온라인카지노



Wrestling Mailbag: Nick Suriano, Iowa's Starting Lineup, Recruiting, Drake Ayala, And More

Welcome back to the Wrestling Mailbag, our week after week space to geek out with regards to wrestling stuff here in Iowa, the nation over and even all throughout the planet. It's a spot to share contemplations and keep the continuous wrestling discussion going all through the season. 온라인카지노

Today, I'm contemplating Nick Suriano.

Suriano reported Sunday that he's made a beeline for Michigan to complete his university vocation. The previous Rutgers grappler had chatted with Penn State, Ohio State and even Iowa State as potential landing spots. He chose the Wolverines, and this season just got significantly more fun.

His expansion implies Michigan is presently a real NCAA prize competitor, and maybe even in the blend to win the entire thing (however that is the place where this thing gets intriguing). Michigan's setup could resemble this come January:

Really pungent. That is three NCAA finalists (Suriano, Micic and Parris) and three all the more All-Americans in Cam, Myles and Brucki.

However at that point, this is what Iowa's arrangement should look like come the large rivalries:

Furthermore, this is what Penn State may resemble:

Both of those arrangements are mean, as well.

You can see where we're going with this, that a two-group race might have ventured into a three-group race. Furthermore, that is prior to including other powerhouses like Oklahoma State, Arizona State, Mizzou, in addition to the others from NC State, Virginia Tech, Cornell, Ohio State, Minnesota and Nebraska who will thicken the plot.

Story proceeds

It's been assumed that Suriano will wrestle 125 pounds. He arrived at the NCAA finals at that load in 2018, and lost to Spencer Lee. The following year, he knock up to 133 and prevailed upon it Oklahoma State's Daton Fix. No one has at any point won a NCAA title at one weight, then, at that point, dropped down to a lower weight and won another.

Nobody is by and large certain how this will all work out. Perhaps he goes 125 and scores enormous focuses for Michigan. Perhaps he goes 133 and again scores enormous focuses. Perhaps he doesn't score a huge load of focuses by any means (however that is most likely improbable).

Perhaps — and this is something intriguing to consider — his expansion will persuade Logan Massa to return at 174 for Michigan. That'd be another All-American in the arrangement for the Wolverines. How's that for a wind? To add to it, Michigan is actually the host school for this current season's NCAA Championships, which will be in Detroit.

These are only a portion of the contemplations that went through my mind when I saw Suriano's post on Sunday evening. Lock in, you folks. The Big Ten, and the '21-22 school season, just got significantly seriously fascinating and fun.

Presently, then, at that point. On to the Wrestling Mailbag. I partook in this line from Army West Point lead trainer Kevin Ward: "When you figure out how to run toward a test and deal with it, you can begin to develop." He tweeted that Sunday after Iowa beat Army, 36-7.

If it's not too much trouble, give me a follow on Twitter and I'll stay up with the latest on everything wrestling in Iowa. Remember to tune into the Register's wrestling digital broadcast, In the Room, every week. You can track down the most recent scenes beneath.

Much obliged for your assistance here, and for perusing.

More Michigan, Suriano, Spencer Lee

That would be something, wouldn't it?

That is the undeniable connection here that I possibly momentarily referenced up top — that assuming Suriano chooses to really take on this vision journey like pursuit and win a title at 125 pounds, he'd apparently would need to go through Spencer Lee to do it.

That would be fun, and join that with Spencer targeting a fourth NCAA title this season, that probably implies that'd be seemingly the greatest argument at the NCAA Championships come March.

(It would likewise imply that, if the last at 125 winds up being Spencer versus Suriano, they'd be the last to go in the finals request once more, which, all things considered, I'm not actually a fanatic of, but rather no one tends to think about what I think.)

The other idea is that we could see a Spencer-Suriano matchup at the Big Ten Championships, as well. Possibly. In 2018, Suriano was the favorite and therapeutically relinquished out once he arrived at the elimination rounds. That dropped him to the 4-seed at the public competition. Spencer lost to Nathan Tomasello in the Big Ten elimination rounds that year, took third, turned into the 3-seed, and we as a whole realize what happened that week in Cleveland.

It would be a pleasant cap to Spencer's unbelievable vocation in the event that he 1) won a fourth title, and 2) won his fourth by beating Suriano once more. Suriano would likewise turn into a moment legend on the off chance that he beat Spencer and aided Michigan to its very first NCAA group title all the while. The Wolverines have required second multiple times, most as of late in 2005.