Jump to content

InterMat Staff

Members
  • Posts

    3,676
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    10

Everything posted by InterMat Staff

  1. OREM, Utah -- The new calendar year began on a high note for the University of Wyoming wrestling team, as the Cowboys used six match victories Friday to defeat conference foe Utah Valley on the road, 20-12. Wyoming (3-2 overall) opened Western Wrestling Conference action 1-0 for the fifth-straight season, and the Cowboys improved to 8-1 all-time against the Wolverines in series history. UW head coach Mark Branch won his 23rd conference dual in five seasons. “It was a good win – conference wins are always good,” Branch said. “We’ve been off the mat for two weeks (in competition), and I don’t think we looked as good as we could have. Being on the road, we knew this dual would be competitive. There’s nothing that’s a given and I was proud of the guys who stepped up and wrestled well tonight.” Sophomore Brandon Richardson gave the Cowboys a spark in the first match of the evening. After the 149-pounder gave up a takedown in the first 15 seconds, he went into the second period down 2-0. Utah Valley’s Josh Wilson racked up nearly two minutes of riding time, but an early escape in the second from Richardson made it 2-1 Wilson. Richardson then worked for a takedown with less than 30 seconds to go, and Wilson’s riding-time point tied things up at 3-all. Richardson then worked for the winning takedown half a minute into overtime to win, 5-3. That gave Wyoming a 3-0 lead. “Brandon’s win was huge. That showed a lot of heart,” Branch said. Sophomore Andy McCulley took an early lead on Ethan Smith of Utah Valley at 157 pounds, thanks to a takedown, an escape and one-plus minute of riding time. Smith earned an escape, but McCulley got the 4-1 victory, his 19th of the season. After that, sophomore Dakota Friesth tied things up at 3-3 with just 29 seconds to go at 165 pounds, but Utah Valley’s Curtis Cook used a Friesth takedown attempt against him and added a takedown and back points of his own to win 8-3. That cut the UW margin to 6-3. Senior L.J. Helbig avenged a loss earlier in the season to UVU’s Monte Schmalhaus at 174 pounds. After being down 2-0 to start the match, Helbig used a reversal and an illegal-hold point to take a 3-2 lead. He would add five more points for the 8-3 decision win, which gave Wyoming a 9-3 lead after four matches. Sophomore Shane Woods used two escapes to overcome an early 2-0 deficit, and scored a takedown with less than 40 seconds remaining to beat Derek Thomas of Utah Valley, 4-3, in the 184-pound bout. Shortly after, fourth-ranked senior Alfonso Hernandez built a 3-0 lead after just 3 minutes, and kept pouring it on, beating UVU’s David Prieto at 197 pounds, 13-5. His win gave the Pokes a 16-3 lead. Sophomore Leland Pfeifer saw his first action of the season, taking on Utah Valley’s Adam Fager at heavyweight. Pfeifer, coming off a knee injury, battled but couldn’t overcome Fager, losing a 9-4 decision. Utah Valley took the momentum back when Wolverine Jade Rauser took an early 2-0 lead on sophomore Tyler Cox at 125 pounds. Cox added a reversal, but Rauser got a takedown, an escape and a riding-time point for the final 6-3 margin. The Wolverines clawed to within five, 16-9, with two matches to go. But sophomore Zach Zehner slammed the door on any comeback attempt by UVU when made his first appearance of the season for the Pokes, stepping in at 133 pounds. He looked sharp early, taking a 4-1 lead in the first period over Chasen Tolbert. He poured it on over the next four minutes, winning a 14-3 major decision to seal the dual win for UW. Sophomore Kyle Komata capped off the evening for UW, losing a 6-2 decision to Avery Garner. On Sunday, the Cowboys will battle San Francisco State, CSU Bakersfield and Cal Poly in the Mustang Duals in San Luis Obispo, Calif. Action begins at 12:30 p.m. MT. “Our duals against (the California schools) will be competitive,” Branch said. “We’re on their turf and we have got to be focused and wrestle well.” Results: 149: Brandon Richardson (UW) dec. Josh Wilson (UVU), 5-3 SV1 / Wyoming 3, Utah Valley 0 157: Andy McCulley (UW) dec. Ethan Smith (UVU), 4-1 / Wyoming 6, Utah Valley 0 165: Curtis Cook (UVU) dec. Dakota Friesth (UW), 8-3 / Wyoming 6, Utah Valley 3 174: L.J. Helbig (UW) dec. Monte Schmalhaus (UVU), 8-3 / Wyoming 9, Utah Valley 3 184: Shane Woods (UW) dec. Derek Thomas (UVU), 4-3 / Wyoming 12, Utah Valley 3 197: Alfonso Hernandez (UW) maj. dec. David Prieto (UVU), 13-5 / Wyoming 16, Utah Valley 3 285: Adam Fager (UVU) dec. Leland Pfeifer (UW), 9-4 / Wyoming 16, Utah Valley 6 125: Jade Rauser (UVU) dec. Tyler Cox (UW), 6-3 / Wyoming 16, Utah Valley 9 133: Zach Zehner (UW) maj. dec. Chasen Tolbert (UVU), 14-3 / Wyoming 20, Utah Valley 9 141: Avery Garner (UVU) dec. Kyle Komata (UW), 6-2 / Wyoming 20, Utah Valley 12
  2. EAST LANSING, Mich. -- The 21st ranked Purdue wrestling team opened Big Ten Duals in solid fashion on Friday night, upending conference host Michigan State University, 26-10, at Jenison Field House. The Boilermakers improve to 10-2 overall and open conference duals with a victory for the second straight season as they captured seven of the 10 bouts, including three with bonus points. Freshman 174-pounder Chad Welch got things rolling early for the Boilermakers, building a 5-0 lead on Michigan State freshman Jordan Wohlfert before using a slick roll-through from a front headlock for the takedown and fall, and giving the Purdue a 6-0 lead. “Chad gave us the spark we needed early,” said Boilermaker head coach Scott Hinkel. “We knew we would have to bring the fight to them and he set the tempo for the rest of the squad.” The Boilermakers and Spartans split the next two matches to give Purdue a 12-7 lead at the intermission. The Spartans got an 11-1 major decision from sophomore John Rizqallah at 184 pounds and an 8-1 decision from eighth-ranked junior heavyweight Mike McClure, but the Boilermakers countered with a 2-0 decision from 12th-ranked junior Braden Atwood at 197 pounds over sophomore Luke Jones and a 6-2 decision for junior Camden Eppert over junior Brenan Lyon at 125 pounds. Purdue went to work after the break, posting three straight victories, including a pair of major decisions, to seal up the team victory. Seventeenth-ranked junior Cashé Quiroga opened up the run, using an 11-point final period to score a 17-7 major decision over sophomore Brandon Fifield at 133 pounds. Sophomore Brandon Nelsen followed with a dominant 8-1 decision at 141 pounds over freshman Nicholas Trimble, and 11th-ranked senior Ivan Lopouchanski put the victory to bed with a 9-1 major decision over Spartan senior Dan Osterman. Lopouchanski set off fireworks early, hitting an inside trip and taking Osterman straight to his back for a five-point move. Osterman put forth an incredible gutsy effort, fighting off his back for almost the full three minutes of the frame. After a few minutes of blood time for Osterman, the match restarted and Lopouchanski held on to control, scoring takedowns in the second and third periods to pick up the bonus point and remain undefeated at 15-0 on the year. With the team result decided, the two squads split the final bouts as Michigan State senior David Cheza remained undefeated with a 10-4 decision over Purdue senior Tommy Churchard, while Boilermaker sophomore Pat Robinson fought back from an early deficit to earn a 7-5 decision over Spartan sophomore Nick Proctor. The Boilermakers stay on the road in Big Ten action on Sunday, heading to Iowa City, Iowa to face the fifth-ranked Hawkeyes. The match will begin at 5 p.m. (CT) and is scheduled to air on the Big Ten Digital Network. Results: 174: Chad Welch (PU) def. Jordan Wohlfert (MSU), Fall 3:37 (PU 6 – MSU 0) 184: John Rizqallah (MSU) def. Andy Wiseman (PU), MD 11-1 (PU 6 – MSU 4) 197: Braden Atwood (PU) def. Luke Jones (MSU), D 2-0 (PU 9 – MSU 4) 285: Mike McClure (MSU) def. Alex White (PU), D 8-1 (PU 9 – MSU 7) 125: Camden Eppert (PU) def. Brenan Lyon (MSU), D 6-2 (PU 12 – MSU 7) 133: Cashé Quiroga (PU) def. Brandon Fifield (MSU), MD 17-7 (PU 16 – MSU 7) 141: Brandon Nelsen (PU) def. Nicholas Trimble (MSU), D 8-1 (PU 19 – MSU 7) 149: Ivan Lopouchanski (PU) def. Dan Osterman (MSU), MD 9-1 (PU 23 – MSU 7) 157: David Cheza (MSU) def. Tommy Churchard (PU), D 10-4 (PU 23 – MSU 10) 165: Pat Robinson (PU) def. Nick Proctor (MSU), D 7-5 (PU 26 – MSU 10)
  3. Right now is the best moment in the history of college wrestling. The sport is featured on ESPN and the Big Ten Network. We have articles in Sports Illustrated and the New York Times. Our wrestlers and their fans are crazy for Twitter and Facebook. We have productive debates, accessible superstars, podcasts and streaming video. The wrestling community, after years battering ourselves for not doing enough and wallowing in the recesses of the sports kingdom, has matured into a sport worthy of mainstream media and events complete with the high pageantry normally reserved for revenue sports. Kyle Dake earned a 3-2 decision over David Taylor in the finals of the Southern Scuffle (Photo/Bob Mayeri)There are myriad influences that have helped grow college wrestling over the past few years, but nothing in the sport has helped drive interest and create income more than the hotly contested rivalry between Cornell's Kyle Dake and Penn State's David Taylor. We shouldn't heap all the praise on these two men, but we should be thankful. What they are giving us this season is without comparison. Each hi-crotch, funky scramble and controversial reversal brings us one step closer to becoming a self-sustainable and mainstream sport. Thanks to Dake and Taylor for their courage on the mat, and for giving fans the best product we've ever had the pleasure to enjoy. Dake vs. Taylor III: Keys to victory Kyle Dake 1. Maintain offensive posture in neutral That opening double leg was a bold pre-match decision. According to Kid Dynamite his nearly off-the-whistle double was a reaction to several fans' critique of the first match. More action is what the fans wanted and that's exactly what Dake gave them. Dake was able to get in so deep because he kept his head up when wrestling from his knees against the lankier Taylor. To win in March Dake will have to keep his knees bent and his butt down to prevent Taylor's front head attacks including his Cael-inspired ankle picks. Dake could also force Taylor into a Russian, and if Taylor's hips float out of position it should create an opportunity for the Cornell wrestler to score from his feet. It'll be important for Dake to keep his butt to the center. As he noted after the match, one step out of bounds and fans will be calling for a stall warning, a call that could hurt later in the match. To read the rest of this story, plus get access to all InterMat Platinum content, subscribe today. Already an InterMat Platinum subscriber? Read complete story.
  4. Right now is the best moment in the history of college wrestling. The sport is featured on ESPN and the Big Ten Network. We have articles in Sports Illustrated and the New York Times. Our wrestlers and their fans are crazy for Twitter and Facebook. We have productive debates, accessible superstars, podcasts and streaming video. The wrestling community, after years battering ourselves for not doing enough and wallowing in the recesses of the sports kingdom, has matured into a sport worthy of mainstream media and events complete with the high pageantry normally reserved for revenue sports. Kyle Dake earned a 3-2 decision over David Taylor in the finals of the Southern Scuffle (Photo/Bob Mayeri)There are myriad influences that have helped grow college wrestling over the past few years, but nothing in the sport has helped drive interest and create income more than the hotly contested rivalry between Cornell's Kyle Dake and Penn State's David Taylor. We shouldn't heap all the praise on these two men, but we should be thankful. What they are giving us this season is without comparison. Each hi-crotch, funky scramble and controversial reversal brings us one step closer to becoming a self-sustainable and mainstream sport. Thanks to Dake and Taylor for their courage on the mat, and for giving fans the best product we've ever had the pleasure to enjoy. Dake vs. Taylor III: Keys to victory Kyle Dake 1. Maintain offensive posture in neutral That opening double leg was a bold pre-match decision. According to Kid Dynamite his nearly off-the-whistle double was a reaction to several fans' critique of the first match. More action is what the fans wanted and that's exactly what Dake gave them. Dake was able to get in so deep because he kept his head up when wrestling from his knees against the lankier Taylor. To win in March Dake will have to keep his knees bent and his butt down to prevent Taylor's front head attacks including his Cael-inspired ankle picks. Dake could also force Taylor into a Russian, and if Taylor's hips float out of position it should create an opportunity for the Cornell wrestler to score from his feet. It'll be important for Dake to keep his butt to the center. As he noted after the match, one step out of bounds and fans will be calling for a stall warning, a call that could hurt later in the match. 2. Improve conditioning Kyle Dake is wrestling in his fourth weight class in four seasons (Photo/Tony Rotundo, WrestlersAreWarriors.com)The Kid has a gas tank four times larger than most other wrestlers, but in this week's finals against Taylor he looked more winded than normal. Exhaustion didn't cost him the match, but he did seem distracted by the burn in his legs, arms and lungs. Halfway through the third period Dake developed headgear issues that not only seemed unimportant, but possibly self-prescribed. The issue going forward isn't whether or not the headgear was broken, it was that Dake seemed to break concentration and chased that brief distraction as a reprieve from the action and an opportunity to catch his breath. (Dake also looked slightly winded in his quarterfinal match against North Carolina State's Nigel Jones, who was testing him with a series of cowcatchers and other throws before getting stuck in the second period.) Cornell head wrestling coach Rob Koll conditions his athletes better than most, so it's entirely possible that Dake is just not getting tested in the room as much as a normal wrestler. Think about the conditioning of every star wrestler you've ever known. Now think about that second-string 141 who fought off his back for four years in college. The most effective conditioning comes from experiencing frustration, when a wrestler is struggling to compete and win. When you win by unique ability and on-the-mat intelligence it can be difficult to mimic in the room the type of stress the body feels in a match with Taylor. (It's easier for Taylor who is surrounded by Ed Ruth, Matt Brown, Quentin Wright, Altons, Cael and Casey Cunningham.) 3. Keep Taylor from riding legs Allowing Taylor's arachnid legs in during his baby standup didn't work. Though he was able to earn a reversal, he had given up more than 90 seconds of ride time and were the controversial reversal NOT called, it might have been game over for Dake. Taylor has now seen how Dake will respond to a leg ride on the right side and will work with Casey Cunningham (a leg wizard) to find says to flatten Dake. If Taylor can grind out a full period on top he'll gain a two-point advantage in their finals match. It's an edge that seems difficult to overcome. Taylor's length makes it difficult for opponents to explode to their feet without being gripped and sucked back down, but if one athlete can find a way to his feet in a hiccup, it's Dake. Should he get to his feet he is free to open up more of the scrambles he's found to be successful against Taylor when stuck on bottom. From an explosive standup, or looking for reversal on the mat, to win in March Dake will need to keep improving from bottom. David Taylor 1. Create more offense, score in the middle of the mat Taylor can be a slow starter. Against tougher opponents it's only after Taylor notches his first takedown that he's able to find his ankle picks and extend a lead. Against Dake he only attempted three ankle picks, none of which came within a galaxy of being finished. Dake's low positioning has made it difficult to find opportunities, but to win Taylor needs to have a go-to shot late in the match, and better head control to set up those attempts. When Taylor has shot against Dake it's tended to be near the edge of the mat, and never with success. Dake has used the edge of the mat to run the energy out of Taylor's shots. To correct this distance disadvantage, Taylor needs to launch his shots no more than a foot outside the ten-foot circle. Dake isn't falling to his hips after a single shot, and Taylor will be forced to take two or three shots to finish which will require much more Resilite. Opening up with his own back to the closest edge would allow Taylor to work with more mat space and finish his offensive attacks. 2. Own the mat Taylor is one of the best scramblers in college wrestling, but much of the advantage is eliminated when he faces Dake. Taylor needs to make the mat his home and find a position from which he can score back points on Dake, even if it's in transition. David Taylor nearly secured a riding time point against Kyle Dake at the Southern Scuffle (Photo/Bob Mayeri)Riding Dake is like trying to stay on top of a twirling, shedding Falkor, but doing it for one full period would almost translate into a two-point advantage for Taylor. It's likely that neither will ever score a takedown, but take away giving up the escape in the second and the reversal in third and Taylor wins by three points. It'll take a combination of techniques and drills, but Cunningham and Cael should be able to ready Taylor enough in his mat game to give him a large advantage. However, Dake has now seen the best of Taylor's game, meaning the Penn State maestro will need to revamp his attacks and add in new control positions. 3. Wrestle with a clear head After Taylor gave up the reversal at the end of their last match the Penn State junior looked to coach Cody Sanderson with a face of befuddlement -- partially wondering if the right call was made, but part signaling frustration from bottom. (Dake was riding loose making it difficult to earn a final escape.) Taylor's look was desperation and stress mixing together at the right time, but without the right outcome. Taylor wrestles best when he's relaxed, engaging with fans and wrestling in the moment. He wrestles his worst when he's thinking about legacy, personal grudges, or gets frustrated by the referee. The most important pre-NCAAs exercise for Taylor will be clearing his head of distractions and feeling comfortable in playing the part of the spoiler to Dake's dreams of becoming a four-time NCAA champion. Dake is the one with a legacy to preserve, while Taylor is still building his heading into his final season. By removing the drama and focusing on his goals, Taylor should be able to relax and find the form he used to dominate the 2012 NCAA tournament. How to do that in a wrestling world obsessed with your every action on and off the mat? I haven't the slightest ...
  5. InterMat senior writer T.R. Foley answers reader questions about NCAA wrestling, international wrestling, recruiting, or anything loosely related to wrestling. You have until Thursday night every week to send questions to Foley's Twitter or email account. Do you want to read a past mailbag? Access archives. The holidays are over, and all we have are a series of hangover from consuming too much turkey, buying too many presents, drinking too much booze, and watching too much wrestling. What a problem to enjoy. The 2012 Midlands and 2013 Southern Scuffle were both homerun events. The Evanston-based Midlands was probably stronger top to bottom, with some excellent matches all way down to seventh and eighth place. Of course the tournament didn't have Kyle Dake and David Taylor, but did feature several exciting post-graduate entries and a 197-pound finals featuring No. 1 vs. No 2. Fans were able to watch the finals live and for free on the Big Ten Network. Meanwhile the Scuffle continued to grow under a combination of good marketing and excellent leadership. The tournament included five of the nation's top seven teams and featured finals at 165, 184, and heavyweight that featured five NCAA champions and competitors who were all No.1 and. No 2 at their respective weights. Fans were able to watch much of the Southern Scuffle online when signing up for $20 per month/$150 per year subscription. We're lucky to have these options and should never forget that wrestling, while far from the best it can be, is certainly in its Golden Age. To your questions ... Q: When will they actually decide where the 2015 NCAAs will be held? I would think it would be soon right? -- Frank C. Foley: I reached out to the NCAA today and was forwarded to a few different offices. The likely answer is after this season when the Championship and Wrestling committees have the time to meet. Once they have their options and can review the proposals it should be just a few votes in Indianapolis, after which point we can critique! -- Updated 11AM -- I spoke with some members of the NCAA and this is what they responded: "The next bid cycle timeline has not been finalized, but we anticipate we will put out Request For Proposals (RFPs) in early spring (late April/Early May) and announce the 2015 site late summer (Late August/Early September). Please note that this is tentative and could be changed." Q: I was looking through the rankings the other night and was wondering when we've had this many potential all-time greats in the college ranks. This is obviously best case scenario (for them not their opponents) and people will be gunning for everyone on this list, but the potential here is pretty amazing: 125: McDonough -- four-time finalist, three-time champ 133: L. Steiber -- four-time champ 149: Oliver -- three-time finalist, two-time champ 157: DSJ -- three-time finalist, two-time champ 165: Dake and Taylor 184: Ruth – three-time champ 197: Wright – three-time finalist, two-time champ 285: Nelson – three-time champ This doesn't even include guys like Megaludis, Ness, Caldwell, and Howe who still have the chance to be multiple time finalists/champs. When all their careers are finished, how do you think this will compare to other eras? -- Billy M. Foley: We might have had similarly strong years, but never with this much publicity. The Internet has allowed wrestling fans to come together as a community to discuss and promote the day's best storylines. Also, as you noted, there is still plenty that needs to go right for much of that potential greatness to be realized. Maybe it'll all come crashing down? Until that happens I'll choose to believe my own optimism. Right now, at this very moment, American folkstyle wrestling is the most-watched, most-profitable and most-followed traditional style in the history of the world. Much of this is due to technology. We can watch our stars compete at almost any time and usually for very little money. But we also have an audience will to read about the sport, which means that writers can write and tweeters can tweet. Traditional styles have always faced the problem of popularity, but in figuring out that calculus we've not only been able to enjoy the sport now, but preserve it for future generations. Q: After defeating Caldwell once and Taylor twice already this year, can anyone stop Dake from winning his fourth NCAA title -- Gregg Y. Foley: Your question seems so absolute when I think it's pretty clear after Wednesday that David Taylor has every chance to stop Kyle Dake! Taylor has the skill set, coaching, and game plan to beat Dake and win a second NCAA tournament. Don't get me wrong, Kid Dynamite is a freak and he's the heavy favorite to make NCAA history in March, but it's far from certain. What's more interesting to me is how you phrased the question, as though this second win was the nail in the coffin. It got me thinking about storylines in epic novels and how those are sometimes portrayed on the big screen. We're about to take a sharp turn, so please keep your hands and feet inside the margins. I like movie trailers. Apple Trailers, IMDB or Flixster, no matter where I am I'm searching for new movie trailers. If you watch as many trailers as I do you understand that companies often release three or four movie trailers in the lead up to a movie. Most of them are just retreads of scenes used in the first trailer set to new music. Other times it's the same music and a new scene or two added for effect. But every once in a great while you'll see two trailers lined up on the bottom and they will completely contradict each another. For example, the movie "Promised Land" was first promoted with a very serious trailer about the consequences of gas fracking in Pennsylvania and the ulcer-inducing tension between capitalist oil salesman Matt Damon and environmentalist/fun-killer John Krasinski. The music played in the trailer was somber and ran behind scenes of gray Pennsylvania skies, images of crying babies and rolling footage of picturesque land turned brown, and specked with dead livestock. I love Matt Damon, you could put him in an infomercial selling the Perfect Pancake and I'd pay just to keep the guy on screen. Simply put, I'm the first person in line for each and every Damon flick, but even I was missing this one in favor of taking a shower with broken glass, or re-reading Les Miserables. I apparently wasn't alone in my Damon-induced depression because a few weeks later a NEW and much CHEERIER trailer came out with Jason Bourne and Jim from the Office (though this time ONLY on television -- keep an eye out). In the new one-minute trailer the duo was busy giving each other a ribbing over beers, and featured Damon hitching rides with locals at dusk in the back of beat up blue pickup truck -- locks blowing in the wind, beauty entreating visitors to part with their $12.50. (It worked, I tweeted evites to local members of the Matt Damon Fan Club to set up a movie night.) The Dake vs. Taylor trailers going on in many people's heads are similarly as disparate. The facts remain the same, but the outlook and what they're trying to sell are very different. For Taylor fans the junior has become a figurehead for the program. He's popular, but he's also symbolic of Penn States turnaround on the mat. Their finals match will be his final chance at redemption, and their validation as the new dynasty in college athletics -- their fiefdom's Gladiator defeating the greatest Gladiator in the kingdom. For Dake fans the imagery is more triumphant, a conquering boy-king ascending to the throne, a throne being resigned by Taylor's own coach. The scene reads and looks like something from great literature, and the trailer would be adequately epic. Dake-Taylor exemplifies the centuries-old attraction of humans to wrestling, a sport so defined by effort and humbled in its conceit of man's wish to discover self through struggle that it allows for those accessible, realistic and marketable storylines of rivalry, courage and unconquerable greatness. The story of Dake and Taylor is the story that we'll tell our sons and daughters and that they'll tell their grandchildren. No matter the outcome or perspective, this is the story that will survive the generations and help preserve the sport that many of us love so dearly.
  6. PISCATAWAY, N.J. -- The Rutgers wrestling squad used a strong start to down CSU Bakersfield, 29-9, in Bakersfield, Calif., Thursday night. The Scarlet Knights picked up victories in their first five bouts to jump out to a 17-0 lead and wouldn’t look back. Rutgers won eight of 10 bouts against the Roadrunners, including wins for bonus points by seniors Dan Rinaldi (Lodi, N.J.) and Scott Winston (Jackson, N.J.), as well as junior Dan Seidenberg (Red Bank, N.J.). Under the guidance of sixth-year head coach Scott Goodale, senior Trevor Melde (Hewitt, N.J.) notched a win over a ranked opponent. The Scarlet Knights improved to 8-1 on the season, including a 2-0 mark in the EIWA. The Roadrunners dropped to 4-2, still holding a conference mark of 0-1 in the PAC 12. The match started at the 174-pound mark, with senior Greg Zannetti (Edison, N.J) picking up a 7-1 decision over CSU Bakersfield’s Andrew Balch. Rutgers then rattled off two bonus points wins as Rinaldi defeated Reuben Franklin, 12-2, at 184 and Seidenberg earned the 8-0 major over Frankie Hurtado at 197. Senior Joe Langel (Howell, N.J.) picked up a hard-fought overtime decision over Tyler Iwamura at 125 pounds. After CSU Bakersfield picked up its first victory of the contest at 133, 141-pounder Melde notched a big decision, 15-8, over No. 20 Timmy Box of Bakersfield to improve to 11-4 on the season. Two bouts later, 157-pounder Winston improved to 16-4 this season as he tallied his third fall of the campaign, pinning Runner Adam Fierro at the 1:35 mark of the opening period. His last came over James Vollrath of Penn State at the Nittany Lion Open. Rutgers continues its West Coast trek, taking part in the Stanford Duals on Sunday, Jan. 6, beginning at 5 p.m. ET. The Scarlet Knights are slated to face Arizona State and Stanford inside Burnham Pavilion in Palo Alto, Calif. Follow Rutgers Athletics on Facebook (www.facebook.com/RutgersAthletics) and Twitter (@RUAthletics) for all of the latest news and updates. For specific updates regarding Rutgers wrestling, follow the program on Twitter (@RUWrestling). Fans can receive timely information, including special offers and giveaways throughout the year on our social media outlets along with www.ScarletKnights.com. Results: 125: Joe Langel (RU) dec. Tyler Iwamura (CSUB), 4-2 (OT) 133: Ian Nickell (CSUB) dec. Vincent Dellefave (RU), 8-3 141: Trevor Melde (RU) dec. Timmy Box (CSUB), 15-8 149: Mario Mason (RU) dec. Dalton Kelley (CSUB), 6-3 157: Scott Winston (RU) pinned Adam Fierro (CSUB), 1:35 165: David Meza (CSUB) pinned Anthony Volpe (RU), 7:56 (OT) 174: No. 10 Greg Zannetti (RU) dec. Andrew Balch (CSUB), 7-1 184: No. 13 Dan Rinaldi (RU) major dec. Reuben Franklin (CSUB), 12-2 197: Dan Seidenberg (RU) major dec. Frankie Hurtado (CSUB), 8-0 HWT: Billy Smith (RU) dec. Sammy Cervantes (CSUB), 5-0
  7. Fight Now TV Presents Takedown Wrestling from the Brute studios in Des Moines, Iowa at 1460 KXNO. Takedown Wrestling is proudly presented by Kemin, Inspired Molecular Solutions! This Saturday it's Takedown Wrestling Radio from 9 to 11 a.m. CST/10 a.m. to noon ET. Join Scott Casber, Steve Foster, our own Jeff Murphy and Brad Johnson. This week's guests: 9:03 Michael Carey, Eastern States Wrestling Classic 9:15 Jason Peters, Pitt assistant head wrestling coach 9:35 Pat Walker, Illinois wrestler 9:50 Tyler Barkley- Max Muscle Sports Nutrition Update 10:03 Frankie Molinaro, Rutgers assistant wrestling coach 10:15 Troy Steiner, Oregon State assistant wrestling coach 10:35 Jeff Murphy, Kemin Report 10:40 John Stutzman, Bloomsburg head wrestling coach 10:50 Peggi Johnson, Wildrose Casino and Resort Clinton, Iowa Fans, athletes, coaches: This is your sport. Join in the conversation live. Ask questions. Call 866-333-5966 or 515-204-5966. Takedown Wrestling is available on radio on AM 1460 KXNO in Iowa, online at Livesportsvideo.com, or on your Blackberry or iPhone with the iHeart Radio app. (Click on KXNO under Sportsradio.)
  8. Eric Morris is ranked No. 1 at 182 pounds (Photo/Tony Rotundo, WrestlersAreWarriors.com) Over the next two days (Friday and Saturday), virtually all of the best wrestlers from California will assemble at Clovis High School for the Doc Buchanan Invitational. When combined with elite out of state teams such as Roseburg, Ore. and No. 2 Wyoming Seminary, Pa., you get a field arguably tougher than the single-class California state tournament. The traveling Blue Knights from Pennsylvania are obviously the favorites to take home the title, but another trio of nationally ranked teams is in the field: No. 15 Clovis, Calif., No. 19 Poway, Calif., and No. 45 Bakersfield, Calif. Anchoring the tournament from an individual perspective are all nine returning California state finalists, including the five returning state champions, as well as 25 wrestlers that are nationally ranked. Arguably the featured weight of the Doc Buchanan Invitational is at 170 pounds, where four wrestlers are nationally ranked and six have appeared on the podium at their state tournament. Those include state placers in No. 9 Peter Santos (Oakmont, Calif.), No. 13 Corey Griego (Sultana, Calif.), No. 17 Steve Cervantes (Poway, Calif.), and Ray Lomas (Central Catholic, Calif.) along with two-time state placers in No. 15 Keaton Subjeck (Oak Ridge, Calif.) and Nicky Hall (Wyoming Seminary, Pa.). Santos was a FloNationals placer last spring and Subjeck placed at the Super 32 Challenge in October. In major competitions during this regular season, Santos, Griego, Subjeck, and Hall were placers at the Ironman while Cervantes finished second at the Reno Tournament of Champions. Another trio of weight classes features three nationally ranked wrestlers: 132, 152, and 220. Leading the way at 132 pounds is freshman sensation Aaron Pico (St. John Bosco, Calif.), who is ranked first in the nation at the weight class and already a two-time Cadet National double champion. Joining him as ranked wrestlers in this weight class are No. 8 Ali Naser (El Camino Real, Calif.), a 2011 state placer, and No. 11 Javier Gasca (Kingsburg, Calif.), who was third at state last year and a FloNationals runner-up. Also present in this weight is returning state placer Victor Trujillo (Bella Vista, Calif.). The 152-pound weight class is led by two-time state placer Shayne Tucker (Bella Vista, Calif.), who finished third at this year's Ironman and won the Reno Tournament of Champions. Tucker is ranked No. 9 nationally and also is a two-time Super 32 Challenge placer. Joining him here are No. 15 (at 160) Kyle Perreault (Clovis East, Calif.) and No. 20 Reed Van Anrooy (Roseburg, Ore.). Perreault placed seventh at state last year and was a NHSCA Junior national champion, while Van Anrooy is a three-time state champion, winning his first state title last year. Others to watch include two-time state champion Alex Aniciete (Las Vegas, Nev.), state eighth place finishers Luke Wilson (Righetti, Calif.) and Blayne Briceno (Crespi, Calif.), as well as National Prep placer Tyrel White (Wyoming Seminary, Pa.) Two-time Reno TOC champion Spencer Empey (Reed, Nev.), also a two-time state champion, is ranked No. 4 at 220 pounds. State placer Sean medley (Wasco, Calif.) - who also placed at the FloNationals -- is ranked No. 11 nationally, while Junior National double All-American Garrett Ryan (Wyoming Seminary, Pa.) is No. 15 in the country at 220 pounds. Four other weight classes feature a pair of nationally ranked wrestlers: 113, 120, 126, and 285. The 113-pound weight class is led by No. 1 Zahid Valencia (St. John Bosco, Calif.), who has yet to lose a high school match. The sophomore is also the top ranked wrestler in his grade regardless of weight class. Joining Valencia as a nationally ranked wrestler here is freshman Israel Saavedra (Modesto, Calif.), who is ranked No. 14 and has already placed at the FloNationals and Super 32 Challenge. Others to watch here are state placers Isaiah Hokit (Wasco, Calif.) and Julian Gayton (Clovis, Calif.), National Prep runner-up Danny Boychuck (Wyoming Seminary, Pa.), as well as Walsh Ironman placer Sean Williams (Lemoore, Calif.). Defending state champion Isaiah Locsin (Live Oak, Calif.) is a two-time state finalist and ranked No. 10 nationally at 120 pounds. He is joined in the rankings by two-time state placer Mason Pengilly (Porterville, Calif.), who is ranked No. 13 nationally and in the last off-season was a FloNationals runner-up and Junior National freestyle All-American. Others in this weight class include two-time state placer Arulfo Olea (Exeter, Calif.) and 2011 Super 32 placer Jeremy Schwartz (Wyoming Seminary, Pa.). Two-time state placer, and two-time FloNationals placer, Emilio Saavedra (Modesto, Calif.) is the highest ranked wrestler in the 126-pound weight class at No. 10 in the country. Joining him as a ranked wrestler is No. 18 Judson Preskitt (Wyoming Seminary, Pa.), the Ironman runner-up who has placed twice at National Preps. Others to watch include two-time state placer Jonas Gayton (Clovis, Calif.), a state runner-up last year, 2010 state placer Vincent Gomez (Bakersfield Frontier), and Reno TOC champion Michael Knoblauch (Clovis West, Calif.). At 285 pounds, it is a showdown between two of the nation's four best underclass wrestlers in the weight classification with No. 3 Nick Nevills (Clovis, Calif.) and No. 9 Michael Johnson, Jr. (Wyoming Seminary, Pa.) present. Nevills won state as a freshman before finishing third last year, while Johnson was a runner-up at National Preps during his freshman campaign last year. The 160 and 182-pound weight classes are anchored by a nationally elite wrestler. At 160 pounds, it is a shallow weight class led by No. 2 Isaiah Martinez (Lemoore, Calif.). Martinez is a two-time state champion and three-time state placer, as well winning titles at the FloNationals, Junior National Freestyle Championships, and the Super 32 Challenge during the past off-season. Others to note in this weight are Cadet Greco-Roman runner-up Nick Fiegner (Folsom, Calif.) and freshmen sensation Chris Weiler (Wyoming Seminary, Pa.), already a Cadet double All-American and Walsh Ironman placer. No. 1 Eric Morris (Wyoming Seminary, Pa.) leads the way at 182 pounds, where three other state placers are also present. Kyle Pope (Bakersfield, Calif.) was a state runner-up last year, Adrian Salas (Clovis, Calif.) finished fourth this past season and is a two-time state placer, while Trevor Smith (Ripon, Calif.) placed sixth at state. Other nationally ranked wrestlers in the tournament are No. 18 Tirso Lara (Poway, Calif.) at 106 pounds, No. 14 Anthony Valencia (St. John Bosco, Calif.) at 138. Lara, champion at the Reno TOC, leads a weight class that also features returning state placer Adrian Camposano (Central, Calif.) as well as three Fargo All-Americans in Juan Jimenez (Porterville, Calif.), Sean Nickell (Bakersfield, Calif.), and Perez Perez (Windsor, Calif.). Defending state champion Anthony Valencia, also a FloNationals and Cadet freestyle champion, is in a weight class with three other notable wrestlers: two-time state placer and returning finalist Paul Fox (Gilroy, Calif.), state placer Chris Garcia (Clovis West, Calif.), and state champion Kyle Leet (Palo Verde, Nev.). Only two weights are without a nationally ranked wrestler, 195 and 145. The 195 weight class is led by Junior Greco-Roman All-American Mason Kumashiro (Los Alamitos, Calif.) and National Prep placer Matt Doggett (Wyoming Seminary, Pa.). Even though the 145 weight does not feature a nationally ranked wrestler, there is quality depth present, led by state champion Nikko Villarreal (Gilroy, Calif.) and two-time state placers in Coleman Hammond (Bakersfield, Calif.) and Victor Lopez (Poway, Calif.). Additional wrestlers meriting attention are state placer Jason Ladd (Clovis, Calif.) and New England regional placer Jake Savoca (Wyoming Seminary, Pa.).
  9. ON THE MAT The fifth-ranked University of Iowa wrestling team hosts No. 4 Ohio State on Friday at 7:04 p.m. (CT). The Hawkeyes (10-0) and Buckeyes (6-0) will meet on Mediacom Mat inside Carver-Hawkeye Arena in the Big Ten opener for both schools. The Hawkeyes have nine wrestlers ranked in the top 20 in at least one national poll. The Buckeyes have nine wrestlers ranked in the top 20 in at least one national poll. Tickets to the dual are $15 for adults, $8 for youth and $2 for kids five-years old and younger. TELEVISION COVERAGE Iowa's dual vs. Ohio State will be televised live on BTN. Tim Johnson and Jim Gibbons will have the call. Shane Sparks will report matside. AUDIO COVERAGE This weekend's competition will be broadcast on AM-800 KXIC and streamed online at hawkeyesports.com via Hawkeye All-Access. Steven Grace and Mark Ironside will have the call live from Carver-Hawkeye Arena. SOCIAL MEDIA Live Hawkeye wrestling updates are available @IowaWRLive; @Hawks_Wrestling; facebook.com/iowahawkeyewrestling. LIVE RESULTS Live results will be available on the wrestling schedule page at hawkeyesports.com. BACK POINTS • Tonight's dual features 18 wrestlers ranked in at least one of three national polls. Iowa and Ohio State each have nine wrestlers ranked among the top 20 in at least one national poll. • Four Hawkeyes in the probable lineup have unblemished records at Carver-Hawkeye Arena. Tony Ramos (19-0), Derek St. John (18-0), Brody Grothus (1-0) and Mike Evans (11-0) are a combined 49-0 on their home mat. • Matt McDonough (125) has won 36 consecutive matches, a career-best. He is 32-1 all-time at Carver-Hawkeye Arena. • The Hawkeyes are 23-1 in Big Ten home duals since 2006-07, Tom Brands first season as head coach. • The Hawkeyes own the series lead against Ohio State, 36-3. THE SERIES -- OHIO STATE The Hawkeyes lead the all-time series 36-3. Ohio State won the most recent meeting, 21-9, on Jan. 20, 2012 in Columbus, Ohio. Iowa is 14-1 all-time at home against the Buckeyes. Ohio State's lone win in Iowa City was in the series' first meeting, a 17-13 win in 1929. IOWA VS. RANKED OPPONENTS The Hawkeyes are 2-0 this season in duals against ranked opponents. Iowa defeated No. 17 Virginia 26-12 on Nov. 16, and No. 23 Lehigh 26-9 on Dec. 6. Including No. 4 Ohio State, nine of Iowa's remaining 10 opponents are ranked in the latest NWCA Division I Coaches Poll. Individually, the Hawkeyes own a 12-4 mark against ranked opponents. Matt McDonough (125) leads all Hawkeyes with victories over four rated foes (4-0). Mark Ballweg (141) is 3-0 against ranked competition, and Michael Kelly (149), Derek St. John (157) and Bobby Telford (285) are all 1-0 against ranked opponents. Other records against rated foes include Brody Grothus (0-1), Nick Moore (1-1), Ethen Lofthouse (1-1) and Nathan Burak (0-1). BRANDS IN THE BIG TEN Head Coach Tom Brands owns a 43-5 Big Ten record in six seasons, including 6-0 in conference openers. He is 23-1 all-time at home in Big Ten duals. MCDONOUGH STREAK HITS 36 Senior Matt McDonough extended his win streak to a career-best 36 matches when he scored a major decision against No. 18 Steve Bonanno of Hofstra at the Grapple at the Garden on Dec. 16. McDonough finished last season with an NCAA title and a 28-match winning streak. He is a perfect 8-0 this season. McDonough's last loss was an 11-7 overtime decision to Illinois' Jesse Delgado (Dec. 2, 2011). He has since defeated Delgado twice -- first at the National Duals tournament (6-3) and most recently in the semifinals at the 2012 Big Ten Tournament (4-3). 3 ON THE BOARD IS JUST NOT ENOUGH Junior Tony Ramos has scored bonus points in all 10 matches this season, including five pins and five major decisions. He leads the team with 50 dual points. His five pins tie for the team lead and his five major decisions rank second to Mark Ballweg (7). Ramos has won 39 of 40 career duals and owns a perfect 19-0 record at Carver-Hawkeye Arena. HAVING A BALL-WEG @ 141 Senior Mark Ballweg has won his last 24 bouts and owns a career record of 35-3 competing at 141 pounds. He is 10-0 with a team-high seven major decisions this season. He has scored bonus points in eight of 10 matches and is 3-0 against ranked opponents. 6-FOR-6 IN 2012-13 Sophomore Michael Kelly is one of eight Hawkeyes with a perfect dual record this season. Kelly is 6-0 in dual competition, doubling his dual win total from a year ago when he was 3-9 at 149 pounds. Kelly's 10-2 overall record includes two pins, five major decisions and one technical fall. MOUNT ST. JOHN Junior Derek St. John, rated No. 1 at 157, is 10-0 this season with two pins, four major decisions, and a team-best two technical falls. St. John is undefeated in 18 career matches inside Carver-Hawkeye Arena. He owns a career dual record of 34-3 and an overall career record of 55-9. 165 WANTS MOORE Sophomore Nick Moore is 6-2 this season and has scored 26 dual points, more than two and one-half times his total from a year ago (10). Moore has scored bonus points in five bouts, including three falls and one major decision. Moore was 3-1 competing at 165 pounds last season. Including his 11-2 mark wrestling unattached in 2010-11, Moore is 20-5 all-time while competing at 165. EVANS HAS FOUND A BIGGER HOME Sophomore Mike Evans has started five of Iowa's last six duals at 174 pounds after opening the season at 165. Evans owned a 2-0 record at 165, and since moving up a weight class he has gone 5-0 with one pin, one technical fall and three major decisions to raise his season record to 7-0. Including his redshirt freshman season in 2011-12, Evans is 24-2 with 16 bonus point victories at 174 pounds. LOFTHOUSE MAKING WAVES AT 184 Junior Ethen Lofthouse owns a 9-1 record in his first season competing at 184 pounds. Lofthouse has scored bonus points in seven of his nine wins, including three pins and four major decisions. His only loss of the season was a 9-4 decision to No. 2 Robert Hamlin of Lehigh. Lofthouse owned a 28-9 record and placed seventh at the NCAA Championships last season while competing at 174 pounds. BURAK ON THE BRINK Freshman Nathan Burak is 9-5 this year with five bonus point victories. Among Burak's five losses, four have been decided by one point. His dual record sits at 2-4, but he's coming off his most impressive dual win of the season, a 12-4 major decision against Angelo Malvestuto at Buffalo. Burak opened the season with a third place finish at the Lindenwood Open before being inserted into the varsity lineup Nov. 24. TELFORD WITH A SOPHOMORE SURGE Sophomore Bobby Telford owns a 10-0 dual record with 47 dual points scored this season, a mark that ranks second on the team behind Tony Ramos (50). Entering conference action, Telford has already surpassed his dual win total and his dual points scored from last season. Telford owned a 9-5 dual mark and netted 36 dual points during his 2011-12 All-American campaign. THREE WITH AN EYE ON FOUR Senior Matt McDonough is a three-time NCAA finalist. He won NCAA titles in 2010 and 2012, and finished runner-up in 2011. With a top eight finish at the 2013 NCAA tournament, McDonough would become the 18th four-time All-American in school history. With a trip to the NCAA finals he would join Ed Banach, Duane Goldman and Lincoln McIlravy as the school's only four-time NCAA finalists. A third national title would make McDonough the seventh wrestler in school history to earn three NCAA Championships (Ed Banach, Tom Brands, Barry Davis, Lincoln McIlravy, Joe Williams, Jim Zalesky). MCDONOUGH CHASES HISTORY Senior Matt McDonough has four pins this season and a career total of 39. He scored nine falls as a freshman, 14 as a sophomore and 12 as a junior. He is five falls from matching Chuck Yagla (44) for 10th on the all-time career falls list. Ed Banach owns the school record with 73. Terry Brands sits No. 6 with 48 and Tom Brands ranks No. 8 with 46. MCDONOUGH AMONG THE BEST Senior Matt McDonough owns a career record of 108-4. His .964 winning percentage ranks fourth in program history among wrestlers with a minimum 95 decisions. Iowa's top wrestlers in program history based on winning percentage include: 1. T.J. Williams (98-1-0) .990 2. Brent Metcalf (108-3-0) .973 3. Lincoln McIlravy (96-3-0) .970 4. Matt McDonough (108-4) .964 5. Tom Brands (158-7-2) .952 6. Terry Brands (137-7) .951 39 YEARS OF DOMINANCE Since 1974, only seven schools have captured the NCAA Championship. During that 38-year span, the Hawkeyes have won 23 team titles, including nine straight from 1978-86. The other schools include Oklahoma State (7), Minnesota (3), Iowa State (2), Penn State (2), Arizona State (1) and Oklahoma (1). ATTENDANCE LEADERS AT IT AGAIN The Hawkeye drew 9,623 fans to its season opening dual against Iowa State. That number topped the average attendance from last year's national record of 9,014. Last year Iowa's 9,014 average marked the fourth straight year the Hawkeyes averaged over 8,000 fans per dual and the sixth straight season Iowa led the nation in attendance. THE LAST MEETING- No. 2 Iowa dropped a 21-9 decision to No. 7 Ohio State on Jan. 20, 2012 inside St. John Arena. Ohio State won seven of 10 matches to end a 34-dual losing streak to the Hawkeyes. The loss was Iowa's first in 50 road duals and the first against a Big Ten opponent in 39 duals #2 IOWA 9, #7 Ohio State 21 -- Jan. 20, 2012 125 - #2 Matt McDonough (I) dec. #15 Johnni Dijulius (O), 5-2 133 - #4 Logan Stieber (O) dec. #2 Tony Ramos (I), 7-0 141 - #7 Hunter Stieber (O) dec. #3 Montell Marion (I), 4-2 149 - #16 Cam Tessari (O) dec. Mike Kelly (I), 9-4 157 - Josh Demas (O) dec. #2 Derek St. John (I), 7-3 165 - Derek Garcia (O) dec. #6 Mike Evans (I), 6-5 174 - #9 Ethen Lofthouse (I) dec. Joe Grandominico (O), 7-1 184 - #8 Nick Heflin (O) dec. Vinnie Wagner (I), 7-4 197 - Andrew Campolattano (O) dec. Grant Gambrall (I), 8-6 285 - Blake Rasing (I) dec. #15 Peter Capone (O), 6-2 HAWKEYE WRESTLING HISTORY Iowa's overall dual meet record is 916-219-31 (.799) in 102 seasons. The Hawkeyes have won 23 national titles and 34 Big Ten titles. Iowa's 51 NCAA Champions have won a total of 79 NCAA individual titles, crowning six three-time and 16 two-time champions. The Hawkeyes' 105 Big Ten champions have won a total of 190 conference titles. There have been seven four-time, 18 three-time and 28 two-time Iowa winners. Iowa's 147 All-Americans have earned All-America status 297 times, including 17 four-time, 31 three-time and 37 two-time honorees. TICKET INFORMATION Single-meet tickets are available for purchase on hawkeyesports.com. Tickets for Purdue (1/6), Nebraska (2/10) and Edinboro (2/16) are $12 for adults, $8 for youth, and free for kids five-years old and younger. Single-meet tickets to the Penn State (2/1) dual are $15 for adults, $8 for youth and $2 for kids five-years old and younger.
  10. CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. -- Highlighted by an individual championship at 157 pounds from Jedd Moore (R-Sr., Mount Vernon, Ohio), the No. 20 Virginia wrestling team took sixth place at the Southern Scuffle, held at McKenzie Arena in Chattanooga, Tenn. The Cavaliers finished with 109.5 points; top-ranked Penn State finished atop the 24-team field with 178.5 points, followed by No. 2 Oklahoma State (158), No. 6 Missouri (147.5), No. 3 Minnesota (139.5) and No. 8 Cornell (136). Ranked No. 16 nationally at 157 pounds, Moore is the second Cavalier to win a Southern Scuffle individual title in the event’s 10-year history. Scott Moore captured the 141-pound championship in 2003 in the tournament’s inaugural season. Jedd Moore went 5-0 as he reached the top of the podium. Six Virginia wrestlers placed in the two-day tournament. Eighth-ranked Matt Snyder (R-Sr., Lewistown, Pa.) was the runner-up at 125 pounds and earned the tournament’s Gregorian Award after recording the most falls in the least amount of time (three falls in 6:25). No. 16 Jon Fausey (R-Jr., Dalmatia, Pa.) and No. 7 Nick Sulzer (R-So., Cleveland, Ohio) took fourth place at 174 and 165 pounds, respectively, while No. 15 George DiCamillo (Fr., Highland Heights, Ohio) and Zach Watson (Fr., Chattanooga, Tenn.) placed fifth and sixth, respectively at 133. Moore (21-4) won a pair of tight matches Wednesday to claim the 157 championship. In the semifinals he topped Missouri’s Kyle Bradley, 2-0. After falling behind 1-0 in the second period of the championship match to Penn State’s James Vollrath, Moore earned an escape point in the third period before forcing a sudden-victory period, where he scored a takedown near the edge of the mat with 41 seconds remaining to clinch the title and a 3-1 win. Snyder (8-3) fell 8-4 to second-ranked Nico Megaludis of Penn State in the 125 championship. He advanced to the finals after pinning Air Force’s Josh Martinez in just 1:40 in the semifinals; it was Snyder’s third straight pin in the tournament. He now has 30 career falls – third most in program history. Fausey (20-4) reached the consolation finals before dropping a 10-3 decision to No. 3 Matt Brown of Penn State in the third-place bout. He went 3-1 Wednesday and 6-2 in the tournament; he opened the day Wednesday by downing The Citadel’s Turtogtokh Luvsandorj, 5-3, in the third tiebreaker period. He then racked up a pair of wins over ranked foes, beating No. 18 Cody Walters of Ohio, 4-1, and winning by medical forfeit over No. 14 Blake Stauffer of Arizona State. Sulzer (13-5) wrestled three nationally ranked opponents Wednesday. He was pinned in the semifinals by three-time national champion Kyle Dake, the No. 1-ranked wrestler at 165 pounds this week. Sulzer bounced back to top No. 12 Zach Toal, 6-2, before succumbing to No. 3 Tyler Caldwell of Oklahoma State, 5-2, in the third-place match. A pair of Cavalier freshmen, DiCamillo (19-5) and Watson (16-5), capped off strong tournaments by finishing fifth and sixth, respectively at 133 pounds. DiCamillo earned fifth after winning by forfeit in the fifth-place bout. He took fifth-ranked Chris Dardanes to sudden-victory time before falling, 3-1, in the semifinals, then was knocked to the fifth-place match with a 13-5 loss to Penn State’s James Gulibon. After a third-round loss Tuesday, Watson battled back through the consolation bracket, winning a pair of matches Tuesday and again Wednesday before losing an 8-2 decision to No. 7 Nathan McCormick of Missouri. Competing unattached, Watson finished 6-2 in the tournament as he returned to his hometown. Three Cavaliers finished competition Wednesday but did not place. Stephen Doty (R-Jr., St. Louis, Mo.) and Zach Nye (R-Fr., Enola, Pa.) each were eliminated Wednesday after dropping their first bouts of the day in the 184-pound wrestlebacks. Joseph Martinez (So., Platteville, Colo.) was knocked out in his first match at 133 pounds Wednesday against Army’s Jordan Thome. Virginia returns to action Jan. 11-12 when it competes in the Virginia Duals at the Hampton Coliseum. Brackets for the dual tournament will be announced early next week.
  11. Wrapping up the final day at the 2012 Southern Scuffle, the No. 3 Golden Gopher wrestling team finished in fourth place with 139.5 total team points. For the second year in a row, Penn State captured the Scuffle title in Chattanooga, Tenn., gathering 178.5 points on the day. The next closest team was Oklahoma State who tallied 158.0 points. Missouri finished just head of the Gophers with 147.5 points. Despite failing to crown a single champion at the event, Minnesota was able to pull out other top finishes. Three grapplers placed second, while others finished third in their respective brackets. Tony Nelson, Logan Storley, and Chris Dardanes each finished runner-up. Nelson fell to Missouri’s Dom Bradley by a 2-1 decision in a tiebreaker round. The loss snaps Nelson’s 40-match win streak that dates back to last season. Storley got a shot at Oklahoma State’s No. 1 Chris Perry and narrowly missed the championship title with a 7-6 decision loss. Dardanes also came up short of the crown, losing 3-2 to Jon Morrison, also of Oklahoma State. Kevin Steinhaus and Nick Dardanes each took home third place. Steinhaus won over Missouri’s Mike Larson by a 7-3 decision, while Dardanes won by decision (10-4) over Chris Mecate (Old Dominion). The Maroon and Gold returns to dual competition on Jan. 11 when the team travels to Columbus, Ohio for a Big Ten meet against the Buckeyes.
  12. CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. -- The second-ranked Oklahoma State wrestling squad finished the Southern Scuffle in second place with 158 points, 20.5 points behind Penn State. The day was highlighted by Jon Morrison, Jordan Oliver and Chris Perry bringing home individual titles at 133, 149 and 174, respectively. "We had a pretty good day," coach John Smith said. "I liked that we won all the finals and how we won them. It wasn't perfect, but we grinded out some wins with Jon Morrison and Chris Perry. I'm glad Oliver won Outstanding Wrestler for his performance this weekend. He was very dominant. I think the guys in the consolation brackets did a good job of fighting back. It was good to see. Finishing second as a team was not ideal, but it's where we're at. We're going to continue to improve." To earn a spot in the finals, seventh-ranked Morrison upset No. 6 Nathan McCormick of Missouri, 3-1. He then topped No. 5 Chris Dardanes, 3-2, for the 133 title, avenging an early season loss. Jordan Oliver earned his 100th career win and the Most Outstanding Wrestler award after overpowering No. 5 Cole VonOhlen to win the 149-pound bracket, 21-8. En route to the championship match, No. 2 Oliver defeated Chris Villalonga for the second time this season with an 18-3 tech fall. The Easton, Pa., native remains undefeated on the season with a 17-0 mark. "It was definitely a great honor to be a part of OSU's rich tradition and making 100-Win Club," Oliver said. "Coming here knowing there was good competition and a great tournament made it a lot of fun. I was excited for it, and it gave me a great opportunity to have fun, wrestle for the fans and become a part of OSU history." Top-ranked Chris Perry earned the third Scuffle title for the Cowboys with his riding time advantage to win, 7-6, over third-ranked Logan Storley for the 174 pound crown. Perry also has an unblemished 17-0 record. Alex Dieringer and Tyler Caldwell earned third place finishes at 157 and 165 pounds. Eighth-ranked Dieringer outwrestled Missouri's Kyle Bradley for a 3-2 decision in the third-place match. Caldwell went head-to-head with No. 7 Nick Sulzer of Virginia, and came out on top, defeating him, 5-2. Alan Gelogaev forfeited his third place match and earned a fourth-place finish in the tournament. Julian Feikert and Chris Chionuma both produced fifth-place finishes in their respective weight classes. Feikert defeated Conner Hanafee, 7-4, at 141 pounds, and Chionuma surpassed Arizona State's Kevin Radford, 9-3. The Cowboys will return to dual action on Jan. 13 when they wrestle the Iowa Hawkeyes inside Gallagher-Iba Arena at 2 p.m. Team Standings 1. Penn State - 178.5 2. Oklahoma State - 158.0 3. Missouri - 147.5 4. Minnesota 139.5 5. Cornell - 136
  13. CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. -- Mike Nevinger and Kyle Dake won individual titles as the Big Red wrestling team placed fifth at the Southern Scuffle. Dake was only the second wrestler in history to win four titles. At 184 pounds, senior Steve Bosak placed second, while freshman Nahshon Garrett was third at 125 pounds. Also placing were Chris Villalonga (5th, 149), Marshall Peppelman (8th, 174) and Jace Bennett (7th, 197). At 141 pounds, Nevinger faced No. 4 Undrakhbayar Khishignaym of the Citadel in the finals. The two were scoreless after the first period. The Citadel wrestler reversed Nevinger from his starting down position in the second, but the Big Red grappler escaped to come within a point. Khishignaym chose to start the third at neutral. Khishignaym tried to throw Nevinger, but Nevinger flipped him and came out on top to win a 3-2 decision. No. 9 Nevinger faced No. 11 Nick Dardanes of Minnesota in the semifinals. Dardanes shot right off the whistle for a double leg takedown. The two wrestlers traded reversals, and Nevinger added an escape to come within a point. Nevinger chose down to start the second and rolled out for a quick escape. Dardanes chose neutral to start the third. Nevinger notched a takedown, but Dardanes escaped. With 1:25 in riding time, Nevinger won a 7-5 decision. Kyle Dake (Photo/Cornell Sports Information)At 165 pounds, Dake shot at No. 2 David Taylor of Penn State right off the whistle and looked to have a takedown, but Taylor caught hold of his leg at the last second. After a scoreless first period, Dake chose to start the second at neutral. Dake almost worked his way to a reversal two different times, but settled for a one point escape. Taylor started the third down on the mat. The Nittany Lion wrestler twisted Dake's leg and came out on top to take a 1-2 lead with a reversal. Taylor had over a minute of riding time. Dake would reverse him again and wound down the riding time to win a 3-2 decision. Dake made quick work of his No. 7 ranked opponent in the semifinals. He grabbed Virginia's Nick Sulzer around the waist and took him down to the mat early in the period. Dake immediately went to work turning the Cavaliers' wrestler and won by fall in 1:21. At 184 pounds, No. 2 Bosak faced No. 1 Ed Ruth of Penn State. Ruth won the 2012 NCAA title at 174 pounds. Ruth converted two double leg takedowns in the first to hold a 4-1 lead. Ruth reversed Bosak from his starting down position in the second, but Bosak twisted free for an escape. Bosak escaped from his opening down position in the third. Bosak shot numerous times in the third looking to score, but with 2:55 in riding time, Ruth won a 7-3 decision. In the semifinals, Bosak faced third ranked, Minnesota's Kevin Steinhaus. Bosak was close to a takedown off a leg sweep at the end of the first, but time ran out before he was able to put points on the board. Steinhaus chose to start the second period down, but Bosak muscled his way to two minutes in riding time. Bosak almost reversed the Golden Gophers' wrestler to start the third, but Steinhaus managed to only allow an escape. With 1:49 riding time, Bosak won a 2-0 decision to advance to the finals. In the match for third place, No. 10 Garrett took on Josh Martinez of Airforce. Garrett racked up takedowns and back points on his way to a 17-5 major decision. In the semifinals, Garrett faced No. 2 ranked Niko Megaludis of Penn State. Megaludis shot early, but Garrett's strong defense kept the match at 0-0. With 26 seconds left in the period, the Penn State grappler finished a takedown to take a two point lead. Garrett quickly twisted to his feet to start the second. The Big Red rookie took lots of shots late in the period, but Megaludis evaded him. Megaludis escaped midway through the period to win 3-1. In the consolation semifinals, Garrett racked up back points and takedowns on his way to a 17-3 major decision over Jerome Robinson of Old Dominion. At 149 pounds, Chris Villalonga took on Oklahoma State's Jordan Oliver in the semifinals. The No. 1 ranked Oliver racked up takedowns and back points, and with riding time won by an 18-3 technical fall. In the consolation semifinals, Villalonga injury defaulted to Drake Houdashelt of Missouri in 3:21. Villalonga placed fifth after his opponent forfeited out of the tournament. Cornell will be back in action on Sunday when the Big Red takes on Lehigh in Bethlehem, Pa. for a 2 p.m. start.
  14. Mark Hall defeated Jake Short at the 2011 Minnesota Christmas Tournament (Photo/Jeff Beshey, The Guillotine) Some great individual showdowns loom at the 15th annual Cheesehead Invitational this coming Friday and Saturday in Kaukauna, Wis. This includes the 152 pound weight class, where two No. 1-ranked wrestlers in the nation will be in the weight class -- Mark Hall (Apple Valley, Minn.) and defending tournament champion Jake Short (Simley, Minn.) moving up one weight class from 145 pounds. In last season's Minnesota Christmas Tournament final, it was Hall upending Short by a 3-0 score. However, it is no guarantee that these two wrestlers will even get to meet. Also present here is Brian Murphy (Glenbard North, Ill.), a three-time top three finisher at state and three-time Fargo freestyle All-American who is ranked No. 3 nationally. Others part of the puzzle in this weight class are state champion and three-time placer Nick Georgean (Davenport Assumption, Iowa), two-time state placer Mitch Berenz (Arrowhead, Wis.), state placer Spencer Derifield (Waverly-Shell Rock, Iowa), state qualifiers Notay Jackson (Mt. Carmel, Ill.) and Luke Fortuna (Montini Catholic, Ill.), along with freshman Beau Breske (Hartford, Wis.). Three other defending tournament champions, for a total of four -- and fourteen other nationally ranked individuals, for a total of 17 -- are featured in this field. In addition, seven Fab 50 teams are a part of this event, which was ranked the fifth best regular season tournament in the country by InterMat this summer. At 120 pounds, Maolu Woiwor (Apple Valley, Minn.) was tournament champion last year at 106 pounds. However, he is not the favorite in this year's event, as two nationally ranked wrestlers are present in a pair of two-time state champion juniors: No. 8 Johnny Jimenez (Marmion Academy, Ill.) and No. 19 Jens Lantz (Ellsworth, Wis.). Joining those three in the field are Cadet Greco-Roman champion Vince Turk (Montini Catholic, Ill.) and state placer Jon Marmolejo (Glenbard North, Ill.), a two-time Cadet Greco-Roman All-American. Fredy Stroker (Bettendorf, Iowa), ranked No. 16 nationally at 126 pounds, won the 113 weight class last year. However, it is No. 2 Jered Cortez (Glenbard North, Ill.) who is the tournament favorite. Cortez, only a junior, is already a two-time state champion and top ten overall in the Class of 2014. Others meriting attention are two-time state placers Jordan Laster (Montini Catholic, Ill.) and Nick Nasenbenny (Plainfield Central, Ill.), state runner-up Tony Devriese (Davenport Assumption, Iowa), along with Brock Morgan (Apple Valley, Minn.) and Dan Radcliffe (Lockport, Ill.). Last among the defending champions is No. 6 Newton Smerchek (Luxemburg-Casco, Wis.) at 285 pounds. He is a two-time state finalist, and was state champion last year. Joining Smerchek in this weight class are No. 13 Jake Scanlan (Southeast Polk, Iowa), a Junior National freestyle All-American, state placer Jesse Nelson (Stoughton, Wis.), two-time state qualifier Alex Fritz (Marmion Academy, Ill.), and state qualifier Sean Easler (Davenport Assumption, Iowa). The other weight in this tournament with multiple nationally ranked wrestlers is 195 pounds, which features No. 8 Jordan Ellingwood (Plainfield Central, Ill.) and No. 14 Blake Blair (Edwardsville, Ill.). Ellingwood is a state placer and was champion at the Preseason Nationals, while Blair finished as state runner-up last year. At the Dvorak two weekends ago, it was Ellingwood winning by 13-5 major decision in the final. Others meriting attention are state placer Adam Walther (Waverly-Shell Rock, Iowa), state qualifier and Ironman placer Cody Snodgrass (Marmion Academy, Ill.), state qualifier Anthony Ferraro (Montini Catholic, Ill.) along with Luis Montoya (Lockport, Ill.) and David Johnson (Apple Valley, Minn.) However, clearly the tournament's deepest weight class is at 132 pounds, which features No. 14 George Fisher (Marmion Academy, Ill.), a two-time state finalist and Preseason Nationals champion two months ago, as the lone ranked wrestler. Others to watch include state champions Kyle Gliva (Simley, Minn.), Seth Gross (Apple Valley, Minn.), and Robert Lee (Kaukauna, Wis.); 2011 state champion Andrew Crone (Arrowhead, Wis.); 2010 state champion Kyle Springer (Davenport Assumption, Iowa); two-time state placers Logan Ryan (Bettendorf, Iowa) and Johnny Gosinski (Glenbard North, Ill.); state placers Bryce Steiert (Waverly-Shell Rock, Iowa) and Austin Strzelczyk (Lockport, Wis.); state qualifier Briar Dittmer (Southeast Polk, Iowa); and freshman Jose Champagne (Montini Catholic, Ill.), a Cadet freestyle All-American. Other nationally ranked wrestlers in the event include No. 20 Nolan Hellickson (Southeast Polk, Iowa) at 106 pounds, No. 2 Bryce Brill (Mt. Carmel, Ill.) at 145, No. 20 Daniel Woiwor (Apple Valley, Minn.), No. 4 Nick Wanzek (Simley, Minn.), and No. 6 Preston Lehman (West Fargo, N.D.) Hellickson leads a 106 pound weight class that also features Preseason Nationals placer Jacob Schwarm (Bettendorf, Iowa), state qualifier Cortez Arredondo (Simley, Minn.), along with freshmen Dylan Duncan (Marmion Academy, Ill.) and Aidan Yde (Arrowhead, Wis.). At 145 pounds, the primary challenge for Brill will come from three-time state placer Alex Hernandez (Bettendorf, Iowa). Others to watch include state runner-up Dayton Racer (Apple Valley, Minn.); state placers Michael Sepke (Montini Catholic, Ill.) and McKinnon Short (Simley, Minn.); along with Colin Strickland (Southeast Polk, Iowa) and Adam Warachek (Luxemburg-Casco, Wis.) For Woiwor at 160, primary challenges will come from a pair of state qualifiers in Xavier Montalvo (Montini Catholic, Ill.) and Tim Miklus (Southeast Polk, Iowa). Montalvo was a Cadet National double All-American, while Miklus placed seventh at the Preseason Nationals. Challengers to Wanzek at 170 include state runner-up Dylan Blackford (Southeast Polk, Iowa), state placer Mike Maduko (Montini Catholic, Ill.), and state qualifier Gabe Frandsen (Ellsworth, Wis.). Lehmann is the anchor at one of the tournament's thinner weight classes, where the lone notable challenger would be state placer Jake Turk (Montini Catholic, Ill.) Three weight classes in this field do not have a nationally ranked wrestler -- 113, 138, and 220. State champion Tommy Pawleski (Montini Catholic, Ill.) leads the way at 113, with primary challengers coming from state placers Brian Rossi (Lockport, Ill.) and Brendan Gould (Davenport Assumption, Iowa), as well as Gannon Volk (Apple Valley, Minn.) and Zach Smith (Port Washington, Wis.). Leading the way at 138 is two-time state placer Chris Garcia (Montini Catholic, Ill.), a returning runner-up at this event; others to watch include two-time state placer Eric Clarke (Davenport Assumption, Iowa), state placers Jacob Woodard (Bettendorf, Iowa) and Andrew Steiert (Waverly-Shell Rock, Iowa), as well as state qualifier Dylan Buchheit (Southeast Polk, Iowa). Finally, there is a lot of balance at 220 pounds, including state placers David Denne (Mt. Carmel, Ill.), Edgar Ruano (Montini Catholic, Ill.), and Bryce Fisher (Southeast Polk, Iowa); state qualifiers Kaleb Staack (Waverly-Shell Rock, Iowa) and Paul Cheney (Apple Valley, Minn.); along with freshman Lucas Warren (Marmion Academy, Ill.). In terms of the team dynamic, the defending champion is Apple Valley, Minn. The Eagles are ranked No. 14 nationally, but coming off a disastrous performance at The Clash, though the potential to be much better is there as shown by their performance at the Minnesota Christmas Tournament. The leader in the national rankings is No. 7 Montini Catholic, Ill., who has an extremely balanced lineup, which was validated in their runner-up finishes at The Clash and Dvorak tournaments in December. Other nationally ranked teams include No. 24 Southeast Polk, Iowa, No. 25 Marmion Academy, Ill., No. 37 Simley, Minn., No. 47 Bettendorf, Iowa, and No. 48 Glenbard North, Ill. Additional teams to note are West Fargo, N.D., Davenport Assumption, Iowa, and Waverly-Shell Rock, Iowa.
  15. Back from the holiday break, Richard and John take a look back at UFC 155 and some of the New Year's Eve hijinx in Japan. After that, WEC veteran Chad George joins the show to talk about his career and starring role in the recent MMA documentary Occupation: Fighter. Do you want to listen to a past episode? Access archives.
  16. Mitch Bengtson won his fifth straight Rumble on the Red title (Photo/Mark Beshey, The Guillotine) Clash Chaos The Clash XI National High School Wrestling Duals, ranked as the No. 3 event in scholastic wrestling per InterMat last summer, was one filled with drama and intrigue. Moving up one position to fourth nationally was the tournament champion St. Michael-Albertville, Minn. However, the Knights faced significant challenges along the way. This included a Bracket "A" final against Oak Park River Forest, Ill., that they won 28-26, splitting the fourteen dual meets 7-7. The first dual meet in the Championship Pool was against Carl Sandburg, Ill., one that ended in a 26-26 tie which required a third period pin from Lincoln Mallinger at 145 to make it come down to the eighth criteria, most first match points scored. On the other hand, the next dual meet was a 34-21 victory over Montini Catholic, Ill. Then, the last dual meet was a 33-21 loss against Brandon, Fla., including an upset where Brandon's James Flint upended Tommy Thorn 7-6 at 120 pounds; previously ranked No. 2 nationally, Thorn drops down to sixth. Both Brandon and Montini Catholic scored wins over Carl Sandburg, Ill; for Brandon it was 25-23 as they also won eight matches, while Montini Catholic scored a 30-22 winning nine matches. However, Montini Catholic upended Brandon in their opening championship pool dual meet 33-18, winning nine of fourteen matches. With St. Michael-Albertville, Brandon, and Montini Catholic all tied at 2-1 records, it came down to the tiebreaker, which was most match points in the dual meets against one another; St. Michael-Albertville won, Montini Catholic took second and moves up to seventh, while Brandon finished third moving to sixth. Probably the fourth-best team at the Clash was Oak Park River Forest, and they move up from No. 14 to No. 8 in the nation this week. The Huskies dominated Blue Springs, Mo. 58-14 in the bracket semifinal, though Blue Springs is not much of a dual meet team, and was without one of their four nationally ranked wrestlers -- Cain Salas (152) all weekend. After falling short against St. Michael-Albertville, they dominated through the second place pool with a 39-19 win over Kasson-Mantorville, Minn., a 44-27 win over Apple Valley, Minn., and a 40-16 win over Marist, Ill. The Huskies went a combined 29-13 in those three dual meets. Champion of the third bracket was Bound Brook, N.J., which moves into the Fab 50 this week at No. 29 after coming into The Clash unranked. In the bracket semifinal against Apple Valley, Minn., they split the fourteen weight classes but lost the dual meet 30-27. The Crusaders bounced back with a decisive 38-21 win over nationally ranked Kearney, Mo., winning ten of fourteen matches to take third. Then on Saturday, they went undefeated averaging nine victories per dual meet in wins over three nationally ranked squads -- 42-28 over Simley, Minn., 45-19 over Blue Springs, Mo., and 42-18 over Pope, Ga. Impossible to figure out was the total underperformance of Apple Valley, Minn. this past weekend. The Eagles entered as the No. 4 team nationally. As previously mentioned, they strugged in the bracket semifinal against Bound Brook, were then blown out by Montini Catholic 40-14 in the bracket final, and then went 1-2 in the day two second place pool; losses to Marist 31-25 and Oak Park River Forest 44-27, before beating Kasson Mantorville 29-28, a team they beat by 20 points earlier in the month. Though essentially wrestling without Seth Gross (132) and Dayton Racer (145-160) all weekend, the Eagles move down to No. 14 nationally, and have the Cheesehead this weekend to confuse us even more. Main events this weekend Separate event-specific previews are being published for the Cheesehead Invitational and Doc Buchanan Invitational events that will be wrestled on Friday and Saturday. The Cheesehead field includes seven nationally ranked teams: No. 7 Montini Catholic, Ill., No. 14 Apple Valley, Minn., No. 24 Southeast Polk, Iowa, No. 25 Marmion Academy, Ill., No. 37 Simley, Minn., No. 47 Bettendorf, Iowa, and No. 48 Glenbard North, Ill. The Doc Buchanan field features a quartet of nationally ranked teams: No. 2 Wyoming Seminary, Pa., No. 15 Clovis, Calif., No. 19 Poway, Calif., and No. 45 Bakersfield, Calif. St. Paris Graham travels to Blair Academy A relatively recent development is the rivalry between St. Paris Graham, Ohio and No. 1 Blair Academy, N.J. This is the fourth consecutive year the perennial national powers have competed in a January dual meet against one another, with the No. 9 Falcons making the trip this year to New Jersey. Though the dual meet in and of itself will be non-competitive due to the lineup holes St. Paris Graham has, most notably beyond 160 pounds, isolated individual matchups will intrigue. The following are the projected matchups, St. Paris Graham first followed by Blair Academy: 106: No. 5 Eli Stickley vs. Matt Deehan: Stickley was champion at the Walsh Ironman, while Deehan failed to place at both the POWERade and Beast of the East. 113: Eli Seipel vs. No. 20 Chaz Tucker: Seipel placed fourth at state last year and sixth at the Ironman; while Cadet freestyle runner-up Tucker failed to place at the Ironman, finished third at the Beast, and seventh at the POWERade. 120: Brent Moore vs. No. 2 Matthew Kolodzik: The freshman Moore failed to place at the Ironman, but did split matches with Kolodzik nine months ago at the Ohio Tournament of Champions; Kolodzik, a Cadet freestyle champion was runner-up to No. 1 Nathan Tomasello (CVCA, Ohio) at the Ironman and Beast before winning the POWERade. 126: Chase Crabtree/Mario Kastl vs. No. 4 Joey McKenna/Michael Monica: Crabtree was the starter at Ironman, failing to place, while the freshman Kastl stepped in during Graham's most recent competition; two-time National Prep champion, and Junior freestyle runner-up, McKenna finished third at POWERade in his season debut. 132: No. 2 Micah Jordan vs. Monica/McKenna: Jordan finished as runner-up at the Ironman and is a two-time state champion, while Monica failed to place at Ironman or Beast at 126 and POWERade up at 132. 138: Nate Henkle vs. No. 6 Mason Manville: Henkle has yet to make the state tournament, while freshman sensation Manville has been runner-up at the Ironman, Beast of the East, and POWERade. 145: Garrett Jordan vs. No. 12 Dylan Milonas: Jordan is a freshman who did not place in their local tournament this past weekend, while Milonas is a two-time National Prep runner-up who has been top three at the Ironman, Beast of the East, and POWERade. 152: No. 8 Alex Marinelli vs. No. 5 Russ Parsons: These two wrestled in the Ironman final, with Parsons needing a late takedown to score a 3-2 decision over the freshman sensation. 160: No. 1 Bo Jordan vs. Jack Wedholm: Bo Jordan is the nation's best senior, a three-time state champion, and three-time Ironman champion; while Wedholm placed at the Ironman, Beast, and POWERade. 170: Lane Thomas vs. Patrick Coover: Thomas has yet to make the state tournament, while Coover is a defending National Prep champion and placed in all three of Blair's competitions season to date. 182: Josh Couchman vs. Addison Knepshield: Couchman has yet to make the state tournament, while Knepshield has placed in all three of Blair's competitions this season. 195: Cole Thedor vs. No. 4 Frank Mattiace: Thedor is in his first year as a Graham starter, while Mattiace is a defending National Prep champion and won titles at the Ironman and POWERade already this season. 220: Anthony Welty vs. David Showunmi: Welty has yet to make the state tournament, while Showunmi has placed in all three of Blair's competitions season to date. 285: Cabel Courtwright vs. No. 2 Brooks Black: Courtwright is in his debut season as the Graham starter, while Black is a three-time Ironman and Beast of the East champion. POWERade packs a punch The nation's fourth best wrestling tournament also took place this past weekend at Canon-McMillan High School just south of Pittsburgh. With the much anticipated finals match between No. 1 Chance Marsteller (Kennard-Dale, Pa.) and No. 2 Cody Wiercioch (Canon-McMillan, Pa.) at 170 pounds on everyone's mind, the event had much to live up to in terms of expectation. Even though Marsteller won 3-2 in the ultimate tiebreaker, and there were no offensive points scored, the match was intensely contested and reflected the elite nature of the two competitors. However, what should not be forgotten is the excellent competition that occurred across all the weight classes. Freshman Luke Pletcher (Greater Latrobe, Pa.), ranked No. 2 nationally, dropped to 106 pounds for the first time and emerged as the dominant weight class champion. Defending state champion Ethan Lizak (Parkland, Pa.), ranked No. 5 in the nation, earned the 113-pound title with a 5-2 victory over No. 12 Jordan Allen (Huntington, W.Va.), who impressed especially with his quarterfinal win over Tucker. Four nationally ranked wrestlers, along with defending POWERade champion Vincenzo Joseph (Pittsburgh Central Catholic, Pa.) stole the show at 120 pounds; though the order went to chalk per the rankings: Kolodzik won, No. 4 Sam Krivus (Hempfield, Pa.) took second, No. 11 Dalton Macri (Canon-McMillan, Pa.) took third, and No. 17 Brandon Thompson (Solon, Ohio) finished fourth. Four nationally ranked competitors took the mat at 126 pounds, with No. 3 Connor Schram (Canon-McMillan, Pa.) earning the title after a 3-1 semifinal victory over No. 7 Ryan Diehl (Trinity, Pa.) and an injury default in the final against No. 6 Michael Kemerer (Franklin Regional, Pa.), a match in which he led 4-2 prior to its early end. The other semifinal saw Kemerer upset McKenna 2-1, while McKenna upended Diehl 3-0 for third place. No. 5 Jason Nolf (Kittanning, Pa.) won the 132-pound weight class, though he had to outlast No. 10 Dennis Gustafson (Forest Park, Va.) 5-4 in a tightly contested semifinal bout. No. 1 Zain Retherford (Benton, Pa.) emerged as champion at 138 pounds, though he was pushed in a 2-0 finals victory over Manville and was extended to overtime in a 5-3 victory over No. 11 Joseph Galasso (Father Judge, Pa.) during the semifinal round. At 145 pounds, unranked Josh Shields (Franklin Regional, Pa.) won the weight class with wins over ranked opposition in the semifinal (2-1 over Colt Cotten of Benton, Pa.) and the final (4-3 over Dylan Milonas). Shields entered the rankings at No. 13 this week, while Milonas dropped to No. 12 and Cotten slid back to No. 18. No. 5 Russ Parsons (Blair) earned a 2-1 tiebreaker victory over No. 6 Anthony Collica (Solon, Ohio) to win a second consecutive POWERade title at 152 pounds. The two wrestlers flipped positions in the rankings from last week; No. 12 Zach Zavatsky (Greater Latrobe, Pa.) won the title at 160 pounds; while Dakota DesLauriers (Burrell, Pa.) repeated as POWERade champion with a 3-1 victory over the formerly ranked Knepshield at 182. At 195, No. 4 Frank Mattiace (Blair) won a tightly contested 3-2 ultimate tiebreak match against defending champion Jake Hart (Hampton, Pa.). Despite the loss, Hart moves into the rankings at No. 19. No. 1 Kyle Snyder (Good Counsel, Md.) absolutely manhandled No. 3 Thomas Haines (Solanco, Pa.) by 16-6 major decision. Haines, the defending champion in this tournament, was the first opponent to last the full six minutes against Snyder this year. While at 285 pounds, No. 2 Brooks Black earned a repeat championship. In the team standings, No. 1 Blair Academy dominated their way to 299 points and the team title. Cincinnati Moeller, Ohio moves up from No. 34 to No. 20 after their second place finish (161 points). Despite being without defending tournament champion Solomon Chishko (145), No. 5 Canon-McMillan, Pa. finished just a point back of Moeller in third place led by champion Schram and five other place-winners. Other highlights of the coming weekend The nation's oldest continuous high school wrestling tournament happens on Friday and Saturday in Geary, Okla. It is a unique event in that there is no seeding, there are no advancement points (only bonus and placement are scored), and challenges for true second can occur. Three nationally ranked teams are featured in the field -- No. 23 Broken Arrow, Okla., No. 30 Edmond North, Okla., and No. 35 Tuttle, Okla. No. 8 Oak Park River Forest, Ill., travels to Iowa City West, Iowa for the Leipic Duals on Saturday. They are in a pool with the event's second best team, Grand Island, Neb. No. 27 South Plainfield, N.J., travels to St. Peter's Prep, N.J., on Friday night for what could be an intriguing dual meet. The Tigers were upset in the corresponding match at home last year for their only in-state dual meet loss of the season. No. 36 Blue Springs, Mo., is scheduled to travel to No. 44 Kearney, Mo., for a dual meet this evening. No. 40 Hermiston, Ore., travels to one of the showcase tournaments in the Northwestern United States, the Rollie Lane Invitational in Idaho. No. 46 Colonial Forge serves as host of the Battlefield Duals on Saturday. The event has ten teams present, so there will be two pools of five with a cross-over match at the end. Other teams in the event include Christiansburg, Va., Connellsville, Pa., Forest Park, Va., Georgetown Prep, Md., and Huntington, W.Va. Odds and ends of the previous weekend No. 4 Mitch Bengtson (St. Cloud Apollo, Minn.) made it five straight championships at the Rumble on the Red with a closer than expected 3-2 victory in the 138-pound final against Weston Droegemueller (Wayzata, Minn.). An upset special occurred in the 113-pound final where Junior National freestyle champion Paul Mascarenas (Cleveland, N.M.) fell by 4-3 decision to Garrett Wangsness (Albert Lea, Minn.); as a result, Mascarenas drops from No. 3 to No. 16 nationally. Then, at 195 pounds, No. 10 Lance Benick (Totino-Grace, Minn.) beat a pair of nationally ranked opponents to win the title; 7-3 over No. 20 Chase Morlock (Morehead, Minn.) in the semifinal and then 6-1 over No. 13 Nate Rotert (Spearfish/Lead-Deadwood, S.D.) in the final. Sharing the team title with 166-1/2 points were Albert Lea and West Fargo, N.D., while Jackson County Central, Minn. finished third with 160. Christian Brothers, Tenn. jumps back into the rankings at No. 49 after their title at the Red Schmitt Holiday Tournament in Granite City, Ill. They scored 665 points to distance themselves from Lincoln-Way Central, Ill. (598), Archer, Ga. (594.5), and previously ranked Neosho, Mo. (478.5). Championships for CBHS were won by Tanner Tidswell (106), Elijah Oliver (113), Nick Gray (126), No. 14 Kaleb Baker (152), and James Walthall (170). Highlighting the individual matchups was the 132-pound final where No. 15 Chris Wilkes (Whitfield, Mo.) needed a late reversal with near falls to defeat No. 20 Nate Rodriguez (Neosho, Mo.) 5-2 at 132 pounds. Even without three-time state champion Dean Heil (132), who is ranked No. 3 nationally, No. 3 St. Edward, Ohio came away with a decisive tournament victory at the Medina Invitational Tournament. The Eagles had five champions -- No. 17 Colin Heffernan (138), No. 3 Edgar Bright (145), No. 10 Markus Scheidel (152), No. 2 Domenic Abounader (182), and Ralph Nichols (285) -- on the way to 286 points. Second in the standings was No. 13 Massillon Perry, Ohio with 237 points, led by lone champion No. 6 Jose Rodriguez (106); a pair of Panthers placed second in David Bavery (120) and Joe Tayse (195), both of whom lost to nationally ranked opponents; while four others earned third place. Finishing third was No. 11 Detroit Catholic Central, Mich. with 225 points despite missing a pair of state placers at 132 and 138 pounds. The Shamrocks were led by a trio of titles from Trevor Zdebski (113), No. 13 Ken Bade (126), and No. 18 Andrew Garcia (170). Despite a lineup that one would have to describe as jumbled and a "mish-mosh," No. 2 Wyoming Seminary, Pa. emerged with a decisive title at the Bethlehem Holiday Wrestling Classic. Led by titles from Nicky Hall (170), No. 1 Eric Morris (182), No. 15 Garrett Ryan (220), and No. 9 Michael Johnson, Jr. (285), the Blue Knights came away with 245 points. That total was more than enough to dominate No. 31 Central Dauphin, Pa. (163) and Phillipsburg, N.J. (157.5) who finished second and third respectively. An individual final of note came at 195 pounds, where for the second straight weekend No. 2 Ryan Solomon (Milton, Pa.) defeated No. 3 Raymond O'Donnell (Saucon Valley, Pa.), this time by a 7-2 score. No. 42 Bergen Catholic, N.J., won the Bergen County Coaches Association Tournament this past weekend, in a field that also included No. 50 Don Bosco Prep, N.J. In the marquee match, it was a battle of freshmen at 106 pounds, as No. 1 Nick Suriano (Bergen Catholic) upended No. 9 Kyle Bierdumpfel (Don Bosco Prep) 2-1 in the ultimate tiebreaker. Also, at 160 pounds, No. 8 Nick Gravina (Northern Highlands, N.J.) won his fourth title at this tournament.
  17. Related Content: Brackets | Placement Match Results The Penn State Nittany Lion wrestling team, ranked No. 1 in the latest InterMat TPI, used a complete team effort to claim its third straight Southern Scuffle crown. Penn State ran away from second place Oklahoma State, posting 178.5 points to 158.0 for the Cowboys. The Nittany Lions used a dominating 5-1 performance in the semifinals to set up a 3-2 run in the finals, crowning three champions. In all, 11 of Penn State's 17 competing wrestlers placed at the event. Sophomore All-American Nico Megaludis (Murrysville, Pa.), ranked No. 2 at 125, began his day with a 3-1 win over No. 10 Nashon Garrett in the semifinals. He then took on No. 8 Matt Snyder of Virginia in the finals and rolled to an 8-4 victory. Megaludis used two takedowns and a reversal in the finals to grab the crown. The Lion freshman gave up all four of his points in the first period and dominated action from there Megaludis went 4-0 over the course of the tournament, improving his record to 12-1. Junior James Vollrath (Richboro, Pa.) entered the tournament as the fifth-seed at 157 and notched the biggest upse4t of the finals, grabbing a 2-1 (tb) win over top-seeded Alex Dieringer of Oklahoma State, ranked No. 8 nationally. Vollrath moved into the finals to face No. 14 Jedd Moore of Virginia. Like his prior bout against a ranked foe, Vollrath took the ranked Tiger into extra time before dropping a hard-fought 3-1 (sv) decision. The second place finish came courtesy of a 4-1 record with two majors. Vollrath is 20-5 overall. Junior All-American David Taylor (St. Paris, Ohio), ranked No. 2 at 165, majored No. 4 Tyler Caldwell of Oklahoma State 11-0 in the semifinal, setting up a match-up with No. 1 Kyle Dake of Cornell in the finals. The duo battled through an even first period, Dake took down to start the second and escaped for a 1-0 lead after two. Taylor chose down in the third and worked his way to a reversal and a 2-1 lead. With just under 1:00 left, the duo rolled out of bounds and Dake was given a reversal by the official after action moved out of the circle. Taylor then worked to escape, while maintaining a riding time edge to grab the win. Dake held on for most of the bout and Taylor was not awarded an escape at the end of the match (and his riding time fell to :59), giving Dake a 3-2 decision. Taylor went 4-1 with two pins and a tech fall to take second. His record now stands at 13-1. Junior All-American Ed Ruth (Harrisburg, Pa.), ranked No. 1 at 184, dominated No. 9 Mike Larson of Missouri in the semis, posting an 11-0 major. He moved into the finals where he took on No. 2 Steve Bosak of Cornell. Ruth wasted no time in establishing his dominance over Bosak, using two first period takedowns to bolt out to a 4-1 lead. He then added a reversal and 2:55 in riding time to coast to the 7-3 win and claim yet another Southern Scuffle title. Ruth went 6-0 at the tournament, notching three pins and two majors. He remains undefeated with a 15-0 record. Senior All-American Quentin Wright (Wingate, Pa.) downed No. 13 Scott Schiller of Minnesota 9-5 in his semifinal bout and met No. 9 Jake Meredith of Arizona State in the finals. After giving up a takedown in the first period on a throw attempt, Wright steadily waited for his chance to pounce. Tied 2-2 in the second, and with Meredith taking down, Wright used a split-scissors to turn the Sun Devil to his back and get the pin at the 5:33 mark to claim the Scuffle crown. Wright was superb on the weekend, going 5-0 with two pins. He improves his undefeated record to 14-0 overall. True freshman Jimmy Gulibon (Latrobe, Pa.) rolled through his first three consolation bouts, picking up a tech fall and a major over No. 16 George DiCamillo in the process. Gulibon, wrestling unattached as the sixth seed, then lost to No. 6 Nathan McCormick of Missouri in the third place bout and took fourth place. He finished the tournament with a 5-2 mark (including one win over a non-collegiate grappler) with three tech falls and a major. Senior James English (York, Pa.) also won his first three bouts of the day in consolation action and, as the 10th-seed, advanced to the bronze medal match where he met Missouri's Drake Houdashelt. English used two takedowns and relentless pressure to post the 5-2 win and take third place. The senior went 6-1 overall at the tournament with a pin and a forfeit victory. English is now 13-2 on the year. Senior Bryan Pearsall (Lititz, Pa.) entered the tournament unseeded but had a fine showing. Pearsall went 4-3 overall, including a win over No. 15 Justin LaValle of Old Dominion in consolation action, and placed eighth at 141. Red-shirt freshman Luke Frey (Montoursville, Pa.), also unseeded, was superb at 149 for Penn State, posting a 4-2 mark with three majors and placing seventh. Sophomore Jimmy Lawson (Tom's River, N.J.) split his opening consolation bouts and wrestled for seventh place. He met No. 14 Levi Cooper of Arizona State for seventh and rolled to an 11-7 win, going 4-2 and taking seventh. In addition to those top performances, the entire Nittany Lion contingent picked up wins at the event. Red-shirt freshman Jordan Conaway (Abbottstown, Pa.) was Penn State's scoring wrestler at 133. Conaway lost his first consolation bout of the day and ended his initial Southern Scuffle run with a 1-2 mark. True freshman Zack Beitz (Mifflintown, Pa.) did not compete in consolation action on day two, taking a medical forfeit (non-loss) as a precaution. Beitz, wrestling unattached, finished his first Scuffle with a 3-1 mark at 141. Senior Nick Fischer (Unionville, Pa.) dropped his first conso bout, losing 7-0 to No. 15 Zach Toal of Missouri. Fischer ended his tournament with a 3-2 mark. Sophomore Jon Gingrich (Wingate, Pa.) dropped a tough 9-3 decision to No. 17 Jeremy Johnson of Ohio in his conso bout today and ended his tourney run with a 2-2 mark. Yesterday, freshman James Frascella (Carmel, Ind.) went 1-2 at 174 and Nick Ruggear (Oxford, Pa.) went 2-2 at 285. Penn State went 5-1 in the semis, setting up its 3-2 run in the finals. In consolation action, the Nittany Lions combined to go 14-8, giving the team a 22-11 mark on day two. Penn State's 11 placers (of 17 competing wrestlers) included three champs, two second placers, two third place finishers, a fourth place finisher, two sevenths and an eighth. Penn State posted a 63-24 overall record through the two-day tournament with 12 pins, four tech falls and 13 majors as well as two forfeits. 31 of Penn State's 63 wins were for bonus points. Penn State's third straight team title makes it the third team in Scuffle history to win (or share) three crowns (joining Minnesota and Cornell). Penn State returns to action on Sunday, Jan. 13, 2013, when Michigan State invades Rec Hall for a 2 p.m. meeting. Penn State's full season of home duals is sold out but limited Standing Room Only tickets are available for select dual meets. For information on which duals have a limited number of SRO tickets available and to purchase tickets, fans can call 1-800-NITTANY or visit the Bryce Jordan Center ticket office windows from 10 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Fans are encouraged to follow Penn State wrestling via twitter at www.twitter.com/pennstateWREST and on Penn State Wrestling's facebook page at www.facebook.com/pennstatewrestling. The 2012-13 Penn State Wrestling season is presented by The Family Clothesline. 2013 SOUTHERN SCUFFLE FINAL TEAM STANDINGS TOP FOUR TEAMS: Wednesday, January 2, 2013 - Chattanooga, Tenn. 1: PENN STATE - 178.5 2: Oklahoma State - 158.0 3: Missouri - 147.5 4: Minnesota - 139.5
  18. 125: 1st: No. 2 Nico Megaludis (Penn State) dec. No. 8 Matt Snyder (Virginia), 8-4 3rd: No. 10 Nahshon Garrett (Cornell) maj. dec. Josh Martinez (Air Force), 17-5 5th: No. 13 Jerome Robinson (Old Dominion) dec. Rob Deutsch (Old Dominion), 4-2 7th: Eric Montoya (Campbell) dec. No. 20 David Terao (American), 4-2 SV 133: 1st: No. 8 Jon Morrison (Oklahoma State) dec. No. 5 Christopher Dardanes (Minnesota), 3-2 3rd: No. 7 Nathan McCormick (Missouri) pinned Jimmy Gulibon (Penn State), 4:44 5th: No. 15 George DiCamillo (Virginia) won by medical forfeit over Zach Watson (Virginia) 7th: Mark Grey (Unattached) dec. Jordan Thome (Army), 2-0 141: 1st: No. 9 Mike Nevinger (Cornell) dec. No. 4 K. Undrakhbayar (The Citadel), 3-2 3rd: No. 11 Nick Dardanes (Minnesota) dec. Chris Mecate (Old Dominion University), 10-4 5th: Connor Hanafee (Army) dec. Julian Feikert (Oklahoma State), 7-4 7th: Dean Pavlou (Chattanooga) dec. Bryan Pearsall (Penn State), 4-2 149: 1st: No. 1 Jordan Oliver (Oklahoma State) maj. dec. No. 5 Cole VonOhlen (Air Force), 21-8 3rd: James English (Penn State) dec. No. 18 Drake Houdashelt (Missouri), 5-2 5th: No. 17 Chris Villalonga (Cornell) won by medical forfeit over No. 2 Dylan Ness (Minnesota) 7th: Luke Frey (Penn State) dec. Dustin Walraven (South Dakota State), 4-3 157: 1st: No. 16 Jedd Moore (Virginia) dec. James Vollrath (Penn State), 3-1 SV 3rd: No. 8 Alex Dieringer (Oklahoma State) dec. Kyle Bradley (Missouri), 3-2 5th: Daniel Zilverberg (Minnesota) dec. Spartak Chino (Ohio), 11-8 7th: Robert Burg (Navy) dec. Matthew Frisch (The Citadel), 7-6 165: 1st: No. 1 Kyle Dake (Cornell) dec. No. 2 David Taylor (Penn State), 3-2 3rd: No. 3 Tyler Caldwell (Oklahoma State) dec. No. 7 Nick Sulzer (Virginia), 5-2 5th: No. 12 Zach Toal (Missouri) pinned Zachary Strickland (Appalachian State), 2:12 7th: No. 10 Cody Yohn (Minnesota) dec. Harrison Hightower (Ohio), 5-2 174: 1st: No. 1 Chris Perry (Oklahoma State) dec. No. 4 Logan Storley (Minnesota), 7-6 3rd: No. 3 Matt Brown (Penn State) dec. No. 16 Jon Fausey (Virginia), 10-3 5th: Todd Porter (Missouri) won by medical forfeit over No. 14 Blake Stauffer (Arizona State) 7th: No. 18 Cody Walters (Ohio) dec. Marshall Peppelman (Cornell), 4-1 184: 1st: No. 1 Ed Ruth (Penn State) dec. No. 2 Steve Bosak (Cornell), 7-3 3rd: No. 3 Kevin Steinhaus (Minnesota) dec. No. 10 Mike Larson (Missouri), 7-3 5th: No. 12 Chris Chionuma (Oklahoma State) dec. No. 15 Kevin Radford (Arizona State), 9-3 7th: John Eblen (Missouri) dec. Mason Bailey (Navy), 6-3 SV 197: 1st: No. 3 Quentin Wright (Penn State) pinned No. 8 Jake Meredith (Arizona State), 5:34 3rd: No. 13 Brent Haynes (Missouri) dec. Phillip Wellington (Ohio), 4-3 5th: No. 14 Scott Schiller (Minnesota) dec. Conner Hartmann (Duke), 8-3 7th: Jace Bennett (Cornell ) dec. Joshua Mohr (Air Force), 9-3 285: 1st: No. 2 Dom Bradley (Missouri) dec. No. 1 Tony Nelson (Minnesota), 2-1 TB 3rd: Nick Gwiazdowski (North Carolina State) won by medical forfeit over No. 3 Alan Gelogaev (Oklahoma State) 5th: No. 17 Jeremy Johnson (Ohio) won by medical forfeit over No. 16 Andrew Delaney (The Citadel) 7th: No. 15 Jimmy Lawson (Penn State) pinned No. 14 Levi Cooper (Arizona State), 6:11
  19. 125: No. 2 Nico Megaludis (Penn State) vs. No. 8 Matt Snyder (Virginia) Previous Meetings: Megaludis defeated Snyder 4-1 on Jan. 1, 2012. 133: No. 5 Chris Dardanes (Minnesota) vs. No. 8 Jon Morrison (Oklahoma State) Previous Meetings: Dardanes defeated Morrison 3-1 SV on Dec. 2, 2012. 141: No. 4 K. Undrakhbayar (The Citadel) vs. No. 9 Mike Nevinger (Cornell) Previous Meetings: K. Undrakhbayar and Nevinger have not met in college. 149: No. 1 Jordan Oliver (Oklahoma State) vs. No. 5 Cole VonOhlen (Air Force) Previous Meetings: Oliver and VonOhlen have not met in college. 157: No. 16 Jedd Moore (Virginia) vs. James Vollrath (Penn State) Previous Meetings: Moore and Vollrath have not met in college. 165: No. 1 Kyle Dake (Cornell) vs. No. 2 David Taylor (Penn State) Previous Meetings: Dake defeated Taylor 2-1 TB on Nov. 3, 2012. 174: No. 1 Chris Perry (Oklahoma State) vs. No. 4 Logan Storley (Minnesota) Previous Meetings: Perry defeated Storley 4-0 on Feb. 19, 2012. 184: No. 1 Ed Ruth (Penn State) vs. No. 2 Steve Bosak (Cornell) Previous Meetings: Ruth and Bosak have not met in college. 197: No. 3 Quentin Wright (Penn State) vs. No. 8 Jake Meredith (Arizona State) Previous Meetings: Wright and Meredith have not met in college. 285: No. 1 Tony Nelson (Minnesota) vs. No. 2 Dom Bradley (Missouri) Previous Meetings: Nelson and Bradley have not met in college.
  20. 125: No. 2 Nico Megaludis (Penn State) dec. No. 10 Nahshon Garrett (Cornell), 3-1 No. 8 Matt Snyder (Virginia) pinned Josh Martinez (Air Force), 1:40 133: No. 5 Chris Dardanes (Minnesota) dec. No. 15 George DiCamillo (Virginia), 3-1 SV No. 8 Jon Morrison (Oklahoma State) dec. No. 7 Nathan McCormick (Missouri), 3-1 141: No. 9 Mike Nevinger (Cornell) dec. No. 11 Nick Dardanes (Minnesota), 7-5 No. 4 K. Undrakhbayar (The Citadel) dec. Chris Mecate (Old Dominion), 3-1 149: No. 1 Jordan Oliver (Oklahoma State) tech. fall No. 17 Chris Villalonga (Cornell), 18-3 No. 5 Cole VonOhlen (Air Force) dec. No. 2 Dylan Ness (Minnesota), 10-5 157: James Vollrath (Penn State) dec. No. 8 Alex Dieringer (Oklahoma State), 2-1 TB No. 16 Jedd Moore (Virginia) dec. Kyle Bradley (Missouri), 2-0 165: No. 1 Kyle Dake (Cornell) pinned No. 7 Nick Sulzer (Virginia), 1:21 No. 2 David Taylor (Penn State) maj. dec. No. 3 Tyler Caldwell (Oklahoma State), 10-0 174: No. 1 Chris Perry (Oklahoma State) won by medical forfeit over No. 14 Blake Stauffer (Arizona State) No. 4 Logan Storley (Minnesota) pinned No. 3 Matt Brown (Penn State), 4:06 184: No. 1 Ed Ruth (Penn State) maj. dec. No. 10 Mike Larson (Missouri), 11-0 No. 2 Steve Bosak (Cornell) dec. No. 3 Kevin Steinhaus (Minnesota), 2-0 197: No. 3 Quentin Wright (Penn State) dec. No. 14 Scott Schiller (Minnesota), 9-5 No. 8 Jake Meredith (Arizona State) dec. Phillip Wellington (Ohio), 4-2 285: No. 1 Tony Nelson (Minnesota) dec. Nick Gwiazdowski (North Carolina State, Unattached), 4-1 No. 2 Dom Bradley (Missouri) dec. No. 3 Alan Gelogaev (Oklahoma State), 2-1
  21. 125: No. 2 Nico Megaludis (Penn State) vs. No. 10 Nahshon Garrett (Cornell) No. 8 Matt Snyder (Virginia) vs. Josh Martinez (Air Force) 133: No. 5 Chris Dardanes (Minnesota) vs. No. 15 George DiCamillo (Virginia) No. 7 Nathan McCormick (Missouri) vs. No. 8 Jon Morrison (Oklahoma State) 141: No. 9 Mike Nevinger (Cornell) vs. No. 11 Nick Dardanes (Minnesota) No. 4 K. Undrakhbayar (The Citadel) vs. Chris Mecate (Old Dominion) 149: No. 1 Jordan Oliver (Oklahoma State) vs. No. 17 Chris Villalonga (Cornell) No. 2 Dylan Ness (Minnesota) vs. No. 5 Cole VonOhlen (Air Force) 157: No. 8 Alex Dieringer (Oklahoma State) vs. James Vollrath (Penn State) No. 16 Jedd Moore (Virginia) vs. Kyle Bradley (Missouri) 165: No. 1 Kyle Dake (Cornell) vs. No. 7 Nick Sulzer (Virginia) No. 2 David Taylor (Penn State) vs. No. 3 Tyler Caldwell (Oklahoma State) 174: No. 1 Chris Perry (Oklahoma State) vs. No. 14 Blake Stauffer (Arizona State) No. 3 Matt Brown (Penn State) vs. No. 4 Logan Storley (Minnesota) 184: No. 1 Ed Ruth (Penn State) vs. No. 10 Mike Larson (Missouri) No. 2 Steve Bosak (Cornell) vs. No. 3 Kevin Steinhaus (Minnesota) 197: No. 3 Quentin Wright (Penn State) vs. No. 14 Scott Schiller (Minnesota) No. 8 Jake Meredith (Arizona State) vs. Phillip Wellington (Ohio) 285: No. 1 Tony Nelson (Minnesota) vs. Nick Gwiazdowski (North Carolina State, Unattached) No. 2 Dom Bradley (Missouri) vs. No. 3 Alan Gelogaev (Oklahoma State)
  22. 125: No. 2 Nico Megaludis (Penn State) dec. No. 20 David Terao (American), 9-3 No. 10 Nahshon Garrett (Cornell) maj. dec. Rob Deutsch (Old Dominion), 11-2 No. 8 Matt Snyder (Virginia) pinned No. 13 Jerome Robinson (Old Dominion), 3:44 Josh Martinez (Air Force) dec. No. 7 David Thorn (Minnesota), 13-9 SV 133: No. 5 Chris Dardanes (Minnesota) dec. Joseph Martinez (Unattached, Virginia), 11-5 No. 15 George DiCamillo (Virginia) dec. Jordan Conaway (Penn State), 6-5 No. 8 Jon Morrison (Oklahoma State) dec. Jimmy Gulibon (Unattached, Penn State), 9-5 No. 7 Nathan McCormick (Missouri) dec. Mark Grey (Unattached), 6-1 141: No. 9 Mike Nevinger (Cornell) maj. dec. Dean Pavlou (Chattanooga), 10-0 No. 11 Nick Dardanes (Minnesota) dec. Tyler Rauenzahn (Army), 7-4 Chris Mecate (Old Dominion) dec. Julian Feikert (Oklahoma State), 3-1 SV No. 4 K. Undrakhbayar (The Citadel) dec. No. 14 Justin LaValle (Old Dominion), 5-3 SV 149: No. 1 Jordan Oliver (Oklahoma State) dec. James English (Penn State), 12-6 No. 17 Chris Villalonga (Cornell) dec. Thomas Gantt (North Carolina), 6-0 No. 5 Cole VonOhlen (Air Force) dec. No. 18 Drake Houdashelt (Missouri), 9-7 No. 2 Dylan Ness (Minnesota) dec. Luke Frey (Penn State), 9-4 157: No. 8 Alex Dieringer (Oklahoma State) dec. Nestor Taffur (Boston), 6-4 James Vollrath (Penn State) maj. dec. Matthew Frisch (The Citadel), 11-3 Kyle Bradley (Missouri) dec. No. 17 Joshua Kreimier (Air Force), 3-2 No. 16 Jedd Moore (Virginia) dec. Dallas Bailey (Oklahoma State), 7-2 165: No. 1 Kyle Dake (Cornell) pinned Nijel Jones (North Carolina State), 3:50 No. 7 Nick Sulzer (Virginia) dec. Cody Yohn (Minnesota), 8-5 No. 3 Tyler Caldwell (Oklahoma State) dec. Zach Toal (Missouri), 3-1 No. 2 David Taylor (Penn State) pinned Paul Hancock (Army), 4:38 174: No. 1 Chris Perry (Oklahoma State) dec. Todd Porter (Missouri), 8-3 No. 14 Blake Stauffer (Arizona State) pinned No. 15 Matt Miller (Navy), 5:00 No. 3 Matt Brown (Penn State) maj. dec. No. 18 Cody Walters (Ohio), 16-8 No. 4 Logan Storley (Minnesota) pinned Turtogtokh Luvsandorj (The Citadel, Unattached), 6:29 184: No. 1 Ed Ruth (Penn State) maj. dec. Stephen Doty (Virginia), 13-4 No. 10 Mike Larson (Missouri) dec. No. 12 Chris Chionuma (Oklahoma State) No. 3 Kevin Steinhaus (Minnesota) pinned No. 15 Kevin Radford (Arizona State), 1:23 No. 2 Steve Bosak (Cornell) dec. John Eblen (Missouri), 4-1 197: No. 3 Quentin Wright (Penn State) dec. Conner Hartmann (Duke), 9-2 No. 14 Scott Schiller (Minnesota) dec. Paul Rands (Navy, Utttached), 9-4 No. 8 Jake Meredith (Arizona State) dec. Nikolas Brown (Chattanooga), 7-5 Phillip Wellington (Ohio) dec. No. 13 Brent Haynes (Missouri), 5-2 285: No. 1 Tony Nelson (Minnesota) dec. No. 16 Odie Delaney (The Citadel), 4-2 Nick Gwiazdowski (North Carolina State, Unattached) tech. fall No. 14 Levi Cooper (Arizona State), 17-1 No. 3 Alan Gelogaev (Oklahoma State) dec. No. 15 Jimmy Lawson (Penn State), 8-1 No. 2 Dom Bradley (Missouri) dec. Jon Gingrich (Penn State), 3-2
  23. This is the Midlands edition of my weekly roundup. Please note that this is a tool for tracking the results of wrestlers currently ranked by InterMat. As this is the case, I am not afforded the luxury of discussing the results of redshirts and post grads. This is best used as a companion to the Midlands final brackets sheet. 125: Personally, I am a big Jarrod Garnett fan and I hope that his win, via whirly bird, over Jesse Delgado in the finals here is a signal that he will be standing on the NCAA podium at the end of the year. Great finals match, even if it was low scoring. Third-ranked Jesse Delgado, Illinois -- runner-up Fifth-ranked Trent Sprenkle, NDSU -- fifth Sixth-ranked Jarrod Garnett, VT -- champion 11th-ranked Christian Cullinan, CMU -- third 12th-ranked Nathan Kraisser, NC State -- DNP 14th-ranked Shane Gentry, Maryland -- DNP 16th-ranked Dom Malone, Northwestern -- DNP 17th-ranked Mark Rappo, Penn -- DNP 133: The finals here between Ryan Mango and Daniel Dennis was the match of the night, too bad it is outside the focus of my roundup. Tons of tough wrestlers didn't place at this weight class. Second-ranked Scott Sentes, CMU -- eighth Fourth-ranked AJ Schopp, Edinboro -- fifth Ninth-ranked Cody Brewer, OU- DNP 10th-ranked Daryl Thomas, Illinois -- DNP 11th-ranked Geoff Alexander, Maryland -- DNP 12th-ranked Shelton Mack, Pitt -- DNP 13th-ranked Levi Wolfensperger, UNI -- DNP 15th-ranked Levi Mele, Northwestern -- DNP Kendric Maple (Photo/OU Sports Information)141: Kendric Maple is really, really good and he handles B.J. Futrell again. Futrell may be the second best 141-pounder in the country. Top-ranked Kendric Maple, OU -- champion Third-ranked B.J. Futrell, Illinois -- runner-up Fourth-ranked Mitchell Port, Edinboro -- fifth Fifth-ranked Evan Henderson, UNC -- DNP Seventh-ranked Mike Mangrum, Ore St -- third Eighth-ranked Zach Neibert, VT -- DNP Ninth-ranked Tyler Graff, UW -- third at 133 13th-ranked Luke Vaith, Hofstra -- DNP 16th-ranked C.J. Cobb, Penn -- DNP 19th-ranked Ridge Kiley, Nebraska -- DNP 149: Nick Brascetta is for real. The Virginia Tech sophomore upends Montell Marrion in the semis, then he puts together a nice match in the finals, beating the No. 3 149-pounder in the country, Donnie Vinson. Third-ranked Donnie Vinson, Binghamton -- runner-up Eighth-ranked Nick Brascetta, VT -- champion 11th-ranked Nick Lester, OU -- fifth 12th-ranked Eric Grajales, Michigan -- sixth 15th-ranked Steve Santos, Columbia -- fourth 16th-ranked David Habat, Edinboro -- DNP 157: Jason Welch takes care of business against a very tough Joey Napoli. Isaac Jordan of Wisconsin wrestles to a shocking 3rd place finish. Second-ranked Jason Welch, Northwestern -- champion Third-ranked James Fleming, Clarion- DNP Fourth-ranked Joey Napoli, Lehigh -- runner-up Sixth-ranked Jesse Dong, VT -- fifth Walter Peppelman, Harvard- DNP 12th-Matt Lester, OU -- seventh 13th-ranked Jake O'Hara, Columbia -- DNP 165: Bubby Graham, who has been quietly good for a while, is now a Midlands champion. Third-ranked Pete Yates, VT -- third Fifth-ranked Bubby Graham, OU -- champion Sixth-ranked Steven Monk, NDSU -- fourth Eighth-ranked Conrad Polz, Illinois -- fifth 11th-ranked Pierce Harger, Northwestern -- DNP 12th-ranked Tyler Wilps, Pitt -- DNP 16th-ranked Taylor Massa, Michigan -- seventh 17th-ranked Mark Lewandowski, Buffalo -- sixth 18th-ranked Johny Greisheimer, Edinboro -- DNP 20th-ranked Mike Ottinger, CMU -- DNP 174: Roger Kokesh keeps cranking out the quality results. He's having a great year. Nice run to the finals by Nate Brown. Fifth-ranked Jordan Blanton, Illinois -- third Eighth-ranked Roger Kokesh, Nebraska -- champion Ninth-ranked Lee Munster, Northwestern -- fifth 12th-ranked Dan Yates, Michigan -- sixth 17th-ranked John Martin Cannon, Buffalo -- fourth 18th-ranked Stephen West, Columbia -- DNP 19th-ranked Nate Brown, Lehigh -- runner-up 184: Ben Bennet reminds us why he is a four time All American. He is my pick to make it to the NCAA finals against Ed Ruth. Third-ranked Robert Hamlin, Lehigh -- runner-up Fifth-ranked Ben Bennett, CMU -- champion Sixth-ranked Jimmy Sheptock, Maryland -- fifth 10th-ranked Ryan Loder, UNI -- fourth 11th-ranked Tony Dallago, Illinois -- DNP 16th-ranked Boaz Beard, ISU -- DNP 17th-ranked Mac Stoll, NDSU -- DNP 197: No. 1 and 2 wrestlers were on a collision course, but in the end Dustin Kilgore shows why he is a national champ. Nice tournament for ISU's Kyven Gadson who gets fourth. That program needs the good news. Top-ranked Dustin Kilgoe, Kent State -- champion Second-ranked Matt Wilps, Pitt -- runner-up Fifth-ranked Mario Gonzalez, Illinois -- fifth Sixth-ranked Nate Schiedel, Binghamton -- DNP 11th ranked Taylor Meeks, Oregon State -- third 15th-ranked Braden Atwood, Purdue- DNP 16th-ranked Kyven Gadson, ISU -- fourth 17th-ranked Christian Boley, Maryland -- DNP 285: Chad Hanke makes good on all the potential he has shown as a redshirt and during the freestyle season, he is now a Midlands champion. Fourth-ranked Jarod Trice, CMU -- co-fifth Sixth-ranked Zach Thomusseit, Pitt -- runner-up Eighth-ranked Chad Hanke, Oregon State-- champion Ninth-ranked Mike McMullan, Northwestern -- co-fifth 11th-ranked Connor Medbery, Wisconsin -- third 12th-ranked Adam Chalfant, Indianna -- DNP 18th-ranked Matt Gibson, ISU -- DNP 20th-ranked Ernest James, Edinboro -- DNP
  24. The Golden Anniversary Midlands tournament is in the books. What did we learn? Who were the big winners and losers? Here are four takeaways from the weekend. New year's freshman class The weekend's attention centered around top-ranked wrestlers like Dustin Kilgore and Kendric Maple, but the real studs were the unattached freshman who were wrestling well in their first Midlands. We already knew that Corey Clark of Iowa had the ability to compete at the highest level after his 6-1 decision win over Jesse Delgado two weeks ago, but it was unclear how he'd handle a difficult two days of wrestling. Though he dropped a close match to eventual Midlands champion Jarrod Garnett of Virginia Tech, Clark showed fans that he'll be a top three ranked wrestler next season ready to compete for the NCAA title, by handling fellow redshirt and All-American Jarrod Patterson (Oklahoma). He's poised and with a year of coaches focused on his progress it's evident he'll be one of the nation's best in 2013-2014. No less impressive was Jason Tsirtsis, Nothwestern's stud 141-pound redshirt and former top recruit. The eighth-seeded Tsirtsis knocked off fifth-seeded Luke Vaith (Hofstra) 10-1 and gave Kendric Maple all he could handle in a 7-5 quarterfinals loss. He then beat Virginia Tech's Zach Neibert 5-3 before losing to fifth-ranked Evan Henderson of North Carolina, and falling again to take eighth. Though Tsirtsis didn't finish his tournament strong, it was his first appearance on the mats at 141 pounds and only his third collegiate tournament overall. Coaching matters One the favorite gripes among collegiate wrestling coaches and media had been the attention Illinois assistant coach Mark Perry had earned since he started his coaching career a few years ago with Cal Poly. "Why does everyone think this guy is worth the money/time?" Well, those naysayers have capitulated to the idea that Perry, though at times still abrasive, is one of the very best assistant coaches in the country. Mark Perry is in his second season as associate head coach at Illinois (Photo/Tony Rotundo, WrestlersAreWarriors.com)Looking at Cal Poly during his stint as assistant, and the guys who stayed loyal to him and transferred to Champagne-Urbana, are both good signs that he inspires his wrestlers to perform their very best every weekend. Add to his accomplishments a top five recruiting class and now a Midlands team title and it's easy to see Perry becoming the first name on every AD short list in April. This isn't to take ANYTHING away from Jim Heffernan, who was not only a stud wrestler, but who is managing his team with expertise and stoic leadership. I talked to a former two-time Illini All-American and former coach recently who told me that his career was made by Heffernan and that his deepest loyalties in the sport are with him. Perry is earning a lot of the attention, but Heff also deserves a hat tip or two. Pat Santoro's Lehigh Mountain Hawks also wrestled well at Midlands, putting three into the finals. Nathaniel Brown wrestled into the finals from the No. 9 seed knocking off two-time All-American Jordan Blanton in the quarterfinals and Michigan's Dan Yates in the semifinals before falling to Nebraska's Robert Kokesh in the finals. Brown shows that the in-the-room development Santoro is known for has persisted and we can expect his team to once again compete for a top ten finish at NCAA's. Other programs whose coaches are making a noticeable positive impact: Carl Fronhofer's Columbia squad finished in 15th, ahead of a few Big Ten schools. Steve Santos is an All-American candidate, but his entire team performed, earning the most bonus points of any school in the first two rounds of the tournament. Central Michigan's Tom Borrelli is a Hall of Fame coach. Every year he makes it work, and this year is no different. His team finished fifth despite some late setbacks. Kevin Dresser's Virginia Tech team is one of the most consistently impressive in college wrestling. They improve every year and each season fans are treated to the emergence of another star. The 2013 campaign is about Nick Brascetta whose counter offense is among the best in the country. Against Donnie Vinson, Brascetta found three counter high crotches, two on the edge that not only allowed him to score, but made Vinson's future attacks limited to one for fear of losing position and being exposed to yet another counter attack by the VT star. Overall the team finished runner-up, two points out of the championship and with two champs: Garnett and Brasccetta. Take top If you didn't think riding tough on top mattered before Midlands, it was impossible to deny after watching the finals. Kendric Maple put a saddle on B.J. Futrell, racking up more than four minutes of non-stalling ride time. "You can't get out, you can't score," and when your opponent has the match's only takedown it's impossible to even the odds. The riding extended to 157 where Jason Welch used a low ankle bow and arrow ride to look for a turk and keep Lehigh's Joey Napoli's chest flat on the mat. That alone ran out the second period and tacked on to the two-point takedown at the end of the first was essentially a four-point margin (no escape, plus ride time). At 174 Kokesh was first being ridden before earning a reversal and grinding out Brown for three minutes of ride time. It happened throughout the tournament as it has throughout the entire season. Riding is the new difference maker. The long and lanky guys who once were told to ride legs as their advantage have diversified their attacks and are working a half ride from the side (as opposed to the riskier crab ride) and keeping opponents knees and hips tight to the mat. Once flat we're seeing more turk attempts and better pressure. Look at the body type and styles of many of the top wrestlers this season: Matt McDonough, Kendric Maple, Derek St. John, Kyle Dake/David Taylor, and Ed Ruth all focus on their top games, have longer bodies and can score from their feet. It's a total game approach that's become necessary to win at the next level. Sure, there are still your stout wrestlers like Chris Perry and Logan Stieber, but they are now the exception. Oh, and Stieber ain't bad from top, either. Televised finals Unbelievable. Though the HD came without sound via Comcast, the Big Ten Network aired the finals LIVE to more than 50 million households around the country. Ben Askren and Jordan Burroughs, states apart, were tweeting their same joy, that they could watch an incredible finals LIVE on television. Wrestling is always looking for validation that we've made an impression, and last night we received our validation that on a Sunday night when they could have played college basketball against the most-watched NFL game of the season (Redskins vs. Cowboys), but instead chose to air Midlands. It's unclear right now what the share was, but it was nice to see the evening dedicated to wrestling with ads by Asics, Cliff Keen and J. Robinson camps. Keep up the good work, wrestling fans!
  25. The preseeds were released for the 2013 Southern Scuffle, which takes place Jan. 1-2 at McKenzie Arena in Chattanooga. 125: 1. Nico Megaludis -- Penn State 2. David Thorn -- Minnesota 3. Matt Snyder -- UVa. 4. Nahshon Garrett -- Cornell 5. Nick Soto -- UTC 6. Jerome Robinson -- ODU 7. Josh Martinez -- AFA 8. Dominic Parisi -- Appalachian State 9. David Terao -- American 10. Brian Bokoski -- UNC 133: 1. Chris Dardanes -- Minnesota 2. Nick McCormick -- Missouri 3. Jon Morrison -- Oklahoma State 4. George Dicamillo -- UVa. 5. Scott Festejo -- ODU 6. James Guilbon -- Penn State 7. Mark Grey -- Unattached 8. Jake Smith -- Appalachian State 9. Joey Ward -- UNC 10. Joe Martinez -- UVa. 11. Jordan Thome -- ARMY 12. Brandon Gambucci -- DUKE 141: 1. Michael Nevinger -- Cornell 2. K. Undrakhbayar -- The Citadel 3. Julian Feikert -- Oklahoma State 4. Nick Dardanes -- Minnesota 5. Nick Hucke -- Missouri 6. Chris Mecate -- ODU 7. Justin Lavalle -- ODU 8. Dean Pavlou -- UTC 9. Nick Flannery -- Ohio 10. Joe Spisak -- UVa. 149: 1. Jordan Oliver -- Oklahoma State 2. Dylan Ness -- Minnesota 3. Cole VonOhlen -- AFA 4. Daniel Young -- Army 5. Derek Valenti -- UVa. 6. Chris Villalonga -- Cornell 7. Justin Gonzalez -- Northern Colorado 8. Drake Houdashelt -- Missouri 9. Gus Sako -- Unattached 10. James English -- Penn State 11. Seth Lange -- Minnesota 157: 1. Alex Dieringer -- Oklahoma State 2. Jedd Moore -- Uva. 3. Joshua Kreimier -- AFA 4. Bobby Barnhisel -- Navy 5. James Vollrath -- Penn State 6. Jesse Shanaman -- Cornell 7. Kyle Bradley -- Missouri 8. David Zilverberg -- Minnesota 165: 1. Kyle Dake -- Cornell 2. David Taylor -- Penn State 3. Tyler Caldwell --Oklahoma State 4. Nick Sulzer -- UVa. 5. Cody Yohn -- Minnesota 6. Zach Toal -- Missouri 7. Josh Condon -- UTC 8. Corey Mock -- UNC 9. Nijel Jones -- NC State 10. Peyton Walsh -- Navy 11. Gabe Martinez -- AFA 174: 1. Chris Perry -- Oklahoma State 2. Logan Storley -- Minnesota 3. Matt Brown -- Penn State 4. Matt Miller -- Navy 5. Blake Stauffer -- Arizona State 6. Cody Walters -- Ohio 7. Turtogtokh Luvsandorj -- The Citadel 8. Todd Porter -- Missouri 9. Jon Fausey -- UVa. 10. George Pickett -- Cornell 11. Marshall Peppelman -- Cornell 12. Coleman Gracey -- Army 184: 1. Ed Ruth -- Penn State 2. Steve Bosak -- Cornell 3. Kevin Steinhaus -- Minnesota 4. Mike Larson -- Missouri 5. Chris Chionuma -- Oklahoma State 6. Kevin Radford -- Arizona State 7. Mason Bailey -- Navy 8. Konner Witt -- AFA 197: 1. Quentin Wright -- Penn State 2. Brent Haynes -- Missouri 3. Jake Meredith -- Arizona State 4. Scott Schiller -- Minnesota 5. Jace Bennett -- Cornell 6. Niko Brown -- UTC 7. Michael Salopek -- UVa. 8. Conner Hartman -- Duke 9. Craig Scott -- Cornell 285: 1. Tony Nelson -- Minnesota 2. Dom Bradley -- Missouri 3. Alan Gelogaev -- Oklahoma State 4. Nick Gwiazdowski -- NC State 5. Levi Cooper -- Arizona State 6. James Lawson -- Penn State 7. Jonathan Gingrich -- Penn State 8. Odie Delaney -- The Citadel 9. Jeremy Johnson -- Ohio 10. Stryker Lane -- Conrnell
×
×
  • Create New...