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Wrestler of the Week: Shane Siefert

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The d3wrestle.com Wrestler of the Week returns today, and the winner is Shane Siefert of Whitewater. Siefert notched three wins for the Warhawks, helping the team to a 3-0 record. First, the top ranked Siefert won 8-3 over fifth ranked returning All-American Eric Twohey in Whitewaters 23-9 victory over WIAC rival La Crosse. Then, over the weekend, Siefert notched a fall in Whitewater’s shutout of North Central and dominated NWCA #9 Jake Reuteler of Concordia Wisconsin 18-3 to give the Warhawks a pair of wins at the Border  Brawl.

Siefert, a junior from Mundelein, Illinois, is currently 20-2 and ranked first in the latest d3wrestle.com Rankings. For his career, he is 85-16 and is a two time All-American, finishing 4th as a freshman and 2nd last season. Whitewater is currently ranked 2nd as a team in both the d3wrestle.com and NWCA Rankings. Siefert and the Warhawks head to Wheaton for the Pete Willson Invitational this Friday and Saturday to defend their team title from last season.

Birt to head up restarted Millikin program

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Last month, Millikin University announced their intention to restart their wrestling program after dropping the sport in 2008. Late last week, the Decatur, Illinois, school announced the hiring of Ryan Birt as their next head coach. Birt most recently was the Associate Head Wrestling Coach at Loras College where he was named 2014 Central Region Assistant Coach of the Year. As a wrestler, Birt was the 1999 NCAA Division III champion and 1997 runner-up for Upper Iowa University. He was also an All-IIAC performer on the football field. Millikin is the fifth school in the College Conference of Illinois and Wisconsin with wrestling.

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Ryan Birt

Millikin University Names Birt Head Wrestling Coach

DECATUR, Illinois—Millikin University is pleased to announce that Ryan Birt has been named the new Big Blue head wrestling coach. Last month Millikin announced that its NCAA varsity wrestling program would return to competition in the 2015-16 academic year after being dormant since 2008. Birt will start at Millikin on January 26.

“We are thrilled to welcome Ryan Birt to Millikin to lead the resurgence of a strong Big Blue wrestling program,” said Millikin University President Dr. Patrick White. “At Loras College, Coach Birt has been a driving force in recruitment and on-the-mat success for a team that has been consistently near the top of the Iowa Conference, the premier NCAA Division III wrestling conference.”

“We are very excited to have Ryan Birt joining the Big Blue staff to lead the return of our wrestling program,” said Dr. Craig White, Millikin Director of Athletics. “Birt’s excellent knowledge of the sport and a strong coaching background will serve Millikin well as we build a competitive wrestling program.”

“I am so thankful that President White and Dr. Craig White are giving me the opportunity to lead Millikin in the sport of wrestling,” said Birt. “It seems like there is a lot of support at Millikin and Central Illinois for wrestling so I believe we can be successful immediately. I can’t wait to get to work and put Millikin on the map as one of the top D3 programs in the country. I was raised an Urbana Tiger, so I am very excited to be coming home to Central Illinois and joining the Millikin staff.”

Birt comes to Millikin with over 16 years of wrestling coaching experience at the club, high school and collegiate level. Birt is an accomplished wrestler earning an NCAA National Championship and twice earning All-American status.

Birt was most recently the Associate Head Coach at Loras College in Iowa. Birt has been on the Loras staff since 2010 where he helped the Duhawks wrestling program become a top 20 program. Last season Loras finished 14th in NCAA Division III and earlier this season the Duhawks were ranked as high as eighth in the nation. Birt was named the NCAA Central Region Assistant Coach of the Year in 2014. He has coached nine NCAA qualifiers, five NCAA All-Americans and one NCAA Champion. He helped Loras raise over $100,000 to renovate team locker rooms and a wrestling room.

Birt started his coaching career in 2000 as an assistant coach at Forest City, Iowa High School. He then moved to Gibson City Melvin Sibley High School where he became head coach in 2002. He compiled over 150 dual meet wins, three regional championships and two sectional championships while at Gibson City. Birt qualified 20 individuals for the Illinois (IHSA) State Tournament, including 11 place-winners and two state champions. In 2003 Birt was inducted into Urbana High School Athletic Hall of Fame.

“An experienced teacher and coach, Ryan Birt will understand and further Millikin’s enactment of performance learning in every aspect of our student’s experience,” said President White.

Birt wrestled and played football at Upper Iowa University. His wrestling career included a perfect 39-0 season and NCAA National Championship in 1999. He was a two-time All-American and an NCAA runner up in 1997. He was twice an Iowa Conference Champion and named the Iowa Conference’s Most Outstanding Wrestler. He was also an all-conference linebacker in football at Upper Iowa. In 2010 he was inducted into the Peacock’s Athletic Hall of Fame. Birt graduated from Upper Iowa in 2000 with degrees in Physical Education and Secondary Special Education.

This fall Millikin will become the fifth College Conference of Illinois and Wisconsin (CCIW) institution to compete in wrestling at the NCAA Division III level.

Millikin fielded a wrestling program from 1959 to 2008 when the program was suspended. Over the years, Millikin had 47 athletes advance to the NCAA National Championships with five wrestlers earning All-American honors.

Millikin wrestlers have earned 48 CCIW individual championships and have earned All-Conference honors 170 times. Millikin had eight second-place conference team finishes, including four times in the program’s final seven years.

Helping to expedite the re-establishment of the program, an anonymous Millikin wrestling alumnus has issued a challenge to alumni and friends of Millikin, offering to match dollar for dollar all donations to Big Blue wrestling – up to $100,000.

High school wrestlers wishing to learn more about the Big Blue wrestling program and Millikin athletics should call Head Coach Ryan Birt at 217-424-6344, email him at rbirt@millikin.edu, or visit http://bit.ly/MU-wrestling to view Millikin’s new wrestling page. To make a gift in support of the program, visit https://www.millikin.edu/give or call Dave Brandon, Vice President for Alumni and Development at 217-424-6383 or email dbrandon@millikin.edu.

Evans named head coach at Eau Claire

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The University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire has named Jared Evans as the new Interim Head Wrestling Coach. Evans replaces Steve Wozniak who has been reassigned in the athletic department. Evans is a three time All-American for Augsburg and was part of two NCAA Champion teams. Read on for more.

Evans Named Head Wrestling Coach

Jared Evans
Jared Evans

Jan 26, 2015
EAU CLAIRE, Wis. (blugolds.com) –The UW-Eau Claire athletics department announced today that Steve Wozniak has been reassigned and Jared Evans will be the interim head coach for the wrestling program, effective immediately.

Wozniak served as an assistant coach from 2011-13 and was the interim head coach for the 2013-14 season before being named head coach in August. His duties will be reassigned within the wrestling program.

“We appreciate Steve’s contributions to the wrestling program as the head coach and are pleased he is willing to assist the program for the remainder of the season in a new role,” said Director of Athletics Dan Schumacher.

Prior to UW-Eau Claire, Evans spent three seasons on the coaching staff for the Augsburg College wrestling program, two of those years as the assistant head coach.

A 2007 Augsburg graduate, Evans earned All-American honors three times as a 149-pound wrestler. He finished his career with a 139-37 record and was a part of Augsburg teams that won national titles in 2004-05 and 2006-07, while finishing second once and third once.

“I’m ecstatic to be a part of the UWEC wrestling program,” said Evans. “I thank Steve for giving me my first opportunity to be a part of UW-Eau Claire wrestling and happy to know that Steve will continue to help us build the program.”

Weekend Events 1/23-25

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Border Brawl Duals at Whitewater

Panther Open at Ferrum

Alma Open

NEWA Duals at Springfield

Mel Berry Duals at Thiel (Friday starting at 4pm)

IIAC Duals at Wartburg and Simpson

Middle Atlantic Championships at Wilkes

Regional Alignment and the Growth of Division III Wrestling

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NCAA Division III Wrestling

 

Division III Regional Alignment for 2014-2015

The 2011-2012 season was the first to feature the current regional qualification system. The Division III teams were each placed into one of six regional tournaments with the top three finishers at each weight qualifying for the NCAA Championships. Prior to 2012, each conference/regional championship was allotted a different number of qualifiers based on a formula that accounted for performance of that conference in previous NCAA Championships. This was also the era of wildcard meetings where coaches voted on the most deserving qualifiers when the number allotted to a conference was not a multiple of ten. The past few years have seen the total number of qualifiers increase from 160 to 170 under the wildcard system and now to the current 180 under the regional system.

Region Teams
West 11
Midwest 12
Central 13
Mideast 18
East 18
Northeast 18
Total 90

The move to the regional system was prompted primarily by the desire of the NCAA to remove historical data (i.e., results from prior seasons) from the process that determines who qualifies for the NCAA Championships in all sports. When Division I wrestling moved to its current system involving coaches rankings, RPI, and Gold and Silver Standards (explained here), that left Division III wrestling as the only championship (out of nearly 90 championships at the time) in the entirety of the NCAA still relying on historical data.

In order to completely remove historical data from the qualifying process, the regions would ideally be determined solely on a geographical basis with an even number of teams in each region. That said, it is possible to argue that some regions should have fewer teams in order to minimize travel distances. Regardless, the system put in place grouped the teams into six regions. For 2015, the three regions in the eastern half of the wrestling map are approximately 50% larger than that three regions in the western half. (These numbers reflect the fact that Yeshiva has not yet attended a regional and that Maranatha has shuttered their program, at least for this year)

EastMideastThere are also a few places on the map where things look a little strange. Some of this was done in order to keep some of the all-sport conferences (OAC, Centennial, IIAC) together, but it is worth pointing out.

First, there’s the East/Mideast divide pictured here. It is a little bit strange, but it makes some sense when considering that the idea was to keep some conferences together, so Centennial members McDaniel and Gettysburg stay with their conference teams that are further to the East.

It is an open question as of now whether the desire to keep conference teams grouped together will remain important as teams are added and the regions are realigned. The NCAA has indicated that the current maximum region size is 18 teams which is why the addition of Daniel Webster College to the Northeast Region this year necessitated moving Oswego into the Mideast Region. Now there are three regions at this maximum of 18. In order to hold regions at or below 18 teams without major realignment, multiple teams will have to change regions next year in order to fit Greensboro and Hampden-Sydney into regions that make geographical sense. Adrian and Millikin can likely slot in somewhere without causing major movement.

Things are also a bit mixed up in the western part of the Division III map.

WestMidwest

There are four teams (five if Maranatha, represented by the red star, was competing this year) that are pretty far to the east and are farther to the east than at least three teams that are not in the West region.

It is expected that that regions will be evaluated and realigned after the 2015-2016 season. Here is one proposal for how to do so. These are some of the guidelines used to generate what is to follow.

1. Conferences do not have to stay together
2. Keep the same, or close to the same, number of teams in each region
3. Simple boundaries between regions are better than complicated ones
4. Current or past team quality is not considered. This is the only way to truly eliminate the use of historical data.
5. This includes all teams that have either announced new teams for next year or are in the provisional period of joining the NCAA. Some of these teams will not yet be eligible for the postseason for 2016-2017.

This results in a list of 97 teams (Yeshiva and Maranatha were excluded from this alignment but could easily be added should they return to postseason competition). With 97 teams, there are five regions with 16 teams and one with 17 teams. No team should have to cross a regional border to travel to any other team in their region. Click below to see a proposed regional map including these 97 teams.

Division III Regional Realignment Proposal Map | List of Teams by Proposed Region

Some caveats to consider:

1. It is likely that more schools will start teams between now and the 2016-2017 season. This season, there were three new teams. Next season, there will be at least four. This map only accounts for what we know now.
2. This is not necessarily the absolute best arrangement of teams. It is possible to meet the guidelines above but come up with a different, or even better, proposal.
3. At some point, keeping six regions will not make sense as there will be too many teams. If a seventh or eighth regional is added, the whole system will have to change if the tournament stays at 180 qualifiers.

With any luck, Division III wrestling will continue to grow, and this proposal, along with any others, will have to adjust to account for the growing demand for wrestling at Division III colleges.

Wednesday Results

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Waynesburg won the final 3 matches to defeat W&J 22-17

 

Springfield 29, Norwich 12

Brockport 39, Oswego 6

Waynesburg 22, Washington & Jefferson 19

Cortland 19, Oneonta 18

 

Rankings Analysis

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New rankings will be out next week. In the meantime, here is some analysis of our last set of rankings.

Rankings available HERE

UPDATE: Rankings #6 Color Coded by Region

26 wrestlers appear at each weight in the d3wrestle.com Rankings. There is a Top Ten and then eight Contenders and eight Honorable Mention.

Top Ten Wrestlers by Region

NE E ME C MW W
12 15 18 21 21 13

Total Wrestlers Appearing by Region

NE E ME C MW W
41 44 56 46 47 26

Weights with fewer than three wrestlers appearing
West 149 – 1
Northeast 149 – 2
West 157 – 2
Central 165 – 2
West 174 – 2
West 184 -2
This means that if the regionals were this week, seven wrestlers not listed anywhere in the d3wrestle.com rankings would qualify for the NCAA Championships. Five of them would be from the West Region.

A lot will change between now and the last weekend in February, but this is where things stand as of today.

Weekend Events 1/17-18

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Cornell Matman Invitational

Will Abele Invitational at Ursinus

Purple Raider Open at Mount Union

Al Hanke Invitational at Elmhurst

Empire Conference Championships

Max Servies Duals at Wabash

East-West Duals at Messiah

Thursday Results

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Jack Seaman won by fall at 285 to turn an 18-12 deficit into a 19-18 win on criteria for Augustana over #9 Coe

 

Augustana 19, Coe 18

Central 26, Loras 11

Alma 29, Olivet 10

Concordia Wisconsin 32, North Central 12

Life 48, Huntingdon 0

 

Wednesday Results

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Trey Mitchell picked up a key fall for McDaniel on Wednesday. Photo by David Sinclair

 

McDaniel 23, Johns Hopkins 17

Whitewater 41, Oshkosh 3

Hampden-Sydney to reinstate wrestling for 2015

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Hampden-Sydney college, a men’s college in Virginia, announced today their intention to reinstate wrestling for next season for the first time since dropping the sport in 1987. Mac Main, currently the golf coach and a former Longwood College wrestler, will add wrestling to his coaching duties and will begin recruiting immediately. Hampden-Sydney is one of three all-male liberal arts colleges in the United States and one of two in Division III. With this announcement, both schools (Wabash being the other) will have wrestling. Read on for more.

Hampden-Sydney to Add Wrestling as Tenth NCAA Sport in 2015-16

HAMPDEN-SYDNEY, VA-Hampden-Sydney College President Dr. Chris Howard and Athletic Director Richard Epperson have announced the addition of wrestling as an intercollegiate sport at the College.

“Hampden-Sydney College is excited to announce the return of wrestling as our tenth NCAA sponsored sport in the fall of 2015,” commented Epperson. “I want to extend sincere appreciation to Mike Moyer, Executive Director of the National Wrestling Coaches Association (NWCA) for his invaluable assistance in bringing wrestling back to the College.” Hampden-Sydney offered wrestling in the 1960’s, 1970’s and 1980’s. Lou Wacker served as Head Coach for many of those years.

The National Wrestling Coaches Association, established in 1928, is a professional organization dedicated to serve and provide leadership for the advancement of all levels of the sport of wrestling with primary emphasis on scholastic and collegiate wrestling programs.

“The NWCA wants to extend a heartfelt thanks to President Chris Howard, Richard Epperson, and the Hampden-Sydney College administration for recognizing the educational value that intercollegiate wrestling will bring to their campus,” Moyer said. “The NWCA is committed to assisting the program with startup funds, grass roots promotion, and ongoing support. Hampden-Sydney College is located in the heart of some of the best high school wrestling in America which will help to insure the long term success of the program. This new varsity program represents the 120th new intercollegiate wrestling team that has been established or re-established since 2001.”

Current Tiger golf coach Mac Main has been tabbed to lead the Hampden-Sydney grapplers and has begun recruiting for the team’s inaugural season.

“I am confident Coach Main will build a competitive Division III wrestling program at Hampden-Sydney,” added Epperson.

“I believe it is fitting that Hampden-Sydney College, an institution steeped in history and tradition, reinstate wrestling as an NCAA intercollegiate sport,” Main stated. “One of our goals is to develop young men of exceptional character and prepare these gentlemen for success in a competitive world. I am pleased to be part of developing a wrestling program that will be both competitive and successful. For the past two years, we have nurtured a wrestling club team and have several freshmen members of the team that are former high school state champion wrestlers. Additionally, we are actively recruiting new students for our program. There are a tremendous number of high school wrestlers that are seeking opportunities to continue their sport in college, and there has been a lack of NCAA Division III wrestling programs, available, for these young men to do so. We believe we can offer these wrestlers an opportunity to continue the sport they love and increase the strength of the Hampden-Sydney athletic department.”

To learn more about the NWCA, visit www.nwcaonline.com.

The Tiger wrestlers will compete in Kirby Field House.

d3wrestle.com Rankings #6

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d3wrestle.com Rankings #6 – January 14, 2015

Team Tournament Rankings

Rank Team Tourn. Pts
1 Wartburg 50
2 Whitewater 49
3 Messiah 44
4 Wabash 41
5 La Crosse 38
6 Delaware Valley 36
7 Augsburg 33
8 Mount Union 29
9 Coe 28
9 Luther 28
11 Ithaca 26
12 Loras 25
13 Cortland 24
13 John Carroll 24
13 Concordia Moorhead 24
13 Williams 24
17 Alma 23
17 Stevens 23
19 Hunter 22
20 Central 20
20 Baldwin Wallace 20
22 TCNJ 19
23 Washington & Jefferson 16
23 Ohio Northern 16
25 Springfield 15
25 Heidelberg 15
25 Ursinus 15
28 Brockport 14
29 Wilkes 13
29 NYU 13

NWCA Rankings #5

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NWCA Rankings #5 Individual | Team

 

 

 

Tuesday Results

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The Mariners knocked off Centennial foe Stevens on Tuesday

Merchant Marine 26, Stevens 20

Central 52, Ozarks 3