Takedown Report

Amateur Wrestling Reports

Pitt County Wrestling coaches reflect on season

By Jake Keator, The Daily Refelctor
Sunday, February 17, 2019
GREENSBORO — With the high school wrestling season officially in the books following Saturday night’s state finals, coaches are beginning to reflect on their seasons and plan ahead for next year.  The North Pitt Panthers captured a Pitt County championship and 2-A Eastern Plains title, both goals they hope to repeat next season. NP will lose some strong wrestlers in graduating seniors Dalton English at 138 pounds and Dominic Maurizzio (132), but other notable names will return, including Raheem Jones (182) and Alex Espinosa-Johnson (195). “I think our upper weight classes, about 160 and up, will be really strong next year,” North Pitt coach Chris Young said. “Raheem for example, things just clicked with him the last month of the season and he placed in the state finals this year.”

As a whole, Young was proud of the way his team fought through adversity. “In the beginning of the year I had high expectations,” he said. “It was an up-and-down season. I wasn’t sure if we were going to have any impact wrestlers, and we dealt with a lot of injuries. We won the Pitt County championships and the conference tournament, so we had a slow start in the beginning but really picked up in the end.” Ayden-Grifton capped off the season in style with Ray Darden taking home the 2-A state title at 195 pounds Saturday night. Rest of the story at http://www.reflector.com/High-Schools/2019/02/17/Wrestling-coaches-look-ahead-to-2020-season.html

April 22, 2019 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Weighty Decisions

By Brian Jerzak
Lakeville North senior Bryce Benhart didn’t have to wrestle his senior year. A lot of high school athletes that I have talked to in a similar situation decide not to continue to be a multi-sport athlete. They choose to focus on the sport they will be playing in college. What makes Benhart’s story even more interesting is very few high school athletes – while in similar situations – had as much at stake as the Panthers’ senior. Well before the 2018-19 high school wrestling season has started, Benhart knew he had a football scholarship to the University of Nebraska waiting for him. Despite the obvious chances he was taking, the benefits of continuing with wrestling, the opportunity to become a state champion and a brief conversation with one of Minnesota’s most successful high school wrestlers convinced Benhart to decide to get back on the mat for one more season. “I started both wrestling and football in third grade,” Benhart said. Benhart was motivated to be the best football player he could be from an early age.

“I was always a bigger kid and was always on the offensive or defensive line,” Benhart said. “My dad always told me you have the talent – don’t waste it. Do something with your talent. Use that to go somewhere big to play football. Get a college degree out of it.” Part of getting the most out of his talent included becoming the best athlete he could be, but the future wrestling state champion did not dominate on the mat early. With football always on his mind, Benhart’s father helped keep his son on the mat by showing his son how wrestling could help him on the football field. “I got beat on the first couple of years,” Benhart admitted, “but my dad pulled up a list of all the NFL players who wrestled – guys like Ray Lewis, Roddy White and all those guys that wrestled in high school. I knew wrestling would help me with football.” The more he wrestled, the more comfortable he got on the mat. He didn’t just wrestle in the winter; he got involved in freestyle and Greco. “I wanted to keep my wrestling going,” the 6’9″ Benhart said. “I preferred Greco because of all the throwing. When I was younger, I got put on a national team and went to Indiana. I ended my freestyle and Greco career after my sophomore year and being on the Minnesota national team again. After that, I stuck with off-season weight lifting.” Soon his success in Greco translated to folkstyle.

“My first two years in high school I wasn’t the greatest,” Benhart admitted. “Around my sophomore year, I started to get to know what moves worked for me and the technique I need to work on. When I started to learn to use my leverage against other people, I started winning my matches.” He started winning his matches – in part – because he learned to use his frame. “I am good at extending people and making people carry my weight,” the future Cornhusker said. “If I can take them down, they pretty much are not getting out. I was a pinner. I think I had twenty pins my senior year.” “On my feet, I am going to use an under hook to a front headlock,” Benhart continued, “or an under hook to a snatch single.”

Benhart knew big things were coming for him on the football field. “The summer before my junior year I got my first Division I offer. After the first offer, I started to get more colleges contacting me. (Recruiting) took off from there. I started visiting more places and started to get more offers. At some points, it was a stressful process. I know most people don’t get this shot, but I put a lot of pressure on myself to pick the right school and coaches for me.” As a junior, Benhart had a dominating season on the mat against almost everyone – with one notable exception – former Apple Valley four-time state champion and current Minnesota Gophers’ All-American Gable Steveson. Rest of the story at https://theguillotine.com/2019/04/weighty-decisions/?mc_cid=71d49ec247&mc_eid=2ef7cbca4b

April 22, 2019 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Q & A with Emily Shilson, Minnesota’s best female wrestler, who’s finally done wrestling boys

Emily Shilson has been wrestling against boys, and usually winning, for about a decade. But that’s over, now that she has completed her senior season in high school.  Shilson looks ahead to wrestling against women at one of the 33 colleges that offer the sport. She hasn’t picked one yet. She will continue to pursue her ultimate goal — the Olympics. Already, she is a 2018 Cadet World Champion and 2017 silver medalist, and a 2018 Youth Olympic Games Champion. Shilson wrestled for Centennial for four seasons and Mounds View her senior year, all at 106 pounds. She qualified for the state tournament the last three years, as a section runner-up and two-time section champion.
She was never able to win a match at state, in three individual tournaments and two team tournaments, but posted a 139-64 career record, including 88-20 the last three. The Shilsons are a wrestling family. Rest of the story at https://www.presspubs.com/shoreview/sports/local/q-a-with-emily-shilson-minnesota-s-best-female-wrestler/article_03c18fbc-608a-11e9-a5c8-939154968f0e.html?mc_cid=71d49ec247&mc_eid=2ef7cbca4b

April 22, 2019 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Top ACTIVE College Division I Coaches in Dual meet wins Top 30 w/ at least 100 wins

ACTIVE Coaches (D-I)– Top 30 (or so) with at least 100 wins    

  1. Gary Taylor (Rider)                                        442 –  retired in 2017
  2. John Smith (Oklahoma State Univ.)               411
  3. Tom Borelli (Central Michigan)                      329 
  4. Rob Koll (Cornell Univ.)                                305
  5. Duane Goldman (Indiana Univ.)                    297 – retired in 2018
  6. Brian Smith (Missouri/Syracuse)                    285
  7. Tom Ryan (Ohio State/Hofstra)                     270
  8. Mark Manning (Nebraska/Northern Iowa)     267
  9. Jim Zalesky (Oregon State/Iowa)                   266
  10. Joe McFarland (Michigan/Indiana)                 238 –  retired in 2018
  11. Tom Brands (Iowa & Virginia Tech)              235
  12. Barry Davis (Wisconsin)                                 234 –  retired in 2018
  13. Tim Flynn (Edinboro State Univ.)                  227
  14. Joel Greenlee (Ohio Univ.)                             221
  15. Roger Reina (Pennsylvania, Un. Of)              219  – returned in 2017
  16. Pat Santoro (Lehigh University, Maryland)   192
  17. Cael Sanderson (Penn State, Iowa State) –     184
  18. Pat Popolizio (North Carolina St., SUNY-Binghampton) –  183
  19. Jim Andrassy (Kent State Univ.)                    180 
  20. Kevin Dresser (Iowa State/Virginia Tech Univ.)        178
  21. Scott Goodale (Rutgers University) –             173
  22. Steve Martin (Old Dominion University) –     159
  23. Steve Garland (Virginia University)               158
  24. John Stutzman (Buffalo SUNY, Bloomsburg) –  143
  25. Dan Wirnsberger (Bucknell, Bloomsburg)     142
  26. Rob Hjerling (The Citadel) –                           140
  27. Jay Weiss (Harvard Univ.) –                           136
  28. Kerry McCoy (Maryland, Stanford) –            131
  29. Mark Cody (Presbyterian, Oklahoma U., American U.) – 113 – I – returned 2018
  30. Frank Romano (Kent State) – 99  –  I  –  at a D-II school now
  31.  

Recent Retired Coaches
Gary Taylor (Rider)                               442 – I  retired in 2017
Duane Goldman (Indiana Univ.)           297 – I  – retired in 2018
Joe McFarland (Michigan, Indiana)      238  –  I – retired in 2018
Barry Davis  (Wisconsin)                         234  –  I – retired in 2018

April 22, 2019 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Women’s Wrestling at Center Stage as Tokyo 2020 Announces Detailed Competition Schedule

TOKYO (April 16) – The Tokyo Organizing Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games (Tokyo 2020) has announced the detailed competition schedule for the sport of wrestling at the 2020 Olympic Games. The two-day competition format will feature women’s wrestling as the final gold medal bout on each day of competition. Japan is the most dominant women’s wrestling nation in the world having won 11 of 18 Olympic gold medals since 2004, the first year the sport was included on the Olympic programme. The island nation has also won 22 world team titles since the first women’s wrestling world championships in 1987, including 11 of the last 13. “The schedule announced by Tokyo 2020 will help wrestling ensure high attendance for each day of the competition,” said United World Wrestling president Nenad Lalovic. “We saw nice crowds in Brazil and expect that this schedule will help us reach even more fans and create a positive and energetic environment for all our competitors. The stars of women’s wrestling will guarantee that interest-level.” Rest of the story at https://unitedworldwrestling.org/article/womens-wrestling-center-stage-tokyo-2020-announces-detailed-competition-schedule?mc_cid=71d49ec247&mc_eid=2ef7cbca4b

April 22, 2019 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

USA men’s freestyle sweeps all 10 Pan American gold medals in Buenos Aires

By Taylor Miller, USA Wrestling | April 21, 2019,

Photo: David Taylor in the 2019 Pan Am finals. Photo by Lucia Cruz. 

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina – The United States men’s freestyle team won all 10 Pan American Championships gold medals over the last two days, collecting eight titles on Sunday evening in Buenos Aires, Argentina. It is the first time in the history of the event that a team has gone undefeated, winning every weight. Team USA went 34-0 over the weekend in men’s freestyle action and claimed the team title, racking up 250 points. Four-time World champion and 2012 Olympic champion Jordan Burroughs won his third overall Pan Am Championships title (fifth including Pan Am Games) on Sunday night, defeating 2015 Pan Am silver medalist Jevon Balfour of Canada in the 74 kg finals. While the score was one-sided, the match featured a lot of action with several exciting scrambles. Burroughs took a 5-0 lead in to the break with a takedown and leg lace and scored one more takedown in the final frame for a 7-0 win.

Winning his second-straight Pan Am title was 2018 World champion David Taylor at 86 kg. Taylor spent minimal time on the mat en route to a dominating 10-0 tech fall over Pedro Ceballo Fuentes of Venezuela. Overall, Taylor finished the day with two pins and two tech falls. Because of his performance, Taylor was recognized as the tournament’s Outstanding Wrestler.  2016 Olympic champion and two-time World champion Kyle Snyder picked up his second-career Pan Am championship on Sunday, winning by injury default over two-time World silver medalist Reineris Salas Perez from Cuba.

Though he didn’t have to wrestle his finals match, Snyder still put together a great performance earlier in the day with a pair tech falls. Two-time World bronze medalist Nick Gwiazdowski surrendered only one point the entire day on his way to his second Pan Am title, winning all four bout by tech falls and outscoring his opponents 41-1. In his final, Gwiazdowski put up a 10-0 first-period tech over nine-time Pan American medalist Korey Jarvis of Canada. At 61 kg, 2018 World bronze medalist Joe Colon went 3-0 on the day in round-robin action to win his first Pan American title. Rest of the story and details at https://www.teamusa.org/USA-Wrestling/Features/2019/April/21/USA-mens-freestyle-sweeps-all-10-Pan-American-gold-medals-in-Buenos-Aires?mc_cid=c1aaf85871&mc_eid=2ef7cbca4b

April 22, 2019 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment