Oklahoma State coach John Smith shares a moment with his top-ranked 149-pounder Jordan Oliver at the National Duals (Photo/Mark Beshey, The Guillotine)
This is why I'd love to have been a fly in the wall in the locker room of Iowa, Ohio State, an Oklahoma State's locker room after National Duals this past weekend. Tom Brands, Tom Ryan, and John Smith are all great coaches, and I would love to see what they said to their teams after disappointing outings. Ohio State, Stiebers aside, has a lineup full of young men capable of beating the very best on any given day. Not a single one of them were able to win against Missouri in the quarterfinals. Iowa saw its wrestlers fall in close matches against Missouri in the consolation finals; among them were the two Hawkeye stalwarts, returning national finalists Matt McDonough and Derek St. John, fall against Missouri. McDonough was shut out for the first time in his collegiate career by Alan Waters, who looks extra sharp under the tutelage of Sammie Henson. This was Missouri's first victory over Iowa in wrestling ... ever.
In the National Duals finals Oklahoma State was beaten by a team they had previously defeated, the University of Minnesota. This loss was punctuated by two shocking pins scored on two of OSU's best, Chris Perry on top with both legs in had his head pulled down and was stacked up by Logan Storley in tie-breaking rideouts, and at heavyweight, Alan Gelogaev was run over and pinned by returning national champ Tony Nelson in a simple wrist and half.
This certainly isn't the end of the world for any of the losing teams mentioned above, but it is certainly a teachable opportunity for their coaches. It will be interesting to see how they perform down the road.
In more positive news, Minnesota is once again your National Duals champions, and a team which seemed to be fading just a bit a few weeks ago seems to be revitalized. Head coach J Robinson was present to watch over the victory. He apparently was coaching without a knee.
That is correct; he completely did not have a knee in one leg. I, personally, have a hard time wrapping me head around this. I didn't know that one had the option of not having a knee if the entire rest of the leg was present. Apparently he is between surgeries, but still it amazes me. I guess if you want to set an example to your wrestlers as to what it means to be tough this is one way to do it.
Other observations from National Duals ...
In other news ...
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