Nov 4, 2018
I found bags for the leaves. YES! It took about two and a half
hours to clear the yard, but at least I got it all done before the
rains came. I would litter this episode with lyrics inspired by
Annie Lennox, but that’d be painful for you, just like walking on
broken glass.
This is Short Time Shots, a mostly unfunny podcast that recaps the
day’s happenings in college wrestling. I’m your host Jason Bryant,
and I have many leatherbound books and I do this kind of stuff for
a living. Seriously.
At the Harold Nichols Cyclone Open, here are the notables out
there, but there are no more I love yous.
Wisconsin’s Tristan Moran topped Northern Iowa’s Josh Alber in the
finals by picking up a second-period fall at 141 pounds. At 149
pounds, Missouri’s Brock Mauller, who probably has THE wrestling
name of the year, picked up a 12-6 win in the finals over Iowa
State’s Jarrett Degan. Mauller beat Wisconsin’s Cole Martin to
reach the finals.
At 165 pounds, Evan Wick of Wisconsin beat Northern Iowa’s Bryce
Steiert 3-2 in the finals in a matchup of All-Americans. UNI did
see All-American Drew Foster major Iowa State’s Sam Colbray 14-0 in
the finals at 184. New Cyclone Willie Miklus was solid with two
falls on his way to a 5-2 finals victory over NAIA national
champion Evan Hansen of Grand View in the finals at 197.
Clarion Open
Not a whole lot going on up at Clarion in terms of star-power, but
notable performances were, well, notable. Eastern Michigan transfer
Armando Torres captured the crown for Cleveland State at 133
pounds, beating Bloomsburg’s Lewis Williams 3-2 in the final.
At 184, Michael Beard, who’s not on a roster this season but is
bound for Penn State, topped NCAA qualifier Greg Bulsak of Clarion
13-9 in the finals. What’s also interesting is after building a
13-2 lead midway through the second period, Beard got hit four
times for stalling and gave up nearfall late. What’s also
interesting is since Beard isn’t on a college roster, his wins and
losses don’t count. Nuance of an NCAA rules regarding official
records say you have to be enrolled for results to count, even in
opens. So all those guys losing to Aaron Brooks don’t have to worry
about their record either. Speaking of Aaron Brooks …
Heavyweight was an interesting weight as Pittsburgh’s Demetrius
Thomas topped Division III national champion Jake Evans 14-4 in the
semifinals on his way to the championship.
Thomas was an NAIA national champion at Williams Baptist as a
freshman and was second last year before transferring to
Pittsburgh. He had to beat Seth Nevills, an unrostered soon-to-be
Nittany Lion 9-7 in the second round.
Cowboy Open
Wyoming had a bunch of guys win, no biggie there. Junior world
silver medalist and Penn State bound Aaron Brooks won at 184
pounds. He’s spending this year at the OTC. While it’s impressive
for a kid like Brooks to come in and win a college open, let’s not
get too carried away about his competition. He’s a blue-chip, can’t
miss recruit, so beating a pair of Division II guys and an Air
Force guy who hasn’t been their full-time starter yet shouldn’t be
cause for alarm. He’s going to be good on the next level and his
scores were impressive, but I wouldn’t consider this a huge test
for him just yet.
Michigan State Open
Michigan State’s RayVon Foley was very solid in earning the title
at 125, beating Central Michigan’s Drew Hildebrandt in the
semifinals and majoring Michigan’s Drew Mattin 12-3 in the
finals.
Kanen Storr beat teammates in back-to-back rounds to pick up a
title for Michigan at 141 pounds, while Penn freshman Anthony
Artalona won the title at 149. Michigan’s got a real nice situation
at 157 where true freshman Will Lewan topped All-American and
teammate Alec Pantaleo 10-8 in the finals there. Lewan already
stole a match in the wrestle-offs from Pantaleo, but let’s just be
clear, there’s no way Lewan is starting this year unless something
bad happens to Pantaleo. But man, that’s just impressive.
Speaking of impressive, Darden Schurg, a Division III All-American
from Wabash, came away as the champion at 174 pounds and he did it
pretty impressively. After beating returning Division III champion
Jairod James of Mount Union in the quarters, Schurg teched
Oklahoma’s Anthony Mantanona before beating Northern Illinois’ Brit
Wilson in the finals. Wilson had beaten Michigan State’s Drew
Hughes in the semis, so - cliché warning - Schurg is ready to
wrestle this year. And Wabash? They’re the LITTLE GIANTS!
At heavyweight, Mason Parris pinned Central Michigan’s Matt Stencel
in 14 seconds to win the title at heavyweight. Bruh. Here comes the
rain again? More like here comes the PAIN again.
Ithaca Invitational in Division III
Returning NCAA Division III champion Ben Brisman of Ithaca won five
bouts en route to the title at 141 pounds. Brisman topped
Castleton’s Max Tempel 10-3 in the finals.
At 184, a pair of All-Americans tangled as Ithaca’s Jake Ashcraft
and Western New England’s John Boyle got reacquainted. Last year at
the D3 championships, Ashcraft majored Boyle 12-2 in the
third-place match. This time it was a 4-0 win for Ashcraft. Ithaca
won the team championship with 167 points and four champions.
You know what else is cool? Seeing a school win its first
tournament title in nearly 40 years. That’s exactly what happened
as Gettysburg crowned four individual champions to win the Messiah
Invitational over host Messiah 110.5-97. Also of note, Andy Vogel,
the head coach of Gettysburg and the man behind D3wrestle.com, is a
Messiah alum. Champions for the Bullets, YES THE BULLETS, and not
the crappy kind like the old Washington Bullets, were Robert
Garnett at 141, Colin Devlin at 149, Colin Kowalski at 174 and Paul
Triandafilou at heavyweight. That last name is easy for me - why?
If I can say the Mongolians without an issue, Triandafilou is a
walk in the park!
York College, the one in Pennsylvania, won the Ned McGinley Monarch
Invitational held at King’s College in Pennsylvania. They’ve got
that Spartan Spirit as Sparty Gang Green won four individual titles
for coach Duane Bastress.
On to the dual meets!
No. 2 Ohio State returned to the state of Maryland to take on Navy.
The end result was a 28-9 win for the Buckeyes in a dual where Navy
battled hard for most of the matches, but faded at the end of
several bouts. Myles Martin’s a New Jersey native, but went to high
school at McDonogh School, where the dual was held. Martin looked
solid, picking up one of two technical falls on the night - the
other came at 149 pounds by Micah Jordan. Joey McKenna needed a
pair of escapes and a riding time point to get past Navy’s Nic Gil
3-2 at 141 pounds. McKenna was fresh off the plane after competing
in Friday’s All-Star Classic in Denver.
No. 7 Missouri blasted No. 15 Illinois 30-8 in the Grapple at the
Grove, an outdoor event prior to the Illinois football game in
Champaign. All-American Jaydin Eierman got past Mikey Carr 12-10 at
141 pounds, while true freshman Zach Elam, fresh off his silver
medal performance at the Junior Worlds, beat Deuce Rachal 10-4 at
285 pounds.
Illinois did have one bright spot as transfer Joey Gunther knocked
off Mizzou’s Connor Flynn 4-1 at 165 pounds.
No. 16 Rutgers cruised in three wins at the RAC in front of over
4,200 fans. The Scarlet Knight faithful saw the return of Anthony
Ashnault to the lineup. The three-time All-American pinned all
three of his opponents on the day, including returning NCAA
qualifier Khristian Olivas of Fresno State. As far as the duals
went, Rutgers beat Fresno State 30-6 and pounded Division III
schools Johnson & Wales 38-5 and Centenary 48-3. Yes, Nick Suriano
wrestled at 133 and yes, that’s where he WILL stay this year. If
anyone tells you he might be going down at some point this year,
that isn’t happening, folks. Trust me.
In Division III, Washington & Lee got an overtime victory at 285
pounds by freshman Clay Chadwick to upend No. 11 Ferrum 20-15.
Having grown up in Virginia and been aware of the Generals program
for over 20 years, this is the biggest win I can remember in the
program’s history. Congrats to Nate Shearer and crew in
Lexington.
Thomas More, yes, the Saints and we’re not talking about Val Kilmer
here, picked up a 35-9 win over Kentucky Wesleyan on Saturday. Can
we talk about Elisabeth Shue, though? Seriously though, the match
was the first dual in Kentucky Wesleyan history. Who got the
school’s first wins? LaMont Wilson, Caleb Craig and Daniel Lopez
did the honors for KWU.
As always, results are available at the nation’s most comprehensive
college wrestling scoreboard at almanac.mattalkonline.com and if
you like this show, if you like the dynamic on-demand content of
the Mat Talk Podcast Network, how about kicking a few bones a month
in my direction to help continue promoting this great sport. You
can contribute at mattalkonline.com/jointheteam. You’ll get cool
stuff too and if you help out enough, I might just stop with these
awful themes. WHHHHHHHHYYYYYYYYYY.
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