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    A look at 10 potential bracket busters at the NCAAs

    Every year there are bracket busters at the NCAA Division I Championships. You know ... the unseeded wrestlers who win the matches they're not supposed to win and prevent those matchups that were supposed to happen.

    So who will the bracket busters be this year in Philadelphia? I've come up with one potential bracket buster in each of the 10 weight classes to watch. These are 10 wrestlers that I think could pull upsets.

    125: Anthony Zanetta (Pitt)
    Zanetta, a two-time EWL champion, went through a sophomore slump at the beginning of this season, but is firing on all cylinders heading into the NCAAs. He has won his last nine matches. Zanetta will face 10th-seeded Alan Waters of Missouri, a true freshman, in the opening round. If Zanetta can get past Waters, he will likely face seventh-seeded Ryan Mango of Stanford. Most fans are expecting to see the rubber match between Waters and Mango in the second round, but don't be shocked if that match does not materialize. In fact, don't be shocked if Zanetta knocks off Waters and Mango en route to a quarterfinal match against second-seeded Matt McDonough of Iowa. McDonough beat Zanetta, 10-6, in the second of last year's NCAA Championships.

    Nathan Pennesi reached the finals of the Reno Tournament of Champions before falling to Andrew Hochstrasser (Photo/Tony Rotundo, WrestlersAreWarriors.com)
    133: Nathan Pennesi (West Virginia)
    Pennesi is a tough freshman from Pennsylvania who has been on a roll. He likes to wrestle from space and use fakes to set up his leg attacks. He's tough to score on in neutral and tough to ride. The only wrestler to beat him over the last two months is Edinboro's Eric Morrill. Four of Pennesi's six losses this season have come to seeded wrestlers and the other two to Morrill. He is paired in the opening round with two-time MAC champion and All-American Scotti Sentes of Central Michigan, who is seeded 11th. Expect that to be a tightly-contested battle. If Pennesi can pull the mild upset against Sentes, he will likely see another freshman in the second round, either seventh-seeded Tony Ramos of Iowa or Frank Cagnina of Lehigh. Pennesi has the tools to make a run to the quarterfinals.

    141: Matt Bonson (Lock Haven)
    Lock Haven coach Robbie Waller's lone NCAA qualifier, Bonson, a transfer from Virginia, has the potential to make some noise in Philadelphia. He was an NCAA qualifier in 2009 for the Cavaliers and will head to Philadelphia with a 24-3 record. The only wrestler to defeat Bonson in the calendar year is All-American Tyler Nauman of Pitt, who edged him twice by two points. Bonson will face the winner of Levi Jones (Boise State) vs. Corey Manson (Cornell). If he wins his first round match, he will likely see third-seeded Boris Novachkov of Cal Poly, a wrestler who has also had a tight battle with Nauman this season.

    Eric Terrazas placed fifth at the Big Ten Championships (Photo/Tony Rotundo, WrestlersAreWarriors.com)
    149: Eric Terrazas (Illinois)
    Buffalo's Desi Green, who is seeded 12th, will have his hands full in the first round against Terrazas, who is coming off a fifth-place finish at the Big Ten Championships. Terrazas has taken more losses this season than Green, but has faced stiffer competition in the Big Ten. If Terrazas can get past Green, he will see Oklahoma State's Jamal Parks, who is seeded fifth, or Minnesota's Danny Zilverberg, a wrestler he has beaten twice, in the second round. Don't be surprised if Terrazas knocks off a couple seeded wrestlers to reach the quarterfinals against Cornell's Kyle Dake.

    157: Matt Cathell (Kent State)
    Cathell is a known commodity as a two-time NCAA qualifier, but he's a dangerous matchup for any wrestler because of his unorthodox style. He likes to throw and funk, plus he's tough on top. Cathell is coming off a disappointing performance at the MAC Championships, where he lost twice, but earned an at-large selection into the NCAAs. Cathell will face fifth-seeded Jesse Dong of Virginia Tech in the first round. Dong has won 18 of his last 19 matches. Interestingly, the one wrestler to defeat Dong during that stretch is Corey Mock of North Carolina, a wrestler Cathell has pinned twice this season.

    165: Donnie Jones (West Virginia)
    The youngest of the Jones brothers, Donnie, a sixth-year senior, is looking to finish his career on the podium for the first time in his fourth appearance at the NCAAs. He has had a productive career at West Virginia, but has not been able to put it together at the NCAAs. Jones has a lot of tools and has proven over the years that he can battle with that nation's best. He beat NCAA champion Jarrod King of Edinboro a month before King won the title in 2009. Last year Jones took two-time All-American Ryan Morningstar of Iowa into overtime in the first round of the NCAAs, before losing, 4-2. Jones will face Ross Tice of Kent State in the opening round this year. If Jones beats Tice, he will face returning All-American Tyler Caldwell of Oklahoma, who is seeded third. Jones will certainly be a fairly big underdog if that match materializes, but he has the tools to make it interesting.

    174: Matt Demichiel (Navy)
    Demichiel has only lost to Cornell's Mack Lewnes and Maryland's Mike Lett's over the last two months. He has two wins this season over 11th-seeeded Austin Meys of Lehigh, including one this past Sunday in the EIWA semifinals. Demichiel could find himself in the quarterfinals if he can get past 10th-seeded Nick Heflin in the first round and seventh-seeded Nick Amuchastegui of Stanford, a wrestler who has split two matches with Meys.

    Luke Rebertus has a win over Robert Hamlin, but lost to Joe LeBlanc in the finals of the Reno Tournament of Champions (Photo/Tony Rotundo, WrestlersAreWarriors.com)
    184: Luke Rebertus (Navy)
    Rebertus is arguably the most dangerous unseeded wrestler in the tournament. He has a win this season over second-seeded Robert Hamlin of Lehigh and has wrestled several of the nation's top 184-pounders to close matches, including top-seeded Chris Honeycutt of Edinboro, who beat him 6-4. Assuming Rebertus can get past Gardner-Webb's Jonathan Velazquez, he will likely get another shot at Honeycutt in the second round. It's not beyond the realm of possibility that unseeded Rebertus upsets top-seeded Honeycutt. If that happens, it's anyone's guess who comes out of the top side of the bracket.

    197: Brent Haynes (Missouri)
    Kent State's Dustin Kilgore's, the fourth seed, got a tough first round draw in Haynes, who went 3-2 at the NCAAs last season. Haynes has beaten several wrestlers in this weight class throughout his young career, including fifth-seeded Luke Lofthouse, who he hammered 7-1 last season. Watch the Kilgore-Haynes first round match because it could be interesting.

    285: Brendan Barlow (Kent State)
    Don't read too much into Barlow's double-digit losses this season. He has been up and down this season and lost some tight matches to the nation's top heavyweights. He owns a 10-5 victory over ninth-seeded Cameron Wade of Penn State. Barlow beat second-seeded Jarrod Twice of Central Michigan to win the MAC title last season, but has two close losses to Trice this season. Barlow also has close losses this season to No. 1 Zach Rey of Lehigh, No. 5 Dom Bradley of Missouri, and No. 6 Ryan Tomei of Pitt. Barlow will get another crack at Tomei in the first round. Tomei won 6-5 the first time the two met. Expect another barnburner.

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