(Original Photo Credit: Brian Ray / SourceMedia Group)
All's well that ends well, right? The final result of yesterday's dual meet with Minnesota (a 19-17 Iowa win, Iowa's 7th straight over the Gophers) was good, even if the way Iowa got there (losing the final four matches of the meet) wasn't so hot. Iowa and Minnesota each won five matches, but Iowa got a major decision from Nick Moore and a pin from Mike Evans (and his 'stache), which trumped the pair of major decisions that Minnesota got from Dylan Ness and Kevin Steinhaus. Iowa got off to a hot start with a fairly dominating 7-1 decision win from Matt McDonough over top-ranked Zach Sanders (though McD should regain his top spot in the rankings this week), kept the momentum rolling through nervy wins from Ramos and Marion over the Dardanes brothers, watched Mike Kelly stumble in an action-packed match at 149, jumped out to a big lead with the aforementioned bonus point wins from Moore and Evans at 157 and 165, and then just tried to hold on through the final four matches. Even if it wasn't always pretty, though, any win was nice to see after Iowa's miserable 0-2 weekend the week prior.
There's a decent chance Iowa could have another dual meet with Minnesota before the year is out (in the National Duals semifinals or finals), so we'd do well to try to improve on a few of these results if we want to again beat the Gophers. If Marion gives up a late takedown, we lose this dual. On the other hand, if Lofthouse doesn't quit wrestling in the third period and Gambrall is just a little bit better, we could have won in a rout.
#5 Iowa (10-3, 5-2) 19, #3 Minnesota (9-3, 6-1) 17
125: #2 Matt McDonough DEC (7-1) #1 Zach Sanders (Iowa 3-0)
133: #4 Tony Ramos DEC (5-2) #7 Chris Dardanes (Iowa 6-0)
141: #7 Montell Marion DEC (3-2) #12 Nick Dardanes (Iowa 9-0)
149: #11 Dylan Ness MAJ DEC (15-7) Mike Kelly (Iowa 9-4)
157: Nick Moore MAJ DEC (11-2) Alec Ortiz (Iowa 13-4)
165: #8 Mike Evans FALL (6:02) #14 Cody Yohn (Iowa 19-4)
174: #7 Logan Storley DEC (5-3) #9 Ethen Lofthouse (Iowa 19-7)
184: #8 Kevin Steinhaus MAJ DEC (12-4) Vinnie Wagner (Iowa 19-11)
197: #6 Sonny Yohn DEC (5-3) Grant Gambrall (Iowa 19-14)
HWT: #4 Tony Nelson DEC (7-2) Blake Rasing (Iowa 19-17)

125: This was about as dominant a 7-1 decision win as you're likely to ever see. McDonough was better than Sanders on his feet, better in scrambles, and better on the mat. He's just plain better. His length and strength makes him a poor matchup for Sanders and while I'd never say that Sanders will never beat McDonough... it's going to be hard for him to do. He tried stuffing McD on his feet and was successful for a while... but McDonough eventually got him down. He tried coming out on top in a scramble... but McD was the one who emerged with a takedown. He struggled to escape McD's rides as well. He's a very good wrestler; McDonough is just better.
133: A very nervy match for Tony against young Dardanes, but he came out on top. His takedown with three seconds left in the second period was huge, and while he gave those points back (sort of) by giving up a reversal to Dardanes in the third, it was only after he'd been able to ride Dardanes for long enough to secure a riding time point (a noteworthy accomplishment, since that's something Tony has struggled with against high-end competition) and that, along with the pair of escapes he recorded, was enough to give him the winning margin. It was a difficult match, though, and it would be probably be nice if Tony could get on side of the bracket at Big Tens with Dardanes and Logan Stieber on the other side.
141: Marion Marion Marion... what more is there to say? "Bad Marion" made another reappearance this week, although Montell was just good enough to eke out a win anyway. Dardanes is a quality opponent, but Marion's lack of activity (again) and late attempt to just hold on to the slenderest of leads was... I don't know if "frustrating" is a strong enough word. Exasperating, maybe? I don't know if he just thinks he can flip a switch when the bright lights of the Big Ten Tournament and NCAA Tournament start shining, but the way he's wrestling now makes it impossible to have any confidence in him.
149: Well, this certainly wasn't a boring match, by any stretch of the imagination... Ness and Kelly traded points in a wild first period, but Ness ultimately turned the tide in his favor with a really slick throw that enabled him to score nearfall points. Kelly tried hard here, but Ness just seemed far too slick for him in this match.
157: Well well well... now there's the Nick Moore we'd been hoping to see for a while. Ortiz isn't a very good opponent, but Moore looked confident and aggressive. He pushed the pace, scored a few nice takedowns, and got some great nearfall points on a move that was only saved from being a pin by Ortiz's uncanny bridging ability. We shouldn't take too much away from this match given the quality of the opposition, but it was very nice to finally see Nick Moore cut loose a bit and give us a glimpse of the guy who won four Iowa state titles.
165: Good lord, that 'stache... I haven't seen a close-up of it anywhere, but it was stunning in its majestic creepyness:
(ORIGINAL PHOTO CREDIT: Matt Holst / Iowa City Press-Citizen, hawkcentral.com)
Perhaps Yohn was so unnerved by it that he lost the capability to do, well, anything. Evans dominated him from start to finish -- on his feet, on the mat, everywhere -- and was cruising to an easy major decision win when he managed to use his impressive mat skills to turn Yohn and pin him halfway through the third period. Please please please let this Evans show up for Iowa the rest of the year (and bring the 'stache along, too -- JayBo rode a weird-looking musstache all the way to a national title in 2010).
174: And here we have our biggest WTF match of the night. For the better part of five minutes, Ethen Lofthouse looked pretty good. He was defending Storley's offense well, got an escape, and secured a nice takedown to build a 3-0 lead as time was winding down in the second period. For all intents and purposes, he was solidly in control of the match. Then, seconds before time ran out in the second period, he gave up a takedown to Storley, cutting his lead to 3-2. A reversal shortly into the third period gave Storley a 4-3 lead, but all Lofthouse needed to do to tie it up was get an escape. Which he didn't get. In fact, he never even came close to getting an escape. He barely did anything for the remainder of the match after the reversal and was deservedly dinged for stalling. He appared to completely shut down after the reversal, which was hugely frustrating. Lofthouse has been an absolute mess lately, which is not good news with National Duals, Big Tens, and the NCAA Tournament looming.
184: See 149, but replace Kelly with Wagner and Ness with Steinhaus. Wagner's effort is never lacking (you almost never see him get hit with a stall call for inactivity), but he just has precious few answers for guys that are really skilled. Steinhaus, unfortunately, ran a bit of a takedown clinic on him here. It was curious that Steinhaus didn't spend more time trying to get a tech fall or a fall here, though, since by this point in the meet they needed as many bonus points as possible.
197: Gambrall is still losing matches, which is disappointing, but... he does look better, at least. He's more active, in better shape, and generally looks a bit more like the Gambrall we saw last year (who was also frustrating to watch, but at least won quite a few matches for Iowa). His biggest problem now appears to be size and strength (or lack thereof); he looked noticeably smaller than Yohn. He certainly looked like a guy on his way down to 184; we'll have to keep an eye on that for the next few weeks. So, disappointing that he lost, but honestly at this point he may no longer be one of the three most frustrating wrestlers on the team (I'd rank him behind Marion, Lofthouse, and the gestalt Blakeby Rasford entity right now).
HWT: Bobby Telford competed in the Grand View Open this weekend, coming in 2nd to Eric Thompson (Wisconsin?), which cleared the way for Blake Rasing to get another start at HWT for Iowa. (Remember when I said Midlands might be the last time we saw Blake start for Iowa in meaningful competition? Oh, how wrong I was...) Even without taking into account Telford's recent slump, the move to start Rasing made some sense, given Rasing's 3-0 career record against Nelson. Alas, unlike McD, Rasing couldn't improve his perfect career mark against his Gopher opponent. Nelson has improved since last year; it's hard to say the same for Blake. On the bright side, this was an usually active heavyweight match, so at least it wasn't as mind-numbingly dull as so many of them.
NEXT: Iowa concludes its dual meet season with a home meet against B1G bottom-feeder Wisconsin. There will be (Badger) blood. Expect a rout in this one.
0 recs | 54 comments
Before reading the article I had to declare my love for that photo of Brands.
After Brands wins his 10th National Title at Iowa, I pray that the image at the top of this article is used to create a relief at the Gable-Brands Hawkeye Wrestling Complex.
The Mexican't - January 30, 2012
Just an unbelievable shot
jtothep - January 30, 2012
I am going to need a closeup of that mustache
A shiny nickel to whomever brings it to me first
therealCatnuts - January 30, 2012
Well
This was the only slightly better shot of Evans’ ’stache I could find.
RossWB - January 30, 2012
Unilateral contract accepted
A shiny nickel for you in Chicago next September.
therealCatnuts - January 30, 2012
i would be surprised if Telford doesnt start next week
justsomehawkeyefan - January 30, 2012
Well hopefully..
He’s got a fire lit under his ass.
FlyingDutchman1 - January 30, 2012
My brother was there
he said that Tom kicked something at Lofthouse after the match.
Moore was a brute in high school. I think he needs to compensate for not being stronger than everyone. He had a nice match yesterday and hopefully it gives him some confidence.
Gambrall was definitely in a position to beat the #5? guy at weight that Grant really has no business competing. If he can bring that fire down to 84, he should do well.
Lycurgus - January 30, 2012
Moore
Is very likable. Around the face. Looks like he’s paying attention to his coaches but doesn’t look douchey. I like him.
jtothep - January 30, 2012
I like this comment in a way that is difficult to describe
Lycurgus - January 30, 2012
Yeah, it looked like he kicked a clipboard as EL was walking away, after saying a few words.
rupertj - January 30, 2012
Also
Did anyone else notice the enormous guy in the mountain dew shirt behind the mat. Sadly, that was one of the most Iowa things ever.
Lycurgus - January 30, 2012
Yes
He actually looked like a 1,000 liter bottle of Mt. Dew.
mikjones24 - January 30, 2012
Reason #14327 that Lubbock sucks
I watched the second half of this meet at BWW. I listened to two hillbillies and their busted-ass girlfriends make fun of the wrestling the entire time. Damn my Iowa politeness, I wish I would have started shit right there. I know my mom would have shanked those fuckers with a with the rusty end of the Iowa shirt pin that plays the fight song.
Lycurgus - January 30, 2012
184
Steinhaus is an enigma in his own right. Seems to have some slickery in his repertoire, but …. missing something else. Focus? Killer instinct?
I guess, really, that he’s kinda like the rest of the field at 184.
jtothep - January 30, 2012
I dunno.
He’s 18-4. Three of his losses were to top guys (Bosak, C Perry, Bennett). The loss to Rebertus from Navy was kind of a head-scratcher. All but one of the losses was by a point, too. And he has a lot of bonus point wins (13, I think), although most of them are straight major decisions. I don’t think he’s turning guys a lot, just getting a ton of takedowns. And, of course, he did beat Q this year…
Really, 184 feels like a big crapshoot. It’s going to come down to who gets hot, who can avoid upsets, and who gets a favorable draw. I think any one of the top 8 guys could win that weight.
RossWB - January 30, 2012
Why does...
Brands continue to stick with Gambrall at 197? Its pretty clear that he’s just simply not physically able to compete at the bigger weight. I thought the Iowa program was high on Tomas Lira.
Is Dylan Carew still just not physically able to go yet after the knee surgeries?
FlyingDutchman1 - January 30, 2012
The word on Carew is that it is an attitude problem more than anything
Lycurgus - January 30, 2012
While Gambrall definitely is not his best at 97
He wrestled the number 5 guy at that weight and was damn close to taking the match to OT
Lycurgus - January 30, 2012
Gambrall is better than Lira, even as an undersized 197er.
As for why Gambrall has spent so long at 197 this year… that topic has been discussed ad nauseum and I don’t think we’ve ever seen a good answer. We’d probably need to interview Brands and Gambrall to solve that puzzle.
Carew’s issues are either physical or mental, depending on who you talk to. He’s not going to wrestle the rest of this season, though.
RossWB - January 30, 2012
Brands and Ferentz are buddies.
They like doing things because they gaddamn can.
hawkinsandmelrose - January 30, 2012
One stache to rule them all, One stache to find them,
One stache to bring them all and in the darkness bind them.
mikjones24 - January 30, 2012
The Fellowship of the Stache
Dan Dennis
JayBo
Mike Evans
Joe Williams
And Mike Zadick is the kind wizard of facial hair assisting them on their quest
Lycurgus - January 30, 2012
yeah.. i'll make it green
SaturdayMorningKegStanzis - January 30, 2012
GOD DAMN IT, HE'S CHEATING AGAIN!
Brands is flaunting his breakings of rules and laws again. HOVERING IS NOT ALLOWED! GOOD PEOPLE OBEY THE LAWS OF GRAVITY!
WhiteSpeedReceiver - January 30, 2012
IIIINNNNNTTTTEEENNNNNSSSIIIIIIIITYYYYY!!!
FlyingDutchman1 - January 30, 2012
J Robinson name doesn't obey the laws of naming.
What kind of name is a letter? Nonsense, I say. NONSENSE.
Also, Brands has just been talking to Ferentz when it comes to gravity.
RossWB - January 30, 2012
He lost the rest of his name in a bad jump in Vietnam.
WhiteSpeedReceiver - January 30, 2012
Considering Gable's success in ending the Cold War, they clearly should have sent him to Vietnam, too.
RossWB - January 30, 2012
Robinson cut his teeth fighting in Munich in 1972, too.
Sadly, he lost 4-0 to an “Argentine” that I believe may have been a hiding East German. “Jesus Blanco” isn’t fooling me.
WhiteSpeedReceiver - January 30, 2012
"Blanco," eh?
Sounds like a cover for a member of the Aryan Nation…
RossWB - January 31, 2012
Blanco Incognito
therealCatnuts - January 31, 2012
That picture is the best SWEEP THE LEG moment ever
SaturdayMorningKegStanzis - January 30, 2012
Learned it in the HawKai dojo.
Hawkeyegirl - January 30, 2012
Marion definitely looked lackluster
its so frustrating watching him sometimes. I was yelling “DO SOMETHING!” the entire time I was watching his match.
And Kelly at 149 was sad to watch. I realize he’s just a frosh, but it seems to me the kid has got no fire.
IAinCA - January 30, 2012
Kelly has no fire?
I didn’t see his match yesterday, but that kid has consistently put out every time I have watched him. He is tough, just needs some more seasoning
Lycurgus - January 30, 2012
Hehehe..you said he consistently puts out...hehehe
BStylin Hawkye - January 30, 2012
Yes...yes I did
Lycurgus - January 30, 2012
I don't think a lack of fire is Kelly's problem at all.
There have been several guys for whom you could wonder about that this year, but Kelly has been a goer in almost every match (he was yesterday for sure, although he did slow down after that nutty first period). His problem seems to be a lack of skill at times.
I will say that it was kind of frustrating to see Kelly and Wagner get so blown out yesterday after they’d wrestled much closer matches against Molinaro and Wright at PSU last week. I know a little of that is a function of styles (Frankie is all too happy to lay on a dude and rack up riding time; I saw he had 5:28 in RT in a match this weekend, while Ness is much funkier and apt to go for turns, big moves, and more takedowns), but Kelly and Wagner also didn’t seem as sharp as they were at PSU. Oh well.
RossWB - January 30, 2012
I should say, he's also not a natural 149er.
He’s just the best of a bunch of lackluster options right now. He really belongs at 157 (or maybe 165).
Hell, it wouldn’t surprise me to see a rematch of these guys at 157 next year (assuming DSJ moves up to 165, which is purely my own idle guess and not based on anything) since Ness looked freaking huge at 149.
RossWB - January 30, 2012
Mike Kelly was not having a real good time yesterday.
RossWB - January 30, 2012
I'm not sure the neck is supposed to bend that way.
Let me check with my doctors.
Yeah no, that’s unhealthy.
mikjones24 - January 30, 2012
The bridge by the Minny guy was worse.
And kind of incredible that it wasn’t called for a potentially dangerous situation. It looked really funky in real time to me.
One Night Stanzi - January 30, 2012
Interesting comments from Nick Moore
I hope most of his difficulties earlier in the year were because of the weight cut; that would make it a lot easier to be optimistic about him going forward.
RossWB - January 30, 2012
Oh and Andy Hamilton said this about Gambrall in his chat today
(via)
Good news.
RossWB - January 30, 2012
Oh, and re: Carew at 149:
RossWB - January 30, 2012
Just want to say
that that was a hell of match he wrestled yesterday for a kid weighing 189. Yohn is fucking huge and Gambrall took him to the wire. I am actually having some good feelings about what he might be able to do this year.
Lycurgus - January 30, 2012
Yeah, the size disparity between those two was jarring yesterday.
He was far more aggressive than he has been in the past and really likes he’s starting to get back some of his old form. I’m curious to see what he can do at 184.
RossWB - January 30, 2012
Also, wrestlers have the best quotes:
McD:
Brands:
(via)
RossWB - January 30, 2012
Awesome quotes
BoiseHawk - January 30, 2012 via mobile
I love wrestling attitude
“Screw being PC, I’m saying what I think and stop me if you can”
ClaybornSmash - January 31, 2012
Lofthouse
I just am not seeing any improvement and becoming afraid that it is all he is going to be. I had hopes…….
Bluzmn - January 30, 2012
Dardanes
Those brothers looked tough. Very good with the heavy hands. We were fortunate to have some very talented guys at their weights.
As much as anything I think Marion was getting frustrated with all the pressure being brought down on his neck. He needs to be more mentally tough and fight through that but sadly mental toughness isn’t one of Montell’s strong suits.
I have a feeling they’re going to be thorns in our sides going forward.
HawKCP - January 30, 2012 via iPhone app
Re: Montell
I do think he feels like he can flip the switch and if Brands really did train them hard right through the last two losses then I don’t think that’s helping to dispel that notion from his mind.
That’s not to say Tom was wrong to do it, if he did, just that I think it’s missing the mark with one particular guy.
We shall see.
HawKCP - January 30, 2012 via iPhone app
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