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2017 Wrestler of the Year

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The 2017 d3wrestle.com Wrestler of the Year is Riley Lefever of Wabash College. Lefever also won the 2016 version of the award, and his season this year proved he deserved to win it again. He put a cap on an outstanding career with a fall in the 197 lbs. NCAA finals, scoring bonus points in every match at the championships for the second year in a row. The win made him the second wrestler to ever win four NCAA Division III Championships. He finished the season with a 39-3 record and 25 falls. He was the champion of the Harold Nichols Open, Indiana Little State, Spartan Mat Classic, John Summa Invitational, Mid-States Invitational, Midwest Regional, and NCAA Championships. He was named Outstanding Wrestler at the Little State, Spartan Mat Classic, Midwest Region, and NCAA Championships. He also finished 2nd at the Eastern Michigan Open, losing only to the eventual 3rd place finisher at the NCAA Division I Championships. During the year, he defeated the eventual 5th place finisher at the DI championships. Finally, he earned the NCAA’s Most Dominant award, scoring an average of 5.79 team points per match against Division III competition.

Lefever compiled a career record of 158-6 with 92 falls. He was 129-0 against Division III competition with 73 falls and 18 tech falls. He won NCAA championships at 184 lbs. in 2014, 2015, and 2016 before moving up to 197 lbs. for his senior year. 2017 marked the third year in a row that he was named the Most Dominant wrestler in Division III. In 2014, Lefever was named the d3wrestle.com Freshman of the Year after an undefeated opening campaign that proved to be a harbinger of the three years to follow.

Lefever was an Indiana state runner-up and a Junior National freestyle runner-up before coming to Wabash. He continued wrestle freestyle in college, placing 5th at the 2016 University Nationals and placing 3rd at both the 2015 UWW Junior Nationals and UWW Junior World Team Trials. He is from Fort Wayne, Indiana, and two of his older brothers, Reece and Conner, also wrestled at Wabash with Conner winning the 2015 NCAA Championship at 174 lbs. and Reece becoming the first wrestler ever for the Little Giants to become an All-American in three consecutive seasons. Riley is an English major and History minor, and he recently became a three time NWCA Scholar All-American.

After Lefever won his fourth title, Wabash head coach Brian Anderson had this to say, “It was phenomenal, what a wonderful way to go out, and to boost our team into third place is unbelievable. That’s Riley’s humble way there. He’s always team first, and he goes out and does everything possible to help our team. He’s a seasoned veteran. He’s been on that stage three times before tonight and it shows. He keeps comfortable. His dominance doesn’t surprise me because his mindset of constantly trying to score points just wears people down to the point where the points keep coming easier and easier as the match goes. The kid is a complete game changer, a program changer. He has been a huge part of taking Wabash College wrestling to the level we’re at now, an expectation to come home with a team trophy.” Congratulations to Riley Lefever, the 2017 d3wrestle.com Wrestler of the Year.

Previous Wrestlers of the Year
2016 – Riley Lefever, Wabash
2015 – Mike Fuenffinger, Augsburg
2014 – Nazar Kulchytskyy, Oshkosh
2013 – Nazar Kulchytskyy, Oshkosh
2012 – Byron Tate, Wartburg
2011 – Minga Batsukh, St. John’s
2010 – Clayton Rush, Coe











Jason Russell to head Thomas More

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Jason Russell Named Head Wrestling Coach at Thomas More

Thomas More College has announced Jason Russell as the next head wrestling coach for the Crestview Hills, Kentucky, school. Russell spent the past two seasons as an assistant at Whitewater after one year as a volunteer assistant at his alma mater of Heidelberg. Russell was a 2014 NCAA qualifier for the Student Princes, and he will take over a Thomas More program entering its second season of competition. Read on for more from Thomas More College.

Jason Russell Named Head Wrestling Coach at Thomas More
Mar 28, 2017
(CRESTVIEW HILLS, Ky.) – Thomas More College president David A. Armstrong, J.D. and athletic director Terry Connor have named Jason Russell the new head wrestling coach at Thomas More.

Russell comes to Thomas More after serving as an assistant coach the last two season at the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater. At Whitewater, he helped lead the Warhawks to the 2016 Wisconsin Intercollegiate Athletic Conference championship, while coaching four NCAA Qualifiers during the 2015-16 season and Jordan Newman to the NCAA Division III Championship at 184 lbs. Russell assisted Whitewater’s recruiting efforts, monitored the program’s academic success, scouted and handled the team’s social media presence.

“We are very happy that Jason has agreed to become the head wrestling coach at Thomas More,” commented Connor. “The search committee felt his dedication and passion for wrestling will allow him to build a successful program, which just finished its inaugural season at Thomas More.”

“I would like to thank President David Armstrong, director of athletics Terry Connor, associate athletic director Jeff Hetzer, assistant athletic director Lindsay Eagan and the entire athletic department for the opportunity to lead the Thomas More wrestling program,” stated Russell. “The athletic programs at Thomas More have a long standing tradition of excellence. I am looking forward to learning from some of the best coaches in the country and I am excited to continue to build a team that strives to achieve greatness on the mat, in the classroom and within the Northern Kentucky and Greater Cincinnati communities.”

Prior to coaching at Whitewater, Coach Russell served as a volunteer assistant at Heidelberg University in Tiffin, Ohio during the 2014-15 season. At Heidelberg he coached NCAA All-American Richard Dowdley and NCAA Qualifier Nino Majoy. Russell also handled scouting and fundraising planning for the Student Princes.

Russell earned his Bachelor of Arts in History from Heidelberg in 2014, where he was a four-time varsity letter winner and a 2014 NCAA National Qualifier. He had a 69-29 career record and was a 2013-14 Heidelberg Scholar Athlete as well as a second team All-Ohio Athletic Conference selection in 2014. Russell will earn his Masters of Science Education in Athletic Administration from Wisconsin-Whitewater this May.












2017 Coach of the Year

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The 2017 d3wrestle.com Coach of the Year is Eric Keller of Wartburg. Keller led the Knights to their 13th NCAA Championship, the most in Division III history. Wartburg crowned national champion Eric DeVos and put nine total wrestlers on the podium in La Crosse. The nine All-Americans were the most in Keller’s tenure with the Knights. Eric DeVos placed 1st, Cross Cannone and Logan Thomsen placed 2nd, Kenny Martin placed 3rd, Lance Evans placed 4th, Bryan Levsen and Kyle Fank placed 5th, Arnulfo Olea placed 6th, and Andrew Steiert placed 7th. The 129.5 team points scored matched their championship winning total from last year. With their 13th overall championship, Wartburg broke a tie with Augsburg for the most DIII national championships. The Knights have won six of the last seven NCAA championships.

Wartburg was 20-0 this year and won the National Duals for the seventh year in a row and eleventh time overall. The team won the Iowa Conference for the 25th year in a row and have won 196 consecutive Iowa Conference dual meets. They scored 190 points at the Central regional to outpace second place Loras by 67.5 points. All ten starters qualified for the NCAA Championships as the Knights won the Central Region for the 5th year in a row.

Keller is in his second stint at Wartburg. The Northern Iowa graduate spent 2000-2005 at Wartburg as an assistant before taking the reigns at North Central College for the 2005-2006 season. He then returned to Wartburg for the 2006-2007 season and has been there ever since. In 2010, he was promoted to co-head coach and continued on in 2012 as head coach upon the retirement of Jim Miller. Keller was the d3wrestle.com Coach of the Year in 2015 and was the co-winner in 2012 with Jim Miller. Congratulations to Eric Keller, the 2017 d3wrestle.com Coach of the Year.

Previous Winners
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











2017 Freshman Team and Freshman of the Year

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The 2017 d3wrestle.com Freshman of the Year is Troy Stanich of Stevens Institute of Technology. Stanich capped an outstanding season with a third place finish at the NCAA Championships at 133 lbs. and finished his first college campaign with a 45-1 record. During the season, he was the champion at the Ithaca Invitational, Roger Williams Invitational, New Standard Invitational, Matman Invitational, Centennial Conference Championships, and the East Regional. He defeated both NCAA finalists at his weight multiple times and was named the Outstanding Wrestler at both the conference and regional tournaments while also being named Centennial Conference Rookie of the Year. His only defeat came in a one point semifinal loss to eventual runner-up Jay Albis of Johnson & Wales, a wrestler who Stanich had defeated three times earlier this season. Stanich compiled 22 falls and 5 tech falls during the year and finished in the top five in the season long NCAA awards for Dominance and Most Falls.

Stanich is from Roxbury, New Jersey, and placed 4th at the 2016 New Jersey State Championships at 126 lbs. for Roxbury High School. He lost in the semifinals to current Penn State 125 lbs. starter Nick Suriano. He finished in 6th place at the 2015 championships at 120 lbs. and qualified for the tournament as a sophomore. He is studying Mechanical Engineering at Stevens.

Read on for the 2017 d3wrestle.com All-Freshman Team. Every effort was made to include wrestlers who are in their first year of college competition and were in high school for the 2015-2016 season.

2017 d3wrestle.com All-Freshman team
125 – Zach Beckner, Ferrum, 2nd NCAA, 1st East Region
133 – Troy Stanich, Stevens, 3rd NCAA, 1st East Region
141 – Hayden Bates, Heidelberg, 21-3, 6th Mideast Region
141 – Clint Lembeck, Loras, 5th NCAA, 1st Central Region
149 – Sam Schneider, Ithaca,  5th NCAA, 1st Northeast Region
157 – Steve Bonsall, Chicago, 8th NCAA, 3rd Midwest Region
165 – Lucas Jeske, Augsburg, 3rd NCAA, 1st West Region
174 – Dan Kilroy, TCNJ, 8th NCAA, 2nd East Region
184 – Owen Webster, Augsburg, 3rd NCAA, 1st West Region
197 – Guy Patron, Loras, 3rd NCAA, 3rd Central Region
285 – Konrad Ernst, La Crosse, 27-11, 4th Midwest Region

2017 results for 2016 All-Freshman team
125 – Jacob Forsman, Norwich, 25-14 at 133
133 – Romeo Riley, Alma, did not wrestle
141 – Brendon Seyfried, Williams, 7th NCAA, 3rd Northeast Region
149 – Austin Whitney, Cortland, did not wrestle
157 – Brandon Arteaga, Whitewater, did not wrestle
165 – Anthony Arroyo, 5th NCAA, 3rd Mideast Region
174 – Garrett Beaman, St. Olaf, 5-1
184 – Austin Cook, La Crosse, 11-9
197 – Angus Arthur, Adrian, did not wrestle
285 – Paul Triandafilou, Gettysburg, NCAA Qualifier, 2nd East Region











2017 Picks Game Winner

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The winner of the 2017 d3wrestle.com Picks Game is NorseHorns. NorseHorns selected a team that scored 136 points to edge out the competition and take the title. The team had three finalists and eight All-Americans. Thanks to everyone who took the time to enter and submit results. Good luck to everyone in next year’s game.

NorseHorns Team

1st seed – 149 Kenny Martin, Wartburg, 17.5
2nd seed – 174 Eric Devos, Wartburg, 23.5
3rd seed– 184 Jordan Newman, Whitewater, 22.5
4th seed – 133 Ryan Flynn, York, 8
5th seed – 165 Connor Brummett, Wabash, 0.5
6th seed – 285 Adarios Jones, Augustana, 16.5
7th seed – 141 Clint Lembeck, Loras, 15
8th seed – 157 Quincy Kalkbrenner, Dubuque, 0
Unseeded – 125 Zachary Beckner, Ferrum, 15
Unseeded – 197 Guy Patron, Loras, 17.5

Total – 136













Awards Coming Next Week

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The d3wrestle.com Annual Awards will be announced next week. These include awards for the All-Freshman team and Freshman of the Year, Coach of the Year, and Wrestler of the Year. Be sure to come back on Monday as the first announcement is made.

Monday – All-Freshman Team and Freshman of the Year

Tuesday – Coach of the Year

Wednesday – Wrestler of the Year











2017 Picks Game Results Post

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Here is a list of the team points scored by each wrestler in the tournament. The list is arranged by weight class. If a wrestler does not appear, he scored zero points:

2017 NCAA Team Points by Individual

Use your original team to generate your score. Copy your team into a comment below, and add the team points for each individual at the end of each line. Sum the points up at the bottom. Make sure you use the same team name and email address you used when making your initial picks. Click below for a refresher on who you chose.

Picks Game Entries

Results comments must be posted by 11:59pm Eastern  on Wednesday, March 22nd. The winning entry will be verified, and the winner will be contacted with information on how to collect the prize.

2017 Bracket Facts

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  • No #1 seed finished lower than third place, and every #1 seed made the semifinals.
  • The lowest seeded champion was #4 Daniel Del Gallo at 149, and he faced one of the two unseeded finalists in the tournament.
  • 157 had the most unseeded placewinners. 5th through 8th place were all unseeded, while the top four places went in order of seed.
  • One one of the top 3 seeded wrestlers failed to place (Vandall, 165)
  • Owen Doster (Wabash), Michael LaBell (JWU), and Christos Giatras (Augustana) lost in the preliminary round and came place to place. All three of them finished 7th.
  • Lucas Jeske (Augsburg) was the only wrestler with more than one technical fall in the tournament.
  • Gregory Warner (York) scored the only first period tech fall.
  • There were five falls in the first minute of matches and 36 in the first period.
  • Six wrestlers competed seven times in the tournament. 22 more wrestlers had six matches.
  • Triston Engle (Brockport) scored more team points in his 4th place finish at 197 (20.5) than Lucas Malmberg (Messiah) scored as the 125 champ (20). He also won the most falls award.
  • 197 had the most pins with 11. 157 had the least with 4. Unsurprisingly, 197 scored the most team points, though 174 scored the least.
  • Augsburg led all teams with 7 falls. Wartburg led with 3 tech falls.
  • 10 wrestlers entered the tournament undefeated. Four won the championship (Weinmann, Dierna, DeVos, Roseberry).
  • Lucas Malmberg (Messiah), Bobby Dierna (Cortland), and Zachery Roseberry (Delaware Valley) all became 4x All-Americans.
  • Riley Lefever (Wabash) finished his career with 92.5 team points, 6 falls, and 4 NCAA Championships.












2017 All-Americans and Regional Performance

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2017 Region Performance | Other versions of this post 2016, 2015

Region All-Americans Team Points Champions
Central 20 290 1
Northeast 16 201 2
Mideast 15 194 1
Midwest 12 180.5 4
East 11 148 2
West 6 105 0

Five Year Totals 2013-2017 (since the regional system was put in place)

Region All-Americans % of total AA Team Points % of total Points
Central 87 21.75 1185 21.99
Midwest 77 19.25 1068.5 19.83
Mideast 71 17.75 921.5 17.10
Northeast 65 16.25 813 15.09
East 63 15.75 832 15.44
West 37 9.25 568 10.54

2017 All-Americans (unseeded in italics, 26 total)

125 165
1 Malmberg Messiah 1 Hermsen Stevens Point
2 Beckner Ferrum 2 Jarrell JWU
3 Haas Brockport 3 Jeske Augsburg
4 Pestano Central 4 Cannon Messiah
5 Denny Whitewater 5 Arroyo Baldwin Wallace
6 Olea Wartburg 6 Barger Lycoming
7 Jordan JWU 7 Steiert Wartburg
8 Gliva Augsburg 8 Jackson Olivet
133 174
1 Pike NYU 1 DeVos Wartburg
2 Albis JWU 2 Swarr Messiah
3 Stanich Stevens 3 Blanco W&J
4 Williams Millikin 4 Barber Cortland
5 Timok Central 5 Carlson La Crosse
6 Flynn York 6 Schweiger Delaware Valley
7 Doster Wabash 7 LaBell JWU
8 Passaro Cortland 8 Kilroy TCNJ
141 184
1 Weinmann La Crosse 1 Newman Whitewater
2 Cannone Wartburg 2 Kreiter Luther
3 Flynn Augsburg 3 Webster Augsburg
4 Broukal Wabash 4 Bushey Oswego
5 Lembeck Loras 5 Levsen Wartburg
6 Ferinde JWU 6 Benderoth NYU
7 Seyfried Williams 7 Giatras Augustana
8 Warner York 8 Chorzepa Williams
149 197
1 Del Gallo Southern Maine 1 Lefever Wabash
2 Engle Cornell 2 Toribio Ithaca
3 Martin Wartburg 3 Patron Loras
4 Lansberry Lycoming 4 Engle Brockport
5 Schneider Ithaca 5 Fank Wartburg
6 Erickson Coe 6 Kowal Stevens
7 Wilhelm Stevens 7 Koser Messiah
8 Wilson Waynesburg 8 Hutchinson Greensboro
157 285
1 Dierna Cortland 1 Roseberry Delaware Valley
2 Thomsen Wartburg 2 Longendyke Augsburg
3 Bova Wabash 3 Jones Augustana
4 Arnold Ursinus 4 Evans Wartburg
5 Davis Loras 5 Bethel Oneonta
6 Choinski Oshkosh 6 Ralston Stevens Point
7 Herzog RWU 7 Evans Waynesburg
8 Bonsall Chicago 8 O’Brien Ithaca

NWCA Scholar Teams and All-Americans

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NWCA

The top 30 team GPAs and the 2017 NWCA Scholar All-Americans are listed below. In order to become an NWCA Scholar All-American, the following criteria must be met:

  1. The wrestler must have a GPA of 3.2 or greater for the previous academic year or have a cumulative GPA of 3.2 or greater. Freshmen are eligible, and their GPA from the fall of 2016 must be above 3.2.
  2. The wrestler must have been at the current school for the entire 2016-2017 school year
  3. The wrestlers must meet at least one of the following wrestling criteria
    1. NCAA Qualifier with a winning record
    2. Finish in the top six at the NCAA regional while competing in at least half of the team’s scheduled competitions and compiling a winning record
    3. Win at least 67% of his matches while competing in at least 50% of his team’s scheduled competitions

The team GPA was calculated by averaging the GPAs of the ten regional starters plus as many as four other team members who competed in at least 50% of the team’s scheduled competitions.

NWCA Scholar All-Americans

NWCA Top Scholar Teams












2017 NCAA Final Results & Replay

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2017 NCAA Finals Video Replay (ncaa.com)

Final Brackets | Final Team Scores | 2017 All-Americans

Outstanding Wrestler: Riley Lefever, Wabash
Most Falls in Least Amount of Time: Triston Engle, Brockport
Coach of the Year: Lonnie Morris, Johnson & Wales
Rookie Coach of the Year: TJ Miller, Loras
Assistant Coach of the Year: Brian Allen, JWU
Elite 90 Award: Adam Presler, Concordia-Moorhead
Most Dominant: Riley Lefever, Wabash
Most Falls: Hunter Harris, Messiah
Most Tech Falls: Stephen Jarrell, Johnson & Wales













Saturday Live Results and Video Links

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Preliminary All-American count by region
Central – 20
Northeast – 16
Mideast – 15
Midwest – 12
East – 11
West – 6

Day 1 Team Scores | Brackets

Session 3 – 11am Eastern – Championships semifinals, Consolations quarters, semis, and placement matches
Session 4 – 8pm Eastern – Championship Finals

Live Results (TrackWrestling)

Saturday Live Video (NCAA.com)













Friday Live Results and Video Links

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Session 1 – 12pm Eastern – Championships rounds 1 & 2 and consolation round 1
Session 2 – 7pm Eastern – Championship quarterfinals and consolations rounds 2 & 3

Live Results (TrackWrestling)

Friday Live Video (NCAA.com)













2017 NCAA Preview: 285 lbs.

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Zach Roseberry could become a 4x All-American

2016 Champion – Zach Roseberry, Delaware Valley

Central 1 Lance Evans Wartburg
Central 2 Adarios Jones Augustana
Central 3 Quin Gilliam Loras
East 1 Zachery Roseberry Delaware Valley
East 2 Paul Triandafilou Gettysburg
East 3 Victor Raigoza Merchant Marine
Mideast 1 Jacob Evans Waynesburg
Mideast 2 Sam Weinger RIT
Mideast 3 Gabriel Mahaney Baldwin Wallace
Midwest 1 Donny Ralston Stevens Point
Midwest 2 Jesse Judge Olivet
Midwest 3 Zac Rieger Adrian
Northeast 1 James Bethel Oneonta
Northeast 2 Jake O’Brien Ithaca
Northeast 3 John Georges Rhode Island
West 1 Donny Longendyke Augsburg
West 2 Justice Davis Concordia-Moorhead
West 3 Austin Bellile MSOE

Zachery Roseberry came in undefeated last year for Delaware Valley, but he only earned the #2 seed thanks to defending champion Donny Longendyke of Augsburg. Most assumed Longendyke would repeat as champion as he had not lost to a DIII opponent in either the 2015 or 2016 seasons. Roseberry had other plans and used outstanding leg attacks to pull the upset. Both are back this year along with 3rd place finisher Lance Evans of Wartburg. Evans is undefeated, has a pair of wins over Longendyke, and will be a top contender for the championship this weekend. Paul Triandafilou of Gettysburg is the four returning All-American from last year, and he lost in overtime to Roseberry in the East Region final.

James Bethel of Oneonta was a freshman All-American in 2015, finishing 4th and losing to Roseberry in the consolation finals. He missed all of last year but picked up right where he left off in 2016-2017. His only losses are to Longendyke and the EIWA champion from Columbia. If seeds hold, he will face Triandafilou in a battle of former freshman All-Americans. Quin Gilliam of Loras is one of two Louisiana natives in the tournament for Loras thanks to head coach TJ Miller spending five years there before returning to Iowa and the college ranks. Austin Bellile of MSOE began his career two seasons ago at 184 but moved up to 285 for his sophomore year. Now a junior, he earned his spot here with a 3rd place finish at the West Regional.











2017 NCAA Preview: 197 lbs.

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Riley Lefever is going for his fourth championship

2016 Champion – David Welch, Roger Williams

Central 1 Kyle Fank Wartburg
Central 2 Matt Seabold Central
Central 3 Guy Patron Loras
East 1 AJ Kowal Stevens
East 2 Kacee Hutchinson Greensboro
East 3 Etiini Udott Centenary
Mideast 1 Kyle Koser Messiah
Mideast 2 Triston Engle Brockport
Mideast 3 Gage Gladysz Thiel
Midwest 1 Riley Lefever Wabash
Midwest 2 Michael Swider Wheaton
Midwest 3 Dylan Diebitz Stevens Point
Northeast 1 Carlos Toribio Ithaca
Northeast 2 Devon Carrillo Wesleyan
Northeast 3 Hunter Ayen Springfield
West 1 Mason Baumgartner Concordia Wisconsin
West 2 Devin Mahnke MSOE
West 3 Robert Tait St. John’s

There has only been one 4x NCAA Division III champion. That could change this year as Riley Lefever of Wabash aims to cap a brilliant career with his fourth NCAA title. He has never lost to a Division III opponet, and that record will remain intact if he has his hand raised on Saturday night. Lefever has scored bonus points on every DIII opponent he has faced and leads all of the NCAA is the Most Dominant standings with an average of 5.85 team points per match.

Kyle Fank of Wartburg is the #2 seed. He gets his first shot at the NCAA Championships and has just two losses this year. One of them is to Michael Swider of Wheaton. Swider was 7th at this weight last year and is the only returning 2016 All-American at 197. Matt Seabold of Central was an All-American in 2015 at this weight, while AJ Kowal of Stevens and Carlos Toribio of Ithaca placed 3rd and 5th respectively last season at 184. Hunter Ayen of Springfield did not wrestle last season, but he was a qualifier at this weight in 2015. Devon Carrillo of Wesleyan beat Ayen twice this year and split with Toribio, and he has just one loss this season.











2017 NCAA Preview: 184 lbs.

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Freshman Owen Webster is the top seed at 184

2016 NCAA Champion – Riley Lefever, Wabash

Central 1 Justin Kreiter Luther
Central 2 Christos Giatras Augustana
Central 3 Bryan Levsen Wartburg
East 1 Blaise Benderoth NYU
East 2 Doug Hamann TCNJ
East 3 Patrick Rooney Merchant Marine
Mideast 1 Jordan Bushey Oswego
Mideast 2 Ryan Shank Waynesburg
Mideast 3 Derek Beitz Messiah
Midwest 1 Jordan Newman Whitewater
Midwest 2 Jared Fekete Wheaton
Midwest 3 Trent Hullett Alma
Northeast 1 Christopher Chorzepa Williams
Northeast 2 Michael Gallagher Rhode Island
Northeast 3 Deuly Espinal Cortland
West 1 Owen Webster Augsburg
West 2 Grant Wedepohl Platteville
West 3 Luke Dodd St. John’s

After dominating the weight for three years, Riley Lefever has moved to 197, giving the other guys at this weight a chance for a championship. Owen Webster, Augsburg’s top seed at this weight, never had to deal with Lefever since he is a freshman. He came in as the #40 overall recruit and has lived up to his reputation. He has scored bonus points in a vast majority of his matches and has gone undefeated against DIII. His top competition looks to be two time All-American Christopher Chorzepa of Williams who has one loss (to Webster) this year, Jordan Newman of Whitewater, a 2015 All-American who is undefeated against DIII competition, Jordan Bushey of Oswego, an undefeated freshman, and Justin Kreiter of Luther, the highest returning placewinner at the weight.

Patrick Rooney of Merchant Marine comes in unseeded but has a win over Ben Swarr, the defending champion and top seed at 174 lbs. in an early season tournament. Doug Hamann of TCNJ came into the postseason with a 4-3 record but defeated Rooney on his way to the regional final. He was 8th at 174 last season. Blaise Benderoth, the East Region champ, began the year at 165, suffered an injury that kept him out two montsh, and then came back at 184 where he now sits at the 7th seed.











2017 Picks Game

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The 2016 d3wrestle.com Picks Contest is here. Read the rules closely. The prize will be an item from the d3wrestle.com store. Here is a link to the brackets.

  1. You are to choose 10 wrestlers, one from each weight class.
  2. You are to choose a maximum of one wrestler for each seed and a minimum of two unseeded wrestlers.
  3. You may replace any seeded wrestler with an unseeded wrestler. e.g., if you want to pick an extra unseeded wrestler instead of the 8th (or other) seed at a weight, that is permissible, as long as you only choose one or zero wrestlers for a seeded spot.
  4. Your score is the combined team points scored by your ten wrestlers. A list of scores will be provided after the tournament.
  5. Post your team as a comment to this post before 11:59pm Eastern on Thursday, March 9th. The format is as follows: Seed, Weight, Name, School. Place each wrestler on a separate line in order of seed. Make sure the email address attached to your post is real so I can contact the winner.
  6. Ties will be broken by whoever has the most champs, then runners-up, and so on.












2017 NCAA Preview: 174 lbs.

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Ben Swarr won his title in overtime last season

2016 NCAA Champion – Ben Swarr, Messiah

Central 1 Eric DeVos Wartburg
Central 2 Mike Maksimovic Cornell
Central 3 Javier Reyes Luther
East 1 Ben Schweiger Delaware Valley
East 2 Dan Kilroy TCNJ
East 3 John Messinger NYU
Mideast 1 Ben Swarr Messiah
Mideast 2 Tory Cain RIT
Mideast 3 Sonnieboy Blanco Washington & Jefferson
Midwest 1 Richard Carlson La Crosse
Midwest 2 Logan Walkup Wheaton
Midwest 3 Darden Schurg Wabash
Northeast 1 Jaison White Ithaca
Northeast 2 Michael LaBell Johnson & Wales
Northeast 3 Colin Barber Cortland
West 1 Jon Goetz Platteville
West 2 Mason Mergener Concordia Wisconsin
West 3 Jake Johnson Concordia-Moorhead

Last year’s finalists look to be on a collision course for another matchup on Saturday night. Ben Swarr of Messiah came from the 7th seed to win with a takedown in the final seconds over Eric DeVos of Wartburg. Both are undefeated at the weight in DIII, though Swarr has wrestled nearly three times as many matches as DeVos this year, and has defeated the #3 and #5 seeds this season. The other 2016 All-American in the bracket, Sonnieboy Blanco of Washington & Jefferson, is seeded 7th with a 37-2 record. Both of his losses are to wrestlers in the bracket, included the unseeded Darden Schurg of Wabash.

Two wrestlers who did not compete at all last year were 2015 All-Americans that are seeded here. #3 Richard Carlson of La Crosse was 6th in 2015 at 184, while Tory Cain of RIT was 5th in 2015 at this weight. John Messinger (NYU), Jon Goetz (Platteville), Javier Reyes (Luther), and Jake Johnson (Concordia-Moorhead) are all returning qualifiers at this weight who failed to place last year, while Logan Walkup of Wheaton qualified at 184 before dropping to 174 in January.











2017 NCAA Preview: 165 lbs.

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Surprise 2016 champion Logan Hermsen will not surprise anyone this year

2016 NCAA Champion – Logan Hermsen, Stevens Point

Central 1 Ryan Vandall Central
Central 2 Tristan Zurfluh Luther
Central 3 Andrew Steiert Wartburg
East 1 Joseph Scott Washington & Lee
East 2 Nick Herring TCNJ
East 3 Colin Navickas Stevens
Mideast 1 Larry Cannon Messiah
Mideast 2 Nolan Barger Lycoming
Mideast 3 Anthony Arroyo Baldwin Wallace
Midwest 1 Logan Hermsen Stevens Point
Midwest 2 Connor Brummett Wabash
Midwest 3 Davon Jackson Olivet
Northeast 1 Stephen Jarrell Johnson & Wales
Northeast 2 Nick Velez Ithaca
Northeast 3 Zach Zupan Cortland
West 1 Lucas Jeske Augsburg
West 2 Mitchell Fucile Lakeland
West 3 Teddy Erickson St. John’s

In a top half of a bracket where the #1 and #4 seeds both lost in the first round, Logan Hermsen came out of the #5 spot to make the finals where he prevailed in overtime against the #2 seed. He has one DIII loss this year back in November when he bumped up to 174 for a day, but he has gone undefeated since November 12th, winning four tournaments along the way. His quarterfinal opponent last year, Central’s Ryan Vandall, has gone undefeated in DIII and slots in as the #2 seed. Both of the consolation finalists from last year are back, though Nolan Barger of Lycoming and Colin Navickas of Stevens each took a loss at their respective regionals.

There are seven total All-Americans at this weight. Nick Velez of Ithaca placed 7th at this weight last year, while Messiah’s Larry Cannon and Luther’s Tristan Zurfluh were both All-Americans at 157 a year ago. Andrew Steiert was the top seed at 165 in 2015, finishing in 6th place. He is back as the 8th seed in 2017. #3 Stephen Jarrell of Johnson & Wales is almost certain to win the DIII Tech Falls award, as he leads that category by 4. Mitchell Fucile of Lakeland qualified in 2015, missed out in 2016, and is back in 2017 for one last shot at the podium. Joseph Scott is one of two qualifiers for Washington & Lee. The school broke a 15 year qualification drought last season and now has two qualifiers for the first time since 1987.











2017 NCAA Preview: 157 lbs.

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Bobby Dierna is going for a second title at 157

2016 NCAA Champion – Bobby Dierna, Cortland

Central 1 Logan Thomsen Wartburg
Central 2 Jimmy Davis Loras
Central 3 Quincy Kalkbrenner Dubuque
East 1 Derek Arnold Ursinus
East 2 Logan Meister Ferrum
East 3 Erik Beshada Merchant Marine
Mideast 1 Rocco Russo Oswego
Mideast 2 Nicholas Racanelli Wilkes
Mideast 3 Dempsey King RIT
Midwest 1 Nick Bova Wabash
Midwest 2 Keone Derain Elmhurst
Midwest 3 Steve Bonsall Chicago
Northeast 1 Bobby Dierna Cortland
Northeast 2 Zach Joseph Springfield
Northeast 3 Ty Herzog Roger Williams
West 1 Cole Sladek Concordia-Moorhead
West 2 Mark Choinski Oshkosh
West 3 Grant Parker Augsburg

Four All-Americans return at this weight including the defending champion Bobby Dierna of Cortland. Dierna has now placed 3rd, 2nd, and 1st in his career as he looks for a second title. He is 17-0 after beginning wrestling in January this year, and he has scored bonus points in every match he has wrestled. The second and third seeds have had similar excellent seasons with the difference being a 5-3 win for Logan Thomsen of Wartburg over Nick Bova of Wabash back in November. Bova was 8th here last year, while 2016-2017 is Thomsen’s first shot at the starting lineup. Grant Parker of Augsburg defeated Bova in the 7th place match last year, but he comes in unseeded and will have to start off with a preliminary match on Friday.

Derek Arnold is a former All-American at a lower weight. In 2015, he was the #2 seed and finished in 4th place at 149. Last year, he was the top seed at 149 and was the one of two #1 seeds who failed to place. He is the 4th seed this year and will take on returning All-American Parker in his first match. Arnold defeated 2016 6th place finisher Logan Meister of Ferrum in the East Regional finals. Meister was the first NCAA qualifier for his school in 2014 and the first All-American last year. He will be working to also become the first two time All-American for his school.