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InterMat Staff

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  1. OREM, Utah -- University of Wyoming 133-pound redshirt freshman Zach Zehner (Tomahawk, Wis./Tomahawk HS) has been named the Western Wrestling Conference Wrestler of the Week after defeating a ranked opponent last week. The conference award was announced Tuesday by the league. Zehner was one of four Cowboys to win matches in Wyoming's dual versus No. 21 Nebraska last Saturday. Zehner, who was ranked 16th, took on the Cornhuskers' 18th-ranked Ridge Kiley in the 133-pound bout. Zehner earned an escape point at the beginning of the second period to take a 1-0 lead. Kiley then went ahead 2-1 after a takedown, but Zehner got a reversal to retake the lead at 3-2 entering the third period. Kiley picked up a late escape point to tie it, but Zehner earned a riding time point to win 4-3. The Wyoming grappler is now 4-2 on the year against ranked opponents and the victory also marked Zehner's third-straight win over Kiley this season. Zehner's victory gave the Cowboys a 9-3 advantage in the dual, but the Pokes eventually fell to the Huskers, 19-15. The WWC weekly honor is Zehner's first of his career and the fourth weekly conference award won by a Wyoming grappler this season. The Western Wrestling Conference, which is in its sixth year of competition, is comprised of seven schools including the Air Force Academy, North Dakota State, Northern Colorado, Northern Iowa, South Dakota State, Utah Valley and Wyoming. 2011-12 WWC Wrestlers of the Week Nov. 9 - Cole VonOhlen (Air Force) Nov. 15 - Shane Onufer (Wyoming) Nov. 22 - Kasey Garnhart (Wyoming)/Steven Monk (North Dakota State) Nov. 29 - Ryan Loder (Northern Iowa) Dec. 6 - Joe LeBlanc (Wyoming) Dec. 13 - Zach Zehner (Wyoming)
  2. Most UFC fighters are anxious to know if and when they'll receive another opponent, Vitor Belfort now knows his next two. The former UFC champion and one of the most popular fighters in Brazil, Silva is scheduled to face Anthony Rumble Johnson at UFC 142, but was today tabbed as coach "The Ultimate Fighter: Brazil." Squaring off against the coach will be 35-year-old former PRIDE Champion Wanderlei Silva. Belfort (20-9 MMA, 9-5 UFC) and Silva (34-11-1 MMA, 4-6 UFC) met 14 years ago at UFC 17.5, with then 20-year-old Belfort earning the knockout in just :46 and the prospect of a rematch has been a fan-favorite ever since. Fighters are being selected in training sessions, including one this week in Sao Paolo with UFC matchmaker Joe Silva and UFC President Dana White in attendance. "TUF: Brazil" will be the first international edition of the popular reality series. It's expected to be played in the United States on FUEL TV and internationally by Globo.
  3. COLUMBIA, Mo. -- Mizzou sophomore Alan Waters was named Big 12 Wrestler of the Week, as announced Monday afternoon by the league office. It's the first career weekly honor for Missouri's 125 pounder, and the first honoree for the Tigers since Todd Schavrien won last December. Alan WatersWaters went 5-0 at the Kaufman-Brand Open last Sunday, Dec. 4, with four of his matches coming via first period falls. His fifth win, coming in the championship bout, was won by technical fall. On Friday against No. 20 Kent State, Waters opened the dual with a dominating 12-1 major decision victory over No. 2 Nic Bedelyon. Waters opened the scoring with a takedown midway through the first period, and tilted Bedelyon to the mat twice for a pair of three point nearfalls to take a commanding 8-0 lead. After a scoreless second period, Waters worked an escape and another takedown to go with riding time. The Kansas City, Mo., native is 8-0 on the season (3-0 in duals), with all eight victories coming with bonus points. On the year, Waters has one win by major decision, three wins by technical fall and four wins by pin. He ranks as high as No. 4 in the country. Missouri returns home this weekend for a Big 12 matchup against the Iowa State Cyclones. Action from the Hearnes Center will get underway at Noon CT. For more information, stay tuned to mutigers.com or follow us on Twitter: @MizzouWrestling.
  4. The University of Tennessee at Chattanooga wrestling team scored a big 18-17 win over Ohio in Maclellan Gym tonight. The Mocs erased a five-point deficit with wins in the last two matches while improving their overall record to 3-2 (1-0 SoCon). "This was a big win for us tonight," stated head coach Heath Eslinger. "We got behind twice in the match, but our guys stepped up and gave us a huge win. We still have a lot to work on and a lot of areas to improve, but this is something we can build on going into the Illinois trip and the semester break." Freshman Kevin Malone (Carrollton, Ohio) led off for Chattanooga in the heavyweight match. He was facing a tough task against No. 5 Jeremy Johnson. Johnson defeated Malone (5-1) at the Hokie Open earlier in the season, but today's bout was much closer. Trailing 2-0 in the closing seconds, Malone appeared to tie the score at 2-2 with a late takedown. However, a stalling caution back in the first period gave Johnson the deciding point and the 3-2 win. The Bobcats went up 7-0 after Gabe Ramos scored a major decision (11-0) over freshman Blake Thomas (Brentwood, Tenn.) at 125. Chattanooga got on the board at 133 with freshman Nick Soto's (Spring Hill, Fla.) 4-0 shutout over Jake Wojcik. "Nick is off to a good start for a true freshman," added Eslinger. "He is seeing the benefits of his hard work in all areas, on the mat and in the classroom. When you put in the work, good things happen." Ohio took the 141 match with Darrin Boing winning a major decision (14-6) over Shawn Greevy (Mechanicsburg, Pa.), increasing the Bobcats lead to 11-3. Greevy had defeated Boing 5-4 at the Hokie Open, but could not duplicate the result tonight. With an eight point deficit to overcome, Chattanooga would have to ride its three seniors to get back into the match. The Mocs did just that, winning the next three matches, all decisions by seniors. Those three wins - Kelly Felix (Franklin, Tenn.) at 149, Dan Waddell (Chattanooga, Tenn.) at 157 and Brandon Wright (Germantown, Tenn.) at 165 - got the crowd going and gave UTC a 12-11 lead. Waddell's 2-0 win over Harrison Hightower was payback for a 9-4 loss at the Hokie Open. "I am proud of the way our seniors responded tonight," added Eslinger. "We needed them to step up and get us back in the match and they came through. We expect that of this group and it is nice to see it happen on the mat." The excitement was short-lived however as sophomore Levi Clemons (Kissimmee, Fla.) was pinned at 174 by No. 13 Nick Purdue. That put the Mocs in a 17-12 hole and needing wins in the last two matches to stay alive. Fresh off a first place finish at the Davidson Open, junior Robert Prigmore (Southlake, Texas) continued his hot streak with a great match tonight. He shocked the crowd and Ohio's Ryan Garringer with a quick takedown and three near-fall points at 184. He competed hard for the rest of the match and held on for the 5-3 win to start the final rally. For the second time this season, junior Niko Brown (Kissimmee, Fla.) took the mat with a chance to clinch the team victory. He came through again tonight, defeating Beau Wagner 10-4. UTC now hits the road for its final dual of the calendar year at No. 11 Illinois. The Mocs visit the Illini on Sunday, Dec. 18, at 2:00 p.m. Chattanooga hosts the Southern Scuffle in McKenzie Arena on Jan. 1-2, 2012. Tickets are available now on GoMocs.com or at the UTC Ticket Office by calling (423) 266-MOCS (6627). Results: 285: No. 5 Jeremy Johnson (Ohio) - Dec. 3-2 - Kevin Malone (UTC) - Ohio 3-0 125: Gabe Ramos (Ohio) - MD 11-0 - Blake Thomas (UTC) - Ohio 7-0 133: Nick Soto (UTC) - Dec. 4-0 - Jake Wojcik (Ohio) - Ohio 7-3 141: Darrin Boing (Ohio) - MD 14-6 - Shawn Greevy (UTC) - Ohio 11-3 149: Kelly Felix (UTC) - Dec. 13-9 - Brad Squire (Ohio) - Ohio 11-6 157: Dan Waddell (UTC) - Dec. 2-0 - Harrison Hightower (Ohio) - Ohio 11-9 165: Brandon Wright (UTC) - Dec. 4-1 - Miles Chapman (Ohio) - UTC 12-11 174: No. 13 Nick Purdue (Ohio) - Fall 2:17 - Levi Clemons (UTC) - Ohio 17-12 184: Robert Prigmore (UTC) - Dec. 5-3 - Ryan Garringer (Ohio) - Ohio - 17-15 197: Niko Brown (UTC) - Dec. 10-4 - Beau Wagner (Ohio) - UTC 18-17
  5. RENO, Nev. -- The 17th Annual Reno Tournament of Champions will be held at the Reno Events Center from Dec. 16-18. The tournament will feature a two-day high school tournament followed by a one-day college tournament. A number of area schools will compete against the nation's best in what is dubbed the "Toughest Tournament in the U.S.A." Ticket prices are $15 per day for the high school tournament and an additional $15 for the high school finals. The college tournament ticket prices are $20 all day. Floor passes are $25 and provides access to the floor only but you will still need to purchase a ticket for each day to get into the building. This year, Easton (Pa.) high school and the University of Wyoming enter as defending team champions. Easton will look to win its 8th tournament overall, while the Cowboys of Wyoming will look to fend off No. 2 Oklahoma State and a host of other schools for its second tournament title. Easton Area (Pa.) will look to begin a new string of consecutive titles this year. The Red Rovers will be challenged once again by Union (Okla.), Bakersfield (Calif.) and Poway (Calif.) and a host of other schools including in-state rival Pleasant Valley (Pa.). This year, four teams don Amateur Wrestling News' Prep 40 in Bakersfield (Calif.), Union, Columbia (Idaho) and Poway. The college tournament should be one of the most competitive and tournaments since the inception of the RTOC. With five teams ranked in the top 20 according to InterMatWrestle's rankings, including OSU and defending RTOC champion Wyoming, this year's tournament promises to be extremely competitive. This year, Air Force, Michigan State and Oregon State compete for the first time in several years, while Clackamas brings its defending NJCAA team to try to become the first non-D1 school to win the RTOC. Battling to dethrone Mark Branch's Wyoming Cowboys include No. 12 Stanford, the Beavers at 14 and No. 19 Cal Poly. With 28 schools competing, Sunday will promise to be an exciting day of tournament action that will include National implications, too. After the three days are finished we will see why the tournament is the "Toughest Tournament in the U.S.A."
  6. Fedor Emelianenko is back ... again. The 35-year-old Russian has been announced as the headliner for "DREAM: Fight for Japan: Genkidesuka!! Oomisoka!! 2011!" where he is scheduled to face 2008 Olympic gold medalist and former PRIDE heavyweight champion, Satoshi Ishii. The Japanese fighter was recently rumored to have quit MMA in hopes of returning to judo for the 2012 Olympics in London. Emelianenko is making a quick turnaround having recently earned a decision victory against Jeff Monson on Nov. 20. The former Strikeforce champion had lost his three previous bouts on American soil before his return to native Russia to fight Monson. Also on the evening's card is Shinya Aoki (29-5) versus former Sengoku champ Satoru Kitaoka (29-10-9. Aoki is the current DREAM title-holder at lightweight. "DREAM: Fight for Japan: Genkidesuka!! Oomisoka!! 2011!" is set for Dec. 31 at Saitama Super Arena in Saitama, Japan. The full card for "DREAM: Fight for Japan: Genkidesuka!! Oomisoka!! 2011!" Fedor Emelianenko vs. Satoshi Ishii Champ Shinya Aoki vs. Satoru Kitaoka (lightweight title) Champ Hiroyuki Takaya vs. Takeshi "Lion" Inoue (featherweight title) Tatsuya Kawajiri vs. Kazuyuki Miyata Yuichiro Nagashima vs. Katsunori Kikuno Rodolfo Marques Diniz vs. Bibiano Fernandes (bantamweight grand-prix semifinal) Antonio Banuelos vs. Masakazu Imanari (bantamweight grand-prix semifinal) Hideo Tokoro vs. Yusup Saadulaev (bantamweight grand-prix reserve match) Ryo Chonan vs. Hayato Sakurai
  7. Photo/Zuffa LLC via Getty Images Here is what we learned from the UFC 140 main card and what is (or could be) next for the fighters: Jon Jones vs. Lyoto Machida Division: Light Heavyweight Result: Jones defeated Machida by submission in Round 2 What we learned about Jones: We learned that Jones can take a punch. Many critics have said that Jones has not been tested and have questioned his attitude and heart. He answered the critics in this fight with his finish of Machida. He lost the first round in the opinion of many experts, only to come back and display his grappling and submission of Lyoto Machida. What is next for Jones: Jones is scheduled to face the winner of the Phil Davis vs. Rashad Evans fight at UFC on Fox 2 on Jan 28. What we learned about Machida: We learned that Machida is still an elite striker and contender in the light heavyweight division. Machida did a masterful job of closing the distance with his 10.5-inch reach disadvantage by darting in and out with his striking in the first round. What is next for Machida: Machida should have a minor medical suspension and should get either the loser of Evans-Davis or possible a fight with Dan Henderson. Frank Mir vs. Antonio Rodrigo Nogueira Division: Heavyweight Result: Mir defeated Nogueira submission in Round 1 What we learned about Mir: Mir can still take a serious shot and recover. Although Mir has been knocked out by Shane Carwin, Brock Lesnar and others in his career, his comeback was nothing short of spectacular. His is widely considered one of the top two or three in the division as far as submissions and jiu-jitsu. After his win at UFC 140, few can dispute his top billing jiu-jitsu skills in the heavyweight division. What is next for Mir: The win puts Mir back in the top handful of heavyweights and a matchup with Cain Velazquez or the loser Allistar Overeem-Brock Lesnar makes some sense since Lesnar and Mir stand at 1-1 in their fights What we learned about Nogueira: "Big Nog" showed that his hands/boxing skills are still formidable and he has tons of heart. He dropped Mir and made technical mistakes as he pounced and tried to finish the former UFC heavyweight champion. He refused to tap once it was clear (after he tried to roll out of the Kimura submission) that it would end his night and break his upper arm. What is next for Nogueira: Nogueria will have a lengthy (minimal six-month) medical suspension with the arm break. I would look for him in the fall of 2012 against a top 10 opponent or rising prospect. A fight with Daniel Cormier, who is scheduled to fight Josh Barnett in the spring of 2012 would answer questions about both fighters. Tito Ortiz vs. Antonio Rogerio Nogueira Division: Light Heavyweight Result: Nogueira defeated Ortiz by TKO in Round 1 What we learned about Nogueria: "Little Nog," who dropped two tough decisions against Ryan Bader and Phil Davis, is still formable in the light heavyweight division with his dismantling of Tito Ortiz. At 20-5, Nogueria needs a signature win to get his name in the handful of fighters who are in title fight conversations. What is next for Nogueria: A fight with Forrest Griffin, Rich Franklin, or the winner of Alexander Gustafsson-Vladimir Matyushenko could be in store. What we learned about Ortiz: The self proclaimed "The People's Champion" has now lost two in a row via TKO in his last two fights in the Octagon, and five out of last six UFC fights. The lone win during that stretch against Ryan Bader is looking more and more of an aberration. What is next for Ortiz: Ortiz has one fight left on his contract and my guess is that Dana and the UFC will setup a farewell fight. Forrest Griffin, who Tito is 1-1 against, would be a great way to send out the former champ and future UFC Hall of Famer. Brian Ebersole vs. Claude Patrick Division: Welterweight Result: Ebersole defeated Patrick by split decision (29-28, 29-28, 28-29) What we learned about Ebersole: The eccentric Ebersole is now 3-0 in the UFC and winner of his last 10 fights. His hard-fought, workmanlike effort against Patrick will now give him a chance to move up the middle ranks of the welterweight division. What is next for Ebersole: It is time to move Ebersole up in competition against potentially his original match with Rory Markham or Paulo Thiago (who had his fight in January moved with Pierce, who is now fighting Josh Koscheck). What we learned about Patrick: With his 13-fight winning streak snapped, Patrick will look to rebound quickly. We learned that although he was 3-0 going into the fight with Ebersole, he may need a bit more experience before moving back up the welterweight ladder. His overall game was on display. What is next for Patrick: Potentially a fight against Jake Hecht, who won on the same UFC 140 card. It is a fight that would make sense. Chan Sung Jung vs. Mark Hominick Division: Featherweight Result: Chan Sung Jung defeated Hominick by KO in Round 1 What we learned about Jung: We learned that Jung has a nice straight right hand, but in truth we did not learn much. The win does raise Jung stock's considerably as he beat Hominick, who was one fight removed from fighting for the title. What is next for Jung: Jung, at 2-0 in the UFC, will likely get a fight that would set up an upper-tier ranking with an additional win. A fight against Tyson Griffin, Marlon Sandro, or Darren Elkins would allow the UFC to build Jung. What we learned about Hominick: Hominick, who came into the fight off a loss to longtime trainer and friend Shawn Tompkins, merely got caught. He went in overzealous, and got hit with a clean right hand. What is next for Hominick: A fight with the winner of Garza-Poirer would make sense in many ways. Hominick, with two consecutive losses, will have his back against the wall in a must-win next fight.
  8. The five main card bouts for UFC 142 in Rio de Janiero have been finalized by the UFC. Headlining the event will be Brazilian Jose Aldo (20-1 MMA, 2-0 UFC) who defends his lightweight belt against Chad Mendes (11-0 MMA, 2-0 UFC). The preliminary and main card features five brazilian fighters. Jan. 14 at HSBC Arena in Rio de Janeiro, and Brazilian UFC featherweight champion Jose Aldo (20-1 MMA, 2-0 UFC) meets Chad Mendes in the championship headliner (11-0 MMA, 2-0 UFC). Main Card: (Pay-per-view) Champ Jose Aldo vs. Chad Mendes (for featherweight title) Vitor Belfort vs. Anthony Johnson Mike Massenzio vs. Rousimar Palhares Siyar Bahadurzada vs. Erick Silva Edson Barboza vs. Terry Etim Preliminary Card: Sam Stout vs. Thiago Tavares Mike Pyle vs. Paulo Thiago Fabio Maldonado vs. Stanislav Nedkov Rob Broughton vs. Ednaldo Oliveira Felipe Arantes vs. Antonio "Pato" Carvalho Yuri Alcantara vs. Michihiro Omigawa
  9. STILLWATER, Okla. -- The second-ranked Oklahoma State wrestling team cruised to a 25-13 win over Bedlam rival Oklahoma Sunday in front of 4,211 fans at Gallagher-Iba Arena. Junior Jordan Oliver and senior Cayle Byers led the way for the Cowboys with a pair of falls. OSU (3-0-0 overall; 2-0-0 Big 12), picked up its fourth-straight win over Oklahoma (3-1-0 overall; 2-1-0 Big 12) to improve its all-time series advantage to 129-26-10. “I thought this was going to be a tougher match,” coach John Smith said. “I thought there could be some battle matches. They have a lot of guys in the middle of the road that are pretty competitive. If you would've told me that we were going to win it 25-13, I probably would've thought it was a good match on our part. After watching it and being exposed to a couple of areas, especially down wrestling, we just really struggled.” Oliver's fall came in just 1:30 after a flurry of takedowns, including one in the first second of the bout. The Easton, Pa., native moves to 3-0 on the year and his pin over OU's Derek Geiges marks his third first-period fall of the season. “I'm just trying to get out there and get bonus points for the team,” Oliver said. “I want to put points on the board and make guys wrestle, not letting them just stand around. I'm just feeling a lot more comfortable getting on top of guys. If a cradle or pin is there, I'm going to take it.” Byer's pin over OU's Keldrick Hall came in more dramatic fashion. Holding on to a 2-0 lead late in the final period, he was able to turn Hall with less than 30 seconds left and earn the fall in 6:41. His bonus-point win marked his seventh of the year and it built the Cowboys' dual lead to an out-of-reach 15-6. “I wanted to score in the first period this match, but I just wasn't creating angles,” Byers said. “I figured if I kept putting pressure on him the conditioning would do the rest.” Senior Jamal Parks started the dual for Cowboys on a good note with a 4-3 decision over No. 11 Nick Lester at 149 pounds. Parks earned a takedown in the first and second periods to take a 4-3 lead into the third and successfully fought off Lester's attempt to turn him throughout the final two minutes. Other Cowboy wins included a 5-3 decision from senior Chris McNeil over OU's Nolan McBryde at 174 pounds, a 7-1 decision from sophomore Chris Perry over OU's Erich Schmidtke at 184 pounds and 15-2 major decision from junior Alan Gelogaev over OU's Kyle Colling at heavyweight. Oklahoma won four bouts on the day, including the 157-, 165-, 125- and 141-pound matches. The Cowboys are scheduled to return to action Dec. 18 when they travel to Reno, Nev., for the Reno Tournament of Champions. Their next dual meets are set for Dec. 30 at Boise State and Jan. 1 at Wyoming. Results: 149: No. 2 Jamal Parks (OSU) dec. No. 11 Nick Lester (OU); 4-3 157: No. 11 Matt Lester (OU) dec. No. 9 Albert White (OSU); 8-3 165: Bubby Graham (OU) dec. No. 16 Dallas Bailey (OSU); 6-2 174: Chris McNeil (OSU) dec. Nolan McBryde (OU); 5-3 184: No. 6 Chris Perry (OSU) dec. No. 13 Erich Schmidtke (OU); 7-1 197: No. 4 Cayle Byers (OSU) fall Keldrick Hall (OU); 6:41 285: No. 3 Alan Gelogaev (OSU) MD Kyle Colling (OU); 15-2 125: No. 4 Jarrod Patterson (OU) dec. Jon Morrison (OSU); 4-0 133: No. 1 Jordan Oliver (OSU) fall Derek Geiges (OU); 1:30 141: No. 6 Kendric Maple (OU) MD No. 9 Josh Kindig (OSU); 13-3
  10. CLEVELAND -- The No. 9 Pitt wrestling team won its 13th straight match in the Eastern Wrestling League with a 39-3 victory at Cleveland State on Sunday. The Panthers (4-1) posted wins in nine of the 10 bouts against the Vikings, earning bonus points in eight of the wins. Redshirt seniors Tyler Nauman and Ethan Headlee both recorded second period pins for Pitt. Nauman is third all-time at Pitt with 37 career falls, while Headlee is now all alone in seventh with 28 career pins. Anthony Zanetta, Shelton Mack, Travis Shaffer, Donnie Tasser, Max Thomusseit and Matt Wilps all had major decisions for the Panthers, while Tyler Wilps just missed adding another with a 12-5 decision at 165. Zanetta and Matt Wilps both remained unbeaten in dual meets this season at 5-0. Zanetta was fresh off a win over No. 15 Johnni Dijulius in the Ohio State match. Matt Wilps has beaten ranked opponents in four of his five dual meet victories. As in all of their wins this season, Pitt was dominant in neutral. The Panthers finished with 29 takedowns in their nine individual victories, two of which didn't go past the second period. Pitt will have over two weeks off before it returns to action. The Panthers will next compete at the Lock Haven Invitational on Thursday, Dec. 29. Results: 125 – No. 17 Anthony Zanetta (Pitt) maj. dec. Ben Willeford (CSU), 9-1 133 – No. 20 Shelton Mack (Pitt) maj. dec. Nick Flannery (CSU), 16-5 141 – Travis Shaffer (Pitt) maj. dec. Josh Palivoda (CSU) 10-0 149 – No. 11 Tyler Nauman (Pitt) FALL Mike Mencini (CSU), 4:33 157 – Donnie Tasser (Pitt) maj. dec. Tanner Lemon (CSU), 14-0 165 – Tyler Wilps (Pitt) dec. Corey Carlo (CSU), 12-5 174 – No. 20 Ethan Headlee (Pitt) FALL Aric Thurn (CSU), 2:15 184 – Max Thomusseit (Pitt) maj. dec. Corbin Boone (CSU), 19-8 197 – No. 6 Matt Wilps (Pitt) maj. dec. Nick Anthony (CSU), 14-5 285 – Chris Weber (CSU) dec. Joel Yahner (Pitt), 3-1
  11. ANN ARBOR, Mich. -- The No. 8-ranked University of Michigan wrestling team claimed six individual bouts, including the final four of the afternoon, and earned three major decisions to knock off Wisconsin, 21-12, in its Big Ten Conference opener on Sunday afternoon (Dec. 11) at Cliff Keen Arena. With the Wolverines trailing by four points with four matches remaining, fifth-year senior Justin Zeerip (Fremont, Mich./Hesperia HS) initiated his team's comeback with a 10-2 major decision over Frank Cousins at 174 pounds. The Wolverine senior scored four takedowns, finishing on a late double leg in the bout's final 20 seconds to seal the bonus point. Zeerip improved to 11-1 on the season. Senior/junior Hunter Collins (Gilroy, Calif./Gilroy HS) also took advantage of a late score to edge Timmy McCall, 4-3, in his season dual debut at 184 pounds. While the score was even entering the third period, McCall had a riding-time point already locked up when he chose down in the third. Collins rode out the period and tilted the Badger wrestler for two points in the last 10 seconds of regulation to steal away the match. Sophomore/freshman Max Huntley (Emerald, Isle./Blair Academy) needed extra time to defeat Jackson Hein in the 197-pound match, converting on a scoring opportunity midway through the sudden-victory frame to win, 4-2. The aggressor throughout the match, Huntley took a temporary lead on a third-period reversal, before Hein escaped to send the match to overtime. Hein took an errant half shot, and Huntley countered, spinning around to score on the edge. Junior/sophomore Ben Apland (Woodridge, Ill./Downers Grove South HS) survived a second-period scare to defeat Cole Tobin, 8-4, in the heavyweight match. Apland controlled the first period, scoring on a go-behind before riding out the frame to accumulate time advantage, but Tobin stole the lead midway through the second, throwing Apland on his back for four points. The Wolverine wrestler quickly evened the score on a stall call and locked hands before using a third-period double leg to ice the match. Junior/sophomore Grant Pizzo (Brighton, Mich./Brighton HS) and fifth-year senior Kellen Russell (High Bridge, N.J./Blair Academy) earned major decisions at 125 and 141 pounds, respectively, to provide the Wolverines an early advantage after three bouts. Pizzo rolled to a 9-1 win in the former bout, using two takedowns, a reversal and two back points to beat Austin Hieptas in his first-ever match at Cliff Keen Arena. With the major decision in sight, Pizzo cut Hieptas loose midway through the third period and quickly finished on a double-leg shot in the final 30 seconds to earn the bonus point after riding time. Russell scored on four takedowns -- two in the third period -- to cruise past Thomas Glenn, 10-2, in the 141-pound contest. He converted on a go behind in the first and a pair of double legs before countering a Glenn shot to seal the major decision late in the third. The Wolverines will take a break for the holidays before returning to competition on Thursday, Dec. 29, at the Mat Town Invitational in Lock Haven, Pa. The tournament is slated for a 9 a.m. start at Thomas Fieldhouse. Results: 125 -- Grant Pizzo (U-M) major dec. Austin Hieptas, 9-1 U-M, 4-0 133 -- Tom Kelliher (UW) dec. #12 Zac Stevens, 8-4 U-M, 4-3 141 -- #4 Kellen Russell (U-M) major dec. Thomas Glenn, 10-2 U-M, 8-3 149 -- #9 Cole Schmitt (UW) dec. Mike Hillock, 5-3 U-M, 8-6 157 -- Shawn Perry (UW) dec. Brandon Zeerip, 5-2 UW, 9-8 165 -- #17 Ben Jordan (UW) dec. Dan Yates, 8-3 UW, 12-8 174 -- #11 Justin Zeerip (U-M) major dec. Frank Cousins, 10-2 Tied, 12-12 184 -- Hunter Collins (U-M) dec. Timmy McCall, 4-3 U-M, 15-12 197 -- Max Huntley (U-M) dec. Jackson Hein, 4-2 SV U-M, 18-12 Hwt -- #18 Ben Apland (U-M) dec. Cole Tobin, 8-4 U-M, 21-12
  12. COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Bonus points scored by the No. 6 Ohio State wrestling team (6-0) proved to be the difference maker in the Buckeyes' 22-15 win over No. 20 Kent State Sunday afternoon in the M.A.C. Center in Kent, Ohio. Despite Ohio State and Kent State winning five matches each, pins by Logan Stieber and C.J. Magrum, as well as a major decision by Hunter Stieber lifted the Scarlet and Gray to its sixth dual win of the season. “It was not a good day for everyone, but it's good to get the win in a harsh environment,” Magrum said. “We need to keep improving and pushing each other. The Buckeyes will get better as the season progresses.” The Buckeyes went 2-3 in the first five matches of the day, yet still owned a 10-9 lead heading into intermission. After the break, Ohio State won three consecutive matches at 174, 184 and 197 pounds. Down 3-0 early, Ohio State answered with back-to-back wins courtesy of No. 3 L. Stieber at 133 pounds and No. 6 H. Stieber at 141 pounds. L. Stieber, who remains undefeated on the season with a 15-0 overall record and 6-0 ledger in dual competition, immediately gave the Buckeyes a 6-3 lead when he pinned Troy Opfer at the 2:17 mark. L. Stieber, a redshirt freshman from Monroeville, Ohio, now has a team-leading eight pins this season. “We wrestled okay as a whole today, but we have to finish matches and score more points,” L. Stieber said. The younger brother of L. Stieber, H. Stieber, also tacked on bonus points for the Scarlet and Gray after recording an 11-2 major decision vs. No. 13 Tyler Small. Stieber now improves to 14-2 overall and 5-1 in dual action. In a highly anticipated 149-pound matchup between a pair of freshmen Ohio High School state champions, Buckeye and 15th-ranked Cam Tessari faced No. 18 Ian Miller. Tessari, who hails from Monroeville, Ohio, and is a four-time state champion, dropped a 9-5 decision to Miller, who is a three-time state titlist from Oak Harbor, Ohio. Another Golden Flash decision at 157 pounds followed to allow them to cut the Ohio State lead to one (10-9). No. 19 Josh Demas, a redshirt freshman out of Westerville North High School, lost to Mallie Shuster, 6-1. Out of the break, Kent State maintained its momentum when Buckeye Derek Garcia, a freshman from Sedro Woolley, Wash., suffered a 6-1 setback to Tommy Sasfy. With the win, the Golden Flashes took a 12-10 lead with four matches remaining. Ohio State jumped back into the lead (13-12) thanks to No. 5 Nick Heflin's 8-3 win over Brandonn Johnson at 174 pounds. Heflin, a redshirt sophomore from Massillon, Ohio, is now 15-1 overall, including a 6-0 dual record. Magrum pinning Kwan Bailey in 6:28 at 184 pounds proved to be crucial down the stretch as the win gave the Buckeyes a 19-12 lead with two matches left. The redshirt junior from Oak Harbor, Ohio, is 13-3 overall and remains undefeated in dual competition with a 6-0 record. Freshman Andrew Campolattano sealed the win for the Scarlet Gray after his 8-2 victory vs. Keith Witt. Campolattano, a native of Bound Brook, N.J., is 10-5 overall and 4-2 in dual matches. In the final match of the afternoon, redshirt sophomore Peter Capone dropped a 6-3 decision to Brendan Barlow for the 22-15 final. At 125 pounds, freshman Johnni Dijulius faced the second-ranked wrestler in the nation in Nicholas Bedelyon and was handed a 6-1 loss to open the dual. After nearly a month, Ohio State returns to St. John Arena in Columbus for its Big Ten Conference season opener vs. Indiana at 2 p.m. Dec. 18. Results: 125 – No. 2 Nicholas Bedelyon (Kent State) DEC No.13 Johnni Dijulius, 12-6 133 – No. 3 Logan Stieber PINNED Troy Opfer (Kent State), 2:17 141 – No. 6 Hunter Stieber MAJ DEC No. 13 Tyler Small (Kent State), 11-2 149 – No. 18 Ian Miller (Kent State) DEC No. 15 Cam Tessari, 9-5 157 – Mallie Shuster (Kent State) DEC No. 19 Josh Demas, 6-1 165 – Tommy Sasfy (Kent State) DEC Derek Garcia, 6-1 174 – No. 5 Nick Heflin DEC Brandonn Johnson (Kent State), 8-3 184 – No. 15 C.J. Magrum PINNED Kwan Bailey (Kent State), 6:28 197 – Andrew Campolattano DEC Keith Witt (Kent State), 8-2 HWT – No. 15 Brendan Barlow (Kent State) DEC No. 11 Peter Capone, 6-3
  13. The little guys just got some big news. UFC president Dana White announced Saturday that the world's largest promotion wil be adding a 125 lbs. flyweight class. Flyweight will be the seventh UFC weight class with a title belt. The flyweights will debut in a semifinal tournament featuring Demetrious Johnson vs. Ian McCall and Joseph Benavidez vs. Yasuhiro Urushitani at March's UFC on FX 2 event. Johnson (9-2 MMA, 2-1 UFC) is coming off an October loss to bantamweight champ Dominick Cruz. His opponent, McCall (11-2 MMA, 0-0 UFC) is making his UFC debut, though he was 1-2 in the WEC and is riding a four fight win-streak. Benavidez (15-2 MMA, 2-0 UFC), arguably the most excited to make the transition to flyweight, hopes to remain undefeated in the UFC after wins over Eddie Wineland and Ian Loveland. His opponent, 35-year-old Urushitani (19-4-6 MMA, 0-0 UFC) is making his promotional debut. UFC on FX 2 takes place in Sydney, Australia on March 3. The event is being held on Sunday, March 4 in Australia, in order to air Saturday night in the United States.
  14. The No. 9 American University wrestling team picked up its first dual meet win of the season Saturday night in Fairfax, Va., with a 27-15 victory over George Mason. American won six of the 10 bouts on the evening, earning the 12-point triumph on the strength of two falls and three major decisions. No. 1 Ryan Flores closed the evening for AU in impressive fashion, earning a fall against George Mason's Adam Barnette at the 1:53 mark. Flores improves to 5-0 on the season at heavyweight with four of his victories coming by pins. No. 4 Ganbayar Sanjaa also stayed perfect on the season at 157 lbs., earning a pin against Jaaziah Bethea at 6:40, his second fall of the campaign. Thomas Williams began the meet off strong for American, earning a 9-0 major decision over Vincent Rodriguez at 125 lbs. Kevin Tao registered his team-leading sixth major decision of the season with a 23-10 victory over GMU's Mike Bakuckas at 149 lbs. AU's final major decision was by Thomas Barreiro at 184 lbs. as he picked up a 21-12 win over Corey Smith. No. 9 Matt Mariacher also earned a victory for American, recording a 3-0 decision against Denny Herndon III at 141 lbs. The triumph was Mariacher's team-best 11th win of the season. The Eagles will return to the mat for the 49th-annual Midlands Championships, which will be contested on December 29-30 on the campus of Northwestern in Evanston, Ill. Results: 125 - Thomas Williams (American) major dec. Vincent Rodriguez (GMU), 9-0; American leads 4-0 133 - Zachary Isenhour (GMU) tech. fall Chris Brienza (American), 16-0; GMU leads 5-4 141 - No. 9 Matt Mariacher (American) dec. Denny Herndon III (GMU), 4-0; American leads 7-5 149 - Kevin Tao (American) major dec. Mike Bakuckas (GMU), 23-10; American leads 11-5 157 - No. 4 Ganbayar Sanjaa (American) pin Jaaziah Bethea (GMU), 6:40; American leads 17-5 165 - Ty Knepp (GMU) overtime dec. Sean McCarty (American), 10-8; American leads 17-8 174 - Frankie McLaughlin IV (GMU) major dec. Phillip Barreiro (American), 16-8; American leads 17-12 184 - Thomas Barreiro (American) major dec. Corey Smith (GMU), 12-2; American leads 21-12 197 - Shohei Tovuujav (GMU) dec. No. 11 Daniel Mitchell (American), 5-2; American leads 21-15 HWT - No. 1 Ryan Flores (American) pin Adam Barnette (GMU), 1:53; American wins 27-15
  15. BAKERSFIELD, Calif. -- Four Beavers picked up pins and five others earned bonus points as the No. 16 Oregon State wrestling team rolled to a 45-4 victory over CSU Bakersfield Saturday night at the Icardo Center. The win pushes Oregon State's dual record to 3-1 this season while the Roadrunners dropped to 1-3. The Beavers have now won four straight over CSU Bakersfield. The 41-point win is Oregon State's largest over a Pac-12 opponent since defeating Portland State, 49-0, in 2004. Pat Rollins, RJ Pena, Ty Vinson and Clayton Jack all won via falls while Garrett Drucker, Mike Mangrum, Scott Sakaguchi, John Tuck and Lucas Mondragon downed their opponents with either a major decision over technical fall. For Mondragon, it was his first career bout for the Beavers and he won it in impressive fashion, picking up a 13-4 major decision over Oren Dramen. The win came with the Beavers already up 35-4 but continued OSU's streak of winning with bonus points. Rollins (125 pounds) won via pin for the fifth time this season and improved to 10-6 when he defeated Tyler Iwamura in 4:23 to start the dual – neither wrestler had a point before the fall. He avenged a 6-2 loss to Iwamura last weekend in Las Vegas. Drucker, competing for the fifth time officially this season, and won by major decision for the first time. He defeated Justin Durham, 14-6, at 133 pounds and pushed the Beavers to a 10-0 lead over the Roadrunners. Mangrum (141 pounds) pushed his record to 14-0 this season, and 2-0 in bouts decided by technical falls, when he beat Dalton Kelley, 23-6. The 23 points is a single-bout record for Mangrum. Sakaguchi made it 19-0 in favor of the Beavers when he defeated Calvin Miller, 9-1, at 149 pounds. Sakaguchi improved to 39-15 all-time with the win and is 8-1 in major decisions. Pena (157 pounds) earned his ninth pin of the season when he fell Anthony Box in the second period for a total time of 4:04. Pena had a 12-0 lead on Box before the pin. Vinson gave the Beavers their sixth bonus victory of the night, when, at 174 pounds, he pinned Jesus Ambriz in 2:55. It was Vinson's fifth pin of the season and came after he already had a 5-0 lead via a takedown and three-point near fall. Tuck (184 pounds) snapped a two-bout losing streak with a 10-2 win over Reuben Franklin. Tuck had three takedowns in the win to improve to 6-6 this season. Mondragon, wrestling for the first time officially for OSU – his other bouts have come unattached – took a 7-1 lead into the third period before finishing with a 13-4 win over Oren Dramen at 197 pounds. Jack (heavyweight), like Mangrum, pushed his season record to 14-0 after pinning CSU Bakersfield's Frankie Hurtado in just 56 seconds. He now has 96 career victories at OSU and 36 have come via falls. OSU's lone individual loss came at 165 pounds when CSU Bakersfield's Adam Fierro defeated Cody Weishoff, 11-2. Oregon State next takes on Cal Poly Sunday at Cuesta College in San Luis Obispo, Calif. The dual starts at 1 p.m. PT. Live stats are available by visiting osubeavers.com. For more on Oregon State wrestling, make sure and follow the team's official Twitter page at twitter.com/osu_wrestling and osubeavers.com. Results: 125 – Pat Rollins fall Tyler Iwamura (CSUB), 4:23. OSU 6, CSUB 0 133 – Garrett Drucker major decision Justin Durham (CSUB), 14-6. OSU 10, CSUB 0 141 – Mike Mangrum technical fall Dalton Kelley (CSUB), 23-6. OSU 15, CSUB 0 149 – Scott Sakaguchi major decision Calvin Miller (CSUB), 9-1. OSU 19, CSUB 0 157 – RJ Pena fall Anthony Box (CSUB), 4:04. OSU 25, CSUB 0 165 – Adam Fierro (CSUB) major decision Cody Weishoff, 11-2. OSU 25, CSUB 4 174 – Ty Vinson fall Jesus Ambriz (CSUB), 2:55. OSU 31, CSUB 4 184 – John Tuck major decision Reuben Franklin (CSUB), 10-2. OSU 35, CSUB 4 197 – Lucas Mondragon major decision Oren Dramen, 13-4. OSU 39, CSUB 4 HWT – Clayton Jack fall Frankie Hurtado (CSUB), 0:56. OSU 45, CSUB 4
  16. Related: Team Standings & Brackets ERIE, Pa. -- After one year away from the podium, the 19th-ranked Edinboro wrestling team emerged victorious at the PSAC Championships at Mercyhurst on Saturday for the sixth time in seven years. The Fighting Scots won six of the 10 individual weight classes and finished with 163.5 points to hold off Bloomsburg (150 points) and Clarion (124). This was Edinboro's 12th overall PSAC title. A.J. Schopp (133 lbs), Mitchell Port (141), David Habat (149), Vic Avery (184), Chris Honeycutt (197) and Ernest James (285) all won individual titles. Aside from Honeycutt, who won at 184 lbs last season, all were first-time champions. In addition, Kory Mines (125 lbs) and Casey Fuller (157 lbs) finished in third place, while Ethan Saylor finished in fifth at 165 lbs. “We circle this date every year,” Edinboro head coach Tim Flynn said. “Our team takes a lot of pride in it and our kids wrestled really hard.” Honeycutt , ranked third in the nation, maintained his undefeated 18-0 record and avoided a scare early in third period as Clarion's Alex Thomas briefly put him on his back to pull out a 12-6 decision at 197 lbs. Immediately following Honeycutt's win, James finished off his dominant day by pinning Lock Haven's Henry Turner in 49 seconds for his third fall in less than a minute of the event. “I've just worked real hard,” James said. “After last season, I know it was my first year starting, but I've just worked really hard to improve myself out there.” Schopp, ranked eighth in the nation, continued his stellar season and capped off his day with a 17-2 technical fall victory over Bloomsburg's Nick Wilcox to improve to 17-1. At 141 lbs, 18th-ranked Port overcame a 0-2 deficit to accumulate nine straight points and eventually earn 12-4 decision. His record is now 12-4. The Fighting Scots picked up their third straight individual title as Habat, after trailing 2-0 for much of the match, took control late in the third and won by fall at the 3:52 mark. At 184 pounds, Vic Avery also earned his first PSAC title with a 7-3 decision over Clarion's Steven Cressley. Edinboro's only loss in a title bout came at 174 lbs as Chris Hrunka was pinned at the 6:14 mark. Outside of title bouts, Saylor avenged a loss to East Stroudsburg's Braden Turner in the opening round by taking a 2-1 decision in the third-place match at 157 lbs. In addition, Mines won third place by fall over Kutztown's Desmond Moore after four minutes and 36 seconds, while Saylor earned fifth place at 165 lbs by medical forfeit over Gannon's Adam Greenman.
  17. BUFFALO, N.Y. -- No. 18 Central Michigan earned wins at eight of the 10 weight classes Saturday, earning a 30-6 dual victory over Buffalo. The Chippewas (7-2, 2-0 MAC) claimed the final six matches of the dual, getting a kick-start from two freshmen at 157 and 165 pounds. After the Chippewas and Bulls (0-6, 0-1 MAC) split the first four matches, redshirt-freshman Jared Porter earned his first collegiate victory at 157 pounds by decision over Dominic Montesanti, 3-2. Despite leading, 2-1, in the third period, Porter had allowed Montesanti to accumulate enough riding time for a bonus point, but was able to come up with an escape with just two seconds remaining to claim the 3-2 decision. True freshman Mike Ottinger continued to prove that he is a force to be reckoned with in the Mid-American Conference at 165 pounds. The Schnecksville, Pa., native claimed a decision, 6-3, over No. 20 Mark Lewandowski, the MAC's highest ranked 165-pounder, pushing the Chippewas' lead to six, 12-6. Craig Kelliher, wrestling at 174 pounds for the first time this season, earned a pin victory over Patrick Bradley to give the Chippewas six bonus points, and No. 8 Ben Bennett earned a win by forfeit at 184 pounds for another six bonus points for CMU, extending their lead again to 21, 24-6. Seniors Chad Friend and No. 6 Peter Sturgeon closed the dual with decisions at 197 and 285 pounds, 8-3 and 3-1. The Chippewas return to action next Saturday when they travel to Lewisburg, Pa., for the Bucknell Duals where they will square off versus Bucknell and Princeton. Results: 125: Joe Roth (CMU) dec. Max Soria, 12-5; CMU 3, UB 0 133: Tyler Keselring (CMU) dec. Justin Farmer, 4-2; CMU 6, UB 0 141: Kevin Smith (UB) dec. Scott Mattingly, 7-4; CMU 6, UB 3 149: Chris Conti (UB) dec. Malcolm Martin, 6-1; Tied, 6-6 157: Jared Porter (CMU) dec. Dominic Montesanti, 3-2; CMU 9, UB 6 165: Mike Ottinger (CMU) dec. No. 20 Mark Lewandowski, 6-3; CMU 12, UB 6 174: Craig Kelliher (CMU) pin Patrick Brady, 1:54; CMU 18, UB 6 184: No. 8 Ben Bennett (CMU) win by forfeit; CMU 24, UB 6 197: Chad Friend (CMU) dec. Justin Heiserman, 8-3; CMU 27, UB 6 285: No. 6 Peter Sturgeon (CMU) dec. Tyler Peter, 3-1; CMU 30, UB 6
  18. LINCOLN, Neb. -- Behind a pair of upsets over nationally ranked opponents the No. 21 Nebraska wrestling team improved to 5-0 on Saturday after taking down the No. 14 Wyoming Cowboys, 19-15, at the NU Coliseum. The win marks the first time the Huskers have started 5-0 in dual competition since 2008, and was the Huskers second victory over a nationally ranked opponent this season. Wyoming fell to 0-1 on the season. No. 10 Robert Kokesh (165) provided the match of the night with his 5-0 decision over No. 3 Shane Onufer (WYO). Kokesh earned a takedown at the end of the first period to gain momentum and never looked back cruising to the victory. The Wagner, S.D., native avenged an earlier loss to Onufer at the UNK Open on Nov. 19. The talented redshirt freshman now owns a 13-2 record this season and had defeated three ranked opponents. Tucker Lane (Hwt) kicked off the dual with an 8-1 decision over LJ Helbig (WYO) to give NU a 3-0 advantage. Lane jumped out to a 5-0 lead with a takedown and 2-point nearfall in the first period. Lane has an 11-2 record after his win on Saturday night. After two straight victories at 125 and 133 pounds for the Cowboys, the Huskers found themselves down by a score of 9-3. True freshman Jake Sueflohn (NU) won the first home match of his career to start the Husker comeback with an 11-2 major decision over McCade Ford (WYO), before redshirt freshman Brandon WIlbourn (149) defeated Brandon Richardson, 11-5, to give the Huskers the lead for good. At 157 pounds, freshman No. 16 James Green escaped from Dakota Friesth (WYO) with 1:25 remaining in the third period to win, 6-5. After Kokesh's win, Tyler Koehn (174) picked up the Huskers' second upset over a nationally ranked foe when he beat No. 18 Patrick Martinez (WYO), 6-3. Wyoming was able to win the last two matches of the night, but couldn't overcome the 10-point lead NU had accumulated. No. 10 Josh Ihnen (NU) fell to No.3 Joe LeBlanc after giving up a takedown with under 30 seconds left in the dual. The loss drops Ihnen's season record to 9-2. The Cowboys' last win came at 197 pounds where No. 13 Alfonso Hernandez (WYO) took down James Nakashima, 4-2. The Huskers return to action for a pair of road duals next weekend when they take on South Dakota State on Saturday, Dec. 17 at 7p.m., and North Dakota State on Sunday, Dec. 19 at 1 p.m. Nebraska's next home dual will be against Ohio State in their Big Ten opener on Jan. 6 at 7 p.m. Check back to Huskers.com for more coverage of the Nebraska wrestling team. Results: Hwt- #10 Tucker Lane (NU) by dec. over LJ Helbig (WYO), 8-1 (NU 3, WYO 0) 125- Kasey Garnhart (WYO) by fall over Shawn Nagel (NU), 6:37 (NU 3, WYO 6) 133- #16 Zach Zehner (WYO) by dec. over #18 Ridge Kiley (NU), 4-3 (NU 3, WYO 9) 141- #12 Jake Sueflohn (NU) by major dec. over McCade Ford (WYO), 11-2 (NU 7, WYO 9) 149- Brandon Wilbourn (NU) by dec. over Brandon Richardson (WYO) 11-5, (NU 10, WYO 9) 157- #16 James Green by dec. over Dakota Friesth (WYO), 6-5 (NU 13, WYO 9) 165- #10 Robert Kokesh (NU) by dec. over #3 Shane Onufer (WYO), 5-0 (NU 16, WYO 9) 174- Tyler Koehn (NU) by dec. over #18 Patrick Martinez (WYO), 6-3 (NU 19, WYO 9) 184- #3 Joe LeBlanc (WYO) by dec. over #10 Josh Ihnen (NU), 4-3 (NU 19, WYO 12)
  19. LAWRENCEVILLE, N.J. -- The 16th-ranked Rutgers wrestling team finished off its double-dual Saturday in its second location of the day with a 21-12 win over Rider in Alumni Gym. In earlier action, the Scarlet Knights topped Princeton, 29-7, in Dillon Gym. RU was led by two-win performances by Mike DeMarco (Lyndhurst, N.J.), Maro Mason (Moorestown, N.J,), Scott Winston (Jackson, N.J.), Greg Zannetti (Edison, N.J.), Daniel Seidenberg (Raritan, N.J.) and Daniel Rinaldi (Lodi, N.J.). The Scarlet Knights improved to 5-1 overall with the dual wins, while the Broncs dropped to 3-2 overall. The Tigers fell to 1-4 with their earlier loss. RU wrestlers won eight of the 10 contested bouts against Princeton and took six of the 10 matches against Rider. In the most anticipated battle of the day, Zannetti turned away Rider's Jim Resnick at 174 pounds by major decision, 11-3. The Scarlet Knight, ranked 14th nationally according to Intermat, controlled No. 11 Resnick throughout the match en route to bonus points for Rutgers. Zannetti improved to a perfect 9-0 on the season with the win. Mason (149 pounds) and Winston (165 pounds) also contributed bonus points for head coach Scott Goodale's squad, scoring 12-4 and 12-3 wins over their Bronc opponents, respectively. In earlier action, Mason scored the biggest win of the Princeton dual with a 23-8 (7:00) technical fall over Zach Bintliff. The victory, coupled with his win against Rider, improved the Rutgers 149-pounder's overall record to 9-0. Winston, Rinaldi and Daniel Hopkins (Jackson, N.J.) also scored bonus points for RU with major decision victories in their respective matches against the Tigers. Ranked sixth nationally at 165 pounds, Winston controlled Princeton's Rich Eva for an 18-5 win. Rinaldi and Hopkins paired to end the dual strongly for Rutgers, scoring 12-2 and 12-3 wins over their Tiger foes at 197 pounds and heavyweight, respectively. The Scarlet Knights next travel to the prestigious Midlands Championships in Evanston, Ill., inside Welsh-Ryan Arena on the campus of Northwestern University. The tournament, set to run from Dec. 29-30, annually features some of the top wrestling talent from around the nation. 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. No. 16 Rutgers 29, Princeton 7 125 pounds: Garrett Frey (P) dec. Vincent Dellefave (RU), 3-2 133 pounds: Mike DeMarco (RU) dec. Chris Perez (P), 4-2 141 pounds: Billy Ashnault (RU) dec. Adam Krop (P), 5-3 149 pounds: No. 3 Mario Mason (RU) tech. fall Zach Bintliff, 23-8 (7:00) 157 pounds: Daniel Kolodzik (P) maj. dec. Anthony Volpe (RU), 8-0 165 pounds: No. 6 Scott Winston (RU) maj. dec. Rich Eva (P), 18-5 174 pounds: No. 14 Greg Zannetti (RU) dec. Andy Lowy (P), 8-3 184 pounds: Daniel Seidenberg (RU) dec. Dan Santoro (P), 4-0 197 pounds: Daniel Rinaldi (RU) maj. dec. Kurt Brendel (P), 12-2 HWT: Daniel Hopkins (RU) maj. dec. Stephen Turner (P), 12-3 No. 16 Rutgers 21, Rider 12 125 pounds: Chuck Zeisloft (Rider) dec. Vincent Dellefave (Rutgers), 5-1 133 pounds: Michael DeMarco (Rutgers) dec. Jimmy Morris (Rider), 8-1 141 pounds: Jimmy Kirchner (Rider) dec. Billy Ashnault (Rutgers), 11-6 149 pounds: No. 3 Mario Mason (Rutgers) maj. dec. Zac Cibula (Rider), 12-4 157 pounds: Ramon Santiago (Rider) dec. Anthony Volpe (Rutgers), 6-1 165 pounds: No. 6 Scott Winston (Rutgers) maj. dec. James Brundage (Rider) , 12-3 174 pounds: No. 14 Greg Zannetti (Rutgers) maj. dec. No. 11 Jim Resnick (Rider), 11-3 184 pounds: Daniel Seidenberg (Rutgers) dec. Clint Morrison (Rider), 5-3 (TB1) 197 pounds: Daniel Rinaldi (Rutgers) dec. Donald McNeil (Rider), 6-2 HWT: Evan Craig (Rider) def. Daniel Hopkins (Rutgers), 2-1
  20. 106: 1st: No. 4 (at 113) Zahid Valencia (St. John Bosco, Calif.) dec. No. 5 Matthew Kolodzik (Miami Valley School, Ohio), 3-2 3rd: No. 1 Darian Cruz (Bethlehem Catholic, Pa.) dec. No. 11 (at 113) Johnson Mai (North Torrence, Calif.), 4-2 5th: Vincenzo Joseph (Pittsburgh Central Catholic, Pa.) dec. No. 13 Brent Fleetwood (Smyrna, Del.), 6-3 7th: No. 8 Coy Ozias (Christiansburg, Va.) over Lance Hill (Parkersburg South, W.V.) by forfeit 113: 1st: No. 2 Nathan Tomasello (CVCalif., Ohio) dec. No. 5 Joey McKenna (Blair Academy, N.J.), 3-2 3rd: No. 14 Zeke Moisey (Bethlehem Catholic, Pa.) dec. Alex Moore (St. Edward, Ohio, 3-2 5th: No. 7 J.R. Wert (Christiansburg, Va.) dec. Aaron Assad (Brecksville, Ohio), 2-1 tiebreaker 7th: Cody Stageberg (Cox, Va.) pinned Tanner Shoap (Chambersburg, Pa.) 120: 1st: No. 3 George DiCamillo (St. Ignatius, Ohio) dec. No. 4 Ryan Taylor (St. Paris Graham, Ohio), 11-4 3rd: Ivan McClay (Massillon, Ohio) dec. Kevon Powell (Montini Catholic, Ill.), 4-2 OT 5th: No. 16 Godwin Nyama (Brashear, Pa.) dec. P.J. Klee (Blair Academy, N.J.), 5-3 7th: Kaleb Lemaire (Caesar Rodney, Del.) pinned Calvin Campbell (Lexington, Ohio) 126: 1st: No. 8 Dean Heil (St. Edward, Ohio) pinned No. 1 Jimmy Gulibon (Derry Area, Pa.), 4:19 3rd: No. 5 (at 132) Brandon Jeske (Cox, Va.) dec. No. 3 Joey Dance (Christiansburg, Va.), 3-2 5th: No. 9 Dominick Malone (Wyoming Seminary, Pa.) dec. No. 5 Nathan Kraisser (Centennial, Md.), 3-1 7th: No. 19 Max Hvolbek (Blair Academy, N.J.) tech. fall Anthony Valencia (St. John Bosco, Calif.), 19-2 132: 1st: No. 18 (at 126) Randy Cruz (Bethlehem Catholic, Pa.) dec. Edgar Bright (St. Edward, Ohio), 5-2 3rd: No. 2 Alex Cisneros (Selma, Calif.) dec. No. 1 Mark Grey (Blair Academy, N.J.), 3-0 5th: No. 14 Joey Ward (Cincinnati Moeller, Ohio) dec. No. 14 (at 138) Brent Fickel (Padua, Ohio), 6-4 7th: C.J. Jablonski (Cox, Va.) dec. Chris Garcia (Montini Catholic, Ill.), 8-2 138: 1st: No. 1 Nate Skonieczny (Walsh Jesuit, Ohio) pinned No. 16 Austin Matthews (Reynolds, Pa.), 4:42 3rd: No. 5 Todd Preston (Blair Academy, N.J.) dec. No. 9 Chase Ferman (Broken Arrow, Okla.), 6-4 5th: Nick Barber (St. Edward, Ohio) dec. Mitch Newhouse (Massillon Perry, Ohio), 3-2 7th: Ty White (Wyoming Seminary, Pa.) dec. Angelo Amenta (Oregon Clay, Ohio), 5-4 145: 1st: Dylan Milonas (Blair Academy, N.J.) dec. No. 20 Blake Kastl (St. Paris Graham, Ohio), 5-3 OT 3rd: No. 9 Zack Dailey (Massillon Perry, Ohio) dec. Jake Faust (Lexington, Ohio), 1-0 5th: No. 19 Jack Clark (McDonogh, Md.) dec. Markus Scheidel (St. Edward, Ohio), 3-1 7th: Brooks Martino (Robinson, Va.) pinned Cohl Fulk (Wyoming Seminary, Pa.) 152: 1st: No. 2 (at 160) Bo Jordan (St. Paris Graham, Ohio) dec. No. 2 Isaiah Martinez (Lemoore, Calif.), 2-0 3rd: Garrett Hammond (Chambersburg, Pa.) dec. Russ Parsons (Blair Academy, N.J.), 8-6 5th: Dakota Sizemore (Cincinnati Moeller, Ohio) dec. Jim Klosz (Holy Name, Ohio), 5-3 OT 7th: Tyler Manion (Pittsburgh Central Catholic, Pa.) over Alex Bergman (Oak Harbor, Ohio) by forfeit 160: 1st: No. 3 (at 170) Isaac Jordan (St. Paris Graham, Ohio) over No. 4 (at 170) Geordan Speiller (Pine Castle Christian, FL), 5-2 3rd: Zach Epperly (Christiansburg, Va.) over No. 13 Victor Pereira (Newark Memorial, Calif.), 5-4 5th: No. 10 (at 170) Dylan Reel (Washington, Ill.) over Jacob Davis (St. Edward, Ohio), 5-3 7th: Patrick Coover (Blair Academy, N.J.) major dec. Toby Hague (McDonogh, Md.), 9-1 170: 1st: No. 8 (at 160) Mark Martin (St. Edward, Ohio) dec. No. 10 (at 160) Eric Morris (Wyoming Seminary, Pa.), 2-1 3rd: No. 20 Elliott Riddick (Bethlehem Catholic, Pa.) over Tyler Miles (Christiansburg, Va.) by forfeit 5th: Addison Knepshield (Blair Academy, N.J.) dec. Michael Blum (Cincinnati Moeller, Ohio), 4-2 7th: Austin Coniker (Pittsburgh Central Catholic, Pa.) dec. David Gray (CVCalif., Ohio), 6-4 182: 1st: No. 3 (at 195) Huston Evans (St. Paris Graham, Ohio) dec. No. 11 Domenic Abounader (St. Edward, Ohio), 3-2 3rd: B.J. Toal (Troy Christian, Ohio) dec. Michael Mocco (Blair Academy, N.J.), 3-1 OT 5th: Andrew Krawulski (Collins Hill, GA) over Steven Brogle (Parkersburg South, W.V.) by forfeit 7th: Aaron Adkins (Akron SVSM, Ohio) dec. Troy Lang (Brecksville, Ohio), 3-1 195: 1st: No. 19 Frank Mattiace (Blair Academy, N.J.) dec. Seth Calvert (Broken Arrow, Okla.), 6-1 3rd: James Suvak (St. Edward, Ohio) dec. Joe Tayse (Massillon Perry, Ohio), 7-4 5th: Kevin Marvel (McDonogh, Md.) dec. Jerry Thornberry (Cincinnati Moeller, Ohio), 2-1 7th: Josh Lehner (Lexington, Ohio) dec. Josh Alpha (Bethlehem Catholic, Pa.), 3-0 220: 1st: No. 2 Kyle Snyder (Good Counsel, Md.) dec. No. 6 AJ Vizcarrando (Wyoming Seminary, Pa.), 3-2 3rd: No. 11 Matt Meadows (CVCalif., Ohio) dec. Chalmer Freauf (Cincinnati Moeller, Ohio), 5-1 5th: No. 8 Ty Walz (St. Edward, Ohio) dec. David Farr (Blair Academy, N.J.), 10-5 7th: No. 16 Austin Lobsinger (West Valley, Calif.) pinned Garrett Linton (Rootstown, Ohio) 285: 1st: No. 1 Brooks Black (Blair Academy, N.J.) dec. No. 7 Greg Kuhar (St. Edward, Ohio), 3-1 3rd: No. 12 Mimmo Lytle (Swanton, Ohio) dec. Michael Johnson, Jr. (Wyoming Seminary, Pa.), 1-0 5th: Garrett Gray (Oregon Clay, Ohio) dec. Nino Majoy (Huron, Ohio), 5-3 7th: Blake Heim (Reynolds, Pa.) dec. Chuck Boddy (Germantown Academy, Pa.), 5-3
  21. Related: Placewinners Related: Brackets Related: Team Standings (Top 10) CUYAHOGA FALLS, Ohio -- Every year, the Walsh Jesuit Ironman is hyped as "the best in-season tournament in America." Well, this year's edition of the Ironman more than lived up to the hype. The intensity, electricity, and competitive atmosphere of Ironman Saturday was surreal to say the least. Blair (Photo/Kevin Schlosser, BuckeyeWrestling.com)Despite some moments of disappointment, No. 1 Blair Academy, N.J., lived up to its ranking and came home with its 10th Ironman title, and third in the last four years. The Buccaneers had a true team effort placing 13 of their 14 wrestlers inside of the top eight to score 252-1/2 points. "That was impressive," said head coach Jeff Buxton, "I'm proud of our team, things came together but we still have plenty to work on." The major moment of concern for Blair came in the semifinal round, when No. 2 St. Edward, Ohio took a temporary hold on the team point lead after a crazy sequence of matches from 126 through 138. In the semifinals at 126, No. 8 Dean Heil (St. Edward, Ohio) earned a 4-2 victory over No. 5 (at 132) Brandon Jeske (Cox, Va.). That came after a 3-1 Heil victory over No. 3 Joey Dance (Christiansburg, Va.) in the quarterfinal round. At 132 pounds, the two top wrestlers in the nation were upset within a five minute span. No. 1 ranked Mark Grey (Blair Academy, N.J.) was upended by No. 18 (at 126) Randy Cruz (Bethlehem Catholic, Pa.) 9-4. Cruz took an early lead in the match, Grey was able to cut the deficit down to 6-4, but Cruz escaped and got a late takedown to close it out. "Grey is real tough," said Cruz, "I've seen him at many events, but never wrestled him before today." Making it even worse for Blair, Edgar Bright (St. Edward, Ohio) upset No. 2 Alex Cisneros (Selma, Calif.) 5-2 in the tiebreaker. In the next weight, at 138, No. 5 Todd Preston (Blair Academy, N.J.) was upended 3-1 on a late takedown by No. 16 Austin Matthews (Reynolds, Pa.) off a crazy scramble. However, the Buccaneers were able to recover from that, starting with Dylan Milonas at 145 pounds, who upended No. 9 Zack Dailey (Massillon Perry, Ohio) 7-5 in the tiebreaker on a reversal during the semifinal round. That came after a 1-0 victory over No. 19 Jack Clark (McDonogh, Md.) in a quarterfinal battle of National Prep runners-up with a third perod rideout. In the final, Milonas was the first of three Blair champions with a 5-3 overtime victory over No. 20 Blake Kastl (St. Paris Graham, Ohio). "My endurance really keeps me going in these close matches," said Milonas. "It's all about the training partners that I have (at Blair, like Grey and Preston, and others) that keep pushing me and keep me going." In that semifinal round, Blair was also able to get wins from No. 19 Frank Mattiace at 195 and No. 1 Brooks Black at 285. Those wrestlers also earned championships during the final round. Mattiace earned a 6-1 victory against Seth Calvert (Broken Arrow, Okla.) on a five-point move late in the third period of a match that was previously tied 1-1. "Calvert hit a low ankle pick, and I trapped it to a cradle," said Mattiace. "Being at Blair has helped me improve a ton, and I give thanks to the coaches for making me ten times a better wrestler," Mattiace added. "Competing nationally has enabled me to improve." Black earned a 3-1 victory over No. 7 Greg Kuhar (St. Edward, Ohio) in the championship round on a third period takedown with 45 seconds remaining. That was a fifth victory for Black over Kuhar in as many meetings. Having seen him so many times, "I just have to go and execute the same plan, push the pace, and it will come," Black said. "It feels great to win a second (Ironman) title, I worked hard for it, and am thankful for the coaching (from Buxton and staff)." Dean Heil pinned Jimmy Gulibon to win the title at 126 pounds (Photo/Kevin Schlosser, BuckeyeWrestling.com)The major individual story of the tournament came from the already mentioned Heil, who followed up the victories earlier in the day over Dance and Jeske with an even bigger statement in the championship final match against No.1 Jimmy Gulibon (Derry Area, Pa.). After trading takedowns in the first two periods, the wrestlers were tied at 3-3. Gulibon then scored an escape off of his choice to start the third period. Countering a Gulibon shot, Heil won the scramble and trapped Gulibon on his back for the fall at the 4:19 mark. "I warmed up the same (before each match), I knew my competition, and I wrestled my match (in all three matches)," said Heil in analyzing his run through the Saturday gauntlet at the Ironman. "I was able to overcome some distractions in training (not being able to practice the week before this one due to injury), kept my focus, and knew this was a chance to be No. 1 in America." He more than stated his case on Ironman Saturday, and the performance was sufficient to earn Outstanding Wrestler honors. "It's totally amazing, and I fought through a heck of bracket," Heil responded when asked about earning the award. Despite that dynamic performance from Heil, St. Edward came up just short in their attempt to upend Blair, as they scored 240-1/2 points. That total for the Eagles was the highest ever accrued by a runner-up team. No. 8 (at 160) Mark Martin gave the Eagles a second titlist with a 2-1 victory over No. 10 (at 160) Eric Morris at 170 pounds. After being ridden out in the second period, and giving up an escape with about thirty seconds remaining, the match-deciding sequence started with about fifteen seconds remaining. Martin seized the moment, got in on a double leg attack, and blasted through the space for the match-winning takedown. "I went to what I do best," said Martin, "Morris does a good job staying in position, so I just had to go find an explosive moment to create a gap." The Eagles placed eleven wrestlers in all, championships coming from Heil and Martin, with runner-up finishes from Bright, No. 11 Domenic Abounader at 182, and Kuhar. Third place in the standings was No. 7 St. Paris Graham, Ohio with 167 points and a trio of champions, which tied Blair for the tournament high. Falcon champions were No. 2 (at 160) Bo Jordan winning at 152, No. 3 (at 170) Isaac Jordan winning at 160, and No. 3 (at 195) Huston Evans winning at 182. They also tied St. Edward with a tournament high five finalists, as No. 4 Ryan Taylor and Kastl were upended at 120 and 145 respectively. Bo Jordan upended No. 2 Isaiah Martinez (Lemoore, Calif.) for his second consecutive Ironman title, by a 2-0 score on a second period takedown from a head-inside single to a dump finish. Facing such a tough opponent, Bo focused on his basic match plan, "Just go out there, do what I do, get the inside position, push the pace, and get in his face." In the next weight, his cousin Isaac Jordan followed suit with a 5-2 victory over No. 4 (at 170) Geordan Speiller (Pine Castle Christian, Fla.). Takedowns in the first two periods were key -- they came off a head inside single and a sweep single. This was a bounce-back year for Isaac, after failing to place in last year's Ironman, then sitting out the rest of the regular season due to a hurt hamstring before winning a state title. "I feel much better (this year)," Isaac commented, also adding that, "(Bo) is a great partner, and I have many others in the room that also push me." Finally getting an Ironman title after finishing second last year, fourth and seventh the years before that, was Evans who upended Abounader by a 3-2 score. The match-deciding takedown came in the third period after multiple attempts fell just short of scoring. "It feels great to get one, since I've been working for this for a long time," said Evans, "I feel great this year, especially not having to cut (much if any) weight." Earning second Ironman championships this year were No. 2 Nathan Tomasello (CVCalif., Ohio) and No. 1 Nate Skonieczny (Walsh Jesuit, Ohio) at 113 and 138 pounds respectively. Tomasello had a very rough road to his title having to get off his back in the first period against No. 14 Zeke Moisey (Bethlehem Catholic, Pa.) and catch up to a 5-0 deficit. Trailing 9-8 late in the match after three takedowns to dent into that lead, Tomasello got the go ahead takedown and pin with one second remaining in the match. The championship match against No. 5 Joey McKenna (Blair Academy, N.J.) was no easier, despite Tomasello getting an early takedown. With the score tied 2-2, McKenna rode tough for much of the third period before Tomasello got the escape with about 30 seconds left before fending off a deep McKenna attack towards the edge of the mat inside the last ten seconds. "I trust god, and wrestle for his glory," said Tomasello, "Just able to let things go, focus in on the task at hand, and work very hard to be in better shape (than my opponents) to be able to wrestle the full six minutes." Skonieczny won a second title in three years at his home tournament with a pin against Matthews at the 4:41 mark. Leading 4-3 after takedowns in the second and third period, Skonieczny was in attempting a third takedown to extend the margin. Matthews tried to scramble through the attempt, but Skonieczny trapped Matthews on his back for a brief moment for the fall from the neutral position. "I got a good pace going, hit some good shots," Skonieczny said, "When (Matthews) rolled through, I just stopped it, and got the pin, which was an especially nice feeling." Winning additional maiden Ironman titles were No. 4 (at 113) Zahid Valencia (St. John Bosco, Calif.) at 106, No. 2 Kyle Snyder (Good Counsel, Md.) at 220, and Randy Cruz at 132. Though ranked as the No. 1 freshman regardless of weight in the country, this was Valencia's first major in-season test. He did more than pass this test, though all three matches on Saturday were one point affairs. The quarterfinal was a 6-5 victory over Vincenzo Joseph (Pittsburgh Central Catholic, Pa.), then a 5-4 victory over No. 11 (at 113) Johnson Mai (North Torrence, Calif.) before the 3-2 finals victory over No. 5 Matthew Kolodzik (Miami Valley School, Ohio). Key to the Valencia finals victory was a second period takedown, the only one of the match. "The Ironman comes with pressure, but I've been here before over my youth career," said Valencia, "I also have great partners that push me and help prepare me for challenges during the matches." Snyder, a sophomore sensation who is ranked No. 2 in that grade, added another notch to his resume with a 3-2 finals victory over No. 6 A.J. Vizcarrando (Wyoming Seminary, Pa.). A first period takedown held up as the key part of the margin, as he was able to replicate his National Prep finals victory over the same opponent. "It's been a lot of hard work with some great people and coaches that have enabled me to elevate to that next level (so early in my career)," said Snyder. Rounding out the champions was a three-time Ironman champion No. 3 George DiCamillo (St. Ignatius, Ohio) at 120 pounds. He became just the ninth wrestler to win three Ironman titles; David Taylor (Penn State/St. Paris Graham, Ohio) won four titles, and would make it ten that have won three or more. DiCamillo did so in entertaining fashion, as he made a statement against Ryan Taylor with an 11-4 major decision victory. Keys to the match were a Peterson counter takedown in the first period and five-point reversal to the back in the second period, which made it 7-0. Having wrestled Taylor on multiple occasions, including last year's 6-5 Ironman finals victory, DiCamillo knew that he "had to mix it up a bit and keep (Taylor) guessing." "It hasn't really sunk in yet," said DiCamillo of winning a third Ironman title, "however, I'm really excited."
  22. Photo/Zuffa LLC via Getty Images TORONTO -- Jon Jones looked vulnerable ... if only for a short time. But in the end, it was the 24-year-old Jones who reigned supreme after submitting Lyota Machida in the second round of their light heavyweight title bout on Saturday night at UFC 140 in Toronto. Jones was outstruck by Machida in the opening round. But Jones came back strong in the second round, taking Machida down before landing a vicious elbow, which not only changed the momentum of the fight, but opened a gash in Machida's forehead. Shortly after, Jones backed Machida into the Octagon cage and put the Dragon to sleep. Jones' victory was deemed Fight of the Night. "I have never fought anyone like Lyota," said Jones, who improved to 15-1, with his only loss coming by disqualification. "He's an amazing person. First off, I would like to say he has my utmost respect. So hats off to Lyota." UFC President Dana White had high praise for Jones, who is ranked fourth in the InterMatFight pound-for-pound rankings. "Jon Jones is the real deal," said White. "He has had an incredible schedule this year, fighting all the best in the world. Actually, this is the first time that the [light heavyweight] belt has been defended since Chuck Liddell. Big night for Bones Jones. The kickoff to what I think is going to be an amazing career." Former heavyweight champion Frank Mir found himself in danger early against Antonio Rodrigo Nogueia, as he was stunned by several strikes. Nogueia attempted a submission, but Mir quickly turned the tables and secured a Kimura, which broke Nogueira's arm, and gave Mir the victory. Mir was the first fighter ever to knock out Nogueia, when he did so on Dec. 27, 2008. Now he is the first fighter ever to submit Nogueia. Mir was was awarded Submission of the Night. "When I locked up Nogueira, I had a strong inclination that he was not going to tap," said Mir. "So I took a deep breath and ... uh, you guys saw what happened." Antonio Rogerio Nogueira, known as "Little Nog," proved to be too much for Tito Ortiz, who was fighting in his UFC-record 26th fight. Ortiz started quickly, landing strikes and appeared to have "Little Nog" in trouble. But Nogueira landed a left hand followed by a knee to the torso, which put Ortiz down on the canvas. Nogueira landed several punches and elbows to Ortiz's ribs before referee Yves Lavigne stepped in and called the fight. Brian Ebersole improved to 49-14 with a split decision victory over Claude Patrick, who entered the fight on a 13-fight winning streak. Patrick put Ebersole in a guillotine in the first round, but Ebersole survived and went on to win the round. Patrick came back to win the second round on the scorecard, landing some big strikes. Ebersole used two takedowns in the final round to take the final round and the decision. Chan Sung Jung started off the main card with guns blazing, knocking out Mark Hominick in just seven seconds. Jung landed a right, knocking down Hominick, and then pounced on top and landed a barrage of punches. Jung's seven-second knockout tied the record for the quickest knockout in UFC history. For Jung, who is known as "The Korean Zombie," it marked his second straight victory, following his submission victory over Leonard Garcia on March 26. Jung improves to 12-3, while Hominick falls to 20-10. Undercard Igor Pokrajak made early work of Krzysztof Soszynski with a first round knockout. Pokrajak was able to land a clean head shot on Soszynski that put him to the mat. Pokrajak kept the barrage of punches flying and quickly ended the fight. Pokrajak has now won two straight UFC fights by knockout. Dennis Hallman defeated John Makdessi by submitting him in a rear-naked choke in the first round. Hallman was able to overwhelm Makdessi early in the match and Makdessi was never seriously in the contest. Dennis Hallman apologized to the fans and to Makdessi after the fight for not making weight for the fight. In a fight that could have gone either way, Yves Jabouin was given a split-decision victory over Walel Watson (30-27, 29-28, 28-29). The match fight was extremely close with both fighters being very active throughout the entire contest. In the end, Jabouin's 2-0 takedown advantage may have made the difference in the judges eyes. Canadian Mark Bocek outlasted Nik Lentz in a match that lasted all three rounds. In front of a hometown crowd, Bocek was given a unanimous decision (30-27) by the judges by landing 46 significant strikes to Lentz's 10 (according to fightmetric.com). Bocek also had the takedown advantage over Lentz, 5-0. Jake Hecht delivered the first upset of UFC 140 when he stopped Rich Attonito in the second by technical knockout. Hecht was able to stun Attonito with an elbow to the head. After a flurry of uncontested strikes by Hetch, the fight was stopped. Jake Hecht has now won four straight, and 11 of his last 12 fights. In the first fight of the night, John Cholish, former Cornell wrestler, won his UFC debut by TKO in the second round over UFC newbie Mitch Clarke. Referee Big John McCarthy put a stop to the action towards the end of the second round after Clarke could no longer defend himself from strikes as he was being controlled by Cholish from behind.
  23. 1. No. 1 Blair Academy, N.J. 252-1/2 2. No. 2 St. Edward, Ohio 240-1/2 3. No. 7 St. Paris Graham, Ohio 167 4. No. 12 Wyoming Seminary, Pa. 128 5. No. 21 Cincinnati Moeller, Ohio 121-1/2 6. No. 14 Bethlehem Catholic, Pa. 120 7. No. 9 Christiansburg, Va. 119 8. No. 26 Broken Arrow, Okla. 102-1/2 9. No. 19 Massillon Perry, Ohio 90 10. No. 32 Collins Hill, Ga. 77 Other nationally ranked teams: 15. No. 29 Montini Catholic, Ill. 59; 22 (tie). No. 46 McDonogh, Md. 44; 24. No. 25 Pittsburgh Central Catholic, Pa. 43; 36 (tie). No. 47 Caesar Rodney, Del. 30
  24. Mohammed "King Mo" Lawal won't be the only NCAA Division I All-American at "Strikeforce Rockhold vs. Jardin" on Jan. 7. Undefeated former Mizzou wrestler Tyron Woodley (9-0 MMA, 7-0 SF) has been scheduled to fight streaking Jordan Mein (23-7 MMA, 1-0 SF) on the Jan. 7 card. Woodley has rattled off a string of impressive victories including his most recent decision victory against heavy-handed brawler Paul Daley. He's also recently bested Andrea Galvao and Terec Saffiedin. Mein is on six-fight win streak and has won 10 of his last 11 fights, including a September TKO of Evangelista 'Cyborg" Santos. The main card, including Woodley vs. Mein, will be aired on Showtime.
  25. LANCASTER, Pa. -- Back-to-back pins by seniors Tyler Sackett (Omaha, Neb.) and Aaron Kalil (Salem, N.H.) in the first two matches helped pave the way for a 31-12 victory by the Navy wrestling team over Franklin & Marshall Friday evening at the Mayser Center in Lancaster, Pa. The Midshipmen are now 2-2 in dual competition, while the Diplomats dropped to 0-7. “I'll be honest and say this wasn't our best match, but I didn't think we looked particularly sharp all week,” said Navy head coach Bruce Burnett. “I'm not one to make excuses for the team, but perhaps it's the fact we have finals next week. Whatever it was, we have to correct the mistakes we are making. The one thing I can't criticize is how hard the guys competed. I was particularly happy with the way Luke (Rebertus) and Dan (Miller) wrestled tonight.” Sackett, who has been out of action with a knee injury since the season-opening Eastern Michigan Open, returned to the mat at 125 pounds where he built a 10-0 advantage over F&M rookie David Hershberger before earning the pin at 3:26 to give the Mids an early 6-0 lead. “It was great to have Tyler back out on the mat,” said Burnett. “Now he just needs to matches to get back into the swing of things.” Nineteenth-ranked Kalil stepped onto the mat where he battled 133-pound F&M freshman Robert Ruiz. The two locked up several times, but neither could get much going until Kalil gained his escape and got Ruiz to the mat where he took the match via fall at 3:18 to push the Mids' lead to 6-0. After a scoreless opening period, Navy sophomore Raymond Borja (Virginia Beach, Va.) scored the first point at 141-pounds with an escape, but it would be his last lead of the evening. After Durso knotted things up with an escape to start the third, he went on to record a pair of third-period takedowns and used riding time to earn a 6-2 victory over Borja to trim Navy's lead to 12-3. The Mids, however, would go on to win the next three matches, all of which were the first dual wins of the season for the Navy wrestlers. Sophomore Joe Locksmith (Kissimmee, Fla.) took F&M sophomore Andrew Murano to the mat early in the first period and built a 3-0 advantage early in the second. Murano's lone point of the match was an escape to begin the third, as Locksmith now stands 1-3 in dual action this season. Junior Zach Basich (Wheeling, W.Va.) won a hard-fought match over the Diplomats' Eric Norgard at 157 pounds. Basich owned a 2-1 advantage through the first period and by the end of the second held a 5-2 lead. Norgard clipped the lead to 5-3 to open the final period, but another Basich takedown sealed the 8-3 victory in what marked his first dual of the year. Subbing in for an injured Mason Bailey (Fairmont, W.Va.) at 165 pounds was junior Jake Schalles (Orlando, Fla.), who looked strong in his match against F&M rookie Adam Schroeder. Schalles put together four takedowns en route to picking up a 9-4 win and improving to 1-0 in dual action this season. Trailing 21-3, Franklin & Marshall was able to briefly snap the Mids' winning streak as senior 174-pound Matt Fullowan pulled off a 5-3 win over Navy junior Oscar Huntley (Stafford, Va.) in sudden victory. Fullowan drew first win a takedown in the first and Huntley spent much of the time trying to work his way out. It wouldn't be until the second period that Huntley would earn an a point for an escape. The two would battle back and forth and by the end of regulation, the two would be deadlocked at 3-3. After a sudden victory period and two tie breakers, Fullowan went in on Huntley's leg and got him to the edge of the match for the winning takedown. It marked Huntley's first dual loss of the season, dropping to 3-1. Senior Luke Rebertus (Gloucester, Va.) pushed the Mids' lead to 25-6 after schooling F&M senior Mat Latessa. Rebertus turned in five takedowns against Latessa before scoring the 12-3 major decision and improving to 2-2 on the year. Senior Colin Ely of F&M looked like he was shot out of a cannon upon the opening whistle, taking Navy newcomer Paul Rands (Cary, Ill.) to the mat immediately and scoring a nearfall before winning the match by fall at 1:02. In the final bout of the night, Navy junior Dan Miller (Berlin, Md.) continued to get back in wrestling after missing a handful of weeks with an injury. Miller put together three takedowns and led 6-2 before sealing the match win by way of all at 4:16. Miller now stands 3-1 in dual action this season. The Midshipmen will have the next few weeks off from competition to concentrate on final exams and get away for the holidays before returning to the mat on Jan. 1-2 when whey travel to Chattanooga, Tenn. to take part in the Southern Scuffle. Results: 125 - Tyler Sackett (N) fall David Hershberger (F&M), 3:26 133 - Aaron Kalil (N) fall Robert Ruiz (F&M), 3:18 141 - Richard Durso (F&M) dec. Raymond Borja (N), 6-2 149 - Joe Locksmith (N) dec. Andrew Murano (F&M), 3-1 157 - Zach Basich (N), dec. Eric Norgard (F&M), 8-3 165 - Jake Schalles (N) dec. Adam Schroeder (F&M), 9-4 174 - Matt Fullowan (F&M) dec. Oscar Huntley (N), 5-3 SV2 184 - Luke Rebertus major dec. Matt Latessa (F&M), 12-3 197 - Colin Ely (F&M) fall Paul Rands (N), 1:02 285 - Dan Miller (N) fall Alexander Henry (F&M), 4:16
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