffalo) 8-5SV 174 - Carter Schmidt (California Baptist) dec Rafael Knapp (Buffalo) 4-1 184 - Nathan Haas (California Baptist) dec Marcus Petite (Buffalo) 10-7 197 - Eli Sheeran (California Baptist) dec Coy Raines (Buffalo) 6-0 285 - Magnus Bibla (Buffalo) dec Tristan Kemp (California Baptist) 4-2 VMI 24 Sacred Heart 19 125 - Mike Manta (Sacred Heart) dec Cody Tanner (VMI) 8-2 133 - Andrew Fallon (Sacred Heart) dec Dyson Dunham (VMI) 14-8 141 - Phoenix Alyea (VMI) fall Jake Samuels (Sacred Heart) 4:45 149 - Patrick Jordon (VMI) fall Vincent Milazzo (Sacred Heart) 2:22 157 - Felix Lettini (Sacred Heart) maj Logan Chambers (VMI) 11-3 165 - Ryan Vigil (VMI) dec Mike McGhee (Sacred Heart) 5-0 174 - Aidan Zarrella (Sacred Heart) fall Eric Doran (VMI) 6:25 184 - Braxton Lewis (VMI) dec Hunter Perez (Sacred Heart) 8-2 197 - Toby Schoffstall (VMI) fall Jake Trovato (Sacred Heart) :57 285 - Brendan Gilchrist (Sacred Heart) dec Josh Evans (VMI) 10-6 Arizona State 38 Long Island 3 125 - Richie Figueroa (Arizona State) dec Robbie Sagaris (Long Island) 6-1 133 - Julian Chlebove (Arizona State) tech Kaelen Francois (Long Island) 17-2 141 - Emilio Ysaguirre (Arizona State) dec Devin Matthews (Long Island) 9-5 149 - Jesse Vasquez (Arizona State) dec Drew Witham (Long Island) 11-7 157 - Brayden Roberts (Long Island) dec Michael Kilic (Arizona State) 2-0 165 - Nicco Ruiz (Arizona State) tech James Johnston (Long Island) 21-5 174 - Chance McLane (Arizona State) maj Blake Bahna (Long Island) 12-2 184 - Aziz Fayzullaev (Arizona State) fall Anthony D’Alesio (Long Island) 2:42 197 - Jacob Meissner (Arizona State) dec Gavin Claro (Long Island) 9-8 285 - Cohlton Schultz (Arizona State) Disq Chris Powell (Long Island) Campbell 24 California Baptist 17 125 - Anthony Molton (Campbell) fall Mitchell Neiner (California Baptist) :52 133 - Dom Zaccone (Campbell) dec Hunter Leake (California Baptist) 8-2 141 - Shannon Hanna (Campbell) dec Eli Griffin (California Baptist) 4-2SV 149 - Paul Kelly (California Baptist) InjDef Eugene Harney (Campbell) 157 - Seth Larson (Campbell) dec Daniel Manibog (California Baptist) 4-2 165 - Drayden Morton (California Baptist) maj Kendrick Hodge (Campbell) 13-4 174 - Dom Baker (Campbell) dec Carter Schmidt (California Baptist) 4-1SV 184 - Nathan Haas (California Baptist) maj Cole Rees (Campbell) 17-7 197 - Mike Slade (Campbell) dec Eli Sheeran (California Baptist) 7-6 285 - Taye Ghadiali (Campbell) fall Tristan Kemp (California Baptist) 2:06 Rutgers 46 Duke 4 125 - Dean Peterson (Rutgers) tech Ethan Grimminger (Duke) 17-2 133 - Dylan Shawver (Rutgers) fall Raymond Adams (Duke) 5:45 141 - Joey Olivieri (Rutgers) tech Christian Colman (Duke) 20-4 149 - Andrew Clark (Rutgers) maj Peter Chacon (Duke) 14-4 157 - Conner Harer (Rutgers) fall Nick Tattini (Duke) 4:59 165 - Aidan Wallace (Duke) maj Luke Gayer (Rutgers) 10-0 174 - Jackson Turley (Rutgers) FFT 184 - Brian Soldano (Rutgers) fall Logan Richey (Duke) :55 197 - John Poznanski (Rutgers) tech Vincent Lee (Duke) 18-3 285 - Yaraslau Slavikouski (Rutgers) dec Conor Barket (Duke) 8-1 Illinois 37 Arizona State 6 125 - Richie Figueroa (Arizona State) fall Caelan Riley (Illinois) 3:55 133 - Lucas Byrd (Illinois) dec Julian Chlebove (Arizona State) 4-0 141 - Danny Pucino (Illinois) dec Emilio Ysaguirre (Arizona State) 4-1 149 - Kannon Webster (Illinois) maj Jesse Vasquez (Arizona State) 21-7 157 - Jason Kraisser (Illinois) fall Michael Kilic (Arizona State) 2:22 165 - Braeden Scoles (Illinois) fall Nicco Ruiz (Arizona State) 2:53 174 - Danny Braunagel (Illinois) dec Chance McLane (Arizona State) 6-3 184 - Edmond Ruth (Illinois) dec Aziz Fayzullaev (Arizona State) 11-7 197 - Zac Braunagel (Illinois) fall Jacob Meissner (Arizona State) 3:46 285 - Luke Luffman (Illinois) dec Cohlton Schultz (Arizona State) 2-1SV Rutgers 41 Franklin & Marshall 3 125 - Jimmy Garcia (F&M) dec Kurt Wehner (Rutgers) 9-4 133 - Dylan Shawver (Rutgers) FFT 141 - Joey Olivieri (Rutgers) dec Bryce Kresho (F&M) 10-8 149 - Michael Cetta (Rutgers) fall Josh Hillard (F&M) 4:03 157 - Conner Harer (Rutgers) maj Luke Bender (F&M) 11-1 165 - Tony White (Rutgers) maj Josh Palmucci (F&M) 11-1 174 - Jackson Turley (Rutgers) maj Dom Wheatley (F&M) 18-4 184 - Shane Cartagena-Walsh (Rutgers) tech Leo Varga (F&M) 21-5 197 - John Poznanski (Rutgers) tech RJ Moore (F&M) 19-4 285 - Yaraslau Slavikouski (Rutgers) maj Brody Kline (F&M) 14-3 NC State 35 Campbell 3 125 - Jakob Camacho (NC State) dec Anthony Molton (Campbell) 7-2 133 - Dom Zaccone (Campbell) dec Draegen Orine (NC State) 6-2 141 - Kai Orine (NC State) fall Shannon Hanna (Campbell) 4:10 149 - Koy Buesgens (NC State) FFT 157 - Ed Scott (NC State) fall Seth Larson (Campbell) 1:09 165 - Derek Fields (NC State) dec Kendrick Hodge (Campbell) 4-1 174 - Matt Singleton (NC State) fall Dom Baker (Campbell) :24 184 - Dylan Fishback (NC State) tech Conor Maslanek (Campbell) 18-1 197 - Christian Knop (NC State) fall Mike Slade (Campbell) 3:30 285 - Isaac Trumble (NC State) dec Taye Ghadiali (Campbell) 2-1 North Carolina 33 Drexel 0 125 - Spencer Moore (North Carolina) dec Desmond Pleasant (Drexel) 10-5 133 - Ethan Oakley (North Carolina) dec Kyle Waterman (Drexel) 8-2 141 - Jayden Scott (North Carolina) dec Jordan Soriano (Drexel) 5-2 149 - Lachlan McNeil (North Carolina) maj Dom Findora (Drexel) 14-4 157 - Sonny Santiago (North Carolina) dec Luke Nichter (Drexel) 5-1 165 - Nick Fea (North Carolina) maj Cody Walsh (Drexel) 9-1 174 - Isaias Estrada (North Carolina) dec Jack Janda (Drexel) 6-1SV 184 - Gavin Kane (North Carolina) dec Giuseppe Hoose (Drexel) 15-9 197 - Cade Lautt (North Carolina) maj Ethan Wilson (Drexel) 17-5 285 - Aydin Guttridge (North Carolina) dec Tanner Updegraff (Drexel) 8-2 Navy 29 Drexel 9 125 - Garrett Totten (Navy) dec Desmond Pleasant (Drexel) 9-4 133- Kyle Waterman (Drexel) dec Brendan Ferretti (Navy) 13-10SV 141 - Josh Koderhandt (Navy) tech Jordan Soriano (Drexel) 19-4 149 - Kaemen Smith (Navy) dec Dom Findora (Drexel) 7-6 157 - Luke Nichter (Drexel) maj Devon Deem (Navy) 13-4 165 - Tyler Sagi (Navy) maj Cody Walsh (Drexel) 11-3 174 - Danny Wask (Navy) tech Dom D’Agostino (Drexel) 21-4 184 - Daniel Williams (Navy) dec Giuseppe Hoose (Drexel) 9-2 197 - Payton Thomas (Navy) fall Ethan Wilson (Drexel) 4:37 285 - Dom Petracci (Drexel) dec Alistair Larson (Navy) 4-1 North Carolina 23 Navy 16 125 - Spencer Moore (North Carolina) maj Garrett Totten (Navy) 17-4 133 - Ethan Oakley (North Carolina) dec Brendan Ferretti (Navy) 5-1 141 - Josh Koderhandt (Navy) dec Jayden Scott (North Carolina) 7-2 149 - Lachlan McNeil (North Carolina) tech Kaeman Smith (Navy) 19-4 157 - Sonny Santiago (Navy) maj Charlie Evans (Navy) 13-2 165 - Tyler Sagi (Navy) InjDef Nick Fea (North Carolina) 174 - Danny Wask (Navy) dec Isaias Estrada (North Carolina) 7-2 184 - Gavin Kane (North Carolina) dec Daniel Williams (Navy) 5-1 197 - Payton Thomas (Navy) maj Cade Lautt (North Carolina) 18-6 285 - Aydin Guttridge (North Carolina) maj Alistair Larson (Navy) 11-3 George Mason 40 Bloomsburg 0 125 - Ben Monn (George Mason) maj Major Lewis (Bloomsburg) 11-1 133 - Charlie Bunting (George Mason) FFT 141 - Dom Hargrove (George Mason) dec Ashton Campbell (Bloomsburg) 7-4 149 - Kaden Cassidy (George Mason) tech Hayden Coy (Bloomsburg) 15-0 157 - DJ McGee (George Mason) dec William Morrow (Bloomsburg) 7-1 165 - Evan Maag (George Mason) tech Leo Hess (Bloomsburg) 19-2 174 - Logan Messer (George Mason) maj Matt Benedetti (Bloomsburg) 13-3 184 - Malachi Duvall (George Mason) dec David Tuttle (Bloomsburg) 11-5 197 - Tyler Kocak (George Mason) maj Kolby Flank (Bloomsburg) 13-4 285 - James Blackman (George Mason) tech Tyler McCatham (Bloomsburg) 22-6 George Mason 54 Millersville 0 125 - JB Dragovich (George Mason) tech Dominic Flatt (Millersville) 21-6 133 - Charlie Bunting (George Mason) tech Cael Rossi (Millersville) 19-4 141 - Dom Hargrove (George Mason) fall Danny Capozzi (Millersville) 1:40 149 - Cale Roggie (George Mason) maj Marcus Gable (Millersville) 19-5 157 - Thomas Stokfa (George Mason) tech Timothy Uhler (Millersville) 19-4 165 - Sean Coughlin (George Mason) tech Chase Bish (Millersville) 19-3 174 - Riley Hackworth (George Mason) fall Mitch Bivona (Millersville) 2:06 184 - Malachi Duvall (George Mason) fall Tyler Hurst (Millersville) 1;49 197 - Donovan Sprouse (George Mason) fall Bruce Vaughan (Millersville) 6:00 285 - Ean Winchester (George Mason) fall Kurt Scheuerman (Millersville) 1:02 George Mason 37 Williams 6 125 - Gunner Chambers (George Mason) tech Christopher Cohen (Williams) 20-3 133 - Geoffrey Whelan (George Mason) dec John Schneider (Williams) 10-6 141 - Dom Hargrove (George Mason) fall Tylor Stubbs (Williams) 2:10 149 - Cale Roggie (George Mason) tech Caleb Seyfried (Williams) 19-4 157 - Peter Kane (Williams) dec Thomas Stofka (George Mason) 10-5 165 - Sean Coughlin (George Mason) tech Fisher Stites (Williams) 21-5 174 - Riley Hackworth (George Mason) maj Sean Tansey (Williams) 13-4 184 - Malachi Duvall (George Mason) dec Zach Borzio (Williams) 7-4 197 - Max Hall (Williams) dec Colin Pedersen (George Mason) 9-5 285 - Ean Winchester (George Mason) fall Thomas Goodwin (Williams) 3:48 Millersville 30 Bloomsburg 12 125 - Bryce Beatty (Millersville) dec Major Lewis (Bloomsburg) 5-3 133 - Taylor Robinson (Millersville) FFT 141 - Nicholas Cottone (Millersville) FFT 149 - Hayden Coy (Bloomsburg) dec Richie DeFulvio (Millersville) 16-10 157 - William Morrow (Bloomsburg) dec Tim Uhler (Millersville) 9-3 165 - Nick Bennet (Millersville) dec Leo Hess (Bloomsburg) 7-0 174 - Mitch Bivona (Millersville) FFT 184 - Cole Dubois (Millersville) dec David Tuttle (Bloomsburg) 3-1 197 - Riley O’Boyle (Millersville) dec Kolby Flank (Bloomsburg) 4-2 285 - Tyler McCatham (Bloomsburg) fall Kurt Scheuerman (Millersville) 4:06 Williams 24 Bloomsburg 10 125 - Christopher Cohen (Williams) dec Major Lewis (Bloomsburg) 4-1 141 - Tylor Stubbs (Williams) maj Ashton Campbell (Bloomsburg) 18-0 149 - Caleb Seyfried (Williams) dec Hayden Coy (Bloomsburg) 7-6 157 - William Morrow (Bloomsburg) dec Peter Kane (Williams) 4-1 165 - Leo Hess (Bloomsburg) maj Fisher Stites (Williams) 17-7 174 - Sean Tansey (Williams) dec Matt Benedetti (Bloomsburg) 5-3 184 - David Tuttle (Bloomsburg) dec Jamie Evarts (Williams) 12-6 197 - David LaPrade (Williams) tech Mason Rebuck (Bloomsburg) 17-2 285 - Thomas Goodwin (Williams) fall Shane Noonan (Bloomsburg) 3:00 Iowa 32 Stanford 9 125 - Kale Petersen (Iowa) FFT 133 - Tyler Knox (Stanford) dec Drake Ayala (Iowa) 15-10 141 - Aden Valencia (Stanford) dec Ryder Block (Iowa) 11-6 149 - Kyle Parco (Iowa) tech Jaden Abas (Stanford) 15-0 157 - Jacori Teemer (Iowa) maj Grigor Cholakyan (Stanford) 13-3 165 - Michael Caliendo (Iowa) dec Hunter Garvin (Stanford) 17-12 174 - Lorenzo Norman (Stanford) dec Nelson Brands (Iowa) 4-1 184 - Gabe Arnold (Iowa) maj Tye Monteiro (Stanford) 14-3 197 - Stephen Buchanan (Iowa) tech Nick Stemmet (Stanford) 17-1 285 - Ben Kueter (Iowa) tech Jackson Mankowski (Stanford) 19-4 Wyoming 46 Western Wyoming 0 125 - Jore Volk (Wyoming) fall Sefton Douglass (Western Wyoming) 4:36 133 - Stockton O’Brien (Wyoming) fall Zach Marrero (Western Wyoming) 4:52 141 - Cole Brooks (Wyoming) fall Dmitri Garza-Alarcon (Western Wyoming) 1:58 149 - Gabe Willochell (Wyoming) maj Tristan Stafford (Western Wyoming) 15-3 157 - Jared Hill (Wyoming) maj Hixton Canton (Western Wyoming) 15-5 165 - Cooper Voorhees (Wyoming) maj Banks Norby (Western Wyoming) 17-5 174 - Seamus Casey (Wyoming) dec Sam May (Western Wyoming) 6-3 184 - Brett McIntosh (Wyoming) maj Banks Love (Western Wyoming) 12-2 197 - Joey Novak (Wyoming) fall Ian Dickerson (Western Wyoming) 1:59 285 - Kevin Zimmer (Wyoming) dec D’Marian Lopez (Western Wyoming) 4-2 Sunday’s Dual Results Glenville State 27 Morgan State 12 (Working on obtaining full results) Bucknell 34 Morgan State 8 125 - Treshaun Tecson (Morgan State) maj Kade Davidheiser (Bucknell) 13-1 133 - Kurt Phipps (Bucknell) tech Kevin Lopez (Morgan State) 17-0 141 - Dylan Chappell (Bucknell) tech Myrin Nixon (Morgan State) 17-0 149 - Braden Bower (Bucknell) dec Yannis Charles (Morgan State) 10-7 157 - Cade Wirnsberger (Bucknell) maj Shaymus MacIntosh (Morgan State) 8-0 165 - Creed Thomas (Bucknell) dec Sam Diggs (Morgan State) 11-9 174 - Myles Takats (Bucknell) tech Darrien Roberts (Morgan State) 18-1 184 - Logan Deacetis (Bucknell) tech Kingsley Menifee (Morgan State) 18-2 197 - Dillon Bechtold (Bucknell) tech Cam Johnson (Morgan State) 18-3 285 - Xavier Doolin (Morgan State) maj Logan Shepherd (Bucknell) 12-4 American 19 Clarion 18 125 - Coen Bainey (American) dec Weston Pisarchick (Clarion) 4-3 133 - Shamil Kalmatov (American) dec Mason Prinkey (Clarion) 9-6 141 - Gianni Silvestri (Clarion) dec Cael McIntyre (American) 7-5 149 - Kyle Schickel (Clarion) dec Gage Owen (American) 5-3 157 - Jack Nies (American) dec Alejandro Herrera-Rondon (Clarion) 9-6SV 165 - Kaden Milheim (American) maj John Altieri (Clarion) 13-1 174 - John Worthing (Clarion) fall Caleb Campos (American) 2:44 184 - Adrian Gacek (Clarion) dec Lucas White (American) 6-3 197 - Liam Volk-Klos (American) fall Connor Jacobs (Clarion) 4:59 285 - Austin Chapman (Clarion) dec Will Jarrell (American) 4-2