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Qualified for the NCAAs EIWA​

125 (2): Sheldon Seymour (Lehigh), Charlie Farmer (Army)

133 (1): Kurt Phipps (Bucknell)

141 (3): Josh Koderhandt (Navy), Dylan Chappell (Bucknell), Jordan Soriano (Drexel)

149 (1): Trae McDaniel (Army)

157 (1): Logan Rozynski (Lehigh)

165 (2): Noah Mulvaney (Bucknell), Kyle Mosher (Hofstra)

174 (4): Danny Wask (Navy), Brevin Cassella (Binghamton), Dalton Harkins (Army), Jasiah Queen (Drexel)

184 (1): Ross Mcfarland (Hofstra)

197 (4): Michael Beard (Lehigh), Dillon Bechtold (Bucknell), Payton Thomas (Navy), Mickey O'Malley (Drexel)

285 (3): Owen Trephan (Lehigh), Cory Day (Binghamton), Brady Colbert (Army) 22

Qualifiers by school: Lehigh (4); Army (4); Bucknell (4); Navy (3); Drexel (3); Hofstra (2); Binghamton (2)

Qualfied for NCAA’s Mid American Conference

125
Blake West of Northern Illinois

133
Anthony Noto of Lock Haven
Sean Spidle of Central Michigan
Colton Camacho of Edinboro

141
Wyatt Henson of Lock Haven

149
Sammy Alvarez of Rider
Mason Shrader of Central Michigan Kaden Cassidy of George Mason

157
DJ Mcgee of George Mason
Johnny Lovett of Central Michigan
Landen Johnson of Northern Illinois

165
Enrique Munguia of Rider
Chandler Amaker of Central Michigan

174
Garrett Thompson of Ohio
Alex Cramer of Central Michigan
Avery Bassett of Lock Haven

184
Isaac Dean of Rider
Jared McGill of Edinboro
Malachi DuVall of George Mason

197
Brock Zurawski of Rider

285
Gavin Hoffman of Lock Haven
Jordan Greer of Ohio
Daniel Bucknavich of Cleveland State
 
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Qualified for the NCAAs EIWA​

125 (2): Sheldon Seymour (Lehigh), Charlie Farmer (Army)

133 (1): Kurt Phipps (Bucknell)

141 (3): Josh Koderhandt (Navy), Dylan Chappell (Bucknell), Jordan Soriano (Drexel)

149 (1): Trae McDaniel (Army)

157 (1): Logan Rozynski (Lehigh)

165 (2): Noah Mulvaney (Bucknell), Kyle Mosher (Hofstra)

174 (4): Danny Wask (Navy), Brevin Cassella (Binghamton), Dalton Harkins (Army), Jasiah Queen (Drexel)

184 (1): Ross Mcfarland (Hofstra)

197 (4): Michael Beard (Lehigh), Dillon Bechtold (Bucknell), Payton Thomas (Navy), Mickey O'Malley (Drexel)

285 (3): Owen Trephan (Lehigh), Cory Day (Binghamton), Brady Colbert (Army) 22

Qualifiers by school: Lehigh (4); Army (4); Bucknell (4); Navy (3); Drexel (3); Hofstra (2); Binghamton (2)

Qualfied for NCAA’s Mid American Conference

125
Blake West of Northern Illinois

133
Anthony Noto of Lock Haven
Sean Spidle of Central Michigan
Colton Camacho of Edinboro

141
Wyatt Henson of Lock Haven

149
Sammy Alvarez of Rider
Mason Shrader of Central Michigan Kaden Cassidy of George Mason

157
DJ Mcgee of George Mason
Johnny Lovett of Central Michigan
Landen Johnson of Northern Illinois

165
Enrique Munguia of Rider
Chandler Amaker of Central Michigan

174
Garrett Thompson of Ohio
Alex Cramer of Central Michigan
Avery Bassett of Lock Haven

184
Isaac Dean of Rider
Jared McGill of Edinboro
Malachi DuVall of George Mason

197
Brock Zurawski of Rider

285
Gavin Hoffman of Lock Haven
Jordan Greer of Ohio
Daniel Bucknavich of Cleveland State
Wyatt Henson going at 141. What was the reason he left Iowa to go to Oklahoma and then later to LH?
 
Partly because Woods was brought in. I believe his Dad, Sammie Henson World Gold & Olympic Silver, had some input as well.
 
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Wyatt Henson going at 141. What was the reason he left Iowa to go to Oklahoma and then later to LH?
It was because he didn’t want to live the lifestyle it takes to be a successful college wrestler. Broke some team rules and instead of facing the punishments he left.
Partly because Woods was brought in.
No he went 133 at Oklahoma his first year.
 
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Judge asks NCAA to work grandfathering the roster limits for existing athletes.

WOW. NCAA has a HUGE mess now. Thousands of athletes have already been removed from rosters as schools have worked to downsize to the new roster limits. HS athletes have had previously awarded scholarships cancelled due to limited roster spots. This is a messy, complex issue as schools have to deal with the cost impact of the issue as well as the potential Title9 compliance issues. The long-term result of this revenue sharing settlement is likely to be the elimination of a lot of non-revenue sports programs which is probably what a lot of the Power5 conference executives actually desire.
 
WOW. NCAA has a HUGE mess now. Thousands of athletes have already been removed from rosters as schools have worked to downsize to the new roster limits. HS athletes have had previously awarded scholarships cancelled due to limited roster spots. This is a messy, complex issue as schools have to deal with the cost impact of the issue as well as the potential Title9 compliance issues. The long-term result of this revenue sharing settlement is likely to be the elimination of a lot of non-revenue sports programs which is probably what a lot of the Power5 conference executives actually desire.
If anyone can turn something into a shit show the NCAA can
 
WOW. NCAA has a HUGE mess now. Thousands of athletes have already been removed from rosters as schools have worked to downsize to the new roster limits. HS athletes have had previously awarded scholarships cancelled due to limited roster spots. This is a messy, complex issue as schools have to deal with the cost impact of the issue as well as the potential Title9 compliance issues. The long-term result of this revenue sharing settlement is likely to be the elimination of a lot of non-revenue sports programs which is probably what a lot of the Power5 conference executives actually desire.

It never made sense not to have a grace period for current athletes. "Sorry gritty walk-ons who are paying your own way but you gotta go."
 
It never made sense not to have a grace period for current athletes. "Sorry gritty walk-ons who are paying your own way but you gotta go."
By the letter of the settlement, as I understand it, all walk-ons would now be on full scholarship and participate in the revenue sharing, because they will be rostered.

My guess is the NCAA and Power 5 Athletic Departments didn't want to pay anything to student athletes they hadn't financially supported before. And perhaps they didn't want to water down shares for those they are willing to financially support.

Unless I am missing something, with the same cap $ amount, it seems a school's existing scholarship athlete of a given sport will necessarily get a smaller share than they otherwise would have. If it's all about the money, they could push for a higher cap to make up for the effective settlement reduction.
 
The NCAA is like Big Pharma. A legalized criminal organization. No joke. It’s ridiculous and makes me angry.
When third parties make it so that you cannot run your own ship, the bastardization that results can result in worse problems than ever imagined.
 
By the letter of the settlement, as I understand it, all walk-ons would now be on full scholarship and participate in the revenue sharing, because they will be rostered.

My guess is the NCAA and Power 5 Athletic Departments didn't want to pay anything to student athletes they hadn't financially supported before. And perhaps they didn't want to water down shares for those they are willing to financially support.

Unless I am missing something, with the same cap $ amount, it seems a school's existing scholarship athlete of a given sport will necessarily get a smaller share than they otherwise would have. If it's all about the money, they could push for a higher cap to make up for the effective settlement reduction.
I think there was still a gap between the roster number and the number of official scholarships but I could be wrong. Think NIL would still make it possible to cover the guys in that gap. So well funded programs would have everyone on scholarship.
 
I think there was still a gap between the roster number and the number of official scholarships but I could be wrong. Think NIL would still make it possible to cover the guys in that gap. So well funded programs would have everyone on scholarship.
I believe if a student athlete is grandfathered in to a roster spot, then they are rostered. Once rostered, then the student athlete gets a full ride and takes part in revenue sharing, as the settlement is currently written.

Roster limits are the maximum on a team, nothing more. They are not a mandatory number. Football scholarships were to be cut from 128 to 105, or something like that, based on the settlement roster limit.

Revenue sharing includes the costs of scholarship, room and board, food, books, academic tutors, and whatever else a school wants to take off the top before doling out cash upto to their revenue sharing limit.

NIL money is added to these, and a totally separate $ bucket that isn't part of the University's budget or sharing. Most student athletes will see no NIL monies, especially walk-ons, unless an associated entity (like a collective's sport specific funds or donor) supports the whole team or targets them with some form of endowment.
 
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