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More D1 Quarterfinal Analysis

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Last summer, I wrote an article for TheOpenMat.com analyzing the technique in the 2013 NCAA Division I quarterfinal round. You can see that article here: Andy Vogel: 2013 Quarterfinal Analysis

I have now watched the 2014 quarterfinals and added that information to the spreadsheet tracking last year’s data. You can find that spreadsheet here: NCAA Quarterfinals Takedowns

There are three tabs to that spreadsheet. One is for 2013, one is for 2014, and one is for the two years combined. This combined data set encompasses 80 matches over two years, so we are starting to get to a point where some of the noise in the data is ironed out. I want to do two things with this post. First, I will quickly go over my ten points from last year’s article to see how the conclusions hold up with twice as much data. Second, I want to address some of the points brought up in the following two articles posted by Chris Orzechowski as it relates to my data. Article 1 | Article 2

Here are the ten points from the original article, along with appropriate comments

1. The single leg takedown is still supreme
This is still demonstrably true. 46% of takedowns were singles in 2013, and 44% were in 2014

2. Wrestlers must be able to finish without getting to their feet

3. The high crotch is missing in action
It is not missing so much in 2014. This was the point that seemed most likely to be an issue of a small sample size, and 2014 bore that out. After seeing just one high crotch in the 2013 quarters, there were nine in 2014. I believe the general conclusion in the initial article is still correct, as those who scored with a hi-c cut across and finished very quickly. Those that failed to finish quickly were stalemated out of the position.

4. Good wrestlers rarely give up points on their own attacks
This is especially true when the attacker gets to the legs.

5. Wrestlers cannot rely on defensive scrambling to score
There were many instances of wrestlers getting initiating scrambles to avoid giving up points, but there were still very few instances where the defensive scrambler actually scored. The next question is whether the defensive wrestlers were actually trying to score or just working for a stalemate.

6. The fireman’s carry is all but gone in NCAA wrestling
Still true! If you have a great fireman’s but want to be a great college wrestler, you need to add another attack immediately.

7. An opponent on his knees is vulnerable to an overtie shrug or slide by
I did not see this in 2014, but it may be back in 2015 with Hunter Stieber back from a redshirt year. He is really good at this.

8. Even if a wrestler does not score, excellence on top is rewarded

9. Wrestlers, even very good ones, have trouble adjusting during the match
At the very least, all wrestlers need to develop an effective attack to each side.

10. Referees could call stalling sooner to spur action
This is getting worse, not better. Unfortunately, there are some very talented wrestlers out there who have figured out the officials’ unwillingness to call stalling, and they are doing a lot of boring winning.

Lastly, and I did not track this in 2013 for comparison, 22 of the 40 2014 quarterfinal winners either scored a riding time point or won by fall. None of the losers scored a riding time point.

Now, to address the articles posted by Chris Orzechowski. His articles used the 2012-2014 NCAA finals as his data set. The first article started off with some great points that echoed what I found in the 2013 analysis and was backed up by the 2014 addition to the data. The single leg is the dominant takedown, and it’s not that close. My article and his looked at different matches but came to the same conclusion, so I am pretty confident in that result. Looking at scoring in the matches, Orzechowski concludes that singles, stand ups, and mat returns are very important due to the relative frequency of those techniques and scoring riding time points.

There is one other conclusion in the article I want to address, however. 85% of NCAA Champions from 2012-2014 scored the first takedown, so it is concluded that it is imperative that wrestlers score first if they want to win. I am sure there is a connection between the first takedown and winning, but I think the causality is backwards. Wrestlers do not win because they get the first takedown. Wrestlers get the first takedown because they are better than their opponent and thus more likely to win. The idea that you should emphasize scoring first while coaching remains good advice if the goal is to help wrestlers develop a successful attacking style.

The second article qualifies the statements about scoring first, revealing that scoring first is no more important than scoring any other time. Where things got interesting was in the discussion of the timing of scores. In the 30 NCAA finals matches examined in the article, it was determined that there were approximately 50% more points scored in the 3rd period than either the 1st or 2nd period. Curious to see if this held up in the quarterfinals, I did my own analysis. I only had information about takedowns, so that will have to stand in for points, but the lack of near fall points at this level should mean the comparison is at least decent. Here are the takedown statistics for the full 80 match data set.

Takedowns by Period for Winners and Losers in 2013-2014 NCAA Divison I Quarterfinals

13 & ’14  1st  2nd  3rd  OT
Winner  63  26  36  5
Loser  11  3  16  0
Total  74  29  52  5

We can compare my data with that in the article, keeping in mind that the article uses all points while my data uses only takedowns. I am leaving out overtime takedowns in the chart below because I cannot tell if they were included in the Orzechowski’s data. The big caveat is the difference between points and takedowns. This could come into play in the 2nd and 3rd periods, as those periods usually feature at least one escape.

Scoring/Takedown Percentage Comparison
scoring chart

I believe this chart shows the difference in quality between wrestlers in the finals and quarterfinals. There are still some significant mismatches in the quarterfinals, whereas the finals should ostensibly be the top two wrestlers at each weight. Thus, the matches will have less variance and could come down to things like conditioning as stated in Orzechowski’s second article. In the quarterfinals, a better wrestler can get out to a bigger lead, making late scoring less important. I think that is exactly what happens in the quarterfinals. You can see that the winning wrestlers have a huge advantage in 1st period takedowns, but a much smaller advantage in the 3rd period. In fact, the 3rd period is when the losing wrestlers scored the most, possibly because you sometimes have a better conditioned, but less talented wrestler trying to fight his way back from a deficit.

I am grateful to Orzechowski for taking the time to write his articles to help move the conversation forward. If you have not yet read his articles, I highly encourage it.

Walter steps down at Platteville

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Chris Walter

d3wrestle.com has learned that University of Wisconsin-Platteville head coach Chis Walter has stepped down after 17 years leading the Pioneers to take a position outside of coaching. He coached 29 NCAA qualifiers and 9 All-Americans at Platteville. During his career, he was named WIAC Coach of the Year and NWCA Rookie Coach of the Year. He also is a member of the NWCA Division III Ranking Committee. He served as the assistant coach for one season before taking over as head coach in 1997 and leading the team to a 10th place NCAA finish in 1998.

There has not yet been any official word on how Platteville will move forward t0 name a successor.

Last chance for DIII Cultural Exchange

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Cultural Exchange Banner

This is the last chance for athletes to join the Division III Cultural Exchange trip. After this month, it will be far too expensive to add any more athletes to the team. Ideally, at least six more wrestlers will join this group. Here are some important details:

Cost: $2,988, includes airfare to and from JFK
Dates: Depart May 27th, Return June 9th
Itinerary: Istanbul, Bulgaria, Bucharest, Paris

Contact Tim Fader at fadert@uww.edu or 262-472-1867 for more information and to sign up.

See updates from last year’s trip HERE.

Both of the 2014 141 lbs. finalists were on this trip in 2013.

Cultural Exchange Workout

La Crosse GA Position

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Lax logo

Master of Science in Physical Education Teaching

The University of Wisconsin Lacrosse has graduate assistantships available for students wishing to continue their education. Assistantships include high school and elementary school teaching assignments, lab and clinical work as well as adventure education opportunities. Students receive approximately $7200.00 stipe end for the assistantship. The program can be completed in 12 months. There are three academic tracks to choose from: Adventure education, Adapted physical education, and Teaching.

Program information can be found at: http://www.uwlax.edu/sah/ess/pe/index.htm

There is also an opportunity to serve as an asst. wrestling coach.

Interested students are encouraged to contact Dr. Jeff Steffen at:
Jeff Steffen
Director of Graduate PETE and Adventure Programs
University of Wisconsin- La Crosse
218 Mitchell Hall
La Crosse, WI 54601

office 608-785-6535
fax 608-785-8172
jsteffen@uwlax.edu

2014 Wrestler of the Year: Nazar Kulchytskyy

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In a repeat of last season, Nazar Kulchytskyy of the University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh has been named the d3wrestle.com Wrestler of the Year for 2014. Kulchytskyy won his third consecutive NCAA championship in Cedar Rapids this month, finishing off his career with a pin in the 157 lbs. finals. He opened the tournament with an 18-4 major decision over last year’s runner-up at the weight, and worked his way through the bracket with wins over the #8, #5, and #2 seeds to take the title. It was his second championship at 157 sandwiched around a 165 title in 2013. His pin in the finals ran his season record to 42-2 and a perfect 33-0 against Division III competitors. He was awarded the Outstanding Wrestler award at the NCAA Championships.

It was the second straight year that Kulchytskyy finished undefeated against Division III wrestlers, and he finishes with a career record of 143-5. He lost one match to a Division III wrestler in his entire career. In 2013-2014, he was named the NCAA’s most dominant wrestler, scoring an average of 5 team points per bout against DIII wrestlers. It was the second straight year he won that award. He finished the season with 20 falls, 5 tech falls, and 8 major decisions. Only four of his Division III opponents were able to avoid giving up bonus points.

During the season, Kulchytskyy won titles at the Pointer Open, MSOE Invitational, Pete Willson Invitational, Blugold Open, and the West Regional. He was second at the Dan Gable Endowment Open, losing to a Division wrestler from the University of Wisconsin. He led the Titans to a 10th place finish at the NCAA Championships, their best finish since 1982. Congratulations to Nazar Kulchytskyy, the 2014 d3wrestle.com Wrestler of the Year and the all-time wins leader at the University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh.

Clayton Joins USA Wrestling

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Mike Clayton has left Stevens Institute of Technology after seven seasons to take a position with USA Wrestling. Assistant Coach Jeff Jacobs has been named interim head coach in his place with former Stevens All-American Joe Favia taking Jacobs’s place as assistant. Read below for the release from USA Wrestling.

Mike Clayton joins USA Wrestling as its National Coaches Education Program Manager

Mike Clayton, formerly from Hoboken, N.J., has joined USA Wrestling as its National Coaches Education Program Manager. Clayton began his service in his new position on March 11.

Clayton will manage USA Wrestling’s National Coaches Education Program (NCEP) and will be actively involved in the education and development of wrestling coaches at all levels within the United States.

Click to keep reading Mike Clayton joins USA Wrestling as its National Coaches Education Program Manager

2014 Coach of the Year: Tim Fader

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The 2014 d3wrestle.com Coach of they Year is Tim Fader of the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater. Fader led the Warhawks to their highest ever finish in the NCAA Championships for the second straight year, topping last year’s third place finish with a runner-up award this season. Whitewater had five All-Americans and put two wrestlers into the finals. Sophomores Matt Adcock (141) and Shane Siefert (197) each finished second in their weight class to lead Whitewater at the Championships. Jimmy Nehls, Elroy Perkin, and Cedric Gibson all finished in 5th place, while Anthony Edgren also competed, giving the Warhawks six total qualifiers.

Whitewater compiled a 20-3 record that included a third place finish at the NWCA National Duals where they lost only to NCAA Champion Wartburg. They were team champions at the Pete Willson Wheaton Invitational and won their third consecutive WIAC Championship. In the postseason, they won a second straight Midwest Regional title, sending six to the NCAA Championships.

Fader began at Whitewater in 2004 after six seasons as the head coach at rival La Crosse. He has coached 21 All-Americans at Whitewater, including four NCAA finalists. He has led Whitewater to a 117-67-3 record since 2004, and has twice been named the NWCA Coach of the Year, once at La Crosse in 2001 and once at Whitewater in 2012. He is also a team leader for the Division III Cultural Exchange. Congratulations to Coach Fader on being named the 2o14 d3wrestle.com Coach of the Year.

All-Freshmen Team & Freshman of the Year

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The 2014 d3wrestle.com Freshman of the Year should not be a surprise to anyone. Riley Lefever of Wabash is this year’s winner after an outstanding debut season for the Little Giants. The Fort Wayne, Indiana, native joined brothers Connor and Reece at Wabash this season and compiled a 41-0 record at 184 lbs. on the way to a national championship win in the NCAA finals in Cedar Rapids on March 15th. He defeated returning NCAA runner-up Brian Broderick of TCNJ 3-1 with a takedown in the first sudden victory period to become the first ever NCAA Champion from Wabash and lead the Little Giants to a 9th place finish, their best ever at the event.

During the season Lefever was the champion at the Concordia Open, Little State, North Central Invitational, Mid-States Championship, and the Midwest Regional. He was the Outstanding Wrestler at the North Central Invitational and the Outstanding Freshman at the Mid-States. He was undefeated at the NWCA National Duals to help Wabash to a 5th place finish at that event.

In high school, Lefever was both a state and USA Wrestling Junior National freestyle runner-up last year.

See below for the rest of the 2014 d3wrestle.com All-Freshman Team

125 – Lucas Malmberg, Messiah – NCAA Runner-Up, Mideast champion, 46-4
133 – Dustin Weinmann, La Crosse – NCAA qualifier, Midwest runner-up, 21-11
141 – Charlie Banaszak, Chicago – NCAA 4th, Midwest 3rd, 29-11
149 – Nick Drendel, Dubuque – NCAA 8th, Central champion, 22-8
157 – Larry Cannon, Messiah – 25-13, wins over All-Americans Garrison and Jasinski
165 – Stephen Aiello, Wheaton – NCAA 7th, Midwest 3rd, 44-13
174 – Carlos Toribio, Ithaca – NCAA qualifier, Northeast 3rd, 25-8
184 – Riley Lefever, Wabash – NCAA Champion, Midwest champion, 41-0
197 – Hunter Ayen, Springfield – Northeast 4th, 28-12
285 – Zachery Roseberry, Delaware Valley – NCAA 4th, East champion, 29-7

2014 Results for 2013 All-Freshman Team
125 – Izzy Balsiger, UW-La Crosse – 2-1 this season
133 – Ryan O’Boyle, McDaniel – NCAA 4th
141 – Nathaniel Behnke, UW-Eau Claire – NCAA qualifier
149 – Bobby Dierna, Cortland – NCAA runner-up
157 – Everet Desilets, Johnson & Wales – NCAA 5th
165 – Shaun Gillen, Oneonta – Northeast 4th
174 – Dallas Winston, Delaware Valley – 1-2 this season
184 – Josh Thomson, Messiah – NCAA 4th
197 – Shane Siefert, UW-Whitewater – NCAA runner-up
285 – James Buss, Loras – NCAA Champion

Overcoming Adversity with Wrestling

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 JonathanDeupree

From Florida to Southern Maine: Overcoming Adversity with Wrestling

By Joe Narvaez

Wrestling is one of the toughest sports known to man. From cutting weight to training hard through injuries, the sport is a true test of strength and mental stability. This sport has been one to create adults and all wrestlers are better people because of the sport. It has parallels with many of the challenges we see as human beings, and it prepares us for the challenges we do not see coming, much like that low single attack out of nowhere.

At the University of Southern Maine, Jonathan Deupree has come from being an unknown to a nationally known wrestler in two short seasons. His journey to get here has not been typical, and when he is finished it will be one that many could not have accomplished.

Growing up, Jonathan was faced with the normal challenges of adolescence, but some of his choices caused these challenges to become more difficult. Through all of this, one thing stayed the same, he kept wrestling. After high school he dropped out of college and fell into a hole many never get out of, but he kept wrestling. His poor choices had him associated with friends who were getting killed as members of gangs and who were going to prison. These decisions put Jonathan out on the streets, homeless on his own until he decided to change his life. For some this is called “Rock Bottom” but for Jonathan it was called “A Turning Point.” He made it to Maine for a change of scenery and continued to wrestle at an MMA gym.

That gym is where he met two-time All-American and current Southern Maine assistant coach Mike Morin. Mike had been working out when he noticed that Jonathan was not just an average guy training. The two had a conversation, and Jonathan agreed to apply to Southern Maine to wrestle and complete his studies. Head coach Joe Pistone, along with assistant coaches Mike Morin, Julio Santiago, Joe Narvaez, and Logan Russell, welcomed Jonathan with open arms into the family. They all knew that there was a special individual on hand to help the team win.

The last two seasons Jonathan has dedicated himself to leading a better life which in return has made him a better person. In that short time he has gone from an unknown wrestler to one of the best 184 lbs. wrestlers in the country. Being from Florida, Portland, Maine, is the other side of the coin when it comes to weather, but that did not stop him from making the most of this opportunity. Placing in the Northeast Regional in 2013 gave him a taste of success but winning the Northeast Regional in 2014 was a major step towards accomplishing his main goal. He qualified for the 2014 NCAA Championships and made it to the round of 12, but he has some lofty goals for next year. In wrestling, as is true in life, anything can happen!

After graduation, Jonathan plans to open a transitional home for athletes who need help after they have made poor decisions. Jonathan used wrestling to get back on track, and this transitional home will allow athletes to participate in what they love to do and focus on making the right choices to get back in the mainstream of living as an adult. He plans to start locally but aspires to expand nationally. When you are down by one point with 2 minutes left you have to make the most of that last period to overcome adversity. Jonathan is making the most of that period because wrestling has taught him how to fight, survive and win! The entire University of Southern Maine staff is excited for the 2014-15 Huskies!

Deupree and Staff 2014

Job Posting: University of the Ozarks

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See the job listing below for a full time position at a new Division III program. Note that the position and program are pending a Board of Trustees vote on April 26th.

University of the Ozarks

Head Men’s Wrestling Coach

The University of the Ozarks, a four-year liberal arts NCAA Division III institution located in Clarksville, Arkansas, seeks a head men’s wrestling coach to start a new wrestling program. The new wrestling program is pending approval from the Board of Trustees at the April 26, 2014 meeting. The position is a full-time, twelve-month contract and will begin immediately after program approval by the Board of Trustees.

This position is responsible for all phases including organization, direction, and administration. This includes recruitment and retention of student-athletes to meet the academic standards of an NCAA III institution. Other important duties include fiscal management, practice and coaching, and compliance with NCAA rules and regulations.

Bachelor’s degree required, master’s degree preferred. College coaching experience preferred. An understanding of the NCAA Division III philosophy and the role of athletics in a rigorous academic setting is essential. Candidates must know NCAA bylaws, rules and regulations. EOE. Application preference will be given to those received before April 14. Review of the applications will begin immediately.

Send letter of application, resume and three references to: swiseman@ozarks.edu. Only electronic resumes will be accepted. No phone calls please.

Spots Still Available

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Cultural Exchange Banner

There is still time left to join the Division III Cultural Exchange trip to Bulgaria, Romania and Turkey this summer. The cost of the trip is $2988 and it will cover the roundtrip flight overseas and all costs of travel, lodging, meals, sightseeing, training, and competition. There is usually four-five different competitions in different cities as well as many chances to train and learn with World Silver Medalist Georgi Kalchev. The head coach of the trip is Nate Hansen of Simpson College and his assistant will be Zach Mizer of Buena Vista College. Last year we took a group of 19 from Division III and would like to take 20 this year.

You can view videos of the 2013 trip at

www.youtube.com/user/georgecamps

If you would like to learn more about this opportunity, please call Tim Fader at 262-472-1867 or email at fadert@uww.edu

2014 Awards Coming Next Week

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d3wrestle Logo

Starting next week, d3wrestle.com will start naming the season-long award winners. The awards given out are All-Freshman team (one per weight), Freshman of the Year, Coach of the Year, and Wrestler of the Year.

Last years award winner were as follows:

2013 Wrestler of the Year – Nazar Kulchytskyy, Oshkosh

2013 Coach of the Year – Steve Marianetti, Elmhurst

2013 Freshman of the Year – Josh Thomson, Messiah

2013 All-Freshman Team:
125 lbs. – Izzy Balsiger, UW-La Crosse
133 lbs. – Ryan O’Boyle, McDaniel
141 lbs. – Nathaniel Behnke, UW-Eau Claire
149 lbs. – Bobby Dierna, Cortland
157 lbs. – Everet Desilets, Johnson & Wales
165 lbs. – Shaun Gillen – Oneonta
174 lbs. – Dallas Winston – Delaware Valley
184 lbs. – Josh Thomson, Messiah
197 lbs. – Shane Siefert, UW-Whitewater
285 lbs. – James Buss, Loras

Championships Data

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2014 NCAA Banner

Region Stats

All-Americans
Northeast 16
Mideast 15
Midwest 15
Central 15
East 12
West 8
Team Points
Central 215
Midwest 200
Mideast 193
Northeast 179
East 146
West 125.5
Scoring Wrestlers
Midwest 26
Northeast 26
Central 24
Mideast 23
West 20
East 19

Places by Region

Central East Mideast Midwest Northeast West
1st 5 0 1 2 0 2
2nd 2 1 3 2 2 0
3rd 1 4 2 0 2 1
4th 4 1 3 1 1
5th 2 0 1 4 2 1
6th 1 2 3 1 2 1
7th 2 1 1 2 3 1
8th 1 1 2 1 4 1
Total 14 13 14 15 16 8

List of wrestlers who scored team points

Unseeded All-Americans (21)
125 Ambrocio, Concordia Wisconsin, 8th
133 Bergeron, Concordia Moorhead, 6th
133 Giorgio, Coast Guard, 8th
141 Banaszak, Chicago, 4th
141 Ferinde, JWU, 5th
141 Stauber, Johns Hopkins, 6th
149 Perkin, Whitewater, 5th
149 Drendel, Dubuque, 8th
157 Desilets, JWU, 5th
157 Jasinski, Ursinus, 8th
165 Foley, Springfield, 6th
165 Aiello, Wheaton, 7th
165 Crowell, Roger Williams, 8th
174 Bonaventura, Waynesburg, 2nd
174 Lenhardt, JWU, 8th
184 Chorzepa, Williams, 3rd
184 Malychewski, Pacific, 5th
184 Sheldon, Coe, 6th
197 Horner, Coe, 5th
285 Green, Trine, 5th
285 Caruso, Bridgewater State, 8th

Best Finish By Seed
1: 1st (133, 141, 157, 174, 184, 197)
2: 1st (149, 165)
3: 2nd (125, 133)
4: 1st (125, 285)
5: 2nd (165)
6: 2nd (141)
7: 3rd (149)
8: 4th (184, 285)

Number of seeded wrestlers who equaled or exceeded seed: 35
Number who failed to match seed: 45
Seeded All-Americans: 60

2014 NCAA Division III All-Americans

125 165
1 Mike Fuenffinger Augsburg 1 Cole Welter Wartburg
2 Lucas Malmberg Messiah 2 Nicholas Carr Washington & Jefferson
3 Jesse Gunter Baldwin Wallace 3 Chris Burdge Centenary (NJ)
4 Robert Bidlingmaier Olivet 4 Kristopher Schimek Ithaca
5 Gilberto Camacho Wartburg 5 Cedric Gibson Whitewater
6 Matthias Ellis II Brockport State 6 Dylan Foley Springfield
7 Paul Bewak Johns Hopkins 7 Stephen Aiello Wheaton (IL)
8 Sean Ambrocio Concordia (WI) 8 Collin Crowell Roger Williams
133 174
1 Kenny Anderson Wartburg 1 Landon Williams Wartburg
2 Alex Gomez Ithaca 2 Anthony Bonaventura Waynesburg
3 Jeremy Border Mount Union 3 Ethan Ball Coe
4 Ryan O`Boyle McDaniel 4 Dan Schiferl Oshkosh
5 Jimmy Nehls Whitewater 5 Ricardo Plummer Messiah
6 Jacoby Bergeron Concordia 6 Zach Zotollo TCNJ
7 Silas Murray Rhode Island College 7 Lou Puca Cortland
8 Nathaniel Giorgio Coast Guard 8 Colin Lenhardt Johnson & Wales (RI)
141 184
1 Kaleb Loht Messiah 1 Riley Lefever Wabash
2 Matt Adcock Whitewater 2 Brian Broderick TCNJ
3 Brandon Jones New York University 3 Christoper Chorzepa Williams College
4 Charles Banaszak Chicago 4 Josh Thomson Messiah
5 Michael Ferinde Johnson & Wales (RI) 5 Caleb Malychewski Pacific (OR)
6 Henry Stauber Johns Hopkins 6 Ryan Sheldon Coe
7 Matt Holmes Loras 7 David Welch Roger Williams
8 Wayne Black Mount St. Joseph 8 Eric Twohey La Crosse
149 197
1 Ryan Prater Elmhurst 1 Alex Coolidge Cornell College
2 Robert Dierna Cortland 2 Shane Siefert Whitewater
3 Vincent Fava Delaware Valley 3 Jacob Lowry Thiel
4 Mark Hartenstine Wilkes 4 Aaron Karns Delaware Valley
5 Elroy Perkin Whitewater 5 Donnie Horner Coe
6 Daniel Mirman John Carroll 6 Joe Giaramita Cortland
7 Jacob Long Concordia 7 Punahele Soriano Wartburg
8 Nick Drendel Dubuque 8 Paul Glover Brockport State
157 285
1 Nazar Kulchytskyy Oshkosh 1 James Buss Loras
2 Dimitri Boyer Coe 2 Ryan Fank Wartburg
3 Jorge Lopez Williams College 3 Chad Johnson Augsburg
4 Reece Lefever Wabash 4 Zachery Roseberry Delaware Valley
5 Everet Desilets Johnson & Wales (RI) 5 Mackenzie Green Trine University
6 Jon Garrison Mount Union 6 Jacob Minske La Crosse
7 Mark Savenok Wheaton (IL) 7 Cody Lovejoy Ohio Northern
8 Richard Jasinski Ursinus 8 Ricky Caruso Bridgewater State

Finals Recap

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2014 NCAA Banner

A recap of the 2014 NCAA Division III Championship Finals from the US Cellular Center in Cedar Rapids, Iowa

125 Mike Fuenffinger (Augsburg) major decision 12-4 over Lucas Malmberg (Messiah)
Fuenffinger had a dominant tournament with three major decisions, the last of which came in the finals. He used a lot of forward pressure to control the pace, dropping to an ankle and finishing on both legs quickly. On top, he kept smothering pressure on the Messiah freshman, forcing him to choose neutral in the second period. In the third, Malmberg had a ray of hope when he scored a quick two near fall points to start the period, but that was all he could muster, with Fuenffinger scoring the final takedown to secure the major right at the buzzer.

133 Kenny Anderson (Wartburg) decision 4-2 in sudden victory over Alex Gomez (Ithaca)
Gomez was the aggressor in the first period, but he could not secure a takedown against the 2x champ from Wartburg. After Anderson chose down to start the second, Gomez took advantage and piled up two minutes on top to get into the third period scoreless but with a commanding advantage in riding time. In between periods, it seemed like there was some indecision in the Ithaca corner about what to choose. Gomez ultimately chose bottom against Anderson, something nobody else in the tournament did. He nearly made it pay off with a reversal early in the period, but Anderson was able to reverse him back and get rid of the riding time advantage and send the match into overtime. In sudden victory, Anderson took his first real shot of the match and blew through a double leg to win his third straight title.

141 Kaleb Loht (Messiah) decision 6-3 over Matt Adcock (Whitewater)
Loht seemed to be head and shoulders above the rest of this weight class all weekend. He pressed the action, looking to close the gap, while Adcock worked from space looking for outside doubles. Near the end of the first, Adcock took a shot that Loht countered with a throwby and rideout to end the period up 2-0. He added another takedown and was in control the whole way. Adcock scored a late takedown to tighten the score, but it was too little too late as Loht ran his record to 48-1 to lead Division III in wins for the year.

149 Ryan Prater (Elmhurst) decision 4-2 over Bobby Dierna (Cortland)
Dierna got after it early, getting in on several attacks but not finding a finish. The period ended with no score as Dierna chose the bottom position. Prater made the most of his chance on top and was able to get legs in and get two points along with two minutes of riding time to end up with a 2-0 lead after two. A quick escape gave Prater a 3-0 lead that he was able to hold. A late takedown by Dierna closed the gap, but the escape and riding time were the different for Elmhurst’s fourth ever NCAA champion.

157 Nazar Kulchytskyy (Oshkosh) win by fall in 4:20 over Dimitri Boyer (Coe)
After a scare in the semis, Kulchytskyy did not let things get that close in the finals. He got to work early, scoring a takedown and working on a tilt. All tournament long, he dominated with solid positioning and an outstanding front headlock, and this was more of the same. Midway through the second period of a match he had well in hand, he was able to convert a Boyer shot into a nearside cradle and eventually worked for a fall. Kulchytskyy ended the tournament as a three time champ, the NCAA Most Dominant wrestler, and the tournament Outstanding Wrestler.

165 Cole Welter (Wartburg) decision 5-3 over Nick Carr (Washington & Jefferson)
Carr, a late season transfer for the Presidents, had surprised many by defeating the #1 seed to get to the finals. Welter was less of a surprise coming from the #2 slot. Carr was aggressive on his feet as usual, but the first period ended in a scoreless tie. Carr rode hard in the second to pick up just over a minute of riding time. Carr, recognizing his size disadvantage to the taller and bigger Welter, chose neutral to hang on to the riding time advantage. Eventually, Welter was too much and scored a couple of takedowns to take a 5-1 lead. Carr reversed Welter near the end, but Welter gave Wartburg a second champion.

174 Landon Williams (Wartburg) win by fall in 2:46 over Anthony Bonaventura (Waynesburg)
Williams was the top seed and undefeated against DIII competition. Bonaventura was unseeded, but had defeated the #2 and #3 seeds to become the most unexpected finalist of the evening. His good fortune ran out against the 2013 champion Williams. A early takedown and three sets of back points made it 8-0 very quickly for Williams. He went for one more tilt and was able to pin Bonavantura shortly before the first period expired to win his second title and end the night for the Knights as they salted away with their fourth straight title.

184 Riley Lefever (Wabash) decision 3-1 in sudden victory over Brian Broderick (TCNJ)
After the excitement of the previous match, things slowed down quite a bit in the 184 match. Neither wrestler made too many attempts, just trading escapes in each period. In overtime, Broderick took a shot near the edge that Lefever countered. As Broderick came up, Lefever dropped to a leg. Broderick looked like he was going to be able to fight it off and escape out of bounds, but Lefever stayed on it and was able to work to secure the other leg to end the match without slipping out of bounds. Lefever finished his freshman year undefeated.

197 Alex Coolidge (Cornell) decision 6-5 over Shane Siefert (Whitewater)
Siefert jumped on Coolidge and scored a takedown just 12 seconds into the match to take an early lead. A quick reversal and escape had the score 3-2 with both wrestlers on their feet and less than 30 seconds gone in the match. 3-3 heading into the third period, Siefert was the one with the reversal followed by an escape to take a 5-4 lead into the last minute of the match. Coolidge got in on Siefert’s leg with under 30 seconds to go and was able to secure the takedown. Siefert nearly escaped, but Coolidge was able to hang on for dear life and ride out the clock to take the one point win in front of the hometown crowd.

285 James Buss (Loras) decision 4-1 over Ryan Fank (Wartburg)
What a tournament for the sophomore from Loras. Buss scored the upset of the tournament in the semifinals, beating Augsburg’s Chad Johnson 7-5. Johnson was three years removed from his last DIII loss at the time. All that win did was get Buss into the finals against Fank. Fank had defeated Buss in both of their previous meetings this year, but Buss was obviously in the midst of a great run. Buss was able to convert a Fank shot into a takedown and rideout to finish the first period up 2-0. Fank scored a quick escape and the second period ended with Buss up by one. Buss chose neutral against the rangy Fank, and with not much time left, Fank took a shot that Buss was able to stop. He was nearly behind when you could see Fank visibly give up, knowing that no matter what happened in that situation, it was not his night.

NWCA Academic Awards

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2014 NWCA Scholar All-Americans
2014 NWCA Top 30 Scholar Teams

To become a Scholar All-American, a wrestler must have a 3.2 GPA or better and achieve one of the following:
1. National Qualifier with a winning record
2. Regional placewinner with a winning record who has competed in at least 50% of the season
3. Season winning percentage of 67% or better who has competed in at least 50% of the season

This year, for the first time, freshmen were eligible for Scholar All-American awards.

As a final note, the wrestlers listed here are properly referred to as NWCA Scholar All-Americans, not Academic All-Americans. Academic All-American is a different award given by a different organization.

 

1. National qualifier – List Regional Placing:  ______________________

 

Win/loss record (need minimum of .500) ___________________

 

2. NCAA Regional and Place (Must Place Top 6 at NCAA Regional) :  _____________________

 

Win/loss record (need minimum of .500) ___________________

 

# of dates competed (need minimum of 50%): ______________

 

3. Win/loss record (need minimum of .670) ________________________

 

# of dates competed (need minimum of 50%): ______________

 

What is the nominee’s current won/loss record? Current Season: ___________Career Total:____________

 

1. National qualifier – List Regional Placing:  ______________________

 

                  Win/loss record (need minimum of .500) ___________________

 

2. NCAA Regional and Place (Must Place Top 6 at NCAA Regional) :  _____________________

 

Win/loss record (need minimum of .500) ___________________

 

# of dates competed (need minimum of 50%): ______________

 

3. Win/loss record (need minimum of .670) ________________________

 

# of dates competed (need minimum of 50%): ______________

 

What is the nominee’s current won/loss record? Current Season: ___________Career Total:____________

Picks Game Results Post

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2014 NCAA Banner
Please post your team results as a comment to this post. In order to help you calculate your score, the link below will take you to a list of the team points scored by every wrestler who scored in the tournament. If a wrestler is not on the list, he scored zero team points at the tournament. List your team results using the format below, using the same name, and using the same email address as in your initial entry. I made picks before the tournament as well, so the example team below is my team.

2014 Team Points Per Wrestler

IF YOU DO NOT PRECISELY FOLLOW THE FORMAT SHOWN BELOW YOU WILL BE DISQUALIFIED.

The format is as follows: weight, seed, last name, team, points

125, 3, Malmberg, Messiah, 17
133, unseeded, Giorgio, Coast Guard, 5.5
141, 6, Adcock, Whitewater, 15
149, 2, Prater, Elmhurst, 22
157, 1, Kulchytskyy, Oshkosh, 23
165, 4, Gibson, Whitewater, 13
174, unseeded, Lenhardt, JWU, 8
184, 8, Thomson, Messiah, 15.5
197, 5, Soriano, Wartburg, 9.5
285, 7, Edgren, Whitewater, 0
Total 128.5

Final 2014 Results

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2014 NCAA Banner

2014 NCAA Final Team Scores

2014 NCAA Final Brackets

NWCA Academic Awards
2014 NWCA Scholar All-Americans
2014 NWCA Top 30 Scholar Teams

NWCA Awards
Outstanding Wrestler: Nazar Kulchytskyy (UW-Oshkosh), 157 lbs
Most Falls in Least Amount of Time: Jacob Lowry (Thiel), 197 lbs – 2 falls (1:53)
Coach of the Year: Bryan Brunk (Messiah)
Rookie Coach of the Year: Marques Gales (Trinity), Nate Yetzer (Ferrum), Efrain Ayala (UW-Oshkosh)
Assistant Coach of the Year: Domineak Commodore (Messiah)

NCAA Season Awards
Elite 89 Award: Cody Lovejoy (Ohio Northern), 285 lbs
Most Dominant: Nazar Kulchytskyy (UW-Oshkosh), 157 lbs
Most Falls: Thomas Reyhons (Augustana), 184 lbs – 25 falls
Most Tech Falls: Shane Siefert (UW-Whitewater), 197 lbs – 11 tech falls

Saturday Live Video Link

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2014 NCAA Banner

Live Video of All Four Mats for Saturday, March 15

Session 3 – 11am Eastern – semifinals, consolation quarterfinals and semifinals, 3rd/5th/7th place matches

Session 4 – 8pm Eastern – championship finals

All-Americans per Region

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All-Americans per region:

West 8
East 12
Central 14
Mideast 15
Midwest 15
Northeast 16