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Moenkedick steps down at Concordia

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Concordia wrestling head coach Phil Moenkedick announced his resignation to take the position as Dean of Students at Perham HS.

Phil Moenkedick has stepped down after three years as head coach at Concordia-Moorhead, leaving the school where he won a pair of national championships as an athlete. He is headed to Perham High School where he will be the Dean of Students. Read on for more.

Moenkedick Resigns As Head Coach

MOORHEAD, Minn. (4/23/19)—Concordia wrestling head coach Phil Moenkedick announced that he will resign from his position effective at the end of May to take the job as Dean of Students at Perham High School.

Moenkedick said that the decision was very difficult and easy at the same time. “My wife and I are excited about the opportunities this move provides for our family,” Moenkedick stated. “This is a great opportunity for me to continue to have a positive impact on young people in the Perham Schools. Perham is home for Tara (wife) and I and we have a lot of family there.”

Moenkedick just finished his third season as head coach of the Cobber wrestling program. He helped Concordia to a national Top 25 ranking in each of his three seasons at Concordia and guided seven wrestlers to an appearance in the Division III National Championship Meet. He also had seven wrestlers earn All-Region honors and Adam Presler was named the winner of the NCAA Elite 90 award at the 2017 NCAA Meet. Moenkedick was the top assistant coach for the Cobbers for two years prior to being named the head coach in the summer of 2016.

“We are sad to see Phil leave Concordia,” Athletic Director Rachel Bergeson said. “He has done a tremendous job as a mentor to all the student/athletes and has carried on the successful tradition of the Cobber wrestling program. He made an impact on his athletes and the entire Concordia athletic department. He will be missed.”

Moenkedick was also one of the most decorated wrestlers in Cobber wrestling history. He won back-to-back national championships in 2010 and 2011. Moenkedick was also a 3-time All-American and is the all-time leader for wins in a career in school history. In the classroom Moenkedick earned CoSIDA Academic All-American honors in his junior and senior seasons and was a 3-time NWCA Scholar All-American.

“I am so grateful for my experience at Concordia as a whole and more specifically within the athletics department and wrestling program,” Moenkedick said. “I have been supported, challenged, and fulfilled in an abundance of ways. The people here are special and I feel very blessed to have been able to contribute to the mission of impacting young people in a very positive way over the past 5 years alongside others who are committed to that mission. I am excited for how the athletics department and wrestling program will continue to grow moving forward.”

Cornell Assistant Position

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Full-Time Head Assistant Wrestling Coach

Cornell College, a residential liberal arts college, and a member of the Midwest Conference of the NCAA Division III located in Mount Vernon, IA, is seeking applications for a full-time head assistant wrestling coach.

This individual will assist the Head Coach with all aspects of the program including but not limited to:

  • coaching and developing student-athletes athletically and assisting in their personal growth as young people;
  • recruitment of qualified student-athletes;
  • designing and implementing training;
  • home meet and equipment management;
  • travel planning;
  • other administrative duties as assigned by the head coach

About Cornell College

Cornell College is committed to fostering a faculty and staff community that reflects its diverse student body. We encourage applications from candidates who share our vision for a campus that embraces differing backgrounds, viewpoints, and identities. We believe in the values of diversity, equity, and inclusion that serve to enrich and strengthen our campus community.

Cornell College is a selective liberal arts college distinguished by its One Course At A Time curriculum, which allows students more opportunities for off-campus study, full-time internships, and research blocks. Academic immersion and unparalleled flexibility attract an ambitious student body from nearly all 50 US states and territories and many foreign countries. External endorsements include selection as one of the Colleges That Change Lives, a U.S. News Top 100 liberal arts college, and a Fiske Guide to Colleges Best Buy. Founded in 1853, Cornell’s picturesque hilltop campus contains a mix of historic and modern facilities, ranging from the majestic King Chapel to the newly constructed Russell Science Center. It is located in Mount Vernon, Iowa, an urban fringe community recognized by Frommer’s as one of “America’s Coolest Small Towns” and located in the heart of Iowa’s Creative Corridor.

Requirements

A bachelor’s degree is required; experience in coaching at the college level is preferred. The successful candidate will have solid knowledge of the sport, be eager to learn and assist with all aspects of coaching, have strong people skills, be dedicated to enriching the experience of the student-athlete, and be committed to the development and success of the wrestling program. Valid driver’s license is required.

To apply, submit a cover letter, resume, and list of at least three professional references through Cornell College’s online application system.

Click Here for Job Posting

2019 Coach of the Year

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Jim Moulsoff

The 2019 d3wrestle.com Coach of the Year is Jim Moulsoff of Augsburg. Moulsoff led the Auggies to their 13th NCAA team championship and his second as head coach. Augsburg lapped the field at the 2019 championships, scoring 130 points, winning four championships, and taking home seven All-American awards. Augsburg nearly doubled the score of the second place team, winning by 64 points over Loras. David Flynn, Ryan Epps, Lucas Jeske, and Lance Benick won titles for the Auggies, with Victor Gliva, Alex Wilson, and Tanner Vassar getting on the podium as well. Epps and Jeske each won their second consecutive championship.

Moulsoff, in his fifth year as head coach, has led the Auggies to the last five of their 17 straight regional championships. The team was 11-1 in dual meets and won the NWCA National Duals for the second year in a row. Moulsoff has now coached 27 All-Americans in his five years and Augsburg has been in the top five of the NCAA Championships in each of his years at the helm.

Moulsoff began at Augsburg in 2007 as an assistant coach before taking over for the 2014-2015 season. All four of Augsburg NCAA champions and six total 2019 All-Americans are set to return to the Auggies next season. Congratulations to Jim Moulsoff, the 2019 d3wrestle.com Coach of the Year.

Previous Coach of the Year Winners
2018 – Eric Keller, Wartburg
2017 – Eric Keller, Wartburg
2016 – Bryan Brunk, Messiah
2015 – Eric Keller, Wartburg
2014 – Tim Fader, Whitewater
2013 – Steve Marianetti, Elmhurst
2012 – Jim Miller & Eric Keller, Wartburg
2011 – Mark Hawald, Mount Union
2010 – Dave Malecek, La Crosse

2019 Freshman of the Year and All-Freshman Team

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The d3wrestle.com Freshman of the Year award is given to the top Division III wrestler who competed in high school in the previous season. The 2019 d3wrestle.com Freshman of the Year is Antonio McCloud of Mount St. Joseph. McCloud came to the Lions from Cincinnati’s Elder High School where he was coached by former Mount St. Joseph All-American Jason Roush. McCloud won the 2018 Ohio Division I championship at 220 lbs. before heading to Mount St. Joseph this season.

McCloud finished 8th at 197 lbs. in the 2019 NCAA Championships, giving the Lions their first All-American since 2014 and first for new head coach Charles Mason. In addition to his All-American Award, McCloud was the Central Region champion, and he won the Patriot Open, Trine Invitational, and Waynesburg Invitational while finishing second at the Spartan Mat Classic and sixth at the Pete Willson Wheaton Invitational. He finished the year with a 29-6 record with all six losses to All-Americans or NCAA qualifiers. He is the first Mount St. Joseph wrestler to win the award and the fourth winner from a team currently in the Central Region.

The 2018-2019 d3wrestle.com All-Freshman team is listed below. The team is made up of wrestlers who are listed on their respective rosters with freshman eligibility and placed in the top eight at the 2019 NCAA Championships. Please leave a comment if any other 2019 All-Americans belong on this list.


125 Carlos Champagne, Wabash, 7th
125 Eron Haynes, Nebraska Wesleyan, 8th
133 Levi Englman, Ferrum, 7th
141 Brady Fritz, Wartburg, 6th
174 Ben Sarasin, Chicago, 7th
197 Antonio McCloud, Mount St. Joseph, 8th

Previous Freshman of the Year Winners
2018 – Brett Kaliner, Stevens
2017 – Troy Stanich, Stevens
2016 – Angus Arthur, Adrian
2015 – Matthew Grossmann, Wilkes
2014 – Riley Lefever, Wabash
2013 – Josh Thomson, Messiah
2012 – Nate Giorgio, Coast Guard
2011 – Chris Burdge, Centenary
2010 – Kyle Kwiat, Ohio Northern

NWCA Academic Awards

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The NWCA Academic awards were presented at the NCAA Championships to the top 30 teams and the individuals who became Scholar All-Americans. To become a Scholar All-American, a wrestler has to meet academic and athletic qualifications. A wrestler must achieve at least one of the following, along with the required GPA, to be recognized:

  1. NCAA qualifier with a winning record
  2. Regional placewinner (top 8) with a winning record and appeared in at least half of a team’s scheduled events
  3. Won at least 2/3 of matches and appeared in at least half of a team’s scheduled events

List of 2019 NWCA Scholar All-Americans

The top 30 teams are calculated by calculating the overall GPA of at least six wrestlers who competed in the regional and up to four others who competed in at least half of a team’s scheduled events. Only ten total wrestlers from a given team are used to calculate the team totals.

2019 Team List

RankInstitutionCalculated GPA
1Johns Hopkins University3.776
2Baldwin Wallace3.766
3Wesleyan University3.714
4Stevens Institute of Technology3.704
5Ithaca College3.668
6Springfield College3.665
7Saint John’s University3.650
8University of Chicago3.644
9Williams College3.627
10Norwich University3.620
11Case Western Reserve3.611
12Muhlenberg College3.608
13Washington and Lee University3.602
14Messiah College3.597
15Wilkes University3.586
16Rochester Institute of Technology3.545
17United States Coast Guard Academy3.537
18Augsburg University3.537
19Cornell College3.532
20Trinity College3.522
21York College of Pennsylvania3.519
22Worcester Polytechnic Institute3.515
23New York University3.508
24Wartburg College3.473
25SUNY Oneonta3.406
26Heidelberg3.399
27Johnson & Wales University3.396
28Concordia College-Moorhead3.389
29Waynesburg University3.360
30University of Wisconsin-Platteville3.359

Bracket Notes

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Of the 20 wrestlers seeded 1st or 2nd, seven made the finals.

There were 21 unseeded All-Americans.

Two defending champions failed to place (Rathbun, 133; Evans, 285).

Two #1 seeds failed to place (Stanich, 141; Burns, 149).

One #2 seed failed to place (Bennyhoff, 133).

No #1 seed lost his first match. Two did last year (Pestano, 125; Stanich, 133).

Earliest a #1 and #2 seed met was at 149 in the round of 12 (#2 Cooper pinned #1 Burns).

Neither returning finalist at 133 placed. Of the 13 returning finalists from 2018, five returned the finals in 2019 (Albis, Warner, Epps, Jeske, James).

Recent unseeded champs: Ryan Budzek, TCNJ, 149, 2019; Devin Broukal, Wabash, 133, 2016; Devin Biscaha, Springfield, 157, 2013; Vincent Renaut, Merchant Marine, 165, 2010.

Seven semifinalists placed 6th.

Seed# All-Americans
18
29
35
48
58
68
76
87
unseeded21

All-Americans and Regional Performance

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Mideast – 18
Upper Midwest – 18
Lower Midwest – 17
Central – 15
Northeast – 8
Southeast – 4

Unseeded All-Americans in Italics

PlaceNameTeamRegionPlaceNameTeamRegion
125165
1Jay AlbisJWUNE1Lucas JeskeAugsburgUM
2Mike TortoriceWhitewaterUM2Dempsey KingRITME
3Peter Del GalloSouthern MaineNE3Mark ChoinskiOshkoshUM
4Ferdinand MaseIthacaME4Eddie SmithLorasLM
5Victor GlivaAugsburgUM5Nicholas BonomoWhitewaterUM
6Cameron TimokCentralLM6Kyle HatchWabashC
7Carlos ChampagneWabashC7Taylor ShayRoger WilliamsNE
8Eron HaynesNebraska WesleyanLM8Austin WhitneyIthacaME
133 174
1Jordin JamesMount UnionC1Darden SchurgWabashC
2Ben VostersStevens PointUM2Jairod JamesMount UnionC
3Bobby JordanJWUNE3Kyle BriggsWartburgLM
4Charles NashBaldwin WallaceC4Daniel KilroyTCNJME
5Jake GiordanoTCNJME5Tanner VassarAugsburgUM
6Yoseph BoraiStevensME6A.J. AeberliCoast GuardNE
7Levi EnglmanFerrumSE7Ben SarasinChicagoUM
8Kimo DialMerchant MarineME8Jacob KrakowLorasLM
141 184
1David FlynnAugsburgUM1John BoyleWestern New EnglandNE
2Chris WilliamsMillikinLM2Jake AshcraftIthacaME
3Clint LembeckLorasLM3Khamri ThomasJWUNE
4Ben BrismanIthacaME4Joshua GlantzmanMerchant MarineME
5Evan DrillNYUNE5Kyle PeiskerChicagoUM
6Brady FritzWartburgLM6Dylan RothHeidelbergC
7Brendan LaddAlmaC7Nick StencelWhitewaterUM
8Mario VasquezFerrumSE8Josh EdelCoeLM
149 197
1Ryan BudzekTCNJME1Lance BenickAugsburgUM
2Gregory WarnerYorkSE2Keajion JenningsMillikinLM
3Brett KalinerStevensME3Riley KauzlaricWhitewaterUM
4Alex WilsonAugsburgUM4Etiini UdottCentenaryME
5Zachary CooperAlmaC5Taylor MehmenCoeLM
6Jarrad LaskoJohn CarrollC6Guy PatronLorasLM
7Ryan SnowBrockportME7Zeckary LehmanBaldwin WallaceC
8Luke HernandezMount UnionC8Antonio McCloudMount St. JosephC
157 285
1Ryan EppsAugsburgUM1Garrett WesneskiLycomingSE
2Antwon PughMount UnionC2Adarios JonesAugustanaLM
3Cross CannoneWartburgLM3James BethelOneontaME
4Brandon MurrayLorasLM4Jake O`BrienIthacaME
5Kaidon WintersRITME5Drew KasperOtterbeinC
6Bradan BirtMillikinLM6Bowen WilemanWartburgLM
7Keone DerainElmhurstUM7Konrad ErnstLa CrosseUM
8Grant ZaminLa CrosseUM8Connor CalkinsRITME

Final Results

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Final Team Scores and Brackets

Finals Results
125: Jay Albis (Johnson & Wales) over Mike Tortorice (Whitewater) Fall 2:26
133: Jordin James (Mount Union) over Ben Vosters (Stevens Point) 9-7
141: David Flynn (Augsburg) over Chris Williams (Millikin) 4-3
149: Ryan Budzek (TCNJ) over Greg Warner (York) 4-2
157: Ryan Epps (Augsburg) over Antwon Pugh (Mount Union) DQ (stalling)
165: Lucas Jeske (Augsburg) over Dempsey King (RIT) 6-2
174: Darden Schurg (Wabash) over Jairod James (Mount Union) 5-3 SV1
184: John Boyle (Western New England) over Jake Ashcraft (Ithaca), 5-3 SV1
197: Lance Benick (Augsburg) over Keajion Jennings (Millikin) 8-5
285: Garrett Wesneski (Lycoming) over Adarios Jones (Augustana) 9-7 SV1

2019 NCAA Div. III National Champ Post-Match Interviews
125 – Jay Albis, JWU
133 – Jordin James, Mount Union
141 – David Flynn, Augsburg
149 – Ryan Budzek, TCNJ
157 – Ryan Epps, Augsburg
165 – Lucas Jeske, Augsburg
174 – Darden Schurg, Wabash
184 – John Boyle, WNEC
197 – Lance Benick, Augsburg
285 – Garrett Wesneski, Lycoming
Coach – Jim Moulsoff, Augsburg

Tournament Awards
Outstanding Wrestler – Jay Albis, Johnson & Wales
Coach of the Year – Jim Moulsoff, Augsburg
Assistant Coach of the Year – Brian Allen, Johnson & Wales
Most Falls – Da’mani Burns, Johnson & Wales

Season Long Awards
Most Dominant – James Bethel, Oneonta
Most Falls – Da’mani Burns, Johnson & Wales
Most Tech Falls – Stephen Maloney, Messiah

NCAA Championships HQ – Saturday

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Live Brackets (TrackWrestling) | Event Schedule

Live Video

Weight Class Previews
125 | 133 | 141 | 149 | 157
165 | 174 | 184 | 197 | 285


NCAA Championships HQ

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Live Brackets (TrackWrestling) | Event Schedule

Live Video

Weight Class Previews
125 | 133 | 141 | 149 | 157
165 | 174 | 184 | 197 | 285


2019 NCAA Preview: 165 lbs.

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  1. Lucas Jeske, Augsburg
  2. Taylor Shay, Roger Williams
  3. Nicholas Racanelli, Wilkes
  4. Kyle Hatch, Wabash
  5. Eddie Smith, Loras
  6. Anthony Arroyo, Oshkosh
  7. Dempsey King, RIT
  8. Austin Whitney, Ithaca

Adrian Gonzalez, Johnson & Wales
Alec Donovan, Centenary
Brad Kerkhoff, Buena Vista
Hadyn Swartwood, Lycoming
Jared Walker, Washington & Jefferson
Mark Choinski, Oshkosh
Michael Suarez, Luther
Nicholas Bonomo, Whitewater
Nick Remke, Coast Guard
Sam Gross, John Carroll

Lucas Jeske of Augsburg went pin, pin, pin, tech fall on his way to Outstanding Wrestler honors

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last year. He is currently undefeated, though he only began competing in the second half of the season. He has had some close calls this year including a 7-6 win over #4 seed Kyle Hatch of Wabash. He has show the ability to put up big results, but he will need to be on his game. The #2 and #3 seeds are from the East with #2 Taylor Shay defeating #3 Nick Racanelli of Wilkes early in the year. Shay’s only loss is outside DIII, while Racanelli’s only loss is to Shay.

There are two unseeded All-Americans here. Nick Remke of Coast Guard finished 5th last year, while Mark Choinski of Oshkosh is a 2x All-American at 157 who is up at 165 this season. His first round match is one of the best in the tournament, as he is set to take on Anthony Arroyo of Baldwin Wallace, the 3rd place finisher at this weight last season. Kyle Hatch finished 8th last season but is seeded 4th here. He has a loss to Jeske as well as one to the 5th seed Eddie Smith of Loras who won the Lower Midwest Region.

Nicholas Bonomo of Whitewater did not wrestle any matches at 165 this year until the regional where he placed second to Jeske. He did the exact same thing last year, making his 165 debut at the regional where he placed 3rd. He will take on the 3rd seed Racanelli in his first bout. Michael Suarez of Luther entered the regional with a 12-12 record and promptly went 5-1 to finish third and earn a spot in the championships.

2019 NCAA Preview: 157 lbs.

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  1. Cross Cannone, Wartburg
  2. Ryan Epps, Augsburg
  3. Kaidon Winters, RIT
  4. Antwon Pugh, Mount Union
  5. Brandon Murray, Loras
  6. Bradan Birt, Millikin
  7. Trevor Corl, Lycoming
  8. Gran Zamin, La Crosse

Christopher Muce, Centenary
Dylan Dwyer, NYU
Hunter Neely, Washington & Jefferson
Jared Lough, Averett
Jared Timberman, Wabash
JT Beirne, TCNJ
Keone Derain, Elmhurst
Richard Burke, Baldwin Wallace
Ryan Monteiro, Western New England
Tyler Marsh, WPI

This is the only weight where returning champs could meet up. Ryan Epps of Augsburg won this weight class last year and has a single DIII loss. That loss is to Wartburg’s Cross Cannone, the champion at 149 last year. Cannone is riding a 61 match winning streak dating back to his loss in the 2017 finals at 141. Cannone provided a crucial win for the Knights over Epps in the annual Battle of the Burgs won by Wartburg on a tiebreaker.

Cannone and Epps are the favorites, but the 3rd and 4th seeds at this weight are both undefeated so far. Kaidon Winters of RIT lost in the round of 12 last year but has not lost since. He has wins over five wrestlers in the bracket. Antwon Pugh of Mount Union sports an identical 31-0 record to Winters and also has five wins in the bracket. Epps is the only returning All-American at the weight, but Bradan Birt of Millikin and Trevor Corl of Lycoming wrestled for 7th at 149 last year with Birt taking that matchup.

Keone Derain of Elmhust and Christopher Muce of Centenary are both back at the tournament after qualifying in 2017. #5 Brandon Murray of Loras is a former NJCAA All-American and 2x national qualifier for Iowa Central. Tyler Marsh is a 2x qualifier for WPI and the first to qualify in consecutive years for the team since 2004.

2019 NCAA Preview: 174 lbs.

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  1. Darden Schurg, Wabash
  2. Jairod James, Mount Union
  3. Kyle Briggs, Wartburg
  4. Daniel Kilroy, TCNJ
  5. A.J. Aeberli, Coast Guard
  6. Ben Sarasin, Chicago
  7. Tanner Vassar, Augsburg
  8. Jake Voss, Coe

Blake Rosenbaum, Ferrum
Brian Shermeyer, Messiah
Chibueze Chukwuezi, Ithaca
Colin Kowalski, Gettysburg
Haydn Kinjorski, Olivet
Jacob Krakow, Loras
Jarrit Shinhoster, Whitewater
Jordan Juliano, Centenary
Malik Settles, New England
Michael Gargano, Johnson & Wales

It looks like a two man race at 174 with Darden Schurg and Jairod James on course for a finals matchup. The two wrestled the first week of the season with Wabash’s Schurg topping defending NCAA champion James 4-3 at the Michigan State Open. Neither has had too much trouble with DIII competition so far this year. They would have had a rematch at the regional final, but Schurg forfeited to James, postponing a potential match until this weekend.

There are three other All-Americans in the bracket. Fourth seeded Daniel Kilroy of TCNJ was 8th in 2017 and in the round of 12 last year. Tanner Vassar of Augsburg and Jake Voss of Coe wrestled for 7th last year at this weight with Vassar coming out on top. Vassar had to beat last year’s 6th place finisher to get 3rd at the regional and earn his spot. Voss defeated fellow qualifier Jacob Krakow of Loras in the regional semifinal to grab his spot in the tournament.

Kyle Briggs of Wartburg spent last season behind 3x All-American Eric DeVos but has shined this season. He has just one DIII loss to Schurg and wins over Vassar and Voss. A.J. Aeberli, Colin Kowalski, and Malik Settles all qualified last year, though Kowalski was at 165. Blake Rosenbaum of Ferrum placed 4th in his region in both 2017 and 2018, but he finally qualified with a regional championship this season.

2019 NCAA Preview: 149 lbs.

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  1. Da’mani Burns, Johnson & Wales
  2. Zachary Cooper, Alma
  3. Stephen Maloney, Messiah
  4. Kristian Rumph, Wartburg
  5. Brett Kaliner, Stevens
  6. Alex Wilson, Augsburg
  7. Tyler Gazaway, Roger Williams
  8. Gregory Warner, York

Jarrad Lasko, John Carroll
Kevin Kelly, Loras
Logan Schlough, La Crosse
Luke Hernandez, Mount Union
Max Tempel, Castleton
Michael Heinl, Washington & Jefferson
Ryan Budzek, TCNJ
Ryan Snow, Brockport
Sean Sax, Westminster
Ty Johnson, Concordia-Moorhead

This is the lightest weight without a returning champion, as Cross Cannone has moved up to 157. There are a good number of wrestlers with a shot at taking this weight. Top seed Da’mani Burns of Johnson & Wales is tied for 2nd in DIII with 21 falls and is 6th in dominance heading into the weekend. He has wins over #3 Maloney and #5 Kaliner this season. Second seeded Zachary Cooper of Alma has a single loss this year which avenged in the regional final. He had to work to get here, winning in overtime in the region semis and making a 2nd period rideout stand up in a 1-0 finals win.

Brett Kaliner of Stevens was the national runner up at 141 last season. This year, he has losses to Maloney and Burns and wins over several others in the bracket including 3x All-American Gregory Warner of York. Stephen Maloney qualified for Messiah last year and comes in as the 3rd seed this year after a good season. Alex Wilson of Augsburg fell in the round of 12 last year and hopes to finish his career on the podium.

Sean Sax is the first ever qualifier for Westminster College in their second season as a program. Logan Schlough of La Crosse qualified this year while his brother Hayden qualified at 141 last year for the Eagles. Ryan Budzek of TCNJ made it back to the NCAA Championships in 2019 after last qualifying in 2016. Kristian Rumph started the year at 141 but moved up to 149 at the end of January and found his way to the top of the regional podium with a win over Kevin Kelly of Loras, a round of 12 finisher at 141 a year ago.

2019 NCAA Preview: 184 lbs.

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  1. Dylan Roth, Heidelberg
  2. Jake Ashcraft, Ithaca
  3. Khamri Thomas, Johnson & Wales
  4. John Boyle, Western New England
  5. Paul Detwiler, Coast Guard
  6. Nick Stencel, Whitewater
  7. Devon Pingel, Adrian
  8. Solomon Nielsen, Augsburg

Cody Baldridge, North Central
Jake Paulson, Penn State-Behrend
Josh Edel, Coe
Joshua Glantzman, Merchant Marine
Justin Ransom, Baldwin Wallace
Kyle Peisker, Chicago
Michael Dooley, Stevens
Rexx Hallyburton, Washington & Lee
Tevin Bailey, Dubuque
Victor DeFrance, Messiah

Dylan Roth has put together an outstanding season to take the top seed with a 38-0 record. He missed the entire 2018 season with an injury, but he appears to be making up for lost time. 184 is a good weight class with the 3rd, 4th, and 8th place finishers from last year as the next three seeds. Jake Ashcraft won the Most Dominant award from the NCAA last season. John Boyle split a pair of matches with Ashcraft at last year’s tournament, though Ashcraft as the win this season. Khamri Thomas of Johnson & Wales split wiht Boyle, winning the regional final and was 2-1 against 5th seeded Paul Detwiler of Coast Guard.

Justin Ransom of Baldwin Wallace is the only as yet unmentioned wrestler who qualified last season. He has moved up to 184 after qualifying at 174 last season. He also has a win over #2 seed Ashcraft. Nick Stencel wrestled all last season at 184 before dropping to 174 for the postseason. This year, he stayed up and it paid off with a trip to Roanoke. Both of his losses this season were to Coe wrestlers, with Josh Edel being the one who qualified here.

Jake Paulson is the first qualifier for the second year Penn State-Behrend squad out of Erie, PA. He lost his first match at the regional and reeled off five wins in a row to make it here. Kyle Peisker spent almost the entire season at 174 before moving up to 184 at the very end of the year and placing third at the Upper Midwest. Devon Pingel transferred to Adrian from Cleveland State and made the regional final where he fell to Roth. He also wrestled 174 lbs. defending champ Jairod James while representing CSU last season.

2019 NCAA Preview: 141 lbs.

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  1. Troy Stanich, Stevens
  2. Ben Brisman, Ithaca
  3. Hazen Rice, Whitewater
  4. Clint Lembeck, Loras
  5. Brendan Ladd, Alma
  6. Chris Williams, Millikin
  7. Brady Fritz, Wartburg
  8. David Flynn, Augsburg

Brandon Woody, Averett
Evan Drill, NYU
Jarrod Brezovec, John Carroll
Jimmy McAuliffe, Elmhurst
Jordan Napier, Manchester
Joseph Ferinde, Johnson & Wales
Joseph Rossetti, Williams
Mario Vasquez, Ferrum
Robert Dinger, TCNJ
Tommy Stokes, Wilkes

Troy Stanich is undefeated against DIII competition and has just two non-decisions this season in that streak. He is the odds on favorite to win this tournament. This was true the past two years as well, but he dropped matches to a pair of Johnson & Wales wrestlers before storming back to 3rd each time. The JWU wrestler is on the other side of the bracket this year. Also on the other side is the defending champion at this weight, Ben Brisman of Ithaca. Brisman’s only loss this season is to Stanich back in December.

There are three returning All-Americans at this weight that are unseeded. Evan Drill was 4th for NYU last year at 149 and has dropped to 141 this season. Jimmy McAuliffe of Elmhurst topped Joseph Ferinde of Johnson & Wales in the 7th place match at this weight last year. There are also a couple of more seeded All-Americans. Brendan Ladd was a surprise semifinalist last year for Alma and has just one loss this season. Chris Williams of Millikin is a three time All-American who beat Ladd in the consolation semis last season.

Clint Lembeck of Loras was an All-American and regional Outstanding Wrestler in 2017. David Flynn of Augsburg was the 4th seed last year but fell in the All-American round to Ferinde. This year, he lost in the regional semis to Hazen Rice of Whitewater, the 3rd seed with just two losses ont he year. Brandon Woody is part of a three-man Averett contingent making its first NCAA appearance.

2019 NCAA Preview: 197 lbs.

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  1. Etiini Udott, Centenary
  2. Guy Patron, Loras
  3. Lance Benick, Augsburg
  4. Keajion Jennings, Millikin
  5. Antonio McCloud, Mount St. Joseph
  6. Michael DiNardo, Johnson & Wales
  7. Taylor Mehmen, Coe
  8. Riley Kauzlaric, Whitewater

Dan D’Agostini, Scranton
Dylan Dubuque, Cortland
Gage Gladysz, Thiel
Jonathan Wagner, Coast Guard
Ken Burrs, Waynesburg
Luke Dodd, St. John’s
Michael Curtis, WPI
Travis Ogden, Lycoming
Tyler Hammack, Heidelberg
Zeckary Lehman, Baldwin Wallace

Just three All-Americans are back at this weight including the top two seeds. Eiini Udott of Centenary is a four time NCAA qualifier and was 5th here last year. Guy Patron was 3rd as a freshman and 2nd last year as a sophomore. Udott is undefeated against DIII competition, though he has perhaps not seen the same level of opponent as some of the other top seeds. Patron has wins over the 4th and 7th seeds but losses to the 3rd and 8th seeds. Keajion Jennings, the 4th seed, was an All-American at 184 last year, and he has a win this season over #3 Benick of Augsburg. Seeding this weight must have been a challenge.

Michael DiNardo (JWU), Jonathan Wagner (Coast Guard), Ken Burrs (Waynesburg) all return to the weight after qualifying last year, while Zeckary Lehman (Baldwin Wallace) and Tyler Hammack (Heidelberg) join Jennings in making it at 197 a year after qualifying at 184. Thiel’s Gage Gladysz was a qualifier at 197 in 2017 before moving up to 285 and missing the tournament. Back down to 197, he is making a second trip to the championships.

Mount St. Joseph has not had a national qualifier since 2014, and they went through a rough stretch where the team was shut down for a season to give them time to build the roster back up. Freshman Ohio state champion Antonio McCloud won the Central Region and gives the Lions a shot at an All-American in their return to the national stage. Michael Curtis is one of two qualifiers for WPI, and the Engineers have multiple qualifiers for the first time in 16 years.

2019 NCAA Preview: 133 lbs.

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  1. Jordin James, Mount Union
  2. Sam Bennyhoff, Augsburg
  3. Brock Rathbun, Wartburg
  4. Bobby Jordan, Johnson & Wales
  5. Brice Everson, Loras
  6. Charles Nash, Baldwin Wallace
  7. Ben Vosters, Stevens Point
  8. Jake Giordano, TCNJ

Chase Petty, Central
Ian Tolotti, Springfield
Jacob Forsman, Norwich
Josh Stenger, La Crosse
Kimo Dial, Merchant Marine
Levi Englman, Ferrum
Owen Doster, Wabash
Ricky Cavallo, Johns Hopkins
Russell Benson, Delaware Valley
Yoseph Borai, Stevens

Brock Rathbun became the first freshman national champion in Wartburg’s history last year, but he will have a tough road ahead if he wants to repeat as champion. He will be the third seed this weekend with a familiar foe potentially awaiting in the semifinals. Second seed Sam Bennyhoff of Augsburg was Rathbun’s finals opponent last year and took the win in their dual this season. The top seed spent last year at Iowa Lakes Community College but Jordin James now mans 133 lbs. for Mount Union. His only loss this year was a disqualification in the season’s first week, and he has wins over four other wrestlers in this tournament.

Fourth seed Bobby Jordan of Johnson & Wales has qualified several times to the championships and was an All-American in 2017. An injury cut short his season last year, but he is back in 2019 with a win over Bennhoff at the National Duals. Owen Doster returns for Wabash and was an All-American in 2017 before going 0-2 at last year’s tournament. Charles Nash was a round of 12 wrestler at 141 for Baldwin Wallace last year, and Ricky Cavallo returns at the same weight hoping to improve on last year’s single win in the event.

Ben Vosters of Stevens Point qualified for the tournament in 2016 and gets to return for the first time in 2019. Jacob Forsman of Norwich was unseeded at the regional but became the first qualifier for his team since 2008. Kimo Dial of Merchant Marine did not place at his conference tournament but defeated an NCAA round of 12 finisher in the 3rd place match to earn his way into the tournament.

2019 NCAA Preview: 285 lbs.

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  1. James Bethel, Oneonta
  2. Adarios Jones, Augustana
  3. Jake Evans, Waynesburg
  4. Konrad Ernst, La Crosse
  5. Garrett Wesneski, Lycoming
  6. Drew Kasper, Otterbein
  7. Jake O’Brien, Ithaca
  8. Patrick Irwin, Coast Guard

Bowen Wileman, Wartburg
Brandon Ballard, York
Connor Calkins, RIT
Grant Miller, Wheaton
Jerhett Lee, Ozarks
Jesse Webb, Castleton
Lucius Rinehart, Platteville
Tommy Wrzesien, Johnson & Wales
Trevor Piggott, Olivet
Wade Ripple, Wabash

There is a lot of firepower at 285 this year. Jake Evans is the defending champion and has 186 career wins. Top seed James Bethel is undefeated in DIII and leads the NCAA in dominance. He is second behind Evans in falls. Adarios Jones missed last year with an injury but is undefeated this season. In 2017, he defeated Bethel and Evans at the NCAA Championships. Konrad Ernst of Lacrose is also undefeated this year and is third in dominance. Garrett Wesneski of Lycoming defeated Evans in the regional final and has split with the Waynesburg wrestler this year for his only loss.

Fifth seed Jake O’Brien is the remaining All-American in the weight. He was a semifinalist last year before finishing 5th with a win over Ernst in his final match. Of the wrestlers not yet mentioned, only RIT’s Connor Calkins was in the bracket last season, though Otterbein’s Drew Kasper qualified in 2018 at 197 lbs. Hoping to make the most of his chance is Bowen Wileman of Wartburg. He has been behind All-Americans the past few seasons for the Knights and has qualified as a senior is his first chance in the starting lineup.

Two of the wrestlers that qualified here did not compete until February. Grant Miller of Wheaton is a football player for the Thunder, and his first competition was February 7th in the CCIW Championships. Brandon Ballard came to York after earlier stops at South Dakota State and Labette Community College. He has a few more matches than Miller under his belt but his first one came in a dual on February 1st.

2019 NCAA Preview: 125 lbs.

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  1. Jay Albis, Johnson & Wales
  2. Mike Tortorice, Whitewater
  3. Victor Gliva, Augsburg
  4. Dante Ginnetti, Baldwin Wallace
  5. Cam Timok, Central
  6. Peter Del Gallo, Southern Maine
  7. Brady Kyner, Wartburg
  8. Ferdinand Mase, Ithaca

Carlos Champagne, Wabash
Collin Wickramaratna, Ursinus
Dylan Nuttall, York
Eron Haynes, Nebraska Wesleyan
Jordan Burkholder, Muskingum
Josiah Gehr, Messiah
Matt Caccamise, Brockport
Samuel Braswell, Averett
Sawyer Sarbacker, La Crosse
Zack Murillo, Wesleyan

The first three weights all feature the 2018 champion in the bracket, but the only one of the three to be the top seed this year is Jay Albis of Johnson & Wales at 125. He wrestled a tough schedule this year that included Midlands, the National Duals, and a dual with the 7th ranked wrestler in Division II. He is currently 2nd in the DIII tech falls race with an outside shot to take the award this weekend. His only DIII loss was to Peter Del Gallo of Southern Maine way back on the second Saturday of the season.

The next highest returning finisher here is Mike Tortorice of Whitewater. He finished 3rd last season, winning five matches in a row after taking an opening round loss. He has a win over the 3rd seed Victor Gliva and was the champ at the Pete Willson Wheaton Invitational. Fourth seed Dante Ginnetti of Baldwin Wallace only wrestled 125 at the regional and was a qualifier at 133 last year, while 5th seed Cam Timok of Central dropped to 125 halfway through the year and was a 2017 All-American at 133. Ferdinand Mase is the 8th seed and finished 7th last year for Ithaca.

A pair of wrestlers are the first NCAA qualifiers for their schools. Eron Haynes gives Nebraska Wesleyan a qualifier in their third year. Samuel Braswell is one of three Averett wrestlers competing this week, but he is technically the first to have earned his spot for the second year program. Jordan Burkholder of Muskingum is the first qualifier for his school since 2008.