-
Posts
3,961 -
Joined
-
Last visited
-
Days Won
10
Content Type
Forums
Articles
Teams
College Commitments
Rankings
Authors
Jobs
Store
Everything posted by InterMat Staff
-
James Green at the Final X press conference (Photo/Tony Rotundo, WrestlersAreWarriors.com) BLACKSBURG, Va. -- With two Olympic hopefuls already part of the team in Mekhi Lewis and Ty Walz, the Southeast Regional Training Center bolsters its roster in a big way with the addition of James Green. Green is training for the Tokyo Olympic Games, attempting to represent the U.S. Olympic Team at 74 kilograms. Green's addition as a resident athlete brings another world class wrestler to Blacksburg. James has been competing internationally for the past five years at 70 kilograms, having much success for Team USA. Representing the U.S. for five straight years, he medaled at the 2017 and 2015 Senior World Championships, winning silver and bronze, respectively. Green is also a two-time Final X and Pan-Am Champion, as well as the 2017 U.S. Open champion. Collegiately, Green was a four-time All-American at Nebraska from 2012-2015, finishing third twice and seventh twice wrestling at 157 pounds. The 2014 Big Ten Champion is a member of Nebraska's 100-Win Club and has the fifth-most wins in school history with 129. Green will be moving to the area with his wife, Chandell, and daughter, Glory. The SERTC is a recognized U.S. Olympic Regional Training Center site. With this designation, the SERTC sponsors resident athletes to live and train in the Blacksburg area.
-
LIBERTY, MO -- William Jewell College is pleased to announce the addition of women's wrestling and the reinstatement of the men's wrestling program beginning in 2021-2022 which will bring Jewell's varsity sports to 24. "It feels great to be bringing wrestling back to The Hill," said Director of Athletics, Tom Eisenhauer. "The sport has a long tradition here and has seen a resurgence across the globe. The commitment and perseverance it takes to be a successful wrestler are the same traits it takes to be successful in the classroom. Wrestling complements our other sport offerings so it a natural fit on our campus. Women's wrestling will come to The Hill for the first time after receiving emerging sport status in January of this year following a vote at the NCAA Convention. Women's wrestling is one of the fastest growing sports in the nation with the first collegiate varsity team created in 1993. Jewell will become the third Great Lakes Valley Conference institution to add the sport, joining McKendree and Lindenwood. The Cardinals will also be the seventh collegiate program in the state of Missouri but the first in the Kansas City metro. Additionally, the Missouri High School Activities Association (MSHAA) began offering a state championship in girls wrestling in 2019 with more than 25 local high schools now fielding teams. Kansas has also recently added the sport at the high school level with nearly 150 schools fielding varsity programs. "It's been exciting to witness the tremendous growth of girls wrestling at the high school level, especially here in the Kansas City region, and I'm thrilled that we can provide an opportunity for many of these young women to continue to compete at the NCAA Division II level, said Eisenhauer. The next step for the sport to move to NCAA Championship status will be reaching a minimum of 40 NCAA-affiliated varsity programs. Currently, five women's sports have done so including rowing, bowling, beach volleyball, water polo and ice hockey. Until the sport reaches NCAA Championship status, women will compete in the National Wrestling Coaches Association Women's National Championship. While the women's program will be a welcomed addition, the men's program will be returning after a 27-year hiatus. Men's wrestling was first added at William Jewell in the fall of 1950 and boasted the first national qualifier in 1954. Wrestling became a conference-sponsored sport for the Cardinals in the fall of 1961, as they won the Missouri Collegiate Athletic Union title in 1963. Over the next 30 years, Jewell totaled 14 individual conference champions and 20 national qualifiers. The Cardinal men will compete in the Great Lakes Valley Conference which began sponsoring the sport in 2016-2017 and includes full-time members McKendree, Lindenwood, Indianapolis, Maryville and Drury along with associate member Ouachita Baptist. McKendree has won three straight conference titles. Despite only recently adding the sport at the conference level, GLVC schools have a deep history in men's wrestling as 18 athletes from five different schools were named All-America in 2020. "William Jewell is delighted to be one of the first NCAA-II institutions in Missouri to add women's wrestling to our roster of sports and to return to offering men's wrestling, which has a storied history on The Hill," said William Jewell President Dr. Elizabeth MacLeod Walls. "By adding these programs, we are responding to growth trends across the region in both men's and women's wrestling. We are pleased to welcome these student-athletes to our campus beginning in the fall of 2021." Jewell has officially had 19 head coaches in men's wrestling, including hall of famers Fred Flook (1962-1972) and the late Darrel Gourley (1958-61, 1980-81); however, eight of those individuals were also student-athletes at the time. William Jewell plans to hire a head coach this summer before officially beginning competition in the winter of 2021. Individuals interested in applying for the head coaching position should visit here. Applications will be accepted through June 15.
-
Rugged night for ex-wrestlers at UFC Fight Night Las Vegas
InterMat Staff posted an article in Mixed Martial Arts
Gilbert Burns defeated Tyron Woodley by unanimous decision (Photo/Getty Images) At least four former amateur wrestlers took to the Octagon at UFC Fight Night Las Vegas Saturday night. Sadly, for just two one-time participants in the oldest-and-greatest sport, only came out of the cage as winners … while, arguably, the contestant with the most impressive wrestling credentials -- Tyron Woodley, NCAA All-American for the University of Missouri -- suffered arguably the greatest upset of the evening. Burns scores unanimous decision over Woodley "The UFC has a newly minted welterweight contender," according to Marc Raimondi of ESPN.com. "Gilbert Burns defeated former champion Tyron Woodley via unanimous decision (50-45, 50-44, 50-44) in a complete performance Saturday night in the main event of UFC Las Vegas. Burns nearly finished Woodley in the opening minutes and never let his foot off the gas pedal, winning every single round." Prior to launching his pro MMA career, Woodley had been a two-time NCAA All-American wrestler for the University of Missouri, the same collegiate program that also produced another mat-star-turned-MMA champ, Ben Askren. ESPN had Woodley ranked No. 5 among MMA welterweights coming in, while Burns was No. 9. Woodley had not fought since dropping the welterweight title to Kamaru Usman via unanimous decision at UFC 235 on March 2, 2019. Here's how Burns assessed his performance at UFC Fight Night Las Vegas vs his opponent: "That was a former champion right there -- you saw," Burns said. "And I had a dominant performance." Burns now owns a record of 19-3, including six wins in a row and four straight since moving up from lightweight to welterweight. Burns, 33, a Brazil native, who lives and trains in Florida, has just one loss going back to 2016. Woodley, 38, was unbeaten in seven consecutive fights before falling to Usman, but now has not won since 2018. Outcomes involving other ex-amateur wrestlers Casey Kenney (who once wrestled at University of Indianapolis) bounced back from a previous UFC loss "in style," (to use UFC.com's working), submitting Louis Smolka in the first round. "The two bantamweights got after it as expected, but in the midst of an exchange with a little over two minutes left in the opening round, Kenney clipped Smolka with a right hand that appeared to stun him. Smolka responded with a takedown attempt but got caught in a guillotine choke that forced him to tap out at 3:03 of the first round. Casey Kenney bounced back from a loss to Merab Dvalishvili in style, submitting Louis Smolka in the first round. The two bantamweights got after it as expected, but in the midst of an exchange with a little over two minutes left in the opening round, Kenney clipped Smolka with a right hand that appeared to stun him. Smolka responded with a takedown attempt but got caught in a guillotine choke that forced him to tap out at 3:03 of the first round. With the win, Kenney ups his record to 14-2-1. Smolka falls to 16-7. Brandon Royval submits Tim Elliott in a "bout of the night" Former FLA flyweight champ Brandon Royval beat a top-15 fighter (and former junior-college champ and NCAA Division II finalist Tim Elliott) in his first UFC fight on Saturday, turning the tables on one-time title challenger Tim Elliott to score an arm-triangle submission at 3:18 of the second round. Elliott had just moments earlier threatened with a guillotine choke, only to get reversed and quickly checkmated. Immediately after the submission win, Royval "trashed" his own performance, where former amateur wrestling superstar and UFC commentator was much more encouraging. "Brandon, I've got to be honest, man -- you're beating really hard on yourself," Cormier said. "You just won your UFC debut over one of the top 15 guys in the division. On Monday, you're going to have a ranking right next to your name. You cannot be that disappointed!" By contrast, Tim Elliott suffered his third consecutive loss in the Octagon. Yet, both Royval and Elliott took home "Fight of the Night" honors and $50,000 a piece from their preliminary flyweight bout. Finally, Brandon Royval and Tim Elliott took home "Fight of the Night" honors and $50,000 apiece for their preliminary flyweight clash. Elliott set a wicked pace in the opening round, but once he tired, Royval gradually gained momentum. After a scramble on the canvas, the former Legacy Fighting Alliance champion was able to bring an end to the contest with an arm-triangle choke at the 3:18 mark of Round 2. What's more, Chris Guitierez scored a second-round TKO by kicks of Vince Morales, 2009 Oregon high school state champion wrestler at UFC Las Vegas. -
Earlier this week, Easton Area School Board unanimously approved the start of a girls wrestling program in the 2020-21 season during its virtual meeting ... becoming only the second public school in Pennsylvania to announce girls wrestling. (McCaskey High was the first.) On Friday, Easton High School announced it had opened up the head boys' coaching position… meaning JaMarr Billman no longer held that title. Billman confirmed that news Friday afternoon. "I did not resign," he wrote in a text message. "I only know that the job was opened. I was not told anything else." The varsity boys wrestling coach opening has been posted on the school district website. Billman, who had been head coach for the Easton Rovers for the past four seasons, may re-apply for the position. Here's Easton athletic director Jim Pokrivsak explained the coaching change: "Easton's boys wrestling program has a proud history and tradition as one of the finest wrestling programs in the state. Yet, from time to time as with any program, no matter how successful it has been in the past, it is necessary to take a fresh look at where the program has been and where it might be going in the future. As part of that re-examination there has been a collective decision to open the boys wrestling coach position with a view toward the continued improvement necessary to ensure that Easton's wrestling program will maintain its tradition of excellence well into the future." Easton is also seeking a varsity head girls wrestling coach. The boys and girls coaching positions are completely separate. Billman has a long history with Easton as a student-athlete, and, more recently, on the coaching staff. He was a two-time PIAA Class 3A champion for Easton in 1996 and 1997 when he was named The Express-Times Wrestler of the Year. He was a four-time state medalist. He wrestled at Penn State and Lock Haven, compiled a 117-13 record and was a three-time All-American, finishing fifth each time.
-
Tadaaki Hatta, a native of Japan and NCAA champion from Oklahoma State, joins The MatBoss Podcast to talk about the old days. Hatta is a teacher in Ohio and has been a longtime coach internationally and domestically in the international styles of wrestling. Hatta talks about the origins of wrestling in Japan and how his father was the architect for the sport there and dives into the wrestling back in the 1960s and more. Hatta also talks about why he came to the U.S. to compete on the college mats. Hatta also explained the rule changes the NCAA instituted where the first takedown was two points and each takedown afterwards was one point. The MatBoss Podcast is also sponsored by Barbarian Apparel. About MatBoss: Created by coaches for coaches, MatBoss for iPad® integrates wrestling stats directly into the video you record for each match, completely replacing the need for labor-intensive pencil and paper scoring systems. It's the wrestling stats app our sport has been waiting for. Focus on coaching, not busy work Improve through video analysis Make data an advantage Eliminate scoring errors Increase exposure Become a digital coach For more information, visit MatBossApp.com. Follow MatBoss on Twitter and subscribe to the show @MatBossApp | Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Stitcher | Spreaker | Google Podcasts | RSS
-
Anthony Cassar warming up at the 2019 NCAAs (Photo/Tony Rotundo, WrestlersAreWariors.com) Anthony Cassar, 2019 NCAA heavyweight champ for Penn State, has always let it be known he would like to make an eventual career move from wrestling into professional mixed arts. While his next goal is representing the U.S. Olympic men's freestyle team at 125 kilograms/275 pounds at the 2021 Tokyo Olympics, Cassar has just taken the next significant step toward realizing his MMA dream: Cassar's final season wrestling as Penn State heavyweight, winning the 2019 NCAA 285-pound title, the 2019 Big Ten crown, and the 2019 NWCA First-Team National All-American team, concluding with a 30-1 overall record, including 15 majors, two tech falls and five pins. Cassar had planned to wrestle at Penn State for the 2019-2020 season; however, on Jan. 7, 2020, the Nittany Lions announced that Cassar and 2018 NCAA All-American Kyle Conel (197) were out for the season due to injury . Cassar eventually hopes to join other former Penn State wrestling champs in pro MMA careers, including Phil Davis, Ed Ruth, and Bo Nickal. Collegiate mat champs transition to MMA titles InterMat's Richard Mann put together this chart of NCAA wrestling titlewinners who found title success in MMA …
-
Josh Roosa WILKES-BARRE, Pa. -- A former local wrestling standout at Crestwood High School is returning home, as Associate Vice President and Executive Director of Intercollegiate Athletics and Recreation Cheryl Ish announced the hiring of Josh Roosa as the new head coach of the King's wrestling program. Roosa becomes the college's first full-time head coach, and is just the third coach over the storied 51 years of King's Wrestling. "It's with great excitement that we welcome Josh Roosa to King's and back to NEPA," said Ish. "Josh's passion for the sport, this area and for building our program was evident during the search process. The search committee was impressed with his vision for the growth of the program and his understanding of the success and traditions enjoyed under legendary coach Ned McGinley. I am confident that Josh will take advantage of his familiarity with the high caliber Pennsylvania high school wrestling and quickly begin the process of recruiting quality student-athletes to King's." "Josh's experiences wrestling and coaching at high level will be an asset to developing a strong team culture and promoting individual success," said Ish. "Equally important, Josh's core values as a coach match perfectly with providing our student-athletes with a valuable education and great team environment." "I am beyond thrilled to have the opportunity to lead a program with such a rich tradition and history," said Roosa. "Being an NEPA native and Crestwood Graduate, I am very much aware of that tradition and I am looking forward to building on all that Ned McGinley and others have worked hard to build. I would like to thank Cheryl Ish and the entire search committee for granting me this wonderful opportunity." "Through the interview process, it became clear that King's College was an institution I wanted to be a part of," said Roosa. "The passion, excitement, and commitment everyone had for the King's College community was impressive. I have been very familiar with the program from a young age. I attended dual meets and looked up to wrestlers like Jim Morgan, Mitch Marks, Jason Reilly, and many others. To have an opportunity to take over a program that I looked up to as a kid is a dream come true." Josh RoosaRoosa returns to Northeast Pennsylvania after serving as an assistant coach and co-head assistant coach at Division I Appalachian State University. While at App State, Roosa was responsible for all on-campus recruiting, along with assisting with team and individual workouts, producing social media content, and assisting in fundraising. After two years as an assistant coach in Boone, Roosa was elevated to a role of co-head assistant coach before the 2017-18 season. In addition to the SoCon titles and NCAA qualifiers, he helped App State earn multiple top-25 national rankings, highlighted by a climb to No. 16 during the 2016-17 season. Following the fourth straight SoCon title in 2018-19, the 2019-20 team had a school-record six NCAA Championships qualifiers while posting a 9-3 dual meet record. A young team with new starters at six positions led Division I wrestling with four dual meet shutouts, was one of only three Division I teams with at least four conference champions and was one of only six Division I teams that had all 10 starters finish the season with a winning record. Off the mat, App State posted a school-record GPA of 3.45 in the spring of 2020, pushing the cumulative GPA to a program-best 3.11, and its number of community service hours recorded by the Helper Helper platform in 2019-20 ranked No. 4 among all Division I wrestling programs. A year earlier, the Mountaineers led all Division I wrestling programs in community service hours. "I intend to focus on building a roster full of committed student athletes who want to excel academically, athletically, and socially," said Roosa. "I am excited to get in the room and implement a system I know works at the highest level and I am confident will make a huge difference in our performance on the mat. I am also looking forward to connecting with the alumni and supporters of King's College wrestling and getting them all involved with the program." Prior to his time at App State, Roosa was an assistant coach at Division I University of Buffalo for one season. Roosa helped lead effective conditioning and technique practices, and assisted with recruiting while serving as the academic liaison to Athletic Academic Services. His coaching career came after a stellar career on the mat at Division I Bloomsburg University, where he was a five-year scholarship wrestler. An NCAA qualifier at 149 and University Nationals All-American, he was a team captain in 2012-13 when the Huskie squad finished ranked 14th in the country. Roosa graduated from Bloomsburg with a B.A. in communication studies. Before college, Roosa chalked up a 143-18 scholastic record on the mats at Crestwood High School in Mountaintop, PA. Roosa was a four-time PIAA District 2 champion, and had a record of 34-0 as a senior before breaking his hand and missing the state championships. He was sixth at the PIAA "AAA" Championships in 2007, and was the 2006 and 2007 National High School Coaches Association national champion at 145. Roosa will come to Wilkes-Barre with his wife Rachael, and their one son, Joseph. "I will bring tremendous energy and work ethic every day," said Roosa. "It has always been my goal to help all of my student-athletes reach their full potential on and off the mat. It may take some time but I plan to build King's College wrestling into one of the premier programs in the country." -- What They're Saying About Roosa "Although I hate to lose Josh I am extremely excited for him and his family. He has done a phenomenal job here supporting our program and and team culture, and hope these experiences will help him now lead King's College. I consider Josh not only a great coach but a personal friend and wish him tremendous luck as he starts this new journey." - JohnMark Bentley, Head Coach, Appalachian State University "I'm so excited for Josh and his family! Having recruited, coached and worked along side of Josh this is the next step in his journey. As an athlete and coach Josh was and is a tireless worker. The attitude and commitment that he will bring will help elevate King's College wrestling. I'm looking forward to watching King's wrestling grow in and out of the wrestling room." - John Stutzman, Head Coach, University at Buffalo
-
USA Wrestling has released the "Return to Events Guidelines" document, which are guidelines and recommendations for the wrestling community as it contemplates holding local- and state-level events, with extensive recommendations on event operations protocol in the current COVID-19 pandemic environment. The document includes specific chapters on Venue Selection, Government and Medical Expert Adherence, Event Groups, Medical Plan, Infection Mitigation Procedures, Communication, Operational Plan and an Appendix of additional resources. The Operational Plan is an extensive document that can be downloaded as a pdf, which includes a step-by-step checklist of specific actions that are recommended in a variety of event-related operations. USA Wrestling highly encourages potential event hosts to use both the Return to Events Guidelines and the downloadable Operation Plan during planning and when they are on-site at a wrestling competition. Link: USA Wrestling Return to Events Guidelines This is the second specific resource that USA Wrestling has provided to the wrestling community to assist in the process of the resumption of wrestling activity. Published on May 15 was the Return to Mat Guidelines, which are guidelines and recommendations to make decisions on a local level regarding when and how to safely resume wrestling practice and activity. Link: USA Wrestling Return to the Mat Guidelines Both of these documents were initially drafted by one of USA Wrestling's special committees created during the pandemic, the Return to Practice and Competition Committee, which includes medical experts and event operations professionals. Both have been reviewed by USA Wrestling's COVID-19 Advisory Committee, a group of experts who advise the organization on medical, scientific and government matters pertaining to the novel coronavirus. These documents include recommendations from the United States Olympic and Paralympic Committee and numerous other sources, including public health agencies and other sports organizations. As USA Wrestling has suggested since the pandemic began, all individuals should keep themselves updated with the most recent information from their state and local public health department, and follow those local regulations. Club leaders, coaches, parents and individuals must make their own assessments as to the safety of their situations in conjunction with these documents. USA Wrestling expects that these documents may be revised as the pandemic progresses and new or updated information becomes available. The wrestling community is asked to review this document from time to time to assess the guidelines and recommendations.
-
The world's largest youth wrestling tournament won't be happening this year. Junior Nationals and 16U Nationals held annually in Fargo has been canceled due to the outbreak of COVID-19. While the decision had long been expected, the cancellation of the event marks an important moment in wrestling's story during this crisis. We are now left to deal with a second major break to the normalcy of the wrestling calendar. The kids won't be able to win their titles and college coaches won't have a chance to recruit in-person. It's yet another in a series of minor setbacks that when added together signal a larger loss to the continuity and health of the community. For now, we are all isolated, and because of wrestling's tight quarters we can expect that to continue for some time. Mat time is coveted and for those who can achieve a safe workout operation might soon be some chances to get back to action. However, the large-scale intermingling of wrestlers, along with fans and coaches is far, far off. Several months in the best-case situation; a couple of years in the worst-case scenarios. There are a number of small ways we as a community can counterbalance that loss of kinship found on the mats, but we know that nothing can replace the act of wrestling. We are the world's oldest and greatest sport because we allow for the facade of toughness to be torn down through proximity and invite close friendship through shared struggle. Zoom calls won't replace the lessons of the mat and it's foolish to think it could. For now, we mourn the loss of our sport, but soon we will be back. Like many of you my heart goes out to the young wrestlers who are having these moments lost to the pandemic and poor response of our leaders. These young men and women deserve the opportunity to compete and form bonds with friends and teammates. To lose that is something that they can't replicate at home or recover in the future. To your questions … Mark Madsen with the Denmark flag after winning silver at the 2016 Olympics (Photo/Tony Rotundo, WrestlersAreWarriors.com) Q: Mark Madsen is undefeated in MMA and fighting in the UFC. At 35 years old, do you think he could be a UFC champion someday? Or do you think his window has closed? -- Mike C. Foley: I was able to hire Madsen as a color commentator for the United World Wrestling World Championships in 2019 and because he was training for a fight we spent the breaks rolling jiu-jitsu. Though he's not a black belt in jiu-jitsu he has the perfect mentality for a wrestler fighting on the ground in MMA. He doesn't pause on his butt. He fires up to his feet and immediately tries to reverse control. Also, his neck is massive and he's basically impossible to submit because as a Greco-Roman wrestler he's used to not extending his arms. All this is to say that he does have a real chance of competing for a belt in the next 18 months. He's a foreign fighter, which makes it tough, but because he has the Olympic credentials, he could be used as a certifying win for another up-and-comer. Given that opportunity, I could see him winning that type of matchup and making his way into a title fight. Window is wide open. Q: I've heard that the NWCA is proposing to delay the start of the NCAA wrestling season to January? Do you have any insight or clarification on this? Is there any traction? -- Rich C. Foley: As of today the single-semester season has become the most popular logic among coaches and administrators. There are already myriad benefits to the single semester season, but in a year of uncertainty in public health and football (which controls the purse strings) the delay to a single season allows for preparation. Wrestling -- by virtue of the fact it's antithetical to "social distancing" -- won't be the first sport out of the gate. The best option, according to those who make these types of decisions, seems to be to delay and hope for the best. It's the right strategy. We have no idea of predicting what will happen in the summer and fall, much less the winter which we could guess would be prime for a re-emergence of COVID-19. Still, there is A LOT of jockeying that'll need to take place both by the NWCA and the NCAA, not to mention the various stakeholders for conference and national tournament hosts. To think of a shortened season gives me faith that there is a path forward. Even an 8-week spring seasons is preferable to what could become a 20-month break from the sport at the collegiate level. MULTIMEDIA HALFTIME Jordan Burroughs released a statement on the murder of George Floyd. Please read. Q: The United States has been producing some successful women's wrestlers. Sara McMann, Tatiana (Padilla) Suarez and a few others have done well. Do you think we will see any from the current crop transition to MMA after this Olympic cycle? Who do you think could do well in MMA? -- Mike C. Foley: The move to MMA is an obvious one for several male fighters, but for women the calculus has always been more complex. The age at which some women are finding success at the top-level is a little bit later than the male average, and those who do finish their careers don't have a tradition of running into the gym. Now, that could all change with the addition of an atomweight division and a larger number of overall women's wrestlers at the collegiate and international level. Wrestlers like Haley Augello and Victoria Anthony have a real chance of being superstars in MMA, with the latter having the potential for mega super stardom. Inside trips, great takedowns, seemingly unafraid of injury and a great personality that also translates online is a recipe for success in Bellator and the UFC. I'm not so familiar with the intentions of the women, but I do feel that almost all of the middleweights would have the potential to compete at the top level rather quickly. Helen Maroulis may avoid it due to her history of head injuries, but Mallory Velte is someone who could really find a path in the cage post-wrestling. Let's also not forget the international wrestling community. There is some thought that a number of the Russian women will transition to MMA, including Ektarina Bukina who though she is kind, has the look of someone you'd never want to fight. Q: Fargo was the last shoe to drop. The pandemic started right before a busy spring and summer competition calendar for USA Wrestling. I saw a tweet from someone at USA Wrestling last week that "Not a single person laid off or furloughed from @USAWrestling during this trying time." Any idea what the financial fallout will be for USA Wrestling? -- Mike C. Foley: That's remarkable nobody was furloughed or laid off. Really impressive. I don't know the fallout, but I'm sure they are girding for some hit to revenue based on fewer licenses and the lost income from Fargo.
-
Amos named Dave Schultz High School Excellence Award winner
InterMat Staff posted an article in High School
Braxton Amos wrestling in the finals of the Super 32 Challenge (Photo/Sam Janicki, SJanickiPhoto.com) STILLWATER, Okla. -- The National Wrestling Hall of Fame on Thursday announced that Braxton Amos of Mineral Wells, West Virginia, is the 2020 national winner of the Dave Schultz High School Excellence Award (DSHSEA). "Being named the 2020 Dave Schultz High School Excellence Award winner is an awesome ending to my high school wrestling career. My club coach, Miron Kharchilava, trained with Dave on several occasions. Hearing his stories about Dave and their training is inspiring," said Amos, who is the first national winner from West Virginia. "One of the posters that still hangs in Miron's room is Dave with a quote about the Japanese Samurai Musashi Miyamoto. I have walked by that poster thousands of times, it makes me appreciate the amount of time Dave put into chasing perfection and reminds me that people who didn't see the discipline will never understand his sacrifice. "It's an honor to join the list of past DSHSE winners," he added. "I'm proud to represent the University of Wisconsin, the State of West Virginia, and Parkersburg South High School." The DSHSEA was established in 1996 to honor Olympic and World champion Dave Schultz, whose career was cut short when he was murdered in January 1996. He was inducted into the National Wrestling Hall of Fame as a Distinguished Member in 1997 and as a member of the United World Wrestling Hall of Fame in 2016. The DSHSEA recognizes and celebrates the nation's most outstanding high school senior male wrestlers for their excellence in wrestling, scholastic achievement, citizenship, and community service. The Hall of Fame also presents the Tricia Saunders High School Excellence Award, which recognizes and celebrates the nation's most outstanding high school senior female wrestlers. "We are excited to honor Braxton Amos as the national winner of the 2020 Dave Schultz High School Excellence Award," said Executive Director Lee Roy Smith. "This award and honor represents the National Wrestling Hall of Fame's pride in a young man who has demonstrated a commitment to balancing his pursuit of excellence in the fields of academics, athletics and community service." The son of Tim and Anika Amos, he is a three-time West Virginia state champion, who did not surrender a takedown, near fall or reversal during his career for Parkersburg South High School. The top-ranked wrestler in the country at 220 pounds and the top-ranked wrestler pound-for-pound, Amos has signed a letter of intent to wrestle for the University of Wisconsin. Amos, who did not wrestle because of injury as a freshman, set school records for wins in an undefeated season, recording 48 victories twice; most wins in three seasons with 142; highest winning percentage with 100 percent; and most consecutive wins with 142. He was named Outstanding Wrestler at the state tournament twice and is a two-time recipient of the Dutton Award, presented to West Virginia's Outstanding Wrestler for all classes. He also received the Hercules Award, presented for the most pins in the least amount of time. He won the USA Wrestling Freestyle Junior Nationals in 2019 after capturing both the freestyle and Greco-Roman titles at the USA Wrestling Cadet Nationals in 2016 and 2017. Competing with sprained ligaments in his knee, Amos reached the finals in Greco-Roman in 2019 before defaulting because of his injury. He did not compete in Fargo in 2018. Amos also has three Super 32 titles, three Ironman crowns and three Powerade championships. He was named Outstanding Wrestler in Greco-Roman at Fargo while also earning Outstanding Wrestler at Super 32 and the Most Pins award at Powerade. Amos, who was first team All-State in football, was president of the United Way Student Board and student council vice president while also organizing an annual community clean-up day. He was Academic All-State all three years that he competed and a member of the National Honor Society with a 4.05 GPA. Ohio has had the most national winners with five followed by Pennsylvania with three and California, Minnesota and Oklahoma with two winners each. Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, New Jersey, New York, South Carolina, Utah, West Virginia and Wisconsin have each had one winner. Regional winners are selected from state winners, and the national winner is chosen from the regional winners. The state winners are evaluated and selected on the basis of three criteria: success and standout performances and sportsmanship in wrestling; review of GPA and class rank, academic honors and distinctions; and participation in activities that demonstrate commitment to character and community. The Hall of Fame accepts nominations for its high school excellence awards from state chapters and coaches. The nominations are reviewed by a committee, which selects state and regional winners. The committee then determines the national winners from the regional winners. National winners of the DSHSEA award have combined to win 19 NCAA Division I individual titles led by four-time champion Logan Stieber (2010), three-time winner Zain Retherford (2013) and two-time winners Steven Mocco (2001), David Taylor (2009) and Teyon Ware (2002). The 2016 winner of the DSHSEA Mark Hall won an NCAA title as a freshman in 2017 while 2015 winner Zahid Valencia won back-to-back championships in 2018 and 2019. All-Time National Winners of Dave Schultz High School Excellence Award 2020 - Braxton Amos, Parkersburg South High School, Mineral Wells, West Virginia 2019 - Cohlton Schultz, Ponderosa High School, Parker, Colorado (Greco-Roman Cadet World Champion) 2018 - David Carr, Perry High School, Massillon, Ohio (Junior World Champion) 2017 - Daton Fix, Charles Page High School, Sand Springs, Oklahoma (Junior World Champion) 2016 - Mark Hall II, Apple Valley High School, Apple Valley, Minnesota (NCAA Champion and 2X Junior World Champion) 2015 - Zahid Valencia, St. John Bosco High School, Bellflower, California (2X NCAA Champion and Junior World Silver Medalist) 2014 - Chance Marsteller, Kennard-Dale High School, Fawn Grove, Pennsylvania 2013 - Zain Retherford, Benton Area High School, Benton, Pennsylvania (3X NCAA Champion) 2012 - Taylor Massa, St. Johns High School, St. Johns, Michigan 2011 - Morgan McIntosh, Calvary Chapel High School, Santa Ana, California 2010 - Logan Stieber, Monroeville High School, Monroeville, Ohio (World Champion and 4X NCAA Champion) 2009 - David Taylor, Graham High School, St. Paris, Ohio (World Champion and 2X NCAA Champion) 2008 - Jason Chamberlain, Springville High School, Springville, Utah 2007 - Zachary Sanders, Wabasha-Kellogg High School, Wabasha, Minnesota 2006 - David Craig, Brandon High School, Brandon, Florida 2005 - Troy Nickerson, Chenango Forks High School, Chenango Forks, New York (NCAA Champion) 2004 - Coleman Scott, Waynesburg High School, Waynesburg, Pennsylvania (NCAA Champion and Olympic bronze medalist) 2003 - C.P. Schlatter, St. Paul Graham High School, Urbana, Ohio 2002 - Teyon Ware, Edmond North High School, Edmond, Oklahoma (2X NCAA Champion) 2001 - Steven Mocco, Blair Academy, Blairstown, New Jersey (2X NCAA Champion and Olympian) 2000 - Ben Connell, Lugoff-Elgin High School, Lugoff, South Carolina 1999 - Zach Roberson, Blue Valley North West High School, Overland Park, Kansas (NCAA Champion) 1998 - Garrett Lowney, Freedom High School, Appleton, Wisconsin (2X Olympian) and Justin Ruiz, Taylorsville High School, Salt Lake City, Utah (Olympian) 1997 - Jeff Knupp, Walsh Jesuit High School, Akron, Ohio 1996 - David Kjeldgaard, Lewis Central High School, Council Bluffs, Iowa National Wrestling Hall of Fame & Museum America's shrine to the sport of wrestling, the National Wrestling Hall of Fame & Museum was founded as a nonprofit organization in 1976 to honor the sport of wrestling, preserve its history, recognize extraordinary individual achievements, and inspire future generations. The National Wrestling Hall of Fame has museums in Stillwater, Oklahoma, and Waterloo, Iowa. The Stillwater, Oklahoma, location reopened in June 2016 following a $3.8 million renovation while the Waterloo, Iowa, location reopened in March 2019 after undergoing a $1.4 million renovation. Both museums now feature interactive exhibits and electronic kiosks, as well as the opportunity to watch NCAA Championship matches from the 1930s to present day. Stillwater also has the John T. Vaughan Hall of Honors where the greatest names in wrestling are recognized, including iconic granite plaques presented to Distinguished Members since the Hall of Fame opened in 1976. The museum has the largest collection of wrestling artifacts and memorabilia in the world, including the most collegiate and Olympic wrestling uniforms. Wrestling truly is for everyone and the diversity and accessibility of the sport continues to be highlighted through exhibits featuring females, African-Americans, Asian Americans, Native Americans, and Latino Americans. There is also a library featuring historical documents, including NCAA guides and results, as well as books on the sport. For more information about the Hall of Fame, please visit www.NWHOF.org. -
Tyron Woodley finished as a two-time All-American at Missouri (Photo/Missouri Athletics) On Saturday, Tyron Woodley returns to the Octagon for the first time since losing his UFC welterweight title against Kamaru Usman. He will face off against multiple time Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu world champion Gilbert Burns. In order to get back in the title picture, Woodley will likely need to overcome a variety of obstacles and challenges. Challenges are nothing new for Woodley. Before ever stepping into an MMA gym, he went through the wringer that only wrestling can provide. He excelled on the high school mats of the Greater St. Louis area and made history at Missouri. Let's take a long look at the extensive wrestling career of the former UFC champion. High school Freshman season (1996-1997) Woodley first started making a name for himself as a freshman at McCluer High School in Florissant, Mo. He won the Class 4A District 4 tournament at 130 pounds with a 25-9 technical fall over Matt Davis of Hazelwood West in the finals. At the time, McCluer was a budding program in the area. In addition to Woodley, two of his teammates also claimed district titles including James Knowles. Knowles, who is currently the Mayor of Ferguson, Mo., pinned professional wrestling veteran Randy Orton in the 189-pound final. In an article in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch on Feb. 15, 1997, Woodley was described as McCluer's best hope among four freshmen starters to bring home a Section 2 tournament title. He nearly pulled it off as he made the finals before falling against Tim Blubaugh of DeSemt in a 13-9 decision. Woodley advanced to the Missouri Class 4A state tournament with a 14-5 record. However, he fell in the first round of the tournament when he was pinned by Corey Crandall of Ft. Osage in 2:46. Despite failing to place, Woodley was named an honorable mention to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch All-Metro Area Wrestling Team. Sophomore season (1997-1998) Woodley famously told Conor McGregor, "I haven't weighed 145 since my sophomore year of high school." He actually started the season down at 140 and won the early season Kirkwood Invitational. He entered the District 4 tournament at 145 pounds and won his second straight title. In the finals he defeated Matt Martin of Riteour via a 15-7 score. The victory qualified Woodley for the Sectional 2 tournament. While he came up short as a freshman, he won his first sectional title as a sophomore. He dominated his way through the field and scored a 12-4 major decision over Kevin McGuire of Pattonville in the finals. With the victory, he was headed to the state tournament for the second time in two seasons. He won his first-round match with an 11-4 decision over Steve Baumgartner of Hickman. However, his momentum came to a halt in the second round. Woodley suffered a first-period fall against Patrick Byrne of Parkway South. Woodley later reflected upon that loss to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, and he described it as one of the most deflating moments of his high school career. "I leaned too far back while attempting a cradle move and both my shoulder wound up parallel to the mat," he said. "I was pulling harder and harder and I was leading 5-0 in the match when suddenly, the referee slapped the mat to signal 'pin.' I jumped up because I thought I had won. He raised the other guy's arm in victory and I thought he had made a mistake until it was explained to me. The referee said it was a defensive pin." Junior season (1998-1999) By the time Woodley became a junior, he was one of the best wrestlers in the state. He competed at 152 pounds and brought an undefeated record into a dual meet between McCluer and Hazelwood East on Jan. 27. Curtis Bledsoe, who quickly became one of Woodley's biggest high school rivals, handed him his first loss of the season via an 8-6 score. Bledsoe was undefeated on the season and had won a state title in the previous season at 140 pounds. The two met again in the finals of the District 4 tournament. This time, Woodley got the better of the matchup and took home a 5-4 decision. He returned the favor against Bledsoe and handed him his first loss of the year. After the district tournament. Woodley spoke with the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. "It's pretty intense," he said. "Both of us are real good and when you do the same kind of stuff, it's hard to defend it." The rivalry would continue at the Section 2 tournament. They met in the finals once again. Woodley widened the gap and won the section title with a 6-1 score. He entered the Class 4A state tournament with a 37-1 record, and he was clearly the favorite at 152 pounds. Woodley looked the part early in the state tournament as he decked Steve Baumgartner of Hickman in 2:55 and defeated Andrew Elder of Park Hill 6-1. In the finals, on Feb. 21, he faced off against Bledsoe for the fourth time in 25 days. In the bout, Woodley got off to a strong start and held a solid lead. In the final period, he continued to push the pace and even earned a point via two stall warnings. However, with 10 seconds left in the match, Bledsoe came back and scored the fall. Bledsoe seemed as shocked as anyone when he spoke after the tournament with the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. "I don't know what happened there," he said. "It came out of nowhere. Last week I kind of gave up at the end, so I knew I had to go and not stop." For the runner-up finish, Woodley earned second team honors for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch All-Metro Area Wrestling Team. Senior season (1999-2000) After losing the final match of his junior year, Woodley moved up to 160 pounds and turned things around quickly as a senior. Early in the year, he defeated Dustin Wiles of Farmington, who was third the previous season in Class 3A. Woodley then won the Springfield Holiday Tournament and St. Charles Invitational, defeating David Downs of Troy in the finals of both events. By the time the calendars moved to February, Woodley held an undefeated record and was looking for yet another District 4A tournament title. He breezed through the field and defeated J.C. Russell of Hazelwood West in the finals with an 8-2 decision. He had a rematch with Russell one week later in the Section 2 tournament final to advance to the Class 4A tournament once again. In his final quest for a state title, Woodley was not going to be deterred. In the quarterfinals, he scored a dominant major decision victory over Chase Johnson of Oak Park. Woodley then picked up a second-period fall over Austin Alley of Jefferson City. His final was a close match, but he pulled out a 3-1 decision over Adam Stern of Oakville to become a state champion. Woodley finished the year with an undefeated 48-0 record. His 48 wins were the most among all of the Missouri state champions, and he was only the third state champion in McCluer history. Following the regular season, Woodley took part in both the NHSCA Senior Nationals as well as Junior Nationals in Fargo. He finished seventh at the NHSCA event and defeated future MMA competitor Justin Salas in the seventh-place match. At Fargo, he competed in freestyle and finished third. In the third-place match, he scored an 11-second fall over Zach Doll. Doll was a reigning National Prep champion and would go on to wrestle collegiately at Pittsburgh. As late as May 22, the plan was still for Woodley to attend Nebraska. An article in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch mentioned that he was still committed to the Cornhuskers and also asked him about his future outside of wrestling. "I would like to give back to the community," he said. "I plan to accomplish this by teaching young children that there is someone for them to look up to. I will show them that they are loved and tell them how important they are to our future." Seven days later the same newspaper reported that Woodley had signed with Missouri. Head coach Brian Smith spoke with ESPN.com about recruiting Woodley for an article published last year. "Tyron was thinking about going to Nebraska," he said. "I remember driving down to do a home visit, and he grew up in Ferguson, Missouri. It was a rough area. I sat with his mom and just let her know that we are close enough to home. She was like, 'I want him to stay out there and be in Columbia and hang with his friends there.' His mom was happy for him to get away from the area and grow up here through college." College Redshirt season (2000-2001) Woodley redshirted his first season in Columbia and competed in a variety of open tournaments. He won the freshman/sophomore division at the Missouri Open and finished second at both the Lindenwood Open and Glen Brand Open. He led all Missouri redshirt freshmen in terms of wins. Freshman season (2001-2002) After his redshirt campaign, Woodley joined the starting lineup for the Tigers. He broke through early in the season with a runner-up performance at the Reno Tournament of Champions. He made the finals at 165 pounds before coming up short against Eugene Harris of Oregon in a 5-3 match. Not only did Woodley get off to a hot start individually, but the Tigers were rolling as well. They had won 11 straight dual matches and risen to No. 9 in the rankings when they welcomed No. 5 Oklahoma State to Columbia on Jan. 25. A then-record 1,138 fans came out to witness the match. Woodley dropped a 6-3 decision against Tyrone Lewis, and the Cowboys won the dual 26-7. Back in 2002, the top three finishers at each weight in the Big 12 earned a spot at the NCAA tournament. Woodley entered the conference tournament as the fourth seed. In the third-place match, he nearly upset Robbie Waller of Oklahoma but eventually dropped an 8-6 overtime match. Woodley clearly closed the gap as he surrendered a first-period fall less than a month before the match. Despite the fourth-place finish, Woodley was awarded one of the conference's wildcards and made his way to his first NCAA tournament. Woodley entered the field as an unseeded wrestler. He won his first-round match over Scott Roth of Cornell before falling against Mark Fee of Appalachian State. Once in the consolation bracket, Woodley defeated Bill Boeh (Duquesne) and Carl Fronhofer (Pittsburgh) to reach the round of 12 -- one match away from becoming an All-American. His match against Fronhofer was apparently quite a spectacle and came down to a last-minute exchange. Fronhofer spoke with The Post-Star (Glen Falls, N.Y.) following the bout. "I was down by one with five seconds left, and I went to throw the guy," Fronhofer explained. "The ref on the mat called two (points for a takedown), but the other ref said time was out. It was real crazy. Everybody in the gym thought I had two -- 13,000 people were yelling that I had two. We protested and they deliberated for about half an hour, but they denied our protest." Despite Fronhofer's objections, Woodley advanced to the next round. His match against Doc Vecchio of Penn State went to overtime, but in the end, Woodley was eliminated via a 10-8 score. He finished the season with a 21-12 record. After the season, he was awarded the Marshall Esteppe Award, which is given to Missouri's Most Outstanding Freshman. Sophomore season (2002-2003) Woodley began his sophomore season ranked eighth in the InterMat rankings. Early in the season, he won the Harold Nichols Open with a 3-2 victory over Iowa's Mark Mueller in the finals. Woodley then had an early run-in with the No.1 ranked Matt Lackey of Illinois in the finals of the Missouri Open and lost 6-4. In late January, Woodley scored a first-period fall over Wes Roberts, which was vital to the Tigers' victory over Oklahoma. However, the following week, he was upset via eventual UFC competitor Matt Veach, who was wrestling for Eastern Illinois at the time. Missouri hosted the 2003 Big 12 tournament and once again Woodley would need to fight his way through a tough field to qualify for the NCAA tournament. However, things broke in his favor early in the tournament. Iowa State's Nick Passolano knocked off returning All-American Tyrone Lewis (Oklahoma State) in a double-overtime semifinal match. Woodley had struggled against Lewis throughout his career, and he would now face a much more favorable matchup if he made it to the finals. In his own semifinal, he defeated Jacob Klein of Nebraska to set up the final against Passalano. Nate Carlisle summarized the bout for the March 9 edition of The Des Moines Register. "In [Passolano's] final against Missouri's Tyron Woodley, the score was tied, 1-1, with about 20 seconds remaining in the third period and the wrestlers neutral," he wrote. "Woodley then appeared to take down Passolano and put him on his back. The referee signaled a takedown, but then waved it off -- over screaming protests from the Missouri fans -- when Passolano quickly jumped to his feet and hoisted one of Woodley's legs into the air. The pair fell off the mat… The match went to overtime where Woodley scored a takedown and a two-point nearfall with 41 seconds remaining for a 5-1 win." With the victory, Woodley not only qualified for his second NCAA tournament, but he also became the first-ever Big 12 Conference champion in Missouri history. Woodley entered the 2003 NCAA tournament as the fifth seed. In his first-round match, he scored a 7-2 decision victory over Nick Nemeth (Kent State), who would go on to perform as Dolph Ziggler for World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE). He then bested Central Michigan's Kevin Carr in the second round. In the quarterfinals, Woodley ran into Jacob Volkmann (Minnesota). Like the Missouri wrestler, Volkmann would also go on to have an extensive UFC career, and he defeated Woodley 4-0 to advance to the semifinals. Woodley found himself one match away from All-American status for the second straight season. This time he secured a 4-2 victory over Noel Thompson of Hofstra to become an All-American for the first time. The eighth-place finish as well as a runner-up performance from teammate Scott Barker at 184 pounds led the Tigers to their highest finish in 11 years. Tyron Woodley compiled a record of 110-38 as a four-year starter at Missouri (Photo/Missouri Athletics) Junior season (2003-2004) InterMat ranked Woodley seventh at 165 pounds to start his junior season. The Tigers were ranked 12th as a team, and they had an early season meeting with No. 1 Oklahoma State. The match took place at Hazelwood Central High School, which is only a 15-minute drive from Woodley's high school alma mater. He would drop another decision against rival Tyrone Lewis, but the Tigers pulled off the upset in front of their home-state fans. Woodley spoke succinctly with the St. Louis Post-Dispatch following the dual. "I wasn't as quick as I needed to be. That disappointed me, but tonight was big for us." Despite the early season struggle, Woodley headed into the new year with momentum. In late December, he won the Southern Scuffle. In the semifinals, he avenged a previous defeat with a 5-4 decision win over Volkmann and then iced the tournament over Virginia Tech's Chris Stith in the finals. The returning Big 12 champion brought a 21-8 record into the 2004 edition of the tournament. Woodley suffered an upset in his first match and dropped a one-point decision against Charles Jones (Oklahoma). The early loss set up a rematch of the previous year's final with a bid to the NCAA tournament on the line. This time Iowa State's Passolano had his number and took the bout via a 3-1 score. Unlike his freshman season, a wildcard berth did not materialize. Woodley missed his first NCAA tournament as a starter at Missouri. Senior season (2004-2005) Prior to the start of Woodley's senior season, Missouri head coach Brian Smith spoke with the Tigers athletics website. "Tyron has tremendous talent and technique entering his senior year," he said. "Tyron and the coaching staff have only one goal for this season and it's a goal we all think Tyron can attain to cap off his successful Missouri campaign." Woodley spent the entire season ranked in the top 10 and entered a stacked Big 12 tournament. The five-person field included Woodley, who was ranked fifth, No. 3 Johny Hendricks (Oklahoma State), No. 6 Travis Paulson (Iowa State) and No. 8 Jacob Klein (Nebraska). In the semifinals, Woodley knocked off Paulson in a close 2-1 match, while Hendricks needed overtime to pull out a 6-4 win over Klein. Those results set up a final between two eventual UFC champions. The two were scheduled to fight many years later, but the bout fell through at the last minute. Woodley discussed his frustration with this finals match after their fight left him without a shot at redemption. Hendricks took a 4-1 decision and the Big 12 title. Woodley still qualified for his third NCAA tournament. His accomplishments were enough to earn him the fifth seed, and he won his first two matches over Donny Reynold (Illinois) and Mike Patrovich (Hofstra). Woodley then fell out of the championship hunt with a 3-0 decision loss against Mark Perry (Iowa). Woodley found himself in the round of 12 for the third time in his collegiate career. He faltered in his freshman season and pulled through as a sophomore. As a senior, he became an All-American with a dominant 11-0 decision over Justin Nestor of Pittsburgh. Woodley ended up finishing seventh and concluded his collegiate career as a two-time All-American and Big 12 champion. After finishing his career at Missouri, Woodley hung around the freestyle circuit for a few years, and he even made the finals of the 2006 University Nationals. In 2009, he made his professional MMA debut and a little over seven years after that he claimed the UFC title with a victory over Robbie Lawler. Even after a long professional career, Woodley still echoes the same sentiments he expressed as a high school senior. During his title reign he spoke with Sports Illustrated. "Why can't I be somebody that kids look up to?" he said. "When you come to the realization that you can be that person, then you can be." Match and tournament results as well as biographical information sourced from the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Daily Journal (Flat River), Springfield News-Leader, The Courier (Waterloo, Iowa), The Dispatch (Moline, Illinois), Des Moines Register, The Oklahoman and the Journal Gazette (Mattoon, Illinois) unless otherwise noted.
-
Penn State's Nick Lee gets his hand raised after beating Ohio State's Luke Pletcher (Photo/Sam Janicki, SJanickiPhoto.com) UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa -- Penn State senior student-athlete Nick Lee was among the 28 honorees named Big Ten Outstanding Sportsmanship Award winners for the 2019-20 academic year. He was chosen from a group of 350 students honored throughout the academic year who had displayed positive sportsmanship. One member of each varsity sports team on every campus was chosen by his or her institution as a Sportsmanship Award honoree, and two Outstanding Sportsmanship Award winners were then selected from each institution. All of the Sportsmanship Award winners have distinguished themselves through sportsmanship and ethical behavior. In addition, these honorees must be in good academic standing and must have demonstrated good citizenship outside of the sports-competition setting. Lee, who was to be the No. 2 seed at this year's NCAA Championship before the event was canceled by the NCAA, has been a leader on the Nittany Lions on and off the mat for three seasons. From the middle of his true freshman year when he had his redshirt pulled and went on to earn All-America honors, Lee has been the consummate teammate for head coach Cael Sanderson and the Nittany Lions. An outstanding leader both on the mat and in the classroom, Lee leads by example and is cited by the Lion coaching staff as one of Penn State's most disciplined wrestlers. Lee is a three-time National Wrestling Coaches Association (NWCA) National All-Academic honoree and a two-time Academic All-Big Ten pick.
-
Moments before the finals of the 2019 Junior National freestyle finals (Photo/David Peterson, Minnesota/USA Wrestling) USA Wrestling has announced that the 2020 U.S. Marine Corps Junior and 16U National Championships at the Fargodome on the campus of North Dakota State in Fargo, N.D. has been canceled. The competition, recognized as the largest wrestling tournament in the world, had been scheduled for July 17-24. With input from its state leadership as well as its COVID-19 Special Committees, USA Wrestling believes that this is the responsible thing to do in order to maintain the long term viability of the sport. As has been the case since the start of the coronavirus pandemic, the health and safety of USA Wrestling members and the entire wrestling community remains the No. 1 priority for the organization. Based upon information currently available, it was not feasible or prudent to host a major national championship in July, where participants will come from all different areas in the nation, many of which have vastly different local situations concerning COVID-19. High-performance experts indicate that it takes up to eight weeks to prepare for high-level competition, a factor which also went into the decision. This year would have marked the 50th year that the Junior Nationals (high school) portion of the event had been held, with the first Junior Nationals hosted in Iowa City, Iowa in 1971. USA Wrestling has either postponed or canceled 21 national or regional events since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States. USA Wrestling has consistently stated that the expected progression of wrestling activity will likely begin locally, based upon health and government regulations, then move on to state, regional and national activity. With that in mind, USA Wrestling will focus on the working with its state association leadership to consider local, state and regional competitions in the upcoming months. Any such activity will only be possible when held under the guidelines set by local and state health authorities and in compliance with the safety measures being developed for the sport. On May 14, USA Wrestling published its "Return to the Mat Guidelines" document, which are guidelines and recommendations for the wrestling community as it makes decisions on a local level regarding when and how to safely resume wrestling activity. USA Wrestling is expecting to release its Return to Competition Guidelines document in the coming week.
-
Frank named interim head wrestling coach at Gettysburg College
InterMat Staff posted an article in College
Gino Frank GETTYSBURG, Pa. -- Executive Director of Intercollegiate Athletics and Campus Recreation Mike Mattia has announced long-time Gettysburg College wrestling assistant coach Gino Frank has been named the interim head coach for the 2020-21 campaign. Frank becomes the 18th head coach since the storied program began in 1930. He follows in the footsteps of former colleague Andy Vogel, who is poised to lead the reemergence of the wrestling program at Hiram College. Frank and Vogel worked side-by-side for 13 years guiding the Bullets on the wrestling mat. "I want to thank Gino for taking on this extra responsibility during these uncertain times," said Mattia. "He has been a part of our wrestling program for over a decade, and has played an integral role in building and maintaining a successful program that competes on a national level. I know no one is more dedicated or will work harder than Gino when it comes to providing a great experience for our wrestlers and preparing them for success on the mat." "I am extremely excited for this opportunity that Gettysburg has given to me," said Frank. "For the past 13 years, I've had a tremendous amount of pride in working as an assistant wrestling coach at Gettysburg College. The reputation of Gettysburg College academics combined with the strength of our athletic department and the student-athletes that I've had an opportunity to work with over the years has created the source of this great pride. As I work to continue the development of our Bullet wrestlers, I will greatly miss working with coaches Andy Vogel and Pankil Chander. I've learned a lot from them and wish them the best with their new coaching jobs." Since Frank arrived in 2007, Gettysburg has produced 10 NCAA Division III qualifiers, three All-Americans, eight Centennial Conference champions, and 19 National Wrestling Coaches Association (NWCA) Scholar All-Americans. He has coached six of the seven Bullets to win over 100 career matches. Frank coached Andrew Goldstein '08 when he became the first Gettysburg grappler to attain All-America status in a decade with an eighth-place finish at 157 pounds in 2008. He also mentored Zach Thomson who finished third at 174 in 2013 and Paul Triandafilou '19 who was the first-ever Gettysburg All-American at heavyweight with a fifth-place showing in 2016. Overall, the Bullets competed on the national stage eight times over the last 13 seasons. As a team, Gettysburg recorded four-straight winning seasons from 2014-15 to 2017-18, marking its longest streak since the 1970s. The Bullets finished as high as third twice at the CC Championships and placed eighth at the NCAA Division III East Regional in 2017. Frank brings an impressive resume as a coach away from Gettysburg. A USA Wrestling Silver Certified Coach, he is the founder and head coach of the Modern Day Gladiators Club in Central Pennsylvania. Modern Day Gladiators has produced 44 Greco-Roman, Freestyle, and Women's Freestyle All-Americans, 59 Northeast Regional Medalists, five Greco-Roman World Team Trials qualifiers, five Olympic Training Center invitees, and three Pan-Am Games gold medalists since 2009. Prior to establishing the Modern Day Gladiator Club, Frank coached with the Icebreakers Wrestling club, producing seven All-Americans and 11 Northeast Regional medalists. From 2006 to 2008, Frank led the Pennsylvania National Greco-Roman Team and helped the team win back-to-back national championships. He also served as a coach with the Minnesota Storm Junior National Greco-Roman Team (2009-12) and the New York National Greco-Roman Team (2013-2018). During his tenure with Team New York, they recorded a fourth-place finish with three national champions at the 2014 USA Wrestling National Championships in Fargo, North Dakota. Frank made his return to the Pennsylvania National Team in 2019 as the head Junior Greco-Roman coach. In his first year back, the team climbed 14 places from its finish the previous year to place fourth on the strength of nine All-Americans. Frank is a 1995 graduate of Bucknell University where he double-majored in history and geography. Prior to being sidelined due to injury early his career, Frank won silver medals at both the Greco-Roman and Freestyle Pennsylvania Open Championships. He later earned a varsity letter as a student assistant coach for Bucknell. An accomplished wrestler, Frank won a silver medal at the U.S. Master's Greco-Roman National Championships in Las Vegas. He pinned each of his three opponents en route to earning Master's Division All-American status. Frank also competed at the NYAC International Greco-Roman Tournament and was inducted into the Mid-Western Pennsylvania Athletic Conference Hall of Fame in 2006. Frank is an educator away from the wrestling mat and has over 20 years of service teaching social studies at Mechanicsburg Middle School. His previous teaching stops include Immaculate High School in Danbury, Conn., and Warren County High School in Front Royal, Va. Despite the loss of the team's top competitor in regional place-winner Colin Devlin '20, Gettysburg is poised to return 23 wrestlers from a very young squad. The Bullets started at least six freshmen in the majority of dual matches during 2019-20. Frank will continue to develop the younger wrestlers while looking for potential impact recruits to push Gettysburg into the mix for its first Centennial crown in the years ahead. His previous relationships with the current roster proved a key factor in determining the direction of the program following Vogel's announcement last month. "The relationships he has built with our wrestlers and the leadership he provides," noted Mattia, "will be vital during what is sure to be a very unconventional academic and athletic year." "One of my main goals is to add 10-to-15 quality student-athletes to our roster with each incoming class," said Frank. "I also want to help each wrestler develop their full potential both on the mat and in the classroom. Finally, as we strive to build conference and regional place-winners as well as All-Americans, I would like to guide a team that raises Gettysburg College's first-ever Centennial Conference wrestling championship banner in Bream Gymnasium." -
Floyd "Shorty" Hitchcock. Some of you might have known him. Shorty was an NCAA champion at Bloomsburg University and the head wrestling coach at Millersville University. Shorty also coached Ricky and Rocky Bonomo at Lake Lehman High School. Shorty was an anomaly. He passed way too soon from pancreatic cancer in 2002 at the age of 50. Many people probably knew him better than me. My time with him was only a few short years. I wrestled for him from 1994-1997 at Millersville University. After finishing my eligibility, I was one of his assistant coaches during the 1998-99 season. I also worked at his wrestling camps and the pool he managed during the summer. In my adult life, I wish I would have had the opportunity to know him longer. I was a young coach when he passed. My memories of him still make me smile when I think about him. Shorty was full of energy. A jokester who could make practically anyone laugh and feel at ease when you were around him. Honestly, he was one of the most enjoyable people I've ever met. He was a big burly guy who could almost literally lift a house. However, he had a soft side that when you needed someone to talk to, he was there. Shorty was a special and unique individual. Almost a character amongst himself. A mythical person even while he was alive. We would refer to Shorty's antics as "Shorty Stories." And there were quite a few. I know from experience many that were true. Others were urban legends fabricated or embellished to make his stories more interesting. Thinking about it now, I do not believe I have met anyone like Shorty. I am confident in my lifetime that I will not meet anyone like him again. He had something about him that made him larger than life. Floyd "Shorty" HitchcockI once watched Shorty lift a stack of weights on an old universal weight machine with one arm. To some, that may not seem impressive or extraordinary. But when you understand that our entire team of college wrestlers could not budge the stack with two arms, it was unworldly. He walked up with a look of comical disgust. Shorty couldn't understand why none of us -- including our bigger guys -- could lift the weights even an inch. To this day, I am not sure how much it was. It was the entire stack of weights pinned at the bottom on a chest-high military press. We were a bunch of young kids doing a needless challenge at the end of a workout. Shorty looked at the weights. Put one arm on the bar and pressed it straight up, not once, but three times. He then put the weights down as we looked on with amazement. He turned to us and giggled. The infamous Shorty Hitchcock giggle. The devious laugh that we all knew him for. Eyes squinted and the big grin on his face. "Rambo" was the once a season conditioning activity where we would run in the woods for hours with the sole objective to not get caught by Shorty. It was the last man standing type of thing. How long could you make it without being found and taken out of the game? I laugh thinking about it now. Twenty-five or so 18-22-year-old young men trying to not be seen by a 40-something-year-old wrestling coach. The exercise was equally adrenaline-filled as it was entertaining. You never knew where he would surprise you. He had a knack for finding you when you least suspected. From a distance, you would hear, "Run, there he is," followed by leaves rustling and branches cracking and the sound of the infamous giggle. When Shorty found you, you were in trouble. He attacked you quickly in stealth fashion. You were out of the challenge before you had time to react. More funny, though, was after he caught you, he disappeared without a trace. Shorty wasn't a small guy in any respect. Teammates would ask where he went. We had no idea. Forward rolls down the bleachers. Shorty found ways to make workouts, practice, or regular events unnormal and unique. It was more fun for him that way. It was more fun for us as well. You never knew what to expect. One preseason workout, we ran sprints and did bleacher running, and buddy carries, wheelbarrows, and jumping up and down the steps. After we finished our set, Shorty would tell us what to do next. I still remember vividly, "Forward rolls." I looked at my teammate Matt, and said, "What did he just say?" We did forward rolls down the bleachers. Shorty didn't tell you how. He told us to start at the top and make it down. We had to figure out the rest. Jungle gym and pull-up bar competitions. Head-to-head singe pull-up bar tournaments and WWF battle royal free-for-alls on the jungle gym. Who could stay on the pull-up bar the longest? No rules. Do what you could to stay on and do what you needed to get your teammates off the bar. You can use your imagination. The long runs on backcountry roads of Amish Country Pennsylvania. Eight to ten-mile runs. No time limit. Shorty would give hand-drawn maps and tell you to make it back to campus. Periodically, Shorty would drive by, stop, and ask us how we were doing. Then giggle, and drive away. We would wait until everyone was back. Teammates would return back to the gym from all different directions laughing at the events from the run. The cows, wrong turns, and weird looks from people who drove by on the empty cornfield laced roads miles from campus. Puke Hill. An overgrown steep uphill trail behind Pucillo Gymnasium. Up and down over and over again. You'd finish exhausted and dirty with cuts and scrapes all over you from the brush. To this day, one of the toughest things I have ever done. I remember laying on the ground on a crisp fall day, praying that we were done after tenth time up the hill. Shorty Games. Full contact indoor soccer, a manhunt in the wrestling room, and any other creative ways to make our days less mundane. As I said, you never knew what to expect when you were with Shorty. Two on one wrestling matches against him. You and a teammate went live matches against him. If you were wondering, Shorty always won. Never-ending push-up workouts, close grip, wide grip, and whatever he could think of. Sandbag tossing workouts. If he could think about it, we did it. There are many more stories I could tell about Shorty on bus trips, or during wrestling camps. It was always an adventure. Shorty was a different person. He did things how he wanted to do them. Many loved him, but some others didn't. He was a controversial figure. I loved him and recognized the extreme workouts, and off-the-wall, games were ways to make us more hardened and calloused to prepare us for a demanding wrestling season. To me, I am grateful that I had the opportunity to know him. I think about the stuff we did and the things he used to say. I remember the times when he would duck in mid-conversation like something was falling from above. Only to see your worried reaction. Or when he would ask if you ever saw a "dog jaw? "Dog jaw?" you questioned back. "Yes," he would say "like cauliflower ear but on your jaw." Then as you reached for his chin to see what he meant, he would abruptly bark like he was going to bite your hand. You nervously would pull your hand away. Then, he would giggle. The infamous Shorty Hitchcock giggle.
-
Lincoln Christian adds wrestling, hires A.B. Stokes as head coach
InterMat Staff posted an article in College
Lincoln Christian School has added a wrestling program, naming A.B. Stokes as the new mat program's first head coach, the Tulsa World reported Tuesday. Jerry Ricke, Lincoln Christian's athletic director, said the school has been looking to add a wrestling program for some time. Stokes, a 2002 graduate of Austin High School in Chicago, has served as a wrestling coach on both the high school and collegiate level. Stokes has 15 years of experience coaching high school wrestling. He has coached seven individual state champions, eight state finalists and 43 state qualifiers. Stokes spent the past two years as associate head football coach at Bethel College in North Newton, Kansas, and was an assistant wrestling coach the past three years at Newton High School. Prior to Newton, Stokes was head football and track coach and wrestling assistant at Larned (Kansas) for six years (2012-17). Lincoln Christian School is a highly-rated, private, Christian school located in Tulsa, Okla. It has 1,000 students in grades PK, K-12 with a student-teacher ratio of 12 to 1. After graduation, 71% of students from this school go on to attend a 4-year college. -
Estrella wins Tricia Saunders High School Excellence Award
InterMat Staff posted an article in High School
Nanea Estrella STILLWATER, Okla. -- The National Wrestling Hall of Fame on Tuesday announced that Nanea Estrella of Makawao, Hawaii, is the 2020 national winner of the Tricia Saunders High School Excellence Award (TSHSEA). "I am so excited to receive this award. There were so many amazing female wrestlers up for this award and I am blessed to be a part of this group," said Estrealla. "Tricia Saunders was a leader for female athletes and is a true role model for people like me, who are just starting their career and hope to be the best one day. I hope to one day inspire female wrestlers like she has inspired me. Thank you to all who helped me achieve this honor and I want to thank the National Wrestling Hall of Fame for this tremendous award." First presented in 2014, the TSHSEA is named for Tricia Saunders, a four-time World Champion and women's wrestling pioneer. Saunders was the first woman to be inducted as a Distinguished Member of the National Wrestling Hall of Fame in 2006 and was inducted into the United World Wrestling Hall of Fame in 2011. The TSHSEA recognizes and celebrates the nation's most outstanding high school senior female wrestlers for their excellence in wrestling, scholastic achievement, citizenship, and community service. "We are excited to honor Nanea Estrella as the national winner of the 2020 Tricia Saunders High School Excellence Award," said Executive Director Lee Roy Smith. "This award and honor represents the Hall of Fame's pride in a young woman who has demonstrated a commitment to balancing her pursuit of excellence on the wrestling mat with academics and community service." The national winner of the Dave Schultz High School Excellence Award will be announced on Thursday. The daughter of Isaac and Johanna Estrella, she was a four-time state champion for Lahainaluna High School. Ranked second at 132 pounds in the National Girls High School Rankings, she has signed a letter of intent to wrestle at Menlo College. Estrella was team captain for three years and has been ranked in the Top 10 nationally since her sophomore year. Estrella had runner-up finishes at the Cadet Nationals in 2018 and the Junior Nationals in 2019, and won both freestyle and Greco-Roman at the 2019 Western Regionals. She earned a triple crown and was named Outstanding Wrestler in Greco-Roman at the Turf Wars in Pocatello, Idaho, and placed third at the 2019 Cadet World Team trials. She also lettered in track and field and was a two-time Hawaii state qualifier in the 4x100-meter relay, 4x400-meter relay, 400-meter dash, 200-meter dash and long jump. Estrella tutored fourth-grade students and is also a member of Lahainaluna High School's Aloha Club, which performs community outreach activities including beach cleanups, food drives and preparing and serving meals to the homeless. She is also a finalist for the 2020 Pele Award, which honors creative excellence in the art of advertising and design. Estrella submitted a PSA video called "Don't Be A Drip" about water conservation. She has received the A&B scholar athlete award and is a CTE pathway completer in broadcast media. For the third consecutive year, the Hall of Fame recognized a record number of state winners for the TSHSEA with 46, up from 35 winners in 2019 and 32 winners in 2018. Winners are evaluated and selected on the basis of three criteria: success and standout performances and sportsmanship in wrestling; review of GPA and class rank, academic honors and distinctions; and participation in activities that demonstrate commitment to character and community. Women's wrestling is one of the fastest growing high school sports and there are more than 27,000 female high school wrestlers competing across the nation. From 1998-2015 there were six states with a sanctioned girls state wrestling championship: Alaska, California, Hawaii, Tennessee, Texas and Washington. Since 2015, 16 additional states have created an official girls wrestling state championships, or have started the path leading to official sanction: Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Connecticut, Georgia, Kansas, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Missouri, Montana, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Oregon and Utah. Georgia, Oregon, Maine, Massachusetts, Missouri and New Jersey held their first official state championship in 2018-19 while Arkansas, Kansas, Maryland and New Mexico held an official state championship for 2019-20. Colorado voted for a two-year pilot program for 2018-19 with an official state championship for 2020-21. Arizona voted girls wrestling as an emerging sport for 2018-19 and will host an official state championship in 2020-21. Connecticut held a girls wrestling invitational tournament in 2019-20. Sixteen states have held unofficial girls state championships, organized and run by coaches, state wrestling associations or officials associations. The 16 states with unofficial girls state championships are: Florida, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, Nevada, North Carolina, Ohio, South Carolina, Virginia, West Virginia and Wisconsin. There are 81 intercollegiate women's wrestling teams. The NCAA has approved "Emerging Sport Status" for women's wrestling at the Division II and Division III levels, and women's wrestling supporters are hopeful that it will approve it for Division I this summer. The NAIA also recognizes women's wrestling as an emerging sport. The Hall of Fame accepts nominations for its high school excellence awards from state chapters and coaches. The nominations are reviewed by a committee, which selects state and regional winners. The committee then determines the national winners from the regional winners. All-Time National Winners of Tricia Saunders High School Excellence Award 2020 - Nanea Estrella, Lahainaluna High School, Makawao, Hawaii 2019 - Emily Shilson, Mounds View High School, North Oaks, Minnesota 2018 - Alleida Martinez, Selma High School, Selma, California 2017 - Cierra Foster, Post Falls High School, Post Falls, Idaho 2016 - Katie Brock, Sequatchie County High School, Whitwell, Tennessee 2015 - Marizza Birrueta, Grandview High School, Grandview, Washington 2014 - Marina Doi, Kingsburg High School, Kingsburg, California National Wrestling Hall of Fame & Museum America's shrine to the sport of wrestling, the National Wrestling Hall of Fame & Museum was founded as a nonprofit organization in 1976 to honor the sport of wrestling, preserve its history, recognize extraordinary individual achievements, and inspire future generations. The National Wrestling Hall of Fame has museums in Stillwater, Oklahoma, and Waterloo, Iowa. The Stillwater, Oklahoma, location reopened in June 2016 following a $3.8 million renovation while the Waterloo, Iowa, location reopened in March 2019 after undergoing a $1.4 million renovation. Both museums now feature interactive exhibits and electronic kiosks, as well as the opportunity to watch NCAA Championship matches from the 1930s to present day. Stillwater also has the John T. Vaughan Hall of Honors where the greatest names in wrestling are recognized, including iconic granite plaques presented to Distinguished Members since the Hall of Fame opened in 1976. The museum has the largest collection of wrestling artifacts and memorabilia in the world, including the most collegiate and Olympic wrestling uniforms. Wrestling truly is for everyone and the diversity and accessibility of the sport continues to be highlighted through exhibits featuring females, African-Americans, Asian Americans, Native Americans, and Latino Americans. There is also a library featuring historical documents, including NCAA guides and results, as well as books on the sport. For more information about the Hall of Fame, please visit www.NWHOF.org. -
What COVID-19 issues must be resolved before Olympics? Japan weighs in
InterMat Staff posted an article in College
Just fourteen months before the Opening Ceremonies of the 2021 Tokyo Olympics, will the Summer Games -- including men's and women's wrestling -- be able to take place ... and what issues must be resolved in the meantime? Japan Prime Minister Shinzo Abe (Photo/Uichiro Kasai)At a news conference in Tokyo, Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe announced lifting a coronavirus state of emergency for Tokyo and four other remaining areas, ending COVID-19 pandemic restrictions throughout Japan ... a critical first step toward the 2021 Olympics being held as planned starting on July 23, 2021. Abe went on say that the swift development of vaccines and effective treatments for COVID-19 are priorities towards achieving the Tokyo Olympics next year. However, Abe says recovery from the coronavirus pandemic cannot be limited only in Japan ... because the Games involves athletes and spectators from all over the world. The Japanese prime minister reiterates that his government hopes to hold the Tokyo Games "in a complete form" with spectators as a proof of human victory against the coronavirus. All that said, medical experts say that developing safe-but-effective vaccines for participating athletes and fans in the stands in the next 14 months -- before the 2021 Olympics get underway -- will be a difficult task. These issues again came to the forefront last week, as the Tokyo Olympic organizing committee CEO Toshiro Muto spoke Thursday about the need to take "countermeasures" to combat the coronavirus at next year's postponed games. Muto was responding to a BBC interview in which International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach said a 2021 Tokyo Olympics without fans "is not what we want." "Regarding president Bach's remarks," said Muto, speaking through an interpreter in an on-line news conference, "there are other people in Japan as well that (believe the Olympics) need to take place behind closed doors. However, our point of view is that we have more than one year until the games take place. And we think it's too early at this point in time to have that discussion." "Obviously, we are aware that it will be inevitable to have some sort of countermeasures for COVID-19 when we hold the Tokyo Olympic Games and Paralympic Games next year," Muto said. "This is all we can say at this point in time. For detailed questions about specific countermeasures for us to take, it may not be the right timing to answer." -
Josh Bird, two-time Wisconsin state champ, killed in crash
InterMat Staff posted an article in College
Josh Bird, two-time WIAA (Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association) state wrestling champ for Burlington High, was killed in a two-vehicle crash Friday evening in the Town of Mukwonago. The Waukesha County Sheriff's Office and Wisconsin State Patrol said a 23-year Burlington man was killed in a motor vehicle accident at 4 p.m. Friday on State Highway 83 and Sugden Road in the Town of Mukwonago, according to the Journal-Times. Josh Bird (Photo/John Sachs, Tech-Fall.com)Officials said a vehicle headed north on Highway 83 turned west on to Sugden and hit a vehicle -- reportedly a motorcycle driven by Bird -- which was heading south on Highway 83. Bird was pronounced dead at the scene, officials said, while the driver of the northbound vehicle, a 70-year-old Mukwonago man, sustained minor injuries. Josh Bird graduated in 2016 from Burlington High School in southeast Wisconsin, just west of Kenosha and Racine. Bird was a three-time WIAA state finalist, winning the 120-pound title as a freshman and being crowned the 132-pound champ as a junior, while placing second in the finals of the 132 bracket as a sophomore. Overall, Bird compiled a prep record of 152-10. Beyond won-loss records and titles, Josh Bird was richly awarded with honors. He was voted the All-Racine County Wrestler of the Year by the county's wrestling coaches each of his first three years in high school. Bird's death left its mark on the entire prep wrestling community in the state of Wisconsin. Jade Gribble, Bird's coach at Burlington High School, confirmed Bird's death on Saturday evening, telling the Journal-Times, "Unfortunately it's true," said an emotional Gribble. "Josh was something special. It will be hard not to have him here. I found out Friday night and have just been in shock since then." The same newspaper shared that reports of Bird's death were also were posted on the Wisconsin Wrestling Online Facebook account on Saturday afternoon, and tweeted out on several accounts. "Bird was a monster on the mat," tweeted Abigail Ruckdashel, the managing editor of Wisconsin Wrestling Online, where several others commented on Bird's death. Through his Twitter account, Burlington Standard Press reporter Mike Ramczyk remembered Bird as funny and friendly. "And the best wrestler I've had the privilege of covering," he wrote. In the years since Bird had graduated from high school, the two-time Burlington High state champ returned to his hometown and was training to become a carpenter, according to Bird's wrestling coach Gribble said, adding that his star wrestler had purchased a house, living in town and happier than ever, Gribble said. Funeral arrangements have just been announced. A Celebration of Joshua's Life will be held on Saturday, May 30, 2020, at 10 a.m. at the Burlington Chocolate Festival Grandstand, 681 Maryland Ave. Please enter grounds off Maryland Ave. Schuette-Daniels Funeral Home & Crematory 625 S. Browns Lake Drive Burlington, WI 53105 (262) 763-3434 www.danielsfamilyfuneral.com To honor Joshua's life, in lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to the family and will be split up amongst the family's favorite charities. -
Abdulrashid Sadulaev after winning a world title in Nur-Sultan, Kazakhstan (Photo/Tony Rotundo, WrestlersAreWarriors.com) Olympic champion Abdulrashid Sadulaev has revealed that he is infected by the coronavirus. Sadulaev, arguably the world's top pound-for-pound freestyle wrestler, shared the news on an Instagram video. Sadulaev won the gold medal in freestyle at 86 kilograms at the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. He went undefeated at the senior international level for nearly four years from 2013 until 2017, when he was beaten by American Kyle Snyder in a world championships final dubbed the "Match of the Century." He came back to win world titles in 2018 and 2019. The Dagestan wrestling superstar admitted that he did not take the pandemic seriously and got infected. "I admit like most of my countrymen I too did not attach importance to the coronavirus," Sadulaev. "We really underestimated the disease, we began to feel its danger and threat only when it knocked on our door. I myself transferred it." Sadulaev has now recovered from the infection, and has urged the public to responsibly approach the threat, and adhere to the recommendations of doctors and specialists. He has also asked to keep social distancing and minimize contacts during the Uraza-Bayram holiday. The "Russian Tank" is at least the second known 2016 Olympic champion wrestler to test positive for COVID-19. Greco-Roman Olympic gold medalist Ismael Borrero of Cuba also tested positive.
-
Joe Dubuque, a two-time NCAA champion at Indiana and the current associate head coach at Princeton, joins Chad Dennis on Episode 55 of The MatBoss Podcast. They talk about the state of wrestling with the COVID-19 global pandemic and what the impact is on college wrestling, Princeton and the sport overall. Dubuque also looks at the season that was, upending Cornell to win the Ivy League championship and the decisions that impacted the Princeton lineup this season. The MatBoss Podcast is also sponsored by Barbarian Apparel. About MatBoss: Created by coaches for coaches, MatBoss for iPad® integrates wrestling stats directly into the video you record for each match, completely replacing the need for labor-intensive pencil and paper scoring systems. It's the wrestling stats app our sport has been waiting for. Focus on coaching, not busy work Improve through video analysis Make data an advantage Eliminate scoring errors Increase exposure Become a digital coach For more information, visit MatBossApp.com. Follow MatBoss on Twitter and subscribe to the show @MatBossApp | Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Stitcher | Spreaker | Google Podcasts | RSS
-
NCAA Division I wrestlers -- as well as student-athletes in other D1 college sports -- will be permitted to participate in voluntary athletics activities beginning June 1, the Division I Council voted electronically this week. The decision was announced late Thursday afternoon. The current waiver allowing for eight hours of required virtual nonphysical activities in all sports also was extended. "The return of voluntary activity in addition to the extension of the waiver to allow virtual, nonphysical activity shows sensitivity to local, state and regional differences in how Division I campuses are reopening," said Council chair M. Grace Calhoun, athletics director at Pennsylvania. "We will continue to be considerate of these differences with wise and flexible administration of our regulations, and we expect schools to keep the well-being of student-athletes as a priority." The NCAA Division I announcement RE volunteer activity went on to say, “The Council will continue to consider the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on college sports in the coming weeks and months.â€
-
Nebraska approves girls wrestling as an 'emerging' sport
InterMat Staff posted an article in College
It was a tale of two sports within the state Nebraska, as the NSAA -- the Nebraska Scholastic Athletic Association, the governing body for student athletic activities in the Cornhusker State -- came to two different conclusions about rules for two different high school sports this week. The NSAA Board of Directors voted Thursday that bowling will become a sanctioned sport in Nebraska, but girls wrestling will have to wait longer to become fully sanctioned, which would include an official, separate state tournament. Here's an explanation of what happened at the NSAA regarding creating more opportunities for Nebraska high school student-athletes. The NSAA Representative Assembly voted 31-20 Thursday to add bowling as the first new championship sport in the state since softball joined the Nebraska high school state championship roster in the 1990s. Girls wrestling fell three votes short (28-23) of the three-fifths threshold needed to join fully-sanctioned status. However, girls wrestling gained approval as an emerging sport by a 7-1 vote earlier in the day at the NSAA Board of Directors meeting. That emerging status allows girls over the next three seasons to participate in both their school's existing co-ed wrestling program and the emerging girls wrestling program. There would not be a separate girls tournament at the start, but the NSAA board could adopt one within a three-year window. With the NSAA decision this week concerning the decision NOT to officially sanction girls wrestling in Nebraska (while leaving the door open to that eventuality in the next three years), girls' high school wrestling has enjoyed tremendous growth in the past couple years. At the end of 2019, Utah became the 20th state to add girls' wrestling as an officially sanctioned sport. During calendar year 2019, five other states announced the addition of sanctioned girls' wrestling, including New Mexico, Arkansas, Colorado, Kansas and Maryland. To provide some additional perspective ... as recently as the beginning of 2018, six states had separate state wrestling championships for girls: Alaska, California, Hawaii, Tennessee, Texas and Washington State. During 2018, eight additional states announced the establishment of a girls' state championships. it remains that 23 states have sanctioned separate wrestling competitions for girls at the high school level. That is a tremendous growth for girls wrestling in recent years; less than a handful of years ago -- in fact, as recent as in 2018 -- just six states had sanctioned separate girls state wrestling championships. -
COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Kollin Moore earned the right to represent The Ohio State University as a 2020 Big Ten Medal of Honor recipient. He named Ohio State's male recipient, while Jincy Dunne, a hockey player, was the female recipient. The Big Ten Conference's most exclusive award was the first of its kind in intercollegiate athletics to recognize academic and athletic excellence. The Big Ten Medal of Honor was first awarded in 1915 to one student-athlete from the graduating class of each university. B1G schools currently feature nearly 9,500 student-athletes, but only 28 pick up the recognition on an annual basis. Moore, a native of Burbank, Ohio, finished as the Dan Hodge Trophy runner-up in his final season after sitting atop the 197-pound national rankings from start to finish. He garnered a 27-0 season record and was the NCAA Championships top seed. Moore ranks eighth in Ohio State history with a .909 career winning percentage (110-11). He is a three-time Big Ten champion and reached the NCAA finals in 2019. In the classroom, Moore earned a bachelor's degree in business operations management and is closing in on completion of a kinesiology master's degree during his five years as a Buckeye. He picked up Academic All-Big Ten and Ohio State Scholar-Athlete honors as well.
-
VILNIUS, Lithuania -- With few cases of COVID-19 nationwide, Lithuania's top wrestlers are returning to the mat, albeit with safety precautions in place. Lithuania has only seen 1600 total cases of COVID-19 and 60 deaths. Despite the lower numbers the wrestling federation and the athletes are taking every precaution they can to ensure the health and safety of the wrestlers on the mat. The new guidelines for practice includes increased cleaning protocols, temperature checks, hand sanitization and face masks (for anyone not actively wrestling). Athletes' Commission member Mindaugas EZERSKIS mentioned the practices during Monday's Athlete Webinar with the commission and UWW President Nenad Lalovic. Ezerskis said the team is training during the week and taking weekends off with a focus on preparing for the Olympics and Olympic Qualification events. You can watch the full video, here.