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Jacob Panasiuk

SIAP

Roselle (Ill.) Lake Park three-star defensive end Jacub Panasiuk hails from Big Ten country, and his older brother Mike signed with Michigan State in February. Naturally, the younger Panasiuk just released his top four schools, and all of them are Big Ten programs.

Indiana, Michigan State, MINNESOTA and Penn State are the four schools Panasiuk is favoring (in no order). (Per tweet from Panasiuk on May 17).

U of M and other U Schools are not allow in North Carolina

Well we've done IT! All over Grown MEN wanting to shower with the girls! Or piss! Or take a Poop!

I think Minnesota has really "Acted Stupidly"!

Perverts are Perverts! And Men wanting to be in girls bathrooms are MENTALLY IL! Those men need HELP! Not more bathroom and locker room space!

PLUS THIS WILL KILL RECRUITING IN THE SOUTH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I go to a Traditional Black Baptist Church with a Pastor who is in his 40's and on Sunday he said this was Sinful! Do any of you think that in Black Churches they agree? HA HA! They will not want to send their Kids to Minnesota.

My cousins in Alabama think Minnesota has dug itself a grave it could take a generation to undo. Talk about stupid!

Five Gopher Wrestlers Compete at Junior World Team Trials

Four current Gopher Wrestling Freshmen redshirts and 2016-17 incoming recruit Mitch McKee will be competing for Junior World Team Freestyle titles this weekend in Irving, Texas. Also, rising Junior Patrick McKee (younger brother of Mitch) will be competing.

60KG Mitch McKee and 120KG Rylee Streifel are in the best position to win as both are already guaranteed to be in the final against a single opponent because of their early championships in the April event leading up to these finals. But, 66KG Fredy Stroker (who took fifth in April), 74KG Larry Early III (DNP in April) and 84KG Bobby Steveson (took third in April) all have a legitimate shot at winning titles and being part of the team that will wrestle internationally for the U.S. over the next year.

These national and international Freestyle and Greco-Roman events are becoming extremely popular with all of the leading elite high school wrestlers, so the events provide a great way for elite wrestlers to practice their craft year-round...and to get experience against the best national and international competition. Because our U.S. wrestlers have started to participate so extensively in these events lately, especially over the past 5 years, we are likely to have excellent Olympic-level Freestyle and Greco-Roman teams from now on into the foreseeable future!!!

Coverage will be on FloWrestling.org. I have included two articles that discuss this important event:

Five Gophers Compete for Spots on Team USA


Two Minnesota wrestlers have automatically advanced to the best-of-three championship finals after winning junior national titles earlier this spring

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By virtue of winning the junior national title three weeks ago, Rylee Streifel is guaranteed a spot in this weekend's best-of-three final at 120 kilograms

Gophersports.com
May 18, 2016


USA Wrestling will set its roster for the 2016 Junior World Championships at the United World Wrestling Junior Freestyle World Team Trials this weekend in Irving, Texas. Across brackets stocked full of the top young wrestling talent in the country, the names of five Gophers appear in five different weight classes.

This group of five includes two 2016 junior national champions – Mitch McKee and Rylee Streifel. By virtue of their titles earlier this spring in Las Vegas, both McKee and Streifel have automatically qualified for the best-of-three championship series at their weights, needing to pick up just two wins against a single opponent to claim their spots on Team USA. Streifel will compete at 120 kilograms, while McKee will wrestle at 60kg.

On Thursday of this week, McKee will also wrestle at Beat the Streets in Times Square in an exhibition match against Peiman Biabani of Iran. By rule, McKee reserves the right to defer his best-of-three series to a later date at any time until weigh-ins for this weekend’s event are complete. Meanwhile, Streifel’s best-of-three series is guaranteed to take place in Texas.

The other three Gophers in the field – Fredy Stroker, Larry Early III and Bobby Steveson – will begin their weekend in challenge tournaments. By winning the challenge tournament at their respective weights, tournaments which are set in traditional, double-elimination brackets, any of these wrestlers earns the right to compete against the junior national champion at his weight to earn a spot on the junior national team. Stroker will be competing at 66kg, Early at 74kg and Steveson at 84kg. At the junior national championships in late April, Steveson took third place, while Stroker took fifth. Early advanced to the quarterfinals before falling to the backside of the bracket.



Junior World Team Trials Preview
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Photo: Austin Bernard
FloWrestling.org
May 19, 2016
Willie Saylor

What happens in Vegas doesn’t necessarily stay in Vegas. Eight wrestlers carry a title in Vegas to the JR Trial Finals.

In an Olympic year, where the wrestling calendar demands changes, Junior Nationals and Junior World Team Trials are less than four weeks apart as opposed to the five- or six-week gap we typically see.

We previewed Junior Nationals at the end of April, and the results are still fresh in our minds.

This weekend at Body Bar, and in conjunction with the Cadet and Junior Women’s Trials, spots on the Junior World Team are at stake. Win here and you punch your ticket to compete at the World Championships in September in Macon, France.

The champions in Vegas sit in a best-of-three finals while the rest of the field are put in a traditional bracket. Four of those Vegas champs - Daton Fix (55kg), Mitchell McKee (60kg), Mark Hall (74kg), and Zahid Valencia (84kg) - will wrestle at Beat the Streets on Thursday. All four of those weights will be wrestled in Texas on Sunday. And while none of them have announced they will postpone their best-of-three finals, that still remains an option.

Below we’ll recap what happened in Vegas, who the new entries are, and what to keep an eye on.


WATCH LIVE HERE - Starting Saturday at 9:30 AM CT


Saturday’s Weights:

50KG - 2015 World Team Member - Spencer Lee, PA


Sitting in the Finals: Spencer Lee, PA

Vegas Placers:
2nd - Patrick McKee, MN
3rd - Rhett Golowenski, OK
4th - Ty Smith, NV
5th - Ryan Chauvin, FL
6th - Elijah Varona, FL
7th - Jason Holmes, AZ
8th - Dom Lajoie, MI

What Happened in Vegas: Spencer Lee torched the field with techs so fast you missed them if you weren’t dialed in. The returning World Champ is as much a lock as anyone who’s ever entered a wrestling tournament.

I expect him to meet Patrick McKee who has shown great development. He posted three techs before hitting Lee.

Willie’s Prediction: Lee over McKee in 2


66KG - 2015 World Team Member - Aaron Pico, CA

Sitting in the Finals: Alec Pantaleo, MI

Vegas Placers:
2nd - Matt Kolodzik, OH
3rd - Griffin Parriott, MN
4th - Tristen Moran, OK
5th - Fredy Stroker, MN
6th - Vince Turk, IL
7th - Ryan Pomrinca, NJ
8th - Mark Voss, MN

New to the Field: David Carr, OH

What Happened in Vegas: 66 is usually a very interesting weight with great depth. However not much interesting happened in Vegas. Pantaleo won a controlled bout with Kolodzik in the finals.

The most notable match came when Fredy Stroker was pinned while leading a match against Adam Whitesell. Last year’s Cadet World Champion, Jarod Verkleeren failed to place after being teched by Cortland Schuyler and pinned by Joe Lee.

I put both Stroker and Griffin Parriott, who placed 3rd in Vegas, as legitimate contenders to win the spot as the field stands now. Not yet registered are Michael Kemerer, who won in Vegas at 70kg and was expected to drop for Texas, and Aaron Pico, a two-time Junior World Medalist. Rumors suggest that neither will compete in the Trials this weekend.

The last curveball is in David Carr, who reached the Cadet Trials finals last year as an undersized 152lber. He’ll be big and darn good at 145.5.

Willie’s Prediction: Pantaleo over Kolodzik in 2


96KG - 2015 World Team Member - Anthony Cassar, NJ

Sitting in the Finals: Jacob Seely, CO

Vegas Placers:2nd - Lance Benick, MN
3rd - Andre Lee, IL
4th - Evan Hansen, IA
5th - Chase Singletary, FL
6th - Angus Arthur, MI
7th - Kollin Moore, OH
8th - Mason Reinhardt, WI

New to the Field: Anthony Cassar, NJ

What Happened in Vegas: Seely made his second straight Vegas final, this time winning the title with wins over two former Cadet World Team Members in Arthur and Benick. A third former Cadet WTM, Hunter Ritter, was also in the field but didn’t place.

The problem for Seely is that his old nemesis is back. Anthony Cassar beat Seely in both the finals of Vegas and the Trials finals in 2015. Cassar went on to have a strong training camp and early tournament at Worlds, but suffered a horrible shoulder injury that has kept him on the shelf till now. He was making great strides, but where is he at in his development now?

Willie’s Prediction: Cassar over Seely in 2


120KG - 2015 World Team Member - Nathan Butler, KS

Sitting in the Finals: Rylee Streifel, MN

Vegas Placers:2nd - Patrick Grayson, VA
3rd - Joey Goodhart, PA
4th - Youssif Hemida, NY
5th - Jake Gunning, PA
6th - Dan Stibral, ND
7th - Christian Lance, MO
8th - Ben Stone, WI

New to the Field: Jordan Wood, PA

What Happened in Vegas: Last year’s Fargo finalist, Rylee Striefel won a tight final with Patrick Grayson. A relative newcomer to FS, Grayson had a few squeakers in getting to the finals. A couple more weeks of FS-exclusive training might show a much improved and confident Grayson.

In the event that he is firing on all cylinders, America gets a shot in the arm here. Jordan Wood teched Streifel in Fargo finals last year and won Cadet World Silver in 2014. He’ll have to navigate a bracket that has its dangers, but if he does I expect him to win.

Willie’s Prediction: Wood over Streifel in 3


Sunday’s Weights:

55KG - 2015 World Team Member - Stevan Micic, IN

Sitting in the Finals: Daton Fix, OK

Vegas Placers:2nd - Gavin Teasdale, PA
3rd - Austin Gomez, IL
4th - Nick Piccininni, OK
5th - Austin Assad, OH
6th - Kris Williams, IL
7th - Kyle Akins, IL
8th - Brandon Courtney, AZ

What Happened in Vegas: Fix teched his way to the finals, but it was Gavin Teasdale that was the talk of the tournament. Whereas Fix came in as the favorite, most pundits were cautious of how Teasdale would compete up in weight. Just a high school sophomore, the two-time Cadet World Team Member teched three college wrestlers including Brian Rossi and Nick Piccininni.

On one hand it was a great display by Teasdale, who proved he was plenty big, strong, and physical enough. On the other hand, almost all his points came on counters - namely a devastating chest wrap. It will be interesting to see if his opponents can adjust to this, although it appeared that even when they knew it was coming, they couldn’t stop it.

The first test was passed. The one remaining is - can Gavin get a takedown when he’s down in points? I can see a situation where he’s trailing and struggles to finish on a shot and gets tripped up for a loss - guys like Piccininni, Gomez, and Assad present those types of problems.

Because Teasdale was on fire, overlooked was Gomez’s performance in which he pinned Assad and put up 17pts. on Piccininni.

Willie’s Prediction: Fix over Gomez in 2


60KG - 2015 World Team Member - Joey McKenna, NJ

Sitting in the Finals: Mitch McKee, MN

Vegas Placers:2nd - Seth Gross, MN
3rd - Yianni Diakomihalis, NY
4th - Jaydin Eierman, MO
5th - Taylor LaMont, UT
6th - Scotty Parker, PA
7th - Nick Lee, IN
8th - Josh Terao, HI

New to the Field: Markus Simmons, OK

What Happened in Vegas: One of the biggest stories of Vegas was the high-scoring affair between Yianni and Eierman. There appeared to be several miscalls and mis-interpretations, perhaps some on both sides. Eierman scored on his own shot early and then it was Yianni who did most of the attacking. Eierman’s points thereafter came exclusively on counters.

Eierman lost his next match to Scotty Parker, and then was teched by Yianni in the 3rd place bout. As it turned out, Mitch Mckee had to face neither Eierman nor Yianni, but beat Parker and then fellow Minnesotan Seth Gross. Also pay attention to Nick Lee, whose losses were to McKee and Eierman, and Gfeller, whose losses were to Gross and Yianni.

The winner here was us fans, who get the possibility of Yianni-Eierman III.

Willie’s Prediction: Yianni over McKee in 3


74KG - 2015 World Team Member - Mark Hall, MI

Sitting in the Finals: Mark Hall, MI

Vegas Placers:2nd - Logan Massa, MI
3rd - Vincenzo Joseph, PA
4th - Anthony Valencia, CA
5th - Jordan Kutler, NJ
6th - Kimball Bastian, UT
7th - Joey Gunther, IL
8th - Dylan Lydy, IN

Notable Non-Placers: Joe Smith, OK; Larry Early, IL; Fox Baldwin, FL; Josh Shields, PA

New to the Field: Jason Nolf, PA

What Happened in Vegas: We were pretty sure we’d get a showdown between Mark Hall and the winner of Anthony Valencia and Logan Massa, and we did. But Vincenzo Joseph pushed Hall, scoring the first 4 points before Hall scored 6 and tacked on a late one. Joseph and Joe Smith had a good one the previous round. Smith defaulted after the loss, but should be considered a serious threat.

In the final, Hall mixed Massa and ended it early.

The real curveball here is the addition of Nolf. He’s obviously a stud, but where is he at in his training? Up a weight? In Freestyle? He reached the finals at Vegas in 2015 beating Marsteller and Jon Jay Chavez and losing to Hall 13-8. Seeding will play a crucial role in what match-ups we see. I have little confidence in picking the finals opponent opposite Hall. I could see any of Joseph, Massa, or Nolf in the finals. And a hot Valencia is always a real possibility. Should he catch a couple breaks, Smith wouldn’t be a surprise either.

Here’s how I suspect seeding will go: Top Half - 1. Massa, 5. Kutler, 4. Nolf
Bottom Half - 3. Valencia, 6. Smith, 2. Joseph

What it comes down to me is this: I take Nolf over Massa, Massa over Cenzo, but Cenzo over Nolf...if that makes any sense. Interestingly enough, what made the difference in the IMAR wins over Nolf was the difficulty Nolf had in finishing - the exact same problem Hall represents to Nolf.

Willie’s Prediction: Hall over Cenzo in 2


84KG - 2015 World Team Member - Zahid Valencia, CA

Sitting in the Finals: Zahid Valencia, CA

Vegas Placers:
2nd - Myles Martin, NJ
3rd - Bobby Steveson, MN
4th - Josh Hokit, CA
5th - Emery Parker, IL
6th - Nathan Traxler, IL
7th - Ryan Christensen, WA
8th - Nick Fiegener, CA

New to the Field: Bo Nickal, TX; Beau Breske, WI

What Happened in Vegas: For the second straight year at Vegas, and running his record to 4-0 against him, Zahid beat Myles in last month’s final. What that means is that while the field has depth with Bobby Steveson and Nathan Traxler and a host of others, we’re almost certainly staring down an NCAA Finals rematch in the challenge tourney finals here. And there’s really no reason to discuss anything else.

Bo and Myles had a four-match series this season with Bo winning on three occasions. Although most people are of the opinion that Bo is the better wrestler, the gap isn’t what some make it out to be. One of the bouts was 4-3 and another was close until the final minute That being said, I still go with Bo.

A Bo-Zahid finals would be the most contrasting of styles. Bo is the consummate big move guy and Zahid might be the most fundamental, positionally dependent wrestler in America. I tend to err on the side of caution.

Willie’s Prediction: Zahid over Bo in 3.


Schedule
Saturday, May 21 - 50 KG, 66 KG, 96 KG and 120 KG
Session I: 9:30AM - Preliminaries through Challenge Tournament Finals
Session II: 2PM - Round 1 of best of 3 finals and 3rd place matches
Session III: 3PM - Round 2 of best of 3 finals and True 3rd Place matches
Session IV: 4PM - Round 3 of best of 3 finals - if necessary

Sunday, May 22 - 55 KG, 60 KG, 74 KG and 84KG
Session I: 9:30AM - Preliminaries through Challenge Tournament Finals
Session II: 2PM - Round 1 of best of 3 finals and 3rd place matches
Session III: 3PM - Round 2 of best of 3 finals and True 3rd Place matches
Session IV: 4PM - Round 3 of best of 3 finals - if necessary





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Latest Preakness odds...does Nyquist win this weekend?

Nyquist is a heavy favorite (5-7) to win at Pimlico on Saturday over Exaggerator (9-2), Gun Runner (12-1) and Stradivari (12-1). Does he get it done??

And, if so, does he have the endurance to win at Belmont Park for the Triple Crown? So far, I think he does. But, I'll update that prediction after I see him run again this weekend.


Latest 2016 Preakness odds
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Can Nyquist complete the second leg of the Triple Crown? Dylan Buell/Getty Images

4:21 PM ET
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Ben Fawkes ESPN Staff Writer

The 2016 Preakness takes place May 21 at Pimlico in Baltimore, Maryland. Will Nyquist complete the second leg of the Triple Crown? Currently, the horse's odds to win the Triple Crown are +230, with the "no" at -270.

Odds courtesy of the Westgate Las Vegas SuperBook, as of May 16.

2016 Preakness odds
Horse Odds

Nyquist 5-7
Exaggerator 9-2
Gun Runner 12-1
Stradivari 12-1
Cherry Wine 20-1
Creator 20-1
Collected 25-1
Dazzling Gem 25-1
Uncle Lino 25-1
Awesome Speed 25-1
Fellowship 30-1
Cupid 30-1
Lani 30-1
Laoban 40-1
Abiding Star 40-1

Kill wanted out of Minnesota.

I've said last year when Coach Kill was booed, He'd be gone by the end of the year. I was right and not just to pat myself on the back, but to say He wanted out of Minnesota. I have that on good, good, Great sources!

I think we thank him and now move on from Jerry as a go to source.

I do not know what will happen with the current staff!

But a little source says they've found it hard in Minnesota. "So much push back". I pressed what they meant by push back, but my source could not put their finger on the quote.

May some of you on the board who have a much better understanding of what it's like in Minnesota today give some insight on "Push Back". I personally would like to know.

Thanks!

Gopher Wrestling's 2016-17 #8 Recruiting Class starts our rise back to the Top!!

Posted too quickly as I'm starving for dinner. Thread title should have said after a very weak season last year, that our rise back to the top starts with the 2016/17 season.

Intermat just released it's Team recruiting rankings for the upcoming 2016-17 season and the Gophers came in at #8. I've included their article below...along with some discussion from several wrestling blogs about how the Gopher Wrestling team might look over the next 5 years. More comments follow this first article:


Recruiting rankings released, NC State tops rankings

Josh Lowe, InterMat High School Analyst
5/11/2016

The national title team for Penn State from this past season yet again speaks to the impact that recruiting high-end talent can have in creating, as well as maintaining and bolstering, the necessary culture and environment to foster team success on a year-to-year basis.

The Nittany Lions had five finalists in this year's NCAA Division I Wrestling Championships, all of whom were top ten overall recruits coming out of high school. Four of those were rated as top five recruits, including national champions Nico Megaludis and Zain Retherford. In addition, the Penn State lineup featured two other top ten recruits, Jimmy Gulibon and Nick Nevills; Gulibon fell just short of All-American honors in 2016, while Nevills failed to qualify for the national tournament after missing almost all of the season due to injury.

On the other side of the ledger, Penn State got a second All-American finish from Jordan Conaway, who was not a top 100 recruit when he graduated from high school; Conaway was ranked nationally in the 112-pound weight class. This shows two additional important points of collegiate wrestling programs and recruiting: the ability to develop and improve the prospects brought into your program, along with the ability to project success for productive prep wrestlers (Conaway won state in Pennsylvania's big-school division as a senior) that might enter college slightly less touted.

As emphasized the last year, having the type of roster talent that is present at Penn State creates a higher margin for program success should top prospective wrestlers fail to meet pre-conceived expectations. The more stars a team brings into the program, the more likely it is for the proper number of them to emerge into key contributors.

While there are some excellent recruiting hauls here in 2016, let's not overreact and say that it guarantees program success. What is more accurate to say is that strong recruiting hauls create positive momentum for a program, but ultimate end-game results may end up being a different story. Even though the high performers in college generally come from the subset of high profile prospects, being a high profile recruit entering college is no guarantee of strong collegiate performance, especially when considering the full career.

InterMat Recruiting Class Rankings
1. North Carolina State
2. Penn State
3. Iowa State
4. Iowa
5. Lehigh
6. Nebraska
7. Purdue
8. Minnesota
9. Rutgers
10. Ohio State
11. Stanford
12. Cornell
13. Virginia Tech
14. Lock Haven
15. Virginia
16. Wisconsin
17. Oklahoma State
18. Illinois
19. Pittsburgh
20. Central Michigan
21. Princeton
22. Northern Iowa
23. Drexel
24. Utah Valley
25. Michigan State

Below is a breakdown of each ranked recruiting class.

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Hayden Hidlay is one of five top 100 recruits for North Carolina State (Photo/John Sachs, Tech-Fall.com)

1. North Carolina State Top 100 recruits: No. 9 Nick Reenan (Wyoming Seminary, Pa.), No. 13 Hayden Hidlay (Mifflin County, Pa.), No. 18 Trent Bullard (Archer, Ga.), No. 42 Daniel Bullard (Archer, Ga.) and No. 75 Tariq Wilson (Steubenville, Ohio)

Other ranked recruits: Tommy Cox (Deer Park, N.Y.) and Chris Diaz (Archer, Ga.)

Additional notable recruits: Three-time state champion Kellen Devlin (Amherst, N.Y.), NHSCA Senior Nationals champion Codi Russell (Collins Hill, Ga.) and Super 32 placer Wade Cummings (Downington East, Pa.)

Commentary: This is the second straight year that a non-traditional program has earned the top recruiting class ranking, following Arizona State last year. The Wolfpack have the momentum of a most excellent 2015-16 regular season that included dual meet wins at Oklahoma State and Iowa. This recruiting haul further validates the work that Pat Popolizio and his assistants have done in Raleigh over a short period of time. Middleweights are abound with Hidlay, Reenan and the Bullard's; while lower weights are addressed by Wilson, Cox, and the three lesser heralded but notable recruits.

2. Penn State Top 100 recruits: No. 1 Mark Hall (Apple Valley, Minn.), No. 2 Nick Suriano (Bergen Catholic, N.J.), No. 7 Mason Manville (Wyoming Seminary, Pa.) and No. 92 A.J. Nevills (Clovis, Calif.)

Commentary: Penn State just won a national title, their fifth in six years, and has three of the nation's top ten recruits coming to Happy Valley in the fall. Somehow I think things will be just fine for the Nittany Lions despite not getting the No. 1 recruiting class, which was driven by the quantity of quality recruits in the haul that North Carolina State brought in. Suriano will probably be called into immediate service at 125 where he becomes an All-American contender, Hall and Manville will become assets in the middle of the Penn State lineup sooner rather than later, and Nevills provides quality depth in the upper weights. Penn State returns three of their five national finalists in 2016-17, and will replace Conaway in the lineup at 133 with impact transfer Jered Cortez.

3. Iowa State Top 100 recruits: No. 14 Samuel Colbray (Hermiston, Ore.), No. 43 Gannon Gremmel (Dubuque Hempstead, Iowa), No. 45 Kanen Storr (Leslie, Mich.), No. 72 Ian Parker (St. Johns, Mich.) and No. 76 Danny Vega (Ironwood Ridge, Ariz.)

Additional notable recruits: State champion Trey Meyer (East Valley, Wash.) and three-time state champion Zemua Baptista (Friend, Neb.)

Commentary: With the slight scrutiny that the Cyclones coaching staff is facing on a year-to-year basis, bringing in strong recruits is one way to head it off. The other is obviously strong dual meet performances and success at the NCAAs in terms of All-Americans and team finish. Five top 100 recruits is joint most for 2016 with North Carolina State. Colbray and Gremmel have the potential to be cogs in the Cyclones' machine at 197 and 285 for a few years, Vega the same as a career 125, while Storr and Parker provide potential in the lower-middleweights.

4. Iowa Top 100 recruits: No. 3 Alex Marinelli (St. Paris Graham, Ohio), No. 26 Kaleb Young (Punxsatawney, Pa.), No. 36 Carter Happel (Lisbon, Iowa) and No. 83 Jack Wagner (Bettendorf, Iowa)

Additional notable recruits: Three-time state champion Brock Rathbun (Cedar Point-Urbana, Iowa) and state champion Matt Malcom (Glenwood, Iowa)

Commentary: Falling outside of the top four trophies for the first time in the Tom Brands era stoked the fire for fans across the sport of wrestling about the Hawkeyes' program, regardless of where one falls in the Iowa spectrum (fan, non-fan, etc). Since the top-ranked recruiting class in 2012, it has been three successive recruiting years outside the top ten prior to this one. This group -- along with the verbal commitments of elite 2017 and 2018 prospects -- provides a clear marker that Iowa remains a collegiate wrestling force to be reckoned with. Of interest here is that Marinelli and Happel are both four-time state champions.

5. Lehigh Top 100 recruits: No. 10 Jordan Wood (Boyertown, Pa.), No. 15 Luke Karam (Bethlehem Catholic, Pa.), No. 19 Chris Weiler (Wyoming Seminary, Pa.) and No. 80 John Jakobsen (Stroudsburg, Pa.)

Additional notable recruits: Junior National freestyle All-American Nick Farro (Delbarton, N.J.) and two-time state placer Kyle Gentile (Pennridge, Pa.)

Commentary: Local recruiting is the lifeblood of Lehigh's program, and an excellent base has enabled Pat Santoro to bring in yet another ranked class. Five of the six core recruits in this Mountain Hawks recruiting class are in-state wrestlers, while the other is from across the river in New Jersey; this includes two wrestlers from District XI itself (Karam and Jakobsen).

6. Nebraska Top 100 recruits: No. 5 Chad Red (New Palestine, Ind.), No. 12 Beau Breske (Hartford Union, Wis.) and No. 40 Eric Schultz (Tinley Park, Ill.)

Other ranked recruits: Luke Weber (Forsyth, Mont.) and Taylor Venz (Owatonna, Minn.)

Additional notable recruit: Two-time state champion Johnny Blankenship (Platte County, Mo.)

Commentary: In recent years, Mark Manning's Huskers have been noted for having a very balanced lineup, which culminated in all ten wrestlers qualifying for the NCAA tournament based on finish in the Big Ten tournament; furthermore each and every wrestler won two or more matches at the NCAA tournament. In order to achieve that type of lineup, it takes strong recruiting. This class is another example of that; Red is an elite lower-middleweight, while Breske and Schultz fit that description for upper weights. The other three core recruits have strong potential as well.

7. Purdue Top 100 recruits: No. 17 Griffin Parriott (New Prague, Minn.), No. 27 Shawn Streck (Merrillville, Ind.) and No. 84 Christian Brunner (Dundee-Crown, Ill.)

Other ranked recruits: Devin Schroder (Grand Rapids Catholic Central, Mich.) and Kobe Woods (Penn, Ind.)

Commentary: Rebuilding a program in college wrestling is a process that takes time, especially at a relatively off-brand program, a billing that describes the Boilermakers. They are competing in the nation's toughest conference, Big Ten, and face a tough battle in terms of talent procurement. However, in two years at the helm Tony Ersland has laid a solid foundation. This year's recruiting class a crucial tone setting piece of that. The three top 100 recruits need to reach their potential and become lynchpin pieces if the Boilermakers are going to creep into the upper half of the Big Ten and get to earning multiple All-Americans at the NCAA tournament yearly.

8. Minnesota Top 100 recruits: No. 20 Mitch McKee (St. Michael-Albertville, Minn.), No. 48 Owen Webster (Shakopee, Minn.) and No. 50 Hunter Marko (Amery, Wis.)

Other ranked recruit: Lucas Jeske (St. Michael-Albertville, Minn.)

Commentary: The Gophers' 2010 recruiting class was the top-ranked group of that year, and then there were four straight groups outside the top ten. This somewhat explains the relative struggles of the 2015-16 season, finishing in the lower half of the Big Ten tournament standings, and a finish outside the top 15 at the NCAA tournament. However, a second straight top ten recruiting class should enable the Gophers to return to their perennial status of the upper reaches of the Big Ten standings and the top ten at the NCAA tournament.

9. Rutgers Top 100 recruits: No. 34 Matt Correnti (Holy Cross, N.J.), No. 44 Kevin Mulligan (Bergen Catholic, N.J.) and No. 62 Joe Grello (Bergen Catholic, N.J.)

Other ranked recruits: Alex Mackall (Walsh Jesuit, Ohio), Mike Van Brill (Clearview Regional, N.J.) and Brett Donner (Wall Township, N.J.)

Additional notable recruit: Two-time state runner-up Brandon Paetzell (Phillipsburg, N.J.)

Commentary: The Garden State provides a fertile in-state recruiting base for head coach Scott Goodale and his Scarlet Knights. Three consecutive seasons with an All-American, and now a season with multiple All-American finishers, helps to validate the development work that has went into the program during Goodale's reign. Of the seven core wrestlers in this class, six are in-state wrestlers. In addition, the six weight class ranked recruits is the second most this year (North Carolina State has seven).

10. Ohio State Top 100 recruits: No. 4 Isaiah White (Oak Park River Forest, Ill.), No. 8 Luke Pletcher (Greater Latrobe, Pa.) and No. 68 Elijah Cleary (Lake Highland Prep, Fla.)

Additional notable recruit: Three-time National Prep placer Kevin Snyder (Good Counsel, Md.)

Commentary: More of the same for head coach Tom Ryan and the Buckeyes. Three very high-end prospects come in as part of this class, one that is ranked within the top 12 for the seventh time in the last eight years. Look for White to be called upon immediately at 165 pounds for a Buckeyes team that will be contending for yet another trophy at the NCAA tournament; Pletcher fits into the lower middleweight area after a likely redshirt, while Cleary is an upper middle weight.

11. Stanford Top 100 recruits: No. 29 Nathan Traxler (Marmion Academy, Ill.), No. 31 Brandon Dallavia (Blair Academy, N.J.) and No. 71 Requir van der Merwe (Blair Academy, N.J.)

Additional notable recruit: Three-time state placer Gabe Townsell (Oak Park River Forest, Ill.)

Commentary: Yet again, head coach Jason Borrelli has brought in a high-end recruiting haul to The Farm, as it's the sixth top 20 class in eight years at the helm. The question remains when this will translate into a top ten finish at the NCAA tournament, maybe 2016-17 will be that year; the Cardinal return a pair of All-Americans in Joey McKenna and Connor Schram, along with round of 12 finisher Jim Wilson. This recruiting group further affirms the positive strides for Stanford with prospects coming in from some of the nation's strongest prep wrestling programs.

12. Cornell Top 100 recruits: No. 28 Ben Darmstadt (Elyria, Ohio), No. 63 Max Dean (Lowell, Mich.) and No. 89 Noah Baughman (Wadsworth, Ohio)

Other ranked recruit: Trence Gillem (Helix Charter, Calif.)

Additional notable recruit: Three-time state champion Foster Karmon (Grand Rapids Catholic Central, Mich.)

Commentary: A pair of NCAA champions anchored a ninth straight top ten finish for the Big Red at this year's NCAA tournament. Key to their success has been the recruiting of highly talented wrestlers with strong character, which is yet again reflected in this class. All three top 100 recruits won a pair of state titles as high school wrestlers, while nationally ranked Gillem was a state champion this past season. Dean and Darmstadt address the upper weights, while Baughman and Gillem fit in the lower weight classes.

13. Virginia Tech Top 100 recruits: No. 51 Kyle Norstrem (Brandon, Fla.), No. 53 Brent Moore (St. Paris Graham, Ohio) and No. 86 Jarrett Degen (Belgrade, Mont.)

Other ranked recruit: Cody Amos (Cave Spring, Va.)

Additional notable recruits: Three-time National Prep finalist Joey Prata (St. Christopher's, Va.) and three-time state champion Anthony Helm (Matoaca, Va.)

Impact transfer: [Just got transfer Ryan Blees from OK State...announced 5-13-16]

Commentary: The 11th season of Kevin Dresser being the head coach at Virginia Tech concluded with a fourth consecutive top ten finish, which is an impressive leap, given where things were when he took the job. Furthermore, momentum for Hokie wrestling has never been stronger, as they finished fourth in the NCAA tournament this past season and won the ACC regular season title. This recruiting group is yet again excellent with three top 100 recruits coming into the fold, along with some solid in-state wrestlers as well.

14. Lock Haven Top 100 recruit: No. 46 Tyshawn White (Central Dauphin, Pa.)

Impact transfers: Chance Marsteller (Oklahoma State/Kennard Dale, Pa.), Thomas Haines (Ohio State/Solanco, Pa.), and Patrick Duggan (West Virginia/Cumberland Valley, Pa.)

Other ranked recruits: Tyson Klump (Nazareth, Pa.) and Jonathan Ross (Northern York, Pa.)

Additional notable recruits: Three-time state placer Colin Glorioso (Huntingdon, Pa.) and two-time state placer Trey Hartsock (Mifflin County, Pa.)

Commentary: In three seasons at Lock Haven, head coach Scott Moore has helped to stabilize the program and provide growth. The recruiting haul -- both in terms of high school graduates and college transfers -- is one that can help buoy the Bald Eagles back towards their glory years of the past. Four-time state medalist White is the type of wrestler that Lock Haven had not been getting for many years, which is a positive reflection on Moore's work. Marsteller and Haines were top 10 overall prospects in the 2014 class; should they show that type of potential, it would be a huge coup, though transfers are always a crap shoot in terms of resultant performance. Each has three years of eligibility remaining.

15. Virginia Top 100 recruits: No. 22 George Phillippi (Derry Area, Pa.) and No. 25 Jack Mueller (Trinity Christian Academy, Texas)

Other ranked recruits: Louie Hayes (Carl Sandburg, Ill.) and Jay Aiello (Westfield, Va.)

Additional notable recruits: Four-time state champion Michael Murphy (Baylor School, Tenn.), three-time state placer Jake Shaffer (Greater Latrobe, Pa.) and state champion Edwin Rubio (John Glenn, N.Y.)

Commentary: Steve Garland and staff followed up last year's fifth-ranked recruiting class with yet another solid recruiting group, one that is ranked nationally for a fourth straight year. Elite lower weights Phillippi and Mueller anchor this class, while Aiello and Rubio provide potential talent in the upper two weight classes.

16. Wisconsin Top 100 recruits: No. 37 Zander Wick (San Marino, Calif.), No. 39 Evan Wick (San Marino, Calif.) and No. 100 Jacob Covaciu (Merrillville, Ind.)

Additional notable recruit: State champion Brady Wetter (Dodgeville, Wis.)

Commentary: Out of state recruiting again had to be key for the Badgers, as they failed to get commitments from either of the pair of top 50 (and 100) recruits in this class from the state of Wisconsin. A pair of talented twins from California are excellent prospects in the middle-weights; with two-time state champion and Junior National freestyle All-American Covaciu, also a middleweight prospect.

17. Oklahoma State Top 100 recruits: No. 47 Keegan Moore (Jackson County Central, Minn.), No. 57 Ethan Andersen (Southeast Polk, Iowa) and No. 59 Wyatt Sheets (Stilwell, Okla.)

Commentary: The Cowboys' recruiting continues to be excellent. The previous two years saw a combined eleven top 100 recruits come into the fold, and with class ranked second overall. While this group is ranked lower, it's due more to a lower quantity than it is the lack of quality. All three commits are highly talented and accomplished; Moore and Andersen represent out-of-state upper weights with strong potential, while Sheets is an excellent in-state middleweight with strong genetic stock (father was multiple-time NCAA champ).

18. Illinois Top 100 recruits: No. 38 Dylan Duncan (Montini Catholic, Ill.), No. 49 Mike Carr (South Fayette, Pa.) and No. 77 Travis Piotrowski (Prairie Ridge, Ill.)

Additional notable recruits: Two-time state third Jacob Silzer (St. Rita, Ill.) and three-time state placer Dylan Thurston (Washington, Ill.)

Commentary: Another year, yet again the Fighting Illini bring in multiple top 100 recruits to Champaign-Urbana. Head coach Jim Heffernan has again found solid in-state talent in two-time state champion Duncan and state champion Piotrowski. However, a concern does remain in that eight of the ten top 100 recruits from Illinois are not ending up at the state's flagship institution; this follows last year when the Illini only landed two of the nine top 100 recruits from their own state. In terms of this class, the lower half of the lineup is the clear focus.

19. Pittsburgh Top 100 recruits: No. 33 Jake Wentzel (South Park, Pa.), No. 67 Austin Bell (Belle Vernon, Pa.) and No. 82 Christian Dietrich (Wyoming Seminary, Pa.)

Commentary: Given the geographic footprint that the Panthers operate within, strong recruiting classes should be a consistent pattern. However, that is not the case, as only the Panthers' third-ranked group from 2013 was ranked in the top 25 from the previous seven years. Wentzel and Bell come from right around Pittsburgh, and are extremely accomplished wrestlers. Wentzel is a two-time state champ and four-time state placer, while Bell placed third twice at the state tournament; both wrestlers placed third at the Super 32 Challenge in 2014, and each has also placed at the FloNationals. This pair addresses middleweight needs, while Dietrich is a talented upperweight.

20. Central Michigan Top 100 recruits: No. 16 Matt Stencel (Oregon Clay, Ohio) and No. 56 Landon Pelham (Tecumseh, Mich.)

Other ranked recruits: Drew Hildebrandt (Penn, Ind.) and Dresden Simon (Dansville, Mich.)

Additional notable recruits: Two-time state champions Reiley Brown (Whitehall, Mich.) and Blake Montrie (Bedford, Mich.)

Commentary: The five years after the Chippewas' No. 2 recruiting class in 2011 have been a mixed bag to say the least. 2015 saw a 12-year run for Central Michigan earning an All-American at the NCAA tournament come to an end. However, Justin Oliver's seventh-place finish this March is the potential start to a new streak for the Chippewas. Four of the six core recruits are two-time state champions, while Pelham and Hildebrandt each have a state title in their own right. A plethora of weight classes are covered with this group; however, an unfortunate note is that the two best recruits of the group are probably both projected heavyweights.

21. Princeton Top 100 recruits: No. 61 Ty Agaisse (Delbarton, N.J.), No. 64 Christian Araneo (Ward Melville, N.Y.) and No. 93 Riley DeMoss (Marmion Academy, Ill.)

Other ranked recruit: Kevin Parker (Shenendehowa, N.Y.)

Additional notable recruits: Two-time state champion Matteo DeVincenzo (Port Jefferson, N.Y.) and National Prep runner-up Leonard Merkin (Poly Prep, N.Y.)

Commentary: Yet another nationally ranked recruiting haul for Chris Ayres and the Tigers, who are building positive momentum. They are recruiting their region very well, with Agaisse coming from the Garden State, and four others coming from right across the Hudson River in New York. Agaisse and DeVincenzo are lowerweights; Merkin is a middleweight; while DeMoss, Parker, and Araneo fit in the back third of the lineup.

22. Northern Iowa Top 100 recruits: No. 24 Rudy Yates (Carl Sandburg, Ill.) and No. 58 Carter Isley (Albia, Iowa)

Additional newcomer: Tyler Hoffman (Iowa Central/East Buchanan, Iowa)

Commentary: The last two seasons have been setbacks for the Panthers following the banner 2014 season, in which they went undefeated in dual meets and saw three wrestlers earn All-American finishes. However, the positive culture is still there. The No. 4 ranked recruiting class from 2015 is likely to start making an even stronger impact, though Bryce Steiert already qualified for the NCAA tournament this year as a true freshmen. Three very strong assets come into the Northern Iowa program from this class: elite lowerweight Yates; elite heavyweight Isley; and 2015 NJCAA champion Hoffman, a projected 184.

23. Drexel Top 100 recruit: No. 41 Josh Hokit (Clovis, Calif.)

Impact transfer: Garrett Hammond (Penn State/Chambersburg, Pa.)

Additional notable recruits: State placer Devan Turner (Dixon, Calif.), four-time state placer Julian Flores (San Marino, Calif.) and three-time state placer Justin Demicco (Brecksville, Ohio)

Commentary: The California ties of head coach Matt Azevedo helped the Dragons procure much of the core talent in this year's recruiting class, most notably state champion Hokit and 2015 state champion Flores. If Flores shows the form of 2014-15, he is a clear top 50 to 100 wrestler in this graduating class, which would be very good news for Drexel. The transfer Hammond has two years of eligibility remaining, and is a probable top 15-20 wrestler at either 157 pounds or 165 pounds immediately.

24. Utah ValleyTop 100 recruits: No. 23 Taylor LaMont (Maple Mountain, Utah) and No. 87 Durbin Lloren (Buchanan, Calif.)

Additional notable recruits: Three-time state champion Tanner Cox (Maple Mountain, Utah), two-time state champion Koy Wilkinson (Pleasant Grove, Utah) and three-time state champion Gary Jantzer (Marshfield, Ore.)

Commentary: Considering the geography and limited resources facing the Wolverines, it's been a relatively positive seven-year run as a postseason eligible Division I program. Jade Rauser earned the second All-American honor in program history this past March. In addition, this is another solid year in recruiting with a pair of top 100 commits, along with three additional wrestlers from the western third of the country with many credentials. LaMont has been one of the best age group wrestlers throughout his career, and thrived in all the major events, while Lloren was a four-time state placer in California with the 2015 state title.

25. Michigan StateTop 100 recruit: No. 32 Drew Hughes (Lowell, Ind.)

Other ranked recruit: Shane Tucker (Mt. Carmel, Ill.)

Additional notable recruits: Two-time state champion Lucas Hall (Lowell, Mich.), three-time state finalist Matt Santos (Swan Valley, Mich.), state champion Austin Hiles (Brecksville, Ohio), two-time state runner-up Nick May (Kalamazoo Loy Norrix, Mich.) and state runner-up Christian Rebottaro (Monta Vista Christian, Calif.)

Commentary: The transition from Tom Minkel to Roger Chandler as head coach is upon us. Enough words have been written about the struggles of Spartans wrestling under Minkel. The first recruiting class for Chandler's program is one that offers solid roster depth/talent across the weight classes, something that is of genuine need. There is also a potential program lynchpin in Hughes (two-time state champion, two-time fourth place at the Super 32 Challenge). Hall and Santos help the lower weights, Hiles and Tucker help the middle-weights along with Hughes, while May and Rebottaro help the top two weights.

Honorable Mention (alphabetical): Indiana, Missouri, Northwestern and West Virginia



Gopher Wrestling had its worst year in many years last season, but friends...the future looks a lot brighter!!! And, we are in good shape to get all-world #1 rising Juniors Gable Steveson (Apple Valley) (220#s) and his friend #13 Roman Bravo-Young (Sunnyside, AZ) (120#s)...as they're looking like a package deal. Gable is ready to commit early and he's working on lining Bravo-Young up soon. And, if he commits, it could start drawing other elite recruits that would like to be part of a Natty competing team!

There's a lot of discussion going on in the major wrestling blogs that thinks Gopher Wrestling will be back in the elite levels of College Wrestling starting in 2017-18. I'm posting some projections from several leading Gopher Wrestling bloggers on how our Gophers will look over the next 5 years if things play out as they seem. From the Guillotine:


I know people skeptical of the Gophers but the future actually looks very bright, let's take a realistic look.

MINNESOTA GOPHERS FUTURE

2016-2017 (Top 10 Finish)
125 Ethan Lizak, rSo/ Petry, rSo
133 Mitch McKee, Fr/ S.Brancale, rSr or Polakowski, rSo
141 Tommy Thorn, rSo/ B.Brancale, rFr
149 Fredy Stroker, rFr/ Brolsma, rFr
157 Jake Short, rJr or Brandon Kingsley, rSr
165 Larry Early, rFr/ Krone, rSo
174 Nick Wanzek, rJr/ Carr, rSo
184 Bobby Steveson, rFr/ C.Pfarr, rJr
197 Brett Pfarr, rSr/ Berge, rJr
285 Michael Kroells, rSr/ Streifel, rFr

Redshirting: Hunter Marko, Lucas Jeske, Owen Webster

Incoming Recruits: Tucker Sjomeling, Brady Berge
----------------------------------------------

2017-2018 (Top 5 Finish)
125 Ethan Lizak, rJr/ Petry, rJr
133 Mitch McKee, So/ Polakowski, rJr
141 Tommy Thorn, rJr/ B.Brancale, rSo
149 Fredy Stroker, rSo or Hunter Marko, rFr
157 Jake Short, rSr/ Brolsma, rSo
165 Larry Early, rSo/ Krone, rJr
174 Nick Wanzek, rSr or Lucas Jeske, rFr
184 Owen Webster, rFr/ C.Pfarr, rSr
197 Bobby Steveson, rSo/ Balow, rJr
285 Rylee Streifel, rSo, Destiche, rJr

Redshirting: Tucker Sjomeling, Brady Berge

Incoming Recruits: Pat McKee, Roman Bravo-Young, Alex Lloyd, Gable Steveson
-----------------------------------------------------

2018-2019 (Contending for National Title)
125 Ethan Lizak, rSr/ Petry, rSr
133 Mitch McKee, Jr/ Polakowski, rSr or Sjomeling, rFr
141 Tommy Thorn, rSr
149 Hunter Marko, rSo/ B.Brancale, rJr
157 Fredy Stroker, rJr/ Brolsma, rJr
165 Larry Early, rJr/ Krone, rSr
174 Brady Berge, rFr/ Jeske, rSo
184 Owen Webster, rSo
197 Bobby Steveson, rJr/ Balow, rSr
285 Gable Steveson, Fr/ Streifel, rJr

Redshirting: Pat McKee, Roman Bravo-Young, Alex Lloyd

Incoming Recruits: Anthony Jackson, Dan Kerkvleit
-------------------------------------------------------

2019-2020 (Contending for National Title)
125 Pat McKee, rFr
133 Mitch McKee, Sr/ Sjomeling, rSo
141 Roman Bravo-Young, rFr
149 Hunter Marko, rJr or Alex Lloyd, rFr
157 Fredy Stroker, rSr/ Brolsma, rSr
165 Larry Early, rSr
174 Brady Berge, rSo/ Jeske, rJr
184 Owen Webster, rJr
197 Bobby Steveson, rSr
285 Gable Steveson, So/ Streifel, rSr

Redshirting: Anthony Jackson, Dan Kerkvleit

Incoming Recruits: ?
--------------------------------------------

2020-2021 (Contending for National Title)
125 Pat McKee, rSo
133 Tucker Sjomeling, rJr
141 Roman Bravo-Young, rSo
149 Alex Lloyd, rSo
157 Hunter Marko, rSr
165 Anthony Jackson, rFr
174 Brady Berge, rJr/ Jeske, rSr
184 Owen Webster, rSr
197 Dan Kerkvleit, rFr
285 Gable Steveson, Jr
--------------------------------------------------------

Recruits:
2016-2017
Brady Berge: MN is on his list and his brother is here.
Tucker Sjomeling: No info just a gut feeling.

2017-2018
Pat McKee: He will be a Gopher
Roman Bravo-Young: Leaning towards MN.
Alex Lloyd: No info but in state and he's a must have in an area of need.
Gable Steveson: I've been told it's MN. He comes the rest will come.

2018-2019
Anthony Jackson & Dan Kerkvleit: Let's keep that Simley pipeline boys.

The McKee Scenario firmly believe 3 things...1) You always put out your best lineup no matter what. 2) Mitch McKee is college ready, can contribute for us at NCAAs as a true frosh, and is our best option at 133 next year. 3) Mitch McKee will be at 133 his whole college career.

Now with all that said I think we should start McKee at 133 next year as a true frosh. And if 133 starts getting hard for McKee to make and maintain then you redshirt him in 2018-2019, Thorn's senior year allowing McKee him to come back and take over for Thorn at 141 for his final 2 years.

If this happened then that would mean Polakowski, rSr and Sjomeling, rFr would battle for 133 spot for 2018-2019 with McKee redshirting and moving up a weight. McKee moving up would also mean that incoming recruit Roman Bravo-Young would have to make 133 for his first 2 years rather then 141, if Bravo-Young couldn't make 133 we would still have Sjomeling there.

The Berge Scenario: This sangria is much more simple. Depending on the recovery time and when Brady will be 100% again is what should determine whether he redshirts or not. He will be our best option and whatever weight if he is healthy. I believe he is a career 174 which is exactly where we need him.

Conclusion: The Minnesota Gophers wrestling program is still thriving, we had a down year but the future looks very bright. The staff clearly knows what their doing so let them do their job. I would like to see them get a big name coach I there to groom for when J steps down, the Lord know he ain't getting any younger and I don't believe Eggum is head coach material.
pitbull413, Apr 3 2016



And here's another view of 2016-17 by Jammen from the Blue & White Wrestling Forum:

2016-17 Gopher outlook: Fluid at 133, 149, 157, and 165.

125) Ethan Lizak (rSo) coming off a 17-4 red shirt season. Beat AA Schram, lost to Lambert, Petry, Klimera, and Moisey. The 4 point NF could come in very handy for Lizak with his top work tilts. There is a chance he could wind up at 133 with his long frame He ended the season at 133 for the Dukawk open.
133) I think frosh Mitch McKee is D1 ready, but if he red shirts then it gets ugly. Brancale 15-18, Morgan 4-4, or one of the 125's is a possibility.
141) Tommy Thorn (rSo) 36-11. He beat AA's Meredith and Cruz during the season. Lost to Jordan and Jack at NCAA's.
149) Jake Short (rJr) 16-11 or Fredy Stroker (rFr) 25-4, lost to J. Arthur, Kemerer, Cimato, & Collica.
157) Brandon Kingsley (rSr) 20-13 or Jake Short. Kingsley beat Marsteller, Welch, & Mascola, but had lots of close losses.
165) Larry Early (rFr) 10-4 or Brandon Krone (rso) 11-13 . Up and down year with lots of injuries. Best win Burke Paddock.
174) Nick Wanzek (rJr) 21-13. Similar to Kingsley's year, beat Riddick, Brunson, & Weatherspoon with a lot of bad losses.
184) Bobby Steveson (rFr) 14-4, will be step up from a very game C Pfarr (rjr) 9-21.
197) Brett Pfarr (rSr) 40-4, AA, lost to Smack, Burak, Cox 2x.
Hvy) Michael Kroells (rSr) 35-9, 2xAA


Both of these posters think Mitch McKee is D1 ready (no redshirt) and pitbull's assumptions are based on us getting elite recruit Brady Berge and some future MN based recruits.

The future is looking good, so it's going to be fun watching Gopher Wrestling again...very soon!!!

Go Gopher Wrestling!
Right back to The Top!!!

Wildfire

Not sure if this is hitting the news there or not, but they had to evacuate the entire city of Ft. McMurray; ~60,000 people. It's crazy. We do work there and places they are showing on the news are places we store gear and/or stay in the hotel. Quite the raging inferno yesterday. Huge oil (bitumen) town, basically grew from nothing to ~60-80,000 people in like 10 years.

Entire neighbourhoods burned to the ground.
This was the Shell gas station that is right across the road from where we stay while there, apparently it exploded last night
2d4d391c-c73d-4db9-a842-e5befa304d76.jpg


Fire from yesterday, just up the road from the gas station above
0aeae475-63fb-4dbd-87c4-fac3775655ef.jpg


The Super 8 motel
f776b5b6-80cd-4f65-b6da-322d830b05b5.jpg


What's left of the Beacon Hill neighbourhood
9151b03e-8d40-49cb-983b-e6f2ffbab213.jpg


People evacuating the city last night
1737d6b8-15db-42f7-bd64-bee75c8b28b6.jpg


Destruction
e089bfef-717c-4ab8-9ce0-c19a97f7289e.jpg


Part of the blaze
a84211f7-bfe5-44b6-8a7c-06d94fba73c7.jpg


Definitely true about the statement
505b68d6-1447-46ea-b614-ed513dd4f285.jpg


Close to downtown; evacuation
a0e88282-b15a-4729-bd8c-9d69ede08be6.jpg


It is crazy, 60,000+ people to evacuate in a matter of minutes, creates this.
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Nathan Reuvers

Based on sources I know I feel comfortable in saying that Notre Dame is not interested in Reuvers much at all right now. They have targets they like better. With that, I believe Wisconsin has grabbed the lead here. I say that not because he is visiting there tomorrow, I say that because people I know in this Twin Cities basketball community have relayed information to me and they are considered the favorite.

Will he decide soon? Tomorrow? I don't know. Of all the guys that are being recruited in 2017 he loves the process more than most it seems. Loves telling people how many offers he has and loves putting out his tweets of his new offer. He's loved the process more than most and I just don't know that he's ready to pull the trigger yet as there are still other schools interested that haven't offered. I do believe Wisconsin is a leader here, I do believe that there is a chance he could take it soon but I'm not ready to predict that.

I've also felt that of the three bigs in MN he is the least likely of the three to come here and this pretty much goes with that. I think Minnesota has a fantastic shot at Jericho and I think they have a strong shot at Theo. Need to grab one of them for sure, two would be a luxury.

First Preseason Mag

that Ive seen is Athlon's Big Ten which a spotted at B & N. Predictably Iowa was # one in the west followed by Nebraska, Wisconsin, Northwestern and the Gophers in 5th place. I would guess that most preseason mags will have about the same order with the Gophers possibly rising to number four on a few. This lines up about the way things were predicted two years ago when Michigan was picked number in the old alignment. They pick the Gophers to go 6 and 6 overall and 3 and 6 in the BT. In my quick perusal the thing I found most amusing was that in their rating of each team by position they listed the Gophers number 11 at running back! Seriously?
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