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2024 Olympic Brackets: 67 kg MGR, 87 kg MGR, 53 kg WFS
InterMat Staff posted an article in International
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The ‘buckle up’ moments occurred early in Paris on the opening day of wrestling at the 2024 Olympic Games. The first flight, which included Women’s Freestyle at 68kg along with 60 and 130kgs in Greco Roman, saw the bulk of their premier matchups take place in the first two rounds of the morning session. Two champions from 2023 Worlds collided in the first round with American prodigy Amit Elor leading Turkey’s Buse Tosun from whistle to whistle. It was among the most pivotal matches of the day for TheMat.com’s annual International Journalist Pick Contest as nineteen of the twenty-one entries chose one of those two as champion: fifteen selections for Elor, four for Tosun and one each for Nonoka Osaki (JPN) and Koumba Larrouque (FRA). One round later came the most intriguing matchup of Greco heavyweights as reigning World Champion Amin Mirzazadeh (IRI) fell to perhaps the greatest practitioner the sport has ever seen in Cuba’s Mijain Lopez. Again, nineteen journalists’ picks went to one of the two; Mijain received twelve nods to Mirzazadeh’s seven. The third big differentiator in the contest for Day I came at 60kg in Greco in the second session where Japan’s Kenchiro Fumita edged Zholman Sharshenbekov (KGZ), 4-3, in a reversal of last year’s World Championship final. Thirteen entries picked Sharshenbekov giving the seven who selected Fumita a leg up. Four entries are still alive to go perfect for the first flight, whose Gold Medal finals will take place in tomorrow’s second session. Two of those entries - Intermat’s Earl Smith and FloWrestling Andrew Spey - tied for 3rd in last year’s contest. Also notable is that all four still perfect selected Amit Elor, Kenchiro Fumita, and Mijain. No journalist selected any of their finalists opponents: Meerim Zhumanazarova (68/(KGZ), Liguo Cao (60/CHN), or Yasmani Acosta (130/CHI). Nine of the entries have two of three alive in the finals including Sina Etemadi, the only non-journalist in the field and the winner of the 2023 competition and 2022 Pick Champ Jon Kozak of FloWrestling. Still Perfect: Earl Smith (Intermat), Richard Mann (Intermat), Andrew Spey (FloWrestling), Willie Saylor (MatScouts) 2-for-3: Gary Abbott (USAWrestling), Jon Kozak (FloWrestling), Sina Etemadi (Fan), Dan Fickel (Wrestling USA), Mark Ostrander (Weighing In), Jack Hurley (The Fight Site), Andy Mason (Hagerstown Herald), Steve Rotstein (Pittsburgh Union), Byamabaa Tsagaanbaatar (Mongolian Federation).
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Dominating First-Period Tech Pushes Elor to Olympic Finals
InterMat Staff posted an article in Women
After a pair of dominating wins, two-time world champion Amit Elor appeared to be in for the biggest test of her maiden Olympic journey. Elor was tasked with an 18-year-old opponent from North Korea in Sol Gum Pak in the 68 kg semifinals. Pak posted ten points in each of her first two bouts - a win over 2021 world champion Irina Ringaci (Moldova) and a comeback against another young sensation Nisha Dahiya (India). That challenge never materialized as Elor only needed 1:44 seconds to post a stunning 10-0 tech. The bout started as most of Elor’s do - with her controlling the center of the mat and dominating the ties. Those little battles tilted so strongly in Elor’s favor that Pak was warned for passivity within the first minute. After a restart, Elor continued tying Pak up, snapped the North Korean down, and spun for a takedown. Not content with a two-point advantage, Elor locked up a leg lace. Following one turn, Elor had to readjust and then three more followed. The Turkish official blew his whistle and stopped the action signifying the end of the bout. If you turned away from the screen, you might have missed Elor’s whirlwind of action. With her win, Elor became only the fifth American woman to make an Olympic final. Of course, she has her sights set on a gold medal and gold alone. Elor also has the opportunity to become the youngest American wrestler to win Olympic gold. Standing between Elor and an Olympic gold medal is Kyrgyzstan’s Meerim Zhumanazarova. Zhumanazarova held off a late takedown attempt from 2020 Olympic silver medalist Blessing Oborududu (Nigeria) to win 3-1 and advance in the other semifinal. Zhumanazarova was an Olympic bronze medalist at this weight in 2020 and was a world champion in 2021. -
A few hours ago, brackets dropped for day two of the wrestling competition at the 2024 Olympic Games (For the full bracket, look here). Like the American wrestlers who started their tournaments this morning, tomorrow’s crop of wrestlers face some imposing opponents right off the bat. Here are the Americans wrestling on Tuesday, along with background information on their first opponent and a potential path to the finals. Since the gold medal matches are wrestled on the following day, we’ll deal with that half of the bracket when relevant. Greco-Roman 77 kg Kamal Bey vs Akzhol Makhmudov (Kyrgyzstan) It’s a familiar face for Kamal Bey in the opening round of his first Olympic tournament. Bey and Akzhol Makhmudov met in the finals of the 2017 Junior World Championships with Bey getting the win and the gold medal. Just a year later, Makhmudov won an Asian Championship at the Senior level and since then he’s amassed two more continental championships. Also that year, Makhmudov got some measure of revenge with a win over Bey in the bronze medal match at Junior Worlds. Makhmudov has grown into one of the best Greco wrestlers in the world, regardless of size. He’s coming off a world title in 2023, which was his second in a row. Makhmudov already has one Olympic medal - a silver from the 2020 Games. While Makhmudov seems like a rough draw and possibly could be, Bey has laid hands on him multiple times and does have the 2017 win to rely on mentally. Awaiting the winner of Bey/Makhmudov is either Jair Cuero (Colombia) or Demeu Zhadrayev (Kazakhstan). Cuero has defeated Bey twice in 2024, once at the Pan-American Championships and another time at the Pan-American Olympic Qualifier. Zhadrayev made the Olympics after making the semifinals of the Asian Qualifier. Of the nine returning world medalists at this weight, six are on Bey’s half of the bracket. Whoever emerges from his quarterfinal will meet a past world medalist in the semifinals. Three of the four possibilities from that quarterfinals have made at least one world final. Greco-Roman 97 kg Joe Rau vs. Mohammadhadi Saravi (Iran) There’s also some history between Joe Rau and his first opponent, Mohammadhadi Saravi. The two met earlier this year at the Hungarian Ranking Series event. Saravi prevailed with a 10-1 tech. The Iranian is a 2021 world champion and has two additional senior world bronze medals to his credit. Saravi is also appearing in his second Olympic event. In the 2020 Games, Saravai came away with a bronze medal in Tokyo. Since losing in the 2023 world semifinals, Saravi has been lights out. He rebounded with a bronze medal and then a gold medal at the 2023 Asian Games. In 2024, Saravi added to his collection with gold medals at the Asian Championships and the Hungarian event. If Rau could get by the third-seeded Saravi, he’d have to face the winner of Uzur Dzhuzupbekov (Kyrgyzstan) and Mindaugas Venckaitis (Lithuania). Neither has won an Olympic or world medal yet; however, Venckaitis wrestled for the bronze last year in Belgrade. This bottom half of the bracket is anchored by the second seed, Abubakr Khaslakhanau who is from Belarus but wrestling under the AIN (Individual Neutral Athlete) label. He was a U20 world champion in 2023 and got a strong seed after placing fifth at the 2023 World Championships and winning the Zagreb Open, before taking the bronze at European’s. Women’s Freestyle 50 kg Sarah Hildebrandt vs. Ibtissem Doudou (Algeria) Finally, an American wrestler who did not draw a world champion in the opening round. Sarah Hildebrandt will start her tournament with Ibtissem Doudou who has never wrestled in a world championship (or Olympic) event at any time in her career. Doudou qualified after a pair of wins at the African Olympic Qualifier. After qualifying, Doudou entered the Hungarian Ranking Series event and fell to Canada’s Madison Parks, 10-0. Should Hildebrandt advance to the quarterfinals, her most likely opponent would be China’s Ziqi Feng. Like Hildebrandt, Feng earned a bronze medal at the 2023 World Championships. Earlier that year, the pair met in the gold medal match at the Hungarian Ranking Series event. The American took that match, 4-2. Feng's only other Senior World event was in 2022 when she went 0-1. Two familiar faces could be waiting for Hildebrandt in the semifinals - Mariya Stadnik (Azerbaijan) or Otgonjargal Dolgorjav (Mongolia). Stadnik is one of the legends of women’s wrestling with six world medals and four Olympic medals. The two-time world champion is seeking an elusive Olympic gold medal to make her resume complete. Currently, she has two silvers and two bronzes. Hildebrandt and Stadnik met in the quarterfinals of the 2023 World Championships and Hildebrandt dominated to the tune of 14-3. Dolgorjav and Hildebrandt also have a history, as well. Hildebrandt teched the Mongolian in the early rounds of the 2023 Hungarian Ranking Series event; however, Dolgorjav got the most memorable win as she narrowly defeated Hildebrandt in the semifinals of the 2023 World Championships. It seems difficult to fathom, but at least two of the quartet of Hildebrandt, Feng, Stadnik, and Dolgorjav will not medal in Paris.
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2024 Olympic Brackets: 77 kg MGR, 97 kg MGR, 50 kg WFS
InterMat Staff posted an article in International
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Olympic wrestling officially got underway on Monday morning from Paris and as luck would have it, both of the Americans who were in action took the mat in the very first matches of the tournament. In Greco-Roman at 130 kgs, former Michigan star Adam Coon took on the returning heavyweight world champion Amin Mirzazadeh of Iran. For the first half of the opening stanza, the two battled for position and Coon held his own against the Iranian. However, Coon was called for passivity and put down in the ensuing par terre restart. From there, Mirzazadeh locked up a gut wrench and turned Coon for a commanding 3-0 lead. 3-0 is how the first period ended and in the second it was Mirzazadeh who was hit for passivity and put down. Unfortunately, Coon was not able to capitalize on the advantage and the pair was sent back to their feet. Coon continued to fight for position but could not break through the stingy defense of the Iranian. The bout ended 3-1 in favor of Mirzazadeh. Amit Elor also started her tournament at 68 kg in women’s freestyle simultaneously and against a returning world champion in Turkiye’s Buse Tosun. From the opening whistle, Elor controlled the action with her two-on-one tie. That resulted in an early step-out point in Elor’s favor. She continued to apply pressure and backed Tosun out of bounds for a second step-out point and a 2-0 lead - early in the opening period. Later in the first, Elor was able to secure her first takedown to take a 4-0 lead. Not content, she shot Tosun off the mat with a double-leg attempt to lead 5-0 heading into the second period. In the second period, the official put Tosun on the activity clock as Elor continued to control the ties and the positional battle. Tosun did get to Elor’s leg at one point, but couldn’t secure a takedown and gave up a point for a shot clock violation. Elor remained on the offensive late in the second with another takedown, this time from an arm drag to lead 8-0. Late in the bout, the pair exchanged takedowns, so the final score read 10-2 in favor of the American. About an hour and a half later, Elor took the mat in the Olympic quarterfinals. Her opponent was Wiktoria Choluj of Poland - the same wrestler she defeated in the 2023 U23 World semifinals, 5-0. This meeting played out similarly to that one as it was all Elor. Elor patiently worked to secure the opening takedown after using her arm drag and never looked back. She added a step-out and another takedown to lead 5-0 after the opening three minutes. During the final three minutes, Elor continued to methodically dismantle Choluj. She added to her lead with a step-out point and a third takedown, to win 8-0. In this afternoon’s semifinals, Elor will meet North Korean Sol Gum Pak. Pak is an 18-year-old who is relatively unknown. She has not competed at a major international tournament prior to the Asian Olympic Qualifier. Gum Pak did post a win over 2021 world champion and three-time world medalist Irina Ringaci (Moldova) in the Round of 16. The semifinals will begin this afternoon at approximately 3pm (Eastern). Coon was eliminated from medal contention after Mirzazadeh was defeated by the legendary Mijain Lopez (Cuba) in the quarterfinals. Lopez is two matches away from making Olympic history with his fifth gold medal in Greco-Roman. American Results Women’s Freestyle 68 kg Round of 16 - Amit Elor over Buse Tosun (Turkiye) 10-2 Quarterfinals - Amit Elor over Wiktoria Choluj (Poland) 8-0 Greco-Roman 130 kg Round of 16 - Amin Mirzazadeh (Iran) over Adam Coon 3-1
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2023 World Champion Micic Withdrawls from Olympics Due to Injury
InterMat Staff posted an article in International
A few hours before the first day of wrestling competition at the 2024 Olympic Games, one of the favorites at 57 kg in men’s freestyle announced he would have to withdraw from the tournament due to an injury. 2023 world champion, Stevan Micic of Serbia, made a post on his Instagram account that stated that he “suffered a knee injury a few weeks ago in practice.” He later states that he will need knee surgery. Last year, Micic earned his second Senior World medal by running through a gauntlet of credentialed opponents to claim the gold. In three consecutive matches, Micic defeated an Olympic champion, an Olympic silver medalist and a world champion to reign over the 57 kg weight class. Micic is best known to American fans as a star for the Michigan Wolverines. A 2018 Big Ten champion, Micic earned All-American honors three times including an appearance in the 2018 NCAA finals. During his final year of competition, Micic moved up to 141 lbs and started on a Wolverine squad that captured its first Big Ten team championship since 1973. At this time, United World Wrestling has not publicly acknowledged Micic’s statement. It’s unclear whether he will be replaced in the bracket or not. Micic was in line to receive the top seed at 57 kg. Logistically, it may be difficult to get a replacement to Paris since his weight class is set to wrestle on Thursday morning. -
Earlier today, brackets were released for day one of wrestling at the 2024 Olympic Games. Those are posted here. As promised in that posting, we’re breaking down the draws for the American wrestling on day one. Remember, there is no American at 60 kg in Greco-Roman, so we did not mention that bracket here. At first glance, you might think that the pair of Americans taking the mat on Monday got a raw deal in the draws - since both drew the top seed in their respective brackets. That may be the case in one situation and, not so much, in the other. Don’t worry, we’ll explain. Here are the Americans wrestling on Monday, along with background information on their first opponent and a potential path to the finals. Since the gold medal matches are wrestled on the following day, we’ll deal with that half of the bracket when relevant. Greco-Roman 130 kg Adam Coon vs. Amin Mirzazadeh (Iran) photo courtesy of Tony Rotundo; WrestlersAreWarriors.com Right off the bat, Adam Coon draws the defending world champion Amin Mirzazadeh of Iran. Mirzazadeh won his world title with criteria wins in each of his final three matches in Belgrade. The last of which came over five-time world champion Riza Kayaalp of Turkiye. Since winning his first world title, Mirzazadeh has won the Asian Games and the Asian Championships. During the Asian Games, he grinded out a pair of close decisions - one of which was via criteria in the gold medal match. At the 2024 Asian Championships, he was much more dominant. In a weight class with a handful of contenders in their mid-to-late 30’s, Mirzazadeh is younger and closer to his athletic prime at 26. Should Coon pull an upset over the reigning world champion, an even larger hurdle likely awaits in the quarterfinals. Four-time Olympic champion Mijain Lopez of Cuba is his potential opponent. Lopez is looking to add to his already incredible resume with a seemingly unfathomable fifth Olympic gold medal. The Cuban has not entered any major international tournaments since winning the gold in 2021. Realistically, if Coon could find a way to get by both Mirzazadeh and Lopez, I’m not sure it matters who comes through the other quarterfinal. Oddly enough, one of the first-round matches in that quarterfinal features a pair of past Olympic medalists clashing. Heiki Nabi (Estonia) fell in the 2012 London Olympic finals to Lopez, while Sabah Shariati (Azerbaijan) was a bronze medalist four years later. In that tournament, Shariati defeated American Robby Smith in the opening round, 8-2. We mentioned in the 130 kg preview, that if Mirzazadeh and Lopez were on the same side of the bracket it would be massively lopsided. That proved to be the case, plus this half has the past Olympic medalists who could advance to meet one of them in the semis. Women’s freestyle 68 kg Amit Elor vs. Buse Tosun (Turkey) photo courtesy of Tony Rotundo; WrestlersAreWarriors.com Both of the Americans that will compete on day one have drawn the top seed. In this instance, it’s not as brutal of a draw for Amit Elor. Back in 2022, Elor and Buse Tosun met in the quarterfinals of the 2022 World Championships at 72 kg. Elor prevailed with a fall after jumping out to a 4-0 lead. She ended up winning her first Senior world title and Tosun did not place. Last year, Tosun moved down to 68 kg in preparation for the Olympic Games. She claimed a world title after running through an impressive field. In her opening match, Tosun pinned world champion Irina Ringaci (Moldova). Since then, Tosun has been a bronze medalist at the Zagreb Open and a European champion - both at 68 kg. After disposing of Tosun, Elor would have the winner of Wiktoria Choluj (Poland) and Feng Zhou (China). Zhou is a two-time Olympian and two-time world medalist; however, her most recent world medal came in 2018. Choluj is a three-time age group world medalist, but has yet to get on the medal stand at a Senior-level world event. These two met in 2024 at the Zagreb Open with Zhou getting a narrow 4-3 win. In that same tournament, Zhou defeated American Forrest Molinari, 2-0. Speaking of Americans, Zhou was beaten by Emma Bruntil, 6-3 at the 2023 World Championships. Also in the same half of the bracket is three-time world medalist and 2021 Ringaci. Ringaci has the relatively unknown Sol Gum Pak (North Korea) in the opening round. During the Asian Olympic Qualifier, the 18-year-old Pak defeated Zhou. The final quarterfinal in this bracket pits Nisha Dahiya (India) against Tetiana Sova-Rizhko (Ukraine). Dahiya is making her Olympic debut and has yet to compete in a Senior World event. At the Last Chance World OG Qualifier, Dahiya won three matches to qualify for Paris. Sova-Rizhko has two years' worth of Senior World experience and has earned world bronze medals at the U17 and U20 levels.
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2024 Olympic Brackets: 60 kg MGR, 130 kg MGR, 68 kg WFS
InterMat Staff posted an article in International
Brackets have been released for the first day of competition at the 2024 Olympic Games. The first day of action will feature competition at 60 and 130 kg in Greco-Roman and 68 kg in women's freestyle. Later this afternoon, we'll have a breakdown of the brackets from an American standpoint. Remember that there is no American representative at 60 kg in Greco-Roman. (Graphics below courtesy of United World Wrestling) -
It’s early August which means the 2024 Olympic Games are right around the corner. Over the next two weeks, InterMat will bring you individual weight class previews for each of the 18 weights contested at the Olympic Games. The 2024 version has already been slightly different from years past. Earlier in the summer, United World Wrestling announced a list of wrestlers from Belarus and Russia who would not be permitted to compete due to their support of the war with Ukraine. After this decision, Russia decided to withdraw all of its entries for wrestling. That led to replacements being named earlier this month. With all of the moving parts, and a field that wasn’t confirmed until later in the game, previewing the action had to take a back seat since we weren’t sure who would actually be in Paris. UWW has recently published entry lists for each of the three styles, so we are good to go. Our final preview is men's Greco-Roman at 130 kg. The American entry is Adam Coon, who will be making his Olympic debut. Coon is the lone American in the Greco discipline who comes into the tournament seeded (8th). The story of the weight is the return of the legendary Mijain Lopez of Cuba. The four-time Olympic gold medalist will be looking for number five in Paris. Expect his pursuit to garner plenty of coverage from NBC. 130 kg entries Sabah Shariati (Azerbaijan) Kiril Milov (Bulgaria) Yasmani Acosta Fernandez (Chile) Lingzhe Meng (China) Mijain Lopez (Cuba) Abdellatif Mohamed (Egypt) Heiki Nabi (Estonia) Jello Krahmer (Germany) Amin Mirzazade (Iran) Alimkhan Syzdykov (Kazakhstan) Seungchan Lee (South Korea) Oussama Assad (Morocco) Alin Alexuc Ciurariu (Romania) Amine Guennich (Tunisia) Muhammet Bakir (Turkiye) Adam Coon (USA) Seeds 1. Amin Mirzazade (Iran) 2. Abdellatif Mohamed (Egypt) 3. Lingzhe Meng (China) 4. Alin Alexuc Ciurariu (Romania) 5. Heiki Nabi (Estonia) 6. Yasmani Acosta Fernandez (Chile) 7. Seungchan Lee (South Korea) 8. Adam Coon (USA) Past Senior World/Olympic Medalists:(8) Acosta Fernandez, Coon, Lopez (x12), Milov (x2), Mirzazade (x2), Mohamed, Nabi (x6), Shariati 2020(1) Olympic Medalists (130 kg) Gold: Mijain Lopez (Cuba) Silver: Iakobi Kajaia (Georgia) Bronze: Riza Kayaalp (Turkiye) Bronze: Sergey Semenov (Russia) photo courtesy of Tony Rotundo; WrestlersAreWarriors.com 2023 World Medalists (130 kg) Gold: Amin Mirzazadeh (Iran) Silver: Riza Kayaalp (Turkiye) Bronze: Abdellatif Mohamed (Egypt) Bronze: Oscar Pino Hinds (Cuba) How They Qualified: 2023 World Championships: Kayaalp (Bakir), Meng, Mirzazadeh, Mohamed, Pino Hinds (Lopez) Asian Qualifier: Lee, Syzdykov African/Oceania Qualifier: Assad, Guennichi European Qualifier: Krahmer Pan-American Qualifier: Acosta Fernandez, Schultz (Coon) World OG Qualifier: Alexuc Ciurariu, Shariati Reallocated Quotas: Milov, Nabi Key Recent (ish) Matches between Qualifiers 2024 Hungarian Ranking Series quarterfinals: Lee over Mohamed (7-6) 2024 Hungarian Ranking Series quarterfinals: Alexuc Ciurariu over Guennichi (5-0) 2024 Hungarian Ranking Series Round of 16: Mohamed over Coon (3-1) 2024 Hungarian Ranking Series Round of 16: Guennichi over Syzdykov (3-2) 2024 Last Chance World OG Qualifier semifinals: Alexuc Ciurariu over Nabi (1-1) 2024 European Olympic Qualifier: Krahmer over Alexuc Ciurariu (6-1) 2024 African Olympic Qualifier: Guennichi over Assad (8-0) 2023 Asian Games finals: Mirzazadeh over Meng (1-1) 2023 Asian Games semifinals: Mirzazadeh over Syzdykov (3-1) 2023 World Championships bronze medal match: Mohamed over Meng (3-2) 2023 World Championships repechage: Mohamed over Nabi (2-0) 2023 World Championships Round of 16: Alexuc Ciurariu over Lee (1-1) 2023 World Championships Round of 32: Meng over Krahmer (3-1) 2023 Hungarian Ranking Series Round of 32: Alexuc Ciurariu over Coon (3-1) 2023 Asian Championship finals: Mirzazadeh over Lingzhe (2-0) 2023 European Championship quarterfinals: Shariati over Alexuc Ciurariu (9-3) The American Entry: Adam Coon For the second consecutive Olympic Trials, Adam Coon prevailed over Cohlton Schultz; however, it isn’t as cut-and-dry as it may have appeared on paper. And it’s a totally different result. In 2021, Coon won the Trials but wasn’t able to qualify the weight at the OG Last Chance Qualifier and therefore couldn’t compete at the Tokyo Games. After the Olympic process, Coon left the wrestling world to pursue an NFL career - initially with the Tennessee Titans. Once Coon’s NFL experience ended, he returned to the wrestling mat in 2023. Understandably rusty, Coon was beaten soundly by Schultz at the 2023 US Open and in two straight matches at Final X 2023. That trend looked like it would continue at the Olympic Trials where Schultz took the first match, 3-1. Coon ended up turning the tables and won the last two matches of the series 1-1 and 6-1. Schultz had already qualified the weight for the Olympics with his efforts at the Pan-American Olympic Qualifier, so no additional action was required from Coon, he was headed to the Olympics for the first time. While this is Coon’s first appearance at the Olympic Games, he does have experience on the big stage. In 2018, Coon made the world finals during his Senior World debut. A year later, he made the world team but did not come away with a medal. Coon is the only American Greco-Roman wrestler who has earned a seed in Paris. He’ll start the tournament as the eighth seed. While we’ll have to wait until tomorrow to see Coon’s first-round opponent, should he win that bout he’d have the returning world champion and top-seeded Amin Mirzazadeh. photo courtesy of Tony Rotundo; WrestlersAreWarriors.com The X-Factor: Mijain Lopez (Cuba) Typically, we’ve identified wrestlers in this portion of the preview as being potential underdogs and bracket-busters, with the majority of them being unseeded. Mijain Lopez is unseeded but hardly an underdog. Quite the contrary, he’s actually aiming to become not only one of the greatest Olympic wrestlers ever, but one of the most impressive Olympians…ever! The 41-year-old Lopez is a four-time Olympic gold medalist. Oh yeah, with five world championships, as well. Lopez does not concern himself with continental titles or ranking series events or even world championships these days. He hasn’t wrestled in one since 2015. Without any ranking criteria points within the last year, Lopez will come into the tournament without a seed. Most wrestlers at this level don’t care about that sort of thing - Lopez probably worries about it even less than anyone else in the tournament. Without any recent competition, it’s difficult to gauge where Lopez is physically - compared to the last Olympic Games. Despite his age, you have to assume that Lopez is still capable of winning this bracket. The bracket This weight class is a bit odd since half of the medalists from 2023 are not in the field. That leaves Mirzazadeh as the top seed (rightfully so) and 2023 bronze medalist Abdellatif Mohamed (Egypt) as the second seed. For now, both sides of the bracket appear to be relatively balanced. The top half has Mirzazadeh along with #4 Alexuc Ciurariu and #5 Nabi and #8 Coon. Nabi is a nearly 40-year-old competitor who is in his third Olympic Games and was a silver medalist to Lopez back in 2012! Along with Mohamed, on the bottom half is, #3 Meng, #6 Acosta Fernandez, and #7 Lee. The former Cuban representative, Acosta Fernandez, is also a former world medalist and might be the best wrestler on the bottom half, for now. Like other contenders, he’s also up there in age at 36. Of course, the wrestling world will be patiently awaiting the draws to see where Lopez is inserted. Should he go on the top half it would be massively imbalanced. Analysis: This could be the weight class that gets the most mainstream media attention due to Lopez and his quest for Olympic immortality. Even if Lopez isn’t completely on top of his game, it’s hard to fathom how you defeat this mountain of a man. Anything other than a 1-1 win on passivities seems difficult to picture. Of course, if there’s anyone equipped to take out the legendary Lopez it’s Mirzazedah. Mirzazedah had his breakthrough at the Senior level in 2022 when he took second place at the World Championships. Last year, he grabbed his first Senior world title. Mirzazedah has world gold medals at both the U20 and U23 levels. This will be Mirzazadeh’s second Olympic Games. In 2020, he fell in the quarterfinals 8-0 to Lopez and then was beaten by Riza Kayaalp (Turkiye) in the bronze medal match. Since then Mirzazadeh has improved significantly and Kayaalp was the opponent he defeated in the 2023 World finals. A 130 kg gold medal hanging on the neck of someone other than Lopez or Mirzazadeh would be considered a gigantic upset. Previous Olympic Previews: Men's Freestyle 57 kg Men's Freestyle 65 kg Men's Freestyle 74 kg Men's Freestyle 86 kg Men's Freestyle 97 kg Men's Freestyle 125 kg Women's Freestyle 50 kg Women's Freestyle 53 kg Women's Freestyle 57 kg Women's Freestyle 62 kg Women's Freestyle 68 kg Women's Freestyle 76 kg Men's Greco-Roman 60 kg Men's Greco-Roman 67 kg Men's Greco-Roman 77 kg Men's Greco-Roman 87 kg Men's Greco-Roman 97 kg
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It’s early August which means the 2024 Olympic Games are right around the corner. Over the next two weeks, InterMat will bring you individual weight class previews for each of the 18 weights contested at the Olympic Games. The 2024 version has already been slightly different from years past. Earlier in the summer, United World Wrestling announced a list of wrestlers from Belarus and Russia who would not be permitted to compete due to their support of the war with Ukraine. After this decision, Russia decided to withdraw all of its entries for wrestling. That led to replacements being named earlier this month. With all of the moving parts, and a field that wasn’t confirmed until later in the game, previewing the action had to take a back seat since we weren’t sure who would actually be in Paris. UWW has recently published entry lists for each of the three styles, so we are good to go. Our final preview in women's freestyle is the 76 kg class. This is a new-look weight class for the United States as Kennedy Blades has made her first Senior level team after defeating the legendary Adeline Gray - a mainstay at this weight for the decade. Blades has experienced success at every age group thus far, so it's hard to imagine her not doing so as a Senior. Here's what to expect for a relatively wide open 76 kg weight class. 76 kg entries Yuliana Yaneva (Bulgaria) Justina DiStasio (Canada) Juan Wang (China) Tatiana Renteria (Colombia) Milaimys Marin Potrille (Cuba) Genesis Reasco Valdez (Ecuador) Bernadett Nagy (Hungary) Reetika Hooda (India) Yuka Kagami (Japan) Aiperi Medet Kyzy (Kyrgyzstan) Davaanasan Enkh Amar (Mongolia) Hannah Rueben (Nigeria) Catalina Axente (Romania) Zaineb Sghaier (Tunisia) Yasemin Adar (Turkiye) Kennedy Blades (USA) Seeds 1. Aiperi Medet Kyzy (Kyrgyzstan) 2. Yuka Kagami (Japan) 3. Tatiana Renteria (Colombia) 4. Catalina Axente (Romania) 5. Milaimys Marin Potrille (Cuba) 6. Hannah Rueben (Nigeria) 7. Justina DiStasio (Canada) 8. Bernadett Nagy (Hungary) Past Senior World/Olympic Medalists:(6) Adar (x4), DiStasio (x2), Enkh Amar, Kagami (x2), Medet Kyzy (x2), Renteria 2020(1) Olympic Medalists (76 kg) Gold: Aline Focken (Germany) Silver: Adeline Gray (USA) Bronze: Qian Zhou (China) Bronze: Yasemin Adar (Turkiye) photo courtesy of Tony Rotundo; WrestlersAreWarriors.com 2023 World Medalists (76 kg) Gold: Yuka Kagami (Japan) Silver: Aiperi Medet Kyzy (Kyrgyzstan) Bronze: Tatiana Renteria (Colombia) Bronze: Adeline Gray (USA) How They Qualified: 2023 World Championships: Gray (Blades), Kagami, Marin Potrille, Medet Kyzy, Renteria Asian Qualifier: Hooda, Wang African/Oceania Qualifier: Rueben, Sghaier European Qualifier: Adar, Nagy Pan-American Qualifier: DiStasio, Reasco Valdez World OG Qualifier: Axente, Enkh Amar, Yaneva Key Recent (ish) Matches between Qualifiers 2024 Hungarian Ranking Series event - DiStasio over Renteria (5-1) 2024 Hungarian Ranking Series event - DiStasio over Sghaier (6-0) 2024 Hungarian Ranking Series event - Renteria over Hooda (3-2) 2024 Hungarian Ranking Series event - Renteria over Sghaier (Fall 5:56) 2024 Hungarian Ranking Series event - Renteria over Reasco Valdez (4-2) 2024 Hungarian Ranking Series event - Hooda over Reasco Valdez (4-0) 2024 Hungarian Ranking Series event - Hooda over Sghaier (7-0) 2024 Hungarian Ranking Series event - Hooda over DiStasio (8-0) 2024 Asian Olympic Qualifier - Hooda over Wang (9-6) 2024 Asian Olympic Qualifier - Hooda over Enkh Amar (11-0) 2024 Asian Olympic Qualifier - Wang over Enkh Amar (7-2) 2024 European Championships semifinals - Adar over Nagy (Fall) 2024 Pan-American Championships final - Reasco Valdez over Renteria (9-0) 2024 Zagreb Open finals: Medet Kyzy over Wang (2-1) 2024 Zagreb Open semifinals: Wang over Blades (3-3) 2024 Zagreb Open Round of 16: Medet Kyzy over DiStasio (Fall) 2023 U23 World Championships final: Hooda over Blades (9-2) 2023 Pan-American Games final: Marin Potrille over Renteria (5-4) 2023 Pan-American Games semifinals: Renteria over Reasco Valdez (1-1) 2023 Asian Games Round of 16: Medet Kyzy over Wang (2-1) 2023 World Championships finals: Kagami over Medet Kyzy (InjDef) 2023 World Championships Olympic Wrestle-Off: Marin Potrille over Axente (Fall :50) 2023 World Championships bronze medal match: Renteria over Axente (Fall 5:59) 2023 World Championships repechage: Axente over DiStasio (2-0) 2023 World Championships semifinals: Kagami over Marin Potrille (5-2) 2023 World Championships semifinals: Medet Kyzy over Renteria (Fall 2:32) 2023 World Championships quarterfinals: Medet Kyzy over DiStasio (11-0) 2023 World Championships Round of 16: Renteria over Rueben (6-2) 2023 World Championships Round of 16: Marin Potrille over Reasco Valdez (Fall 4:52) 2023 World Championships Round of 32: Medet Kyzy over Axente (11-0) 2023 Hungarian Ranking Series semifinal: Wang over DiStasio (Fall 4:59) 2023 Hungarian Ranking Series quarterfinals: Wang over Reasco Valdez (4-3) 2023 Hungarian Ranking Series: Enkh Amar over Axente (3-0) 2023 European Championship quarterfinals: Adar over Axente (10-0) The American Entry: Kennedy Blades After two straight Olympic Games with Adeline Gray in this weight class, Kennedy Blades has overtaken the American legend for a spot on the 2024 team. Blades has shown plenty of potential at the age group level which led fans to think that this time could come for her. She has won medals at three different age groups including a U20 gold medal in 2021. Blades punched her ticket to Paris after a pair of decisive wins (11-6 and 8-3) over Gray in the finals of the Olympic Team Trials. That was after Blades teched her way through the challenge tournament - one of her wins in that bracket came over 2022 World Team member Dymond Guilford. The win over Gray at the Olympic Trials wasn’t the first for Blades. In 2023, Blades teched Gray 12-2 in the finals of the US Open. Within the last year, Blades has been the American representative at this weight for the U20 and U23 World Championships. She brought home the bronze from U20’s and was a silver medalist at U23’s. Earlier this year, Blades was a bronze medalist at the Zagreb Open Ranking Series. In her medal round match, Blades defeated future Iowa teammate and fellow U20 World Champion Kylie Welker. Blades will come into the tournament unseeded which can be like a roll of the dice. She doesn’t have much history against most of the field, so there isn’t much to compare her to the other entrants. The most important note might be her two decisive wins over Gray - a feat that few have been able to accomplish over the last decade. photo courtesy of Tony Rotundo; WrestlersAreWarriors.com The X-Factor: Yasemin Adar (Turkiye) The woman with the longest resume and a consistent track record for success, Yasemin Adar, is not seeded. Adar is also the only medalist from the 2020 Games in the field. Part of Adar not receiving a seed is because she did not compete at the 2023 World Championships. At her last World Championship event (2022), she came away with gold - winning her second world title. In addition to her three world finals appearances, Adar also fell twice in world bronze medal matches early in her career. Which brings us to age. Adar is 32 years old. Not too old to win at the highest level; however, she’s the oldest woman in the bracket and one of only three 30-year-olds in this field of 16. Adar has entered two tournaments in 2024 and has not lost in either. She crushed the field at the European Championships and then had three straight wins at the European Olympic Qualifier. At the qualifier, Adar teched four-time world medalist Epp Mae of Estonia. I wouldn’t expect seeding (or lack thereof) to be an issue for Adar. It’s probably more problematic for whoever she draws in the first round. Chances are she’s probably beaten them at one point or another in her career. The bracket The first three seeds in this bracket are about what you would expect based on the results from the 2023 World Championships. Both finalists are in the one and two slots, though silver medalist Medet Kyzy is the top seed and Kagami is the two. In addition, the bottom half of the bracket has 2023 bronze medalist Tatiana Renteria and former world champion Justina DiStasio as the seventh seed. Counting Adar, there are a pair of past world medalists (Enkh Amar) who will be drawn into the bracket. Just as important are where some of the young talent lands - such as Blades and Hooda. Analysis Similar to heavyweight in men’s freestyle, this weight class is going through a bit of transition. Some of the old guard have either moved on or were unseated in the qualification process. That is evident in the fact that Adar is the only returning medalist from the 2020 Games (held in 2021). Other notables from that era like Mae, 2016 Olympic gold medalist Erica Wiebe (Canada), 2012 gold medalist Natalya Vorobieva (Russia), and Qian Zhou (China) are not in the field. At the same time, there are a handful of young women who are 23 or younger and have had great success at the age group level and are looking to make their marks here. Blades and her U20 world finals opponent, Hooda, are two obvious examples. Another is U20 and U23 champion Marin Potrille, who is the fifth seed. The eighth seed Bernadett Nagy (Hungary) is a medalist at the U17 and U20 divisions. The 2023 world champion, Kagami is still only 22. By the time the 2028 Olympic Games rolled around, we could see a large portion of this weight class, still intact - just with more prestigious credentials by their names. That’s getting way ahead of ourselves though. A rematch of the 2023 world finals; between the top two seeds, is also a very plausible scenario. Previous Olympic Previews: Men's Freestyle 57 kg Men's Freestyle 65 kg Men's Freestyle 74 kg Men's Freestyle 86 kg Men's Freestyle 97 kg Men's Freestyle 125 kg Women's Freestyle 50 kg Women's Freestyle 53 kg Women's Freestyle 57 kg Women's Freestyle 62 kg Women's Freestyle 68 kg Men's Greco-Roman 60 kg Men's Greco-Roman 67 kg Men's Greco-Roman 77 kg Men's Greco-Roman 87 kg Men's Greco-Roman 97 kg
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Just over a week after he was announced as an assistant coach with the Ohio RTC, Coleman Scott sat down with Ryan Holmes to discuss how this opportunity came together and what he hopes to accomplish in the new role. The two also hit on a variety of topics. With it being the middle of the Summer Olympics, Scott talks about the unique circumstances surrounding him making the 2012 team, along with his Olympic experience, and having to pick himself up and wrestle for the bronze medal after a difficult semifinal loss. Scott also talks about the situation at Oklahoma State this year - as he was an associate head coach and in the running for the head coaching job that ultimately went to David Taylor. He also addresses a situation regarding financial allegations that were made against him. Scott is very honest about his feelings to potentially leave the wrestling world entirely, before this position with the Ohio RTC emerged. For the full interview: photo courtesy of Tony Rotundo; WrestlersAreWarriors.com
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Before we get going here, I just want to say a few words on the recent scuttlebutt with the media coverage of the Bo Bassett recruiting countdown. Allow me to preface this by admitting that the whole thing is ridiculous. I don’t need weekly updates to know he’s turning down schools that he was never going to commit to anyway and a part of me does find it somewhat disrespectful to the smaller schools, who have to be the butt of a joke when they make the cut list. But maybe that’s just me and others don’t see it that way. I know Gardner-Webb had some fun with it and that’s fine. If anything, it brings some good exposure to your school. So why does every media outlet big and small feel the need to cover it ad nauseam? Well, because it’s news whether we like it or not. He’s the top high school prospect in the country right now and possibly the next generational talent. There’s also not much else going on right now and if not for the Olympics next week there really wouldn't be anything going on. People need to produce daily content whether it be IM, Flo, or anyone else out there. Twenty years ago, you could get away with an article a day or simply updating your site every few days. Most folks barely went on the internet for more than an hour a day and we didn’t have everything at our literal fingertips. Those days are long gone. Sites need clicks. Clicks mean page views. Page views bring in advertising and advertising brings in money. It wasn't my idea. If I had it my way the League of Shadows would burn this world to the ground and we’d start over with a clean slate. I’m not here to kick you off my lawn or anything and I understand where both sides are coming from. The overexposure and reporting on every move will ruffle many a feather and already has if you read the comments on social media and message boards. Face it, people are going to complain. That’s why the internet was invented. If this was the same thing with a young star of a more popular sport then you might not look at it the same way, but wrestling is different with a much smaller circle, so we all feel just a little closer to the action. You’ll drive yourself nuts getting worked up over every little silly piece of content and you can’t stop it anyway so don’t bother. Or do bother and feed off your own rage. It feels good sometimes. The fact is that the athletes control everything now and don’t need classic media to promote them when they can just promote themselves. And if you don’t like it then be prepared to lose access because that’s just the way things are. It’s no surprise that the forthcoming Who’s Number One event is being held in Bishop McCort’s backyard where Flo has never held an event before. Are they catering to a school that should have multiple entries in the event? Probably. Is it a good idea to have it there so they sell a lot of tickets and have a good crowd to cheer on the hometown kids? Absolutely. It’s easy to make an argument on both sides of this and the best thing is to just deal with it, ignore it, or have some fun with it. There are bigger problems in the world right now. Like how Big Chocolate is slowly shrinking the size of our candy bars and thinking we won’t notice. But that’s a rant for another time. We have questions to get to and that’s why you’re here. Well, it’s just the one question actually and it comes from one half of the dynamic Rutgers broadcasting team, Nick Kosko, and since we’re Kosko guys, let’s see what he has on his mind. It's the dog days of summer, so let me throw an alternate universe at you ... Wrestling in the Winter Olympics instead. Yes, some college guys would cause overlap, but it is interesting that a winter sport is a Summer sport every 4 years. Thoughts? Anyway, gotta prepare for year ten on the mic. Bye. Year ten! You’re just a kid! It’s funny you bring this up since I was recently thinking about how it does seem to be out of season in regards to the other sports at their respective games. Most sports at The Games do reflect the season they are in. You’re not going to play water polo in winter and you're not going to speed skate on ice in Summer. You could but it just doesn’t make any sense. Wrestling could go either way, but I prefer it in Summer. We have enough going on in February where we don’t need this thrown into the mix. Why it’s in this season, I do not know, but it likely goes back to not wanting to interfere with the college season. Or perhaps they wrestled outdoors a hundred years ago. I'm not old enough to remember that far back. Maybe Jason Bryant knows the answer. Speaking of JB, my Mets are about to mollywhop his Angels this weekend so it’s a good thing he’s out of town and time zones. Now I’m veering off topic so that means it’s time to wrap this up and move on with my day. Enjoy the weekend all, next week we crown champions and they better all be from America. Sixteen gold medals or we riot.
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It’s early August which means the 2024 Olympic Games are right around the corner. Over the next two weeks, InterMat will bring you individual weight class previews for each of the 18 weights contested at the Olympic Games. The 2024 version has already been slightly different from years past. Earlier in the summer, United World Wrestling announced a list of wrestlers from Belarus and Russia who would not be permitted to compete due to their support of the war with Ukraine. After this decision, Russia decided to withdraw all of its entries for wrestling. That led to replacements being named earlier this month. With all of the moving parts, and a field that wasn’t confirmed until later in the game, previewing the action had to take a back seat since we weren’t sure who would actually be in Paris. UWW has recently published entry lists for each of the three styles, so we are good to go. Our final preview in men's freestyle is the 125 kg class. This is a bracket that has generally been dominated by two wrestlers over the past decade. Over the past couple years, we've seen hints that a changing of the guard could be in the making. Now there is some younger contenders who have already made an impact, but have their sights set on Olympic gold. American Mason Parris is one of the new generation of contenders. Can he get it done? Parris in Paris was meant to be! 125kg entries Giorgi Meshvildishvili (Azerbaijan) Amarveer Dhesi (Canada) Zhiwei Deng (China) Diaaeldin Abdelmottaleb (Egypt) Geno Petriashvili (Georgia) Daniel Ligeti (Hungary) Amir Zare (Iran) Yusup Batirmurzaev (Kazakhstan) Aiaal Lazarev (Kyrgyzstan) Lkhagvagerel Munkhtur (Mongolia) Ashton Mutuwa (Nigeria) Robert Baran (Poland) Jonovan Smith (Puerto Rico) Taha Akgul (Turkiye) Oleksandr Khotsianivskyi (Ukraine) Mason Parris (USA) Seeds 1. Amir Zare (Iran) 2. Geno Petriasvili (Georgia) 3. Mason Parris (USA) 4. Taha Akgul (Turkiye) 5. Daniel Ligeti (Hungary) 6. Giorgi Meshvildishvili (Azerbaijan) 7. Robert Baran (Poland) 8. Zhiwei Deng (China) Past Senior World/Olympic Medalists:(7) Akgul (x10), Deng, Khotsianivskyi, Munkhtur (x2), Parris, Petriashvili (x10), Zare (x4) 2020(1) Olympic Medalists (125 kg) Gold: Gable Steveson (USA) Silver: Geno Petriashvili (Georgia) Bronze: Taha Akgul (Turkiye) Bronze: Amir Zare (Iran) photo courtesy of Tony Rotundo; WrestlersAreWarriors.com 2023 World Medalists (125 kg) Gold: Amir Zare (Iran) Silver: Geno Petriashvili (Georgia) Bronze: Mason Parris (USA) Bronze: Taha Akgul (Turkiye) How They Qualified: 2023 World Championships: Akgul, Parris, Petriashvili, Zare Asian Qualifier: Batirmurzaev, Munkhtur African/Oceania Qualifier: Abdelmottaleb, Mutuwa European Qualifier: Meshvildishvili Pan-American Qualifier: Dhesi, Smith World OG Qualifier: Deng, Lazarev, Ligeti Reallocated Quota: Khotsianivskyi, Kosciolek Key Recent (ish) Matches between Qualifiers 2024 Hungarian Ranking Series finals: Parris over Batirmurzaev (Fall :34) 2024 Hungarian Ranking Series bronze medal match: Petriashvili over Abdelmottaleb (10-0) 2024 Hungarian Ranking Series semifinals: Batirmurzaev over Petriashvili (Fall :31) 2024 Hungarian Ranking Series quarterfinals: Batimurzaev over Abdelmottaleb (6-1) 2024 Last Chance World OG Qualifier semifinals: Lazarev over Ligeti (12-2) 2024 Asian Olympic Qualifier semifinals: Munkhtur over Deng (2-0) 2024 Asian Olympic Qualifier quarterfinals: Batirmurzaev over Lazarev (Fall 2:48) 2024 Asian Championships finals: Zare over Lazarev (11-0) 2024 European Olympic Qualifier quarterfinals: Kosciolek over Ligeti (7-4) 2024 European Championships finals: Akgul over Petriashvili (5-4) 2024 European Championships semifinals: Akgul over Meshvildishvili (10-0) 2024 Zagreb Open bronze medal match: Parris over Meshvildishvili (5-2) 2024 Zagreb Open quarterfinals: Petriashvili over Baran (11-0) 2024 Zagreb Open quarterfinals: Parris over Dhesi (11-0) 2024 Zagreb Open Round of 16: Zare over Deng (10-0) 2024 Zagreb Open Round of 32: Petriashvili over Ligeti (14-3) 2023 Asian Games finals: Zare over Munkhtur (7-0) 2023 Asian Games semifinals: Zare over Batirmurzaev (11-0) 2023 Asian Games quarterfinals: Munkhtur over Lazarev (6-0) 2023 World Championships finals: Zare over Petriashvili (11-0) 2023 World Championships bronze medal match: Akgul over Ligeti (5-0) 2023 World Championships semifinals: Zare over Akgul (4-0) 2023 World Championships semifinals: Petriashvili over Parris (8-6) 2023 World Championships quarterfinals: Parris over Deng (8-4) 2023 World Championships quarterfinals: Zare over Ligeti (11-4) 2023 World Championships quarterfinals: Petriashvili over Baran (3-1) 2023 World Championships quarterfinals: Akgul over Khotsianivskyi (3-0) 2023 World Championships Round of 16: Deng over Abdelmottaleb (2-1) 2023 World Championships Round of 16: Khotsianivskyi over Lazarev (8-3) 2023 World Championships Round of 32: Parris over Batirmurzaev (11-0) 2023 World Championships Round of 32: Deng over Munkhtur (2-1) 2023 World Championships Round of 32: Akgul over Meshvildishvili (2-0) 2023 Hungarian Ranking Series semifinals: Parris over Deng (5-0) 2023 Asian Championships finals: Munkhtur over Batirmurzaev (1-1) 2023 European Championships finals: Akgul over Petriashvili (9-4) 2023 European Championships semifinals: Petriashvili over Ligeti (7-4) 2023 European Championships quarterfinals: Akgul over Meshvildishvili (3-1) 2023 European Championships Round of 16: Khotsianivskyi over Baran (6-0) The American Entry: Mason Parris 2023 was a changing of the guard at 125 kg as Mason Parris made his first Senior World team. Parris fell in Final X to Gable Steveson, but got the call late in the summer to replace Steveson and made the most of his opportunity. Parris advanced to the world semifinals, before losing a close match to the legendary Geno Petriashvili. Parris would rebound to get a bronze medal, which qualified the United States for the 2024 Olympics. Parris has been quite active in 2024 with gold medals at the Pan-American Championships and the Hungarian Ranking Series event, along with a bronze at the Zagreb Open Ranking Series tournament. Though Parris did not defeat Petriashvili in Hungary, he did win a weight class that he entered. The 2023 world bronze medal allowed Parris to sit in the best-of-three finals at the Olympic Team Trials. Parris waited for former world team member, Hayden Zillmer, to emerge as his opponent after a challenge tournament win. Parris locked up his trip to Paris after back-to-back 7-0 wins. Parris looked great in his first trip to the World Championships and the tournaments that have come up since then. He will certainly be more equipped to take on and defeat some of the gold medal contenders at this weight in Paris. photo courtesy of Tony Rotundo; WrestlersAreWarriors.com The X-Factor: Lkhagvagerel Munkhtur (Mongolia) The upper echelon of contenders at this weight has been in place for a few years now. Most assume that someone from the 2023 medal stand will come away with the gold in Paris. That’s most likely; however, the forgotten contender of this group is Mongolia’s Lkhagvagerel Munkhtur. Munkhtur was a medalist at the World Championships in both 2021 and 2022. In 2022, Munkhtur was a world finalist with many of the same key players involved in the 2024 Olympic Games. To make the 2022 world finals, Munkhtur picked up a win over Petriashvili. At the 2023 World Championships, Munkhtur suffered an early loss to China’s Zhiwei Deng, 2-1. After the World Championships Munkhtur avenged that loss at the Asian Games. Munkhtur will start this tournament without a seed. He’s certainly someone who could be a difficult first-round matchup for just about anyone in the bracket. The bracket: The big four from the 2023 medal stand are back and are holding down the top four seeds at this weight. The top half of the bracket features top-seeded Amir Zare and number-four Taha Akgul. Geno Petriashvili and Mason Parris are on the bottom. It’s difficult to say if one side is more loaded than the other. The top half does have Deng as the eighth seed, which would provide some difficulty for Zare. There will only be two past world medalists drawn into the bracket (Munkhtur and Khotsianivskyi), so this bracket doesn’t look like it will change significantly once the draws have been made. Analysis: This weight class is unique as it features a pair of wrestlers that have dominated 125 kgs for over a decade in Akgul and Petriashvili. Additionally, there are some younger contenders like Zare and Parris who may be ready to take the baton from the old guard and run with it. Both Akgul and Petriashvili have ten world/Olympic medals. Akgul was a 2016 Olympic gold medalist and then got the bronze in 2021. He also has three world titles. Only once since 2013 has Akgul come away from a world or Olympic event without any hardware. Petriashvili needs an Olympic gold medal to complete his impressive resume. The big Georgian was a silver medalist in 2021 and a bronze medalist in 2016. In between those Olympic Games, Petriashvili won three world titles. Zare has a long history with Parris as the two met in the 2019 U20 World finals and Parris prevailed for the gold medal. In 2021, Zare broke through and seized Iran’s Senior level position at the Olympic Games and claimed a bronze medal. He’s been their representative at the three world championship events that followed and came away with medals in each - two of them being gold. The semifinals at this weight will be “must-see.” Should seeds hold, can Mason Parris win a potential semifinal rematch with Petriashvili? photo courtesy of Tony Rotundo; WrestlersAreWarriors.com Previous Olympic Previews: Men's Freestyle 57 kg Men's Freestyle 65 kg Men's Freestyle 74 kg Men's Freestyle 86 kg Men's Freestyle 97 kg Women's Freestyle 50 kg Women's Freestyle 53 kg Women's Freestyle 57 kg Women's Freestyle 62 kg Women's Freestyle 68 kg Men's Greco-Roman 60 kg Men's Greco-Roman 67 kg Men's Greco-Roman 77 kg Men's Greco-Roman 87 kg Men's Greco-Roman 97 kg
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There are plenty of changes going on at American University. During my recent campus visit and tour, the coaching staff took me around their campus to see all of the recent updates. Some are purely academically driven - another directly impacts the wrestling team in a positive manner. As you can see in our first video below, there is great progress in the construction of the Meltzer Center for Athletic Performance. This facility will house the wrestling and volleyball teams with a practice area that features three full mats and plenty of the latest amenities. There will be space for a competition venue, as well. In addition to the changes outside of the wrestling room, there are plenty of new talented faces coming in from the Class of 2024 and committed for 2025. The AU staff has inked Jay Pearce, a top-150 recruit in the Class of 2024, someone who might be able to contribute in year one. The Eagles also have four wrestlers who have been ranked, at one time or another, committed in 2025. The AU wrestling room has started to develop depth in year four under Jason Borrelli. The Eagles have sent wrestlers to the national tournament in each of the last two years at 133 lbs. Both (Jack Maida and Max Leete) will return for 2024-25. In addition, heavyweight Will Jarrell was an NCAA alternate in 2024 and the probable starter at 174, Caleb Campos, is coming off an excellent redshirt season. We had the opportunity to speak with American's coaches along with some of their notable veterans - which are below. Construction Update with Coach Borrelli Head Coach Jason Borrelli Associate Head Coach Alex Tirapelle Assistant Coach Joey Dance NCAA Qualifier Max Leete NCAA Qualifier Jack Maida Team Captain Will Jarrell
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It’s early August which means the 2024 Olympic Games are right around the corner. Over the next two weeks, InterMat will bring you individual weight class previews for each of the 18 weights contested at the Olympic Games. The 2024 version has already been slightly different from years past. Earlier in the summer, United World Wrestling announced a list of wrestlers from Belarus and Russia who would not be permitted to compete due to their support of the war with Ukraine. After this decision, Russia decided to withdraw all of its entries for wrestling. That led to replacements being named earlier this month. With all of the moving parts, and a field that wasn’t confirmed until later in the game, previewing the action had to take a back seat since we weren’t sure who would actually be in Paris. UWW has recently published entry lists for each of the three styles, so we are good to go. Our next weight class preview looks at the 97 kg in Men's Greco-Roman. This weight class featured veteran Joe Rau in his long-awaited Olympic debut. This is a weight class with a few veterans with world-level credentials and plenty of other solid competitors who are looking to break through and medal for the first time. 97kg entries Abubakar Khaslakhanau (AIN - Belarus) Fadi Rouabah (Algeria) Artur Aleksanyan (Armenia) Gabriel Rosillo (Cuba) Artur Omarov (Czechia) Mohamed Gabr (Egypt) Arvi Savolainen (Finland) Roberti Kobliashvili (Georgia) Lucas Lazogianis (Germany) Kevin Mejia Castillo (Honduras) Mohammadhadi Saravi (Iran) Uzur Dzhuzupbekov (Kyrgyzstan) Seungjun Kim (South Korea) Mindaugas Venckaitis (Lithuania) Joe Rau (USA) Rustam Assakalov (Uzbekistan) photo courtesy of Tony Rotundo; WrestlersAreWarriors.com Seeds 1. Artur Aleksanyan (Armenia) 2. Abubakar Khaslakhanau (AIN - Belarus) 3. Mohammadhadi Saravi (Iran) 4. Gabriel Rosillo (Cuba) 5. Artur Omarov (Czechia) 6. Arvi Savolainen (Finland) 7. Mindaugas Venckaitis (Lithuania) 8. Kevin Mejia Castillo (Honduras) Past Senior World/Olympic Medalists:(6) Aleksanyan (x10), Assakalov (x2), Kobliashvili (x2), Omarov, Rosillo, Saravi (x4) 2020(1) Olympic Medalists (97 kg) Gold: Musa Evloev (Russia) Silver: Artur Aleksanyan (Armenia) Bronze: Mohammadhadi Saravi (Iran) Bronze: Tadeuz Michalik (Ukraine) photo courtesy of Tony Rotundo; WrestlersAreWarriors.com 2023 World Medalists (97 kg) Gold: Gabriel Rosillo (Cuba) Silver: Artur Aleksanyan (Armenia) Bronze: Artur Omarov (Czechia) Bronze: Mohammadhadi Saravi (Iran) How They Qualified: 2023 World Championships: Aleksanyan, Khaslakhanau, Omarov, Rosillo, Saravi Asian Qualifier: Assakalov, Kim African/Oceania Qualifier: Gabr, Rouabah European Qualifier: Kobliashvili, Venckaitis Pan-American Qualifier: Mejia Castillo, Vera (Rau) World OG Qualifier: Dzhuzupbekov, Savolainen Reallocated Quota: Lazogianis Key Recent (ish) Matches between Qualifiers 2024 Hungarian Ranking Series event quarterfinals: Saravi over Rau (10-1) 2024 Hungarian Ranking Series event Round of 16: Mejia Castillo over Rouabah (6-3) 2024 Last Chance World OG Qualifier Olympic Wrestle-Off: Dzhzupbekov over Lazogianis (8-4) 2024 Last Chance World OG Qualifier Round of 16: Savolainen over Dzhzupbekov (2-0) 2024 Asian Olympic Qualifier semifinals: Assakalov over Dzhuzupbekov (3-1) 2024 European Olympic Qualifier semifinals: Kobliashvili over Lazogianis (2-1) 2024 European Championships semifinals: Aleksanyan over Khaslakhanau (5-1) 2024 European Championships Round of 16: Savolainen over Kobliashvili (3-2) 2024 Zagreb Open finals: Khaslakhanau over Savolainen (11-2) 2024 Zagreb Open Round of 32: Savolainen over Venckaitis (5-1) 2023 Pan-American Games bronze medal match: Mejia Castillo over Rau (7-2) 2023 Pan-American Games semifinals: Rosillo Kindelan over Rau (8-0) 2023 Pan-American Games Round of 16: Rosillo Kindelan over Mejia Castillo (9-7) 2023 Asian Games repechage: Assakalov over Dzhuzupbekov (Fall) 2023 Asian Games quarterfinals: Saravi over Dzhuzupbekov (3-1) 2023 Asian Games Round of 16: Saravi over Assakalov (6-3) 2023 World Championships finals: Rosillo Kindelan over Aleksanyan (3-3) 2023 World Championships Olympic Wrestle-Off: Khaslakhanau over Venckaitis (Fall 5:08) 2023 World Championships bronze medal match: Omarov over Venckaitis (3-1) 2023 World Championships bronze medal match: Saravi over Khaslakhanau (4-1) 2023 World Championships semifinals: Rosillo Kindelan over Saravi (3-0) 2023 World Championships semifinals: Aleksanyan over Venckaitis (9-0) 2023 World Championships quarterfinals: Aleksanyan over Omarov (9-0) 2023 World Championships quarterfinals: Rosillo Kindelan over Khaslakhanau (8-5) 2023 World Championships Round of 16: Rosillo Kindelan over Assakalov (6-4) 2023 World Championships Round of 16: Aleksanyan over Rau (9-0) 2023 World Championships Round of 16: Venckaitis over Savolainen (Fall 1:29) 2023 Hungarian Ranking series event repechage: Savolainen over Venckaitis (1-1) 2023 European Championships bronze medal match: Omarov over Kobliashvili (1-1) 2023 European Championships semifinals: Aleksanyan over Omarov (9-0) 2023 European Championships Round of 16: Aleksanyan over Kobliashvili (3-1) The American Entry: Joe Rau Finally, long-time veteran Joe Rau is on the Olympic Team! Rau made the finals of the 2020 Olympic Trials and lost in a very controversial bout to John Stefanowicz that ended up in arbitration. Following that loss, Rau retired from the sport. In the lead-up to the 2022 World Championships, 97 kg mainstay G’Angelo Hancock left the sport to pursue a career in the WWE, which led to a large void at the weight. Rau returned in 2023 and moved up to this weight and made the World Team for a third time. Each world team appearance has come at a different weight (80/87/97 kg). Since Rau did not medal or qualify the weight for the 2024 Olympic Games, the United States needed to send a representative to attempt to do so at the Pan-American Olympic Qualifier. Alan Vera got the call and qualified the weight down in Mexico, which allowed him to sit in the Olympic Trials finals. Rau ended up winning the Challenge Tournament at the Olympic Trials placing him against Vera with the elusive Olympic berth looming in the balance. Vera took the first bout 7-1. Rau stormed back with 6-0 and 8-0 victories to claim his spot on the team. Rau is the oldest and most experienced member of the American Greco team in Paris. His first world team appearance came in 2014. He’s still seeking his first World/Olympic medal. Doing so would be the perfect send-off for a long, underrated career. The X-Factor: Rustam Assakalov (Uzbekistan) We’ll talk about it more later, but there seems to be a clear delineation between the medal favorites at this weight class and everyone else. And the favorites all have decent seeds. So attempting to find an unseeded wrestler that might contend for a medal brings us to Uzbekistan’s Rustam Assakalov. Assakalov is a two-time world medalist with his first coming in 2015 and his most recent was in 2019. Both were at lower weights. Assakalov will be competing in his third Olympic Games. He was eighth in each of his first two appearances. Additionally, Assakalov also wrestled for another bronze medal at the 2017 World Championships….in Paris. Assakalov was targeted here because he’s been able to keep it close with the elite members of this weight. Usually, that’s not a recipe for success; however, those top wrestlers here tend to separate themselves from everyone else. The bracket: This is a weight where the five best wrestlers have all received top-five seeds. Unfortunately, the two best wrestlers are located in the top half. Longtime superstar, Artur Aleksanyan, is the top seed. He’s a two-time Olympic medalist (gold - 2016; bronze - 2020) and a four-time world champion. Aleksanyan has been a favorite and a gold medal threat at this weight for the last decade. At 32 years old, he still has some gas in the tank and can be a threat at an upperweight. Last year, Aleksanyan was upset in the world finals by Gabriel Rosillo Kindelan of Cuba. It marked Rosillo Kindelan’s first Senior world medal. He comes in as the fourth seed. The defending world champion will have to defeat a bronze medalist in the quarters, before meeting Aleksanyan in the semis, just to make the finals. The bottom half of the bracket will feature Khaslakhanau and Saravi as the second and third seeds, respectively. At this point, it’s difficult to project the sixth or seventh seeds pushing through and upsetting either of the two. 97 kg “only” features six wrestlers with World/Olympic medals on their resumes. Four start the tournament with seeds, so Assakalov and Kobliashvili will get drawn in. This shouldn’t impact brackets like other weights with two or three times that many unseeded medalists in the mix. Analysis: Aleksanyan, Rosillo Kindelan, and Saravi account for each of the last three world championships. Aleksanyan and Saravi were on the 2020 Olympic medal stand. The trio has seemingly separated themselves from the rest of this bracket. It’s difficult to picture anyone aside from this big three coming away with the gold, which may be different than most other Greco weights. In fact, these three tend to rack up a handful of points against everyone except each other. Should chalk prevail, as expected, there would be one new bronze medalist, as Aleksanyan, Rosillo Kindelan, and Omarov are all on the same half of the bracket and only two could medal. Previous Olympic Previews: Men's Freestyle 57 kg Men's Freestyle 65 kg Men's Freestyle 74 kg Men's Freestyle 86 kg Men's Freestyle 97 kg Women's Freestyle 50 kg Women's Freestyle 53 kg Women's Freestyle 57 kg Women's Freestyle 62 kg Women's Freestyle 68 kg Men's Greco-Roman 60 kg Men's Greco-Roman 67 kg Men's Greco-Roman 77 kg Men's Greco-Roman 87 kg
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August 2 ONE Fight Night 25 (Amazon Prime) Gustavo Balart (Pan Am champ in Greco) vs. Jarred Brooks (Notre Dame College) August 2 LFA 189 (UFC Fight Pass) Jake Woodley (Oklahoma) vs. Marco Hutch August 2 PFL 7 (ESPN/ESPN+) Timothy Johnson (Minnesota State Moorhead) vs. Denis Goltsov Tyrell Fortune (Grand Canyon) vs. Sergey Bilostenniy Cody Law (Pitt Johnstown) vs. Zachary Hicks August 2 ADXC 5 (Internet PPV) Urijah Faber (UC Davis) vs. Bibiano Fernandes* Chad Mendes (Cal Poly) vs. Kevin Lee (Grand Valley State)* AJ Agazarm (Ohio State) vs. Ruan Alvarenga* *Grappling match August 2 Fury FC 95 (UFC Fight Pass) Tracy Reeder (Central Oklahoma) vs. Pena Allamov Nick Maximov (Clackamas) vs. Elias Urbina August 3 UFC on ABC 7 (ABC/ESPN+) Tony Ferguson (Grand Valley State) vs. Michael Chiesa August 3 New Line Cagefighting 27 (YouTube) Thomas Gantt (NC State) vs. Kyle Wright August 10 UFC Fight Night (ESPN) Damon Jackson (Missouri Valley) vs. Chepe Mariscal August 13 Dana White’s Contender Series 2024 Week 1 (ESPN+) Mansur Abdul-Malik (Maryland) vs. Wes Schutlz (Wisconsin-Lacrosse) August 16 PFL 8 (ESPN/ESPN+) Josh Silveira (Arizona State) vs. Impa Kasanganay Danny Sabatello (Purdue) vs. Lazaro Dayron Jordan Oliver (Oklahoma State) vs. Braydon Akeo (Southwestern Oregon) August 23 PFL 9 (ESPN/ESPN+) Tyler Diamond (North Dakota State) vs. Enrique Barzola September 7 Bellator Champions Series 4 (MAX) Raufeon Stots (Nebraska Kearney) vs. Marcos Breno Jordan Newman (Wisconsin-Whitewater) vs. Imamshafi Aliev Bryce Meredith (Wyoming) vs. John MaCalolooy September 14 Bellator Champions Series 5 (MAX) Johnny Eblen (Missouri) vs. Fabian Edwards Archie Colgan (Wyoming) vs. Manoel Sousa
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The InterMat Wrestling Podcast (The Olympic Preview Show)
InterMat Staff posted an article in International
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It’s late July which means the 2024 Olympic Games are right around the corner. Over the next two weeks, InterMat will bring you individual weight class previews for each of the 18 weights contested at the Olympic Games. The 2024 version has already been slightly different from years past. Earlier in the summer, United World Wrestling announced a list of wrestlers from Belarus and Russia who would not be permitted to compete due to their support of the war with Ukraine. After this decision, Russia decided to withdraw all of its entries for wrestling. That led to replacements being named earlier this month. With all of the moving parts, and a field that wasn’t confirmed until later in the game, previewing the action had to take a back seat since we weren’t sure who would actually be in Paris. UWW has recently published entry lists for each of the three styles, so we are good to go. Our next weight class preview looks at the 68 kg bracket in women's freestyle. Though the American women's team has a pair of past Olympic medalists amongst the big six, it could be a first-time world team member, Amit Elor at 68 kg, who has the best shot at striking gold in Paris. Elor already has a pair of Senior world titles to her name and hasn't lost to an international opponent since the U17 World Championships in 2019. Even so, Elor is in a wide-open weight class that features plenty of potential hurdles and contenders. 68kg entries Linda Morais (Canada) Feng Zhou (China) Koumba Larroque (France) Nisha Dahiya (India) Nonoka Ozaki (Japan) Meerim Zhumanazarova (Kyrgyzstan) Irina Ringaci (Moldova) Delgermaa Enkhsaidkhan (Mongolia) Blessing Oborududu (Nigeria) Tayla Ford (New Zealand) Wiktoria Choluj (Poland) Sol Gum Pak (North Korea) Buse Tosun (Turkiye) Tetiana Rizhko (Ukraine) Amit Elor (USA) Soleymi Caraballo (Venezuela) Seeds 1. Buse Tosun (Turkiye) 2. Delgermaa Enkhsaidkhan (Mongolia) 3. Koumba Larroque (France) 4. Irina Ringaci (Moldova) 5. Tetiana Sova Rizhko (Ukraine) 6. Blessing Oborududu (Nigeria) 7. Soleymi Caraballo (Venezuela) 8. Feng Zhou (China) Past Senior World/Olympic Medalists: (10) Elor (x2), Enkhsaidkhan, Larroque (x4), Morais (x3), Oborududu, Ozaki (x3), Ringaci (x3), Tosun (x3), Zhou (x2), Zhumanazarova (x2) 2020(1) Olympic Medalists (97 kg) Gold: Tamyra Mensah-Stock (USA) Silver: Blessing Oborududu (Nigeria) Bronze: Meerim Zhumanazarova (Kyrgyzstan) Bronze: Alla Cherkasova (Ukraine) photo courtesy of Tony Rotundo; WrestlersAreWarriors.com 2023 World Medalists (68 kg) Gold: Bose Tosun (Turkiye) Silver: Delgermaa Enkhsaikhan (Mongolia) Bronze: Koumba Larroque (France) Bronze: Irina Ringaci (Moldova) How They Qualified: 2023 World Championships: Enkhsaikhan, Ishii (Ozaki), Larroque, Ringcai, Tosun Asian Qualifier: Gum Pak, Zhumanazarova African/Oceania Qualifier: Ford, Oborududu European Qualifier: Choluj Pan-American Qualifier: Caraballo, Elor World OG Qualifier: Dahiya, Morais, Zhou Reallocated Quota: Rizhko Key Recent (ish) Matches between Qualifiers 2024 Hungarian Ranking Series final: Tosun over Caraballo (2-0) 2024 Hungarian Ranking Series semifinals: Tosun over Enkhsaikhan (Fall 2:07) 2024 Hungarian Ranking Series semifinals: Caraballo over Choluj (4-3) 2024 Last Chance World OG Qualifier quarterfinals: Zhou over Morais (12-0) 2024 Asian Olympic Qualifier: Zhumanazarova over Dahiya (Fall 5:44) 2024 Asian Olympic Qualifier: Gum Pak over Zhumanazarova (6-2) 2024 Asian Olympic Qualifier: Gum Pak over Zhou (7-4) 2024 Asian Olympic Qualifier: Dahiya over Gum Pak (8-3) 2024 Asian Championship semifinals: Ozaki over Enkhsaikhan (10-0) 2024 European Championship final: Tosun over Rizhko (5-2) 2024 Pan-American Olympic Qualifier: Caraballo over Morais (Fall 6:00) 2024 Zagreb Open bronze medal match: Tosun over Enkhsaikhan (5-1) 2024 Zagreb Open repechage: Tosun over Choluj (2-1) 2024 Zagreb Open semifinal: Zhou over Enkhsaikhan (9-5) 2024 Zagreb Open Round of 16: Enkhsaikhan over Caraballo (4-0) 2024 Zagreb Open Round of 16: Zhou over Choluj (4-3) 2024 Zagreb Open Round of 32: Zhou over Tosun (11-0) 2023 U23 World Championships semifinals: Elor over Choluj (5-0) @ 72 kg 2023 World Championships finals: Tosun over Enkhsaikhan (Fall 3:17) 2023 World Championships quarterfinals: Enkhsaikhan over Larroque (2-1) 2023 World Championships Round of 32: Tosun over Ringaci (Fall 1:47) 2023 World Championships Round of 16: Zhumanazarova over Rizhko (5-2) 2023 Hungarian Ranking Series final: Zhou over Oborududu (2-1) 2023 Hungarian Ranking Series Round of 16: Oborududu over Choluj (3-0) 2023 Asian Championship bronze medal match: Zhou over Enkhsaikhan (9-2) 2023 Asian Championship semifinals: Dahiya over Zhou (7-6) The American Entry: Amit Elor Despite being only 20 years old, Amit Elor enters the 2024 Olympic Games with a career’s worth of accolades to her name. Elor has won eight world championships across four age groups since 2021. In each of the last two years, Elor has swept world titles at the U20, U23, and Senior divisions. In her 12 matches at the 2023 World Championships, across all three age groups, Elor only surrendered points in the Senior World semifinals and finals. Elor’s damage over the past two years has come solely at the non-Olympic weight of 72 kg. Therefore, she will come to Paris unseeded. That’s probably more of a problem for the rest of the field than Elor herself; however, there are nine other past World/Olympic medalists at this weight. Since 72 is a non-Olympic weight, Elor’s world title last year did not qualify her or the United States for the Olympic Games. She remedied that problem by heading to the Pan-American Olympic Qualifier and winning a pair of bouts to clinch a spot for her country. In April, we found out that it would indeed be Elor at 68 kg as she was victorious at the Olympic Trials. Waiting in the finals, Elor defeated past world medalist, Forrest Molinari, in two straight matches to punch her ticket to Paris. Since Elor has competed at 72 kg for the last two years, we don’t have much to go on, in terms of head-to-head matchups, with the other contenders at this weight. The only semi-useful result we have is that Elor defeated Poland’s Witoria Choluj in the 2023 U23 World semifinals, 5-0. photo courtesy of Tony Rotundo; WrestlersAreWarriors.com The X-Factor: Nonoka Ozaki (Japan) Like Elor, another favorite who has switched weights for the Olympic run is Japan’s Nonoka Ozaki. Ozaki is a three-time world medalist and two-time world champion. Because of her weight change, she hasn’t earned enough points to warrant a top-eight seed. Ozaki is the opponent who defeated Kayla Miracle in the finals of the 2022 World Championships at 62 kg. Last year, she defeated Macey Kilty in the 65 kg world finals. Ozaki went through the 2023 tournament without being scored upon. Shortly after the 2023 World Championships, Ozaki briefly moved back to 62 kg and defeated world champion Ainsuluu Tynybekova (Kyrgyzstan) before losing in the finals herself. Ozaki then moved up to 68 kg for the 2024 Asian Championships and teched world finalist Delgermaa Enkhsaikhan (Mongolia) on her way to a gold medal. Since Ami Ishii qualified this weight for Japan in 2023, Ozaki did not need to do so herself. The bracket: This bracket will be something! Particularly since two of the favorites (Elor and Ozaki) are unseeded. There could be some brutal first-round draw and one side of the bracket that is much more difficult than the other. As it stands now, the bracket is relatively balanced. The returning world champion (Tosun) holds the top spot, while her opponent from the 2023 finals (Enkhsaikhan) is the second seed, and both bronze medalists come in at the third and fourth position (Larroque and Ringaci) respectively. Despite holding the top seed, Tosun could have her work cut out for her. A potential quarterfinal match with two-time world medalist Zhou is looming. Zhou checks in as the eighth seed. The pair met earlier this year at the Zagreb Open and Zhou prevailed via tech. Based on what we know now, Blessing Oborududu is another challenger on the bottom half of the bracket. Oborududu was an Olympic silver medalist at the last Games, losing to Tamyra Mensah-Stock in the gold medal match. Analysis: The last three women’s freestyle weights should be a lot of fun as there isn’t a hands-down favorite at any of the weights. On their best days, there are a handful of women who could come away with the gold. In fact, six women at this weight have already won world titles at the Senior level (Elor, Ozaki, Tosun, Ringaci, Morais, and Zhumanazarova). Four of them are unseeded. That could make for some incredibly tough first-round matches - without even considering the quarterfinals and beyond. Once the first whistles blow, seeds will normally go out the window. This goes double or triple for this weight. A seed at 68 kg is nice, but chances are you’ll have a difficult path no matter how the bracket develops. American fans should be excited about Elor getting to face new, high-level competition. She’s passed every test thus far, so there’s no reason to think any different for her prospects in Paris. If there’s any cause for concern, Elor has only wrestled at this weight once since 2021, but just a minor concern at this point. In 2021, we saw Tamyra Mensah-Stock win the gold in Tokyo. Could the American women go back-to-back at this weight? Previous Olympic Previews: Men's Freestyle 57 kg Men's Freestyle 65 kg Men's Freestyle 74 kg Men's Freestyle 86 kg Men's Freestyle 97 kg Women's Freestyle 50 kg Women's Freestyle 53 kg Women's Freestyle 57 kg Women's Freestyle 62 kg Men's Greco-Roman 60 kg Men's Greco-Roman 67 kg Men's Greco-Roman 77 kg Men's Greco-Roman 87 kg
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The top prospect in the high school Class of 2026, Bo Bassett, has vowed to keep fans abreast of his recruiting with daily Wednesday updates. Well, today is Wednesday and true to his word, Bassett has posted an updated graphic which has eliminated three more schools from consideration. In last week's update, Bassett stated that he would be eliminating three schools per week after eliminating seven in previous weeks. Earlier this year, Bassett posted a graphic that contained the logos of approximately 80 schools, most of the DI variety, but some DII’s as well, to signify that he’s totally open in the recruiting process. After a few weeks of removing schools from the list, he’s down to 35. These three schools were removed from this week's graphic: California Baptist, Michigan State, Navy The following schools remain on Bassett’s graphic and therefore in contention for his services: Air Force, American, Arizona State, Brown, Bucknell, Clarion, Cornell, Iowa, Iowa State, Lehigh, Little Rock, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, NC State, Nebraska, North Carolina, Northern Colorado, Northern Iowa, Ohio State, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Oregon State, Penn, Penn State, Pitt-Johnstown, Pittsburgh, Princeton, Purdue, Rutgers, Stanford, Virginia, Virginia Tech, Wisconsin, Wyoming. The following schools were removed from last week’s graphic: Army West Point, Campbell, Edinboro, Harvard, Illinois, North Dakota State, South Dakota State The following schools were removed from the 7/17 graphic: Cal Poly, Columbia, Indiana, Maryland, Millersville, The Citadel, and West Virginia The following schools were removed from the 7/10 graphic: CSU Bakersfield, George Mason, Hofstra, Northwestern, Rider, UW Parkside, West Liberty The following schools were removed from the 7/3 graphic: Appalachian State, Central Michigan, Cleveland State, Drexel, Kent State, Ohio, and St. Cloud State The following schools were removed from the 6/26 graphic: Binghamton, Bloomsburg, Duke, Gardner-Webb, Northern Illinois, Sacred Heart, SIU Edwardsville As you would expect, most traditional DI power programs are still in the hunt for the two-time Super 32 and Ironman champion. Bassett recently competed at the U20 Pan-American Championships and dominated for a gold medal. In three matches, Bassett posted two falls and a tech. Bassett will also be in action later this year at the U20 World Championships - September 2nd-8th in Pontevedra, Spain. In 2021, Bassett captured gold medals in both freestyle and Greco-Roman at the U17 Pan-American Championships. That same year, at the U17 World Championships, Bassett claimed a gold medal in freestyle and was 12th in Greco. He’ll compete this year just in freestyle.
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It’s late July which means the 2024 Olympic Games are right around the corner. Over the next two weeks, InterMat will bring you individual weight class previews for each of the 18 weights contested at the Olympic Games. The 2024 version has already been slightly different from years past. Earlier in the summer, United World Wrestling announced a list of wrestlers from Belarus and Russia who would not be permitted to compete due to their support of the war with Ukraine. After this decision, Russia decided to withdraw all of its entries for wrestling. That led to replacements being named earlier this month. With all of the moving parts, and a field that wasn’t confirmed until later in the game, previewing the action had to take a back seat since we weren’t sure who would actually be in Paris. UWW has recently published entry lists for each of the three styles, so we are good to go. Our next weight class preview goes back around to men's freestyle at 97 kg. Our representative at 97 kg is the same wrestler whose represented us at this weight at every World/Olympic event since 2015, Kyle Snyder. Snyder will seek his third Olympic medal and his second of the gold variety. All of the sudden, Snyder is the most experienced member of our men's freestyle team and one of only two holdovers from the 2020(1) Olympic Team. We'll talk more below about who Snyder has to go through to add more hardware to his collection. 97kg entries Magomedkhan Magomedov (Azerbaijan) Akhmed Tazhudinov (Bahrain) Awusayiman Habila (China) Arturo Silot Torres (Cuba) Luis Perez Sosa (Dominican Republic) Mostafa Elders (Egypt) Givi Matcharashvili (Georgia) Erik Thiele (Germany) Amirali Azarpira (Iran) Alisher Yergali (Kazakhstan) Radu Lefter (Moldova) Zbigniew Baranowski (Poland) Nicolaas De Lange (South Africa) Ibrahim Ciftci (Turkiye) Murazi Mchedlidze (Ukraine) Kyle Snyder (USA) Seeds 1. Magomedkhan Magomedov (Azerbaijan) 2. Akhmed Tazhudinov (Bahrain) 3. Kyle Snyder (USA) 4. Ibrahim Ciftci (Turkiye) 5. Givi Matcharashvili (Georgia) 6. Erik Thiele (Germany) 7. Alisher Yergali (Kazakhstan) 8. Zbigniew Baranowski (Poland) Past Senior World/Olympic Medalists: (4) Magomedov (x2), Matcharashvili (x2), Tazhudinov, Snyder (x9) 2020(1) Olympic Medalists (97 kg) Gold: Abdulrashid Sadulaev (Russia) Silver: Kyle Snyder (USA) Bronze: Reineris Salas Perez (Cuba) Bronze: Abraham Conyedo Ruano (Italy) photo courtesy of Tony Rotundo; WrestlersAreWarriors.com 2023 World Medalists (97 kg) Gold: Akhmed Tazhudinov (Bahrain) Silver: Magomedkhan Magomedov (Azerbaijan) Bronze: Kyle Snyder (USA) Bronze: Givi Matcharashvili (Georgia) How They Qualified: 2023 World Championships: Cifti, Magomedov, Matcharashvili, Snyder, Tazhudinov Asian Qualifier: Azarpira, Yergali African/Oceania Qualifier: De Lange, Elders Pan-American Qualifier: Perez Sosa, Silot Torres World OG Qualifier: Baranowski, Habila, Thiele Reallocated Quota: Lefter, Mchedlidze Key Recent (ish) Matches between Qualifiers 2024 Hungarian Ranking Series Round of 16: Yergali over Ciftci (4-1) 2024 Last Chance World OG Qualifier semifinal: Baranowski over Habila (2-2) 2024 Last Chance World OG Qualifier semifinal: Thiele over Lefter (3-0) 2024 Asian Olympic Qualifier semifinal: Yergali over Habila (3-2) 2024 European Championship final: Matcharashvili over Magomedov (7-1) 2024 European Championship semifinal: Matcharashvili over Ciftci (7-2) 2024 Pan-American Championships final: Snyder over Silot Torres (10-5) 2024 Pan-American Championships quarterfinal: Snyder over Perez Sosa (Fall) 2024 Zagreb Open final: Azarpira over Snyder (6-3) 2023 Pan-American Games final: Snyder over Silot Torres (14-4) 2023 Asian Games Round of 16: Tazhudinov over Habila (7-3) 2023 World Championships final: Tazhudinov over Magomedov (Fall 2:50) 2023 World Championships bronze medal match: Matcharashvili over Ciftci (6-2) 2023 World Championships semifinals: Magomedov over Matcharashvili (6-1) 2023 World Championships quarterfinal: Magomedov over Thiele (Fall 3:21) 2023 World Championships quarterfinal: Tazhudinov over Snyder (11-0) 2023 World Championships quarterfinal: Matcharashvili over Yergali (2-0) 2023 World Championships Round of 16: Magomedov over Ciftci (4-0) 2023 World Championships Round of 16: Snyder over Lefter (12-1) 2023 World Championships Round of 16: Thiele over Baranowski (6-1) 2023 World Championships Round of 32: Yergali over Habila (2-1) 2023 Hungarian Ranking Series bronze medal match: Yergali over Thiele (3-1) 2023 Hungarian Ranking Series semifinals: Magomedov over Thiele (7-2) 2023 Hungarian Ranking Series quarterfinals: Magomedov over Yergali (6-3) 2023 Hungarian Ranking Series Round of 16: Snyder over Matcharashvili (3-2) 2023 Asian Championship final: Tazhudinov over Habila (11-0) 2023 European Championship final: Matcharashvili over Magomedov (4-3) 2023 European Championship bronze medal match: Cifti over Mchedlidze (12-3) 2023 European Championship semifinals: Matcharashvili over Mchedlidze (9-1) 2023 European Championship quarterfinals: Mchedlidze over Thiele (4-4) 2023 European Championship quarterfinals: Matcharashvili over Cifti (4-3) 2023 European Championship repechage: Cifti over Lefter (11-0) The American Entry: Kyle Snyder Captain America is back for his third Olympic Games! In making the 2024 Olympic Team, Kyle Snyder has now held down the 97 kg weight class at every World or Olympic Tournament dating back to 2015. Not only has Snyder now made ten straight teams, but he’s also brought home hardware of some sort from each of the previous nine. He checks in with an Olympic gold and silver medal to go along with three world titles. Snyder’s bronze medal at the 2023 World Championships also clinched a place in the 2024 Olympics for the United States. That slot ended up belonging to Snyder after he blanked 2023 U23 world champion Isaac Trumble in two straight matches in the finals of the Olympic Trials. In addition to the Olympic Trials Snyder has competed twice in 2024. He finished as a runner-up at the Zagreb Open Ranking Series event and was victorious at the Pan-American Championships. Snyder cruised through Pan-Am’s with two wins over wrestlers in this field. The Russian-less Olympic field has robbed wrestling fans of another possible chapter in Snyder’s rivalry with two-time Olympic champion Abdulrashid Sadulaev. Even without Sadulaev in the field, Snyder does have an imposing contender to deal with - Sadulaev’s protege, Akhmed Tazhudinov, who wrestles for Bahrain. Tazhudinov shocked Snyder and then was leading Sadulaev before an injury default at the 2023 World Championships. photo courtesy of Tony Rotundo; WrestlersAreWarriors.com The X-Factor: Amirali Azarpira (Iran) It’s become a recurring theme across some of these previews. Iran has a handful of new faces headed to Paris, one of which is Amirali Azarpira at 97 kg in men’s freestyle. Azarpira was Iran’s representative at the World Championships at 92 kg last year. He was excused from the championship side of the bracket after a 12-9 loss to Zahid Valencia. In each of the previous two years, Azarpira came away with a gold medal from the U23 World Championships. Earlier this year, Azarpira moved back to his normal 97 kg weight class and captured a title at the Zagreb Open. There he overcame a cavalcade of American opponents. First was a 10-0 tech over Michael Macchiavello in the Round of 16, next he edged fellow U23 world champion Isaac Trumble, 8-7. In the finals, Azarpira downed the great Kyle Snyder for the championship, 6-3. Despite his win at the ranking series event, Azarpira will start his tournament unseeded. The bracket: With only four returning medallists in the bracket, they generally are seeded in a decent enough manner. Each is in the top five. The two best wrestlers, Tazhudinov and Snyder, come in as the second and third seeds, respectively. That’s unfortunate, but some combination of Magomedov, Ciftci, and Matcharashvilli, coming out of the top half isn’t bad. This weight is a little bit different than others as Azarpira appears to be the only unseeded wrestler that could be capable of working his way onto the podium. It wouldn’t be surprising to see the same four medalists from 2023 remain on the podium in Paris. Analysis: We’ll see if Tazhudinov is able to replicate the incredible performance he put on last year at the World Championships as he announced himself as the next big thing at 97 kg. Since Worlds, Tazhunidov has won the 2023 Asian Games and the 2024 Asian Championships without a hiccup. He’s the slight favorite though Snyder has a long track record of international success. We’ll see how Tazhudinov fares while carrying the favorite label and having the proverbial target on his back. Previous Olympic Previews: Men's Freestyle 57 kg Men's Freestyle 65 kg Men's Freestyle 74 kg Men's Freestyle 86 kg Women's Freestyle 50 kg Women's Freestyle 53 kg Women's Freestyle 57 kg Women's Freestyle 62 kg Men's Greco-Roman 60 kg Men's Greco-Roman 67 kg Men's Greco-Roman 77 kg Men's Greco-Roman 87 kg
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It’s late July which means the 2024 Olympic Games are right around the corner. Over the next two weeks, InterMat will bring you individual weight class previews for each of the 18 weights contested at the Olympic Games. The 2024 version has already been slightly different from years past. Earlier in the summer, United World Wrestling announced a list of wrestlers from Belarus and Russia who would not be permitted to compete due to their support of the war with Ukraine. After this decision, Russia decided to withdraw all of its entries for wrestling. That led to replacements being named earlier this month. With all of the moving parts, and a field that wasn’t confirmed until later in the game, previewing the action had to take a back seat since we weren’t sure who would actually be in Paris. UWW has recently published entry lists for each of the three styles, so we are good to go. Our next weight class preview goes back around to Greco-Roman at 87 kg. We have a new face on the international scene as the young Payton Jacobson makes his Olympic debut two years removed from a spot on the U20 World team. Jacobson certainly earned his spot in Paris with wins over a handful of proven veteran competitors. He'll have to do even more of it at the Games as 87 kgs is a weight class that has more than half of its entrants with past world/Olympic medals. There are no "good draws" and easing your way into the tournament here. Here's who Jacobson will have to contend with in France: 87kg entries Bachir Sid Azara (Algeria) Rafig Huseynov (Azerbaijan) Semen Novikov (Bulgaria) Haitao Qian (China) Carlos Munoz Jaramillo (Colombia) Turpal Bisultanov (Denmark) Mohamed Metwally (Egypt) Lasha Gobadze (Georgia) David Losonczi (Hungary) Alireza Mohmadipiani (Iran) Nursultan Tursynov (Kazakhstan) Arkadiusz Kulynycz (Poland) Aleksandr Komarov (Serbia) Ali Cengiz (Turkiye) Zhan Beleniuk (Ukraine) Payton Jacobson (USA) Seeds 1. Ali Cengiz (Turkiye) 2. David Losonczi (Hungary) 3. Semen Novikov (Bulgaria) 4. Zhan Beleniuk (Ukraine) 5. Nursultan Tursynov (Kazakhstan) 6. Bachir Sid Azara (Algeria) 7. Aleksandr Komarov (Serbia) 8. Carlos Munoz Jaramillo (Colombia) Past Senior World/Olympic Medalists:(10) Beleniuk (x7), Bisultanov, Cengiz (x2), Gobadze (x3), Huseynov (x4), Kulynycz, Losonczi (x2), Mohmadipiani, Novikov, Qian 2020(1) Olympic Medalists (87 kg) Gold: Zhan Beleniuk (Ukraine) Silver: Viktor Lorincz (Hungary) Bronze: Zurabi Datunashvili (Georgia) Bronze: Denis Kudla (Germany) photo courtesy of Tony Rotundo; WrestlersAreWarriors.com 2023 World Medalists (87 kg) Gold: Ali Cengiz (Turkiye) Silver: David Losonczi (Hungary) Bronze: Zhan Beleniuk (Ukraine) Bronze: Semen Novikov (Bulgaria) How They Qualified: 2023 World Championships: Beleniuk, Cengiz, Losonczi, Novikov, Tursynov Asian Qualifier: Mohmadipiani, Qian African/Oceania Qualifier: Metwally, Sid Azara European Qualifier: Komarov Pan-American Qualifier: Munoz Jaramillo, Woods (Jacobson) World OG Qualifier: Huseynov, Kulynycz Reallocated Quota: Bisultanov, Gobadze Key Recent (ish) Matches between Qualifiers 2024 Hungarian Ranking Series semifinals: Losonczi over Cengiz (Fall 4:45) 2024 Hungarian Ranking Series quarterfinals: Novikov over Sid Azara (5-1) 2024 Hungarian Ranking Series Round of 16: Sid Azara over Munoz Jaramillo (3-1) 2024 Hungarian Ranking Series Round of 16: Losonczi over Tursynov (8-0) 2024 Hungarian Ranking Series Round of 16: Cengiz over Jacobson (4-1) 2024 Last Chance World OG Qualifier Olympic wrestle-off: Kulynycz over Gobadze (3-2) 2024 Last Chance World OG Qualifier bronze medal match: Kulynycz over Bisultanov (6-5) 2024 Last Chance World OG Qualifier semifinals: Komarov over Bisultanov (8-0) 2024 Last Chance World OG Qualifier semifinals: Huseynov over Gobadze (4-1) 2024 European Championship finals: Komarov over Cengiz (4-1) 2024 European Championship quarterfinals: Komarov over Beleniuk (3-1) 2023 World Championship finals: Cengiz over Losonczi (8-7) 2023 World Championship finals: Huseynov over Mohmadipiani (2-1) @ 82 kg 2023 World Championship bronze medal match: Beleniuk over Tursynov (7-2) 2023 World Championship Semifinals: Cengiz over Tursynov (Fall 2:19) 2023 World Championship Semifinals: Losonczi over Novikov (10-0) 2023 World Championship Round of 16: Novikov over Gobadze (3-1) 2023 World Championship Round of 16: Cengiz over Beleniuk (3-1) 2023 World Championship Round of 32: Novikov over Metwally (9-0) 2023 Hungarian Ranking Series finals: Losonczi over Novikov (9-0) 2023 Hungarian Ranking Series quarterfinals: Novikov over Tursynov (7-3) The American Entry: Payton Jacobson 21-year-old Payton Jacobson is the second-youngest member of the American wrestling contingent in 2024. Along with Aaron Brooks, Jacobson could have been the most surprising development from the 2024 Olympic Team Trials. 87 kgs was already qualified by Spencer Woods at the Pan-American Olympic Qualifier - so Woods was waiting in the Trials finals. Before dealing with Woods, Jacobson had to run through quite the gauntlet as he downed Zac Braunagel and 2020 Olympian John Stefanowicz to win the Challenge Tournament. In the first match of their best-of-three series, Jacobson shocked Woods with an 8-2 victory to take command of the series. Woods tied it and forced a deciding match three. Jacobson earned his spot on the team with a 3-1 win. All-in-all, Jacobson claimed his Olympic berth after defeating three opponents with past Senior World/Olympic team experience. Paris will not be Jacobson's first taste of a world-level tournament. Last year, Jacobson represented the United States at the U23 World Championships. During the summer of 2022, Jacobson finished eighth at the U20 World Championships. Without any Senior World hardware and success at a ranking series event, Jacobson will start the Olympic tournament without a seed. photo courtesy of Tony Rotundo; WrestlersAreWarriors.com The X-Factor: Rafig Huseynov (Azerbaijan) The American, Jacobson, is the second-youngest member of this bracket. The oldest is Rafig Huseynov who turned 36 in May. Huseynov is a bit of an outlier in the sport as he started to hit his peak after 30 years old. In his first two Senior World events (2009 and 2010) Huseynov narrowly missed out on a medal - finishing fifth at both events. He didn’t earn his first until nine years later when he made the 82 kg finals in 2019. In 2021, Huseynov won his first world title. Last year, Huseynov added to his collection with a second world championship belt at 82 kg. Since his win came at a non-Olympic weight, Huseynov and Azerbaijan were not guaranteed a spot at the 2024 Olympics. That forced Huseynov to go to the Last Chance World OG Qualifier where he defeated a returning medalist (Gobadze) to lock up an Olympic berth. Because the bulk of Huseynov’s success has come at 82 kg he’s unseeded in Paris. We also don’t have much of a frame of reference for how he’ll do at 87 kg. The bracket: Despite having 10 wrestlers with past world/Olympic medals in a bracket with 16 wrestlers, there will be six returning world medalists who are unseeded. The top four wrestlers are who you may expect and four of the top contenders; however, seeds five through eight aren’t necessarily at that same level. The top half might have the two best wrestlers with 2023 world champion Ali Cengiz as the top seed and 2020 Olympic champion Zhan Beleniuk, who checks in as the fourth seed. The two met in the Round of 16 at the 2023 World Championships and Cengiz was victorious, 3-1. The bottom half has two 2023 medalists, Losonicz and Novikov, along with young superstar Alexander Komarov. Komarov previously competed internationally for Russia, but he’ll represent Serbia here. Komarov captured two U17 and U20 World Titles and another one at the U23 level in 2021. Despite those credentials, he has only wrestled at the Senior World Championships once. He could push (or defeat) the other seeded wrestlers on his half of the bracket. Analysis: This might be one of the more difficult Greco weights to predict. The wrestler with the longest track record is Beleniuk - already a two-time Olympic medalist (1,2). He was knocked off last year by Cengiz, was it a sign of things to come or an aberration? Since then, Cengiz has suffered losses to Komarov and his 2023 finals opponent Losonczi. Should the seeds hold, Komarov and Losonczi could meet in the quarterfinals. Another young, unseeded wrestler to watch at this weight is 21-year-old Iranian Alireza Mohmadipiani. Mohmadipiani was Huseynov’s world finals opponent last year at 82 kg. We know the main contenders here. They should be in the mix no matter what the brackets provide. But for a deeper analysis of this bracket, we’ll probably have to wait until they are released as there are plenty of unseeded wrestlers who are slated to be drawn in. Previous Olympic Previews: Men's Freestyle 57 kg Men's Freestyle 65 kg Men's Freestyle 74 kg Men's Freestyle 86 kg Women's Freestyle 50 kg Women's Freestyle 53 kg Women's Freestyle 57 kg Women's Freestyle 62 kg Men's Greco-Roman 60 kg Men's Greco-Roman 67 kg Men's Greco-Roman 77 kg
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It’s late July which means the 2024 Olympic Games are right around the corner. Over the next two weeks, InterMat will bring you individual weight class previews for each of the 18 weights contested at the Olympic Games. The 2024 version has already been slightly different from years past. Earlier in the summer, United World Wrestling announced a list of wrestlers from Belarus and Russia who would not be permitted to compete due to their support of the war with Ukraine. After this decision, Russia decided to withdraw all of its entries for wrestling. That led to replacements being named earlier this month. With all of the moving parts, and a field that wasn’t confirmed until later in the game, previewing the action had to take a back seat since we weren’t sure who would actually be in Paris. UWW has recently published entry lists for each of the three styles, so we are good to go. Our next weight class preview comes back to women’s freestyle at 62 kg. This weight class features Kayla Miracle as the representative for a second straight Olympics. The two-time Senior world medalist will be looking to medal at the Olympic Games for the first time. Miracle will have an experienced, familiar group of opponents to deal with including three-time world champion Ainsuluu Tynybekova, whom Miracle could see in the quarterfinals. Here's what could happen with the rest of the bracket: 62 kg entries Bilyana Dudova (Bulgaria) Ana Godinez (Canada) Ameline Douarre (France) Luisa Niemesch (Germany) Sakura Motoki (Japan) Aisuluu Tynybekova (Kyrgyzstan) Orkhon Purevdorj (Mongolia) Esther Kolawole (Nigeria) Grace Bullen (Norway) Hyon Gyong Mun (North Korea) Kriszta Incze (Romania) Johanna Lindborg (Sweden) Siwar Bouseta (Tunisia) Nesrin Bas (Turkiye) Iryna Koliadenko (Ukraine) Kayla Miracle (USA) Seeds 1. Aisuluu Tynybekova (Kyrgyzstan) 2. Sakura Motoki (Japan) 3. Grace Bullen (Norway) 4. Iryna Koliadenko (Ukraine) 5. Bilyana Dudova (Bulgaria) 6. Luisa Niemesch (Germany) 7. Ana Godinez (Canada) 8. Kayla Miracle (USA) Past Senior World/Olympic Medalists: (7) Bullen (x2), Dudova (x2), Koliadenko (x3), Miracle (x2), Motoki (x2), Purevdorj, Tynybekova (x5) 2020(1) Olympic Medalists (62 kg) Gold: Yukako Kawai (Japan) Silver: Aisuluu Tynybekova (Kyrgyzstan) Bronze: Taybe Yusein (Bulgaria) Bronze: Iryna Koliadenko (Ukraine) 2023 World Medalists (62 kg) Gold: Aisuluu Tynybekova (Kyrgyzstan) Silver: Sakura Motoki (Japan) Bronze: Grace Bullen (Norway) Bronze: Iryna Koliadenko (Ukraine) How They Qualified: 2023 World Championships: Bullen, Koliadenko, Motoki, Niemesch, Tynybekova Asian Qualifier: Gyong Mun, Purevdorj African/Oceania Qualifier: Bouseta, Kolawole European Qualifier: Dudova Pan-American Qualifier: Godinez, Miracle World OG Qualifier: Bas, Incze Reallocated Quota: Douarre, Lindborg Key Recent (ish) Matches between Qualifiers 2024 Hungarian Ranking Series semifinals: Godinez over Bullen (11-7) 2024 Hungarian Ranking Series semifinals: Koliadenko over Purevdorj (6-4) 2024 Hungarian Ranking Series quarterfinals: Bullen over Dudova (8-2) 2024 Hungarian Ranking Series quarterfinals: Purevdorj over Miracle (14-10) 2024 Hungarian Ranking Series Round of 16: Dudova over Niemesh (2-1) 2024 Last Chance World OG Qualifier quarterfinals: Bas over Lindborg (4-4) 2024 Last Chance World OG Qualifier Round of 32: Bas over Douarre (6-1) 2024 Asian Championship finals: Tynybekova over Motoki (9-6) 2024 European Olympic Qualifier semifinals: Dudova over Douarre (3-0) 2024 European Championship finals: Bullen over Niemesch (5-4) 2024 European Championship semifinals: Niemesch over Lindborg (4-2) 2024 European Championship quarterfinals: Lindborg over Dudova (3-2) 2024 Pan-American Championship finals: Miracle over Godinez (6-6) 2024 Zagreb Open finals: Tynybekova over Miracle (7-0) 2024 Zagreb Open semifinals: Tynybekova over Motoki (3-3) 2024 Zagreb Open semifinals: Miracle over Godinez (4-2) 2024 Zagreb Open quarterfinals: Motoki over Koliadenko (5-2) 2024 Zagreb Open quarterfinals: Godinez over Dudova (8-3) 2024 Zagreb Open Round of 16: Dudova over Lindborg (6-4) 2024 Zagreb Open Round of 32: Koliadenko over Niemesch (2-0) 2023 World Championship Olympic Wrestle-Off: Niemesch over Dudova (3-2) 2023 World Championship finals: Tynybekova over Motoki (4-1) 2023 World Championship bronze medal match: Bullen over Dudova (3-0) 2023 World Championship bronze medal match: Koliadenko over Niemesch (10-0) 2023 World Championship semifinals: Tynybekova over Niemesch (4-2) 2023 World Championship semifinals: Motoki over Bullen (2-1) 2023 World Championship quarterfinals: Tynybekova over Koliadenko (2-2) 2023 World Championship quarterfinals: Bullen over Incze (10-0) 2023 World Championship quarterfinals: Niemesch over Purevdorj (4-3) 2023 World Championship Round of 16: Motoki over Dudova (4-0) 2023 World Championship Round of 16: Bullen over Kolawole (Fall 4:34) 2023 World Championship Round of 16: Purevdorj over Godinez (13-6) 2023 World Championship Round of 16: Incze over Miracle (6-3) 2023 Hungarian Ranking Series finals: Tynybekova over Dudova (2-1) 2023 Hungarian Ranking Series Round of 32: Tynybekova over Niemesch (2-0) 2023 Asian Championship finals: Tynybekova over Purevdorj (9-5) 2023 European Championship finals: Koliadenko over Bullen (Fall) 2023 European Championship semifinals: Bullen over Dudova (7-6) The American Entry: Kayla Miracle It’ll be a second consecutive trip to the Olympic Games for Kayla Miracle at 62 kg. Miracle was not able to return from Tokyo with any hardware; however, later that year, she did earn her first Senior World medal. A year later, Miracle replicated that feat by making the 2022 World Finals. Last year, Miracle was not able to get on the medal stand in Belgrade so she needed to head to the Pan-American Olympic Qualifier to ensure the US had representation at 62 kg at these Olympic Games. Miracle had little difficulty in doing so with a fall and a 3-0 victory in the deciding match. To lock up her second Olympic berth, Miracle needed to go through a familiar foe. By virtue of her wins at the Pan-Am Qualifier, Miracle was able to sit in the finals and wait for an opponent to emerge from the challenge tournament. That opponent ended up being Macey Kilty - the same wrestler that Miracle beat to make the 2020 team. In 2020, Kilty pushed Miracle to three matches before having to default with an injury. That wasn’t the case in 2024, as Miracle cruised to a pair of three-point wins as she swept the series. Miracle has earned the eighth seed in Paris. That means with an opening round win, she faces the returning World champion and 2020 Olympic silver medalist Ainsuluu Tynybekova of Kyrgyzstan. The two most recently squared off in the finals of the Zagreb Open Ranking Series event and Miracle lost 7-0. There’s a lot of familiarity between the two, so don’t be surprised to see Miracle close the gap and potentially pull an upset. The X-Factor: Hyon Gyong Mun (North Korea) This is an X factor if there ever was one. North Korean wrestlers haven’t competed very often over the past Olympic cycle and Hyon Gyong Mun is no different. After the World Championships last year, Gyong Mun entered the Asian Games and defeated two-time world champion Nonoka Ozaki (Japan) 6-6 on criteria. Ozaki is the same opponent who defeated Miracle in the 2022 world finals. Before her bout with Gyong Mun, Ozaki had defeated Tynybekova in the Asian Games semifinals. Gyong Mun was out of action until the Asian Olympic Qualifier where she posted a fall and a 6-0 shutout to lock up a trip to Paris. The Olympic Games marks the first Senior World or Olympic event that Gyong Mun has ever entered. Prior to her re-emergence at the 2023 Asian Games, Gyong Mun’s last major international tournament was in 2019 - a fifth-place finish at the Asian Championships. Gyong Mun’s lack of history means she’ll come into the tournament without a seed. That could make for a rough draft for a seeded wrestler. Really, I don’t know what to expect from her, but a win over Ozaki means she should be a potential gold medal threat. The Bracket: Out of any of the brackets we’ve previewed thus far, this one might be the most fair and balanced. The top four seeds are the four world medalists from 2023, in order. Additionally, you have a two-time world medalist assuming the fifth seed and Miracle at the number eight. The only past world medalist that is unseeded is Purevdorj. That isn’t as significant as other weights as her world title came in 2017 and she hasn’t been on the podium since. Her recent results don’t necessarily warrant a top-eight seed or it shouldn’t be labeled a glaring omission. Of course, we mentioned above that Gyong Mun could be a wild card and will make whichever side of the bracket she’s inserted tougher. Analysis: The favorite is Tynybekova the 2020 Olympic silver medalist and three-time world champion. She has the top seed and rightfully so. While Tynybekova has history and a strong resume, she isn’t immune to an occasional hiccup and does wrestle lots of close matches. In a talented field like this, one mistake in one of the close matches could cost her. There’s a path to the finals for Tynybekova that could include wins over past world finalists in the quarters and semis. Should Tynybekova stumble, Motoki could be the one who takes advantage. She lost to Tynybekova in the 2023 World finals and later at the 2024 Zagreb Open and the Asian Championships. The Zagreb match ended on criteria, so Motoki is right on her heels. This weight is unique because six of the seven returning world medalists are all of the multi-time variety. The only one who isn’t is Purevdorj - who is a world champion. Now, each of the world medalists at this weight has made at least one final. What that means is we have women with tons of experience and high credentials battling in a bracket that is not necessarily wide-open, but winnable for a handful of them on their best days.
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"No Fear of Developing" - Grand Valley State Women's Coach Jake Short
InterMat Staff posted an article in Women
Morgan Hackney sits down with Grand Valley State women's head coach Jake Short. GVSU is in the process of announcing their first recruiting class ahead of their first year of competition in 2024-25. Coach Short talks about his career as a competitor and a coach and how he landed at GVSU. He also discusses how he met Sage Mortimer and how she bought in immediately as a transfer. Coach Short also mentions some other notable transfers - along with more on the way. For the full interview: -
"Do Your Part" - California Baptist Head Coach Derek Moore
InterMat Staff posted an article in Big 12
California Baptist head coach Derek Moore joins James Hackney to talk about the program's transition from DII status to DI, the Lancers first DI national qualifiers in 2024, and his unique program. Coach Moore also discusses using the transfer portal, recruiting, and competing in the Big 12 while in California and much more. For the full interview: