News

Porter is a fascinating pickup by Chiefs

posted by gohiocasts on December 8, 2009, 8:02am

Porter is a fascinating pickup by Chiefs- kansascity.com

The Chiefs just added a player to their practice squad who may never play in a game.

But the signing of offensive lineman Jermail Porter is intriguing.

Porter, who originally entered the NFL as a rookie free agent with New England (where else?) this year, did not play college football but was an All-American wrestler at Kent State.

He finished sixth at the 2009 NCAA championships after winning the Mid-America Conference heavyweight title as a senior and going 31-4.

Why does that intrigue me? We’ve seen former college wrestlers make it in the NFL. And, having covered some Big 12 and NCAA wrestling when the NCAA championships were in Kansas City a few years ago, I learned to appreciate the toughness, stamina, dedication and discipline of these athletes.

New England guard Stephen Neal also did not play college football but was a two-time NCAA wrestling champion at Cal State-Bakersfield. He was signed as an undrafted free agent by the Patriots in 2001 and has been a starter since 2004.

Minnesota Vikings center John Sullivan was a three-time Connecticut state wrestling champion with a 138-6 career record before concentrating on football at Notre Dame, but I remember talking to him at the NFL combine in 2008 about how the quickness and footwork required in wrestling helped him in football.

And who could forget that Chiefs Hall of Fame nose tackle Curley Culp was an NCAA heavyweight champion at Arizona State and a member of the 1968 U.S. Olympic team?

Let’s see what Porter, at 6-foot-5 and 310 pounds, can do with some football training. Considering the play of the Chiefs’ offensive line, it can’t hurt.

 

http://www.kansascity.com/sports/chiefs/story/1607610.html

2010 and 2011 U.S. Senior Nationals and FILA Junior Nationals moving to Cleveland, Ohio

posted by gohiocasts on November 25, 2009, 1:33pm
Gary Abbott USA Wrestling
11/24/2009

USA Wrestling is pleased to announce that the 2010 and 2011 U.S. Senior National Wrestling Championships and the Men’s FILA Junior National Championships have been awarded to Cleveland, Ohio.

This year’s event will be held at the Wolstein Center at Cleveland State University, April 21-25, 2010. The local host for the event is the Greater Cleveland Sports Commission.

“Northeast Ohio has such a strong, vibrant wrestling community and we are thrilled to welcome the nation’s best to Cleveland this April and again in 2011,” stated David Gilbert, President and CEO of the Greater Cleveland Sports Commission. “The U.S. Senior Nationals is one of the premier wrestling events in the nation. It will truly be an exciting weekend with great competition.”

The U.S. Senior National Wrestling Championships feature the nation’s top wrestlers in the three Olympic styles: men’s freestyle, women’s freestyle and Greco-Roman.

The Men’s FILA Junior National Championships include the nation’s top athletes who are 17-20 years old, competing in freestyle and Greco-Roman wrestling.

Up to 850 athletes are expected to participate in the two competitions that weekend, with more than $850,000 expected to be infused into the local economy.

“USA Wrestling is excited to partner with the Greater Cleveland Sports Commission to bring our U.S. Senior National Championships to Cleveland,” said Pete Isais, USA Wrestling National Events Director. “Cleveland is a great wrestling community, and we have great working relationship with the Sports Commission there. We are looking forward to showcasing our most talented athletes for fans to enjoy. We fully expect the event to be a huge success.”

The U.S. Senior Nationals move to Cleveland from Las Vegas, Nev., where the event has been located for 20 of the last 22 years. The FILA Junior Nationals had been held in Las Vegas alongside the Senior Nationals for the last five years.

The Cleveland Local Organizing Committee will include the following organizations:
• USA Wrestling – Ohio
• Greater Cleveland Wrestling Coaches & Officials Association
• Cleveland State University
• Mid-American Conference
• City of Cleveland
• Greater Cleveland Sports Commission
• Convention & Visitors Bureau of Greater Cleveland

The competition schedule and ticket price structure has not been finalized. More information will be announced shortly.

The Greater Cleveland Sports Commission has rich history of hosting premier wrestling events, including the 1998 NCAA Division I Wrestling Championships in Cleveland and the 2007-2009 USA Wrestling University and FILA Cadet Nationals in Akron.

Other Olympic sports events hosted by the Greater Cleveland Sports Commission included: 2000 U.S. Figure Skating Championships, 2002 USA Gymnastics National Championships, 2002 USA Judo Senior Nationals, 2004 U.S. Speedskating Short Track National Championships, 2004 USA Boxing Olympic Trials Box-Off and the 2005 USA Weightlifting National Championship.

Wrestling is a tremendously popular sport in Ohio and is considered one of the nation’s hotbeds. There are 618 high school wrestling teams in Ohio, with 13,804 high school wrestlers, and a tradition of competitive excellence. Ohio also has a rich tradition of college wrestling programs. With its central location, wrestling fans from across the nation will be able to easily travel to Cleveland to enjoy the action.

The top seven athletes in each weight class at the U.S. Senior National Championships qualify to compete at the 2010 U.S. Senior World Team Trials in Council Bluffs, Iowa, June 10-12. The Men’s FILA Junior National Championships is a qualifying event for the FILA Junior World Team Trials in Colorado Springs, Colo., May 21-22.
 

Harris Auto Center Open at Ashland University

posted by gohiocasts on November 17, 2009, 10:17am

Dan Cosimi- Ohiowrestling.net
November 17, 2009 - 12:11 am

125 pounds
Championship: Dante Rini (Notre Dame) dec. Camden Eppert (Purdue) 6-5
Third place: Riki Reynolds (Mount Union) pin Brandon Davis (Ashland) 4:22
Fifth place: John Pas (Mercyhurst Northeast) for. Dominic Cribari (Unattached)

133 pounds
Championship: Jake Creed (Ashland) dec. Tim Hubbard (Mercyhurst Northeast) 7-6
Third place: Jake Garringer (Ashland) dec. Jake Walters (Notre Dame) 12-5
Fifth place: Erik Canter (Mount Union) for. Brian Dean (Notre Dame)

141 pounds
Championship: Kyle Kanaga (Ashland) dec. Josh Malave (Mount Union) 6-3
Third place: Cody Dunn (Notre Dame) for. Adam Koballa (Notre Dame)
Fifth place: Scott Meyer (Ashland) tf. Jason Alexander (Mercyhurst Northeast) 17-0

149 pounds
Championship: Jeff Pelton (Notre Dame) dec. Ashtin Primus (Notre Dame) n/a
Third place: T.J. Rigel (Ashland) md. Kevin McElhaney (Gannon) 17-6
Fifth place: Jordin Humphrey (Unattached) for. Jeremy Regula (Mount Union)

157 pounds
Championship: Thomas Straughn (Notre Dame) pin Marc Hoff (Ashland) 4:30
Third place: Johnny Greisheimer (Edinboro) md. Reno Bernardo (Heidelberg) 22-5
Fifth place: Jeff Liggitt (Mount Union) pin Lambert McElrath (Mount Union) 4:38

165 pounds
Championship: Alex Badovick (Notre Dame) pin Kevin Hardy (Notre Dame) 1:28
Third place: Zack McKendree (Gannon) dec. Aaron Jonhenry (Heidelberg) 11-4
Fifth place: Craig Hogan (Messiah) dec. John Piechuta (Mount Union) 5-4

174 pounds
Championship: John Bittenger (Notre Dame) dec. Tom Kerrigan (Ashland) 3-2
Third place: Tommie Graszl (Ashland) dec. Kurt Wolff (Notre Dame) 3-2
Fifth place: Bret Terry (Gannon) for. Mike Manypenny (Mount Union)

184 pounds
Championship: Alex Denman (Notre Dame) dec. Nick Miller (Mercyhurst Northeast) 7-3
Third place: Ryan Thatcher (Ashland) dec. Andy Jenkins (Mount Union) 3-2
Fifth place: Justin Cheesman (Ashland) dec. Jake Ewing (Ashland) 11-9

197 pounds
Championship: Derek Foore (Notre Dame) pin Tyler Rasho (Mercyhurst Northeast) 1:02
Third place: Brad Rice (Heidelberg) dec. Andrew Borgstrom (Notre Dame) 3-2
Fifth place: William Rigsby (Heidelberg) dec. A.J. Robinson (Mount Union) 7-6

285 pounds
Championship: Frank McGrath (Gannon) dec. Jake Southwick (Ashland) 5-1
Third place: Orlando Scales (Notre Dame) dec. Derrick Hesson (Mount Union) 8-4
Fifth place: Jesse Campbell (Notre Dame) dec. Ernest James (Edinboro) 3-2

 

Natural Law and Wrestling

posted by gohiocasts on November 17, 2009, 10:10am

Ohiowrestling.net Article...

Rex Holman on the Natural Laws and Wrestling

 

College Commitment Class of 2010 - Robert Shepherd (Mason, OH)

posted by gohiocasts on October 27, 2009, 2:44pm

Robert Shepherd to Princeton

Robert Shepherd Q&A
Question:  Why Princeton ?


Throughout high school, I knew that I wanted to wrestle in a Division 1 college. I needed a great coach and challenging academics to achieve my goals in wrestling and school. Princeton has both of these things going for them in that Chris Ayres is a great coach, and Princeton is the best collegiate education in the country. Also at Princeton it seems that everyone supports each other in everything they do. The sense of community there is very strong, and people are there to help you throughout college, life, and wrestling. On top of that, I feel that in Princeton wrestling I can be a part of a up and coming team that will compete on the national level.


Question:  What are your future goals in collegiate wrestling?


In collegiate wrestling my goal is to be a NCAA Champion. I come from a hard working family and wrestling program, in highly competitive state for wrestling. I believe that if I work hard and continue to improve my skills in wrestling, I will achieve this goal. I continue to have the passion and drive that are necessary to be successful in this sport.  I feel that I have been quietly going about my business and overlooked in some cases being overshadowed by the larger names in my class.  I look forward to wrestling on a national level, and continuing to adapt and work hard to achieve my goals.  I feel like I have accomplished most of my goals locally, and that I am just beginning to work toward my goals on a national level.  This is a journey and a challenge that I am looking forward to.


Question:  Do you feel prepared to make the jump to Division I Collegiate wrestling?


I feel that by the end of my senior year I will be prepared to wrestle competitively at the Division I level. I have great coaching in my high school room, as well as coaches that have successfully competed at the Division I, Division III and NAIA levels that understand what it takes to do well at those levels. My strength coach has coached at many colleges both Division I and Division III and he continues to push me and my team mates to excel and prepare us for now and the future.


Question:  What 3 words would describe you?


Persistent, Diligent, Focused


Question:  What are you looking forward to the most headed into your senior season at Mason High School?


I am looking forward to leading my team both in wrestling and academically to achieving both the teams goals and my personal goals.


1)  Name:  Robert Shepherd - Senior
2)  College:  Princeton University
3)  Location:  Mason, OH
4)  High School:  Mason High School - Mason OH
5)  High School Weight:  140 lbs
6)  College Weight Class:  141 / 149 College Weight Class
7)  Commitment Type:   Verbal
8)  Picture Attached 


Robert Shepherd Q&A
Question:  Why Princeton ?


Throughout high school, I knew that I wanted to wrestle in a Division 1 college. I needed a great coach and challenging academics to achieve my goals in wrestling and school. Princeton has both of these things going for them in that Chris Ayres is a great coach, and Princeton is the best collegiate education in the country. Also at Princeton it seems that everyone supports each other in everything they do. The sense of community there is very strong, and people are there to help you throughout college, life, and wrestling. On top of that, I feel that in Princeton wrestling I can be a part of a up and coming team that will compete on the national level.


Question:  What are your future goals in collegiate wrestling?


In collegiate wrestling my goal is to be a NCAA Champion. I come from a hard working family and wrestling program, in highly competitive state for wrestling. I believe that if I work hard and continue to improve my skills in wrestling, I will achieve this goal. I continue to have the passion and drive that are necessary to be successful in this sport.  I feel that I have been quietly going about my business and overlooked in some cases being overshadowed by the larger names in my class.  I look forward to wrestling on a national level, and continuing to adapt and work hard to achieve my goals.  I feel like I have accomplished most of my goals locally, and that I am just beginning to work toward my goals on a national level.  This is a journey and a challenge that I am looking forward to.


Question:  Do you feel prepared to make the jump to Division I Collegiate wrestling?


I feel that by the end of my senior year I will be prepared to wrestle competitively at the Division I level. I have great coaching in my high school room, as well as coaches that have successfully competed at the Division I, Division III and NAIA levels that understand what it takes to do well at those levels. My strength coach has coached at many colleges both Division I and Division III and he continues to push me and my team mates to excel and prepare us for now and the future.


Question:  What 3 words would describe you?


Persistent, Diligent, Focused


Question:  What are you looking forward to the most headed into your senior season at Mason High School?


I am looking forward to leading my team both in wrestling and academically to achieving both the teams goals and my personal goals.

2009 Ohio State Wrestling - Hunter Stieber Verbals to OSU

posted by gohiocasts on October 20, 2009, 7:42am

Ohio State Lands First Commitment for Class of 2011

Monroeville HS junior Hunter Stieber is a Buckeye

Kevin Schlosser; www.buckeyewrestling.com

 

 

http://www.buckeyewrestling.com/?q=node/26002

Ohio's NCAA Division 1 Ranked Wrestlers

posted by gohiocasts on October 20, 2009, 7:40am

AWN Releases Preseason NCAA Division 1 Individual Rankings
Amateur Wrestling News
September 26, 2009

Ranked wrestlers with Ohio ties...
125 pounds: 6. Nic Bedelyon (KSU), 14. Nikko Triggas (OSU)
133 pounds: 10. Dan Mitcheff (KSU)
141 pounds: 1. Reece Humphrey (OSU), 18. Keith Sulzer (NU)
149 pounds: 2. Lance Palmer (OSU), 11. Matt Cathell (KSU)
157 pounds: 15. Jesse Dong (VTU), 15. Jedd Moore (UV)
165 pounds: 2. Dustin Schlatter (UM), 10. Colt Sponseller (OSU)
174 pounds: 1. Mike Miller (CMU), 12. David Rella (OSU), 17. David Erwin (PSU)
184 pounds: 1. Mike Pucillo (OSU), 7. Dustin Kilgore (KSU), 9. Chris Honeycutt (EU)
197 pounds: 17. Logan Brown (PU)
285 pounds: 16. Dustin Porter (GWU), 18. Corey Morrison (OSU)

 

Ayo Technology by Alan Fried

posted by gohiocasts on September 26, 2009, 3:06pm

Ayo Technology by Alan Fried

 


 

Ayo Technology!

I was asked to "blog". To "blog" is not something anyone would have asked me 10 years ago, about the same span of time since I've wrestled my last match. But, the blog and the tweet and the facebook poke, etc. are things that have come about from our technologically dominated lives....mainly the internet. Which, to me, is one of the greatest inventions in history b/c it makes communicating and getting information a zillion times easier than ever.

These days, technology runs my life, I think, more than most. I am a trader now. You know, the stock market, pork bellies, gold etc. etc.. You might have seen those madmen on CNBC or something screaming at the top of their lungs. I'm one of them, but in our modern age I get to do my trading from an office that's as quiet as a library most of time. At work, I stare at 5 computer screens all day long and click a mouse to enter and exit trades. As serious as the business is, it couldn't look more like I was playing a video game..Then, I come home, and well, look at me now, for example....I'm on the internet "blogging".

I want to brief, thorough and helpful. Only moments ago, I was watching videos on the internet to figure out something I was trying to teach myself in music and that's when it came to me how I can help any young wrestler or coach with just a few words of advice.

I want to tell a very short background story. Early in high school I somehow got my hands on a few videocassettes of international wrestling. All the best guys in the world were on the tapes. And, to me, they were priceless. I have never been a sports fan, and that includes wrestling. I don't watch sports on t.v. but a couple times a year and I frequently turn down tickets to Cubs games, etc.. But, I watched those wrestling videos over and over and over again. I got better at wrestling by watching how amazing someone could really become. It raised my standards technically, and got my imagination going too. Just aiming to be at that level (on the videotapes), and knowing what that level actually looked like, gave me such an advantage.

If you're into acting, let's say, or music, or mainstream sports for that matter (NFL, NBA etc.) you've had full and instant access to see or hear the very best the world has ever seen at any time you want. LeBron's on T.V. 100 nights a year...The radio (and internet) play music and movies to no end. But, if you were me in 1987 and you really wanted to watch someone like 8x world champion Sergey Belaglazov compete, you were out of luck. There was just no access to it. Until I got those tapes, I was left to only wonder what the "Big Leagues" were like in my sport and that was not a good thing.

Now, with the internet, any one of you wrestlers or coaches can have the same exact matches I watched and 1000 others playing for you inside of a half a minute, without moving an inch from where you are right now! That's is an INCREDIBLE fact, I think.

I would never tell anyone to do anything, because what works for one person, doesn't for another, and I don't know who it is reading this, but if you think it might help, then get on the internet and watch some of the world level competition.

You don't have to wonder, like I did when I was a kid, what the very best wrestlers the world has ever seen are like when they compete. You don't have to wonder what would work against the best and you do get see what is really possible.

Alan Fried is a native of Ohio wrestling for St. Edwards and NCAA Champion for Oklahoma State University

http://kolat.com/blog/ayo-technology-alan-fried

Ohio Wrestling Welcomes Quincy Osborn

posted by gohiocasts on September 21, 2009, 7:53am

Sept. 10, 2009

ATHENS, Ohio - Ohio Wrestling is welcoming a new coach into the fold this season, Minnesota native Quincy Osborn. Osborn joins the Bobcats after spending the last two years as an assistant coach at Augsburg College in Minneapolis. While an assistant at Augsburg, he worked with recruiting as well as one-on-one training with the student-athletes. He was the assistant wrestling camp director for Augsburg's summer camp in 2008 and 2009.

Osborn's competition career is a very decorated one. After wrestling for two years at the University of Minnesota (where he won the 2003-04 Frasier Dean Most Courageous Wrestler Award), he transferred to the aforementioned Augsburg College to finish out his career. In 2007 he was the Division Three National Champion in the 141-pound weight class. The team, which he captained, also won the National Championship that year. He was awarded Team Most Valuable Wrestler, Most Team Points, Most Takedowns and Most Falls during this impressive campaign.

The Bobcats open the 2009-10 season on November 8 at the Hokie Open in Blacksburg, Va.

Contact GOhioCasts

posted by gohiocasts on September 3, 2009, 9:06am

What do you want  to see this upcoming fall?

Campus visits? Facility tours? College Opens? Pre-Season workouts?

Email us at gohiocasts@gmail.com

 


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