Site North Logan, UT. Event Contact Jeffrey Newby jeffreynewby hotmail. Site Centralia, WA. Event Contact Justin Newby jnewbyusa gmail. Site Las Vegas, NV. Event Contact Christina Hargrove rob nevadawrestling. Event Womens National Championships. Site Fort Worth, TX. Event Contact Leslie Bedford lesliedbedford yahoo. Event Western Regional Championships. Site Farmington, UT. Event Frank E. Gwiz leads Gwiz picks things up in the second, attacking and fighting through Wood's defense to take a lead.
Wood battling back but Gwiz counters to extend his lead to A final downblock-go behind by Gwiz and he'll finish on top in par terre with a win. Zillmer gives up a point early, then Parris muscles up a finish after a shot put him underneath a sprawled-out Zillmer.
Another takedown in the second makes it Parris. Zillmer finally gets on the board with a takedown of his own. Parris was able to get a reversal in the ensuing scramble. Zillmer shoots Parris out of bounds a couple times to cut the deficit to with about a minute to go. Parris stays attacking and fights through Zillmer's headlock for two insurance points. And that's how it ends. We will get at least two more Gwiz v Parris matches!
Heaton clinches it in the next period, winning via technical fall, They bonk heads and Lampe needs injury time. Looks like Fearnside's chin to Lampe forehead maybe. Lampe is sitting up and moving but with a potential head injury you can't be too cautious.
Lampe is back in the center of the mat. We'll go to the break, Fearnside leading by criteria Lampe digging underhooks, gets a step out.
Back to the underhooks but Fearnside responds with a single leg that she finished for two at the edge. And Fearnside will hold on for the win and face Heaton in the finals! Pressuring in at the edge and Gallegos hits a nice arm spin to cut the lead in half. A stepout for Burkert makes it after just 2 minutes of wrestling. Jenna again with a takedown and gut wrench to get her largest lead of the match, A stepout finishes the job.
Burkert to the finals, Another takedown makes it And another one for the tech-fall. We have a main event scheduled for the 55kg finals, Winchester vs Burkert! Nelson gets the first takedown but XMP responds with a four. XMP always looking to go big. At least until Nelson hits a nifty roll through to pick up two more in the scramble and the lead. A correct throw from XMP gives her the lead by criteria again. Nelson responds with a four of her own. XMP scrambles her way to a reversal and its at the break.
Toldja it'd be fun. Nelson counters XMP's next shot to run her lead up to nine. Nelson once again counters XMP to her back and the junior world gold medalist is in the finals! It's , Black in the lead via activity clock at the break. Black breaks it open in the second period, now takes a lead into short time. Beck gets a takedown in the final seconds but can't make up the last two points. Black takes it and will wrestle Nelson tomorrow!
And it's a pinfall for Miracle! Velte extends her lead to 7 before time runs out and will win We will renew one of the best rivalries in wrestling with Miracle vs Velte in the finals! She answers with a couple of her own. Then opens it up even more in the second with another takedown and an lead. A takedown later and the McKendree student Bruntil wins in dominant fashion. Molinari vs Bruntil in the finals. Repeat and it's not sure where that fifth point came from.
Guilford fights back and battles Blades to the ground to pick up two points of her own. We go to the break. We come back and Guilford isn't backing down and gets a takedown in the second. And we have more trouble as we have a stoppage with Blades down on the mat with the trainers looking at her knee. But she's back on her feet and she doesn't miss a step when the whistle blows!
Takedown, throws in a half nelson and that's it! Blades amped up the drama with the stoppage and then sealed the deal in style! Update: So I learned that Kennedy did not hurt her knee, nor did she get knocked out, as I later suspected, but in fact got choked out.
Nothing malicious by Dymond, just the way the scramble went. Anyway, dang, super savage mode by Blades to recover from that they way that she did. And not to be outdone, Welker grips it and rips for a victory via headlock pinfall in the first minute! A rematch of the Olympic Team Trials Last Chance Qualifier but this time it's best-of-three and with a world team spot on the line!
Brady Koontz stakes himself to a lead, then finishes off junior world teamer Billy Sullivan Nowry v Koontz in the finals. Olympian Ildar Hafizov wins over King Sandoval to advance to the finals. Dalton Roberts has a lead in the other 60kg semifinals over Randon Miranda. That score gets adjusted on a review and but Roberts eventually wins Sam Jones wins and advances to the finals. Stpepanian ekes out a close one over Gregerson on criteria.
The year-old Cheptegei currently holds the world record in both the 10, meters and 5, meters. He set the latter mark at an event in August, besting a previous record that stood for 16 years. The world champion competes at a weight not offered at the Olympics, which forced him to move up or down a weight class - both of which already have dominant American competitors. Cox decided to move up, and will have to best Olympic gold medalist Kyle Snyder to make it to Tokyo.
Ryan Crouser: Track and field, United States. A dominant force in shot put, Crouser will hope to once again edge fellow American Joe Kovacs and win his second consecutive Olympic gold. Matheus Cunha: Soccer, Brazil. Keyshawn Davis: Boxing, United States. Davis won silver medals at both the world championships and Pan American Games in and is considered a top American medal threat in the sport. Andre De Grasse: Track and field, Canada.
De Grasse won three medals at the Olympics and two more at the world championships, emerging as a serious medal contender at both and meters this summer. Caeleb Dressel: Swimming, United States. The year-old Florida native is destined for Olympic stardom this summer and racking up eight medals, including six golds, at the most recent swimming world championships in Armand Duplantis: Track and field, Sweden. Born and raised in Louisiana, the year-old wunderkind recently broke the world record in pole vault and has become one of the biggest names in field events.
After a scary crash at the world championships, the silver medalist will rehab with an eye on medaling again in Tokyo. Brady Ellison: Archery, United States. Roger Federer: Tennis, Switzerland. Allyson Felix: Track and field, United States. The first American to win an Olympic gold medal in BMX is expected to be back in , with hopes of winning gold medal No.
Now 34, Fraser-Pryce will be making her fourth appearance at the Olympics in search of her third gold medal in the meter dash. Hong, AP. Janja Garnbret: Sport climbing, Slovenia. Naomi Graham: Boxing, United States. A staff sergeant in the U. Army, Graham has also become a serious gold medal contender for Tokyo in a weight class that has previously been dominated by Claressa Shields.
Adeline Gray: Wrestling, United States. After suffering an injury in competition just before COVID, the Olympic delay represents a new opportunity for Gray, a five-time world champion. Vincent Hancock: Shooting, United States.
A former sergeant in the U. Mikkel Hansen: Handball, Denmark. The three-time International Handball Federation player of the year is the leader of a Danish team that won gold in Rio and is a perennial contender in handball. Grant Holloway: Track and field, United States.
The former Florida Gator and reigning world champion in the meter hurdles could be in for a star turn in Tokyo. Nyjah Huston: Skateboarding, United States. A four-time world champion in the street discipline, this American is likely to be a breakout star in one of the newest Olympic sports. Ebenhack, AP. Sabrina Ionescu: Basketball, United States. The former Oregon dynamo and No. The Los Angeles Lakers star has expressed interest in competing for the U.
But if the Lakers make another deep playoff run next summer, as expected, those plans could change. Kanak Jha: Table tennis, United States. Jha was the youngest American to compete in Rio, when he was just 16, and will aim to now build on his bronze medal at the Pan-American Games in Tokyo. Laura Kenny: Cycling, Great Britain. The year-old has won a total of four gold medals in two Olympic appearances and will aim to add a few more next summer.
Sam Kerr: Soccer, Australia. We packed a lot into the first day of the EsportsT. Welcome to Pittsburgh and the EsportsTravel Summit. The latest SportsTravel Podcast is a. Event attendees can lodge in class with worldeque.
A couple of New York icons. Throw in the taxi and. The renovated Madison Square Garden may have the n.
0コメント