DI Live Streaming Guide (1/29 – 2/1/2026)
We’re almost counting down the final days of January and will get to February on Sunday! From here on out, the majority of the action will be in dual meet competition. Almost all of the DI action this week will come via duals. A total of 55 duals will be contested. Since it can be difficult to figure out where and when to watch all of these events, InterMat has put together a list of all of the live-streamed events occurring this week. Below are the dates/times and how to watch each match (with links).
All Times Eastern
Thursday, January 29:
Davidson at Gardner-Webb 6:00 PM
Lock Haven at Bucknell 7:00 PM ESPN+
Bloomsburg at Clarion 7:00 PM FloWrestling
Friday, January 30:
Northern Illinois at Lock Haven 2:00 PM PSAC Digital Network
Rider at George Mason 5:00 PM ESPN+
Penn State Behrend at Mercyhurst 6:00 PM
Wisconsin at Ohio State 6:00 PM Big Ten Network
Appalachian State at Campbell 7:00 PM Campbell Athletics YouTube
Ohio at Central Michigan 7:00 PM ESPN+
Bellarmine at Davidson 7:00 PM FloWrestling
Virginia at Duke 7:00 PM ACC Network Extra
Northwestern at Michigan 7:00 PM B1G+
Virginia Tech at NC State 7:00 PM ACC Network
Pittsburgh at North Carolina 7:00 PM ACC Network Extra
Maryland at Rutgers 7:00 PM B1G+
Minnesota at Iowa 8:00 PM B1G+
Northern Colorado at North Dakota State 8:00 PM NDSU All-Access
Iowa State at Oklahoma 8:00 PM ESPN+
Northern Iowa at Oklahoma State 8:00 PM ESPN+
Nebraska at Penn State 8:00 PM Big Ten Network … more at … https://intermatwrestle.com/articles.html/47_streaming-guide/di-live-streaming-guide-129-212026-r100783/
Medical Forfeits/Load Management/Ducking and All the Usual Suspects
After a week (plus) that included three large tournaments, it’s time for our yearly referendum on medical forfeits/load management, and other related issues. These have already been topics on social media over the past few days, and I only see that increasing this week.
In the past, a lot of the grumbling was done by fans/ex-wrestlers significantly removed from competition. I thought it was interesting that one of the tweets from the weekend came from Trent Hidlay. The recent world champion is less than two years removed from an extremely decorated career at NC State. I thought that comments coming from a wrestler of his stature and being a recent college graduate would hold much more weight than in years past. You don’t get to call Hidlay an “old man yelling at clouds” and talking about the “good ol’ days” when he was a part of this world less than two years ago. … more at … https://intermatwrestle.com/articles.html/college/medical-forfeitsload-managementducking-and-all-the-usual-suspects-r100738/
Keep California Baptist University Wrestling
This is bigger than one program. The future of wrestling is in our hands
On January 2, 2026, California Baptist University announced the difficult decision to discontinue three sports programs following the conclusion of this season: men’s golf, men’s swim and dive, and men’s wrestling. This decision impacts student-athletes, families, alumni, and the national wrestling community that has benefited from CBU Wrestling’s tradition of academic excellence, leadership development, and service. The loss of CBU Wrestling would eliminate a vital Division I wrestling opportunity in Southern California, creating a significant gap for student-athletes across the state who seek to compete at the highest level while remaining close to home.
In response, we have formed this organization to work urgently and collaboratively to reinstate CBU Wrestling and to help establish a sustainable model for collegiate programs facing similar challenges. Our purpose is to secure the influence, financial resources, and institutional alignment necessary to preserve and sustain California Baptist University Wrestling and its mission of developing young men of character, faith, and leadership.
We are asking our community to stand with us by raising awareness, providing financial support, and demonstrating to university leadership that a better solution exists. … more at … https://keepcbuwrestling.com/
NCAA D1 Wrestling Week 12 Roundup: Winter WonDUALand
The world’s finest collection of noteworthy happenings from the 12th week of the 2025-26 NCAA D1 wrestling season.
Greetings from Austin, where the temps have dipped into the frosty realm of 50 degrees Fahrenheit. Hopefully you’re staying warm and enjoying the MLK Day weekend whever you are!
Week 11 Rankings | Week 12 Box Scores
Roundups: Week 1 | Week 2 | Week 3 | Week 4 | Week 5 | Week 6 | Week 7 | Week 8 | Week 9 | Week 10 | Week 11
And what better way to enjoy a federal holiday than by catching up on all the noteworthy happenings from the twelfth week of the 2025-26 NCAA D1 college wrestling season!
The Dual of the Century of the Week
Panthers Manage Mountaineers in Backyard Brawl, 17-15
The West Virginia-Pittsburgh rivalry is alive and well in the wrestling world. This year’s edition of the Backyard Brawl (the 68th dual between these two programs) lived up to the hype. West Virginia was up 9-0 after three bouts and 15-7 after seven.
But Pitt would not be denied, as they won the final three bouts to complete the comeback and take the dual. Chase Kranitz, Mac Stout and Dayton Pitzer all came up clutch at 184, 197 and 285, respectively. #29 Kranitz in particular was the hero of the dual as he notched the only upset of the contest when he defeated #22 Ian Bush, 4-2. … more at … https://www.flowrestling.org/articles/15232457-ncaa-d1-wrestling-week-12-roundup-winter-wondualand
Wyoming jumps into Top 25 after Top 10 upset; Penn State streak stands at 80 and counting
Manheim, Pennsylvania – Penn State remained No. 1 in this week’s NWCA Coaches Poll following a results-heavy week that included several ranked matchups, a notable upset, and one new team entering the Top 25.
Penn State went 2-0 on the weekend, defeating then-No. 4 Iowa 32-3 before shutting out Northwestern, 51-0. The win over Northwestern extended Penn State’s dual-meet winning streak to 80.
The biggest upset of the week came when Wyoming defeated then-No. 10 South Dakota State 24-18. South Dakota State also recorded a 19-16 win over Utah Valley earlier in the week. Wyoming’s victory moved the Cowboys into the poll at No. 23.
Michigan posted two ranked wins, defeating Rutgers 21-12 and Illinois 18-14. Nebraska defeated then-No. 9 Minnesota 20-12 in the week’s lone ranked matchup involving the Gophers. NC State went 2-0, edging Stanford 21-20 before defeating CSU Bakersfield 43-3. Virginia Tech defeated Appalachian State 39-0 in a non-conference dual at the Moss Arts Center, while Pittsburgh recorded wins over West Virginia (17-15) and Duke (40-0). Elsewhere among ranked teams, Wisconsin defeated Northwestern 28-12. Missouri went 2-0 with wins over Arizona State (22-17) and Utah Valley (31-9). Lehigh defeated Navy 20-15 and Princeton 30-9. Indiana defeated Maryland 26-12.
Several ranked teams are scheduled to compete over the upcoming weekend as conference action continues.
Friday, January 23 includes a full slate of ranked matchups. No. 2 Ohio State is scheduled to wrestle No. 9 Minnesota, while No. 11 North Carolina visits No. 8 NC State. No. 25 Indiana is slated to face No. 1 Penn State. Additional ranked matchups Friday include No. 5 Oklahoma State at No. 18 Missouri, No. 4 Iowa against No. 6 Nebraska, No. 24 Stanford at No. 7 Virginia Tech, and No. 15 South Dakota State hosting California Baptist.
Saturday, January 24 includes dual competition involving ranked teams, with No. 24 Stanford scheduled to wrestle at Virginia and No. 23 Wyoming traveling to face No. 19 West Virginia.
Sunday, January 25 includes several additional ranked matchups … more at … https://nwcaonline.com/news/2026/1/20/national-wrestling-coaches-association-wyoming-jumps-into-top-25-after-top-10-upset-penn-state-streak-stands-at-80-and-counting.aspx
Embracing glory
Larry Owings scored the biggest upset in NCAA wrestling history and spent the rest of his life coming to terms with it.
By Mike Seely
When Larry Owings was growing up in rural Oregon, everyone—his friends, his family, even his teachers—called him by the nickname “Porky.” They did this because he was overweight. “Nowadays, they would call that bullying,” says Owings, now 75. “Back then, you just had to grin and take it. I can’t tell you how deep down inside I was hurting. It inspired me to say, ‘I’m gonna show you someday.’ “
Would he ever.
Owings had four older brothers, all of them state wrestling champs at Canby High School. Taking a gander at their baby brother in junior high, none of them expected Larry to wrestle at all, much less earn any kind of hardware. But a life-changing event—or occupation, rather—occurred in the summer before his freshman year. “I went to work for an old Norwegian dairy farmer,” he recalls. “I hauled hundred-pound bales of hay for him all summer long. Before that, I worked on the farm picking berries, and I hated picking berries. There was no way I was not gonna do good in this job and go back to picking berries.”
Owings’ weight went from about 150 to 130 through the course of his sweaty vocation, and he also grew a couple of inches. In spite of his siblings’ doubts, he joined the Canby wrestling team and worked his way up to varsity at 123 pounds by the end of his freshman year. By the end of his high school career, he would win state championships in both the 136- and 141-pound weight divisions.
During his senior year, Owings was matched in a tournament with an Iowa State University sophomore named Dan Gable, who was undefeated and already an NCAA champion. Gable won their match rather easily, but Owings managed to score some points – quite a feat for anyone facing a man who would go down as the greatest amateur wrestler of all time.
After losing to Gable, Owings said he felt like he “had a score to settle.” Two years later, he’d get his chance.
Triumph, then turmoil
There were a lot of colleges interested in Owings’ wrestling services after high school, but the University of Washington won out. “I didn’t go to Oregon State because my brothers had gone there,” he explains. “I went up to the U-Dub, beautiful campus, coach was very gung-ho. Jim Smith – he’s still alive, by the way. He’s 90 and lives in Lynnwood. I liked the school, I liked the coach. I wanted to go into architecture, and they had a great architecture program.”
Owings, ’72, ’75, ’78, pursued an architecture degree for a quarter before he deemed it too difficult and switched to industrial education. Things on the mat went according to plan, however. By the time Owings was a sophomore, he was Pac-8 champion at 158 pounds with the 1970 NCAA tournament on the horizon. … more at … https://magazine.washington.edu/feature/larry-owings-who-scored-the-biggest-upset-in-ncaa-wrestling-history-comes-to-terms-with-fame-more-than-50-years-later/#gsc.tab=0
Penn State wrestling is miles ahead, dominant win over Iowa proves it
To call Penn State a dynasty would be an understatement.
The Nittany Lions have won 12 of the last 14 national championships, and have won four-straight national titles three different times.
In the NIL era, other teams have the opportunity to close the gap. Iowa and Oklahoma State are the two most storied programs across NCAA wrestling history. If given substantial funding, those programs are expected to take a jump and compete against the Nittany Lions. However, that has yet to happen, with Iowa most recently falling to Penn State 32-3.
The commanding win for the Nittany Lions over the Hawkeyes, one of the most historically dominant teams in the sport, showcases that Penn State is in a different lane than everyone else.
Penn State is coming off a season where it broke many records, including the points record in the NCAA championship and having all 10 wrestlers earn All-American status. … more at … https://www.psucollegian.com/sports/wrestling/column-penn-state-wrestling-is-miles-ahead-dominant-win-over-iowa-proves-it/article_aa49c44a-4d22-495f-ba18-8c7bf940010c.html
#6 Lander Completes 3-0 Road Trip with 50th Conference Win
HARROGATE, Tenn. – The sixth-ranked Lander wrestling team wrapped up its road trip in dominant fashion on Wednesday evening, rolling past the Lincoln Memorial Railsplitters 47-12 in a Conference Carolinas matchup.
The win marked Lander’s 36th straight conference victory and the 50th conference win in program history, making the Bearcats the first program in Conference Carolinas history to reach the milestone.
Lander (16-3, 7-0 CC, 4-0 CC West Division) controlled the match from start to finish in an abbreviated dual that featured five forfeits and five contested bouts, all of which ended by pin or technical fall in either the first or second period.
Oren Decker got the Bearcats on the board early, needing just 1:55 to secure a pin at 125. After a Lander forfeit at 133 and a Lincoln Memorial pin at 141 briefly swung momentum, the Bearcats responded emphatically.
Back-to-back pins from Garrett Wood and Reid Noble at 149 and 157 put Lander back in front at the halfway point, 18-12. From there, the Railsplitters forfeited the next four weights at 165, 174, 184, and 197. The forfeit at 197 marked Champ Higdon’s third forfeit win of the road trip.
Isaac Sheeren closed the night in dominant fashion at heavyweight, rolling to a 19-2 technical fall in 3:24, nearly ending the match by pin following a second-period reversal.
Lander returns home for its final two home duals of the season, … more at … https://landerbearcats.com/news/2026/1/21/wrestling-6-lander-completes-3-0-road-trip-with-50th-conference-win.aspx
#8 NC State Collects 13th-Straight Win Over #11 UNC
RALEIGH – In front of a sold-out Reynolds Coliseum, eighth-ranked NC State wrestling (12-3, 3-0 ACC) collected its 13th consecutive win over the No. 11 North Carolina Tar Heels (8-2, 1-1 ACC) by a comfortable 24-10 win on Friday night.
The Wolfpack improves to 3-0 in conference action by defeating 11th-ranked North Carolina at home Friday night by a 24-10 score. A streak that began in 2014, the win is the 13th in a row by the Pack over the Tar Heels. The dual began at 141 lbs, which resulted in the Tar Heels getting points on the board first.
One of the highlights of the night comes from freshman phenom Will Denny, who had a fiery match that ended up in a major decision over a top-10 opponent. The freshman’s win marks his 10th in a row and second overall top-10 win of the season. The newest addition to the Pack, Patrick Brophy at 197 lbs, took out #33 Robert Platt 8-1 to land his first ranked win in the red-and-white.
To close out the dual, at 133 lbs, Zach Redding defeated 18th-ranked Ethan Oakley for his second ranked win of the season, which is the first since the National Duals Invitational. The attendance marks the third-ever announced sell-out in program history. … more at … https://gopack.com/news/2026/1/24/wrestling-8-nc-state-collects-13th-straight-win-over-11-unc
Boulanger Making Impact as True Freshman
By: Travis Swafford, Duke Athletics Communications Student Assistant
DURHAM, N.C.– Duke freshman wrestler Mikey Boulanger is a man of few words. If you ask him about his impressive start on the collegiate mats, he describes the experience as “an adjustment.” If you ask him whether he really went 55-0 as a senior in high school, he nods yes. But when it came time for Duke head coach Glen Lanham to decide whether the freshman would redshirt or compete in his first year on campus, what Boulanger had to say proved pivotal.
As Lanham describes it, “He just came and said that he had thought about taking off the year when he’s so close to competing. He was like, ‘well if I don’t get the rep, somebody else is. So, I just think it would make me better if I’m the starter.'”
The subsequent decision to let Boulanger wrestle has paid immediate dividends, as he collected eight wins over his first 12 bouts start to the season propelled the team to its best fall record in four years. The Milford, Massachusetts, native’s eight wins ranks fifth on the team, anchoring the Blue Devils in the 157-pound weight class. It’s a performance that has left Lanham and the Duke team impressed.
“He’s definitely been surprising, coming out of nowhere, really,” Lanham said. “We thought that he was going to have to use a redshirt, get bigger, that kind of stuff, get used to college wrestling, but he’s just jumped right into it.”
Boulanger took little time to make his mark. In the team’s second dual of the season against Hofstra, with the Blue Devils down 14-6, he won a crucial match against the Pride’s Frank Volpe in an 8-2 decision. Duke would go on to win four of the next five matches and win the contest 24-17. … more at … https://goduke.com/news/2026/1/21/wrestling-boulanger-making-impact-as-true-freshman

