We can save the single purpose threads for the conference and NCAA tournaments and keep this thread for general bits of wrestling news.
The season kicked off with the Binghamton Open and the team did pretty well overall (though not quite as well as Penn State, who remain the team to beat). I wouldn't have even mentioned this but for the start of the season by Nahshon Garrett, who began the season ranked #3 in the country.
In a preseason exhibition, Garrett beat #7 Jarrod Patterson, an Oklahoma senior, 6-1 in OT. He followed that up by winning the Binghamton Open over #2 Nico Megaludis of Penn State 6-5. He'll almost certainly be #2 in the next rankings, behind only Jesse Delgado, the returning national champion. Mega beat Garrett last year, so this was nice opportunity for vengeance, as they didn't meet in the NCAAs.
Getting other good results from our frosh, so while this may be a bit of a rebuilding year (by Cornell's recent standards) it is still going to be a very good year.
Quote from: ugarteWe can save the single purpose threads for the conference and NCAA tournaments and keep this thread for general bits of wrestling news.
The season kicked off with the Binghamton Open and the team did pretty well overall (though not quite as well as Penn State, who remain the team to beat). I wouldn't have even mentioned this but for the start of the season by Nahshon Garrett, who began the season ranked #3 in the country.
In a preseason exhibition, Garrett beat #7 Jarrod Patterson, an Oklahoma senior, 6-1 in OT. He followed that up by winning the Binghamton Open over #2 Nico Megaludis of Penn State 6-5. He'll almost certainly be #2 in the next rankings, behind only Jesse Delgado, the returning national champion. Mega beat Garrett last year, so this was nice opportunity for vengeance, as they didn't meet in the NCAAs.
Getting other good results from our frosh, so while this may be a bit of a rebuilding year (by Cornell's recent standards) it is still going to be a very good year.
It seems that while there's no Kyle Dake this year, we have more depth up-and-down the lineup than ever before.
Quote from: scoop85Quote from: ugarteWe can save the single purpose threads for the conference and NCAA tournaments and keep this thread for general bits of wrestling news.
The season kicked off with the Binghamton Open and the team did pretty well overall (though not quite as well as Penn State, who remain the team to beat). I wouldn't have even mentioned this but for the start of the season by Nahshon Garrett, who began the season ranked #3 in the country.
In a preseason exhibition, Garrett beat #7 Jarrod Patterson, an Oklahoma senior, 6-1 in OT. He followed that up by winning the Binghamton Open over #2 Nico Megaludis of Penn State 6-5. He'll almost certainly be #2 in the next rankings, behind only Jesse Delgado, the returning national champion. Mega beat Garrett last year, so this was nice opportunity for vengeance, as they didn't meet in the NCAAs.
Getting other good results from our frosh, so while this may be a bit of a rebuilding year (by Cornell's recent standards) it is still going to be a very good year.
It seems that while there's no Kyle Dake this year, we have more depth up-and-down the lineup than ever before.
Until we hit heavy... sigh.
Easy win over Bingo this evening 33-6. The only two losses were at the weights were the regular starters (Garrett and Nevinger) were taking the night off. The freshman class continue to impress as Grey earns a tech fall while Realbuto and Dean get dominant pins.
5 Big Red wrestlers won NY titles today: Grey (133), Villalonga (149), Realbuto (157), Dean (184), and Bennett (197). Garrett would have been a heavy favorite to win at 125 had he wrestled and Nevinger would have been favored at 141 (though Hofstra's Luke Vaith is very good).
Right now I think 7 starters are set, barring injury. There are the two veteran national title contenders in Garrett and Nevinger who are both top 5 ranked. Throw in the super frosh of Grey, Realbuto and Dean. Jace Bennett is probably the starter at 197 and he is top 20 ranked. And Styker Lane is the best heavy, though CU wrestling fans know that is faint praise as the Big Red continue to struggle at that weight. 149 is a two man fight with former super recruit Chris Villalonga trying to hold off yet another freshman in Alex Cisneros. That leaves 165 and 174 where coach Koll will try to find the hot wrestler every weekend.
Dave Dean (http://highschoolsports.mlive.com/news/article/-2559880334825051834/lowell-wrestling-coach-dave-dean-takes-cornell-university-olympic-development-position/), father of freshman Gabe, named head of "Olympic Development Program " at Cornell. Haven't seen any other mentions of this. Interesting.
Cornell crushed Maryland 31-9 in the first meet at MSG, but third-ranked Nevinger lost 5-0 in his first match of the year. Gabe Dean wrestled tough against Maryland's third-ranked 184 pounder, but came up short 5-3.
And then beat Illinois 18-15 thanks to Stryker Lane's 2 OT victory at Hvy. And Gabe Dean's pin with 5 seconds remaining.
Quote from: mountainredAnd then beat Illinois 18-15 thanks to Stryker Lane's 2 OT victory at Hvy. And Gabe Dean's pin with 5 seconds remaining.
From TeamUSA (http://www.teamusa.org/USA-Wrestling/Features/2013/December/01/Plenty-of-stars-put-on-show-at-Grapple-at-the-Garden)
QuoteIn the featured college dual meet, sixth-ranked Cornell and seventh-ranked Illinois were deadlocked 15-15 entering the final match at heavyweight.
The match went through two cycles of overtime before Cornell's Stryker Lane earned a hard-fought 4-3 victory over Illinois wrestler Christopher Lopez. That gave the Big Red a dramatic 18-15 win.
"Oh my goodness, that was so fun," Lane said. "I could hear the crowd cheering for me. That got me pumped up and made me forget how I tired I was. I was glad I was able to get the job done at one of the best venues in the world."
Cornell and Illinois highlighted the large field of 16 college squads that each competed in a pair of duals on Sunday.
Delgado, an Illinois junior, was named Outstanding Wrestler in the college division. The top-ranked Delgado, a returning NCAA champion, topped second-ranked Nahshon Garrett of Cornell 6-2 at 125 pounds. Garrett placed third at the 2013 NCAAs as a freshman.
"I didn't think I wrestled well at all," Delgado said. "I wasn't moving my feet too well and my shots weren't crisp. I just had to gut it out. It was a tough match, but I'm going to keep getting better and it won't be that close the next time."
Delgado clearly hasn't taken the course in athletes' gracious platitudes (http://www.arcamax.com/thefunnies/beetlebailey/s-1430647).
BYW, Kyle Dake did not appear as planned in Grapple at the Garden due to a broken hand.
http://www.intermatwrestle.com/articles/12268
Quote from: David HardingBYW, Kyle Dake did not appear as planned in Grapple at the Garden due to a broken hand.
http://www.intermatwrestle.com/articles/12268
Sounds like a 1980's WWF pay-per-view...
Impressive performance for the wrestling team on their annual Las Vegas trip. The team finished fourth behind #6 Oklahoma, #7 Nebraska and #10 Ohio State, but were a man down as Mike Nevinger (149) was a late scratch. Mike's points certainly would have pushed the Big Red past Ohio State and maybe past Nebraska.
The youngsters continue to impress and these guys have a very bright future. Sophomore Nahshon Garrett rolled to the 125 title in a loaded field that had a half dozen top 15 wrestlers. I don't think he gave up an offensive point. Our other champ was Freshman Gabe Dean who won at 184 knocking off the #5 guy in the nation in the semis. Freshman Brian Realbuto finished second at 157, losing only to #3 James Green by a point in a match that could have gone either way. Freshman Mark Grey finished an oddly disappointing 4th at 133; it says something about your freshman class if 4th place in a top flight tournament is "oddly disappointing." Freshman Dylan Palacio came in unseeded at 165, but finished 6th. He beat three ranked wrestlers in the process and probably needs a year of weight training to be a serious A-A threat. But he is fun to watch.
Chris Villalonga also deserves a shout out. He's been dealing with high expectations as a blue chip recruit, but he looks like he has turned a corner. He finished 3rd at 149, losing only to defending national champ Kendric Maple and twice defeating #7 Scott Sakaguchi of Oregon State (CV was 0-3 against him before and the losses weren't that close).
Following up on my 11/24 post, CV and Palacio are probably now the starters for the foreseeable future. That only leaves 174 as unsettled.
Cornell freshman Gabe Dean just snapped two-time NCAA champ Ed Ruth's 84-match winning streak in the finals of the Southern Scuffle. 7-4.
http://instagram.com/p/isIDmqmzKr/#
Quote from: Al DeFlorioCornell freshman Gabe Dean just snapped two-time NCAA champ Ed Ruth's 84-match winning streak in the finals of the Southern Scuffle. 7-4.
http://instagram.com/p/isIDmqmzKr/#
Phenomenal performance. Gabe's title give the Big Red 2 champs; Nahshon Garrett defended his new #1 ranking by winning at 125.
Dean-Ruth video here: http://www.flowrestling.org/coverage/251121-Southern-Scuffle-2014/video/728191-Ed-Ruth-Penn-State-vs-Gabe-Dean-Cornell
Thanks for the link to the match video. I "watched" it via live stats and knew Gabe had won but had no idea he did so decisively, or that Ruth's winning streak was that impressive. Gabe Dean is the real deal.
Quote from: dag14Thanks for the link to the match video. I "watched" it via live stats and knew Gabe had won but had no idea he did so decisively, or that Ruth's winning streak was that impressive. Gabe Dean is the real deal.
I "watched" it the same way. That's probably what it was like "watching" big Cornell away football games in the 30s and 40s on the large gridiron board in Barton Hall.
Garrett-Megaludis video here: http://www.flowrestling.org/coverage/251121-Southern-Scuffle-2014/video/728196-125-Final-Nahshon-Garrett-Cornell-vs-Nico-Megaludis
Quote from: Al DeFlorioCornell freshman Gabe Dean just snapped two-time NCAA champ Ed Ruth's 84-match winning streak in the finals of the Southern Scuffle. 7-4.
http://instagram.com/p/isIDmqmzKr/#
Dean gets Outstanding Wrestler Award (http://www.pennlive.com/sports/index.ssf/2014/01/penn_states_team_title_somewha.html). Taylor wins, now that Dake has graduated.
Cornell lays out Lehigh 33-7, winning 8 of the 10 weights. Biggest win is probably freshman Brian Realbuto's major decision (8-0) over top 10 ranked and defending EIWA champ Joe Napoli. Nice win for Villalonga over a ranked opponent as well.
I saw this posted on the wrestlingreport forum about William Koll (Rob's son and wrestling recruit): http://www.newyorkwrestlingnews.com/news_article/show/340750-a-winning-formula-lansing-s-two-time-nys-champ-william-koll-selects-cornell
It's a good read and makes William out to be a great person, in addition to being a 2X state champ.
Quote from: mountainredI saw this posted on the wrestlingreport forum about William Koll (Rob's son and wrestling recruit): http://www.newyorkwrestlingnews.com/news_article/show/340750-a-winning-formula-lansing-s-two-time-nys-champ-william-koll-selects-cornell
It's a good read and makes William out to be a great person, in addition to being a 2X state champ.
Great story! Thanks for sharing.
Cornell skunked Brown, 38-0.
Cornell leads Rutgers 13-6 at the break. Grey loses in an uninspired match. Not an impressive first half, other than Garrett.
Quote from: ithacatCornell leads Rutgers 13-6 at the break. Grey loses in an uninspired match. Not an impressive first half, other than Garrett.
I thought Mike Nevinger looked pretty good, winning 13-2. Should have been given that fall at the end of the period.
Quote from: Al DeFlorioQuote from: ithacatCornell leads Rutgers 13-6 at the break. Grey loses in an uninspired match. Not an impressive first half, other than Garrett.
I thought Mike Nevinger looked pretty good, winning 13-2. Should have been given that fall at the end of the period.
Nevinger's match was interesting. Looked like he had that pin at the end of the 1st, then almost got pinned, before taking care of his opponent. In the 2nd half of the dual Gabe Dean was the star. Pickett had a thrilling (if mostly boring) match, at least the end was thrilling. JAP almost pulled off an upset before losing in SV.
29-9 final. Decent crowd of 2,833 too.
Cornell shuts out Penn 32-0 and dominates Princeton 36-7. No losses against Penn but 4 pins vs. Princeton.
Quote from: ugarteCornell shuts out Penn 32-0 and dominates Princeton 36-7. No losses against Penn but 4 pins vs. Princeton.
Correction: Penn was docked a point for some shenanigans from their bench, so actual final score 32 - (-1)
Quote from: ugarteQuote from: ugarteCornell shuts out Penn 32-0 and dominates Princeton 36-7. No losses against Penn but 4 pins vs. Princeton.
Correction: Penn was docked a point for some shenanigans from their bench, so actual final score 32 - (-1)
Wow, it wasn't that many years ago (or was it? time flies...) when Cornell v Penn duals were tight affairs. I remember watching on tv a few years back Cornell winning at Penn by narrowly taking the last match.
Obviously the Cornell wrestling program has made huge strives forward. Over the last few years have the other Ivies stayed about the same, gotten worse, or improved but not at a rate on par with Cornell?
Quote from: JasonN95Quote from: ugarteQuote from: ugarteCornell shuts out Penn 32-0 and dominates Princeton 36-7. No losses against Penn but 4 pins vs. Princeton.
Correction: Penn was docked a point for some shenanigans from their bench, so actual final score 32 - (-1)
Wow, it wasn't that many years ago (or was it? time flies...) when Cornell v Penn duals were tight affairs. I remember watching on tv a few years back Cornell winning at Penn by narrowly taking the last match.
Obviously the Cornell wrestling program has made huge strives forward. Over the last few years have the other Ivies stayed about the same, gotten worse, or improved but not at a rate on par with Cornell?
Cornell has pulled away from the pack. The other Ivies have still collectively gotten a few All-Americans (or at least been competitive for AA) but don't have our top-end talent or depth. The Penn match was "closer" than it looks from the score, because some of the individual matches were close. Harvard had some very good wrestlers in the last few years (O'Connor, Jantzen, W. Peppleman), but all of them have graduated.
Despite getting shut out, Brown and Penn each have a top 10-ish wrestler at 184 ... but they wrestle in the same weight class as our #3 Gabe Dean. Penn has a guy in the top 20 at 165... and Dylan Palacio is just a little better. Penn has a guy in the top 20 at 125... we have the #1 wrestler in the country. The only weight class where the best Ivy wrestler is (a) not Cornell and (b) ranked, is at 174 where Duke Pickett is unranked and Columbia has the guy currently sitting at #20. If things go right this weekend, maybe they'll flip places.
We're relatively weak at 197 and Hwt. for an elite program, and have taken losses at those weights (with our first string) in Ivy matches this year. Our heavy is getting better as the year goes along, though - a soph who has taken the starting spot from a senior who qualified for NCAAs last year. Plus this is a rumored incoming frosh http://www.flowrestling.org/coverage/251141-2014-Temecula-Valley-Invitational/video/730365-220-lbs-finals-Jeramy-Sweany-Vacaville-vs-Miracle-Tausaga-MM#.UvOcffldXEk, so we may still be getting better as a team even though we're going to graduate two All-Americans (if you go by chalk) in Nevinger and Villalonga.
Quote from: ugartePlus this is a rumored incoming frosh http://www.flowrestling.org/coverage/251141-2014-Temecula-Valley-Invitational/video/730365-220-lbs-finals-Jeramy-Sweany-Vacaville-vs-Miracle-Tausaga-MM#.UvOcffldXEk, so we may still be getting better as a team even though we're going to graduate two All-Americans (if you go by chalk) in Nevinger and Villalonga.
I believe Villalonga has additional eligibility, but don't know if he'll graduate this June and therefore be ineligible by Ivy rules. Note Koll's comments at 149 in his December 9 update here:
http://wrestlingreport.com/current_news/viewtopic.php?f=28&t=47249
Quote from: Al DeFlorioQuote from: ugartePlus this is a rumored incoming frosh http://www.flowrestling.org/coverage/251141-2014-Temecula-Valley-Invitational/video/730365-220-lbs-finals-Jeramy-Sweany-Vacaville-vs-Miracle-Tausaga-MM#.UvOcffldXEk, so we may still be getting better as a team even though we're going to graduate two All-Americans (if you go by chalk) in Nevinger and Villalonga.
I believe Villalonga has additional eligibility, but don't know if he'll graduate this June and therefore be ineligible by Ivy rules. Note Koll's comments at 149 in his December 9 update here:
http://wrestlingreport.com/current_news/viewtopic.php?f=28&t=47249
Yeah, that's always confusing. I see that he wrestled his frosh year, but if he got the medical waiver, he could come back. I think Koll calling him a junior suggests that he's planning his courseload to spend five years as a full-time undergrad.
Quote from: ugarteQuote from: Al DeFlorioQuote from: ugartePlus this is a rumored incoming frosh http://www.flowrestling.org/coverage/251141-2014-Temecula-Valley-Invitational/video/730365-220-lbs-finals-Jeramy-Sweany-Vacaville-vs-Miracle-Tausaga-MM#.UvOcffldXEk, so we may still be getting better as a team even though we're going to graduate two All-Americans (if you go by chalk) in Nevinger and Villalonga.
I believe Villalonga has additional eligibility, but don't know if he'll graduate this June and therefore be ineligible by Ivy rules. Note Koll's comments at 149 in his December 9 update here:
http://wrestlingreport.com/current_news/viewtopic.php?f=28&t=47249
Yeah, that's always confusing. I see that he wrestled his frosh year, but if he got the medical waiver, he could come back. I think Koll calling him a junior suggests that he's planning his courseload to spend five years as a full-time undergrad.
His last match freshman year was in December, so maybe it's just an additional semester. I'm assuming--and could be wrong--those fall 2010 matches were in a Cornell singlet or they wouldn't be listed on his Cornell record. He wrestled quite a few matches but in just a few tournaments. I don't know how the NCAA counts things for getting a medical waiver in wrestling.
Nice New York Wrestling News article here: http://www.newyorkwrestlingnews.com/news_article/show/346438?referrer_id=1024271
Cornell wins their 12th straight Ivy title and 63rd straight Ivy dual by beating Columbia 22-15.
A lot of things fell into place for Columbia. Four Big Red starters were out and the Lions won all four of those matches, including the dual's only pin. But Jace Bennett and Jacob Aiken-Phillips get shutouts at 197 and Hwt. to secure the win.
Cornell is competing in the National Duals tournament and won their opening match over Virginia Tech - a talented but not elite squad - 34-0. There were a lot of close matches but we won 'em all. Big wins for Jace Bennett (a pin) and Jacob Aiken-Phillips at the top two weights.
In alumni news, Kyle Dake won the Cerro Pelado tournament in Havana while Jordan Burroughs - his top competition for the USA singlet in his weight class - finally lost for the first time in years to fellow American Nick Marable at a tournament in Turkey. Really hoping Kyle can break through and beat Burroughs the next time they meet.
#4 Cornell beats #11 Oklahoma 23-20 in the National Duals semis and will face #1 Minnesota in the finals with a decent chance to win, given the weight-by-weight matchups. Cornell in red.
125 - Brancale s vs. #1 Garrett
133 - #8 Thorn vs. #15 Grey
141 - #6 C. Dardanes vs. #4 Nevinger
149 - #5 N. Dardanes vs. #4 Villalonga
157 - #9 Ness vs #6 Realbuto
165 - Zilverberg vs. #10 Palacio
174 - #4 Storley vs. Shanaman
184 - #5 Steinhaus vs. #2 Dean
197 - #1 Schiller vs. #17 Bennett
285 - #5 Nelson vs. Aiken-Phillips
Palacio's Overtime Fall Headlines Wrestling's National Duals Final Loss To No. 1 Minnesota (http://www.cornellbigred.com/news/2014/2/17/WREST_0217145952.aspx)
#1 Minnesota 24, #4 Cornell 15
Feb. 17, 2014 * Columbus, Ohio
125 - #1 Nahshon Garrett (Cor) won by decision over Sam Brancale (Minn), 12-5
133 - #8 David Thorn (Minn) won by major decision over #15 Mark Grey (Cor), 11-3
141 –#5 Chris Dardanes (Minn) won by major decision over Logan David (Cor), 16-6
149 - #3 Nick Dardanes (Minn) won by decision over #6 Chris Villalonga (Cor), 5-4 (sv1)
157 - #5 Dylan Ness (Minn) won by fall over #10 Brian Realbuto (Cor), 1:12
165 - #14 Dylan Palacio (Cor) won by fall over Danny Zilverberg (Minn), 7:36
174 - #6 Logan Storley (Minn) won by decision over Craig Eifert (Cor), 8-2
184 - #3 Gabe Dean (Cor) won by decision over #8 Kevin Steinhaus (Minn), 3-2 (OT2)
197 - #4 Scott Schiller (Minn) won by major decision over Jace Bennett (Cor), 11-1
285 - Jacob Aiken-Phillips (Cor) won by decision over Michael Kroells (Minn), 7-6
Cornell finishes its dual season with a 28-19 win over Hofstra. Only three of CU's regular starters competed (Jace, JAP, and Nahshon) and all won comfortably.
Nice recap of how our incoming class did in the state wrestling tournaments: http://wrestlingreport.com/current_news/viewtopic.php?p=157523#p157523
SPOILER: They did very well.
Quote from: ugarteNice recap of how our incoming class did in the state wrestling tournaments: http://wrestlingreport.com/current_news/viewtopic.php?p=157523#p157523
SPOILER: They did very well.
Nice. Though can someone explain to me how one wrester wins
6 state titles? Last I knew, high school was only 4 years, even in Alabama.
Quote from: Jeff Hopkins '82Quote from: ugarteNice recap of how our incoming class did in the state wrestling tournaments: http://wrestlingreport.com/current_news/viewtopic.php?p=157523#p157523
SPOILER: They did very well.
Nice. Though can someone explain to me how one wrester wins 6 state titles? Last I knew, high school was only 4 years, even in Alabama.
You start in junior high school.
Quote from: Al DeFlorioQuote from: Jeff Hopkins '82Quote from: ugarteNice recap of how our incoming class did in the state wrestling tournaments: http://wrestlingreport.com/current_news/viewtopic.php?p=157523#p157523
SPOILER: They did very well.
Nice. Though can someone explain to me how one wrester wins 6 state titles? Last I knew, high school was only 4 years, even in Alabama.
You start in junior high school.
6 is impressive -- didn't Nickerson have 5 titles? That kid out of Rochester, who said Cornell is his dream school, just won his second title (I think he has three sectional titles) and he's a freshman.
Quote from: Al DeFlorioQuote from: Jeff Hopkins '82Quote from: ugarteNice recap of how our incoming class did in the state wrestling tournaments: http://wrestlingreport.com/current_news/viewtopic.php?p=157523#p157523
SPOILER: They did very well.
Nice. Though can someone explain to me how one wrester wins 6 state titles? Last I knew, high school was only 4 years, even in Alabama.
You start in junior high school.
It is pretty amazing to win that many titles if they aren't wisp-thin. The lowest high school weight class is 106 pounds, a tough go for most upperclassmen (the lowest collegiate weight class is 125), so you'll often see them won by freshmen or kids in junior high. Troy Nickerson won 5 NY state titles before coming to Cornell and wrestling at 125.
Womack's 6 titles pretty much chart him as a growing boy: 7th and 8th grade at 103 (2009 and 2010); as a freshman at 112 (2011); soph at 126 (2012); GROWTH SPURT junior and senior at 160 (2013 and 2014) http://highschoolsports.al.com/news/article/-3954861276059906754/wrestling-scottsboros-brandon-womack-claims-fifth-state-championship/
Quote from: Jeff Hopkins '82Quote from: ugarteNice recap of how our incoming class did in the state wrestling tournaments: http://wrestlingreport.com/current_news/viewtopic.php?p=157523#p157523
SPOILER: They did very well.
Nice. Though can someone explain to me how one wrester wins 6 state titles? Last I knew, high school was only 4 years, even in Alabama.
In New York State, junior high kids can compete on varsity teams. It doesn't happen often, which is probably a good thing.
Quote from: dbilmesQuote from: Jeff Hopkins '82Quote from: ugarteNice recap of how our incoming class did in the state wrestling tournaments: http://wrestlingreport.com/current_news/viewtopic.php?p=157523#p157523
SPOILER: They did very well.
Nice. Though can someone explain to me how one wrester wins 6 state titles? Last I knew, high school was only 4 years, even in Alabama.
In New York State, junior high kids can compete on varsity teams. It doesn't happen often, which is probably a good thing.
I don't know if it's still the case, but middle schoolers in NY used to have to pass a fairly rigorous physical fitness test to play up on a varsity team. Even for sports like golf and tennis.
Quote from: ugarteQuote from: Al DeFlorioQuote from: Jeff Hopkins '82Quote from: ugarteNice recap of how our incoming class did in the state wrestling tournaments: http://wrestlingreport.com/current_news/viewtopic.php?p=157523#p157523
SPOILER: They did very well.
Nice. Though can someone explain to me how one wrester wins 6 state titles? Last I knew, high school was only 4 years, even in Alabama.
You start in junior high school.
It is pretty amazing to win that many titles if they aren't wisp-thin. The lowest high school weight class is 106 pounds, a tough go for most upperclassmen (the lowest collegiate weight class is 125), so you'll often see them won by freshmen or kids in junior high. Troy Nickerson won 5 NY state titles before coming to Cornell and wrestling at 125.
Womack's 6 titles pretty much chart him as a growing boy: 7th and 8th grade at 103 (2009 and 2010); as a freshman at 112 (2011); soph at 126 (2012); GROWTH SPURT junior and senior at 160 (2013 and 2014) http://highschoolsports.al.com/news/article/-3954861276059906754/wrestling-scottsboros-brandon-womack-claims-fifth-state-championship/
Keeps this up and he'll be our long-sought heavyweight contender.:-P
Quote from: ugarteQuote from: Al DeFlorioQuote from: Jeff Hopkins '82Quote from: ugarteNice recap of how our incoming class did in the state wrestling tournaments: http://wrestlingreport.com/current_news/viewtopic.php?p=157523#p157523
SPOILER: They did very well.
Nice. Though can someone explain to me how one wrester wins 6 state titles? Last I knew, high school was only 4 years, even in Alabama.
You start in junior high school.
It is pretty amazing to win that many titles if they aren't wisp-thin. The lowest high school weight class is 106 pounds, a tough go for most upperclassmen (the lowest collegiate weight class is 125), so you'll often see them won by freshmen or kids in junior high. Troy Nickerson won 5 NY state titles before coming to Cornell and wrestling at 125.
Womack's 6 titles pretty much chart him as a growing boy: 7th and 8th grade at 103 (2009 and 2010); as a freshman at 112 (2011); soph at 126 (2012); GROWTH SPURT junior and senior at 160 (2013 and 2014) http://highschoolsports.al.com/news/article/-3954861276059906754/wrestling-scottsboros-brandon-womack-claims-fifth-state-championship/
NY has a 99lb class.
Quote from: Chris '03Quote from: dbilmesQuote from: Jeff Hopkins '82Quote from: ugarteNice recap of how our incoming class did in the state wrestling tournaments: http://wrestlingreport.com/current_news/viewtopic.php?p=157523#p157523
SPOILER: They did very well.
Nice. Though can someone explain to me how one wrester wins 6 state titles? Last I knew, high school was only 4 years, even in Alabama.
In New York State, junior high kids can compete on varsity teams. It doesn't happen often, which is probably a good thing.
I don't know if it's still the case, but middle schoolers in NY used to have to pass a fairly rigorous physical fitness test to play up on a varsity team. Even for sports like golf and tennis.
the test is much easier now. mostly consists of doing some jumping and some pullups. is not nearly as hard to pass as it was 20-30 years ago.
Dustin Brown played varsity hockey at Ithaca High School as an eighth grader, the first year he was eligible to do so. He left for the OHL after 9th grade....
Quote from: ithacatQuote from: ugarteQuote from: Al DeFlorioQuote from: Jeff Hopkins '82Quote from: ugarteNice recap of how our incoming class did in the state wrestling tournaments: http://wrestlingreport.com/current_news/viewtopic.php?p=157523#p157523
SPOILER: They did very well.
Nice. Though can someone explain to me how one wrester wins 6 state titles? Last I knew, high school was only 4 years, even in Alabama.
You start in junior high school.
It is pretty amazing to win that many titles if they aren't wisp-thin. The lowest high school weight class is 106 pounds, a tough go for most upperclassmen (the lowest collegiate weight class is 125), so you'll often see them won by freshmen or kids in junior high. Troy Nickerson won 5 NY state titles before coming to Cornell and wrestling at 125.
Womack's 6 titles pretty much chart him as a growing boy: 7th and 8th grade at 103 (2009 and 2010); as a freshman at 112 (2011); soph at 126 (2012); GROWTH SPURT junior and senior at 160 (2013 and 2014) http://highschoolsports.al.com/news/article/-3954861276059906754/wrestling-scottsboros-brandon-womack-claims-fifth-state-championship/
NY has a 99lb class.
I shouldn't have been so definitive. It was a pretty quick googling and I thought the reference was to a standard for an interstate body.