Takedown Report

Amateur Wrestling Reports

Justina Di Stasio and Ana Godinez-Gonzalez on why wrestling is for everyone and making each other better

For a sport that is often stereotyped as requiring intensity and aggression, there is nothing but friendship and respect emanating between Team Canada wrestlers Justina Di Stasio and Ana Godinez Gonzalez

Throughout a recent interview, the veteran Di Stasio gushed with pride over 23-year-old Godinez Gonzalez’s rapid progress in the sport. Godinez Gonzalez affectionately calls Di Stasio “Juice”  as well as the “mom” of the team who keeps her and her sister Karla in line ahead of big meets.

In fact, there are quite a few misconceptions about wrestling that the teammates want to debunk–that it isn’t a social sport that can be done casually, that it’s not size inclusive, that it’s not a great sport for women.

But before we get to that–who are Justina Di Stasio and Ana Godinez Gonzalez?

Justina has the juice

Di Stasio is an accomplished wrestler. The 30-year-old has a long list of accolades, including gold at the last Pan Am Games in 2019 as well as the 2022 Commonwealth Games. In 2018, she earned the title of world champion. 

Despite being a recognizable name on the international scene, Di Stasio hasn’t yet made the Canadian Olympic team. The country can only send one wrestler per weight class, and Di Stasio has lost twice in domestic qualification to Erica Wiebe–who went on to win the Olympic gold medal at Rio 2016.

The challenge of not making the Olympics yet has made Di Stasio both determined and also resilient, in the sense that she recognizes keeping the bigger picture in mind beyond wrestling. … rest of the story at … Olympic.ca/justina-di-stasio-and-ana-godinez-gonzalez-on-why-wrestling-is-for-everyone-and-making-each-other-better

September 13, 2023 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Six must-watch battles at World Championships

BELGRADE, Serbia (September 6) – The World Championships throws certain match-ups that are a must-watch for wrestling fans. We’ve come up with the six bouts that could take place in Belgrade.

FS 65kg – Rahman AMOUZADKHALILI (IRI) vs. Takuto OTOGURO (JPN)

In a weight with endless heavy hitters, offensive juggernauts Takuto OTOGURO (JPN) and Rahman AMOUZAD (IRI) continue rising to the top while somehow avoiding each other.

Otoguro has been the weight’s most dangerous offensive threat since 2018 when he became the youngest Japanese male to win world gold. He’s a guy with cat-like reflexes, is highly elusive, and isn’t afraid to give up a point to get a point. His counter-offensive abilities make him super dangerous. He gets to his angles better than anyone in the weight.

Though he has changed his style a little, Otoguro will need his old-school run-and-gun mentality to take out Amouzad. 

Since Otoguro’s absence after the Tokyo Olympic Games, Amouzad has emerged as the most-feared wrestler at 65kg.

Amouzad is a tactician when it comes to breaking down his opponents—mentally and physically. He’s a guy with relentless forward pressure and a bottomless gas tank. He uses that patented Iranian underhook to close the distance on his opponents and control the mat area. He’s only 22 years old but remains poised like a veteran in close matches. He’s confident wrestling in a phone booth but can attack from space, and that makes him a nightmare to wrestle.

This match comes down to Otoguro’s ability to solve Amouzad’s underhook and put six consecutive minutes together. On the other side, Amouzad has to be methodical when picking his shots and anticipate where and when Otoguro’s going to reattack. … rest of story at … UWW.org/article/six-must-watch-battles-world-championships

September 12, 2023 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Olympic champion Gable Steveson won’t wrestle at world championships

Gable Steveson, a former two-time NCAA heavyweight champion for the Gophers, will be replaced by ex-Michigan wrestler Mason Parris this month at the worlds in Serbia. 

Olympic gold medalist Gable Steveson has notified USA Wrestling that he will not compete at the world championships Sept. 16-24 in Belgrade, Serbia. USA Wrestling announced the news Wednesday but did not state a reason.

Steveson, a two-time NCAA heavyweight champion for the Gophers from Apple Valley, returned to amateur wrestling earlier this year while continuing to train toward a WWE career. He dominated the 125-kilogram men’s freestyle class at the U.S. Open in April, then defeated Mason Parris at Final X in June to earn his spot on the U.S. team for the world championships. Steveson will be replaced at worlds by Parris, an NCAA champion at Michigan and junior world champion in 2019.

RACHEL BLOUNT

Tommies release basketball schedules

The St. Thomas men’s basketball schedule, announced Wednesday, includes a Nov. 6 opener at California and a December game at Marquette. The Tommies will play their first home game Oct. 10 vs. Idaho State. St. Thomas opens Summit League play Dec. 29 at North Dakota State.

The St. Thomas women’s basketball schedule includes home games against Central Florida (Nov. 15), Iowa State (Nov. 29) and Wisconsin (Dec. 13). The Tommies women open Nov. 6 at Drake and play their first home game Nov. 11 vs. Wisconsin-River Falls. St. Thomas is scheduled to play at Saint Mary’s (Nov. 21), followed by games against UC Irvine and Butler in Stockton, Calif., over Thanksgiving weekend. … rest of story at … Startribune.com/olympic-champion-gable-steveson-wont-wrestle-at-world-championships-gophers

September 12, 2023 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Miracle receives No. 1 seed for Senior Worlds, five U.S. women get No. 2, another at No. 8

United World Wrestling released its seeds for women’s freestyle at the 2023 Senior World Championships, which will be held in Belgrade, Serbia, September 16-24.

The United States, which placed second in the 2022 Senior World Championships, has seven athletes seeded for Belgrade, including one No. 1, five No. 2 and a No. 8

Two-time World silver medalist Kayla Miracle secured the No. 1 seed at 62 kg.

The five U.S. wrestlers coming in with No. 2 seeds are Olympic and World medalist Sarah Hildebrandt (50 kg), 2022 World champion Dom Parrish (53 kg), 2019 World champion Jacarra Winchester (55 kg), 2016 Olympic champion and three-time World champion Helen Maroulis (57 kg) and 2022 World champion Amit Elor (72 kg).

.Jennifer Page, competing in her first Senior World Championships, secured the No. 8 seed at 59 kg.

No nation had more than one No. 1 seed, as 10 different nations had one top seed.

No Individual Neutral Athletes (from either Russia or Belarus) received a seed.

2023 SENIOR WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS

At Belgrade, Serbia

Women’s Freestyle seeds

50kg

No. 1 – Yui SUSAKI (JPN)

No. 2 – Sarah HILDEBRANDT (USA)

No. 3 – Otgonjargal DOLGORJAV (MGL)

No. 4 – Ziqi FENG (CHN)

No. 5 – Anna LUKASIAK (POL)

No. 6 – Madison PARKS (CAN)

No. 7 – Jasmina IMMAEVA (UZB)

No. 8 – Miesinnei GENESIS (NGR)

53kg

No. 1 – Lucia YEPEZ (ECU)

No. 2 – Dominique PARRISH (USA) … rest of story at … Themat.com/news/september/04/miracle-receives-no-1-seed-for-senior-worlds-five-u-s-women-get-no-2-another-at-no-8

September 11, 2023 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

New wrestling club building means more gym time for aspiring athletes

Nearly 60 youths flocked to building to partake in first weekend clinic since its opening.

The Juneau Youth Wrestling Club’s building is finally open and ready for wrestlers to hit its new mats after years of construction. Over Labor Day weekend the new blue building hosted its first clinic since opening its doors, inviting two-time USA Wrestling world team member Tony Purler who traveled to Juneau from Kansas City, Missouri, just for the event. For Thunder Mountain High School junior wrestlers Hayden Aube and Justus Darbonne, the new building means more opportunities to practice the sport they love.
“It’s nice not having to rent places out, like at the school, we have to compete for openings, so just having our own building is awesome,” Aube said. “It definitely gives us a lot of opportunity to wrestle and have more time, usually we have to compete with other sports just to wrestle,” Darbonne said. “But this is our own place to practice wherever we need to. It’s definitely a better spot.”

According to JYWC coach and board member Jason Hass, high school and middle school wrestlers from all over Southeast Alaska traveled to partake in the clinic. In total, 58 wrestlers registered, many coming from here in Juneau. Hass said a major force that pushed the building from just an idea into a reality was the increasingly sparse amount of gym time that many young athletes have had to deal with in recent years. He said he thinks that has hindered many athletes from trying out the sport.

“It’s always a struggle for gym time — with the other sports there are just a lot of people, a lot of activities and a finite amount of space — so it’s been hard to try to get gym space,” he said. “It’s been a long-time dream to have our own space and it’s going to be great having this designated space for wrestling.”

Hass said the club wanted to create a large space dedicated not only to increasing space and time for existing wrestlers to practice the sport, but inviting new athletes into the community as well. Now that the building is ready for use, he’s excited and hopeful the Juneau wrestling community will be able to flourish.

“​​Hopefully we’ll be able to offer this up to more and more kids in Juneau — we want to be able to expose wrestling to every boy and girl in Juneau,” he said. “You come in here and you see 60 kids running around having a good time, getting exercise, just a good healthy environment — it’s incredibly encouraging.”

Purler, who led the three-day clinic, said he’s enjoyed spending the weekend teaching the young wrestlers and visiting Alaska for the first time. … rest of story at … Juneauempire.com/new-wrestling-club-building-means-more-gym-time-for-aspiring-athletes

September 11, 2023 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

The college wrestling fan’s guide to the 2023 Senior World Championships

The news is out: Minnesota two-time NCAA champion and Olympic gold medalist Gable Steveson will not be competing in the 2023 World Championships next week. Instead, Team USA will send Michigan alum and 2023 Hodge Trophy winner Mason Parris in his place, giving Parris his first senior world championship experience. 
HODGE TROPHY: Read more about this historic award in NCAA wrestling 

While wrestling fans may be disappointed with the Steveson news, Parris is a strong replacement on an already stellar roster. Parris’ world team peers include Olympic gold medalists Helen Maroulis, David Taylor and Kyle Synder at 57kg, 86kg and 97kg in men’s and women’s freestyle, as well as Olympic silver medalist Adeline Gray who will represent the US in women’s freestyle at 76kg. Olympic bronze medalists Sarah Hildebrandt and Kyle Dake will also wrestle at 50kg and 74kg alongside a slate of other returning and new world team members for the U.S. across all three styles. This is a squad capable of having serious success when the tournament kicks off on September 16. 
The U.S. senior world team also has a number of high-profile collegiate connections, so those who follow NCAA wrestling but may be new to the freestyle or Greco scene will likely recognize some of the names on this year’s team. The style of competition may change, but the excitement will not. 

See the table below for a full list of the 2023 senior world team members, as well as their collegiate affiliations.  … rest of story at … NCAA.com/news/wrestling/article/2023-09-07/college-wrestling-fans-guide-2023-senior-world-championships

September 10, 2023 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Who Should Stanford Hire?

Last week, the University of North Carolina officially announced that they had hired Rob Koll as their next head wrestling coach. Just over two years ago, Koll shocked the wrestling world by leaving Cornell, a school that he built from a good EIWA team into a consistent national power, for Stanford. 

Now, we’re left to wonder, “Who replaces Koll at Stanford.” Even though it’s extremely late in the game (or really early) for coaching changes, there should be plenty of interest in the job. Stanford has a young, talented roster that starts the preseason ranked #24 in duals by InterMat and features six ranked wrestlers. Koll and his staff were able to ink back-to-back top-eight classes (#8 in 2022; #5 in 2021) and have an impressive list of high school seniors that have given the Cardinal program verbals. In addition, Koll’s efforts have led to the possibility of an increase in funding from the athletic department. 

Also, with conference realignment front and center, Stanford will have some stability as they head to the ACC. While it doesn’t make sense geographically, the Cardinal will now compete in a league that features four ranked teams and plenty of talented individuals. That should lead to more at-large opportunities for any Stanford wrestlers who don’t automatically qualify at the ACC Tournament. 

With a brief bit of background information out of the way, let’s focus on coaches that InterMat has identified as quality candidates for the opening. … rest of story at … Intermatwrestle.com/articles.html/college/pac-12/who-should-stanford-hire

September 10, 2023 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

‘John Smith is the sole reason’: Coleman Scott speaks on decision to return to OSU

An eight-year stint at North Carolina was enough to consider a permanent stay.

But after a phone call from a Stillwater phone number, one Scott wished to leaved unspecified in an interview with The O’Colly, leaving North Carolina crossed his mind.

About 30 minutes later, his mind was made up. After 124 duals coached for the Tar Heels, Scott is returning to Stillwater to be an associate coach alongside his former coach John Smith.

“John Smith is the sole reason I made this decision,” Scott said. “If, like, Iowa or somewhere had come calling, I probably wouldn’t have gone.

“When you’re offered an opportunity to coach with arguably the greatest wrestler of all time, that’s something you just can’t turn down.”

Scott built a program from the ground up in Chapel Hill and made it a national contender. And he created a legacy there.  

“By about Year 5, I was thinking, ‘This might be it.’” Scott said“We were winning, and I was enjoying every bit of it.” 

Scott, a former OSU wrestler, led the Tar Heels to a 12th-place finish in nationals this year – their best postseason finish since 1995 – and watched UNC 157-pounder Austin O’Connor attain his second individual national title. 

The decision to exit a program Scott put on the college wrestling map wasn’t easy. Moving away from the relationships built at UNC was perhaps the most stressful thought.

But, as Scott explained, life is built off choices. He said he made the right life decision returning to OSU.

“I’m not gonna give you the coach speak and say, ‘Oh it was best for my family and I.’” Scott said. “But the opportunity to show my wife and family where I began my career, it’s also something I couldn’t pass on. I love Stillwater. I love (Gallagher-Iba Arena). I love everything about that campus.”

And the timing was right. Former associate head coach Zack Esposito departed for a position with USA Wrestling as its National Freestyle development and resident coach. 

“Coleman is a champion and one of the brightest young coaching minds in our sport,” Smith said in a statement regarding Scott’s hiring. “Success has followed him wherever he’s gone, and we’re excited to have him and his family back home with us at Oklahoma State.”

The Cowboys reeled in former All-American transfers in Sammy Alvarez (Rutgers) and Izzak Olejnik (Northern Illinois), and they return three-time 133-pound national runner up Daton Fix. Perhaps new blood could be what OSU wrestling was lacking in its long-awaited return to national prominence. … rest of the story at … Ocolly.com/john-smith-is-the-sole-reason-coleman-scott-speaks-on-decision-to-return-to-osu

September 9, 2023 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

West Liberty Adds Women’s Wrestling as Varsity Sport

WEST LIBERTY, W.Va. – West Liberty University President Dr. Tim Borchers announced today that the university is adding the sport of women’s wrestling to its list of intercollegiate athletic offerings. The Hilltoppers expect to begin competition in the 2024-25 season.

“Adding women’s wrestling will build on the national reputation of the West Liberty wrestling program,” Dr. Borchers said. “With the growing popularity of the sport, this new program will provide additional opportunities for students throughout the region to continue their education.”

Officially recognized as an emerging sport by the NCAA during the 2020-21 academic year, women’s wrestling is the 19th intercollegiate sport on the WLU roster and the 10th targeted at providing opportunities for female student-athletes.
West Liberty joins the more than 150 colleges and universities – including nearly 100 NCAA institutions – that have started women’s wrestling programs. Fueled by an explosion of participation at the high school level, the Hilltoppers expect to have plenty of company in the next few years.

According to FloWrestling, the number of girls participating in high school wrestling nationwide jumped from 35,000 during the 2021-22 academic year to 52,000 this past season. With 40 state high school associations now sanctioning the sport and several others putting it on the sanctioning track, girls’ wrestling has become the fastest-growing high school sport in the country.

Closer to home, more than 750 high schools are now sponsoring girls’ wrestling in West Virginia, Ohio and Pennsylvania alone. West Liberty joins Frostburg State as Mountain East Conference members currently offering the sport. In West Virginia, nearby Bethany College also plans to hit the mats in 2024-25 and Bluefield State will debut this fall.

West Liberty athletic director Lynn Ullom said those numbers combined with the Hilltoppers’ storied tradition and decades of success in collegiate wrestling is what led to this decision.

“We wouldn’t be doing our due diligence if we weren’t constantly strategizing how to aid enrollment goals for the university while providing new pathways to success for the changing marketplace of student-athletes in our region,” Ullom said. … rest of story at … NWCAonline.com/news/2023/9/6/NWCA-west-liberty-adds-womens-wrestling-as-varsity-sport

September 7, 2023 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

USA Wrestling and Wrestle Like A Girl release Coaching Girl and Women Wrestlers Teal Course

(COLORADO SPRINGS, COLO/WASHINGTON, DC) – USA Wrestling and Wrestle Like A Girl have partnered to develop the latest course available through USA Wrestling’s National Coaches Education Program (NCEP). The course, entitled, Coaching Girl and Women Wrestlers Teal Certification Course, is geared towards coaching female wrestlers, providing coaches with anecdotal and evidence-based material that will elevate not only novice coaches, but also those who have been coaching for decades.

Mike Clayton, USA Wrestling’s Manager of Coaches Education, said:

“We’re excited to announce a new course in partnership with Wrestle Like A Girl called, Coaching Girls and Women’s Wrestling. We know that girls’ wrestling numbers are skyrocketing, and we all want to support our coaches with the best possible resources to help keep our athletes safe and feeling welcome.”

This course is designed to provide all coaches with the key skills and knowledge they need to train and develop female wrestlers of all ages and shares ideas and research that will help any coach create a safe, positive, and growth minded program for our athletes. … rest of story at … Themat.com/2023/usa-wrestling-and-wrestle-like-a-girl-release-coaching-girl-and-women-wrestlers-teal-course

September 5, 2023 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment