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CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. -- The Virginia wrestling team opened its 2007-08 season Saturday in dominating fashion with wins over Wagner (52-0), Anderson (45-3) and VMI (42-3) at Memorial Gymnasium. The Cavaliers lost just two of their 30 matches on the day en route to the big wins. Freshman Michael Chaires (Scotia, N.Y.) had a sensational college debut, recording pins in all three of his matches at 165 pounds. Brent Jones (So., Burke, Va.) also recorded two pins and a forfeit win at 197. Ten of the Cavaliers' win came by pin, including five against Wagner. The Cavaliers' 52 points against Wagner were the third-most in program history, falling six points shy of the record of 58, set vs. Howard in 1998. Ross Gitomer (So., Flemington, N.J.) and Anthony Burke (Poquoson, Va.) each recorded three wins on the day at 125 and 133 pounds, respectively. Virginia hits the road next Saturday for the first time this season, traveling to the Binghamton Open. The action starts at 9 a.m.
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NORMAN, Okla. -- Sooner wrestlers began the season in dominant fashion, winning Sunday over Missouri Valley, Oklahoma City and Neosho Community College on the campus of OCU. The Sooners won 29 out of 30 matches on the day and outscored opponents 141-3 in team points. "Overall, I was very pleased with today's matches," head coach Jack Spates said. "I think we made improvements from our ranking match last Thursday in our aggressiveness and our conditioning on the mat." In the opening dual against Missouri Valley, Joey Fio at 125 pounds put OU on the board first by recording a 21-6 technical fall over Bill Exline. The Sooners would not look back after the initial win. Brian Shelton followed with a decision over Jon Garland in the 133-pound match, as did Zach Bailey with a major decision over Brandon Nice at 141 pounds. The next two Sooners in the lineup scored falls with Will Rowe over Brian Graham at 149 pounds and Chad Terry over Juan Alvarez at 157 pounds to extend OU's team score to 24-0. The closest match of the dual paired Max Dean and Chris Jones in the 165-pound bout. Dean recorded a 7-6 decision over Jones with the help of a riding time point to end the match. Jeff James then won his match at 174 pounds by a forfeit. Joshua Weitzel at 184 pounds and Joel Flaggert at 197 pounds both recorded major decisions. Heavyweight Nathan Fernandez sealed the shutout with a fall over Travis Ewart to give the Sooners a 47-0 win over Missouri Valley. It was another dominant performance in match number two against Oklahoma City, with the Sooners prevailing 44-0 over the Stars. The following Sooners recorded major decisions: Fio over Adam Delong 16-5, Bailey over Jeremy Garner 13-1, James over John Wilcox 10-2 and Fernandez over Jeremy Johnson 12-2 in the heavyweight bout. Shelton won his second match of the day in a 9-2 decision over Justin Blumer, as did Rowe scoring a technical fall over Nik Turner by a score of 22-7. Terry continued with a 2-0 decision over Brandon Benson. Dean and Weitzel both recorded falls in their matches against Trevor Adkisson and Mitchell Eichenauer, respectively. Two-time All-American Joel Flaggert won his second match of the day in a technical fall over Corey Johnson, 21-6. Sooners continued to impress in the third dual against Neosho Community College to end the day. Greg Cannon was awarded a win in the first match by forfeit, and John Starzyk put the Sooners up 12-0 with a pin at the 2:40 mark over Ian Seaton. Kyle Terry in his first match of the day at 141 pounds won by a medical forfeit to give the Sooners an 18-0 advantage and Matt Sansone was defeated in a decision by Ty Jaquess in the 149-pound match. Shane Vernon won his only match of the day by a forfeit. Dean and James followed up with major decisions to put OU up 32-3 over the Black Cats. Josh Hinton, Pat Flynn and Brad Farmer all recorded pins within the first period in the 184, 197 and heavyweight matches to give the Sooners a 50-3 victory in its last match. "This has been another great evaluation on where we are strong and also where this team can improve," Spates continued. "This is a very young team and today was a step in the right direction." The Sooners travel to Brockport, N.Y., next weekend for the annual Brockport/Oklahoma Gold Classic.
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Head Wrestling Coach Chris Bono was pleased with what he saw Thursday at the Mocs' annual Blue-Gold wrestle-offs. Six upperclassmen and three underclassmen secured starting positions in the varsity lineup for the upcoming season. Senior Matt Koz recorded the only fall on the night, pinning freshman Ethan Winel at 4:08 to win the 197-pound match. Koz was the SoCon heavyweight champion and an NCAA Qualifer a year ago. "Koz told me that he felt really good after his match," Bono said. "It is good to have him wrestling at his natural weight. There were no surprises. I really liked the way our young guys competed. (True freshmen) Johnson, Lettner, Waddell, Felix; they are our future." Seniors Seth Garvin, Lloyd Rogers and Josh Edmondson joined Koz in the winner's categories. Garvin defeated freshman Dan Waddell, 8-1 at 157 pounds, Rogers scored an 11-4 victory over junior Kyle McKee at 174, and Edmondson recorded a 12-3 major decision over freshman Tyler Roberson at 184. Senior Javier Maldonado, a back-to-back Southern Conference champion and NCAA Qualifier, did not compete but has a lock on his 125-pound position. "Lloyd Rogers and Josh Edmondson looked good," Bono said. "Lloyd out hustled everyone. He showed a lot of focus. We had Josh change some things up. He showed a little variety, and he can pull that off because he is such a great athlete." Junior Steve Hromada's 19-8 major over sophomore T.J. Hannah ensured his spot at 133 pounds and junior Nick Davis edged redshirt freshman Mark Rogers, 3-2 in the 165-pound match. Matt Lettner was the lone freshman to nail down a lineup spot, registering a 5-1 victory over Ben O'Neill in the heavyweight class. Three wrestlers competed for the positions at 141 and 149. Freshman Ben Johnson shut out Mark Nicely at 141, 2-0 then fell to sophomore Cody Cleveland by major decision, 9-1. Freshman Kelly Felix defeated redshirt freshman Carlos Baron 6-3 at 149 before suffering a 17-2 technical fall to sophomore Joey Knox. UTC opens the season next Saturday hosting three teams including No. 5-ranked Ohio State. The Mocs take on Anderson University at 1 p.m., Cumberland University at 3 p.m. and the Buckeyes at 6 p.m.
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MASON CITY -– Albert White (Chicago, IL/St. Rita) won four straight matches, including the 149-pound championship bout, and captured Most Outstanding Wrestler honors as North Iowa Area Community College hosted its first wrestling meet, the Kaye Young NIACC Open on Saturday. The meet was the first hosted by NIACC since the program was disbanded in 1976. The program was officially reinstated last November and the initial meet honored the previous coach at NIACC, Kaye Young, who guided the Trojans to a National Junior College Athletic Association team title in 1973. NIACC head coach Richard Fergola had recruited a freshman class heavy with state champions and a few of them had solid performances in their collegiate debuts. White, who finished 199-4 in high school and won four straight state titles, defeated T.J. Hepburn of Colby Community College (KS) 9-5 in the 149 final, taking a 5-2 lead in the second period and using his superior quickness to stay out of trouble in the third period. He advanced to the finals by pinning Buena Vista College (IA) wrestler Cody Schultz at 4:30. He had started the day by pinning Triton College (IL) competitor Ed Williams at 5:04 and beating Ivan Ramirez of Dana College (NE) 15-4. T.J. Moen had the next highest finish among Trojans wrestlers, placing fourth at 141 pounds after winning four of six matches. He collected the first NIACC victory of the day (and first for a NIACC wrestler in 32 years) by defeating Isaiah Harris of Ellsworth Community College (IA) 10-3. Moen was a state champion wrestler for Saydel High and was nationally ranked in his weight class in high school. Four NIACC wrestlers finished in fifth place: Cody Hogan (125), DaVaughn Perkins (157), Jordan Graham (184) and Luke Stika (197). Hogan – who came to NIACC after winning a state title in his weight division at Richmond High School in Richmond, MO, opened with pins in his initial two matches and earned fifth by defeating Taylor Louie (unattached) by technical fall in 47 seconds. Perkins won four of six matches and needed a 12-10 overtime victory against Dana's Kendall Burke to wrestle back to fifth place. Perkins was 86-0 at North High School in Omaha, NE before becoming a Trojan. Graham won by technical fall at 4:57 against Triton's Justin Cunningham to take his first match and got a forfeit against William Penn University of Iowa's Royce Thomas for fifth. Stika edged Ross Milam of Dana 4-1 in his fifth-place match to finish 3-2 on the day. He had edged Jacob Elhorst of the Dubuque University (IA) 6-2 in his opener and won by fall at 3:39 over Scott Moder of Buena Vista in round two before losing a 2-1 nail biter to St. Olaf College (MN) competitor Steven Wood in the third round. Along with White at 149 pounds, here are the listing of champions and their weight classes: At 125, Aaron Wilcox of Dana College defeated Dana teammate (wrestling unattached) Kevin Gray by forfeit. At 133, Josh Malott of William Penn defeated Justin Dixon of Ellsworth 6-2. At 141, Lyugo Kumbarov of Colby Community College (KS) defeated Dalton Jensen (wrestling unattached) of Iowa State 5-1. At 157, Dan Pray of Dana College defeated Joey Verschoor of Buena Vista 4-3. At 165, Bulla Tuzon of Dana College defeated Andrew Sorensen (unattached) of Iowa State by fall at 3:45. At 174, Joshua Murray of Buena Vista defeated Josh Ghobadpoor of Dana College 15-8. At 184, Chris Kern of Colby (KS) defeated Cole Spree of Northwestern College (IA) 4-1. At 197, Matt Wonderlin of Dubuque (IA) defeated Steven Wood (unattached) of St. Olaf College (MN) 5-3. At 285, Wade Jordan of Dana College defeated Tucker Lane (unattached) of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln 2-0. More about the Kaye Young NIACC Open and NIACC's reinstated wrestling program can be found by checking the NIACC website at www.niacc.edu and clicking the athletics icon on the bottom left of the main page.
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CEDAR FALLS, Iowa -- The University of Northern Iowa wrestling team opened the 2007-08 season in the McLeod Center Saturday taking to the mat to show off this season's talented roster with its annual intra-squad wrestle-offs. UNI head coach Brad Penrith was pleased with the way his wrestlers performed today and came out ready to compete. "Overall, we wrestled extremely well and the older wrestlers' experience really showed through," Penrith said. "There were a couple tactical mistakes that need to be corrected and some weight management issues that also need to be worked on." Redshirt freshman Andy O'Loughlin (Independence, Iowa) scored two wins over sophomore Scott Hazen (Underwood, Iowa) in the 184-pound match, notching scores of 2-1 and 4-3. "I wanted to re-wrestle the 184 match," Penrith said. "There were no takedowns in the first match - I wanted some action." Freshman Jamal Lawrence (Merrillville, Ind.) topped freshman Blake Hilmer (Denver, Iowa) 7-4 and won by fall over redshirt freshman Cole Zempel (LaPorte City, Iowa) at 149 pounds. Junior Moza Fay (Anamosa, Iowa) won by fall in the 165-pound match over fellow junior Drew Kreman (Tipton, Iowa). Redshirt freshman Seth Pugh (Columbus Junction, Iowa) cruised to an 18-5 major decision over freshman Micah Casper (Kalona, Iowa) in the 157-pound match. At 133 pounds, freshman Trent Washington (Omaha, Neb.) won by fall over junior Mike Whisler (Centerville, Iowa). The Panthers open the season Nov. 10 at the Loras Open in Dubuque, Iowa. UNI will begin the home season Dec. 2 in the UNI-Dome with the UNI Open.
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ITHACA, N.Y. –- Junior Andrew Goldstein (Easton, Pa./Easton) opened the 2007-08 wrestling with a dominating effort for Gettysburg College at the Ithaca College Invitational on Nov. 3-4, winning all six of his bouts and capturing the 157-pound championship. Goldstein was one of three Bullets to reach the semifinals of their respective weight classes, helping the Orange & Blue to a 12th-place finish in the 15-team field. Gettysburg finished with 67.5 points thanks to the efforts of Goldstein, senior Matt Shank (Reedsville, Pa./Indian Valley), and freshman Bobby Christopher (Ft. Lauderdale, Fla./Cardinal Gibbons). Shank finished second at 149 pounds, while Christopher put together an impressive collegiate debut with a fourth-place showing in the heavyweight division. After posting four victories on the opening day of the invite, including a pair of falls and a major decision, Goldstein began Sunday with a win over New York University's Takafumi Hashimoto via medical forfeit in the semifinals. He faced his toughest test of the tournament in the finals against Dan DiColo of The College of New Jersey, but the Bullet junior and defending Centennial Conference champion at 157 came up with a 7-5 decision to take the title. Shank won all three of his opening matches handily on Saturday to set up a semifinal showdown with the eighth-ranked wrestler in NCAA Division III, New York's Stephen Hult. Ranked ninth in the nation, Shank got the better of his opponent with a 12-9 victory to advance to the finals against another nationally-ranked foe, New Jersey's Tyler Branham. The Bullet senior gave the sixth-ranked Branham all he could handle and forced overtime with a last-second takedown, but the Lion All-American rebounded for an 8-6 decision. Christopher started his first career event with three victories on the opening day, but the Gettysburg first-year was halted in the semifinals by Oswego State University's Jake Taylor, who went on to win the event, with a fall at five minutes. Knocked down to the consolation bracket, Christopher picked up a 7-5 decision over New York's James Layman, before getting stopped in the third-place match by Sean DeDeyn by a narrow 3-2 margin. Goldstein, Shank, and Christopher may have had the highest finishes for Gettysburg, but sophomore Pat Doherty (Garden City, N.Y./Chaminade) put in the most work, wrestling in seven matches at 157 over the two days. After winning his opening two matches before losing to DiColo in the main bracket, Doherty notched 6-5 and 7-3 decisions in his first two consolation matches. Following a medical forfeit victory, the Bullet sophomore had his weekend put to an end with a 7-3 loss to Joe Biango of New Jersey. Freshman Ben Cutrell (Marion, Mass./Governors Academy) put together a productive opening weekend with victories in the main and consolation brackets of the heavyweight division. Cutrell picked up a 7-2 victory in his first bout on Saturday, and then added a pin at 2:45 over Conor Quinlan in his opening consolation match. First-year Ben Swanson (Wilmington, Del./James Hubert Blake) was the only other Bullet to earn a victory on the weekend, picking up a forfeit win in the consolation bracket of 174 pounds. Gettysburg continues its season at the King's College Monarch Invitational on Saturday, Nov. 10. Opening matches are slated to begin at 10:30 a.m.
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The No. 12 Wisconsin wrestling team competed in the Hall of Fame Duals Friday at the KI Convention Center in Green Bay to open the 2007-08 season. The Badgers faced three Division III opponents and dominated all three duals with just nine points scored on them all day. Wisconsin kicked off the season with a 58-0 shutout of Dubuque (Iowa), a 45-9 win over Tri-State University (Indiana) and another 53-0 shutout of UW-Oshkosh. Wisconsin recorded 20 pins on the day and five Badger grapplers won by pins in each of their three matches. Seniors Collin Cudd (125 lbs.) Jake Donar (165 lbs.) and Craig Henning (157 lbs.), junior Kyle Massey (Hwt.) and sophomore Kyle Ruschell (141 lbs.) had three pins each. Junior Dallas Herbst had the fastest fall of the day, after he pinned Dubuque's Matt Wonderlin in 28 seconds during the 197 lbs. bout. Herbst, Wisconsin's leader in pins in 2006-07, had two pins and won his third dual by forfeit. Some new faces also stepped into the lineup Friday. Redshirt freshman Eric Bugenhagen competed at 184 lbs. against Louis Posa from Tri-State and captured a close 7-5 overtime victory. Junior Mike Metzger wrestled at 149 lbs. for the Badgers and tried to continue the success of last year's starter, All-American Tyler Turner. Metzger went 2-1 on the day, winning by a forfeit against Dubuque and a 7-0 score over Oshkosh's Derek Koenig. With the win over Dubuque, Wisconsin improves to 14-0 overall under head coach Barry Davis in season opening duals. The Badgers take a weekend off from competition but will resume the 2007-08 campaign with tough competition out east in Ithaca, N.Y. Wisconsin will face No. 8 Cornell in a dual, Friday, Nov. 16 and then compete in the Body Bar Invite, Saturday, Nov. 17. Stay tuned to uwbadgers.com for updates and scores throughout the season.
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Ness, Schlatter and Kish to compete in NWCA All-Star Classic
InterMat Staff posted an article in College
Minnesota Gopher wrestlers Jayson Ness, Dustin Schlatter and Roger Kish will compete in the 2007 National Wrestling Coaches Association (NWCA) All-Star Classic, the premier one-day collegiate wrestling event in the country. The 43-year old competition will take place on Monday, Nov. 19 at the University of Oregon's McArthur Court in Eugene, Ore. Including the defending national champion Gophers' three participants, the field will welcome six top-ranked wrestlers, eight second-ranked seeds and four third-ranked selections from the recent Intermat / USA Today preseason national rankings. It will also include 18 All-Americans from the 2006 NCAA Championships, which includes all three of Minnesota's representatives. The University of Oregon announced this July that the wrestling program would be eliminated after the 2007-08 season to revive the baseball team and to satisfy Title IX compliance issues. Ness, an All-American sophomore out of Bloomington, Minn., will take on defending national champion Paul Donahue of Nebraska in the opening match of the event at 125 pounds. Ness sports a 2-0 career record against the junior, earning an 11-5 decision at the Kaufman-Brand Open 11/11/06 and an 8-6 dual meet win Feb. 11 of last season. Donahue upset Sam Hazewinkel of Oklahoma to win the 2007 national championship at 125 pounds. Ness is No. 4 in the Intermat preseason poll, while Donahue claims the No. 1 spot. Dustin Schlatter is a two-time All-American and ranked No. 1 at 149 pounds in the current Intermat / USA Today preseason poll. After winning the national championship as a freshman in 2006, Schlatter had a 65-match winning streak snapped in the quarterfinals of last season's NCAA Championships and finished in third place for the eventual national champion Gophers. His opponent, Josh Churella of Michigan, is a two-time All-American and was the runner-up at last year's national championships. Schlatter owns a 2-0 career record against Churella, with both of those victories coming last season. Schlatter defeated Churella 3-2 for the 2007 Big Ten Championship. The match-up at 184 pounds will be a fierce one between the Gophers' Kish and Jake Varner of Iowa State. Kish and Varner have met three times in their careers, with all three matches coming last season. Kish earned a 7-2 dual meet win over Varner Dec. 8 of last season and followed that with a 5-2 decision at the 2007 National Duals, before falling 4-2 in the 2007 NCAA national semifinals. Varner fell to Northwestern's Jake Herbert in the national title match, while Kish earned his second All-American certificate with a third-place finish. Varner and Kish are No. 1 and 2 in the recent Intermat preseason rankings. In the 2006 NWCA All-Star Classic, held in Dallas, Texas, Schlatter defeated Matt Storniolo (Oklahoma) and Kish was topped by Northwestern's Hebert. Previous Gopher participants 43rd annual event in the include Cole Konrad (2005), Brock Lesnar (2000), Leroy Vega (2000) and current Gopher assistant coaches Brandon Eggum (2000) and Marty Morgan (1990). -
Team Ranking (by vote of all EIWA Head Coaches) 1. Cornell 2. Navy 3. Harvard 4. Penn T5. American T5. Lehigh T7. Army T7. Columbia Individual Ranking (by vote of EIWA Ranking Committee) 125_ 1. Troy Nickerson, Cornell Jr 2. Brandon Kinney, Columbia Sr 3. Fernando Martinez, Army Sr 4. Jasen Borschoff, American So 5. Rollie Peterkin, Penn So 6. Greg Hart, Bucknell So 133_ 1. Robbie Preston, Harvard Sr 2. Seth Ciasulli, Lehigh So 3. Joe Baker, Navy Jr 4. David Marble, Bucknell So 5. William Simpson, Army Jr 6. Jeff Schell, Brown Sr 141_ 1. Matt Kyler, Army So 2. Adam Frey, Cornell So 3. Kyle Borshoff, American So 4. Sal Tirico, Columbia Jr 5. Steve Adamcsik, Rutgers Sr 6. Mark Savino, Brown Sr 149_ 1. Jordan Leen, Cornell Sr 2. JP O'Connor, Harvard So 3. Matt Dunn, Columbia So 4. Trevor Chinn, Lehigh Jr 5. Cesar Grajales, Penn Jr 6. Scott Heckman, East Stroudsburg Sr 157_ 1. Dave Nakesone, Lehigh Sr 2. Christian Snook, Army Sr 3. Bobby Latessa, Harvard Sr 4. Derek Sickles, Columbia Jr 5. Brantley Hooks, Bucknell So 6. Drake Hovis, Cornell Jr 165_ 1. Mike Cannon, American So 2. Andrew Flanagan Harvard Jr 3. Andy Rendos, Bucknell So 4. Joey Hooker, Cornell Sr 5. Zach Shanaman, Penn Jr 6. Brian Rowan, Army Jr 174_ 1. Matt Stolpinski, Navy Sr 2. Steve Anceravage, Cornell Sr 3. Michael Whalen, Rutgers Jr 4. Shane Riccio, Bucknell So 5. Jeff Zannetti, Penn Sr 6. Justin Herbert, Franklin & Marshall Jr 184_ 1. Louis Caputo, Harvard Jr 2. David Craig, Lehigh So 3. Lior Zamir, Penn Sr 4. Matt Parsons, Navy Sr 5. Scott Ferguson, Army Sr 6. Michael Moore, Cornell So 197_ 1. Josh Glenn, American Sr 2. Josh Arnone, Cornell Jr 3. Nick Sommerfield, Columbia Sr 4. Tyler Moyer, Navy Jr 5. Thomas Shovlin, Penn So 6. Lamar Brown, Rutgers Jr 285_ 1. Ed Prendergast, Navy Sr 2. Zack Hammond, Cornell Sr 3. Nathan Thobaben, Army Sr 4. Levon Mock, Brown Sr 5. Kevin Kester, Columbia So 6. Nico Somers, Franklin & Marshall Jr
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CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. -- The 19th-ranked University of Tennessee at Chattanooga wrestling team will give fans a sneak peak Thursday night at the annual Blue-Gold wrestle-offs. The event will begin at 6 p.m. at Maclellan Gym. Admission is free. Head Coach Chris Bono and his wrestlers will host 11 matches to see how the Mocs' lineup will take shape in the early part of the season. "Our guys have worked hard in the preseason and are ready to compete in front of a big crowd," Bono said. "We have many positions open this season after losing an All-America and several starters from a year ago. I am looking forward to watching who is ready to step up for our program." The wrestle-offs include several intriguing challenges including a three-way battle at both 141 pounds and 149. Competing at 141 will be Ben Johnson and Mark Nicely with the winner facing Cody Cleveland. The 149-pound division will see Carlos Baron taking on Kelly Felix while the winner will meet Joey Knox. Southern Conference heavyweight champion Matt Koz is dropping down to 197 pounds in 2007-08 and will face freshman Ethan Winel. Other true freshmen set to compete include Dan Waddell at 157, Tyler Roberson at 184 and Matt Lettner at 285. Tentative lineup: 125: no match 133: Shawn Cordell vs. Steve Hromada 141: Ben Johnson vs. Mark Nicely / winner vs. Cody Cleveland 149: Carlos Baron vs. Kelly Felix / winner vs. Joey Knox 157: Seth Garvin vs. Dan Waddell 165: Nick Davis vs. Mark Rogers 174: Kyle McKee vs. Lloyd Rogers 184: Josh Edmondson vs. Tyler Roberson 197: Matt Koz vs. Ethan Winel 285: Matt Letner vs. Ben O'Neill
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NORMAN, Okla. -- The Sooner wrestling team will kick off the 2007-08 season by hosting the annual Red/White ranking match this Thursday, Nov. 1, at 7 p.m. at the Howard McCasland Fieldhouse. OU will pit the top-two wrestlers in each weight class against one another to help determine starters for the upcoming season. The Sooners have been recently ranked at No. 19 by the National Wrestling Coaches Association (NWCA) and return five NCAA qualifiers in Kyle Terry, Will Rowe, Max Dean, Joshua Weitzel and Joel Flaggert. "This will unquestionably be one the most competitive and the most exciting ranking matches we have had in my tenure," said Coach Jack Spates. The athletic department has also scheduled events prior to the ranking match, beginning at 6:30 p.m. Former Sooner wrestlers Teyon Ware, a two-time national champion, and Sam Hazewinkel, a four-time All-American, will address those in attendance on what it takes to be successful at the collegiate level and participate in a question and answer session. Immediately following will be the ranking match at 7 p.m. Oklahoma will once again be wrestling alongside 2007 Division II national champion Central Oklahoma. "This should be a great night for fans to come out and enjoy all of the extremely competitive matches we have scheduled," Spates said. "We are excited to see our guys under the lights and how they perform." Doors will open at 6 p.m. for the event, admission is free to the public. Oklahoma officially opens the season on Sunday, Nov. 4, when it travels to Oklahoma City to compete in a triple-dual against Missouri Valley, Oklahoma City and Neosho Community College. The matchups for the Red/White ranking match are listed below: 125 Pounds Greg Cannon (RFr., Two-time Oklahoma state champion) vs. Joey Fio (Fr., Two-time Idaho state champion) 133 Pounds Brian Shelton (So., Two-time Oklahoma state champion) vs. John Starzyk (Fr., Three-time Illinois state champion) 141 Pounds Kyle Terry (So., Oklahoma state champion and NCAA qualifier) vs. Zach Bailey (RFr., Four-time Missouri state champion) 149 Pounds Seth Vernon (Fr., Three-time Oklahoma state champion) vs. Will Rowe (Jr., Two-time Texas state champion and two-time NCAA qualifier) 157 Pounds Shane Vernon (So., Three-time Oklahoma state champion) vs. Chad Terry (So., Oklahoma state champion) 165 Pounds Ryan Smith (Fr., Three-time Oregon state champion) vs. Max Dean (Sr., Three-time NCAA qualifier) 174 Pounds Jeff James (RFr., Two-time Oklahoma state champion) vs. Chris DeVilbiss (Jr., Maryland state champion) OR Cody Lowe (RFr., North Carolina state runner-up) 184 Pounds Josh Hinton (So., Oklahoma state champion) vs. Joshua Weitzel (Sr., Two-time NCAA qualifier) 197 Pounds Joel Flaggert (Sr., Two-time All-American and Oklahoma state champion) vs. Eric Lapotsky (So., NCAA Qualifier) Heavyweight Nathan Fernandez (RFr., Three-time Oklahoma state champion) vs. Brad Farmer (Jr., Washington state champion)
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CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. -- Several Chattanooga wrestlers competed at the Kennesaw State Open this month in the Atlanta area, and seven Mocs came home with weight titles. The Mocs claimed open division titles at 125 pounds, as well as 133, 141, 149, 157, 235 and 285. True freshmen Demetrius Johnson (125), Ben Johnson (141), Kelly Felix (149), Dan Waddell (157) and Matt Lettner (285) won their respective weight classes. Senior Steve Hromada claimed the 133-pound title, and sophomore Ben O'Neill was the winner at the 235-pound class. The Mocs open the 2007-08 season Nov. 1 with the annual Blue-Gold Wrestling match at 6 p.m. at Maclellan Gym.
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In our continuing efforts to join the wrestling and mixed martial arts worlds we take our mobile Brute Adidas Studios on the road for 2 new episodes of Takedown Radio as we come to LIVE from Hoffman Estates, Illinois Saturday November 3rd. Takedown Radio is now broadcast on the following internet outlets: Takedownradio.com, KXNO.com, Matchannel.com, Mat-magazine.com. Please be sure to join our live broadcast each and every Saturday as we talk to the worlds greatest athletes. TDR is available LIVE, Archived and Pod Cast. Visit Takedownradio.com for more details. NEW YORK, October 29, 2007 – The International Fight League (OTC.BB: IFLI), the world's number one team-based professional mixed martial arts league, will hit the Chicago area hard with a week of partner activations and media activity, all leading up to Saturday night's live broadcast on MyNetworkTV at the Sears Centre in suburban Hoffman Estates, Ill., the first-ever live Mixed Martial Arts event on primetime broadcast television. The IFL "World Grand Prix," which will air on Saturday at 9 p.m. ET/PT, 8 p.m. CT, will feature the light heavyweight title fight between Vladimir "The Janitor" Matyushenko and Alex Schoenauer, and a highly-anticipated rematch between undefeated lightweight Chris "The Polish Hammer" Horodecki and local favorite Bart "Bartimus" Palaszewski among the nine bouts. "This will be a big week, not just for the IFL, its coaches and athletes but also for the sport of Mixed Martial Arts," said Gareb Shamus, IFL co-founder and CEO. "Whether it is a lengthy national feature on a legend like Pat Miletich and his athletes on ESPN, our live broadcast on MyNetworkTV, or the activation of sponsorships with partners like the USO, Warner Home Video and Muscle Milk, we are continuing to show that in just over a year the sport and the IFL brand continues to make solid strides into the mainstream." All this will lead to Saturday's card at the Sears Centre, which will showcase the best of the IFL's nine-event regular season in each of five weight classes. For a look at some of the top matchups on Saturday, go to http://www.ifl.tv/Multimedia.html. Join us for this special broadcast Saturday from 9:05 AM to 11:00 AM at Takedownradio.com, KXNO.com, Matchannel.com, Mat-magazine.com. Wrestlers and MMA competitors join us each and every week. You should too! TDR is available LIVE, Archived and Pod Cast as well. Visit Takedownradio.com for more details. Thanks for listening!
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DURHAM, N.C. -- The Duke wrestling team held the intrasquad Blue-White Rankings on Saturday in Card Gymnasium. Nine matches were held across seven weight classes during the afternoon. Starting off the afternoon at 141 pounds was freshman A.J. Guardado competing against sophomore Spencer Jasper. Jasper scored early in the match, securing a takedown in the first period and an escape in the second. Guardado pushed hard near the end, closing the gap to 3-2 with a reversal, but ran out of time in his comeback attempt. The 149-pound match consisted of freshmen Colby Johnson and Mike Bell. A takedown and an escape gave Johnson a 3-1 lead after the second period, but an escape in the opening moments of the third closed the gap to 3-2 for Bell. Showcasing his flexibility, Johnson was able to hold onto his lead in evading a near takedown to claim the victory. Redshirt sophomore Michael Degli Obizzi (149 pounds) gained control of his match with sophomore Danny Torres (157 pounds) near the end of the first period and was able to finish it early. At the 157-pound class, last year's most successful freshman, Voris Tejada, was able to hold on to a three-point lead and win it 3-1 over sophomore Jared Sernoffsky. Tejada secured a critical stalemate in the third period to prevent a potentially-tying takedown with a hold of Sernoffsky's ankle. In the 165-pound match, freshman Willy Mello challenged Addison Nuding, the junior captain, as he completed a successful takedown in the second period to reduce the deficit to three points. However, Nuding's experience prevailed as he prevented Mello's shot at a defensive no-control pin. That widened his lead, and he eventually won, 7-2. There were two matches at 174 pounds, as redshirt sophomore Ben Wales took on sophomore Mat Koelling and redshirt junior Turner Rooney squared off against sophomore Chase Macer. Wales was aggressive throughout the match, securing two takedowns and gaining over one-minute of time advantage. Koelling fought well, successfully completing a two-leg takedown and a reversal late in the third period. Rooney was able win control early in his match with a victory over Macer. Redshirt junior Dan Fox and sophomore Jack Richards faced off at 197 pounds. Fox acquired an early lead with a takedown in the first period and that set the tone for the rest of the match. Richards was able to even the score at the end of the first with a five-second near fall. Fox regrouped and controlled the rest of the match, showing his quickness in escaping Richards' attempts to grab his leg and swing around back for an easy takedown. The meet rounded out with the heavyweight match between redshirt sophomores Wade "Tickles" Van Sickle and Mike Tunick, with Van Sickle capturing the victory, 3-1. "The meet was a great opportunity to get in the competitive mindset and to get an idea of what we want to do this season," said Wales. "It was a good experience for the freshmen to figure out what college wrestling entails. It's their first taste of that so it's good to see them perform as well as they did." Coach Clar Anderson was pleased with the intensity of all of the wrestlers and excited at the prospects for this year's team. "There were a lot of competitive matches, which I had expected, said Anderson. "The meet gave our guys a great opportunity to compete in a match-type situation in front of friends and other students. The matches were very competitive, as each athlete was vying for a starting position." Not wrestling in the event were senior Kellan McKeon (125 pounds), redshirt senior Bryan Gibson (133 pounds) and redshirt sophomore John Barone (184 pounds). All three are starters and captains and did not compete due to a lack of good matchups in their respective classes. The freshmen and sophomores will compete on Saturday, Nov. 3 in The Citadel Open in Charleston, S.C., at 10 a.m. The entire team will come together for the UNC Pembroke Open on Nov. 9 and 10 in Pembroke, N.C.
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STATE COLLEGE, Pa.; October 30, 2007 – Penn State Nittany Lion Phil Davis (Harrisburg, Pa.) has been selected to participate in the 2007 National Wrestling Coaches Association All-Star Classic. Ranked No. 2 at 197 pounds, the Nittany Lion senior will face No. 3 Mike Tamillow of Northwestern on Monday, Nov. 19 The 42nd edition of the NWCA All-Star Classic presented by the United States Marine Corps heads to the Pacific Northwest for the first time in 17 years as Eugene, Ore., will host the annual wrestling spectacle. This year's lineup features six top-ranked wrestlers in Division I, one top-ranked wrestler in Division II, eight second-ranked wrestlers from Division I along with four #3's and one #4. In all, 14 different schools will be represented and will comprise athletes from the Big Ten, Big 12, Colonial, EIWA, EWL, Pac 10 and Division II. Davis was selected to wrestle in the event last year along with teammate James Yonushonis (Philipsburg, Pa.), but did not make weight. Yonushonis won his bout at 174. Davis is a three-time All-American with a 90-19 career record. He has placed seventh, second and fifth at nationals and was the 2006 Big Ten Champion. Davis downed Tamillow 8-2 in his only meeting against him last year. Tamillow, however, went on to win the Big Ten title.
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PISCATAWAY, N.J. -– The Rutgers wrestling team will hold its Red & Black wrestle-off on Friday, Nov. 2, at 7 p.m., at the College Ave Gym. "This is a great opportunity for our kids to compete in front of a crowd," said first-year head coach Scott Goodale. Results from the Red & Black wrestle-off will determine the starting lineup for this year's Rutgers squad. "We want them to perform with some pressure," said Goodale. "The staff is looking forward to seeing how they compete in a match situation, where there is something on the line." A highlight of the intra-squad match will be the return of senior Steve Adamscik (Chester, N.J.), who will take to the college wrestling mat for the first time in more than a year after red-shirting last season.
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Two members of the University of Wisconsin wrestling team were selected to participate in the 42nd annual National Wrestling Coaches Association All-Star Classic. Badger head coach Barry Davis and two-time All-American Craig Henning will represent Wisconsin at the classic which takes place Monday, Nov. 19 in Eugene, Ore., at McArthur Court. Davis has been selected as one of the coaches for the classic and Henning will wrestle at 157 lbs. against Big Ten Conference opponent Mike Poeta from Illinois. Both wrestlers faced each other at the 2007 Big Ten Championship. The third-seeded Henning upset top-seeded Poeta with a 7-2 decision in the third-place match. Both Henning and Poeta earned All-American status at the 2007 NCAA Championship with their second and third place finishes, respectively. Henning is ranked No. 1 in two preseason polls and is the first Wisconsin grappler to be named an NWCA All-Star since current assistant coach Donny Pritzlaff in 2001. Eight other Big Ten wrestlers were also selected to compete at the classic.
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BLOOMINGTON, Ind. -- The Indiana University wrestling team unofficially began their season Monday night with the Cream and Crimson Intrasquad scrimmage at the Brown County High School in Nashville, Indiana. There were ten matches on the night, wrestle-offs for the 125-pound through 197-pound weight classes in addition to an opening round match between Sophomore Nick Avery and redshirt Freshman Eric Cameron. The aforementioned opening match between Avery and Cameron was tight, extending to sudden victory. A stalling penalty on Avery late in the third period evened the score at 3-3. Cameron then capitalized on the opportunity by recording a takedown for the 5-3 victory. The 125-pound match showcased four-time New Mexico state champion, Freshman Matt Ortega versus redshirt Sophomore Wesley Fike. Ortega jumped out to a 4-1 lead with a pair of takedowns before pinning Fike in 2:23. Redshirt Junior Andrae Hernandez dominated the 133-pound match over Freshman Reece Freeman. The 2007 All-American earned a takedown early in the first period and tallied nine points worth of near falls for an 11-0 lead. Hernandez was then able to finish the match with another takedown and two-point near fall for the 15-0 tech fall in the second period. Freshman Jeff Pelton and Junior Scott Kelly were then paired up at the 141-pound weight class. Kelly held a 2-1 lead after the first period before choosing the down position to begin period two. No points were scored in that period as Pelton did a great job of riding Kelly. Starting in the down position for period three, Pelton made a quick escape to tie the score before getting a takedown for the 4-2 edge. In the end, Pelton earned a 5-2 win with a riding advantage of over three minutes. Redshirt Freshman Kurt Kinser and Sophomore Nick Walpole proved to be one of the most-tightly contested bouts of the night. An escape by each 149-pound Hoosier were the only points scored in regulation. Walpole then seized a 3-1 win with a takedown 34 seconds into sudden victory. Next up was the 157-pound showdown between two-time All-American Brandon Becker and redshirt Freshman Paul Young. The first period ended in a 0-0 stalemate. Young then chose the neutral position in period two. It was the correct call by Young as he tallied a takedown with just seconds remaining for the 2-0 advantage. Becker immediately escaped in period three and took the lead with a takedown of his own. The tables were turned once again, however, when Young put Becker on his back for the pin at the 6:29 mark. The 165-pound match featured 2007 All-American Matt Coughlin and Junior Kyle Samuels. It was a rematch of the Indiana State High School Championship finals in 2004. Coughlin won Monday's dual just as he had in '04, thanks in large part to a perfectly-executed granby roll in the third period for the 3-1 lead. He added one point in riding time for the 4-1 triumph. A pair of redshirt sophomores squared off in the 174-pound match. Trevor Perry just got by Seth Parker in the 3-2 win. Perry grabbed a takedown in the first period, but Parker notched two escapes to even the score at 2-2 entering the third period. Perry chose the down position in the final period, and escaped the grasp of Parker for the go-ahead point. In the night's largest age discrepancy, fifth-year Senior Marc Bennett faced true Freshman Matt Powless in the 184-pound match. Bennett immediately landed a throw and sunk it in for the pin fall at the 0:46 mark of the first period. Arguably, the most action of the night came in the final match of the night, a clash between Freshman Joe Fagiano and redshirt Freshman Jantzen Minton at 197 pounds. Fagiano built a 7-2 lead in the first two periods, but Minton made a run in the third and final round. In the end, however, Fagiano held on for a 9-6 win. Indiana's official start to the season is set for Nov. 9th when the Hoosiers travel to Crawfordsville, Indiana for a dual with Wabash at 7 p.m.
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Hempstead, NY -- Hofstra University All-American wrestler Charles Griffin has been selected to participate in the 42nd Annual National Wrestling Coaches Association All-Star Classic at the University of Oregon's McArthur Court in Eugene, Oregon. The Classic will be held on Monday, November 19 at 7 p.m. and will be televised on College Sports Television (CSTV). The NWCA All-Star Classic features the top two available wrestlers in each of the 10 weight classes in an exhibition that kicks off the regular season, and sometimes previews the NCAA Championships four months later. Griffin is the first Pride wrestler to participate as a featured competitor since Nick Gallo, Hofstra's only national champion, faced Kenny Nelson from Oklahoma in 1977. Joel Kislin, another Hofstra All-American, made two appearances in the All-Star Classic, facing Iowa State's Chris Taylor in both 1972 and 1973. Griffin, a senior from Reading, Pennsylvania, earned All-American honors at the 2007 NCAA Championships at Auburn Hills, Michigan last March with a third-place finish at 141 pounds. The three-time Colonial Athletic Association champion and NCAA qualifier posted a 35-6 overall record, including a 6-1 mark at the NCAA Championships, in 2006-07. Griffin has posted an 89-20 career record including a perfect 14-0 mark in the conference matches. He will face two-time All-American Nathan Morgan from Oklahoma State. Morgan, ranked third immediately behind Griffin in the preseason poll, placed fourth at last year's NCAA Championships and was sixth in the 2006 Championships. The two wrestlers faced each other as freshman in a dual match at Hofstra during the 2004-05 season. Griffin posted a 7-4 victory over Morgan in that match.
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MINNEAPOLIS -- The Augsburg College wrestling team is ranked No. 1 in the National Wrestling Coaches Association's Brute-Adidas Division III preseason national rankings, it was announced this week. The Auggies, defending Division III national champions, have five individuals ranked among the top 10 in individual weight class rankings. Augsburg, winners of 10 of the last 17 Division III national titles, are ranked ahead of perennial rival Wartburg (Iowa), which finished second last season, and Wisconsin-La Crosse, which finished third. Heidelberg (Ohio) is ranked No. 4 and Luther (Iowa) is ranked No. 5. St. John's (Minn.) is ranked No. 23 in the preseason poll. The Auggies are in their first season under new head coach Sam Barber, who served as an assistant for six seasons under former head coach Jeff Swenson. Augsburg's Quincy Osborn (Sr., Grand Rapids, Minn.), who went 44-3 last season to win the Division III national title at 141 pounds, will move up two weight classes to 157 this season. He opens the year ranked No. 1 in the 157-pound class. Osborn was an Division I national tournament qualifier his first two seasons (2003-04, 2004-05) at the University of Minnesota before transferring to Augsburg last year. He is 104-35 in his collegiate career. Also opening the season top-ranked in their weight class is Augsburg's Seth Flodeen (Jr., Cannon Falls, Minn.) at 125 pounds. Flodeen was a national runner-up last season at 125, finishing with a 25-5 record. He is 53-20 in his Auggie career. Robbie Gotreau (Sr., Bloomington, Minn./Jefferson HS), a two-time All-American at 174 pounds (fifth in 2007, fourth in 2006), will move up to 184 pounds this season. Gotreau, 41-6 last season and 109-26 in his Auggie career, begins the year ranked No. 3 at 184. Wallace O'Connor (Sr., Oshkosh, Wis./Oshkosh West HS) enters the year ranked No. 3 at 197 pounds. He earned All-American honors for the first time last season, finishing eighth at 197. O'Connor finished 21-17 last season and is 55-47 in his Auggie career. Willy Holst (So., Prescott, Wis.) enters the season ranked No. 5 at 149 pounds. Holst transferred to Augsburg last season after spending his freshman year at Division I Minnesota, but missed nearly all of the season due to an injury. Holst is 14-5 as a collegiate wrestler. Augsburg opens its season with its annual Auggie-Brute-Adidas Open on Saturday, Nov. 17 at 9 a.m. at Si Melby Hall. The Auggies' first dual meet is on Wednesday, Nov. 21 at 7 p.m., as Augsburg hosts Augustana (S.D.) at Si Melby Hall.
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Second place in the country at 133 pounds and the top finisher on a team that placed fifth at the NCAA Championships sounds like a career highlight for many wrestlers, but not for Oklahoma State senior Coleman Scott. "It killed me last year us getting fifth," Scott said. "It was totally different than the previous years. I can't be satisfied with second place. People expect you to go out there and show that you are good since you have that orange singlet on. That's something you've got to live up to, but it's a good feeling when you do come out on top." Coleman Scott (Photo/Oklahoma State University Sports Information)It was a struggle for Scott to get back to wrestling after the finals loss last season, a match in which Scott scored the only takedown in a 4-2 defeat. However, when Scott finally returned to the mat during the offseason he was able to turn that disappointment into an insatiable drive to finish his final season in Stillwater with a national title. "It got to the point where I was tired of thinking about it and I had to tell myself to get something accomplished and make those strides in the summer that I needed to," Scott said. "Once I got back into my live wrestling and drilling hard I sort of forgot about it, but then the next day it came up. It's just a motivator now though, it helps me out instead of burning me." So for the first time in four years, Oklahoma State entered this past offseason not wearing the target of defending champion on its back. The feeling was a first for Scott, who was part of championship teams in each of his first two seasons with the Cowboys. "It was a big change coming into this season not being the national champion and knowing that we've got to climb a ladder and not everybody is chasing us anymore," Scott said. "But we've made a lot of strides since the beginning of school. Everybody is getting a lot better and we're going to be in good shape by the end of the year. "I'd rather have the target on because that's when you know you're at the top, when everybody is gunning for you and that's a good feeling," Scott said. "It doesn't bother me to be the underdog, but I think by the end of the year we will have that target on us." In line with the adjustment to no longer being the defending champion, OSU head coach John Smith has shaken up his team's preseason workouts, specifically the conditioning. Scott says the difficulty of the workouts has increased significantly and the results are already apparent and have helped a Cowboy squad full of fresh faces gain confidence that was missing at times last season. "It was a lot different this year, we took a totally different approach," Scott said. "This team is by far in the best shape we've been in this early. It was hard, but I think it's going to pay off in the end. "It gives guys a lot of confidence when they get out there and they know they're in way better shape than their opponent is," Scott said. "Last year some guys lacked a little bit of confidence, but the guys on this year's team are definitely not going to lack any confidence in their conditioning or their skill. We think it'll be a good year." Another change in the Cowboy wrestling room has been the transition of senior leadership. During Scott's first three years in Stillwater, there was a wealth of experience and leadership in the room from the likes of Zack Esposito, Jake Rosholt, Johny Hendricks and Steve Mocco. Now, a new group of young Cowboys looks to Scott and fellow senior and two-time All-American Nathan Morgan for guidance, a role that Scott feels ready to embrace. "It's definitely different," Scott said. "You go from being the little guy on the team and looking up to all those guys, and now people are looking up to you. It's hard at first when you realize that there are people looking at you for what to do. Overall it's a good feeling though and I learned a lot from all those guys. "We had such a tight team the last few years and those older guys were so good at bringing me along my freshman year and all the way through my career," Scott said. "I think that me and Nate and the other guys have to step up and do that now." Although the team may have lost the target on its back, Scott hasn't. He is ranked No. 1 in the nation at 133 pounds by every preseason publication. Being the leader at his weight class hasn't gone to his head, however, as he's continually fueled by the eligibility clock he knows is ticking. "I don't have any more time, I've got to win an NCAA title this year," Scott said. "I've gone through it the last three years and I haven't gotten there, so I've got to do it this year. Getting second last year wasn't a good feeling and I don't ever want to have it again. I know I have a target on my back, but I like everyone chasing me trying to get that No. 1 ranking." Although in the short-term Scott's goals are aimed squarely on becoming an NCAA champion, long-term he hopes to continue wrestling on the international and Olympic stage. It's a goal that's all the more attainable if you look at the resources the Cowboy wrestling room has to offer. From former Olympians like Smith and assistant coach Eric Guerrero to current ones like Daniel Cormier and Mo Lawal, Oklahoma State's room is a breeding ground for future Olympians. "I've wrestled freestyle ever since I was about 12 years old and that's always been my goal to be an Olympic champ. I'm going to train here for as long as I can and hopefully be on the Olympic team."
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The 42nd edition of the NWCA All-Star Classic presented by the United States Marine Corps comes to the Pacific Northwest for the first time in 17 years as Eugene, Ore., will host the annual wrestling spectacle. This year's lineup features six top-ranked wrestlers in Division I, one top-ranked wrestler in Division II, eight second-ranked wrestlers from Division I along with four #3's and one #4. In all, 14 different schools will be represented and will comprise athletes from the Big Ten, Big 12, Colonial, EIWA, EWL, Pac 10 and Division II. "We're excited to have the event in an area that's not only known for its wrestling wealth, but an area that is nationally known for putting out some of the top wrestlers in the nation," said NWCA Executive Director Mike Moyer. There is one pivotal focus of this year's event – save the wrestling program at the University of Oregon. In June, the school announced it was cutting the sport in favor of adding baseball and women's competitive cheer, and that 2007-08 would be the final season of Duck Wrestling in Eugene. "This is an important event, not only for the sport of wrestling, but for the health and well-being of wrestling in the state of Oregon and around the country," said NWCA President Ron Mirikitani. "There is great tradition at the University of Oregon. National Champions, Olympic Medalists, Olympic Coaches," continued Mirikitani. "We're hoping that a great fan presence will show the administration that Oregon needs wrestling and wrestling needs Oregon." The lineup that's going to be taking to the mat at McArthur Court is solid. At 125 pounds, returning NCAA champion Paul Donahoe of Nebraska comes in ranked #1 in the country after his surprise run to the title last season. He'll take on Jayson Ness, a sophomore from Minnesota ranked fourth in the nation and a fifth-place finisher at the NCAA Championships last March. It is the first appearance for both wrestlers. At 133 pounds, two of the Big 12's top wrestlers will square off with three-time All-American and returning NCAA runner-up Coleman Scott of Oklahoma State will take on Missouri's two-time All-American Tyler McCormick. Scott is 2-1 lifetime against McCormick and is one of two Cowboys to be represented in the event. Scott's making his second All-Star appearance, losing last year to Penn's Matt Valenti. At 141 pounds, it's the second Cowboy, two-time All-American Nathan Morgan. Morgan, ranked third, will face second-ranked Charles Griffin of Hofstra. Griffin bested Morgan in the third-place match at the 2007 NCAA Division I Championships last March 6-2 and is the first Hofstra wrestler to compete in the main event of the All-Star Classic since Nick Gallo wrestled in the event in 1977, which conversely, took place in Corvallis. Morgan's making his second All-Star appearance. He fell last year to top-ranked Ryan Lang of Northwestern. Hofstra head coach Tom Shifflet will also represent the Pride. At 149 pounds, a pair of Big Ten opponents will tangle as top-ranked Dustin Schlatter, a two-time All-American and 2006 NCAA champion, will face off with second-ranked Josh Churella, a two-time All-American and 2007 NCAA runner-up. It will be Schlatter's second All-Star appearance. Last season, he defeated Oklahoma's Matt Storniolo in Dallas. At 157 pounds, Wisconsin's NCAA runner-up Craig Henning, ranked second at the weight, will wrestle Illinois' Mike Poeta in another All-Big Ten tussle. It's been six years since Barry Davis has had a wrestler compete in the event – Donny Pritzlaff in 2001. Davis joins Shifflet, Iowa Central coach Luke Moffitt and Embry-Riddle coach Ken Ramsey as coaches for the event. Second-ranked Eric Tannenbaum of Michigan will take on third-ranked Patrick Pitsch of Arizona State at 165 pounds. The match could draw some fans from nearby Washington as the two-time Pac-10 champion hails from Spanaway, Wash., a four-hour drive up I-5. Two Eastern conferences are represented at 174 pounds, with returning NCAA finalist and top-ranked Keith Gavin of Pittsburgh against second-ranked Matt Stolpinski of the United States Naval Academy. Gavin is Pitt's first representative since J.J. Fasnacht in 1996, while Stolpinski is the Academy's first since Mark Conley in 2002. Making his second All-Star Classic is Minnesota's Roger Kish. Last season, Kish fell to Northwestern's Jake Herbert, but the Michigan native will have a familiar foe in his opponent in 2007 – Iowa State's top-ranked sophomore Jake Varner. Varner defeated Kish in overtime in the semifinals of last year's NCAA championships at 184 pounds. A pair of Big Ten wrestlers will again meet at 197 pounds, as second-ranked Phil Davis, a three-time All-American from Penn State, will face third-ranked Mike Tamillow of Northwestern. This will be Davis second appearance in the All-Star Classic, but he failed to make weight at last year's event. Tamillow was seventh at last year's NCAA championships. At heavyweight, Division I's top-ranked heavyweight Dustin Fox of Northwestern will have a large challenge in front of him, the top-ranked heavyweight in Division II, Nebraska-Kearney's Tervel Dlagnev. Dlagnev beat Fox in the finals of last year's Midlands championships and is making his third All-Star appearance but first in the main event. In 2005 in Stillwater, Dlagnev beat Central Oklahoma's Josh LeadingFox in the event's only exhibition, while in 2006, the Texan beat Wartburg's Blake Gillis in one of five exhibition matches. Dlagnev's the first non-Division I wrestler in the event since Emmett Willson of Montana State-Northern (NAIA) in 2004 and the first Division II wrestler to compete since Dan Russell of Portland State in 1990 – the last time Oregon hosted the event. "We feel the All-Star Classic is one of wrestling's greatest events because it can give you a potential NCAA final right now," said Moyer. "We're hoping the momentum of this event in Eugene, with people like Ron Finely among others, leading the charge to keep this valuable and historic sport in the state of Oregon." "Countless teachers and coaches have come through the wrestling room at the University of Oregon and it would be a shame if there was no longer a pipeline to Oregon's youth and high school wrestlers and coaches to and from Eugene." "We hope the All-Star Classic not only puts the 20 best wrestlers in the nation on display, but the need for wrestling at Oregon as well," said Moyer. The United States Marine Corps is again partnering with the NWCA for the event and has been a win-win situation for the NWCA and the event itself. "The United States Marine Corps and the NWCA have built a great partnership over the years," said Moyer. "They present one of our showcase events – the All-Star Classic – and also are a key player in our leadership awards. We're pleased to continue our relationship with them on every level." The event is slated for a 7 p.m. start, and tickets are available by calling the Duck ticket office at 1-800-WEB-FOOT (or 541.346.4461 locally) during weekday normal business hours. Prices are $15 for reserved, $10 for Adult General Admission and $5 for Children General Admission (ages 2-18) and UO Students (with a valid UO student ID). For teams of 15 or more, reserved tickets are available for $10 for each ticket if arranged in advance through the UO Athletic Department Ticket Office. Other general ticket information is available at the online at www.GoDucks.com website. More information on the NWCA is available at the www.nwcaonline.com website. 42nd NWCA All-Star Classic presented by the United States Marine Corps November 19, Eugene, OR 125: #1 Paul Donahoe (Nebraska) vs. #4 Jayson Ness (Minnesota) 133: #1 Coleman Scott (Oklahoma State) vs. #2 Tyler McCormick (Missouri) 141: #2 Charles Griffin (Hofstra) vs. #3 Nathan Morgan (Oklahoma State) 149: #1 Dustin Schlatter (Minnesota) vs. #2 Josh Churella (Michigan) 157: #2 Craig Henning (Wisconsin) vs. #3 Mike Poeta (Illinois) 165: #2 Eric Tannenbaum (Michigan) vs. #3 Patrick Pitsch (Arizona State) 174: #1 Keith Gavin (Pittsburgh) vs. #2 Matt Stolpinski (Navy) 184: #1 Jake Varner (Iowa State) vs. #2 Roger Kish (Minnesota) 197: #2 Phil Davis (Penn State) vs. #3 Mike Tamillow (Northwestern) 285: #1 (D2) Tervel Dlagnev (Neb.-Kearney) vs. #1 (D1) Dustin Fox (Northwestern) EXHIBITIONS (2) 125: #1 (NAIA) Trevor Lofstedt (Southern Oregon) vs. Jake Gonzales (Oregon State) 174: Ron Lee (Oregon) vs. Luke Feist (Stanford) COACHES Tom Shifflet (Hofstra), Barry Davis (Wisconsin), Luke Moffitt (Iowa Central), Ken Ramsey (Embry-Riddle)
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Kennedy of Illinois engineering a bright future on and off the mat
InterMat Staff posted an article in College
Making the transition from high school to a Big Ten university is a challenge for just about anyone. Especially if you're an engineering major … and the school is the University of Illinois, one of the most respected -- and academically rigorous -- engineering schools in the country. Jimmy Kennedy (Photo/University of Illinois Sports Information)If that weren't enough of a challenge, now, add on top of all that -- being the starting wrestler at 133 pounds for the Fighting Illini as a freshman. That in a nutshell describes Jimmy Kennedy's first year at Illinois. Yet Jimmy rose to the challenge -- and then some. He had an incredibly successful first year on the mats at Urbana-Champaign. Among his accomplishments: placing fourth in the 2007 Big Ten conference championships, and making it to the finals of the Midlands. Mark Johnson, head coach at Illinois, concurs. "In my seventeen years here, only a handful of kids have been able to wrestle for us as true freshmen and do so well." Thrust into the starting role "Coming into college, I didn't think I'd be wrestling my freshman year," says Jimmy Kennedy. "The coaches thought I was ready." (In fact, Jimmy was one of only two true freshmen to be installed as starters at Illinois in the 2006-07 season, the other being John Dergo at 184 pounds. This is the first time more than one first-year student-athlete has been in the Illini starting line-up during Coach Johnson's tenure.) "I learned a lot in my first year -- perhaps more than in four years of high school … I competed against some of the best in the country." Jimmy took on a number of opponents ranked in the top twenty at 133 pounds, securing victories over Ohio State's T.J. Enright, Wisconsin's Zach Tanelli, Penn State's Jake Strayer, Indiana's Andrae Hernandez, and North Carolina's Evan Sola during the regular season. Jimmy Kennedy (Photo/University of Illinois Sports Information)Arguably Jimmy Kennedy's biggest regular-season win was a 6-3 victory over Mack Reiter, the two-time All-American from the University of Minnesota. "He was coming back from his injury, and I don't think he was 100%," says the Illini sophomore. "For me, the important thing was not to be intimidated by an opponent's record or reputation. You can't lose the match before you wrestle it." Jimmy ended the regular season with a 25-3 record, with five of those wins secured with a pin. He compiled a 7-1 record in Big Ten dual meet competition, losing only to Michigan State senior Nick Simmons. End-of-season performance At the 2007 Big Ten Championships held at Michigan State, Jimmy Kennedy was seeded second in the 133-pound weight class, behind Nick Simmons. He drew a bye in the first round … then, in the quarterfinals, Jimmy defeated seventh-seeded Mario Galanakis of Iowa 7-6, TB1. However, in the semifinals, the Illinois freshman's title quest was derailed by Andrae Hernandez -- the sixth-seeded Hoosier -- by the score of 3-1. However, Jimmy got back on track with a 6-1 victory over T.J. Enright (the eighth-seeded Buckeye) in the wrestleback semifinals, putting himself in the match for third place against Mack Reiter. The Minnesotan got some revenge for his regular-season loss, pinning his Illini rival at 4:02. Jimmy Kennedy left East Lansing with fourth-place honors … and the right to compete at the national championships two weeks later. At the 2007 NCAAs at the Palace in Auburn Hills, Jimmy Kennedy was seeded ninth in the 133-pound bracket. In his opening-round bout, he scored a 7-4 victory over Lehigh's Seth Ciasulli. The second round saw Jimmy edge eighth-seeded Tyler McCormick of Missouri, 3-2. In the quarterfinals, the Illinois freshman faced familiar foe Nick Simmons … and was shut out by the senior Spartan, 3-0. In the consolation bracket, Jimmy went up against another Big Ten rival, Andrae Hernandez … with the Hoosier getting a 4-3 TB victory. When all was said and done, Jimmy Kennedy was just one win away from earning All-American honors in his first year of college competition. Making a statement at the Midlands One of the high points of Jimmy Kennedy's freshman season was his sparkling performance at the Midlands, the post-Christmas wrestling tournament hosted by Northwestern University that has become one of the major mat events in its 40+ year history. At the Midlands, Jimmy pinned San Francisco State's Ben Lockett at 1:29 … got a 5-3 decision over Conor Beebe of Central Michigan in the second round … and, in the quarterfinals, defeated second-seeded Robbie Preston of Harvard, 5-3 SV. The semifinals saw Jimmy edge Northwestern's Eric Metzler, 2-1, to earn the right to vie for the 133-pound title. In the championship finals, Jimmy was pinned by Nick Simmons … but, along the way, earned the respect of wrestling fans for doing so well in his first appearance at this prestigious event. Back to the beginning Before his incredible 2006-07 season -- or, in fact, before even setting foot on the University of Illinois campus -- Jimmy Kennedy had crafted a solid wrestling career. Jimmy Kennedy (Photo/University of Illinois Sports Information)"I got started (in wrestling) at age five in a club program," says Jimmy. "My cousin and a best friend wrestled. That's how I got into it." "I did pretty well from the beginning." That successful start continued into high school. At Grant Community High School, Jimmy Kennedy had an incredible 187-3 overall record. Perhaps even more incredible, the native of Ingleside, Illinois (a town located between Chicago and the Wisconsin border) broke the Illinois high school state record for takedowns within a season with an eye-popping 384. While in high school, Jimmy made four trips to Champaign-Urbana, qualifying each year for the Illinois high school state championships held at Assembly Hall on the University of Illinois campus. "My goal was to win all four years at state," discloses the Illini 133-pounder. At the end of his prep career, Jimmy had two state titles earned in his sophomore and senior years… placing second his freshman year, and third as a junior. Jimmy's mat success extended far beyond the state of Illinois. As a high school sophomore, he won a Cadet Nationals championship after placing second his freshman year. What's more, in 2006, Jimmy earned the Dave Schultz High School Excellence Award. This award, given to only one wrestler per state, honors not only on-the-mat excellence, but also scholastic achievement, character, citizenship, and community service. When asked about his high school mat experience, Jimmy immediately responded, "My high school coach, Ryan Geist, was one of the best in the state … He pushed us hard in practice, and helped instill a good work ethic in us." "Coach was always there for me," Jimmy continues. "I'd talk to him about colleges. He helped me with my college choice … He helped me understand that, any choice I made, it would be a good one." Mark Johnson (Photo/University of Illinois Sports Information)Illinois head coach Mark Johnson weighs in, "Jimmy was at the top of his class, bright, clean-cut, an All-American type kid." "He's in one of the toughest academic programs here," continues Coach Johnson. "He works hard to succeed in school and in wrestling." "Illinois is academically demanding," concurs Jimmy. "It's a struggle to keep up with my class work and wrestling. The coaches here do a great job helping us, planning our schedules around tests, providing study sessions, whatever we need." Engineering a successful future Coming off an incredible freshman season, expectations are high for Jimmy Kennedy's second year at Illinois. He is ranked sixth in RevWrestling.com's preseason rankings for the 133-pound weight class. (Note: Rev's rankings including wrestlers from all three college divisions). Jimmy Kennedy (Photo/University of Illinois Sports Information)When asked for his own expectations for the season about to start, Jimmy Kennedy has an attitude that any coach -- and wrestling team -- has got to love. "I want the team to do its best … I plan to wrestle hard as an individual, and place high at nationals to help my team's standings." What does the future hold for Jimmy beyond college? "It's hard to make a decision about what I'll do after college this early in my life," replies the Illini sophomore. "I'm basically taking things one year at a time." -
USA Wrestling has chosen five finalist candidates to serve as coaches for the 2008 U.S. Olympic Team in freestyle wrestling. Named as finalists for the volunteer freestyle coaching positions for the U.S. team that will compete at the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing, China are: Sean Bormet of Naperville, Ill. Mike Duroe of Iowa City, Iowa Lee Kemp of Alpharetta, Ga. Kerry McCoy of Stanford, Calif. Lou Rosselli of Columbus, Ohio The five finalists were selected by USA Wrestling's Freestyle Coach Selection Committee. Two of these five volunteer coaches will be selected to serve on the coaching staff at the Beijing Games, along with USA Wrestling's National Freestyle Coach Kevin Jackson. Three of the finalists have served as official Freestyle World Team Coaches at recent World Championships: Duroe (2005, 2006), McCoy (2007) and Rosselli (2006, 2007). The other two coaches, Bormet and Kemp, have been on recent U.S. World Team coaching staffs. Two of the coaches have served as official Junior World Team Coaches in recent years: Rosselli (2005) and Kemp (2007). Both McCoy and Duroe were coaches with the 2007 Pan American Games team. Three of the coach finalists were members of past U.S. Olympic teams as athletes: Kemp (1980), McCoy (2000, 2004) and Rosselli (1996). Kemp was a three-time World champion in freestyle wrestling (1978, 1979, 1982). McCoy is the head wrestling coach at Stanford Univ., and Duroe is head wrestling coach at Cornell College in Iowa. Rosselli is the assistant coach at The Ohio State Univ. Bormet is founder and coach of the Overtime School of Wrestling in Illinois. Kemp coaches the Lee Kemp Cooler Wrestling Club in Georgia. Complete biographies of each of the finalists are below. All five finalists will be given a formal telephone interview with the Freestyle Coach Selection Committee. After the interview process, the Freestyle Coach Selection Committee will select the two coaches which the committee recommends for the Olympic coaching positions. USA Wrestling's Executive Committee will then meet to approve the selections of the Freestyle Coach Selection Committee. The decision of the Executive Committee will be forwarded to the U.S. Olympic Committee for final approval as USA Wrestling's nominees for the Olympic Coach positions. USA Wrestling expects its Olympic Coach selection process to be completed by mid-November. Sean Bormet, Naperville, Ill. Bormet was a member of the coaching staff for the 2006 U.S. World Team, which placed third in the team standings and featured four individual medalists. He is a club coach with the New York Athletic Club, and has worked directly with a number of the athletes on recent U.S. World Teams. Donny Pritzlaff (163 lbs.) and Andy Hrovat (185 lbs.), both members of the New York AC, made the 2006 U.S. World Team. Pritzlaff went on to win a bronze medal at the World Championships. The New York Athletic Club placed second in Div. II at the U.S. National Championships the last two seasons. Six members of the New York AC freestyle team qualified for Freestyle Team USA, the U.S. national team during the last two seasons. Bormet was named winner of the Terry McCann Award winner as the 2006 Freestyle Coach of the Year by USA Wrestling. Bormet owns and operates the Overtime School of Wrestling, a top training facility and wrestling club in Illinois. Since opening this program, Bormet has produced numerous champions and All-American on all of USA Wrestling's age levels. Also coaching with Overtime is Kerry Bowmans, a 2000 Olympic Trials runner-up in freestyle wrestling. Bormet was named 2004 USA Wrestling Developmental Coach of the Year for his coaching achievements working with age-group wrestlers and programs. He has coached numerous age-group national champions and All-Americans as a coach for the Illinois Junior and Cadet freestyle national teams. He has also coached the Illinois Junior Duals freestyle team. Prior to founding the Overtime School of Wrestling, Bormet served as an assistant coach at the Univ. of Wisconsin (1994-99) and the Univ. of Michigan (1999-2000). Bormet placed second at the 1999 U.S. National Championships and third in 1999 as a Senior-level freestyle wrestler. He was third at the 1996 U.S. Olympic Team Trials. Bormet earned NCAA All-American status twice while competing for the Univ. of Michigan. In 1993, he placed third at the NCAA Tournament and in 1992, he placed second. He was a 1991 Espoir National champion in freestyle and competed in the 1991 Espoir World Championships. Bormet was also a three-time Junior freestyle All-American. He was an Illinois state champion for Providence High School in New Lenox, Ill. Mike Duroe, Iowa City, Iowa Duroe served as a World Team Coach for the 2006 U.S. Freestyle World Team, which placed third as a team at the 2006 World Championships in Guangzhou, China. The team featured four individual medalists, including World champion Bill Zadick. Duroe was also a World Team coach for the 2005 U.S. Freestyle World Team, which placed eighth in the standings and featured two medalists, competing in Budapest, Hungary. He was also a coach with the 2007 Pan American Games team, which won seven medals, led by champion Henry Cejudo. Duroe has coached numerous U.S. World-level teams, both in men's freestyle and women's freestyle, as a volunteer coach and also as a staff member for USA Wrestling. He was on the staff of the last three U.S. Olympic men's freestyle coaching teams. Duroe was named 2005 Freestyle Coach of the Year by USA Wrestling. He serves in his third season as the head wrestling coach at Cornell College, a Div. III school in Iowa. The program has shown substantial improvement during his tenure. His teams own the top two dual winning totals in school history (15-9-1 in 2005-06 and 14-8 in 2006-07). He was previously the coach of the Hawkeye Wrestling Club and the administrative assistant for the Univ. of Iowa wrestling program. He has extensive coaching experience on the high school, college and international levels. Duroe served in two professional coaching positions for USA Wrestling, the national governing body. From 1998-2000, he was USA Wrestling's Freestyle Developmental Coach. In 2001, Duroe served as USA Wrestling's Freestyle Resident Coach, working with the elite men's freestyle wrestlers at the U.S. Olympic Training Center. He also managed USA Wrestling's women's wrestling programs, including serving as the Head Women's National Coach. Under Duroe's leadership, the United States was successful in age-group World Championships in freestyle wrestling. The highlight of his efforts with the women's program came in 1999, when the United States won the World Team Title in women's wrestling. Prior to joining USA Wrestling's national staff, he coached U.S. teams on the national and international level in men's and women's wrestling. He served as the head coach of three U.S. Women's World Teams (1995-97). Duroe served as head coach of the women's team at the 1997 Pan American Championships. He also was an assistant coach for the 1996 Pan American Championships men's team. Duroe was also the head coach of the 1995 Cadet World Team. He also served as a coach at four U.S. Olympic Festivals (1989-90, 1993-94). Duroe served as head coach at Northern Michigan Univ. from 1980-85, and assistant coach from 1978-80. During his tenure at Northern Michigan, he tutored 27 All-Americans and three national champions. Duroe was also the coach for the Wildcat Wrestling Club at Northwestern Univ. from 1985-86 and an assistant wrestling coach for the Univ. of Pennsylvania from 2001-2003. Duroe served as the head coach at New Trier High School in Illinois from 1986-98, where he led his team to four conference and five regional team titles. As an athlete, Duroe was a two-time regional champion for Drake Univ. He served as captain of Drake's team for three years and has been inducted into the Drake University Wrestling Hall of Fame. Duroe competed on the national level in freestyle in the early 1980s. He was a three-time national freestyle placewinner, and was the 1983 AAU National champion. Lee Kemp of Alpharetta, Ga. Kemp served as coach of the 2007 Junior World freestyle team, which placed 11th in the standings and featured Junior World Champion Bubba Jenkins. In 2006, Kemp served as a member of the U.S. Freestyle World Team coaching staff, assisting with the team which won four individual World medals and placed third in the World Championships in Guangzhou, China. Kemp is a Distinguished Member of the National Wrestling Hall of Fame after one of the most successful competitive careers in history. Kemp won three World gold medals in freestyle wrestling (1978, 1979, 1982) and was a 1981 World bronze medalist. He was a member of the 1980 U.S. Olympic Team which did not attend the Moscow Olympic Games due to the U.S. government boycott. He also won four World Cup titles, and placed second at the 1984 Olympic Trials to Dave Schultz, who went on to win the Olympic Games in Los Angeles. Kemp also had one of the greatest college careers, winning three NCAA Div. I titles and placing second as a freshman for the Univ. of Wisconsin. He was a Junior National Champion as a prep wrestling star from Chadron, Ohio. Kemp served as a graduate assistant wrestling coach at the Univ. of Wisconsin. He also coached with high school and college teams in the cities where he held professional positions. While in the New York area, he assisted with the wrestling teams at Montclair State Univ. and Rutgers Univ., as well as at Montclair High School. When living in the Minneapolis area, he assisted with the Univ. of Minnesota and with Forest Lake High School. Kemp was a volunteer coach when Forest Lake High School won the Minnesota state team title, and helped develop state champion wrestlers with the program. He currently coaches the Lee Kemp Cooler Wrestling Club in Georgia. Kemp has had a successful career in business. He received his master's degree in marketing from the Univ. of Wisconsin in 1983. He worked in the advertising field with Burrell Communications in Chicago, then was in marketing with Clairol in New York City. In 1991, he became the ownership of a car dealership, Forest Lake Ford in Minnesota, where he held expand the business serving this suburban city. Kemp has also launched his own internet company, Hire the Winners, LLC, which provides an online assessment tool for sales personnel in the auto industry. Kerry McCoy, Stanford, Calif. McCoy served as a 2007 U.S. World Team Coach, helping lead the United States to a fourth place finish, led by World bronze medalist Daniel Cormier. McCoy was also a coach with the 2007 Pan American Games team, which won seven medals, led by champion Henry Cejudo. McCoy was a member of the coaching staff for the 2006 U.S. Freestyle World Team, which placed third in the World Championships in Guangzhou, China. He has coached numerous nationally-ranked men's freestyle wrestlers in recent years. He is currently the head wrestling coach at Stanford Univ., where he is serving in his third season. Previously, McCoy spent five years as assistant coach at Lehigh Univ. and three years as an assistant at Penn State Univ. He was also the Director of Wrestling for the Lehigh Valley Athletic Club. McCoy was a member of the 2000 and 2004 U.S. Olympic freestyle wrestling teams, placing fifth at the 2000 Games in Sydney, Australia and seventh at the 2004 Games in Athens, Greece, competing at super heavyweight. He was a 2003 World silver medalist, and placed fourth at the 1998 and 2001 World meets. McCoy won gold medals at the 2003 Pan American Games and won the World Cup four times (1999-2002). He was second at the 1998 Goodwill Games, and won the Pan American Championships twice. He won the U.S. National championships five straight years (2000-2004), and placed second on two occasions (1996, 1997). McCoy was also a 1992 Junior World champion, and placed seventh in the 1993 Espoir World Championships. He competed for the New York AC. McCoy won two NCAA titles for Penn State Univ. (1994, 1997) and placed third in the 1995 NCAA Championships. He received the Hodge Award in 1997 as the college wrestler of the year. McCoy won 131 of his last 132 matches in college, including an 88-match win streak. He served as Chairperson of the NCAA Student-Athlete Advisory Committee, and was also the President of Penn State's Student-Athlete Advisory Board. McCoy has also served on Athlete Advisory Committees for the U.S. Olympic Committee and USA Wrestling. A native of Middle Island, N.Y., McCoy was a New York state champion for Longwood High School in 1992 and was a state runner-up in 1991. Lou Rosselli, Columbus, Ohio Rosselli served as a 2007 U.S. World Team Coach, helping lead the United States to a fourth place finish, led by World bronze medalist Daniel Cormier. Two athletes who Rosselli served as club coach for Joe Heskett and Tommy Rowlands, both who competed on the 2007 U.S. World Team. Rosselli served as a World Team Coach for the 2006 U.S. Freestyle World Team, which placed third as a team at the 2006 World Championships in Guangzhou, China. The team featured four individual medalists, including World champion Bill Zadick. He was the assistant coach of the 2005 U.S. World University Games Team, which placed third in the team standings with three individual gold medalists in Izmir, Turkey. He serves as a club coach with the New York Athletic Club, one of the world's most successful wrestling clubs. Rosselli has also coached a number of U.S. teams on international tours. Rosselli is in his second season as the assistant wrestling coach at The Ohio State University, joining the staff of new head coach Tom Ryan. Previously, he served 11 seasons as an assistant coach at Edinboro Univ., eight years as a full-time assistant and three years as a volunteer assistant. Rosselli has helped build the Scotsmen into a nationally competitive program on the Div. I level. He is considered one of the nation's most talented assistant wrestling coaches. Rosselli competed at the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta, Ga., at 114.5 pounds. His quest for an Olympic medal was cut short when he broke his arm during a victory and had to withdraw from competition. Rosselli made the team with a stunning victory at the U.S. Olympic Team Trials. Rosselli was a 1997 World Cup champion, and won a silver medal at the 1998 Pan American Championships. He won U.S. National freestyle titles three times (1995, 1996, 1999) and was second in the 1998 U.S. Nationals. Rosselli was also a University Nationals freestyle champion in 1994. He competed for the New York AC. Rosselli placed third at the 1993 NCAA Championships and was fourth in the 1991 NCAA Championships for Edinboro Univ. Rosselli was selected the Outstanding Wrestler at both the Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference Tournament and the Eastern Wrestling League Championships in 1993. His 136 career victories still ranks third on Edinboro's all-time wins list. In 2004, Rosselli was inducted into the Edinboro University Athletic Hall of Fame. He was recognized as the 1993 Sox Harrison Award winner, presented to the top senior male athlete at Edinboro. A native of Middleport, N.Y., Rosselli was a two-time New York state champion at Royalton-Hartland High School, in addition to finishing second once and third once.
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TEMPE, Ariz. -- Patrick Pitsch, a senior 165-pound wrestler on the Arizona State University wrestling team, has been invited to compete in the 42nd Annual National Wrestling Coaches Association (NWCA) All-Star Classic presented by the United States Marine Corps that will take place November 19 at McArthur Court in Eugene, Ore., the Association announced Monday. The Classic, an exhibition event pitting the top wrestlers of each weight class against one another, will feature 10 bouts (one at each collegiate weight) and six of the top-ranked wrestlers in the nation. Pitsch, a senior from Spanaway, Wash., enters the season ranked No. 3 according to the Intermat/NWCA preseason individual rankings for 165 pounds and will face No. 2 Eric Tannenbaum of Michigan in the Classic. According to several other ranking services, Tannenbaum is the consensus national No. 2 behind returning NCAA champion Mark Perry of Iowa while Pitsch is ranked among the Top 5 in all four services, including No. 3 in a pair of rankings. The two-time defending Pac-10 champion at 165 pounds, Pitsch holds a career record of 68-38 in his three years in Tempe and will be looking for his first All-America honor this season. One of the Sun Devils' captains for the 2007-08 season, Pitsch has faced Tannenbaum once in his career, falling in an 8-3 decision in the semifinals of the Cliff Keen/Las Vegas Invitational last year. Pitsch is the 21st different Sun Devil to be included in the All-Star Classic and the first to compete at 165 pounds since 2000 when the late Steve Blackford scored a 13-1 major decision over Boise State's Kirk White. The last time a Sun Devil competed in the event was last year when Brian Stith dropped a 2-1 decision to Iowa State's Trent Paulson at 157 pounds. Overall, ASU wrestlers hold a 10-12-1 record in the event with three no-contests due to injury. For more information on the All-Star Classic, including ticket information, visit: http://www.nwcaonline.com/allstarclassic.cfm.