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He wont but Id like Jesse to have two more years with potentially both Blaze and davino.
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I think Brock man is their best option right away he looked incredible at trials however, Red shirting him and letting him grow may be ideal. Im not sure holding 149 for an entire season would be easy for him.
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NAIA rules would be away around. Not sure the NCAA would go for that.
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Michigan 133/141 IF Cannon does not transfer out, which is a large if, one of him, Ragusin, or Lemley will need to sit (or Redshirt). 149/157/165 Gilcher, Mantanona(x2), Mattin, Cooper, and Gates are all top tier potential talents and two of them will ride pine unless one shrinks down (while growing) or grows in to 174lbs. I wouldn't be surprised to see it be 149 - Gates, 157 - Gilcher, 165/174 - Mantanona (x2) in two years, but they need to get there first. That seemingly leaves Cooper the odd man out? Not sure. Gates might be. Also, Lemley might grow more (or perhaps he heads back down to 133...? Not sure). 197/285 You have Walters and Jenkins right now for 285, even if Walters is a 197lber - Cardenas is there. Next year there will be Walters, Jenkins, Veazy, Sahakian, and Correa in the 197/285 range. I had said before, and I will reiterate: Veazy needs to plan on descending towards 184lbs now if he wants a spot. One of Walters, Sahakian, and Correa will not be starting. These are all not taking the portal in to account.
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kiyooka looks really legit when he decides to wrestle. I dont think mason will play the upper body game with Batir.. hopefully.
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Well I mean now one of Epstein associates/ co-defendants on a rape law suit has now been convicted
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Budapest Ranking Series Event
Wrestleknownothing replied to Spladle08's topic in International Wrestling
If you were a Chicago White Sox fan you would realize it is also a baseball score. -
NCAA Settlement and Implications for NCAA D1 Wrestling
fishbane replied to steamboat_charlie's topic in College Wrestling
There will be a lawsuit regardless. There is a fairly widely held belief that the opportunities must balance or at least be proportional to the makeup of the student body to pass title IX muster and that the payments to athletes could be proportional to revenue. I'd be surprised if any power 5 school pays the women's athletic staff as much as the men's. Schools are free to pay based on ability, experience, knowledge, and economic value for these positions why would it require the opposite for players? It seems likely that at least some schools will take this interpretation and run with it. This in turn makes it more likely for others to follow suit since that would put them at a disadvantage recruiting athletes to revenue sports. On the other hand making a flat payment to all athletes regardless of sport/revenue probably gets another antitrust lawsuit. It would seem to deny athletes in revenue sports from making their true worth in the market. Another lawsuit is inevitable regarding this, so I'd imagine administrators will likely choose to take the path that doesn't put them at a competitive disadvantage in the sports that are most important to their institution. -
There are always some standout statistical performances at the big summer tournaments, but the recent U23 Nationals event appeared to really turn some heads. The following looks at some of the top performances and some other odd statistical occurrences. Point Differential After a big tournament, point differential is often one of the most interesting metrics to look at, because it measures both a wrestler’s offensive and defensive performance simultaneously. In most cases, the top performers in terms of point differential have had the most impressive tournaments. That is certainly the case when looking at this past weekend’s U23 freestyle nationals. The heavyweight champion Lucas Stoddard averaged 4.92 points per minute while allowing his opponents to only score 0.07. His resulting +4.85 point differential was the highest across the tournament by a pretty wide margin. This past season as a freshman at Army West Point, Stoddard went 22-16 and qualified for the NCAA tournament. He came up short in his quest to become an All-American as he dropped both of his NCAA matches against veterans Lucas Davison (Michigan) and Hunter Catka (Virginia Tech). Stoddard’s performance in freestyle paints the picture of a competitor ready to take another step forward. The Black Knight wrestler entered the event as the 30th seed, but he was still able to win all seven of his matches by superiority. He allowed only a single match point in the event. That point came against Logan Shephard in the quarterfinals. In the first 30 seconds of the match, the Bucknell wrestler was able to get to a standing single. It looked like he was going to be able to finish the hold, but Stoddard held his whizzer, and Shephard was forced to settle for a step out. Stoddard then took over. By the time the buzzer sounded for the end of the first period, he was up 11-1, and the match was over. In the finals, Stoddard faced off against a familiar opponent. This past college season, he faced off twice against conference rival Nathan Taylor of Lehigh. Their first meeting came in early November. Taylor scored a 19-3 technical fall with nearly two minutes left in the bout. They rematched in February, and the Lehigh wrestler was slightly less dominant and walked away with a 15-3 major decision. Perhaps Stoddard learned something from those encounters, he has an edge in freestyle or both. This past weekend, it was entirely one-way traffic in the opposite direction. Stoddard scored a pair of 10-0 victories, and Taylor failed to even make it out of the first period. Top Five Point Differentials 125 kg: Lucas Stoddard +4.85 79 kg: Patrick Kennedy +3.63 86 kg: John Gunderson +3.51 61 kg: Drake Ayala +3.11 61 kg: Nic Bouzakis +2.71 Points per Minute East Stroudsburg wrestler Luke Ciampa went 26-10 this past season but came up short of qualifying for the NCAA Division II tournament. He has one year left to try to earn a trip to the national tournament. If his performance at U23 nationals is any indication, he will not be afraid to go for it. He finished only 2-2 at 86 kg in the event, but all of his matches were fast and decisive. Both of Ciampa’s victories were finished inside the first period. He scored a 13-2 superiority victory over Luke Justice and pinned Jet Galbreath while leading by a 10-2 score. On the other side of the equation, both of his losses were shutout 10-0 victories in under a minute. Interestingly, all of the quick matches left him with the highest scoring rate of the entire tournament. He averaged 5.17 points per minute, which slightly outpaced Stoddard. Even with the high scoring rate, his boom-or-bust style left him with a substandard point differential. He actually finished with a negative point differential (-0.22) as his opponents average 5.39 points per minute Top Five Points per Minute 86 kg: Luke Ciampa 5.17 125 kg: Lucas Stoddard 4.92 70 kg: Samuel Hillegas 4.66 79 kg: Brendon Abdon 4.56 65 kg: Carter Schmidt 4.55 Points Against per Minute As previously established, Stoddard allowed only one point on his way to the title at 125 kg. However, he surprisingly did not have the best points against per minute rate. That honor belongs to Massoma Endene. Like Stoddard, he only allowed a single point on his path to the title at 97 kg. However, he had slightly less match time, so he finished with 0.05 points against per minute rate, which eclipses Stoddard’s 0.07. The score against Endene came in the semifinals where he faced off against Stanford’s Nick Stemmet. While holding a 7-0 lead, Endene avoided a hard charge from Stemmet. He held off the takedown, but he did step out in the scramble. That was the only point he allowed in the tournament. For the last two seasons, Endene was wrestling for Wartburg. He was 54-1 and captured a pair of Division III national titles at 197 pounds. This past season, he transferred to Wisconsin, and he is expected to start for the Badgers in the brutal Big Ten conference. Top Five Points Against Per Minute 97 kg: Massoma Endene 0.05 125 kg: Lucas Stoddard 0.07 92 kg: Jacob Cardenas 0.14 65 kg: Roman De La Cruz 0.17 79 kg: Patrick Kennedy 0.20 Highest Scoring Match In some big tournaments like this, wrestlers will drop out of the event once they hit the consolation bracket. Some other wrestlers will end up in shootouts and fill up the scoreboard. Benjamin Mower and Mikey Squires met in the 86 kg consolation Round of 16 and ended up combining for a whopping 52 points, which was the most of the tournament. It was clear from the start that it was going to be a high-scoring match. Mower scored a step out in the first five seconds of the contest. He then scored a takedown and a pair of gut wrenches to go up 7-0. However, Squires scored a reversal of his own and followed that up with a turn. After multiple scrambles and reviews, the two went to the break with Mower leading by a 14-13 score. The second period was more of the same as both wrestlers continued to get to their offense. Eventually, Mower was able to take over late in the contest. He held a 23-21 lead with 1:16 left in the bout. He spun behind for a takedown and then went to work on top with a pair of gut wrenches. That put him up 29-21. When the match returned to its feet, Squires was visibly exhausted, and Mower got behind for another score. The match was finally over. Top Four Highest Scoring Matches 86 kg: Benjamin Mower defeated Mikey Squires 31-21 79 kg: Brodie Porter defeated Brady Schuh 26-20 74 kg: Christopher Earnest defeated Tyler Swiderski 21-19 61 kg: Kevin Honas defeated Genaro De La Garza 20-19 Will Lewan Most Match Time Award The large brackets can also make for some extensive runs through the consolation bracket. Nobody in the tournament spent more time on the mats than Oklahoma State’s Brayden Thomspon. The redshirt freshman lost against Maximus Hale in the Round of 16, but he fought all the way back to a sixth-place finish. Along the way, Thompson wrestled nine matches and collected 47:55 of match time. Multiple wrestlers had 10 matches in the bracket, but nobody spent more time wrestling than Thompson. Victory From the Mouth of Defeat With the ability to win by fall, a wrestler is never technically out of a match until the final buzzer. That was likely never more true than it was for Cole Handlovic. The Cornell wrestler was trailing West Virginia wrestler Samuel Hillegas by an 8-0 score when he reversed a chest wrap and locked up the fall. He scored the victory despite trailing 8-2 on the scoreboard. Across the event, there were 14 matches where the trailing wrestler won by fall, but nobody accomplished this with a greater deficit than Handlovic did against Hillegas.
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Parris vs Batirmurzaev for Gold. Parris beat him 11-0 at Worlds last year. Batirmurzaev was up 4-2 when he pinned Geno, FWIW. He is capable of beating Parris. He was up on Zare a couple years ago before he CRASHED 21-10 (yeah it's a football score...). https://uww.org/athletes-results/batirmurzaev-yusup-2958-profile
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Ttal NCAA athletes by school and the payout per athlete based on $20M shares annually back to athletes: Iowa, Nebraska, Penn State- 800 athletes - $25k Ohio State, Michigan - 1000 athletes - $20k Missouri - 550 athletes - $36k All are ballpark numbers and Google. Still, interesting to look at. You would need to cut a lot of sports to grow that number. I am going to guess title XI will not allow the money to go to just football and basketball.
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Actual Results obvi, but for those of you who don't navigate UWW https://uww.org/event/polyak-imre-varga-janos-memorial-0/results
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Aliyev over Kiyooka, Kiyooka over Musz, Musz over Aliyev Geno gets pinned This bad boy is wild https://uww.org/article/live-blog-budapest-ranking-series-day-1
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Yeah and to be honest, as a Buckeye fan, I was pretty sold on him from listening to him in interviews. He says the right things, all the time, but you Believe it and his new approach and tactics last season backed it all up.
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Nah bro. OP was about best at each weight, wasn't it? Even if the thread title was not.
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Will be interesting to see what the ILLINI end up doing from 165 to 197. There are multiple logjams and, I think, only one redshirt left. You'd think last year's All American and the two Covid AAs will be safe, but who knows. 165. Chris Moore (NCAA qualifier as true Freshman, still has redshirt). Braeden Scoles (True Freshman last year, 4x Wisconsin State Champ, listed at 157 by Wrestlestat.com), Caden Ernd (Spot starter last season). 174. Danny Braunagel (Olympic redshirt last season; Covid AA, moving up in weight--and it loooked like he needed to), Colin Kelly (Blue chip true Freshman this season). No controversy at this weight. Little Brawny starts and Kelly redshirts. 184. Edmond Ruth (AA last season, R12 the year before; moving up in weight), Dylan Connell (NCAA qualifier 2 years ago, suffered multiple injuries last season). This will be the key lineup battle. 197. Zac Braunagel (Olympic redshirt last season; Covid AA, expect him to stay at 197 where he finished R12 two years ago), Isiah Pettigrew (Started last season and looked good until injury slowed him down). Expect a wrestle-off here, but the Brawlnagel has to be the big favorite. Also, Sungyup Ryu showed a lot of promise at Midlands, but he went back to Korea to wrestle with their National Team.
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The only relevant fact you've posted is that Hamas does use civilians as human shields. It is scary that you can refer to this as if it is an every day type of thing. It shouldn't be. It is so tremendously awful that sub-human animals subject people to this... it is unforgivable. The "Yes or no?" schtick you've been using is worse than pathetic. Unless you are a tiny child, you know that the world isn't nearly that simple.
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What he could do to an apple with his hands should be enough to include him on the list.
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This is a good example of why you need to have a year cutoff, whether its the past 20, 30 or even 50 years. Because you have all these old-timers who were great in their day, but who don't belong in a present-day conversation at all. The sport was just so different then, with dissimilar rules and techniques. There was no weight training, and the college athletics experience was so different too. Take Hodge: he wrestled a *total* of 46 bouts in his whole college career, and didn't even *start* at Oklahoma until he was 22 or 23, after a Navy stint and after he'd already wrestled in an Olympics. Can you name who his best opponent was? No, you can't. And every era had a Hodge. Stories about about how diminutive Robin Reed could pin everyone on the Olympic Team, including the heavyweight. Bill Koll, another undefeated-and-never-taken-down guy. JB will come here and wax about Gray Simons. It goes without saying that if you teleport of these old-timers when they were at their peak to the present day, they'd get eaten alive. But should that take away from the fact that, in their day, they were the best around? I don't think so, but how are you going to compare Koll to Zain, Simons to Spencer, Hodge to Starocci, Reed to Stieber? You can't. So just leave them out. If it isn't apples to apples, don't compare.
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I'd put Nolf over smith at 157. He lost 2 matches in his career to Imar as a freshman and also pinned him. He Injury defaulted 2 matches his his junior year that was his 4 losses. Nolf also wrestled 9 more matches and had a better win and bonus % than Smith.
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I like this question when it's a bit more subjective and the question doesn't focus on who had the most NCAA titles, but who would actually was the "best" or "greatest" at their peak performance. I'd go with: 125. Spencer Lee 133. John Smith 141. Yianni (I wanted to put Gable here, but he lost at this weight...) 149. Dake 157. Lee Kemp 165. Burroughs 174. Askren 184. Cael 197. Aaron Brooks 285. Gable
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What I know about the trial has nothing to do with media hot takes or what pundits want to make you think. You’ve been very transparent in your time here, on how you fall in line there. And this never works out well for you.
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Im not the biggest MM fan but when I think about him losing to two sophomores, albeit elite sophomores at super 32 his senior year (Sealey and Ferrari). To then beating Levi to make the junior team 8 months later and then fast forward another 14-18 months being a junior world champ teching his way through the tournament and finishing his RS year in the big 10 with a 70% bonus rate at the toughest weight in the country, its scary to imagine how good hes going to be in the coming years.