Pair of Duke Wrestlers Etch Names in Guinness Book of World Records
By: Matthew Goninen, Duke Athletics Communications Student Assistant
DURHAM, N.C. – Last week, Dash Hort, a redshirt freshman on the Duke Wrestling team, prevailed as the winner of the Blue Devils’ world-record-setting basketball knockout game.
For Hort and his teammates, including runner-up Owen McGrory, participating in the world’s largest knockout game was not planned. They discussed attending for the first time at lunch earlier that day. “We weren’t doing that,” Hort said he decided when he first heard about it at trainer’s table. “We had an ECON 204 exam Thursday, so we had to study for that.” Ultimately, after some convincing from friends, the group of wrestlers decided to attend the event.
Early in the game, the line moved slowly. Hort and his friends contemplated leaving — “We knew what the odds of winning were. It was a sunk cost.” As the line, shrunk, however, Hort and has friends decided to wait it out and see if they could make a run at wining the competition. “At one point, we were three out of 100,” he said. “Then it goes down to 60 people left; that’s a five percent chance to win.”
“After about two hours, everyone remaining was able to fit on the court and we realized that winning was actually possible,” McGrory added. To prevent any close calls, Hort and his group stuck together. “It was pretty smooth sailing, especially towards the end,” Hort added. “At that point, everyone started getting hot. Everyone was hitting their shots.”
Ultimately, it came down to Hort and McGrory, with Hort knocking out his teammate to win. “I got Owen [McGrory] out at the end,” Hort said. “He shot and missed. I don’t know what was going through his head; he turned back like he was going to pass it to somebody. When I shot it, it felt good off the hand.”
Hort made the winning shot to win the competition. He would receive a $1,000 prize for his victory, which he says he will split with his friends. The event lasted from 6:30 p.m., to just after 10:00 p.m.
Hort, who has not played organized basketball since his time playing in youth recreational leagues, went on to say that making the Guinness Book of World Records was not something he anticipated. “It’s such a random thing that has no particular value, … more at … https://goduke.com/news/2026/2/25/wrestling-pair-of-duke-wrestlers-etch-names-in-guinness-book-of-world-records
Penn State Wrestling Was Even More Dominant Statistically This Season
The Nittany Lions, chasing their fifth straight NCAA title, won nearly 93 percent of their individual bouts in duals this season.
To senior Levi Haines, Penn State’s wrestling dominance is simple. “I think we just find a way to score more points than everybody else,” Haines said after the Nittany Lions completed their sixth straight undefeated season.
And this season, Penn State scored more points than everybody else in a stunningly higher gear. After winning the past four NCAA team championships, the Nittany Lions produced a regular season even more dominant than any of those.
That foreshadows another potentially record-setting Penn State postseason, which begins with the Big Ten Wrestling Championships on March 7-8 at the Bryce Jordan Center. It’s not whether Penn State will win its fifth straight NCAA team title; it’s whether the team will break its scoring record for a third consecutive season. “We have a special thing going here,” Penn State coach Cael Sanderson said earlier this season. How special? Here are the numbers.
RELATED: How Penn State remains dominant in the NIL era

Penn State Wrestling’s Five-Year Run … more at … https://www.si.com/college/pennstate/wrestling/penn-state-wrestling-was-even-more-dominant-statistically-this-season

