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Cornell Kevin

@Cornell_Kevins1,581 subscribers

Wrestling media and statistician. Creator of College and International wrestling content. Big Cornell fan who provides inside looks on the team

Shorts

Meyer is not a grad transfer—he’s a Scholar All-American who had just one year left to earn his Ivy diploma. This portal move has nothing to do with health. As recently as last week, Meyer said he wasn’t entering the portal—money didn’t matter, and he was one year away from graduating with high honors and potentially becoming a 4x All-American for the Big Red. All of this suggests the move is far less about any immediate financial incentive and much more about his relationship with the coaches….to the point where he would possibly rather use his final season elsewhere, even if it means leaving his Ivy diploma behind. If things were good, this would not even be a consideration.

Meyer is not a grad transfer—he’s a Scholar All-American who had just one year left to earn his Ivy diploma. This portal move has nothing to do with health. As recently as last week, Meyer said he wasn’t entering the portal—money didn’t matter, and he was one year away from graduating with high honors and potentially becoming a 4x All-American for the Big Red. All of this suggests the move is far less about any immediate financial incentive and much more about his relationship with the coaches….to the point where he would possibly rather use his final season elsewhere, even if it means leaving his Ivy diploma behind. If things were good, this would not even be a consideration.

74,506 просмотров

May be the most difficult hurdle for a wrestler to clear—trusting that the same offense that built the lead is what protects it. The instinct is to protect the lead, but the approach that creates better odds, less regret, and is simply more logical is to keep wrestling the same way that created the lead. Stay on the attack, stay in position, and keep applying pressure. The one who needs to change and create opportunity is the opponent who is losing. So why would you go ahead and assist them in this by back peddling and lead protecting, opening up two windows that weren’t there before? 1 – Stall points 2 – Allowing your opponent to solely focus on their offense as they no longer have to respect your attacks. You hear wrestlers in post-match interviews “We do this all the time in the room! Down 2 with 30 seconds left and working to find a takedown.” Not so much the opposite… “up 2 with 30 seconds left and just have to find ways to back up to protect the lead!” So why resort to something you don’t practice in the most crucial moments of a match—or your season? This is from the excellent series “The Climb” by Stilly Boys on YouTube — a segment from Episode 2: Road to the Big 12s.

May be the most difficult hurdle for a wrestler to clear—trusting that the same offense that built the lead is what protects it. The instinct is to protect the lead, but the approach that creates better odds, less regret, and is simply more logical is to keep wrestling the same way that created the lead. Stay on the attack, stay in position, and keep applying pressure. The one who needs to change and create opportunity is the opponent who is losing. So why would you go ahead and assist them in this by back peddling and lead protecting, opening up two windows that weren’t there before? 1 – Stall points 2 – Allowing your opponent to solely focus on their offense as they no longer have to respect your attacks. You hear wrestlers in post-match interviews “We do this all the time in the room! Down 2 with 30 seconds left and working to find a takedown.” Not so much the opposite… “up 2 with 30 seconds left and just have to find ways to back up to protect the lead!” So why resort to something you don’t practice in the most crucial moments of a match—or your season? This is from the excellent series “The Climb” by Stilly Boys on YouTube — a segment from Episode 2: Road to the Big 12s.

42,067 просмотров

One of the slickest takedowns of the RAF card was Yianni’s ankle snag of Bajrang on his re-attack.

One of the slickest takedowns of the RAF card was Yianni’s ankle snag of Bajrang on his re-attack.

75,444 просмотров

This guy need not be under anyone’s radar at 149 lbs! That being one Koy Buesgens of NC State who is having himself a season this year at 15-1. One loss to Stiles which was very controversial. Koy just took out Aden Valencia by a 14-5 major decision tonight 😮! I look forward to seeing both #5 Buesgens (15-1) and #2 Jaxon Joy (15-0) battle it out February 20th in the NC State vs Cornell dual.

This guy need not be under anyone’s radar at 149 lbs! That being one Koy Buesgens of NC State who is having himself a season this year at 15-1. One loss to Stiles which was very controversial. Koy just took out Aden Valencia by a 14-5 major decision tonight 😮! I look forward to seeing both #5 Buesgens (15-1) and #2 Jaxon Joy (15-0) battle it out February 20th in the NC State vs Cornell dual.

30,468 просмотров

A one-time occurrence produced one of the rarest outcomes in NCAA history. There have only been about a dozen “wrestleback warriors” — wrestlers who lose in round one and fight back to finish 3rd. In 2012 (149 lbs), Donnie Vinson (Binghamton, Jr.) became one. What makes it unique: his 3rd-place match came against Cam Tessari (Ohio State, Fr.), who did the exact same thing — lost round one and won six straight to reach the consi final. Vinson won a 12–10 shootout, becoming the lone wrestler to complete the full wrestleback run in a match where both competitors lost in round one — the only time this has ever happened. ⸻ Extra (condensed bullets) 5 of the top 8 seeds failed to place (2, 3, 5, 7, 8) Vinson avenged his R1 loss to Lester (16–5 MD) Highest NCAA finish in Binghamton history Vinson: 4x qualifier; never won a R1 match at NCAAs Jr: wrestleback warrior (3rd) Sr: R12 finish after another R1 loss Tessari: #10 seed → 4th as a true freshman Later transferred; finished career at Lindsey Wilson NAIA finalist (Jr), national champ (Sr)

A one-time occurrence produced one of the rarest outcomes in NCAA history. There have only been about a dozen “wrestleback warriors” — wrestlers who lose in round one and fight back to finish 3rd. In 2012 (149 lbs), Donnie Vinson (Binghamton, Jr.) became one. What makes it unique: his 3rd-place match came against Cam Tessari (Ohio State, Fr.), who did the exact same thing — lost round one and won six straight to reach the consi final. Vinson won a 12–10 shootout, becoming the lone wrestler to complete the full wrestleback run in a match where both competitors lost in round one — the only time this has ever happened. ⸻ Extra (condensed bullets) 5 of the top 8 seeds failed to place (2, 3, 5, 7, 8) Vinson avenged his R1 loss to Lester (16–5 MD) Highest NCAA finish in Binghamton history Vinson: 4x qualifier; never won a R1 match at NCAAs Jr: wrestleback warrior (3rd) Sr: R12 finish after another R1 loss Tessari: #10 seed → 4th as a true freshman Later transferred; finished career at Lindsey Wilson NAIA finalist (Jr), national champ (Sr)

12,040 просмотров

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