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Other results 1/4-7

AUSTIN, Texas - No. 3 Sun Devil Wrestling (2-1) fell 19-12 to No. 12 Cornell (3-2) Wednesday night in Austin, Texas. Wrestling in a FloWrestling showcase at the FloSports headquarters, ASU picked up wins at 125, 157, 184, and heavyweight from Brandon Courtney, Max Wilner, Anthony Montalvo, and Cohlton Schultz. ASU's next contest is a midday dual against No. 4 Iowa State January 8 at noon AZ (ESPN+) in Ames, Iowa.

Final Results
Full Final Scoring

Of Note
  • No. 5 Brandon Courtney wrestled in his first dual since February 19, 2022, winning 7-4 over No. 20 Brett Ungar. Courtney used two takedowns and a reversal to earn his fifth win of the season (5-1).
  • Max Wilner picked up the first dual victory of his Sun Devil career. He used two escapes and a nearfall to get a 4-2 decision over Gage McClenahan in the opening match of the night.
  • No. 17/19 Anthony Montalvo earned his second dual victory of the year with a 8-5 decision over Ethan Hatcher. He came out hot with a takedown and nearfall in the initial seconds of the match, and used defensive tactics to earn his victory.
  • No. 4/6 heavyweight Cohlton Schultz was the final victory of the night, winning 4-2 over Lewis Fernandes. A reversal and two points off Fernandes getting flagged for stalling was all Schultz needed.
#12 Cornell 19, #3 Arizona State 12
125:
#5 Brandon Courtney (ASU) over #20 Brett Ungar (COR) (Dec 7-4)
133: #3 Vito Arujau (COR) over #4 Michael McGee (ASU) (Dec 7-5)
141: #22 Vince Cornella (COR) over #19 Jesse Vasquez (ASU) (Dec 9-3)
149: #1 Yianni Diakomihalis (COR) over #5/6 Kyle Parco (ASU) (Dec 8-2)
157: Max Wilner (ASU) over Gage McClenahan (COR) (Dec 4-2)
165: #7 Julian Ramirez (COR) over #28 Tony Negron (ASU) (SV-1 6-1)
174: #5 Chris Foca (COR) over Josh Nummer (ASU) (MD 13-0)
184: #17/19 Anthony Montalvo (ASU) over Ethan Hatcher (COR) (Dec 8-5)
197: #7 Jacob Cardenas (COR) over Jonathon Fagen (ASU) (Dec 6-2)
285: #4/6 Cohlton Schultz (ASU) over #16 Lewis Fernandes (COR) (Dec 4-2)
 
Gabe beat Tate again 3-1. Starts at the 2:44. Two things I liked...Gabe scoring at the end of the first period. Also, was in deep in the third and had Tate dead to rights. Tate "wizarded" out of it and didn't get the points. Still liked the effort in the third.

 
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Thursday's Dual Results

Brown 25 Franklin & Marshall 10


125 - Shane Hanson-Ashworth (Brown) dec Mason Leiphart (F&M) 7-4
133 - Hunter Adrian (Brown) dec Pat Phillips (F&M) 2-0
141 - Ian Oswalt (Brown) maj Sam Kotch (F&M) 10-2
149 - Blake Saito (Brown) maj Avery Clarke (F&M) 10-2
157 - Keegan Rothrock (Brown) maj Nicolas Alvarez (F&M) 12-0
165 - Harrison Trahan (Brown) maj RJ Moore (F&M) 13-0
174 - Drew Clearie (Brown) dec Noah Fox (F&M) 11-9
184 - James Conway (F&M) dec Nick Olivieri (Brown) 10-5
197 - John Crawford (F&M) maj Lear Quinton (Brown) 10-0
285 - Vincenzo Pelusi (F&M) dec Alex Semenenko (Brown) 3-2

Presbyterian 23 Brown 15

125 - Shane Hanson-Ashworth (Brown) dec Dominic Chavez (Presbyterian) 4-3
133 - Hunter Adrian (Brown) dec Jacob Brasseur (Presbyterian) 6-4
141 - Trenton Donahue (Presbyterian) fall Samuel Lynch (Brown)
149 - Blake Saito (Brown) tech Khalid Brinkley (Presbyterian) 17-2
157 - Sam McMonagle (Brown) maj Michael Ramirez (Presbyterian) 10-2
165 - Ty Chittum (Presbyterian) dec Mason Spears (Brown) 14-12SV
174 - Zachary Wells (Presbyterian) maj Drew Clearie (Brown) 12-4
184 - David Bertrand (Presbyterian) dec Nick Olivieri (Brown) 3-2
197 - Cordell Duhart (Presbyterian) dec Aaron Wolk (Brown) 8-4
285 - Malcolm Wiley (Presbyterian) maj Alex Semenenko (Brown) 15-2

Franklin & Marshall 29 Davidson 9

125 - Mason Leiphart (F&M) tech Devon Diaco (Davidson) 16-0
133 - Pat Phillips (F&M) dec Jackson Sichelstiel (Davidson) 6-2
141 - Aidan O'Shea (F&M) dec Josh Viarengo (Davidson) 4-2
149 - Avery Clarke (F&M) fall Noah Frack (Davidson) 4:30
157 - Nicolas Alvarez (F&M) dec Marc Koch (Davidson) 5-2
165 - Bryce Sanderlin (Davidson) dec RJ Moore (F&M) 8-1
174 - Noah Fox (F&M) dec Brett Sanderlin (Davidson) 6-0
184 - James Conway (F&M) dec Cameo Blankenship (Davidson) 12-5
197 - Gavin Henry (Davidson) fall John Crawford (F&M) 4:39
285 - Vincenzo Pelusi (F&M) dec Jake Fernicola (Davidson) 3-2

Brown 22 Davidson 19

125 - Shane Hanson-Ashworth (Brown) dec Devon Diaco (Davidson) 4-1
133 - Hunter Adrian (Brown) fall Jackson Sichelstiel (Davidson) 3:45
141 - Ian Oswalt (Brown) fall Josh Viarengo (Davidson) 4:30
149 - Blake Saito (Brown) dec David Loniewski (Davidson) 8-1
157 - Sam McMonagle (Brown) maj Marc Koch (Davidson) 8-0
165 - Bryce Sanderlin (Davidson) maj Jonathan Conrad (Brown) 12-4
174 - Jaden Hardrick (Davidson) dec Drew Clearie (Brown) 5-2
184 - Cameo Blankenship (Davidson) dec Nick Olivieri (Brown) 6-3
197 - Gavin Henry (Davidson) fall Aaron Wolk (Brown) 3:00
285 - Jake Fernicola (Davidson) dec Thomas Mukai (Brown) 4-2

Franklin & Marshall 33 Presbyterian 9

125 - Mason Leiphart (F&M) maj Dominic Chavez (Presbyterian) 15-6
133 - Pat Phillips (F&M) dec Jacob Brasseur (Presbyterian) 11-4
141 - Trenton Donahue (Presbyterian) dec Aidan O'Shea (F&M) 7-2
149 - Avery Clarke (F&M) fall Khalid Brinkley (Presbyterian) 4:10
157 - Nicolas Alvarez (F&M) maj Michael Ramirez (Presbyterian) 10-2
165 - Ty Chittum (Presbyterian) fall RJ Moore (F&M) 6:48
174 - Noah Fox (F&M) dec Zachary Wells (Presbyterian) 8-6
184 - James Conway (F&M) dec Cordell Duhart (Presbyterian) 3-1
197 - John Crawford (F&M) InjDef Malcolm Wiley (Presbyterian) 5:19
285 - Vincenzo Pelusi (F&M) maj Morvens Saint Jean (Presbyterian) 12-4
 
Gabe beat Tate again 3-1. Starts at the 2:44. Two things I liked...Gabe scoring at the end of the first period. Also, was in deep in the third and had Tate dead to rights. Tate "wizarded" out of it and didn't get the points. Still liked the effort in the third.

Someone's been working on his slide-by defense since their first go. Lol. Good match. Still have a hard time seeing Tate getting him, Gabe is just so strong with such good defense.
 
Gabe beat Tate again 3-1. Starts at the 2:44. Two things I liked...Gabe scoring at the end of the first period. Also, was in deep in the third and had Tate dead to rights. Tate "wizarded" out of it and didn't get the points. Still liked the effort in the third.

Thanks for the link. Usual first question, I’m guessing… How tall is Gabe?
 
Gabe beat Tate again 3-1. Starts at the 2:44. Two things I liked...Gabe scoring at the end of the first period. Also, was in deep in the third and had Tate dead to rights. Tate "wizarded" out of it and didn't get the points. Still liked the effort in the third.

love to see gabe getting legs. he'll have to figure out how to finish against longer opponents, but he's so solid in every position. the edge defense will serve him well in college.
 
Friday's Dual Results

Cleveland State 36 Lake Erie 9


125 - Ben Aranda (Cleveland State) tech Jacob Johnson (Lake Erie) 16-0
133 - Cody Moosman (Cleveland State) fall Ryan Wehner (Lake Erie) 4:06
141 - Christian Small (Lake Erie) fall Caleb Rea (Cleveland State) 2:37
149 - Austin Fietz (Lake Erie) dec Joey Caprella (Cleveland State) 10-9
157 - Marcus Robinson (Cleveland State) dec Jack Haskin (Lake Erie) 7-5
165 - Daniel Patten (Cleveland State) dec Jacob Potok (Lake Erie) 7-2
174 - JR Reed (Cleveland State) FFT
184 - Gabe Phillips (Cleveland State) dec Vinny Scaramuzzino (Lake Erie) 9-2
197 - Joey Lyons (Cleveland State) maj Brylan Clouse (Lake Erie) 16-6
285 - Daniel Bucknavich (Cleveland State) FFT

Michigan State 28 Bucknell 9

125 - Tristan Lujan (Michigan State) maj Grayson McClellan (Bucknell) 14-5
133 - Rayvon Foley (Michigan State) dec Kurt Phipps (Bucknell) 5-4
141 - Dylan Chappell (Bucknell) dec Jordan Hamdan (Michigan State) 2-1TB
149 - Braden Bower (Bucknell) dec Peyton Omania (Michigan State) 3-1
157 - Chase Saldate (Michigan State) maj Riley Bower (Bucknell) 8-0
165 - Caleb Fish (Michigan State) dec Chase Barlow (Bucknell) 5-3
174 - Ceasar Garza (Michigan State) dec Sam Barnes (Bucknell) 8-3
184 - Layne Malczewski (Michigan State) fall Michael Bartusch (Bucknell) 3:17
197 - Cameron Caffey (Michigan State) tech Nolan Springer (Bucknell) 19-2
285 - Dorian Crosby (Bucknell) dec Ryan Vasbinder (Michigan State) 5-3

Rutgers 45 Bloomsburg 0

125 - Dean Peterson (Rutgers) maj Bronson Garber (Bloomsburg) 12-0
133 - Devon Britton (Rutgers) fall Cole Rhone (Bloomsburg) 5:25
141 - Sammy Alvarez (Rutgers) dec Josh Mason (Bloomsburg) 1-0
149 - Anthony White (Rutgers) maj Cade Balestrini (Bloomsburg) 11-0
157 - Andy Clark (Rutgers) fall CJ Fritz (Bloomsburg) 2:28
165 - Robert Kanniard (Rutgers) maj Trenton Harder (Bloomsburg) 11-1
174 - Jackson Turley (Rutgers) tech Anthony DeRosa (Bloomsburg) 19-1
184 - Brian Soldano (Rutgers) maj Bruno Stolfi (Bloomsburg) 18-5
197 - Billy Janzer (Rutgers) dec Tanner Culver (Bloomsburg) 9-2
285 - John O'Donnell (Rutgers) dec fall Shane Noonan (Bloomsburg) :53

Ohio State 26 Indiana 13

125 - Jacob Moran (Indiana) dec Brendan McCrone (Ohio State) 4-3
133 - Jesse Mendez (Ohio State) maj Henry Porter (Indiana) 20-6
141 - Dylan D'Emilio (Ohio State) maj Cayden Rooks (Indiana) 10-2
149 - Sammy Sasso (Ohio State) fall Graham Rooks (Indiana) :53
157 - Derek Gilcher (Indiana) dec Paddy Gallagher (Ohio State) 5-4
165 - Isaac Wilcox (Ohio State) dec Nick South (Indiana) 10-7
174 - Ethan Smith (Ohio State) dec DJ Washington (Indiana) 10-7
184 - Kaleb Romero (Ohio State) fall Drayton Harris (Indiana) 4:00
197 - Nick Willham (Indiana) maj Seth Shumate (Ohio State) 10-2
285 - Jacob Bullock (Indiana) dec Tate Orndorff (Ohio State) 7-2

NC State 36 Binghamton 3

125 - Micah Roes (Binghamton) dec Jarrett Trombley (NC State) 3-1SV
133 - Kai Orine (NC State) dec Ivan Garcia (Binghamton) 9-2
141 - Ryan Jack (NC State) maj Nathan Lucier (Binghamton) 12-2
149 - Jackson Arrington (NC State) dec Michael Zarif (Binghamton) 6-0
157 - Ed Scott (NC State) fall Conner Decker (Binghamton) 1:30
165 - Derek Fields (NC State) dec Dimitri Gamkrelidze (Binghamton) 6-4
174 - Alex Faison (NC State) dec Sam DePrez (Binghamton) 7-3
184 - Trent Hidlay (NC State) maj Jacob Nolan (Binghamton) 14-4
197 - Isaac Trumble (NC State) fall Cayden Bevis (Binghamton) 6:56
285 - Owen Trephan (NC State) maj Cory Day (Binghamton) 11-0

Cornell 22 Virginia Tech 12

125 - Brett Ungar (Cornell) dec Eddie Ventresca (Virginia Tech) 2-1TB
133 - Sam Latona (Virginia Tech) dec Vito Arujau (Cornell) 3-2
141 - Vince Cornella (Cornell) maj Tom Crook (Virginia Tech) 12-4
149 - Yianni Diakomihalis (Cornell) dec Caleb Henson (Virginia Tech) 6-2
157 - Clayton Ulrey (Virginia Tech) dec Gage McClenahan (Cornell) 4-2
165 - Julian Ramirez (Cornell) dec Connor Brady (Virginia Tech) 3-0
174 - Chris Foca (Cornell) fall Jordan Florence (Virginia Tech) 4:30
184 - Hunter Bolen (Virginia Tech) dec Ethan Hatcher (Cornell) 4-0
197 - Jacob Cardenas (Cornell) dec Andy Smith (Virginia Tech) 10-3
285 - Hunter Catka (Virginia Tech) dec Brendan Furman (Cornell) 6-1

Chattanooga 30 VMI 9

125 - Dominic DiTomasso (Chattanooga) dec Tony Burke (VMI) 2-0
133 - Brayden Palmer (Chattanooga) dec Dyson Dunham (VMI) 6-4
141 - Franco Valdes (Chattanooga) dec Freddy Junko (VMI) 6-1
149 - Grant Lundy (Chattanooga) dec Josh Yost (VMI) 3-0
157 - Lincoln Heck (Chattanooga) maj Jobe Chishko (VMI) 14-2
165 - Braxton Lewis (VMI) maj Caleb Waddell (Chattanooga) 14-6
174 - Rocky Jordan (Chattanooga) tech Jon Hoover (VMI) 16-0
184 - Matthew Waddell (Chattanooga) fall Zach Brown (VMI) 1:23
197 - Tyler Mousaw (VMI) tech Landon Lewis (Chattanooga) 15-0
285 - Logan Andrew (Chattanooga) dec Josh Evans (VMI) 7-3

Iowa 25 Illinois 19

125 - Spencer Lee (Iowa) fall Maximo Renteria (Illinois) 2:22
133 - Lucas Byrd (Illinois) fall Cullan Schriever (Iowa) 2:58
141 - Danny Pucino (Illinois) maj Drew Bennett (Iowa) 20-8
149 - Max Murin (Iowa) fall Kevon Davenport (Illinois) 3:34
157 - Mike Carr (Illinois) dec Cobe Siebrecht (Iowa) 12-7
165 - Patrick Kennedy (Iowa) maj Danny Braunagel (Illinois) 15-4
174 - Edmond Ruth (Illinois) dec Nelson Brands (Iowa) 2-1TB
184 - Abe Assad (Iowa) dec Dylan Connell (Illinois) 3-1
197 - Zac Braunagel (Illinois) dec Jacob Warner (Iowa) 3-1
285 - Tony Cassioppi (Iowa) Disq Matt Wroblewski (Illinois)


West Virginia 28 Ohio 9

125 - Killian Cardinale (West Virginia) dec Oscar Sanchez (Ohio) 6-2
133 - Davin Rhoads (West Virginia) dec Gio DiSabato (Ohio) 6-2
141 - Jordan Titus (West Virginia) maj Aidan Waszak (Ohio) 14-2
149 - Sam Hillegas (West Virginia) fall Pierce Taylor (Ohio) 1:11
157 - Peyten Keller (Ohio) dec Alex Hornfeck (West Virginia) 8-6
165 - Peyton Hall (West Virginia) dec Jordan Slivka (Ohio) 10-3
174 - Sal Perrine (Ohio) dec Brody Conley (West Virginia) 3-1SV
184 - Anthony Carman (West Virginia) dec Zayne Lehman (Ohio) 6-5
197 - Carson Brewer (Ohio) dec Ian Bush (West Virginia) 6-1
285 - Michael Wolfgram (West Virginia) fall Jacob Padilla (Ohio) 2:20


Penn State 28 Wisconsin 11

125 - Eric Barnett (Wisconsin) tech Gary Steen (Penn State) 15-0
133 - Roman Bravo-Young (Penn State) maj Taylor LaMont (Wisconsin) 14-5
141 - Beau Bartlett (Penn State) maj Felix Lettini (Wisconsin) 12-3
149 - Austin Gomez (Wisconsin) dec Shayne Van Ness (Penn State) 6-2
157 - Levi Haines (Penn State) maj Garrett Model (Wisconsin) 16-6
165 - Dean Hamiti (Wisconsin) maj Matt Lee (Penn State) 18-6
174 - Carter Starocci (Penn State) maj Josh Otto (Wisconsin) 22-8
184 - Aaron Brooks (Penn State) tech Tyler Dow (Wisconsin) 16-0
197 - Max Dean (Penn State) maj Braxton Amos (Wisconsin) 11-2
285 - Greg Kerkvliet (Penn State) dec Trent Hillger (Wisconsin) 6-2


Michigan 30 Cal Poly 11

125 - Jack Medley (Michigan) dec Antonio Lorenzo (Cal Poly) 3-2
133 - Dylan Ragusin (Michigan) fall Ethan Rotondo (Cal Poly) 2:44
141 - Lawrence Saenz (Cal Poly) dec Cole Mattin (Michigan) 4-1
149 - Chance Lamer (Michigan) InjDef Dom Demas (Cal Poly)
157 - Will Lewan (Michigan) dec Luka Wick (Cal Poly) 8-2
165 - Cam Amine (Michigan) dec Legend Lamer (Cal Poly) 6-2
174 - Brawley Lamer (Cal Poly) dec Joseph Walker (Michigan) 6-1
184 - Matt Finesilver (Michigan) dec Jarad Priest (Cal Poly) 8-2
197 - Bernie Truax (Cal Poly) tech Brendin Yatooma (Michigan) 16-1
285 - Mason Parris (Michigan) fall Trevor Tinker (Cal Poly) 2:38

Bellarmine 36 Queens 9

125 - Jack Parker (Bellarmine) tech Griffen Gonzales (Queens) 17-1
133 - Michael Schiffhauer (Bellarmine) maj Ananth Manibushan (Queens) 15-5
141 - Melvin Rubio (Queens) dec Kysen Montgomery (Bellarmine) 8-2
149 - Zac Cowan (Bellarmine) tech David Makupson (Queens) 18-3
157 - Grant O'Dell (Bellarmine) dec Toure Moore (Queens) 9-5
165 - Cole Nance (Bellarmine) fall Vladimir Sukhikh (Queens) 4:57
174 - Devan Hendricks (Bellarmine) maj JT Skalecki (Queens) 18-9
184 - Kennedy Wyatt (Bellarmine) dec D'Andree Hunt (Queens) 11-4
197 - Riley Kuhn (Queens) FFT
285 - Thaddeus Huff (Bellarmine) fall Darius Ward (Queens) 1:04
 

COLUMBUS, Ohio – No. 9 Ohio State (7-1) opened the Big Ten Conference portion of the season with a 26-13 win at Indiana (4-1) Friday.

Pins by Sammy Sasso (149) and Kaleb Romero (184) along with major decision victories by Jesse Mendez (133) and Dylan D’Emilio (141) helped solidify the win.

How it Happened

125 | Jacob Moran (IU) def. Brendan McCrone (OSU) | D, 4-2

After a couple scrambles, neither wrestler was able to score in the opening period. Moran scored first with a reversal to open the second. McCrone then escaped before a Moran takedown made it 4-1 Indiana at the end of two. McCrone added a point for riding time but it was not enough in the 4-2 loss by decision to Moran.

133 | No. 15 Jesse Mendez (OSU) def. Henry Porter (IU) | MD, 20-6
Mendez scored first with a takedown in his home state of Indiana. Mendez scored another takedown and then added a pair of back points for a 6-1 lead. Leading 8-2 after the first, Mendez added an escape to open the second. He then built a 15-5 lead midway through the third and finished off the match with a win by major decision, 20-6.




141 | No. 17 Dylan D’Emilio (OSU) def. Cayden Rooks (IU) | MD, 10-2
A takedown early gave D’Emilio the 2-0 lead after the first. An early escape increased the lead to 3-0 in the second. Another D’Emilio takedown put Rooks down 5-0 after two periods. With a couple takedowns and a point for riding time D’Emilio earned the win by major decision, 10-2.

149 | No. 4 Sammy Sasso (OSU) def. Graham Rooks (IU) | Fall, 0:53
Sasso wasted little time in earning the win with a pin 53 seconds into the first period to give the Buckeyes six team points.




157 | No. 20 Derek Gilcher (IU) def. No. 18 Paddy Gallagher (OSU) | D, 5-4
Gallagher struck first two minutes into the first period with a takedown to lead 2-0. Gallagher added a point after an escape early in the second before a Gilcher takedown made it 3-2 Buckeyes. A Gilcher escape tied it at 3-all early in the third. He added a takedown for a 5-3 advantage. Gallagher earned an escape but Gilcher won by decision, 5-4.

165 | Isaac Wilcox (OSU) def. Nick South (IU) | D, 10-7
The first two points of the bout went to Wilcox with a takedown. He added another takedown following a South escape to make it 4-1 Buckeyes. Wilcox went up 6-3 with a takedown in the second. It was 7-4 Wilcox after an escape before another takedown made it 9-4 Ohio State. Wilcox held on to win by decision, 10-7.




174 | No. 8 Ethan Smith (OSU) def. No. 18 D.J. Washington (IU) | D, 10-4
Smith scored first with a takedown to lead after the first, 2-0. Washington tied it at 2-all with a takedown in the second. Smith took a 3-2 lead with an escape. Another Smith escape in the third put the Buckeyes up 4-2 in the third. After adding a couple takedowns and then a point for riding time, Smith earned the win by decision 10-4.




184 | No. 5 Kaleb Romero (r-Sr.) def. Drayton Harris (IU) | Fall, 3:59
Romero jumped to a quick 6-2 lead with three takedowns. He finished off the opening period with a 12-5 advantage. He got the win by fall 59 seconds into the second period.




197 | Nick Willham (IU) def. Seth Shumate (OSU) | MD, 10-2
Neither wrestler scored in the opening period. Shumate scored with an escape to open the second but Willham got the reversal to take a 2-1 lead. Willham added a point for an escape in the third for a 3-1 lead. He increased the lead to win by major decision, 10-2.

HWT | Jacob Bullock (IU) def. No. 15 Tate Orndorff (OSU) | D, 7-2
After a scoreless first, Bullock escaped for a point to open the second. Bullock added a takedown for a 3-0 lead. The lead increased to 5-2 Indiana in the third for a Hoosier win by decision, 7-2.



Final Results

OSU IU


125 | Jacob Moran (IU) def. Brendan McCrone (OSU) | D, 4-2 0 3
133 | No. 15 Jesse Mendez (OSU) def. Henry Porter (IU) | MD, 20-6 4 3
141 | No. 17 Dylan D’Emilio (OSU) def. Cayden Rooks (IU) | MD, 10-2 8 3
149 | No. 4 Sammy Sasso (OSU) def. Graham Rooks (IU) | Fall, 0:53 14 3
157 | No. 20 Derek Gilcher (IU) def. No. 18 Paddy Gallagher (OSU) | D, 5-4 14 6
165 | Isaac Wilcox (OSU) def. Nick South (IU) | D, 10-7 17 6
174 | No. 8 Ethan Smith (OSU) def. No. 18 D.J. Washington (IU) | D, 10-4 20 6
184 | No. 5 Kaleb Romero (r-Sr.) def. Drayton Harris (IU) | Fall, 3:59 26 6
197 | Nick Willham (IU) def. Seth Shumate (OSU) | MD, 10-2 26 10
HWT | Jacob Bullock (IU) def. No. 15 Tate Orndorff (OSU) | D, 7-2 26 13
 
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Entering the season, Penn State wrestling fans wondered if they’d get to see freshman phenom Levi Haines in the blue and white singlet. Haines made an appearance in a couple of duals, wrestling in all three duals the Nittany Lions had in the Collegiate Duals at the end of December. The Biglerville graduate was in Penn State’s lineup again on Friday night. He helped spark the Nittany Lions (8-0, 1-0 Big Ten) to a 28-11 Big Ten-opening win over Wisconsin (6-2, 0-1) in Madison, Wisc.

Earlier in the week, Penn State coach Cael Sanderson said a decision on the 157-pound starter was still in the works between Haines and Terrell Barraclough. Haines may have showed enough to prove he should be the man at the weight for the remainder of the year. He took on No. 16 Garrett Model with the dual tied, 8-8. The Nittany Lions wrestler raced out to an 8-2 first period lead thanks to two takedowns and four nearfall points. Haines poured it on in the second period to the tune of two more takedowns. In the third period, he added an escape, his fifth takedown, and added a riding time point for a 16-6 major decision to earn a win in his Big Ten dual debut. Out of the break, the Nittany Lions had a new face in Matt Lee at 165 pounds as Alex Facundo didn’t make the trip. According to Penn State Sports Network’s Jeff Byers, Facundo is “a little banged up.”

Lee took on No. 5 Dean Hamiti for the Badgers and recorded the first points of the bout with a takedown. However, it was all Hamiti after that. The Wisconsin wrestler nearly pinned Lee in the second period with a cradle, but held a 9-3 lead. In the third period, Hamiti kept the pressure on Lee, and earned an 18-6 major decision to tie the dual up at 12-12. Penn State won the final four bouts of the night, which has usually been the case. Carter Starocci had six takedowns through two periods of wrestling against Josh Otto. In the third period, the defending two-time NCAA champion had three more takedowns in the third period en route to a 22-8 major decision. Aaron Brooks took less than two periods to dispatch Tyler Dow at 184 pounds. Brooks held a 6-0 lead to start the second period thanks to a takedown and four nearfall points from a two-on-one tilt. In the second period, Brooks opened with a reversal and collected two sets of nearfall points to secure a 16-0 technical fall in 4:32. The Nittany Lions led 21-12. No. 4 Max Dean faced off with No. 14 Braxton Amos at 197 pounds, and held a 4-2 lead after two periods of wrestling. In the third period, Dean got to his patented bow-and-arrow for some nearfall points, and added a riding time point for an 11-2 major decision. Wisconsin was deducted a team point as head coach Chris Bono came onto the mat even though Amos waived him and a trainer off, when Amos had his left knee tweaked. No. 1 Greg Kerkvliet finished the dual off by controlling No. 11 Trent Hillger in a 6-2 win. The dual began at 125 pounds with the Badgers’ No. 5 Eric Barnett having no problems with Gary Steen in a 15-0 technical fall in 5:11. Roman Bravo-Young used six takedowns to amass a 14-5 major decision of No. 27 Taylor LaMont. Beau Bartlett followed with a 12-3 major decision at 141 pounds to give Penn State its first lead of the dual at 8-5. Wisconsin’s Austin Gomez, who is ranked No. 2 in the country, took on No. 15 Shayne Van Ness before Haines hit the mat. The veteran Gomez countered two of Van Ness’ takedown attempts for points of his own in a 6-2 win. Van Ness looked solid and suffered his second loss of the year, but his other loss came to the No. 3 wrestler in the country in Iowa State’s Paniro Johnson. The Nittany Lions are now off until they host Michigan in the first of two Bryce Jordan Center duals on Jan. 20 at 7 p.m.

NO. 1 PENN STATE 28, NO. 11 WISCONSIN 11 Friday at Madison, Wisc. 125: No. 5 Eric Barnett, W, tech. fall Gary Steen, 15-0 (5:11) 133: No. 1 Roman Bravo-Young, PSU, major dec. No. 27 Taylor LaMont, 14-5 141: No. 4 Beau Bartlett, PSU, major dec. Felix Lettini, 12-3 149: No. 2 Austin Gomez, W, dec. No. 15 Shayne Van Ness, 6-2 157: Levi Haines, PSU, major dec. No. 16 Garrett Model, 16-6 165: No. 5 Dean Hamiti, W, major dec. Matt Lee, 18-6 174: No. 1 Carter Starocci, PSU, major dec. Josh Otto, 22-8 184: No. 1 Aaron Brooks, PSU, tech. fall Tyler Dow, 16-0 (4:32) 197: No. 4 Max Dean, PSU, major dec. No. 14 Braxton Amos, 11-2* 285: No. 1 Greg Kerkvliet, PSU, dec. No. 11 Trent Hillger, 6-2 * — Wisconsin lost team point due to control of mat area on coaches Takedowns: PSU 30, W 10 Records: Penn State (8-0, 1-0 Big Ten), Wisconsin (6-2, 0-1 Big Ten)

Read more at: https://www.centredaily.com/sports/...wrestling/article270610177.html#storylink=cpy
 
Take this to the Gabe vs Tate thread !!! Lol . I agree, Gabe is more athletic and tate will need to pull something new out. Sorry papa, but I feel like Gabe could open more as well. :)
How dare you critique my kid?? He took THREE count em THREE solid shots that entire match. That means he average ONE shot attempt each period. And you want him to open up more? Geez. I knew you Iowa fans were demanding but dang. That’s a little much, don’t ya think?

Satire aside; Tate stuck to the plan: keep it close; hope to sneak one away on his feet. In my coaching opinion, Gabe has the ability to create angles and attacks at any given moment. To hell with THEIR game plan. Wrestle you match to do one thing only: dominate. Not just win. Winning is all fine and dandy. Your job is to remind them that the NEVER want to step on that mat ever again with you. To do anything less than that is to provide a false hope that should not exist….

Again, as dad: Please refrain from assuming what my child should and shouldn’t do. He is not here for your amusement. If he wanted to be an amusement he would have selected a school up east, with all the other 🤡.

Regards,

Phil & AO Coachpihl (In split personality mode that I’m currently being treated for)
 
How dare you critique my kid?? He took THREE count em THREE solid shots that entire match. That means he average ONE shot attempt each period. And you want him to open up more? Geez. I knew you Iowa fans were demanding but dang. That’s a little much, don’t ya think?

Satire aside; Tate stuck to the plan: keep it close; hope to sneak one away on his feet. In my coaching opinion, Gabe has the ability to create angles and attacks at any given moment. To hell with THEIR game plan. Wrestle you match to do one thing only: dominate. Not just win. Winning is all fine and dandy. Your job is to remind them that the NEVER want to step on that mat ever again with you. To do anything less than that is to provide a false hope that should not exist….

Again, as dad: Please refrain from assuming what my child should and shouldn’t do. He is not here for your amusement. If he wanted to be an amusement he would have selected a school up east, with all the other 🤡.

Regards,

Phil & AO Coachpihl (In split personality mode that I’m currently being treated for)
I agree with that sentiment so much. Punish and destroy confidence for future meetings. Just do your thing and show opponent he can’t stop you at all. Why would the next meeting be any different. Improve a lot… and still get whooped. Make them work on defense for next meeting.
 
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#9 Northwestern over #14 Minnesota 18 - 11

event date: 01/07/23
 

EVANSTON, Ill. (January 7, 2023) – No. 15 Northwestern (2-0, 1-0 B1G) couldn't have scripted a better start to Big Ten Conference action, dealing No. 9 Minnesota (7-1, 0-1 B1G) its first dual meet defeat of the season in an 18-11 triumph this afternoon inside Welsh-Ryan Arena. Today's victory marks the Wildcats' first dual meet win over the Golden Gophers in Evanston since 1996.

The 'Cats picked up wins in six of the afternoon's nine bouts, including five straight victories to close the dual meet.

Maxx Mayfield provided early fireworks in the day's opening bout at 165 pounds, recording a takedown on the edge of the mat with just one second remaining in the third period to edge out a 6-4 decision over No. 22 Andrew Sparks.




At heavyweight, No. 4 Lucas Davison, fresh off a Midlands Championships run that saw him not allow a point, jumped out to an early lead on Garrett Joles and coasted to a 4-1 win.

No. 11 Chris Cannon found himself in an early hole at 133 pounds, trailing No. 22 Aaron Nagao, 3-0, late in the second period. With time winding down in the frame, Cannon erupted for a takedown that was followed by a four-point near fall as the redshirt junior raced in front, 6-3, on his way to a 7-3 victory.




Competing at 141 pounds, No. 15 Frankie Tal-Shahar picked up a top-10 triumph, making a takedown in the waning seconds of the first period against No. 10 Jakob Bergeland stand in a 2-1 nailbiter.

No. 5 Yahya Thomas picked up a 2-1 win of his own, riding out No. 15 Michael Blockhus in the second period of overtime at 149 pounds en route to a ninth straight victory.




Closing out the meet at 157 pounds, No. 16 Trevor Chumbley slammed the door shut on any hopes of a Minnesota comeback, putting away No. 8 Brayton Lee by an 8-4 scoreline to put the exclamation point on the afternoon for the Wildcats.

Northwestern is back in action on Friday, January 13 when it battles No. 2 Iowa inside Carver-Hawkeye Arena in an 8 p.m. tilt that will be televised on ESPNU.

#15 Northwestern 18, #9 Minnesota 11
125: Double Forfeit
133: No. 11 Chris Cannon (NW) over No. 22 Aaron Nagao (MINN) (Dec 7-4)
141: No. 15 Frankie Tal-Shahar (NW) over No. 10 Jakob Bergeland (MINN) (Dec 2-1)
149: No. 5 Yahya Thomas (NW) over No. 15 Michael Blockhus (MINN) (TB-3 (RT) 2-1)
157: No. 16 Trevor Chumbley (NW) over No. 8 Brayton Lee (MINN) (Dec 8-4)
165: Maxx Mayfield (NW) over No. 22 Andrew Sparks (MINN) (Dec 6-4)
174: No. 15 Bailee O`Reilly (MINN) over Ankhaa Enkhmandakh (NW) (MD 17-5)
184: No. 11 Isaiah Salazar (MINN) over Evan Bates (NW) (MD 15-1)
197: HM Michial Foy (MINN) over HM Andrew Davison (NW) (Dec 2-0)
285: No. 4 Lucas Davison (NW) over HM Garrett Joles (MINN) (Dec 4-1)
 


Huskers Overpower Gardner-Webb, Campbell​


BUIES CREEK, N.C. – The Nebraska wrestling team used 12 bonus-point victories to sweep the day and claim two dual victories, defeating both Gardner-Webb and Campbell on Saturday, 37-6.

The Huskers improved to 4-2 on the season, as NU tallied four pins, four technical falls and three major decisions.

Competition started against Gardner-Webb at 165. #25 Bubba Wilson tallied an escape, but fell to #29 RJ Mosley in sudden victory, 3-1. With the win, Gardner-Webb grabbed the 3-0 overall lead, but it didn't last long as Nebraska won eight of the next nine bouts to claim the team victory.

Up next, #2 Mikey Labriola (174) faced GWU's Andrew Wilson. Labriola attacked quickly tallying three takedowns. Labriola started on bottom in Period 2, recording an escape, reversal and two four-point nearfalls to grab the 17-2 technical fall victory.

At 184, #10 Lenny Pinto wrestled Gardner-Webb's Jha-Quan Anderson. Pinto recorded a takedown before pinning Anderson in the first period. The Huskers held the 11-3 lead as Silas Allred (197) took the mat to face Sam Mora. Allred worked quickly and in just over two minutes scored his fifth pin of the season.

At heavyweight, Cale Davidson took on Abe Preston with the Huskers holding the 17-3 overall lead. Davidson held an 11-0 advantage after Period 2 en route to a 16-1 win by technical fall. #10 Liam Cronin (125) was up next against GWU's Drew West. Cronin led 4-1 after Period 1 and kept the momentum with a four-point nearfall to hold the 10-1 advantage to start Period 3. Cronin finished strong and grabbed the 13-3 major decision.

With the Huskers leading 26-3, #33 Boo Dryden faced Todd Carter. Carter scored first with a takedown, and Dryden responded with an escape. The two went scoreless in Period 2, and Dryden trailed 2-1 to start the final period. Dryden battled, but Carter secured the 3-2 decision.

#5 Brock Hardy (141) then matched up with Gardner-Webb's Zach Price. Hardy tallied a takedown in the opening period and an escape in Period 2 to grab the 4-0 victory by decision. At 149, Blake Cushing made his career dual debut for the Huskers as he wrestled GWU's Corbin Dion. Cushing recorded a takedown in the first period, an escape in the second and a takedown in the final period to claim the 5-2 decision.

Wrapping up competition against Gardner-Webb, top-ranked Peyton Robb (157) defeated Tyler Brignola, recording two takedowns and 12 back points for the 15-1 technical fall.

The Huskers then faced Campbell in their second dual of the night. Wilson (165) started competition again for the Huskers, matching up against Campbell's Dominic Baker. Wilson scored first with a takedown and four-point nearfall before pinning Baker in the first period.

Leading 6-0 overall, Labriola (174) then faced Cole Rees of Campbell and tallied a pair of quick takedowns to hold the 4-1 lead to start Period 2. Labriola continued the attack and used six takedowns and an escape to grab the 18-6 major decision.

At 184, the teams saw their first nationally ranked match as Pinto met #27 Caleb Hopkins. Pinto scored two takedowns and a two-point nearfall to hold the 6-2 advantage after three minutes. In the final two periods, Pinto tallied two more takedowns and a reversal to secure the 14-6 major decision.

Up next, Allred (197) wrestled Caleb Hopkin's brother and teammate, Levi Hopkins. Allred tallied a takedown in the opening period, but Hopkins tied the match in Period 2 with a pair of escapes. In Period 3, Allred scored two more takedowns to claim the 8-3 victory.

Davidson then faced Campbell's #12 Taye Ghadiali at heavyweight. Davidson tallied three escape points, but it was not enough as Ghadiali used two takedowns to defeat Davidson, 5-3. At 125, Cronin wrestled Zak Thompson of Campbell and grabbed the quick 6-0 lead with a takedown and four-point nearfall. Thompson responded with a pair of escapes, but Cronin used a 12-point third period to win by technical fall, 18-3.

At 133, Alex Thomsen wrestled his first dual of the season as he faced Campbell's #29 Dominic Zaccone. The two were tied 1-1 early in the final period before Zaccone scored a takedown and secured the riding time point for the 4-1 victory. Up next, Hardy met Shannon Hanna at 141 and tallied the early takedown in Period 1. Hanna scored a takedown of his own, but Hardy fought back with another takedown before pinning Hanna at 6:52.

With two matches to go, the Huskers held the 28-6 advantage. Dayne Morton was up next for the Huskers at 149 against Chris Rivera. Morton opened the first period with over a minute of riding time, a takedown and a penalty point. Morton continued the pressure and grabbed the 5-0 decision.

In the last match of the day, Robb (157) won by forfeit and the Huskers defeated Campbell, 37-6.

Next weekend, the Huskers open Big Ten competition as they host Minnesota on Friday, Jan. 13 at 8 p.m. (CT) and Northwestern on Sunday, Jan. 15 at 2 p.m. (CT). Friday's dual will be televised on BTN and Sunday's dual will be streamed on Big Ten Plus.

#17 Nebraska 37, Gardner-Webb 6
165: #29 RJ Mosley (GWU) dec. #25 Bubba Wilson (NEB) 4-2 SV-1 (GWU 3, NEB 0)
174: #2 Mikey Labriola (NEB) tech. fall Andrew Wilson (NEB) 17-2 (4:56) (NEB 5, GWU 3)
184: #10 Lenny Pinto (NEB) pinned Jha-Quan Anderson (GWU) (1:24) (NEB 11, GWU 3)
197: #25 Silas Allred (NEB) pinned Sam Mora (GWU) (2:08) (NEB 17, GWU 3)
285: Cale Davidson (NEB) tech. fall Abe Preston (GWU) 16-1 (5:50) (NEB 22, GWU 3)
125: #10 Liam Cronin (NEB) major dec. Drew West (GWU) 13-3 (NEB 26, GWU 3)
133: Todd Carter (GWU) dec. #33 Boo Dryden (NEB) 3-2 (NEB 26, GWU 6)
141: #5 Brock Hardy (NEB) dec. Zach Price (GWU) 4-0 (NEB 29, GWU 6)
149: Blake Cushing (NEB) dec. Corbin Dion (GWU) 5-2 (NEB 32, GWU 6)
157: #1 Peyton Robb (NEB) tech. fall Tyler Brignola (GWU) 16-1 (2:57) (NEB 37, GWU 6)

#17 Nebraska 37, Campbell 6
165: #25 Bubba Wilson (NEB) pinned Dominic Baker (CU) (2:28) (NEB 6, CU 0)
174: #2 Mikey Labriola (NEB) major dec. Cole Rees (CU) 18-6 (NEB 10, CU 0)
184: #10 Lenny Pinto (NEB) major dec. #27 Caleb Hopkins (CU) 14-6 (NEB 14, CU 0)
197: #25 Silas Allred (NEB) dec. Levi Hopkins (CU) 8-3 (NEB 17, CU 0)
285: #12 Taye Ghadiali (CU) dec. Cale Davidson (NEB) 5-3 (NEB 17, CU 3)
125: #10 Liam Cronin (NEB) tech. fall Zak Thompson (CU) 18-3 (7:00) (NEB 22, CU 3)
133: #29 Dominic Zaccone (CU) dec. Alex Thomsen (NEB) 4-1 (NEB 22, CU 6)
141: #5 Brock Hardy (NEB) pinned Shannon Hanna (CU) (6:52) (NEB 28, CU 6)
149: Dayne Morton (NEB) dec. Chris Rivera (CU) 5-0 (NEB 31, CU 6)
157: #1 Peyton Robb (NEB) won by forfeit (NEB 37, CU 6)

Extra Matches
149: Blake Cushing (NEB) pinned Domenic DeFalco (CU) (6:14)
184: Brandyn Van Tassell(NEB) major dec. Cameron Andrews (CU) 12-4
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Iowa State wrestling defeats Wyoming in return to Hilton​

Anthony Hanson, Sports Reporter
January 7, 2023

AMES—No. 4 Iowa State took down Wyoming in a dual Saturday afternoon. The Cyclones defended their highest ranking since 2009 with the 37-7 win.
Iowa State recovered from its first dual loss on Dec. 20, when it fell to No. 1 Penn State. The Cyclones improved to 8-2. In dual matchups, Iowa State has lost to No. 1 Penn State and No. 2 Iowa.
Sunday, it will take on No. 3 Arizona State.
“It was good to be on the mat today,” Iowa State head coach Kevin Dresser said. “But the focus changes quickly.”
Wyoming’s first points came in the dual’s first matchup. Iowa State’s Jason Kraisser fell narrowly to Wyoming’s No. 10 ranked Jacob Wright. Kraisser added a takedown in the final seconds to make the score 6-4.
The Cowboys grabbed their first three points with the decision and would not score again in the 125-pound weight class.
After the decision at the 157-pound weight class, Iowa State recorded five straight bonus point victories.
The next two matchups ended with falls forced by Cyclone wrestlers. No. 3 ranked Iowa State senior David Carr pinned Wyoming’s Cole Moody to add six points to Iowa State’s team score.
“We have to learn how to separate ourselves,” Dresser said. “Getting the major decisions, getting the tech [falls], it’s huge. I was glad to see that happen.”
Carr is now 10-0 after moving up to the 165-pound weight for his final season at Iowa State. Carr is a former national champion in the 157-pound weight class and recorded 55-straight victories at that weight.
In the next matchup, Iowa State’s Julian Brodersen pinned his opponent No. 33 Hayden Hastings in only 22 seconds.
“It was a battle trying to claw my way into the starting lineup,” Brodersen said. “That’s the kind of program you really want to be in.”
Another bonus point came Iowa State’s way when No. 4 Marcus Coleman took down Quayin Short 17-0. The tech fall put Iowa State ahead 17-3 and helped Coleman continue a recent hot streak.
Last time out, Coleman took down Penn State’s Aaron Brooks. Brooks is the nation’s No. 1 wrestler at 184-pounds, and Coleman secured the win when Iowa State faced the Nittany Lions in the finals of the Collegiate Duals on Dec. 20.
Coleman earned Big 12 Wrestler of the Week honors on Dec. 28 for his win over Brooks, and on Saturday he moved his record to 9-1 on the season.
Iowa State picked up another win-by-fall and a sixth bonus point victory in the 133-pound weight class when No. 23 Ramazan Attasauov pinned Wyoming’s Darrick Stacey.
At 197 and 285, Iowa State picked up more bonus points. Yonger Bastida recorded a major decision over Wyoming’s Guillermo Escobedo. Sam Schuyler returned to the mat to give Iowa State a major decision.
Both Schuyler and Iowa State freshman Casey Swiderski did not take the mat in the recent dual with Penn State due to injury. The injuries appear to have no lingering effects, Dresser said, as both wrestlers returned and picked up wins on Saturday.
Fellow Iowa State freshman Paniro Johnson also recorded a win on Saturday. Johnson moved to 8-1 on the season after taking down Chase Zollman of Wyoming. The No. 3 ranked Johnson has wins over Iowa’s Max Murn and Penn State’s Shane Van Ness this season.
Iowa State’s Kysen Terukina, who suffered a shoulder injury in November, will remain out for the rest of the season at 125-pounds. With Corey Cabanban also out with an injury, Iowa State’s Connor Knopick made the start at 125-pounds. Knopick lost 12-4 to Wyoming’s Garrett Ricks for Wyoming’s second win of the dual.
 

EVANSTON, Ill. (January 7, 2023) – No. 15 Northwestern (2-0, 1-0 B1G) couldn't have scripted a better start to Big Ten Conference action, dealing No. 9 Minnesota (7-1, 0-1 B1G) its first dual meet defeat of the season in an 18-11 triumph this afternoon inside Welsh-Ryan Arena. Today's victory marks the Wildcats' first dual meet win over the Golden Gophers in Evanston since 1996.

The 'Cats picked up wins in six of the afternoon's nine bouts, including five straight victories to close the dual meet.

Maxx Mayfield provided early fireworks in the day's opening bout at 165 pounds, recording a takedown on the edge of the mat with just one second remaining in the third period to edge out a 6-4 decision over No. 22 Andrew Sparks.




At heavyweight, No. 4 Lucas Davison, fresh off a Midlands Championships run that saw him not allow a point, jumped out to an early lead on Garrett Joles and coasted to a 4-1 win.

No. 11 Chris Cannon found himself in an early hole at 133 pounds, trailing No. 22 Aaron Nagao, 3-0, late in the second period. With time winding down in the frame, Cannon erupted for a takedown that was followed by a four-point near fall as the redshirt junior raced in front, 6-3, on his way to a 7-3 victory.




Competing at 141 pounds, No. 15 Frankie Tal-Shahar picked up a top-10 triumph, making a takedown in the waning seconds of the first period against No. 10 Jakob Bergeland stand in a 2-1 nailbiter.

No. 5 Yahya Thomas picked up a 2-1 win of his own, riding out No. 15 Michael Blockhus in the second period of overtime at 149 pounds en route to a ninth straight victory.




Closing out the meet at 157 pounds, No. 16 Trevor Chumbley slammed the door shut on any hopes of a Minnesota comeback, putting away No. 8 Brayton Lee by an 8-4 scoreline to put the exclamation point on the afternoon for the Wildcats.

Northwestern is back in action on Friday, January 13 when it battles No. 2 Iowa inside Carver-Hawkeye Arena in an 8 p.m. tilt that will be televised on ESPNU.

#15 Northwestern 18, #9 Minnesota 11
125: Double Forfeit
133: No. 11 Chris Cannon (NW) over No. 22 Aaron Nagao (MINN) (Dec 7-4)
141: No. 15 Frankie Tal-Shahar (NW) over No. 10 Jakob Bergeland (MINN) (Dec 2-1)
149: No. 5 Yahya Thomas (NW) over No. 15 Michael Blockhus (MINN) (TB-3 (RT) 2-1)
157: No. 16 Trevor Chumbley (NW) over No. 8 Brayton Lee (MINN) (Dec 8-4)
165: Maxx Mayfield (NW) over No. 22 Andrew Sparks (MINN) (Dec 6-4)
174: No. 15 Bailee O`Reilly (MINN) over Ankhaa Enkhmandakh (NW) (MD 17-5)
184: No. 11 Isaiah Salazar (MINN) over Evan Bates (NW) (MD 15-1)
197: HM Michial Foy (MINN) over HM Andrew Davison (NW) (Dec 2-0)
285: No. 4 Lucas Davison (NW) over HM Garrett Joles (MINN) (Dec 4-1)
So I know the Hawks haven't wrestled NW yet, but how in the hell does Eggum still have a job?

What a shitshow up North.

Maybe Jammiez can explain it?

Low expectations or they can't afford a good coach?
 
Double Forfeit at 125?
What is that about?
A MN fan on another thread said that Eggum didn't want to win that way so he FF 125 and that McKee weighed in and warmed up . I have never heard of anything like that before. A coach saying I don't want to win the dual that way so you FF 125 as well.
 
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A MN fan on another thread said that Eggum didn't want to win that way so he FF 125 and that McKee weighed in and warmed up . I have never heard of anything like that before. A coach saying I don't want to win the dual that way so you FF 125 as well.
It was speculation on my part given the fact that McKee weighed in and traveled. Truth is we really don’t know. There aren’t a lot of reasonable explanations.
 
A MN fan on another thread said that Eggum didn't want to win that way so he FF 125 and that McKee weighed in and warmed up . I have never heard of anything like that before. A coach saying I don't want to win the dual that way so you FF 125 as well.
I’d also like to point out that a forfeit either way would have ended up entirely inconsequential. The bigger problem, as MitchL so elegantly pointed out above, is that the rest of the team wrestled like crap.
 
I’d also like to point out that a forfeit either way would have ended up entirely inconsequential. The bigger problem, as MitchL so elegantly pointed out above, is that the rest of the team wrestled like crap.
Agree they're not looking great.
 
Seems like matthews has wrestled alot of close matches this year. Only a matter of time until someone picks a guy like that off.
 
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Vasquez over swiderski in ot
Clone fans have unrealistic expectations, but you get that when they're in a 45 year title drought.

Swidski also has never experienced a 3 day grind like Nattys.

As a true freshman, even finishing top eight will be a great accomplishment.

And those ISU fans that expected him to beat Woods in a rematch might need to sober up and be realistic.
 
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