Category: NCAA Wrestling

133 LB SEASON PREVIEW

Another day and another preview. We wrapped up the 125 lb preview yesterday and today we hop into 133 lbs.

Conference Championship Predictions

Big Ten – Stevan Micic (Michigan)

Big 12 – Daton Fix (Oklahoma St)

ACC – Korbin Myers (Virginia Tech)

PAC 12 – Michael McGee (Arizona St)

EIWA – Michael Colaicco (Pennsylvania)

MAC – Derek Spann (Buffalo)

SoCon – Jake Rotundo (Citadel)

All-Americans

  1. Daton Fix (Oklahoma St)
  2. Roman Bravo-Young (Penn State)
  3. Stevan Micic (Michigan)
  4. Austin DeSanto (Iowa)
  5. Korbin Myers (Virginia Tech)
  6. Lucas Byrd (Illinois)
  7. Michael Colaicco (Pennsylvania)
  8. Micky Phillippi (Pittsburgh)

Round of 12

  • Brandon Paetzell (Lehigh)
  • Matthew Schmitt (Missouri)
  • Michael McGee (Arizona St)
  • Sammy Alvarez (Rutgers)

Daton Fix

The 2-time NCAA runner-up I believe finally gets it done in the NCAA finals this March. Fix I think without a doubt is one of the most talented wrestlers at 133 lbs but for some reason the NCAA finals has not gone his way. With 2 overtime losses it begs the question if Fix is letting his opponents hang around in the match. This time around I think it will be different. I predict he will get a rematch with Roman Bravo-Young in the finals and jumps out of the gate with his attacks. With the talent of Bravo-Young that is what you need to do and I think this second time around Fix will be able to keep up the pace and take down Bravo-Young for his first NCAA title.

Round of 12

Matchups:

  • Korbin Myers vs Matthew Schmitt
  • Micky Phillippi vs Brandon Paetzell
  • Lucas Byrd vs Sammy Alverez
  • Michael Colaicco vs Michael McGee

This will be a fun blood round at 133 lbs and it starts off with Myers vs Schmitt. Myers is coming into this one off of a Quarterfinal loss to DeSanto. Schmitt comes into this one off of an early loss in the second round and battles back. Schmitt gets hurt on seeding in this one because off how loaded the Big Ten will be. Give me Myers in this one to advance. Now to Phillippi vs Paetzell. Very interesting matchup here and I think this will be very close. Phillippi comes into this one off of an early second round loss but battles back. Paetzell on the other hand comes off of a Quarterfinal loss to Fix and drops down to the blood round. Give me Phillippi in this one because I think he comes into this match hot after the early loss.

Now to an explosive matchup between Byrd and Alverez. Alverez comes into this one off of an early loss but comes back to get into the blood round. Byrd on the other hand comes off of a Quarterfinal loss to Micic. I’m going with Lucas Byrd in this one because coming off of last year I was really impressed with Byrd’s performance and I think this year he’s even better. The final blood round matchup is Colaicco vs McGee. This pits 2 conference champions together and I think this will be a good under the radar matchup. Colaicco I think gets hurt by seeding and losses early on and fights his way back. McGee comes into this one off of losing to Roman Bravo-Young in the Quarters. I’m going with Colaicco in this one just because I think he’s a dangerous matchup for everybody.

All-Americans

Ok, now that we got the blood rounds out of the way, let’s get to how the All-Americans shake out. You have Korbin Myers vs Micky Phillippi and Lucas Byrd vs Michael Colaicco. Myers vs Phillippi will be an ACC finals rematch and I think it’s going to be the same result as that match with Myers winning. Byrd vs Colaicco and I really like Byrd in this matchup. Now to the Consi-Semis where we see Myers vs DeSanto in the first matchup. DeSanto is a constant motor and reminds me a lot of how the Brands wrestled, he falls short to Fix in the Semi-Finals but not here. Then we see Byrd vs Micic. I think Micic responds from his Semi-Final loss to Bravo-Young and wrestles for third. For seventh we will see Phillippi vs Colaicco and give me Colaicco in that one. For fifth we will get a close matchup between Myers vs Byrd and I’ll take Myers in that one. For third it’s Micic vs DeSanto and I have Micic but this is a toss up match so I could see this going the other way.

Wrap-Up

So 133 might not have that same firepower that it had in 2018 and 2019 but it still packs a punch. I think we will see great wrestlers loss early and possibly get eliminated early like Chris Cannon from Northwestern. A lot of good wrestlers will not All-American at this weight and I think when you sit back and look at who is at 133 there could be 14 or 15 guys that could be All-Americans. Thank you for reading this article and look for the 141 lb preview coming soon.

125 LB SEASON PREVIEW

With the 2021-2022 NCAA Division 1 wrestling season approaching come November I think it’s a great time to look forward to what can happen come March.

Today we will start with 125 lbs and work our way all the way to heavyweight.

A little *disclaimer* before we start. This is for what I think will happen now with the guys who are on the current roster. So, because Nick Suriano is not on a roster yet, he will not be included in this preview. I am not going to predict where a guy will go or how good they will be if I do not know that they will actually wrestle this year due to them not being on a roster yet. Obviously Nick Suriano, if he wrestles will be an All-American but I’m previewing guys on current rosters.

So lets start off with conference champions predictions

  • Big Ten – Spencer Lee (Iowa)
  • Big 12 – Taylor LaMont (Utah Valley)
  • ACC – Sam Latona (Viginia Tech)
  • PAC-12 – Brandon Courtney (Arizona St)
  • EIWA – Vito Arujua (Cornell)
  • MAC – Drew Hildebrandt (Central Michigan)
  • SoCon – Fabian Gutierrez (Chattanooga)

Now All-American predictions

  1. Spencer Lee (Iowa)
  2. Vito Arujua (Cornell)
  3. Brandon Courtney (Arizona St.)
  4. Devin Schroeder (Purdue)
  5. Pat Glory (Princeton)
  6. Taylor LaMont (Utah Valley St.)
  7. Sam Latona (Va. Tech)
  8. Killian Cardinale (WVU)

Round of 12

  • Brody Teske (Northern Iowa)
  • Drew Hildebrandt (C. Michigan)
  • Jakob Camacho (NC State)
  • Robert Howard (PSU)

Any surprises? Let me explain myself.

Spencer Lee

Lee is by far the best wrestler we will see going into the 2021-2022 season and he is most likely the top 57 KG wrestler on the planet. Only if it wasn’t for his lack of ACL’s. Yeah you read that right, lack of ACL’s. If you do not remember after Lee won his third NCAA title against Arizona State’s Brandon Courtney, in his post match interview he shocked the wrestling community by stating “I’m wrestling with no ACLs” -Lee. With a whole summer to relax and get healthy I expect Lee to return and dominate the weight once again cementing himself as a 4-time NCAA champion. He has tough competition, by most standards but this is Spencer Lee we are talking about. Baring any surprise cradles or Sebastian Rivera cutting 20lbs, I think Lee will be the clear favorite.

Round of 12

Oh the blood round, anyone who has been to a NCAA Wrestling Championship in person knows that this round can be more exciting than the Semi-Finals happening at the same time. Drama, desperation, aspiration, all tie in to excitement and 125 lbs might offer some of the best matches. So let me set it all up with the possible matchups:

  • Brody Teske vs Devin Schroeder
  • Jakob Camacho vs Taylor LaMont
  • Robert Howard vs Sam Latona
  • Drew Hildebrandt vs Killian Cardinale

Now seeding can blow this all up, we are speaking in hypotheticals of course and March always brings in the surprise 23 seed in the third place match but lets just imagine this happens because I do believe these are the top 12 guys. Robert Howard I think takes a step up from last year and puts himself in a top 12 seed and could make it to the Quarters but wont go past that in the Championship bracket. He falls to Sam Latona which could be the match of the weight. I give the edge to Latona. Teske vs Schroeder is a match that could be fire works. Teske will probably get hurt with seeding especially with the Ivy’s back in the fold. This puts him in a position that he will have tough matches early and lose early. Schroeder will fall to him in the Quarters but this is his year and he wont be denied. Hildebrandt vs Cardinale is interesting. Not the best two guys in the country but can All-American given the right circumstances and I think both might have good weekends. Cardinale I think edges him out. Finally Camacho vs LaMont. This is a tough weight especially in the ACC so again this is a seeding casualty for Camacho. LaMont drops down from the Quarters and just has more in the tank to put him over the top.

The All-Americans

Now for the rest of my predicted All-Americans there really wasn’t a method to picking them. I believe that there are three legit finalist contenders at the weight and they are Arujua, Glory, and of course laat years finalist Brandon Courtney. This is a tougher weight than some give it credit for and I think its because Lee is so dominant that its him and 2 through 8 will work itself out. I think Arujua is the guy to give Lee a tough match so I put him in the finals. Arujua will take down Glory in the conference championships which will be good enough to earn him a 2 seed. Glory will get 3 or 4, I think 3. So it will be a rematch of the EIWA finals in the semis. Arujua again will take him out, probably on a UTB escape. Glory will then fall to Schroeder in the Consi-Semis back Schroeder is determined to win, Glory will take 5th, Shroeder 4th. The guy Schroeder loses to in the 3rd place match will be Brandon Courtney. Courtney will advance to the semis losing to Lee by at least a major decision. He drops to Taylor LaMont in the consi-semis and bounces back to place 3rd and LaMont gets 6th. That leaves Sam Latona vs Killian Cardinale for 7th. Cardinale will lose to Devin Schroeder, again who is determined to win, he falls to the 7th place match. His opponent in Sam Latona will drop his match to Taylor LaMont and I think this will be close. Latona faces Cardinale and I think beats him soundly for 7th.

Wrap Up

If you have read this far thanks and remember to stop by in a day or two when I release my 133 lb preview. That one will be fun, that much I will tell you. Lets get the conversation going on in the comments section. What did I get right? What did I get wrong? Let me know I would love to hear your opinions.

What Conference Realignment Means for NCAA Wrestling

Wow, isn’t Texas and Oklahoma throwing a wrench into the collegiate sports landscape. As this article explains, (Conference Realignment ) Oklahoma and Texas are in the talks of moving out of the Big 12 soon. Now right now, sports media is only talking about football and the two schools that can potentially move, but there is way more to resolve here.

The first thing we have to resolve is what will happen to the Big 12 once the schools leave? For wrestling, the Big 12 members are WVU, Oklahoma State, Oklahoma, and Iowa State. They also have affiliate schools which are Utah Valley State, North Dakota State, South Dakota State, Wyoming, Northern Colorado, Fresno State (Maybe), and Missouri who was just added to the conference for wrestling a few months ago (Missouri to the Big 12). But as a whole the conference has 10 member schools and that’s what keeps a conference alive. Now with the departure of two schools, that would leave 8 remaining which means the conference can either add schools or implode (most likely). This can create a scrambling effect with other schools so how can realignment shape college wrestling?

Who’s on the move?

WVU, Oklahoma State, and Iowa State will be on the lookout for new conferences to join. For the sake of argument let’s say they target Power 4 Conferences now that the 5th is gone. Where could they go?

West Virginia – ACC and Big Ten

Iowa State – Big Ten and Pac-12

Oklahoma State – Big Ten and Pac-12

For WVU the ACC makes the most sense. It will realign them with Pitt which is a big rivalry no matter the sport and will generate revenue. Plus I think WVU has a great shot with recent recruiting to compete in the ACC. WVU to the Big Ten is purely geographically based and I don’t see the Big Ten as the first choice.

For Iowa State the Big Ten makes sense. It guarantees that Iowa vs Iowa State competitions will continue and will give them a little better standing in the state of Iowa recruiting-wise because when we think of wrestling Big Ten is king. By joining the Big Ten it can cut into Iowa’s recruiting which can balance out the competition, maybe. The Pac-12 only makes sense if the rest of the Big 12 members decide the West Coast is the best option.

Now Oklahoma State is interesting. Out of the three schools, OK State is going to instantly make whichever conference they join better. The Big Ten would make sense if WVU and Iowa State join, I don’t think it’s a solo move. The Pac-12 I think is the fit. The competition will be there but OK State will not have to step in and take on a powerhouse like the Big Ten. I also believe that with the move to the Pac-12, OK State can open up a California recruiting network that can prove valuable.

For the affiliate schools, other than Missouri the Pac-12 will be the move most definitely just based on geography. Missouri will now be in a big pickle, even bigger than what they were in 2012 when the school left for the SEC and the wrestling team joined the MAC. The move will probably be the Big Ten. I think to stay competitive recruiting, the Big Ten will be the better move. The MAC has already been tried and that experiment didn’t work that well for Missouri in March, sorry MAC fans but it’s true.

Watch out for Kansas, insignificant as they are in most sports not basketball, they are rumored to be pursuing a Big Ten merger. Kansas might pursue a wrestling program at that point so maybe a program could be added there.

What about Oklahoma?

I know that Oklahoma wrestling is not on the minds of most people when it comes to this move but it’s on my mind. There are two outcomes to this move and one is great and one is terrible. How about the terrible first.

The terrible outcome would be the loss of the program. Obviously, the MAC is always an option and is probably the answer, but long term Oklahoma might want to replace the sport with something else. I know Missouri is in the same boat but Oklahoma will try to mold themselves around their new conference and will try to compete at the highest level in every sport.

Now for the great outcome. This would be the growth of the sport in the south. This is a dream outcome for wrestling fans and the sport. With the continuing success of Louisiana, Georgia, and Florida high school wrestling at national tournaments it makes some wonder why in-state schools would not want to try to attempt to keep those wrestlers in-state. This could provide the spark for schools like Florida, Georgia, and LSU to add wrestling programs. This growth could cause more competition and spread the wealth of wrestling out to different parts of the country. The sport of wrestling could use the eyeballs so this could be just what we need.

Is This Move Good for Wrestling?

Is it good? Yes and no. First I’ll give the yes and it’s good because the competition will get even better. It is known that most of the Big 12 schools are not that competitive at a national level and I do think it is because they are so far away from the key recruiting states like PA, NJ, and Ohio just to name a few. And people can say “Iowa has a roster full of PA guys”, and yes that is true but they are attached to the Big Ten. See I am from the state of Pennsylvania and if I want to go wrestle and I wanted to leave home I would choose a Big Ten school because there is an opportunity to wrestle at PSU, Maryland, Rutgers, and Ohio State where my parents are more likely come to a match or two than if I decided to go to Oklahoma State. What I am saying is recruiting will get even more spread out than it is and if a West Virginia joins the ACC more high school wrestlers will be willing to go there because they won’t have to travel halfway across the country for a January dual.

Now for the bad. Pitting top-tier competition together will always be entertaining for the fans and some might see that as a great thing. Who doesn’t want to see WVU vs Pitt or OK State vs PSU every year but there are trade-offs to everything and this means that mid-major programs will be on the chopping block. Look we can lie to ourselves and think that centralizing the top-tier competition together will be great for the sport but mid-major schools will suffer. I argue that for any sport to be competitive an underdog is needed not only to keep the fans watching but to keep the top-tier competition on edge. If the smaller programs start to struggle in recruiting, the athletic programs might decide to cut wrestling from the program. Now it takes other things other than success but the upside is important here and small schools aren’t going to benefit from these moves. Maybe some don’t care and feeling that cutting weight is good, but with programs already being cut more than being added. It puts our sport in a tough spot. Do we want to make it a sport where top-tier competition is all we care about? I don’t as a fan and as someone who wants to cover wrestling.

What is Next?

I want everyone to understand that all of this is about how motivated, and how willing are these two schools to bend to get out of the Big 12. And just because the SEC announces Texas and Oklahoma to the SEC is a done deal, doesn’t make it immediate, it’s better explained here: (Realignment Explained) but to sum it up the Big 12 has media rights of these two schools till 2024-2025 so it’s a guaranteed thing that it will happen in 2025 but the schools will want to push for the move sooner than that and possibly it can happen in 2022. There are hoops to jump through but once Oklahoma and Texas leave, the others can then go because unless schools are added to the conference, the Big 12 will no longer exist. This will make it easier to leave and that’s the only way you can see rapid movement as I’ve discussed.

This is a momentous shift in the college sports landscape and I promise you, we aren’t done yet.