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Cat Scratch Fever: Iowa Wrestling Fights Past Northwestern, 24-13

011512-wrestling-vs-northwestern26_1_medium

(ORIGINAL PHOTO CREDIT: Adam Wesley / Daily Iowan Media)

Two days after rebounding from the Oklahoma State loss with an overall solid win over a top-ten Nebraska team, Iowa returned home to take on Northwestern. The results were... underwhelming, in several cases. Iowa went 2-1 against Northwestern's three ranked wrestlers, including a very solid win from Ethen Lofthouse that avenged his defeat in the Midlands Championships earlier this season, but Iowa went just 1-2 in the virtual toss-up matches (149, 184, 197) of the dual and several weights that had been question marks earlier were no closer to being answered after this dual.

#4 Iowa 24, #17 Northwestern 13
HWT: #19
Mike McMullan DEC (7-5 SV) #8 Bobby Telford (iNW 3-0)
125: #2
Matt McDonough MAJ DEC (18-4) #7 Levi Mele (Iowa 4-3)
133: #2
Tony Ramos FALL (2:34) Jameson Oster (Iowa 10-3)
141: #3
Montell Marion MAJ DEC (21-7) Pat Greco (Iowa 14-3)
149:
Kaleb Friedley DEC (3-2) Mike Kelly (Iowa 14-6)
157: #3
Jason Welch MAJ DEC (17-4) Nick Moore (Iowa 14-10)
165: #9
Mike Evans MAJ DEC (11-0) Pierce Harger (Iowa 18-10)
174: #11
Ethen Lofthouse DEC (5-2) #9 Lee Munster (Iowa 21-10)
184:
Vinnie Wagner DEC (11-4) Robert Kellogg (Iowa 24-10)
197:
John Schoen DEC (2-1) #19 Grant Gambrall (Iowa 24-13)

Star-divide

* Taking care of business. McD, Ramos, Marion, Evans, Wagner. Iowa had four bonus-point wins and two of those wins (those by McD and Marion) and one non-bonus point win (Wagner's) were one point away from being even better results (although Marion's hypothetical technical fall would have still been worth only four team points, since he wasn't able to get any back points against Greco). Aside from McDonough, Iowa's other big winners faced fairly overmatched opponents, but they did precisely what you'd want them to do: dominate. Ramos took care of business the most emphatically: easily taking his opponent down before sticking him late in the third first period, but Marion also had his way with his opponent -- he was getting takedowns with almost laughable ease. It was unfortunate that he couldn't get Greco turned for nearfall points (or a pin), but he certainly tried hard (it looked like he was going to actually rip Greco's arm out of its socket a few points) and overall it was a good, dominating performance -- precisely the sort of thing we've been hoping for out of Marion.

Evans and Wagner took a little bit longer to get going, but eventually poured on the points against their opponents. Evans rode well and got in some good turns, while Wagner was able to get multiple takedowns in the last two periods. In fact, he had the major decision wrapped up after a late takedown, but opted to give his opponent an escape and try for one more takedown. That was a debatable decision: losing that team point didn't matter here and his aggressive attitude is very laudable, but in other situations it might be more prudent for Wagner to just take the major decision in hand. McD, meanwhile, continued to look impressive, getting takedowns easily against a quality opponent. He wasn't able to get the fall, though he seemed to be getting near to that (or at least more nearfall points, which would have led to a technical fall) before being stopped on a potentially dangerous call. McD continues to look very, very good out there.

* Revenge, Mormon-style. The biggest win of the meet -- in terms of future seeding significance, not team points -- was undoubtedly Ethen Lofthouse's solid 5-2 win over Lee Munster at 174. After an unimpressive first period, Lofthouse put in a brilliant ride in the second period, riding him for the entire 2:00. He tacked on a takedown and another ride in the third period to ice the match, an impressive reversal from his match with Munster at Midlands, where he was unable to do much of anything against Munster. For whatever reason, Lofthouse wrestles far better at CHA than he does anywhere else. Unfortunately for Ethen, there are three two big road duals coming up (@ OSU, @PSU, @MIN) and neither the Big Tens nor the NCAAs are being held in Iowa City this year, so he had better figure out a way to transfer his home performance to the road.

* Holes in the lineup? We haz 'em. That concludes the good news portion of this recap. The bad news is... everything else. Prior to the season, there appeared to be only one troubling hole in the line-up: 197 lbs. Well, two months later, it's still a problem... and it's been joined by several other weights. 149 was a source of considerable frustration last year and it hasn't been solved yet this year, either. Mike Kelly was solid at Midlands, but he's gone just 1-3 in dual meets since then, despite not facing a murderer's row of opponents. An opponent like jNW's Kaleb Friedley isn't a bad wrestler, but he's the sort of solid 149er that Kelly needs to be able to beat if he has ambitions of making any noise at Big Tens or NCAAs. We're not expecting great things out of Kelly this year, but some points would be nice. Kelly was close to winning here, with a wild scramble in the final thirty seconds, but his inability to escape from Friedley's ride in the second period was troubling (and ultimately decisive in losing the match). He needs to work on that -- and finishing his shots.

Meanwhile, the Nick Moore Experiment at 157 is not going well. He's been filling in for the injured Derek St. John since shortly before Midlands, but the results haven't been too great. Like Kelly, he's gone 1-3 in duals. Unlike Kelly, he can at least point to facing better competition: his last two opponents have been ranked in the top ten and Sunday's opponent (Welch) is a top-3 wrestler who simply outmatched Moore completely. While the overall match went very poorly, I was actually happy that Moore fought so hard in the third period and didn't get pinned or tech falled as seemed likely after the first two periods. The most disappointing aspect of Moore's game has been his takedown defense: he simply gets out of position far too often and gets taken down far too easily. The good news is that, unlike the other holes in Iowa's lineup, there's a clear (and good) solution to this one: put DSJ back in the lineup. The word is that he'll be ready to go for the OSU and PSU duals next weekend (he's certainly looked healthy as Iowa #1 cheerleader on the bench the past few meets), which is very welcome news. Iowa's slim title hopes are completely toast if DSJ can't wrestle (and wrestle at a very high level, too).

Bobby Telford remains in a giant funk at heavyweight: he's now lost his last four matches in a row, starting with the Midlands finals to Jarod Trice. On one hand, all four losses have come against ranked wrestlers (or would-be ranked wrestlers, in Trice's case) and aside from McMullan, they're all top-ten talents. On the other hand, Telford hasn't looked very good at all against said top-ten talent, suggesting that he's not as close to being an elite heavyweight as we thought he was a month ago. Telford was, by heavyweight standards, an offensive dynamo early in the season but it now appears that was mainly the product of facing overmatched opponents; against bigger, stronger, more experienced wrestlers his offense has dried up. He also looks tentative and uncertain and is too often unable to get out from underneath an opponent. His defense has also gotten worse. So what to do? My initial thought was that Brands would let Telford work through his issues on the mat, since that's been his typical M.O. On the other hand, it's not often that he's had a backup as experienced and able as Blake Rasing, either, so it certainly seems possible that he could turn to Rasing. I think he needs to make a decision one way or the other very soon, though: it's too late in the season to be alternating between guys.

And then there's the Grant Gambrall predicament. With every passing meet, it seems less and less likely that Gambrall will be able to do much at 197 at Big Tens or the NCAA Tournament. He seems outhorsed by guys at that weight and unable to get any of his own offense going (it also doesn't help that he seems to wait until far too late in the match to go with any effective shots). In an ideal world, he'd drop back down to 184 and regain his NCAA 3rd place finisher form there, a move which would increase both his own chances of winning a medal this year and the team's chances of winning a title. Unfortunately, this is not an ideal world and I do not expect Gambrall to cut down to 184 this year. If the move was doable, I have to think that Gambrall would have already done it. I don't think he's stupid, so I think he realizes how much he's struggling at 197 and how ill-suited he is to that weight. Indications are that his problems with concussions are keeping him at 197 for now and if that's the case it sucks -- but there's nothing we can do about it.

1 recs  |  42 comments

Comments

There's something haunting about that picture

Greco (HA BAD NAME) looks to be in immense pain and Montell is eerily calm. Almost…too calm. OK, I’m basically saying Montell might be a serial killer.

Dunno if Greco was acting, but looked like he was in a world of hurt.
If Greco was acting, Christopher Plummer should give him the Golden Globe he won for Best Supporting Actor last night.
I hope not.

Because I’m pretty sure Sally Mason would say serial killing is against the Iowa Student Code of Conduct.

Nah, I'd go something like this:

Reporter: Ms. Mason, do you have any comment about Montell Marion being a serial killer?
Mason: We can’t comment about that at this time.
Reporter: Ms. Mason, what about the photos of the accused with posing and smiling next to his victims?
Mason: No hablo ingles.

Reporter hands Sally Mason a photograph.

Reporter: Ms. Mason, that’s a photograph of the accused standing next to a dead body.
Mason: Sorry, but we’re not going to elaborate on why Montell is suspended at this point.

Yep.

I'm no savant. Buy this M. Marion match was my favorite this year.

Ross was not exaggerating at all when he said that guy’s shoulder was nearly ripped out. I’m certain Pat Greco has no interest in seeing Marion again.

So many perfect "daddy's rich" jNW names

Pierce Harger, Robert Kellogg, Jameson Oster
But how did “Lee Munster” sneak in there? He’s clearly one of those scholarship kids from the wrong side of The Gold Coast

Yeah at what does Northwestern's roster start looking like this

HWT: James W. Bottomtooth III
125: C. W. Warbucks
133: Tony Vanderbilt
141: George Rockefeller
149: Edward N. Roosevelt
157: Tom Kennedy
165: Richard Daley III
174: Gordon Taft
184: D’Brickashaw Gates
197: Joe Udall

So the question remains...

Where has THAT Marion been?

don't know

but the last 4 periods of his make me think he is starting to come on.

I think that NW dude may have been a backup

Don’t know much about the NW team on the whole, but the guy they trotted out at 141 against us on Fri night injury defaulted at the 3:18 mark.

I watched that Nebraska meet from Fri night and thought Marion looked pretty decent against Sueflohn. Maybe Montell was just in need of a scrubby scrub opponent to remind himself of his capacity for dominance. Or maybe we’re learning he’s a dude who just thrives most in adversity. This Friday, tho, his opponent should probably weigh in somewhere right in the middle of last weekend’s two opponents.

jNW listed two guys at 141.

They both kinda suck right now.

Still, it was good to see Marion actually destroying a weak opponent instead of just screwing around for most of the match.

Pretty sure we wrestle Minnesota at home

Agree with the assessment. Marion and Ramos have come on strong but we need two more guys who can make runs if we are going to have a shot at the title this year. Hopefully St. John can be a force and someone else can catch lightning in a bottle but things aren’t looking too good.

Evans has been improving faster than expected

but his problem is everyone else’s problem at 165 – the f’ing unicorn. Hopefully he gets on the other side of the brackets and someone can channel Bubba to knock Taylor and his horned beast out.

I don't know

I’m still worried about Evans’ ability to score at Bigs & Nationals. That Kokesh match was a pretty wild one, but he always seemed to remain in control. He’s really got some nice wins since getting majored by Bekzod, and I doubt if they face off again that it would be a similar result. If he’s unable to upset the unicorn, it’ll be good to see how he bounces back against Minny’s Yohn.

A lot of our fans are familiar with him from HS, and I am not. But what I saw against Nebraska looked really tough.

Do we have the presser?

I know Brands made some comments about it being a bad time for an interview. I am assuming that was for his radio interview up in the press rows not for his press conference.

That was the TV interview right after the meet, I think.

No, I don’t have a link for the presser.

Marion's face in that picture is half terrifying, half hilarious

It’s like a mix of, “Damn, that Carver soft serve looks really good” and “Should I break his elbow? Let’s flip a coin.”

I think he looks like someone who was interrupted

while in the midst of something VERY important. Like a dismemberment.

maybe i have been spoiled by "the IOWA STYLE"

But why are wrestlers like Friedley and Schoen rewarded for not wrestling? Freakin’ leg riders ought to be outlawed. Wrestlers who have no offense should be docked points more readily

Leg riders outlawed?

I guess we need to inform Evans and we might as well retroactively revoke Perry’s championships.

Iowa fans get a little uppity about stalling, especially considering plenty of our guys do it too.

I think my favorite part of Sunday's meet

Was Tony Ramos. Right after McD’s match, he runs out to the center of the mat while his theme song (Bad Company, it think) was playing. But there was a TV/radio timeout. He stood in his stance in the middle of the circle and stared down Oster for well over a minute. The referees were off by the scorer’s table. Oster was behind the jNW bench getting his warm-ups off and talking to the coaches. Ramos just stared at him, foot on the line, ready to go with the most intense look you’ve ever seen the whole time. It was great.

He baffles me

I had class with him and we talked a lot to each other (I was star struck I’ll admit it), but outside that he is way quite. Really shy kid, but a monster on the mat. He hides his intensity well, or better put, he saves it for the mat. When he did that double arm flex after he beat Oliver I was like :0…

doesn't baffle me as much as makes me smile
Evans is the new DSJ

in a sense that by NCAAs he will look nothing like he did at Midlands in a good way.

man I hope

and I also hope DSJ looks like late season DSJ and his injury isn’t slowing him down. We need him to establish a very solid option at the “upper” weights. (anything over 141)

Yep

Very curious to see how DSJ looks against good competition this year. His #2 ranking is kind of deceptive, IMO — it’s based on his top-4 finish at NCAAs last year and graduation by guys ahead of him. It’s not really based on anything he’s done on the mat this year. He’s undefeated, but the best guy he’s beaten was either the UNI guy or the Illinois guy, probably.

I think he can (and will, if healthy) be good… I just want to see him prove it on the mat.

Just for shits and giggles, I was imagining what a dual meet between 2012 Iowa and 2010 Iowa would look like

2010 Iowa
125: RS FR McD
133: SR Dan Dennis
141: SO Marion
149: SR Brent Metcalf
157: JR Aaron Janssen or Jake Kerr
165: SR Ryan Morningstar
174: SR Jay Borschel
184: SR Phil Keddy
197: SR Chad Beatty
HWT: SR Dan Erekson

2012 Iowa
125: JR McD
133: SO Tony Ramos
141: SR Marion
149: RS FR Mike Kelly
157: SO Derek St. John
165: RS FR Mike Evans
174: SO Ethen Lofthouse
184: SR Vinnie Wagner
197: JR Grant Gambrall
HWT: RS FR Bobby Telford

125: McD was good in 2010, but he’s better now. Probably not so improved that he beats his old self by bonus points, though.
2012 McD DEC 2010 McD (2012 Iowa 3-0)

133: Dennis was a scrapper and seconds away from being an NCAA champ (the ending of his match with Jayson Ness still makes me so sad), but I think Ramos is better in a h2h matchup. I’ll take Tony in a close one.
Ramos DEC Dennis (2012 Iowa 6-0)

141: See 125. 2012 Marion is frustrating at times, but I still think he’s better than 2010 Marion.
2012 Marion DEC 2010 Marion (2012 Iowa 9-0)

149: Poor, poor Mike Kelly. This would be a bloodbath. And probably a pin.
Metcalf FALL Kelly (2012 Iowa 9-6)

157: I think DSJ is better than either Kerr or Janssen.
DSJ DEC Kerr/Janssen (2012 Iowa 12-6)

165: An interesting battle here between Evans and Morningstar. Morningstar has loads more experience, but I think his style would keep Evans in the bout. I think Morningstar wins in the end, but it would be close.
Morningstar DEC Evans (2012 Iowa 12-9)

174: JayBo was a national champ. Ethen is… inconsistent. Not a good sign for EL. The bigger question for me is whether or not he could keep it to a decision. I’ll say yes for now (as like an 11-4 sort of decision).
Borschel DEC Lofthouse (tied, 12-12)

184: Keddy would destroy Vinnie, I’m afraid. I think bonus points would be in the offing here, too.
Keddy MAJ DEC Wagner (2010 Iowa, 16-12)

197: I think Beatty wins because he’s more accustomed to the size and better at this weight, but his style would allow Gambrall to keep it close.
Beatty DEC Gambrall (2010 Iowa, 19-12)

HWT: Erekson was really good and probably would have done better at NCAAs in 2010 if an injury hadn’t kept him out of action for so long that year. Telford is still mostly just potential.
Erekson DEC Telford (2010 Iowa, 22-12)

The 2012 team does well in the first half of the bout, which shouldn’t be too surprising — all their strength is in the lower weights. The strength of the 2010 team becomes apparent once you look at the upper weights, though — that team fielded legit potential All-Americans from 165-HWT; the 2012 team might have 1-2 potential All-Americans (Evans and EL?) and they’re nowhere near as sure thing as the 2010 guys appeared to be. 165 and 197 are bouts where I think the 2012 guy might win 20-30% of the time if they wrestled… but I might also be generous in not giving bonus points to the 2010 guys at 174 and HWT.

Anyway, just some food for thought…

I found this incredibly entertaining. Interesting diversion to start my day.

Thanks Ross.

A couple quick thoughts

1) I think you’re a little light on DSJ’s ability vs Janssen/Kerr. I think he has bonus points for sure there (when healthy, natch)
2) I like Evans over Morningstar at 165. I’ve got a mancrush on Evans right now, though, so take that with some salt
3) I agree you’re a little light in not giving bonus points to 2010 Iowa at more of the upper weights. I think 174, 184, and HWT all go to bonus points.
4) For some strange reason I still like Gambrall to take it at 197. This one is the least plausible of my opinions, methinks.

Great discussion - fun to think about

1) I agree – DSJ gets bonus on Janssen/Kerr.
2) Evans-Morningstar – I think M-star would score a couple takedowns that he has no business scoring, which was his MO – he’d get a high single, then simply suck a guy in until he could get them in the air and score the TD. It’d take him an entire period to do it, but he’d get it done. There wasn’t a more frustrating wrestler in that time period, but he was clutch when he had to be (see: 2009 NCAA tournament). I think he gets the decision. Both guys would hammer each other on top and it’d probably go to overtime. Evans has the ability to beat him, though. He is truly hammer-like on top.
3) I agree here too – bonus points likely at 74 and 84, and probably heavyweight. Borschel’s senior season was simply dominant – Mack Lewnes, his opponent in the 174 final, had given up zero takedowns on the year, and Borschel handled him with relative ease.
4) No idea on 97. Gambrall has the talent, but yeah, it looks like he doesn’t have the horse power to finish at that weight. Not right now. I guess the good thing is he can be pretty much on full-feed until nationals (much like they did with Beatty; he was serviceable after a season of full-feed, and he had Phil Davis in real trouble at Big Ten’s in 2008 late in the match – he just ran out of time for a possible pin). I think at current form, he loses to Beatty.

"Frustrating but clutch" was a great way to describe Morninsgtar.

He had some big wins in 2009.

I also have a lot of respect for the way he gutted out an A-A finish in 2010 despite having a torn-up knee.

JayBo was awesome. He even did something in 2010 that Metcalf, for all his greatness, was never able to do at Iowa: post an undefeated season. He went 37-0 in 2010. His comeback in the NCAA semifinals is one of my all-time favorite matches, too.

True - Metcalf had at least one loss each season

And just for shits and giggles, here’s Jay in the 2010 semi-final, the the two-part Final. Fun to watch, especially the semi-final. He eventually broke that kid.

Unfortunately, I can’t find the video of Morningstar’s win at 2009 nationals. I wasn’t able to watch it live as I was out of the country, but I think it was in the Iowa corner over Jon Reader too. Easily his biggest moment in an Iowa singlet. And I’m with you – frustrating guy, but gutting out an AA finish on one leg was a phenomenal effort.

I’d also like to find Dan Erekson’s pin on Z at nationals, but can’t find that one either.

Morningstar's win and Erekson's pin (which was amazing) were both huge, huge wins.

Iowa needed every point they could get that year and those guys came through in a big way at the end. The fact that they did it against ISU guys even made it a little sweeter…

thanks for posting

Forgot just how hard JayBo rode Lewnes in the final. Lewnes didn’t really know what hit him. Ended with 3+ minutes of riding time? amazing. JayBo wasn’t flashy but he was so tough.

The semi-final is a great example of pushing the action and not giving up

He got a takedown about half-way through the second period and you could tell the UVA guy was gassed/caving mentally. And with the rules the way they are now, if you push the pace you might be able to get a couple of cheap stall points.

That semifinal match was such an amazing comeback.

Watching it, I went from being so depressed that JayBo’s awesome season was going to be cut short so close to the finals to being elated when he was able to pull off the comeback.

Yeah that was a hammer-job on top

Just flattened Lewnes the entire match.

And BTW – the stall calls on Borschel were weak. He was going for arm bars the entire time, and ref hit him with two stalls. Weak sauce, I say. He was the aggressor the entire time. The Iowa fans I was sitting with in Omaha were not happy.

Yeah

1) It’s possible, especially if the DSJ from the end of last year turns up, but he hasn’t been a big bonus point wrestler so far in his career. I think he’d be get a comfortable decision, like 10-4 or 9-3 or thereabouts.

2) If the Evans that showed up and beat Kokesh turns up then, yeah, he’s got a great chance to beat M*. Haven’t seen that guy enough this year, though. My thinking is that M* would be able to stuff most of Evans’ shots. I think they’d be able to ride one another pretty well. So then it comes down to whether or not M* could get a takedown. I think he could get one.

3) I wavered on whether or not JayBo would major EL. I think it’s definitely very possible, since Borschel was very very good. The argument against it is that EL has only lost by bonus points once (he got majored once by Jon Reader last year). The best wrestlers he’s faced were probably Reader and Ruth, both national title-caliber guys. He went 0-4 against them with two close losses (damn near beat Ruth at Big Tens last year) and two not-so-close losses. Like I said, I think it would be very very close to being a bonus point win — there’s not a ton of practical difference between an 11-4 win and a 12-4 win. I tend to agree that Erekson would probably major Bobby, though.

4) That one’s kind of a toss-up and, like I said, I think GG would win 2-3 out of 10 times, but I think Beatty would win most of them. He’s just bigger, better, and more experienced at that weight.

Pretty interesting--

and pretty cool no doubt.

I think this years Iowa team is set more to do well in tournaments and versus duals. I know midlands ended up being a disappointment for a lot of guys but at the big dance I see a lot these guys peaking and just rolling. Even taking the individual aspect out of it, I think this as a whole is just better in a tournament. Guys like McD-Ramos-MM-DSJ are going to be scoring bonus points in a number of matches when they are favored and even in some close matches. Evans is probably another one of those, especially if he keeps getting better. I think our dual meets have us a little scared, and rightfully so, we have not looked nearly good enough. Brands has to be Brands to keep the team motivated and send a message, and I surely won’t say it is in the bag, we are far from that. All I mean to say is that I think we will outperform what we have looked like in duals so far. A certain wrestleback round where we didn’t lose a match or a certian semis where we advanced everyone make me less worried.

Either way, very fun read. I’d take Evans over Morningstar cause I think Brands would get on the mat to wrestle against Morningstar. At least I think I am remembering right, Morningstar was the guy Brands pretty much left hanging at the NCAAs? Morningstar looked at the bench and Brands just shrugged? I remember him being a super difficult wrestler I think.

Up until this weekend, I had thought this year's team was a better dual team than tournament team.

Now I’m starting to think it’s the latter. We just have too many holes right now — the top-to-bottom strength you need to be a dominant dual meet team just isn’t there.

That said, I think National Duals (or Mat Mayhem, as they’re now calling it) is still our best shot for a “big” title this year, so I hope we can get our dual meet form firmed up by then.

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