Jump to content

Overton Fall Brawl


nununu
 Share

Recommended Posts

Overton 196.5

Hunter's Lane 144

Cane RIdge 120

Franklin 113

FRA 112.5

Hendersonville 86

Pearl Cohn 75

Stratford 74

Hillsboro 65

Hillwood 27

Lipscomb 16

 

Weight: 106

1st: Zac Green, Overton  2nd: Kyrin Gardner, Pearl Cohn 3rd: John Ray, Hillsboro 

Weight: 113

1st: So Mo Ou, Overton 2nd: Chris Stubblefield, Hunters Lane 3rd: Mark Austin, Franklin Road Academy

Weight: 120

1st: Rowan Mosoury, Overton  2nd: Jack Shrader, Franklin  3rd: Nick Stubblefield, Hunters Lane

4th: Terrell Cochran, Cane Ridge

Weight: 126

1st: Kue Htoo, Overton 2nd: Winfred Ostine, Hunters Lane 3rd: Eric Foster, Stratford 

4th: Choi Thang, Cane Ridge

Weight: 132

1st: Adio Brown, Hunters Lane 2nd: Cameron Alsup, Overton 3rd: Yusuf Abdulaziz, Pearl Cohn

4th: Avery Daniels, Franklin Road Academy

Weight: 138

1st: Montez Booker, Pearl Cohn 2nd: Zack Jones, Hendersonville 3rd: Anthony Sowinski, Hillsboro 4th: Christian Snuffer, Hillwood

Weight: 145

1st: Jack Holloran, Franklin  2nd: Quintin McKissick, Hunters Lane 3rd: Nicholas Martin, Hendersonville 4th: Daizjon Carney, Hillwood 

Weight: 152

1st: Austin Tucker, Hillsboro 2nd: Dwain Jackson, Overton 3rd: Drake Mitchell, Franklin Road Academy  4th: Malik Turner, Cane Ridge

Weight: 160

1st: Will Tansil, Franklin Road Academy 2nd: Alex Moran, Cane Ridge 3rd: Christian McKenzie, Hendersonville 4th: Anthony Agabo, Overton 

Weight: 170

1st: Dorian Lee, Cane Ridge 2nd: Chad Young, Franklin Road Academy 3rd: Broderick Sakarapanee, David Lipscomb 4th: Cameron Gallina, Hendersonville

Weight: 182

1st: James Hughes, Stratford  2nd: Jonathan Jones, Hendersonville 3rd: Angel Lopez, Overton 

4th: Chike Brown, Hunters Lane 

Weight: 195

1st: Jason Gardner, Overton  2nd: Steven Rose, Stratford 3rd: Marcus Ball, Hunters Lane

4th: Yony Lesemda, Cane Ridge

Weight: 220

1st: Cameron Vogt, Franklin 2nd: DeShawn Hooper, Hunters Lane 3rd: Thomas Fortune, Franklin Road Academy 4th: Chris Crosby, Pearl Cohn 

Weight: 285

1st: Josh Filbey, Franklin 2nd: Tripp Waller, Franklin Road Academy 3rd: Mustafa Garmavi, Cane Ridge 3- 1 4th: Derick Jefferson, Overton  

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share

Announcements

  • Recent Posts

    • Post events https://forms.office.com/Pages/ResponsePage.aspx?id=qmF0dn9znEScCOpe_cPQuxF9-OnKOoNKj6HT21TSc3FUOEpYSEdVQU5CUjFTUUpYNEQyNkxSWDZEVy4u View events 2024-2025 Wrestling Tournaments.xlsx
    • Lol! I was being a bit facetious. 
    • Way late on this post, but I do believe that I want to at least weight in so to speak lol. I wrestled NAIA competed against some of the best wrestler over all a crossed the divisions and felt great about my college wrestling experience. I think people make the mistake in believe that wrestling some how gets easier as a sport at the smaller college divisions it doesn't the training is mostly the same. I have that on good authority from a coach who was a D1 all-American. it's more the commitment level of the competitors that is different. There is talented wrestlers that can go D1 at any level in the smaller division. sub in Sammy Shires for one he would have done fine on a DI team. He chose a work life ratio that suited him. It's not about talent it's commitment are you going to make training and studying the sport the center of your world cause that's what it takes: NO MATTER HOW TALATENTED BEFORE HAND YOU ARE.  If so then D1 is for you and striving for success at that level is for you like Mr. Palmer said it's what your willing to put in. Now coaches if you have a successful wrestler who fits that bill then by all means D1 is a great option they will see some success no matter how small, but if they are not that committed along with being talented and a killer and you know it then your doing them wrong.  You don't have to tell athletes that you don't think they are D1 tell them to keep their options open to take all their visits to consider all the divisions regardless of their goals. college recruiting visits have you most times wrestle against their current wrestlers coaches and athletes  will find out real quick it's not easy no matter where you go. That way when they make their decision it's a sound one that's based on well rounded experiences.     BobCorker, and oceansize42 I believe what you are thinking is correct but for different reasons. TN wrestler's have the talent... it's a commitment level change. TN wrestlers aren't used to having to put themselves through the level of commitment required and kills them on the D1 level.    WrestlingGod, I agree you should push kids to pursue their dreams, but not at the cost of common sense period... we have to much of that going around this country already. Dreams can turn to poison when these wrestler are not educated on what it truly takes. In TN  a kid who understands wrestling to a high level can be successful with small amounts of hard work. They think their definition of hard work is enough for D1 that is the mistake not the "talent/understanding".  Over-all though we do not celebrate NAIA,D2,D3, or Juco success in this state like other states do. GA/AL celebrates all it's college wrestlers success a crossed the  board no matter the division. Why? because it's hard... I have gone to all the divisions National championships let me tell you to be a all-American at any is impressive especially D2 or NAIA. those guys can scrap and not one of those AA's are an easy match. all of them were state placers or champs multiple times in their high school careers. does that at all sound easy to place at? TN does not give those guys enough credit or shout outs period. it's an over sight because of this D1 or it's less than meaningless   mentality on this site and in this state. GA/AL is better then us on the highest stage because they send guys to D2,NAIA,D3 ect. they come back understanding the sport better then their pervious coaches, and give back and that cycles to athletes readiness to go D1 with clearer understanding of what it takes to be competitive day 1 freshman year.             My post isn't to support one way or the other but to just consider that both sides have merit and that both work when the system in TN. by system I mean coaches are the better educated on preparing athletes for each level they want and should pursue.        
    • If you think McKenzie could've beat Riverside I have a bridge you might like to buy. 
    • Hate to hear Ricky is heading to the old folk's home!
×
  • Create New...