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Bo Nickal Wins the Hodge! Date: April 1, 2019 at 12:34 PM To: Undisclosed-Recipients:;
From: Pat Donghia [email protected] Subject: Bo Nickal Wins the Hodge! Date: April 1, 2019 at 12:34 PM To: undisclosed-recipients:; Bo Nickal Wins the Hodge! Three-time NCAA Champion wins wrestling’s Heisman UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa.; April 1, 2019 – (Portion of release, including quotes, courtesy Bryan Van Kley, WIN Magazine) Penn State Nittany Lion wrestler Bo Nickal (Allen, Texas) has won the WIN Magazine/Culture House Dan Hodge Trophy, presented annually to the top collegiate wrestler in the nation by ASICS. The Hodge Trophy has been awarded since 1995. The three-time NCAA champion finished first in the voting, just ahead of teammate Jason Nolf (Yatesboro, Pa.). A Nittany Lion has now won the last three Hodge Trophy awards. Nickal joins former Nittany Lion greats Zain Retherford and David Taylor, who each claimed two Hodge Trophy honors, and former Lion stand-out Kerry McCoy, who won the honor in 1997, as Penn State recipients. In all, Penn State now has four different individuals who have won the honor six times. The Nittany Lion won his third NCAA championship on March 23, defeating Kollin Moore of Ohio State. The 5-1 finals victory at 197 pounds was Nickal’s 30th of an undefeated senior campaign that included 18 pins, three tech falls and six major decisions. In a year that featured four outstanding finalists for the award, known as “wrestling’s Heisman Trophy,” Nickal won the honor over a senior teammate Jason Nolf, also a three-time NCAA champ who had very similar stats as Nickal. The other two Hodge finalists were Rutgers’ senior Anthony Ashnault and Cornell sophomore two-time champ Yianni Diakomihalis, who won NCAA championships at 149 and 141 pounds, respectively. -
2017-18 Big Ten Records Book
2017-18 BIG TEN RECORDS BOOK Big Life. Big Stage. Big Ten. BIG TEN CONFERENCE RECORDS BOOK 2017-18 70th Edition FALL SPORTS Men’s Cross Country Women’s Cross Country Field Hockey Football* Men’s Soccer Women’s Soccer Volleyball WINTER SPORTS SPRING SPORTS Men's Basketball* Baseball Women's Basketball* Men’s Golf Men’s Gymnastics Women’s Golf Women’s Gymnastics Men's Lacrosse Men's Ice Hockey* Women's Lacrosse Men’s Swimming and Diving Rowing Women’s Swimming and Diving Softball Men’s Indoor Track and Field Men’s Tennis Women’s Indoor Track and Field Women’s Tennis Wrestling Men’s Outdoor Track and Field Women’s Outdoor Track and Field * Records appear in separate publication 4 CONFERENCE PERSONNEL HISTORY UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS Faculty Representatives Basketball Coaches - Men’s 1997-2004 Ron Turner 1896-1989 Henry H. Everett 1906 Elwood Brown 2005-2011 Ron Zook 1898-1899 Jacob K. Shell 1907 F.L. Pinckney 2012-2016 Tim Beckman 1899-1906 Herbert J. Barton 1908 Fletcher Lane 2017- Lovie Smith 1906-1929 George A. Goodenough 1909-1910 H.V. Juul 1929-1936 Alfred C. Callen 1911-1912 T.E. Thompson Golf Coaches - Men’s 1936-1949 Frank E. Richart 1913-1920 Ralph R. Jones 1922-1923 George Davis 1950-1959 Robert B. Browne 1921-1922 Frank J. Winters 1924 Ernest E. Bearg 1959-1968 Leslie A. Bryan 1923-1936 J. Craig Ruby 1925-1928 D.L. Swank 1968-1976 Henry S. Stilwell 1937-1947 Douglas R. Mills 1929-1932 J.H. Utley 1976-1981 William A. -
62384-Wrestling DI
DIVISION I Wrestling DIVISION I 2007 TEAM STANDINGS Northern Ill. ...................................................7 Fifth place: J.P. O’Connor, Harvard, def. Tyler Turner, 47. Virginia..........................................................4 Seventh place: 1. Minnesota ....................................................98 Wisconsin, 6-4; Matt Coughlin, 48. Kent St. .........................................................31/2 Indiana, def. Jordan Leen, Cornell, 11-6. 2. Iowa St. ......................................................881/2 3. Missouri .......................................................80 49. Appalachian St. ............................................3 157-POUND CLASS Cleveland St. .................................................3 4. Northwestern................................................711/2 Final: Trent Paulson, Iowa St., def. Craig Henning, 5. Oklahoma St. ..............................................69 Liberty............................................................3 Wisconsin, 6-4; Third place: Michael Poeta, Illinois, def. 6. Michigan .....................................................62 North Carolina ...............................................3 James Strouse, Hofstra, 2-1 (tiebreaker); Fifth place: 53. Army .............................................................21/2 7. Hofstra.........................................................601/2 Matt Kocher, Pittsburgh, def. C.P. Schlatter, Minnesota, 2- 8. Iowa............................................................57 54. Boise St. -
Wrestling DIVISION I
Wrestling DIVISION I 2009 TEAM STANDINGS 2009 INDIVIDUAL RESULTS Gomez def. Hochstrasser, 6-3; Humphrey def. Ness, 1-0. Final: Gomez def. Humphrey, 5-4. 1. Iowa ....................................................................... 96½ 125-pOUND Class 2. Ohio St. .....................................................................92 WRESTLEBACKS 3. Iowa St. ................................................................. 84½ First round: Brad Pataky, Penn St., pinned Ian Moser, Bloomsburg, 1:40. Second round: Paul Donahoe, Edinboro, First round: Kennedy def. Notte, 11-6. Second round: 4. Nebraska ............................................................. 78½ Conroy def. Bonson, 17-5; Deubel def. Dillashaw, 12-3; Low 5. Cornell .................................................................. 73½ def. Obenson Blanc, Oklahoma St., 4-2; Bernard Futrell, Illinois, def. William Chamberlain, Duquesne, 1-0; Tyler Clark, def. Beebe, 3-2; VomBaur def. Celorrio, 6-0; Kennedy def. 6. Edinboro ..................................................................72 Iowa St., def. Prescott Garner, Navy, 19-5; Rollie Peterkin, Little, 8-3; Hutter def. Kubec, 7-3; Kimbrell def. Fisk, 5-2; 7. Missouri ...................................................................70 Schavrien def. Rappo, 9-3. Third round: Bell def. Conroy, 8. Illinois ........................................................................55 Penn, def. Eric Olanowski, Michigan St., 21-1 (technical fall, 5:49); Charlie Falck, Iowa, def. Derek Reber, Bucknell, 11-3; 14-8; DeShazer -
2018-19 Season in Review
WRESTLING 541 2018-19 SEASON IN REVIEW FINAL TEAM STANDINGS Conference Matches All Matches W L Pct. W L Pct. 1. Iowa* 9 0 1.000 14 1 .933 Penn State*# 9 0 1.000 14 0 1.000 3. Michigan 8 1 .889 13 1 .929 4. Ohio State 7 2 .778 12 2 .857 Minnesota 7 2 .778 14 3 .824 6. Nebraska 5 4 .556 12 5 .706 7. Rutgers 5 4 .556 12 6 .667 8. Wisconsin 3 6 .333 9 6 .600 Michigan State 3 6 .333 10 8 .556 Purdue 3 6 .333 7 10 .412 11. Northwestern 2 7 .222 5 10 .333 12. Indiana 1 8 .111 6 12 .333 13. Illinois 1 8 .111 2 9 .182 14. Maryland 0 9 .000 2 12 .143 * Regular Season Dual Champion ^ Big Ten Champion (determined by end-of-year championship) #NCAA Champion 2019 Big Ten Championships March 9-10 • Williams Arena • University of Minnesota • Minneapolis, Minn. Final Team Standings 2019 All-Big Ten Team Place Team Score Alex Marinelli, IOWA Mark Hall, PSU 1. Penn State 157.0 Sebastian Rivera, NU Bo Nickal, PSU 2. Ohio State 122.5 3. Iowa 107.5 Myles Martin, OSU Jason Nolf, PSU 4. Minnesota 101.5 Joey McKenna, OSU Anthony Ashnault, RU 5. Nebraska 96.5 Anthony Cassar, PSU Nick Suriano, RU 6. Michigan 76.5 7. Wisconsin 76.0 8. Northwestern 53.5 2019 Individual Award Winners Rutgers 53.5 10. Purdue 42.0 Co-Wrestlers of the Year: Bo Nickal, PSU/Jason Nolf, PSU 11. -
U.S. Olympic Team by Sport (Name, Gender, Height, Weight, Date of Birth, Hometown, State, Event/Position/Class)
U.S. Olympic Team by Sport (name, gender, height, weight, date of birth, hometown, state, event/position/class) Alabama (2) Trey Hardee M Athletics 6'5" 212 2/7/1984 Birmingham Ala. Decathlon Sandra Uptagrafft F Shooting 5'1" 116 4/12/1971 Phenix City Ala. Sport Pistol Alaska (1) Corey Cogdell F Shooting 5'7" 140 9/2/1986 Eagle River Alaska Trap Arizona (7) Abdi Abdirahman M Athletics 5'11" 135 1/1/1977 Tucson Ariz. Marathon Will Claye M Athletics 5'11" 160 6/13/1991 Phoenix Ariz. Long Jump; Triple Jump Brady Ellison M Archery 5'11" 190 10/27/1988 Globe Ariz. Recurve Bernard Lagat M Athletics 5'8" 130 12/12/1974 Tucson Ariz. 5,000m Breeja Larson F Swimming 6'0" 160 4/16/1992 Mesa Ariz. 100m breast Caitlin Leverenz F Swimming 2/26/1991 Tucson Ariz. 400m IM; 200m IM Georganne Moline F Athletics 5'9" 120 3/6/1990 Phoenix Ariz. 400m Hurdles Arkansas (3) Margaux Isaksen F Pentathlon 5'10" 134 10/7/1991 Fayetteville Ark. N/A Wallace Spearmon M Athletics 6'3" 175 12/24/1984 Fayetteville Ark. 200m Michael Tinsley M Athletics 6'1" 163 4/21/1984 Little Rock Ark. 400m Hurdles California (128) Kyle Alcorn M Athletics 6'1" 163 3/18/1985 Clovis Calif 3,000m Steeplechase Samuel Mikulak M Gymnastics 5'4" 140 10/13/1992 Newport Beach Calif Artistic Tumua Anae F Water Polo 5'11" 155 10/16/1988 Newport Beach Calif. Goalkeeper Alyssa Anderson F Swimming 5'8" 140 9/30/1990 Granite Bay Calif. -
Division I Wrestling Championships Records Book
DIVISION I WRESTLING CHAMPIONSHIPS RECORDS BOOK 2019 Championships 2 History 13 Individual National Champions 21 Team Finishes 27 All-Time Team Results 33 28 Central Mich. 12½ 29 Fresno St. 11½ 2019 CHAMPIONSHIPS Purdue Utah Valley 32 Old Dominion 11 33 Michigan St. 10½ 34 Pittsburgh 9½ TEAM STANDINGS Wyoming 36 Army West Point 7½ 1 Penn St. 137½ 37 Navy 7 2 Ohio St. 96½ Rider 3 Oklahoma St. 84 39 North Dakota St. 6½ 4 Iowa 76 40 Stanford 5½ 5 Michigan 62½ 41 Binghamton 5 6 Missouri 62 CSU Bakersfield 7 Cornell 59½ 43 West Virginia 4½ 8 Minnesota 53½ 44 Brown 4 9 Rutgers 51½ 45 Campbell 3½ 10 Nebraska 51 Penn 11 Virginia Tech 50 47 Appalachian St. 3 12 Arizona St. 42 48 Cal Poly 2 13 Lehigh 40½ 49 American 1½ UNI Bucknell 15 Princeton 35 George Mason 16 Iowa St. 32 Northern Colo. 17 NC State 31½ 53 Buffalo 1 18 Lock Haven 29 Indiana 19 North Carolina 28½ Ohio 20 Oregon St. 28 56 Air Force ½ 21 Wisconsin 27 Chattanooga 22 Northwestern 26 Columbia 23 Virginia 20½ Drexel 24 Duke 19 Kent St. 25 Oklahoma 18½ Northern Ill. 26 Illinois 16 SIUE 27 Maryland 13 2019 Championships 2 2019 NCAA Division I Wrestling Championships 125 CHAMPIONSHIP Thursday Morning Thursday Night Friday Morning Friday Night Saturday Night (1) Sebastian Rivera (NW) 30-2 (1) Rivera (NW) 11 TF-1.5 5:00 (21-6) (33) Trey Chalifoux (ARMY) 22-15 (33) Trey Chalifoux (ARMY) 22-15Dec 6-4 (1) Rivera (NW) 1 181 Dec 4-0 (32) Willy Girard (BLOO) 23-13 (17) Devin Schroder (PUR) 21-13 12 (16) Mattin (MICH) Dec 5-3 (1) Rivera (NW) (16) Drew Mattin (MICH) 20-9 341 (9) RayVon Foley (MSU) -
Wrestling DIVISION I
Wrestling DIVISION I Highlights Iowa captures Division I wrestling title in dominating fashion: The Iowa Hawkeyes finished in style, outdistancing the field at the 2010 NCAA Wrestling Championships by 44½ points in winning a third straight national title and 23rd overall since 1975. “It’s a lot more fun and it’s a lot more fun with the gap, the point spread, strings of victories, seniors going out the way they should,” Iowa coach Tom Brands said. “There’s a lot more to be content about as far as feeling good that there was a good job done. There was a good job done over the last three days for sure.” Iowa had five in the finals, crowned a trio of champions - redshirt-freshman Matt McDonough and seniors Brent Metcalf and Jay Borschel - and totaled eight All-Americans in amassing 134½ points. Cornell, led by national champion Kyle Dake at 141, finished a solid second with 90 points. Iowa State (75), Wisconsin (70½), Oklahoma (69) and Oklahoma State (65) rounded out the top six in the three-day tournament, which drew just more than 94,000 fans. The Outstanding Wrestler Award went to Minnesota senior Jayson Ness, a four-time All-American who finished his career with a title at 133 pounds. Ness (30-0) claimed gold with a four-point move in the final 10 seconds to beat Iowa’s Dan Dennis, 6-4. The Gopher, who lost in the 2008 NCAA finals at 125, trailed 4-2 and took an injury timeout right before turning a duck-under into a bear hug that finished with Dennis on his back. -
Navy Wrestling National Wrestling Hall of Fame Selects Former Navy
From: Stacie Michaud [email protected] Subject: Navy Wrestling - National Wrestling Hall of Fame Selects Former Navy Head Coach Bruce Burnett for Induction Date: October 23, 2019 at 5:41 AM To: Andrew Huneke - Fox45 [email protected], Baltimore Net [email protected], Baltimore Sun [email protected], Baltimore Sun-online [email protected], Bill Lusby [email protected], Capital [email protected], Earl Smith [email protected], Flowrestling pressreleases@flowrestling.org, Gary Blockus - TrackWrestling EIWA [email protected], gomids.com [email protected], Jarrett Abelson [email protected], Jason Bryant [email protected], John Aadland - EIWA [email protected], John Harmon [email protected], Kyle Irion [email protected], Morgan Adsit - Fox 45 [email protected], NCAA [email protected], Peter M Medhurst [email protected], Richard Immel - USA Wrestling [email protected], Ron Good-AWN [email protected], Scott Abraham - WJLA [email protected], Shawn Stepner-WMAR [email protected], Steve Hopp [email protected], Taylor Miller - USA Wrestling [email protected], The Open Mat [email protected] , USA Wrestling [email protected], USA Wrestling [email protected], Washington Post [email protected], WNAV Radio [email protected], Wrestling USA [email protected] For Immediate Release Tuesday, Oct. 22, 2019 Wrestling Contact: Stacie Michaud (410) 293-8773 For more information on Navy Athletics, log on to www.NavySports.com National Wrestling Hall of Fame Selects Former Navy Head Coach Bruce Burnett for Induction STILLWATER, Okla. — Former Navy wrestling head coach Bruce Burnett is one of eight men who will have his names enshrined in the National Wrestling Hall of Fame as a Class of 2020 inductee it was announced on Tuesday. -
2005-2006 HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY WRESTLING STATISTICS Final 2005-06 Season Wt
2005-2006 HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY WRESTLING STATISTICS Final 2005-06 Season Wt. Wrestler Overall Duals CAA Dual Falls Dec. Maj Tech Quick Career Cl. W-L W-L Duals Pts. Dec. Falls Fall Record 125 Dave Tomasette 14-8 4-3 0-0 15-11 0-1 9-5 3-2 1-0 XXXX 37-23 125 Jon Fennell 0-8 0-6 0-3 0-25 0-3 0-3 0-1 0-0 XXXX 0-8 133 0-3 0-3 0-0 0-15 0-1 0-0 0-1 0-1 XXXX 0-3 TOTAL 0-11 0-9 0-3 0-40 0-4 0-3 0-2 0-1 XXXX 0-11 133 Robbie Deibert 1-8 0-4 0-0 0-23 0-3 1-3 0-0 0-2 XXXX 1-8 133 Ricky LaForge 1-1 1-1 0-0 3-3 0-0 1-1 0-0 0-0 XXXX 141 7-1 0-0 0-0 0-0 2-0 4-1 1-0 0-0 3:10 TOTAL 8-2 1-1 0-0 3-3 2-0 5-2 1-0 0-0 3:10 74-27 141 Charles Griffin 27-8 11-4 3-0 46-14 4-0 14-4 5-2 3-2 1:47 54-14 141 John Manarte 12-5 4-1 3-0 16-3 2-1 8-2 1-0 0-2 1:48 54-38 149 2-0 2-0 0-0 6-0 0-0 2-0 0-0 0-0 XXXX 2-0 TOTAL 14-5 6-1 3-0 22-3 2-1 10-2 1-0 0-2 1:48 56-38 149 Mike Martini 1-6 0-2 0-0 0-8 0-1 0-2 1-0 0-3 XXXX 1-6 149 Chris Booth 0-4 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-1 0-3 0-0 0-0 XXXX 0-4 157 2-4 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 2-4 0-0 0-0 XXXX 2-4 TOTAL 2-8 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-1 2-7 0-0 0-0 XXXX 2-8 149 Mitch Smith 12-3 0-0 0-0 0-0 2-0 7-3 3-0 0-0 1:38 12-3 149 Jon Masa 26-5 13-3 6-0 60-9 7-2 7-3 5-0 7-0 1:18 157 9-2 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-0 4-2 3-0 0-0 2:30 TOTAL 35-7 13-3 6-0 60-9 8-2 11-5 8-0 7-0 1:18 126-32 157 James Strouse 29-12 14-6 6-0 47-18 0-2 18-10 8-0 2-0 XXXX 79-39 157 Mike Parziale 11-5 0-0 0-0 0-0 2-0 6-5 1-0 0-0 3:00 11-5 157 Anthony Tortora 6-2 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-1 5-0 0-1 0-0 0:30 6-2 165 Chris Vondruska 25-11 10-7 5-0 33-23 1-0 19-7 4-4 0-0 6:14 52-34 165 Jon Rothman 2-1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-1 0-0 0-0 XXXX -
Big Ten Wrestling Big Ten Championships - March 4-5, 2017
BIG TEN WRESTLING BIG TEN CHAMPIONSHIPS - MARCH 4-5, 2017 Contact: Bryson Jones, Assistant Director, Communications • Office: 847-696-1010, ext. 125 • E-mail: [email protected] • @B1GWrestling FINAL 2016-17 CONFERENCE & OVERALL STANDINGS CHAMPIONSHIPS INFORMATION CONFERENCE OVERALL Date: March 4-5, 2017 W L PCT. W L PCT. 1. Penn State* 9 0 1.000 14 0 1.000 Site: Indiana University 2. Iowa 8 1 .889 13 2 .867 Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall 3. Ohio State 7 2 .778 11 3 .786 4. Nebraska 6 3 .667 12 4 .750 Illinois 6 3 .667 9 3 .750 SCHEDULE OF EVENTS (ET) Rutgers 6 3 .667 12 5 .706 Saturday, March 4 7. Minnesota 5 4 .556 7 5 .583 8:30 a.m. - Doors open to the public 8. Wisconsin 4 5 .444 7 5 .583 10 a.m. - Session I begins (first round, quarterfinals) Michigan 4 5 .444 8 7 .533 Fans clear arena at conclusion of Session I 10. Purdue 3 6 .333 9 7 .563 4:30 p.m. - Doors open to the public 11. Indiana 2 7 .222 10 9 .526 6 p.m. - Session II begins (semifinals, wrestlebacks) 12. Northwestern 2 7 .222 7 8 .467 13. Michigan State 1 8 .111 5 11 .313 Sunday, March 5 14. Maryland 0 9 .000 2 16 .111 10:30 a.m. - Doors open to the public 12 p.m. - Session III begins (consolation semifinals, * - Big Ten Regular Season Dual-Meet Champion seventh-place matches) 3 p.m. - Session IV begins (first-, third-, fifth-place The 2017 Big Ten Wrestling Championships are set for this Saturday and Sunday, March 4-5, at matches) Simon Skojdt Assembly Hall on the campus of Indiana University. -
NCAA History Supplement
The History of Collegiate Wrestling Special Supplement for The 2006 through 2011 Seasons Jairus K. Hammond National Wrestling Hall of Fame and Museum History of Collegiate Wrestling 2006 Preseason Outlook Oklahoma State entered the 2006 season in the unprecedented position of having four defending NCAA champions in its lineup and thus was a clear favorite to capture its fourth straight team title. The Cowboys’ formidable lineup included returning champions Zach Esposito, Johny Hendricks, Jake Rosholt, and Steve Mocco, plus All-Americans Coleman Scott and Daniel Frishkorn. The Pokes’ biggest challenge might come from in-state rival Oklahoma, led by two-time NCAA champion Teyon Ware. Sooner mentor Jack Spates felt he had perhaps his best team in his 17 years at the helm: “We’re not aiming for second place. We think we can compete with anyone.” Michigan, runner-up to OSU in 2005, defending Big Ten champion Illinois, and a young, but very talented Minnesota squad were expected to challenge the Oklahoma schools for the team crown. Each of these Big Ten schools had a pair of brothers that were All-American candidates – the Churellas at Michigan, the Tirapelles at Illinois and the Schlatters at Minnesota. Lehigh was seeking its fifth straight EIWA crown and would face a stiff challenge from Cornell, which was coming off its first top five finish in the NCAA tournament in half a century. Lehigh could count on 2004 NCAA champion Troy Letters and three other All-Americans. Cornell had three-time All-American Dustin Manotti and super freshman Troy Nickerson. Regular Season The fortieth anniversary NWCA All-Star Classic in Stillwater highlighted November’s action.