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York College Men’s & Women’s FT Assistant

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York College is starting women’s wrestling next season and is adding a full time assistant to work with both teams. See below.

Assistant Men’s and Women’s Wrestling Coach

About York College of Pennsylvania:
Established in 1787, York College of Pennsylvania is a private, four-year college located in the city of York, a hub of arts and industry between Baltimore and Philadelphia. Housed on 190 picturesque acres, the college is known for its focus on experiential learning and community engagement, serving over 4,000 undergraduate and 300+ graduate students in more than 70 baccalaureate majors, along with 20+ graduate and professional programs. Deeply rooted in the liberal arts and recognized for excellence in its professional nursing, business, engineering, and education programs, York is ranked among the nation’s top 50 Best Value Schools by U.S. News. The College’s robust recreation and athletics program is among the best in the region, and is home to 23 NCAA III Division sports teams and 30+ intramural sports. A Princeton Review Best Northeastern College, York prides itself on its experienced, engaged faculty; its high-impact and student-centric philosophy; and its long-standing commitment to affordability and accessibility.

York College is committed to building a diverse college community and encourages members of underrepresented groups to apply.

Job Description:
The Assistant Wrestling Coach is responsible for supporting the Head Wrestling Coach in administering the varsity men’s and women’s wrestling programs. This is a full-time position with particular emphasis on the recruitment and coaching of qualified women’s wresting student-athletes. York College is a member of the Middle Atlantic Conference and will begin competing in women’s wrestling in the fall of 2023.

Requirements:
A bachelor’s degree is required, as well as sound wrestling background with a minimum of two years of experience in recruiting and coaching at the collegiate level.

Additional Information:
York College of Pennsylvania is an Equal Opportunity Employer. For a copy of York College’s Annual Security Report, you may contact the Office of Campus Safety or visit the website: Annual Security Report

Application Instructions:
Interested candidates should electronically submit a cover letter, resume and contact information for three references.

Review of applications will begin immediately. While applications will be accepted until the position is filled, for full consideration, applications should be received by March 28, 2022.

Apply Here

2022 All-Americans and Region Performance

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All-Americans and Team Scores
Lower Midwest – 18 AA, 4 finalists, 3 champs – 270 Points
Southeast – 16 AA, 1 finalist, 1 champ – 191.5 Points
Upper Midwest – 15 AA, 2 finalists, 2 champs – 207.5 Points
Central – 14 AA, 9 finalists, 3 champs – 220.5 Points
Mideast – 9 AA, 1 finalist, 0 champs – 83.5 Points
Northeast – 8 AA, 3 finalists, 1 champ – 109 Points

Breakdown by Weight

CLMMENESEUM
1252312
1332222
14121131
149221111
157111113
165121112
174122111
184122111
197111122
28512122
Total1418981615

All-Americans – 26 unseeded (in italics below)

125NameTeamRegion165NameTeamRegion
1stJacob DecaturBaldwin WallaceC1stBradan BirtMillikinLM
2ndCarlos ChampagneWabashC2ndKyle HatchWabashC
3rdShandon AkeoCentralLM3rdChase SchmidtUW-Eau ClaireUM
4thSamuel BraswellAverettSE4thWill EsmoilCoeLM
5thBrady KynerWartburgLM5thMatt LackmanAlverniaSE
6thRiley ParkerWashington & LeeSE6thCooper PontelandolfoNew YorkNE
7thNicholas ArborioWestern New EnglandNE7thSeth BrossardUW-La CrosseUM
8thTommy RussellMillikinLM8thAustin LambRITME
133174
1stRobbie PrecinNorth CentralLM1stCornell BeachemMount St. JosephC
2ndAndrew PerelkaJohn CarrollC2ndMichael RossJohnson & WalesNE
3rdDalton RohrbaughYorkSE3rdJacob KrakowLorasLM
4thMatt BerlinUW-Stevens PointUM4thZane MulderWartburgLM
5thJosh WilsonGreensboroSE5thSolomon NielsenAugsburgUM
6thDavid MasseyMount UnionC6thZach StedefordRITME
7thZach ThompsonUW-PlattevilleUM7thStefan MajorStevensSE
8thJoe PinsWartburgLM8thDemitreus HenryCortlandME
141184
1stJordin JamesMount UnionC1stJaritt ShinhosterUW-WhitewaterUM
2ndZayren TerukinaWartburgLM2ndPaul DetwilerCoast GuardNE
3rdJacob ReedOhio NorthernC3rdKyle BriggsWartburgLM
4thKyle SlendornStevensSE4thShane LiegelLorasLM
5thJimmy McAuliffeElmhurstUM5thChibueze ChukwueziIthacaME
6thBrandon WoodyAverettSE6thCharles BaczekWabashC
7thJosiah GehrMessiahSE7thMahlic SallahRoanokeSE
8thJames RodriguezCastletonNE8thDaniel SurichTCNJME
149197
1stBrett KalinerStevensSE1stCody BaldridgeNorth CentralLM
2ndMichael PetrellaBaldwin WallaceC2ndJack HeldtWabashC
3rdAlex BarrWabashC3rdBeau YinemanUW-OshkoshUM
4thAlex VillarNorth CentralLM4thCamden FarrowYorkSE
5thKristian RumphWartburgLM5thCoy SpoonerCoast GuardNE
6thRyan FleckUniversity Of ChicagoUM6thBentley Schwanebeck-OstermannAugsburgUM
7thKyle MerrittNorwichNE7thGable CrebsLycomingSE
8thMichael ConklinTCNJME8thJordan WallaceIthacaME
157285
1stNathan LackmanRhode Island CollegeNE1stJordan LemckeUW-OshkoshUM
2ndKaidon WintersRITME2ndDonovan KingOlivetC
3rdTyler ShilsonAugsburgUM3rdKaleb ReevesCoeLM
4thRyan LuthWashington & LeeSE4thTyler KimAugsburgUM
5thNolan HertelUW-La CrosseUM5thNico RamirezSouthern VirginiaSE
6thDavid HollingsworthWartburgLM6thRobby BatesNorth CentralLM
7thLuke ReicoskyJohn CarrollC7thJohn FulmerLycomingSE
8thDarian EstevezUniversity Of ChicagoUM8thHank BehaeghelJohns HopkinsME

McKinney to succeed Headlee at Waynesburg

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Waynesburg University Athletics Logo

Aaron McKinney has been selected to succeed the retiring Ron Headlee as head coach at Waynesburg University. McKinney spent the past four seasons as the head coach at nearby West Allegheny High School. Prior to coaching at West Allegheny, McKinney was a 100-match winner for Lock Haven University.

McKinney hired as head wrestling coach
WAYNESBURG, Pa. (March 14) – The Waynesburg University Department of Athletics is excited to announce the hiring of Aaron McKinney as its new head wrestling coach. He comes to Waynesburg after building an exceptional resume that includes extensive experience as a high school competitor and coach, standout collegiate athlete and club instructor.

“I am very excited about the addition of Aaron McKinney to the Waynesburg University Athletic Department. Coach McKinney’s success as a high school and club wrestling coach, along with his relationships in the local wrestling community and background as a Division I wrestler, will certainly open new doors for the Waynesburg University Wrestling Program,” said Waynesburg University Director of Athletics Adam Jack. “I look forward to the continued growth of the student-athletes on the mat, in the classroom, and as young men, under the guidance of Coach McKinney.”

Click for more…

2022 NCAA Final Results

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Final Individual Brackets | Final Team Scores | Finals Video Replay

Championship Final Results
125: Jacob Decatur (Baldwin Wallace) dec. Carlos Champagne (Wabash), 6-3
133: Robbie Precin (North Central) dec. Andrew Perelka (John Carroll), 6-4
141: Jordin James (Mount Union) dec. Zayren Terukina (Wartburg), 3-2
149: Brett Kaliner (Stevens) dec. Michael Petrella (Baldwin Wallace), 4-2
157: Nathan Lackman (Rhode Island College) dec. Kaidon Winters (RIT), 5-3, SV-1
165: Bradan Birt (Millikin) maj. dec. Kyle Hatch (Wabash), 14-2
174: Cornell Beachem (Mount St. Joseph) dec. Michael Ross (Johnson and Wales), 5-1
184: Jaritt Shinhoster (UW-Whitewater) dec. Paul Detwiler (Coast Guard), 12-6
197: Cody Baldridge (North Central) dec. Jack Heldt (Wabash), 3-2
285: Jordan Lemcke (UW-Oshkosh) dec. Donovan King (Olivet), 2-0

Tournament Awards
Outstanding Wrestler: Bradan Birt, Millikin
Tournament Coach of the Year: Brian Anderson, Wabash
Tournament Assistant Coaches of the Year: Wabash
Rookie Coach of the Year: Bill Jacoutot, Brockport
Most Falls: Kaleb Reeves, Coe

Season-long Awards
Most Dominant: Bradan Birt, Millikin – 5.45
Most Falls: Kaleb Reeves, Coe – 24
Most Tech Falls: Michael Ross, Johnson & Wales – 22

All-Americans

125165
1stJacob DecaturBaldwin Wallace1stBradan BirtMillikin
2ndCarlos ChampagneWabash2ndKyle HatchWabash
3rdShandon AkeoCentral3rdChase SchmidtUW-Eau Claire
4thSamuel BraswellAverett4thWill EsmoilCoe
5thBrady KynerWartburg5thMatt LackmanAlvernia
6thRiley ParkerWashington & Lee6thCooper PontelandolfoNew York
7thNicholas ArborioWestern New England7thSeth BrossardUW-La Crosse
8thTommy RussellMillikin8thAustin LambRIT
133174
1stRobbie PrecinNorth Central1stCornell BeachemMount St. Joseph
2ndAndrew PerelkaJohn Carroll2ndMichael RossJohnson & Wales
3rdDalton RohrbaughYork3rdJacob KrakowLoras
4thMatt BerlinUW-Stevens Point4thZane MulderWartburg
5thJosh WilsonGreensboro5thSolomon NielsenAugsburg
6thDavid MasseyMount Union6thZach StedefordRIT
7thZach ThompsonUW-Platteville7thStefan MajorStevens
8thJoe PinsWartburg8thDemitreus HenryCortland
141184
1stJordin JamesMount Union1stJaritt ShinhosterUW-Whitewater
2ndZayren TerukinaWartburg2ndPaul DetwilerCoast Guard
3rdJacob ReedOhio Northern3rdKyle BriggsWartburg
4thKyle SlendornStevens4thShane LiegelLoras
5thJimmy McAuliffeElmhurst5thChibueze ChukwueziIthaca
6thBrandon WoodyAverett6thCharles BaczekWabash
7thJosiah GehrMessiah7thMahlic SallahRoanoke
8thJames RodriguezCastleton8thDaniel SurichTCNJ
149197
1stBrett KalinerStevens1stCody BaldridgeNorth Central
2ndMichael PetrellaBaldwin Wallace2ndJack HeldtWabash
3rdAlex BarrWabash3rdBeau YinemanUW-Oshkosh
4thAlex VillarNorth Central4thCamden FarrowYork
5thKristian RumphWartburg5thCoy SpoonerCoast Guard
6thRyan FleckUniversity Of Chicago6thBentley Schwanebeck-OstermannAugsburg
7thKyle MerrittNorwich7thGable CrebsLycoming
8thMichael ConklinTCNJ8thJordan WallaceIthaca
157285
1stNathan LackmanRhode Island College1stJordan LemckeUW-Oshkosh
2ndKaidon WintersRIT2ndDonovan KingOlivet
3rdTyler ShilsonAugsburg3rdKaleb ReevesCoe
4thRyan LuthWashington & Lee4thTyler KimAugsburg
5thNolan HertelUW-La Crosse5thNico RamirezSouthern Virginia
6thDavid HollingsworthWartburg6thRobby BatesNorth Central
7thLuke ReicoskyJohn Carroll7thJohn FulmerLycoming
8thDarian EstevezUniversity Of Chicago8thHank BehaeghelJohns Hopkins

NCAA Championships Live Results & Video

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Wrestling begins at 11am Central/12pm Eastern on Friday; 10am Central/11am Eastern on Saturday

Live Results | d3wrestle.com Special Section

Pre-tournament Brackets

Friday Live Video

Saturday Live Video

Full ScheduleAll Times Central
Friday, March 11
11:00am Preliminary Rounds One and Two, Consolation First Round
6:00pm Championships Quarterfinals, Consolation Second and Third Rounds

Saturday, March 12
10:00am Semifinals & Consolation Quarterfinals; Consolation Semifinals; 3rd, 5th, and 7th matches
6:30pm Parade of All-Americans
7:00pm Championship Finals

2022 NCAA Preview: 285 lbs.

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Rankings are from the February 18th NWCA Poll.

Northeast 13. LekaJohnson & Wales
Northeast 215. PeaveySouthern Maine
Northeast 3BoisvertRoger Williams
Mideast 1MarrettaTCNJ
Mideast 2RubioIthaca
Mideast 3BehaeghelJohns Hopkins
Southeast 113. FulmerLycoming
Southeast 2RamirezSouthern Virginia
Southeast 3RodenhaberAlvernia
Central 11. BishopWabash
Central 24. KingOlivet
Central 3MillerAlbion
Lower Midwest 12. ReevesCoe
Lower Midwest 2BatesNorth Central
Lower Midwest 3ReyesMillikin
Upper Midwest 17. KimAugsburg
Upper Midwest 25. LemckeUW-Oshkosh
Upper Midwest 36. KawczynskiUW-La Crosse

Max Bishop has worked his way up the rankings this season and finishes the regular season at #1. He has no DIII losses and is coming off a Central region finals win over #4 Donovan King to solidify his ranking as the NCAA tournament begins tomorrow. Bishop also qualified for the canceled 2020 tournament. Owen Miller, who finished third, qualified for Albion in their first season of competition.

Kaleb Reeves of Coe won the Lower Midwest region with four first period pins including one in just 59 seconds against Robby Bates of North Central. Reeves had a busy offseason where he qualified for the USA Senior World Team Trials in Greco-Roman. Gannon Gremmel, 5th in Division I for Iowa State last year, was almost part of this competition after enrolling in graduate school at Loras, but he was ultimately deemed ineligible for further college competition.

There were five ranked wrestlers in the Upper Midwest region, and the three highest ended up qualifying. Tyler Kim lost twice each this season to Jordan Lemcke and Ben Kawczynski but came back to beat each of them to win the region. The 2nd and 3rd place finishers in the Southeast region both qualified in 2020, but it will be a first trip to the tournament for John Fulmer, the champ from Lycoming. The top seed in the Mideast region went out with an injury in his first match, opening the way for the 5th seed Rubio to make the finals. The third place finisher Henry Behaeghel had a losing record in each of his first three seasons, but now he is a national qualifier.

There are three qualifiers from Maine in the bracket, and two are at this weight class. Jake Peavey finished in second place at 285, while Addison Boisvert of Roger Williams came back to get third. The third Maine qualifier is Colby Frost at 149 who went to Bonny Eagle High School, the same school as Messiah coach Bryan Brunk. The winner of the Northeast region, Liridon Leka of JWU, is not from Maine, but he is 33-0 so far this season.

Projected standings based on seeds

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Here are the projected standings based purely on seeds. It is a quick and dirty calculation that does not account for unseeded wrestlers or bonus points.

Caveats:
1. Preliminary matches ignored
2. Only seeded wrestlers score
3. No bonus points

Projected Standings:
1. Wartburg – 7 seeded
2. North Central – 4 seeded
3. Wabash – 4 seeded
4. Coast Guard – 4 seeded
5. Johnson & Wales – 4 seeded
6. Baldwin Wallace – 3 seeded
7. Augsburg – 5 seeded

Wartburg is far enough ahead by this calculation that it will be a major upset if another team hoists the championship trophy on Saturday night. All seven of their wrestlers are seeded in the top four. Augsburg has the second highest number of seeds, but none are higher than 5th. That said, they have seven qualifiers and a small bit of wrestling above seed could push them into contention for a trophy. Another team worth mentioning here is Coe. They have just one seeded wrestler but six wrestlers in the tournament. It would not be a shock to see them finish well above their projection. Loras and UW-La Crosse are the only teams not listed above with three seeded wrestlers. No other team has more than two.

Though Wartburg remains a big favorite, any of the other six teams listed could finish in second place. When only eight of 18 wrestlers are seeded, tough matchups can occur early in the tournament. 2015 was the last year no #1 or #2 seeds lost their first match. Unseeded wrestlers place all the time. From 2015-2019, an average of 22.6 All-Americans were unseeded. It makes team score predictions tough when it is expected that over a quarter of the placewinners will enter unseeded.

2022 NCAA Preview: 197 lbs.

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Rankings are from the February 18th NWCA Poll.

Northeast 15. SpoonerCoast Guard
Northeast 2ArataRoger Williams
Northeast 312. KellyNYU
Mideast 17. HaddadTCNJ
Mideast 2WallaceIthaca
Mideast 3HarklessRIT
Southeast 1FarrowYork
Southeast 2PellotAlvernia
Southeast 3CrebsLycoming
Central 14. HeldtWabash
Central 215. WellbaumAdrian
Central 3SetliffOtterbein
Lower Midwest 12. BaldridgeNorth Central
Lower Midwest 26. CornLuther
Lower Midwest 3LinahonCentral
Upper Midwest 1HannahUW-Platteville
Upper Midwest 210. Schwanebeck-OstermannAugsburg
Upper Midwest 31. YinemanUW-Oshkosh

197 has a lot of wrestlers who have beat each other, and that includes the Upper Midwest region. Tyler Hannah avenged two earlier losses to Beau Yineman to make the regional finals. There, he met Bentley Schwanebeck-Ostermann, a wrestler with a name that belongs in a John le Carré novel, and won by injury default, turning around another earlier loss. Yineman had just one prior DIII loss to a wrestler who was not in the postseason this year. It was a good weekend for Hannah who brings double digit losses into the tournament.

Yineman’s signature win this season came first week out against Cody Baldridge of North Central, the 2021 NWCA champ. Baldridge has not lost in DIII since and even placed in the Matmen Open that replaced this year’s Midlands. He won the Lower Midwest final over Donovan Corn on a stalling call that was strange more for its timing than whether or not it was warranted (video here to see for yourself).

#3 ranked Doug Byrne of Baldwin Wallace was a late scratch in the Central region, and #4 Jack Heldt of Wabash was able to take advantage. He had little trouble, dominating the field and winning 15-0 in the finals over Wellbaum. In the Southeast, Camden Farrow of York won a region where the #1 seed failed to place. Third place finisher Gable Crebs qualified for Lycoming where his father is the head coach, joining Bradan Birt at 165 as the second wrestler in the tournament competing with dad in the corner.

Northeast champ Coy Spooner is the only North Dakota native in the field, and he wrestles for Coast Guard despite coming from a town that is almost as far from the coast as you can get in this country. 6th seed pulled a pair upsets, including one over #12 Matt Kelly of NYU, to earn his spot in the field. Quinn Haddad won the Mideast region and has a win over Southeast region champ Farrow. He won by forfeit in the finals against Jordan Wallace of Ithaca who is 15-0 this season.

Lycoming College Assistant Coach

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Assistant Wrestling Coach:

The Department of Athletics at Lycoming College is seeking applications for a full-time, 10-month, benefits-eligible Assistant Wrestling Coach.  This position will be responsible for assisting the Head Wrestling Coach with the day to day functions of the Wrestling team.  Specific responsibilities include recruiting, developing practice plans, practice instruction, video analysis, strength training, setup of mats and clocks for home events, assisting in fundraising activities, traveling to away wrestling events, and participation in activities to promote the wrestling program. 

Requirements & Qualifications: 

High school diploma required; bachelor’s degree preferred; competitive wrestling and/or coaching experience at the college level required.  Successful candidate must be well-organized; have excellent interpersonal skills in dealing with prospective student-athletes, student-athletes, and staff and College personnel.  Candidates must be attentive to details, have the ability to lead, and the ability to work both independently and as part of a team.  Candidate must display a commitment for adhering to all Lycoming College, NCAA and MAC policies, rules and regulations.  Valid driver’s license with good driving record required.

To Apply:

Submit cover letter and resume including the names and telephone numbers of three professional references at https://lycomingcollege.applytojob.com/apply/rBX2iii3hP/Assistant-Wrestling-Coach.  

 A post offer, pre-employment drug screen, motor vehicle record check and criminal background check, ACT 153 clearances will be conducted.

Founded in 1812, Lycoming College is one of the nation’s oldest and most respected residential liberal arts colleges. Lycoming is ranked by Forbes as a Top ROI College and by The Princeton Review as one of The 386 Best Colleges. Lycoming College’s strong endowment-per-student and fiscal acumen provide the foundation to support a first-rate undergraduate education. The College is dedicated to providing a high-quality liberal arts and sciences education including more than 100 majors, minors, and concentrations. Our community of scholars collaborates with and mentors our diverse student body of 1,200 active learners, including 37 percent international and domestic students of color, representing 39 states, territories, and countries. Students compete in 17 NCAA Division III sports, participate in faculty-driven research, thrive in a robust program of internships, and study abroad in more than two dozen countries. Lycoming is located in Williamsport, PA, a city rich in the arts and ideally situated for outdoor recreation. Williamsport is the site of a world-class healthcare system (UPMC Susquehanna), modern manufacturing, federal offices and county seat, energy and natural gas resources, and home to and the birthplace of the Little League World Series. Learn more at www.lycoming.edu.

Lycoming College proudly celebrates and values diversity. We are committed to fostering an inclusive campus community supporting all faculty, staff, and students. We encourage applications from candidates with diverse backgrounds and all who are interested in supporting and contributing to our mission. Lycoming College is an equal opportunity employer.

2022 NCAA Preview: 184 lbs.

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Rankings are from the February 18th NWCA Poll.

Northeast 13. DetwilerCoast Guard
Northeast 2GeyerNYU
Northeast 315. MoralesBridgewater State
Mideast 14. ChukwueziIthaca
Mideast 213. SurichTCNJ
Mideast 3TorresCortland
Southeast 1SallahRoanoke
Southeast 214. BabcockWilkes
Southeast 3KassisAlvernia
Central 16. McCloudMount St. Joseph
Central 27. SalmonBaldwin Wallace
Central 3BaczekWabash
Lower Midwest 12. LiegelLoras
Lower Midwest 21. BriggsWartburg
Lower Midwest 39. SchottCoe
Upper Midwest 15. ShinhosterUW-Whitewater
Upper Midwest 210. RoggeAugsburg
Upper Midwest 3PecciChicago

2021 NWCA DIII 174 lbs. champ Kyle Briggs had been dominant all year with just two of his 14 matches lasting a full 7 minutes prior to the regional final. 2021 NWCA DIII 184 lbs. champ Shane Liegel of Loras put a great match together to avenge an earlier loss and come away with a 6-0 victory that ended Briggs’s bid for an undefeated season. The two may have a third match this season, but some tough competitors stand in their way.

Paul Detwiler of Coast Guard fell to Liegel in the NWCA finals last year and has not lost since. The Coast Guard schedule sometimes makes it tough to evaluate their wrestlers, but Detwiler has dominated the competition this year and just completed a second undefeated regular season (his first ended with the cancellation of the 2020 NCAA tournament). He defeated Upper Midwest runner-up Rogge in last year’s NWCA semifinals. Northeast runner-up Geyer made a late season move up to 184 that paid off, while third place finisher Edwin Morales makes his second trip to the tournament.

Chibueze Chukwuezi is a perfect 33-0 this season including three wins over Mideast runner-up Daniel Surich of TCNJ and two wins over 3rd place finisher Brian Torres. He won the Mideast in 2020 as well and was seeded 6th heading into the championship. Mahlic Sallah of Roanoke won the Southeast region, giving the Maroons a qualifier in their first season. Sallah was a 2020 NAIA All-American for Campbellsville. 2019 All-American Antonio McCloud defeated Lucas Salmon in the Central final in a matchup of #6 vs #7.

McCloud’s only loss this year is to Upper Midwest champ Jarrit Shinhoster of Whitewater. Shinhoster was the 4th seed in 2020. He defeated both of the other Upper Midwest qualifiers by 10-0 scores and is the only DIII wrestler with a win over McCloud this season. His only DIII loss is to Liegel. Nick Rogge was a semifinalist at the NWCA tournament last season and has made it to this tournament without beating any of the other qualifiers. Maguire Pecci of Chicago began his career in 2018 at 149 and makes his NCAA Championships debut four years and four weight classes later. The 2022 regional was his first postseason appearance.

2022 Regional Analysis

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Teams per region with a qualifier (67 out of 115 total teams)
Lower Midwest – 8 of 18 (167 individual entries)
Upper Midwest – 9 of 18 (166 entries)
Central -10 of 20 (180 entries)
Mideast – 11 of 20 (185 entries)
Northeast – 14 of 19 (180 entries)
Southeast – 15 of 20 (188 entries)
180 of 1,066 regional entries qualified (16.9%)

Click image below for regional breakdown

Number Seeded per Region
Lower Midwest – 19
Upper Midwest – 18
Central – 15
Northeast – 12
Southeast – 8
Mideast – 8

Breakdown of Seeds

Region↓/Seed→12345678
Lower Midwest4532221
Upper Midwest135234
Central4121232
Northeast511311
Southeast12221
Mideast111131

Relative Seed Strength (8 points for 1st seed down to 1 for 8th)
Lower Midwest – 110
Central – 70
Upper Midwest – 58
Northeast – 51
Southeast – 41
Mideast – 30

Seeded Region Champs – 52
Seeded Region 2nd – 23
Seeded Region 3rd – 5

Non-region champs to be seeded
Lower Midwest – 9 (1 3rd place)
Upper Midwest – 9 (3 3rd place)
Central – 6 (1 3rd place)
Mideast – 2
Northeast – 2
Southeast – 0

2022 NCAA Preview: 174 lbs.

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Rankings are from the February 18th NWCA Poll.

Northeast 16. RossJohnson & Wales
Northeast 2FlemingCastleton
Northeast 313. GaitaWesleyan
Mideast 17. HenryCortland
Mideast 28. GrygasOswego
Mideast 3StedefordRIT
Southeast 1MajorStevens
Southeast 2Ait BoulahriDelaware Valley
Southeast 3KravitsKing’s
Central 11. BeachemMount St. Joseph
Central 214. DeveraJohn Carroll
Central 3PalmerBaldwin Wallace
Lower Midwest 15. KrakowLoras
Lower Midwest 22. MulderWartburg
Lower Midwest 39. WestphalCoe
Upper Midwest 14. NielsenAugsburg
Upper Midwest 23. SarasinChicago
Upper Midwest 315. StrickerUW-Eau Claire

None of the top four wrestlers in the NWCA rankings wrestled in their regional finals. #1 Cornell Beachem took a forfeit. #2 Mulder forfeited to Krakow, and #3 Sarasin forfeited to #4 Solomon Nielsen. Beachem also took a 3 second injury default win in the semis which gave him the shortest day of any qualifier in the tournament. Beachem started the season in December and seemed to perhaps be less than 100% at the National Duals, but he has come on strong since the Wheaton tournament at the end of January.

Iowa State transfer Zane Mulder is in his second season with Wartburg. After a runner-up finish at 165 at last year’s NWCA DIII tournament, he is undefeated at 174 this season with wins over Krakow and Westphal, the other qualifiers from his region, as well as a wins over Upper Midwest champ Nielson and Southeast champ Major. Major took a forfeit in the finals of a Southeast region lacking in star power at 174. 3rd place finisher Kade Kravits was the first qualifier for King’s since 2014.

Ben Sarasin was an All-American as a freshman in 2019 and qualified in 2020 before missing last year due to COVID-19. He looks to get back on the podium at 174 lbs. this year. The only blemish on his record so far is an injury default at Wheaton. He defeated Nielsen in their matchup earlier in the season before forfeiting in the regional final. Nielsen lost to Mulder and Sarasin for his only DIII defeats this season.

Michael Ross a former Wartburg All-American in 2018 is now at JWU and led the nation in tech falls, including the one he picked up in the regional final. Marco Gaita won four in a row in the Northeast consolation bracket to earn his second trip to the championships. Mideast champ Demitreus Henry has now wrestled runner-up Charlie Grygas three times, winning each of the last two. His only losses are the one to Grygas and one to Beachem at Wheaton.

2022 NCAA Preview: 165 lbs.

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Rankings are from the February 18th NWCA Poll. d3wrestle.com ranking to come next week.

Northeast 19. RogersCoast Guard
Northeast 210. PontelandolfoNYU
Northeast 3MaxwellBridgewater State
Mideast 13. ReyesJohns Hopkins
Mideast 2LambRIT
Mideast 3MathewsOswego
Southeast 16. LackmanAlvernia
Southeast 214. TurleyAverett
Southeast 3DatzWashington & Jefferson
Central 112. McGrawJohn Carroll
Central 2LeightnerBaldwin Wallace
Central 31. HatchWabash
Lower Midwest 12. BirtMillikin
Lower Midwest 213. FiserLoras
Lower Midwest 3EsmoilCoe
Upper Midwest 14. BrossardUW-La Crosse
Upper Midwest 25. SchmidtUW-Eau Claire
Upper Midwest 3MorganUW-Oshkosh

Bradan Birt continued his undefeated season with three first period pins and a tech fall at the Lower Midwest region. He is a two-time NCAA placewinner, an NWCA DIII tournament champ, and is 37-0 this season with 155 career wins. The 3rd and 4th seeds Gabe Fiser and Will Esmoil also qualified here, and Fiser avenged an earlier loss against Allen from Cornell to make the finals.

Things got messier in the Central Region. Undefeated and #1 (NWCA) ranked Kyle Hatch of Wabash was pinned by Dalton Leightner of Baldwin Wallace after pinning Leightner earlier in the season. Then Leightner lost to Patrick McGraw of John Carroll, for the second time this year, in the finals. Upper Midwest champ Seth Brossard of UW-Lacrosse has just two losses, one to Birt and one to Hatch. He beat Chase Schmidt in the regional finals after beating him in the WIAC finals two weeks earlier.

Mideast champ Dominick Reyes is undefeated this year and has qualified for the third time. He defeated Southeast champ Matt Lackman, giving the Alvernia wrestler his only loss this season. Lackman beat NWCA DIII 7th place finisher Alex Turley in the finals.

Phil Rogers of Coast Guard controlled NYU’s tough freshman Pontelandolfo 5-0 in the Northeast finals for his second victory in that matchup this season. He is undefeated, but just 9-0, even including four matches at the region. He finished last season in 3rd place at the NWCA DIII tournament, defeating Fiser of Loras in the finals. The third place finisher Fox Maxwell of Bridgewater State was the 7th seed in the region.

2022 NCAA Preview: 157 lbs.

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Rankings are from the February 18th NWCA Poll.

Northeast 15. LackmanRhode Island
Northeast 2FurmanNYU
Northeast 3ChapmanCoast Guard
Mideast 11. WintersRIT
Mideast 2SaccoTCNJ
Mideast 3JohnsonNJCU
Southeast 110. LuthWashington & Lee
Southeast 29. BarnhartMessiah
Southeast 311. HutchinsonYork
Central 1CaprellaOhio Northern
Central 2ReicoskyJohn Carroll
Central 315. BleichBaldwin Wallace
Lower Midwest 12. HollingsworthWartburg
Lower Midwest 26. SmithLoras
Lower Midwest 314. AndersonDubuque
Upper Midwest 14. HertelUW-La Crosse
Upper Midwest 28. EstevezChicago
Upper Midwest 33. ShilsonAugsburg

Kaidon Winters cruised through the Mideast Region with four falls to give him a nation-leading 21 on the season and secure his lead in the latest Most Dominant standings. He remains undefeated in DIII. The third place finisher Jeff Johnson of New Jersey City gave the team its first ever qualifier. Johnson is on his third college stop after Sacred Heart and Rutgers.

NWCA DIII tournament champion David Hollingsworth won the Lower Midwest region in a convincing fashion, finishing it off with a 9-1 win over Zeke Smith of Loras. Hollingsworth took a couple of unexpected losses in the first half, but he has been rolling in 2022. Dubuque’s Zarik Anderson lost twice to Cervantes of North Central at the Concordia tournament but turned that around with a 10-1 win in the 3rd place match.

Things did not go quite according to seed at the Upper Midwest Region. Tyler Shilson had mostly rolled through his DIII competition, save a late season loss to Hollingsworth, and he defeated eventual region champ Nolan Hertel of UW-La Crosse at the end of January. Darian Estevez of Chicago kept the match in neutral and beat Shilson four takedowns to none to make the finals where Hertel made an escape and 3rd period rideout stand up in a 2-0 win.

Southeast champ Ryan Luth avenged a first week loss to Nick Barnhart in the regional finals. He and 3rd place finisher Eric Hutchinson qualified again for the tournament, though Luth’s chance to compete last time disappeared with the 2020 tournament. Nathan Lackman continued his undefeated season by winning the Northeast Region over Trent Furman, who we last saw in 2020 at 133 lbs. In the Central Region, 4th seeded Schuyler Caprella of ONU defeated top seed Stanley Bleich in the semis before taking a forfeit win over Reicosky in the finals. Bleich came back to get third and earn a third trip to the NCAA tournament.

2022 NCAA Brackets

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The live results link below has the brackets for the 2022 NCAA Division III Wrestling Championships. The link below went public at 6pm Eastern today. The brackets should also have appeared on the NCAA website starting at 6pm, but they are usually late.

NCAA Division III Wrestling Championships via TrackWrestling

PDF of all 10 weights in one document

2022 NCAA Preview: 149 lbs.

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Rankings are from the February 18th NWCA Poll.

Northeast 13. UlaszekCoast Guard
Northeast 213. MerrittNorwich
Northeast 3FrostSouthern Maine
Mideast 114. MerwinCortland
Mideast 2ConklinTCNJ
Mideast 3BowlesMuhlenberg
Southeast 11. KalinerStevens
Southeast 2CampbellAverett
Southeast 3SiuGreensboro
Central 14. PetrellaBaldwin Wallace
Central 212. SumnerOhio Northern
Central 3BarrWabash
Lower Midwest 12. RumphWartburg
Lower Midwest 210. AreyanoCentral
Lower Midwest 35. VillarNorth Central
Upper Midwest 1DrexlerUW-Eau Claire
Upper Midwest 2FleckChicago
Upper Midwest 38. BurfordUW-Whitewater

Is this the year for both Stevens and Brett Kaliner? Stevens is looking for their first national championship, and so is Kaliner. He was 2nd as a freshman, the top seed as a sophomore when he finished 3rd, seeded 2nd in 2020, and finished 3rd at the NWCA DIII tournament last year. He has been dominant this year with only four of his 25 victories lasting a full seven minutes.

Kris Rumph was 2nd at last year’s NWCA DIII tournament at 141, and he moved up to 149 this year where he won the Lower Midwest. He took two sets of injury time in the finals against the tough Areyano, but he managed to shake off the injury and score multiple takedowns after the second timeout. Areyano defeated the #2 seed Villar of North Central in the semis, and Villar came back to get 3rd in a weight featuring five different NWCA-ranked wrestlers.

Tony Ulaszek has gone undefeated for Coast Guard with 13 pins in 18 matches, perhaps proving that if your cement mixer is good enough, you can hit it even when the other guy knows it is coming. He pinned Merritt with it in 29 seconds in the regional final. 3rd place Frost is one of three Maine natives in the tournament this year. Jake Drexler of UW-Eau Claire has double-digit losses this season, but his record came on a tough schedule that prepared him to win the Upper Midwest in a #3 seed vs #5 matchup against Fleck in the finals. 8th ranked Jake Burford took 3rd over 7th ranked Brock Parker.

In the Central, Michael Petrella of Baldwin Wallace continued his outstanding season. His only DIII loss is to Kaliner, and he won by major decision over Chase Sumner in the finals. 8th seed Alex Barr of Wabash rolled to 3rd place after giving Petrella his toughest match of the tournament in the quarters. Chandler Merwin lost the takedown battle 3-1 to Conklin in the Mideast final, but his takedown came with four backpoints, and he made it stand up to win in the tiebreaker. 7th seeded Bowles of Muhlenberg lost in the quarters but came back to beat the same guy in overtime in the 3rd place match to punch his ticket.

2022 NCAA Preview: 141 lbs.

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Rankings are from the February 18th NWCA Poll.

Northeast 18. BrownJohnson & Wales
Northeast 26. RossettiWilliams
Northeast 3RodriguezCastleton
Mideast 1DifrancescantonioTCNJ
Mideast 2JonesIthaca
Mideast 3PenaCentenary
Southeast 15. SlendornStevens
Southeast 210. GehrMessiah
Southeast 314. WoodyAverett
Central 11. JamesMount Union
Central 211. ReedOhio Northern
Central 3UribeWabash
Lower Midwest 14. TerukinaWartburg
Lower Midwest 23. EstradaNorth Central
Lower Midwest 3HendersonCoe
Upper Midwest 12. McAuliffeElmhurst
Upper Midwest 27. StuhlAugsburg
Upper Midwest 39. SatoUW-Eau Claire

Jordin James returns to try to win a title at 141 to go along with his 133 championship from 2019. He is the only returning NCAA champion in the tournament. He controlled a 6-1 victory over star freshman Jacob Reed of ONU in the regional final. If he wins in Iowa, he will become Mount Union’s first two-time champion.

Jimmy McAuliffe won the NWCA DIII tournament last season, and he was an NCAA placewinner way back in 2018. Four years later, he looks to ascend the podium again. He won a tough Upper Midwest Region that had two other top-ten wrestlers qualify in Stuhl and Sato. He has only wrestled 15 matches this season, so we will see if a relative lack of activity makes a difference in March.

Zayren Terukina of Wartburg topped Javen Estrada of North Central to win the Lower Midwest. He outscored Estrada three takedowns to one to avenge a loss by fall in the Concordia final in November. In the Mideast, Kyle Slendorn beat Josiah Gehr for the third time this season. Both qualified for the second time; Gehr’s first was in 2019, and Slendorn made it in 2020. Woody, the third place finisher in the Southeast, will also make his second appearance at the NCAA tournament.

Hayden Brown turned around a loss from earlier in the season in the Northeast semis before beating former NCAA qualifier Joseph Rossetti in the finals to set himself up for a good seed in Cedar Rapids. James Rodriguez of Castleon will get his 50th match of the season at the national tournament, and he will eclipse that number if he wins a match. The Mideast went as planned with the top three seeds qualifying in that order.

Castleton University GA Position

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Application Link | Contact Head Coach Scott Legacy with questions.

Job Description:

Castleton University, a member of the NCAA Division III, located in Central Vermont, invites applications for graduate assistant position in Wrestling.

The primary responsibility will be to assist the head coach in all facets of the program, including the recruitment of quality student-athletes, organization and planning of practices, game preparation, administrative duties, scouting, and monitoring of student athlete academic progress.

Requirements:

A bachelor’s degree is required, acceptance into graduate school at Castleton University, previous participation and/or coaching experience are preferred.

Additional Information:

This position includes tuition remission, room, and a stipend.

Full job description and application link

2022 NCAA Preview: 133 lbs.

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Rankings are from the February 18th NWCA Poll. d3wrestle.com ranking to come next week.

Northeast 14. KaiserRoger Williams
Northeast 2SantiagoNew England College
Northeast 3Leo-EsparoliniJohnson & Wales
Mideast 1CardenasCortland
Mideast 2HernandezIthaca
Mideast 3LeveyBrockport
Southeast 13. RohrbaughYork
Southeast 2WilsonGreensboro
Southeast 3KowalskiGettysburg
Central 15. MasseyMount Union
Central 28. PerelkaJohn Carroll
Central 3HintonBaldwin Wallace
Lower Midwest 11. PrecinNorth Central
Lower Midwest 22. PinsWartburg
Lower Midwest 39. ParkeCoe
Upper Midwest 16. BerlinUW-Stevens Point
Upper Midwest 27. FleetwoodUW-Eau Claire
Upper Midwest 3ThompsonUW-Platteville

Robbie Precin continued his outstanding career for North Central with a regional title. He has just two losses in three years of college competition. He picked up a third win this season against Joe Pins of Wartburg in the finals. The top three seed finished 1-2-3 with Bryce Park of Coe slotting into the last qualifying slot.

The Upper Midwest was tightly contested. Matt Berlin, the #2 seed at the canceled 2020 championships, defeated Tyler Fleetwood of UW-Eau Claire in the finals for the second competition in a row, mirroring the WIAC finals with a second major decision. Zach Thompson moved up from the 4th seed to 3rd place to give Platteville a qualifier here.

Dalton Rohrbaugh defeated Josh Wilson in the Southeast final, a battle of DI transfers. Luke Kowalski came in 3rd for Gettysburg. His older brother Colin was the last NCAA qualifier for the Bullets. 8th seeded Gabriel Leo-Esparolini of JWU surprised with a 3rd place finish in the Northeast behind the ranked Kaiser of Roger Williams and Santiago of New England College.

See if you can figure out how these guys are supposed to be seeded. Arrows point from the winner to the loser of a match.

Season-long awards standings

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This is the final update to the season-long awards standings before the NCAA Championships. Kaidon Winters of RIT remains on top of the Most Dominant Standings and has pulled into a tie for most falls, though Joe Salerno of Washington & Lee is ahead on time. Winters can break the tie with a pin at the NCAA Championships, while Salerno’s season is over. Mike Ross of Johnson & Wales has a huge lead in tech falls with 21, the most since these awards were established. After the NCAA Championships, the standings will be recalculated and the awards given out.

NCAA releases updated 2022 NCAA wrestling awards standings for DII and DIII

RankNameSchoolWeightAvg. Team Points
1Kaidon WintersRIT1575.64
2Kaleb ReevesCoe2855.56
2Bradan BirtMillikin1655.51
4Paul DetwilerCoast Guard1845.21
5Tony UlaszekCoast Guard1495.18
6Zane MulderWartburg1745.05
6Brett KalinerStevens1495.05
8Matt LackmanAlvernia1654.97
9Nathan LackmanRhode Island Col.1574.89
10Kyle SlendornStevens1414.81
RankNameSchoolWeightFallsTime
1Joe SalernoWash. & Lee1652140:16
2Kaidon WintersRIT1572151:22
3Kaleb ReevesCoe2852029:12
4Bradan BirtMillikin1652033:56
5Michael GonyeaCastleton1332040:40
6Matt LackmanAlvernia1651941:10
7Mitchell ArchCWRU1491830:47
8Michael BlandoSUNY Oneonta1411831:20
9Evan FidelibusNew England Col.1491838:03
10Beau YinemanWis.-Oshkosh1971840:57
RankNameSchoolWeightTech FallsTime
1Michael RossJWU (Providence)1742190:06
2Tyler ShilsonAugsburg1571461:10
3Cooper PontelandolfoNYU1651244:40
4Quinn TobinAlvernia1411249:33
5Nick RoggeAugsburg1841136:04
6Schuyler CaprellaOhio Northern1571138:09
7Fox MaxwellBridgewater St.1741142:10
8Bradan BirtMillikin1651038:57
9Gavin HollingsworthAlvernia174936:26
10Brock HendersonCoe141944:35