2015-16 SCHEDULE

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Ashley Bailey | ashley.bailey@mail.wvu.edu | (o) 304.293.2821 | (c) 304.288.3427
Nov. 1
Nov. 8
Nov. 15
Nov. 21
Dec.4
Dec. 5
Dec. 12
Jan. 1
Jan. 2
Jan. 15
Jan. 17
Jan. 23
Jan. 29
Jan. 31
Feb. 7
Feb. 12
Feb. 14
Feb. 19
Feb. 21
Mar. 5
Mar. 6
Mar. 17
Mar. 18
Mar. 19
2015-16 SCHEDULE
at NWCA All-Star Classic
5 p.m.
DREXEL !
10 a.m.
CAMPBELL !
11:30 a.m.
ARIZONA STATE !
1 p.m.
vs. Michigan &
11:15 a.m.
vs. Buffalo &
1:15 p.m.
vs. Oregon State &
3:15 p.m.
at Joe Parisi Open (Mo.)
10 a.m.
at Cliff Keen Las Vegas Open 10 a.m.
at Cliff Keen Las Vegas Open 10 a.m.
LOCK HAVEN
7 p.m.
at Southern Scuffle (Tenn)
9 a.m.
at Southern Scuffle (Tenn.)
9 a.m.
OKLAHOMA STATE *
8 p.m.
OKLAHOMA *
4 p.m.
at Arizona State
1 p.m.
vs. Stanford (Az.)
3 p.m.
at Virginia Tech
7 p.m.
N.C. STATE
1 p.m.
PITT
1 p.m.
at South Dakota State *
8 p.m.
at Iowa State *
3 p.m.
CLARION
8 p.m.
at Edinboro
1 p.m.
at Big 12 Championship
All Day
at Big 12 Championship
All Day
at NCAA Championships
All Day
at NCAA Championships
All Day
at NCAA Championships
All Day
Home matches in bold /all caps.
All times Eastern & subject to change
* indicates Big 12 match ! Mountaineer Quad - Morgantown, W.Va. & Northeast Duals - Troy , N..Y. Big 12 Championships - Kansas City, Mo.
NCAA Championships - New York City
RANKINGS
InterMat...................................23rd (Team)
InterMat.......................3rd, Z. Moisey (125)
InterMat....................15th, D. Cottrell (157)
InterMat............. 10th, Jacob A. Smith (197)
USA Today/NWCA...................... 21st (Team)
FloWrestling..................4th, Z. Moisey (125)
FloWrestling...............19th, D. Cottrell (157)
1
2015-16 WEST VIRGINIA WRESTLING
West Virginia
MOUNTAINEERS
9-9, 0-3 Big 12*
*2014-15 Season
MATCH DAY INFO
Date: Nov. 1, 2015
Time: 5 p.m.
Location: Atlanta, Ga.
Arena: McCamish Pavilion (Ga. Tech)
Broadcast Info:
Social Media:
/WVUWrestling
@WVUWrestling
@WVUWrestling
No. 3/4 Zeke MOISEY WVU
Sophomore | 125
Northampton, Pa.
32-14
No.1 Nathan TOMASELLO OSU
R-Sophomore | 125
Parma, Ohio
33-2
• The two have met three times prior to the 2015 NWCA All-Star Classic:
-
Nov. 2, 2014 - Michigan State Open - No. 11 Tomasello takes a 19-6 major decision over Moisey in the season-opener.
-
Dec. 5, 2014 - Cliff Keen Las Vegas Open - No. 9 Tomasello wins a 15-10
decision.
-
March 21, 2015 - No. 4 seed Tomasello earns a 9-5 decision in the finals of the 2015 NCAA Championships at 125 pounds.
• Moisey upset four seeded wrestlers on his way to the NCAA finals:
-
No. 15 Chasen Tolbert of Utah Valley (MD, 14-6)
-
No. 2 Nahshon Garrett of Cornell (Dec., 5-2)
-
No. 7 Eddie Klimara of Oklahoma State (Dec., 5-2)
-
No. 6 Thomas Gilman of Iowa (Fall, 0:52)
• Moisey became WVU's first All-American since Brandon Rader in 2007
• He was the first Mountaineer to wrestle in the NCAA Finals since Greg Jones in 2005
• Moisey was the first unseeded wrestler to qualify for the NCAA Finals since 2003
• Was the Big 12 runner-up after dropping an 8-5 decision to Eddie Klimara (OSU)
• Took eighth place at Cliff Keen Las Vegas Open (Dec. 6, 2014)
• Finished third at the Navy Classic (Nov. 11, 2014)
• Was slated to redshirt the season and wrestled the first two tournaments unattached.
• Dropped a 3-1 match to Virginia Tech's Joey Dance at the Hokie Open while competing
unattached,
• Made his official debut for WVU on Nov. 13, 2014 vs. Arizona State
• Topped ASU's Judson Preskitt in a 12-2 major decision.
MOISEY & TOMASELLO SET FOR REMATCH
No. 4 Zeke Moisey of the West Virginia University wrestling
team will face No. 1 Nathan Tomasello of Ohio State in a rematch of
last season’s 125 pound NCAA championship finals at the 50th Annual
Hire Heroes NWCA All-Star Classic, presented by the Wrestlers in
Business Network on November 1 in Atlanta, Georgia. The event is
slated for a 5 p.m. start at McCamish Pavilion on the campus of Georgia Tech and will be broadcast live on ESPNU.
The 2015 NCAA runner-up, Moisey (31-14) shed his redshirt
three weeks into the season and went on to take second at the Big
12 Championship in Ames, Iowa, in March. He earned an at-large bid
to the NCAA championships, where he upset four seeded opponents,
pinning No. 6 Thomas Gilman of Iowa in the semifinals and advancing to
face Tomasello, the No. 4 seed in the tournament. Moisey became the
first unseeded wrestler to compete in the NCAA finals since 2003 and
the first WVU wrestler to do so since Greg Jones won a national title
in 2005.
Tomasello took a 9-5 decision from Moisey in the NCAA finals
in St. Louis last season. It marked the third meeting of the year between the two. Moisey and Tomasello first met in the opening weekend
of the season at the Michigan State Open, with then-No. 11 Tomasello
winning a 19-6 major decision over Moisey, who competed unattached
as a redshirt at the event. The two squared off again at the Cliff Keen
Las Vegas Invitational in December, as then-No. 9 Tomasello won a 1510 decision. It marked the lone loss for Moisey, who went on to take
eighth place at the tournament.
Moisey is the 30th All-American in WVU wrestling history,
and was the first Mountaineer to earn the honor since Brandon Rader
in 2007.
MOUNTAINEERS IN PRESEASON RANKINGS
The West Virginia University wrestling team will start the
season ranked in the top 25 of the InterMat Division I wrestling rankings, coming in at No. 22 of the tournament rankings released on Oct.
20, 2015.
Additionally, a trio of Mountaineers appear in the top-20
rankings for their respective weights. Zeke Moisey sits at No. 3 at 125
pounds, while Dylan Cottrell is ranked No. 15 at 157 pounds. Jacob A.
Smith comes in at No. 10 at 197 pounds.
Moisey (32-14) entered the championships unseeded and
upset the No. 15, No. 2 and No. 7 seeds before pinning the No. 6 seed
to earn a spot in the NCAA finals and become West Virginia’s first
All-American since 2007. The first unseeded wrestler to wrestle in the
finals since 2003, Moisey dropped a 9-5 decision to No. 4 seed Nathan Tomasello of Ohio State. The two will square off once again on Nov.
1 at the NWCA All-Star Classic in Atlanta, Georgia. Moisey also ranks
fourth at 125 according to FloWrestling is No. 3 on TheOpenMat.com.
Cotrell has yet to don a gold and blue singlet after transferring to West Virginia from Appalachian State last January. As a
redshirt freshman for the ASU Mountaineers, Cotrell was the 2014
SoCon Champion at 149 pounds, earning a bid to the 2014 NCAA
Championships. Cotrell went 26-3 that season, ranking as high as No.
10 at 149. He is No. 18 in TheOpenMat.com’s preseason rankings and
No. 17 on FloWrestling’s list.
A 2015 NCAA qualifier, Smith was the 2015 Big 12 runner-up at 197 pounds. Compiling a 28-13 mark overall and a 15-3
record in duals, Smith also went 2-1 in league action during the regular
season. He went 2-2 at the NCAA Championships in St. Louis, defeating Virginia’s Zach Nye on a riding time tiebreaker in his first wrestleback match before topping Jeffrey Koepke of Illinois, 8-3.
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2015-16 WEST VIRGINIA WRESTLING
BIG 12 ADDS AFFILIATE MEMBERS
The Big 12 Conference has added six affiliate members to
its postseason wrestling competition as Air Force, Northern Colorado,
North Dakota State, South Dakota State, Utah Valley and Wyoming will
join Iowa State, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State and West Virginia in future
Big 12 Wrestling Championships.
The affiliate member additions are effective beginning with
the 2015-16 academic year. Affiliate members will compete for the
Conference’s postseason championship and the league’s automatic
qualification to NCAA postseason competition.
In wrestling, the 10-team Big 12 Championship will shift to a
neutral site and expand to a two-day event with the 2016 championship
set for March 5-6, at Sprint Center in Kansas City. The Big 12 Gymnastics Championship will also make its neutral site debut in 2016 with
Dr Pepper Arena in Frisco, Texas, hosting the meet on Saturday, March
19.
HENSON, MOISEY HONORED BY AMATEUR WRESTLING NEWS
West Virginia University wrestling first-year head coach Sammie Henson has been named the National Rookie Coach of the Year by
Amateur Wrestling News as announced by the publication on Tuesday.
Freshman Zeke Moisey was also honored as a member of the
2015 Amateur Wrestling News All-Rookie Team.
Henson took the helm of the Mountaineers in May of 2014
and has brought the program to new heights in his inaugural season.
West Virginia cracked the top-25 rankings in January after downing
then-No. 25 Bucknell and proceeded to defeat No. 18 Pitt in the regular season finale. It marked the first time since 2007 the Mountaineers
had come out victorious in the Backyard Brawl.
West Virginia scored a program-best 35 points at the 2015
Big 12 Championship in early March, producing four finalists for the
first time in program history. Heavyweight A.J. Vizcarrondo became
WVU’s first-ever two-time league finalist was one of five wrestlers to
earn podium accolades at the event.
Four Mountaineers qualified for the 2015 NCAA Division I
Wrestling Championships in St. Louis and wrestled to a top-20 finish
for the first time in 10 seasons. Under Henson’s tutelage, Moisey became the story of the tournament. The unseeded true freshman upset
four ranked foes, including No. 2 seed Nahshon Garrett of Cornell, to
qualify for the championship final at 125 pounds. Moisey was the first
unseeded wrestler to wrestle a championship bout since 2003 and
was the Mountaineers first All-American since 2007. In addition, he
was the first WVU wrestler to qualify for the finals since Greg Jones in
2005.
HENSON INDUCTED INTO NATIONAL WRESTLING HOF
West Virginia University wrestling coach Sammie Henson was
inducted into the National Wrestling Hall of Fame as a Distinguished
Member of the Class of 2015 in Stillwater, Oklahoma, on June 6.
Henson boasts impressive wins at the collegiate, national and
international level on his resume. The St. Charles, Missouri, native won
a Big Eight title and All-America honors as a freshman at Missouri before transferring to Clemson, where he went on to post a 71-0 record
on his way to a pair of national titles. The 1994 ACC Wrestler of the
Year and 1994 Clemson Male Athlete of the Year, Henson was later
inducted in the Clemson Athletics Hall of Fame.
Following his standout collegiate career, Henson won gold at the 1998
World Championships and took bronze in 2006. He added a silver
medal at the 2000 Olympic Games in Sydney, Australia.
SAMMIE HENSON
Head Coach | First Season
Missouri, 1995
@SammieHenson
• World Champion
• Olympic Silver Medalist
• World Bronze Medalist
• 2x NCAA Champion
• 71-0 at Clemson
• Head Coach - Sunkist
Sammie Henson was named the eighth head coach in WVU program
history in May of 2014, and is quickly bringing the program to new
heights.
Henson brought with him a 17-year streak of All-Americans,
having coached a total of 20 with five NCAA national champions. In
Morgantown, he was challenged with the task of extending that streak
in a program that hadn’t had a wrestler finish in the top eight since
2007. He succeeded.
Pulling freshman Zeke Moisey’s redshirt two weeks into the
season proved to be one of the most crucial decisions of Henson’s
career. Entering the 2015 NCAA National Championships unseeded,
Moisey put together an historic run, upsetting the No. 15, No. 2
and No. 7 seeds to become WVU’s first All-American since Brandon
Rader in 2007. He then went on to pin No. 6 Thomas Gilman of Iowa
in 52 seconds in the semifinals to become the first unseeded wrestler
to advance to the finals since 2003. Moisey dropped a 9-5 decision to
No. 4 Nathan Tomasello of Ohio State to cap his season as the NCAA
runner-up.
However, the turnaround of the WVU wrestling program
started long before the NCAA Championships. The Sammie Henson
era opened in Morgantown on November 13, when the Mountaineers
hosted former WVU assistant and the Arizona State Sun Devils at
the WVU Coliseum. Though the Sun Devils took the match, 19-13,
the match in front of 1,200 fans rejuvenated interest in the program.
The team went on to place a trio of wrestles on the podium at the
Cliff Keen Invitational, with the 16th-place finish marking WVU’s best
showing since 2007. In dual action, the Mountaineers topped No.
25 Bucknell in early January, briefly entering the NCAA top-25 that
month, before ending the regular season with a win at No. 18 Pitt. It
was the first time since 2007 WVU had taken the annual Backyard
Brawl. In between, the Mountaineers sought revenge on ASU, twice
taking victories from the Sun Devils.
West Virginia put together it’s best-ever showing at the Big
12 Championship in March, accruing a team-high 35 points with four
finalists. A.J. Vizcarrondo became the program’s first ever two-time
Big 12 finalist and was the runner-up at heavyweight for the second
straight year. He was joined on the podium by Moisey (runner-up
125), Roman Perryman (runner-up at 149), Jake A. Smith (runner-up
at 197) and Bubba Scheffel (third at 184).
Along with senior Michael Morales (149), Smith, Moisey and
Scheffel earned at-large bids to nationals. The four combined to post
eight wins, marking WVU’s best finish in 10 years. The Mountaineers
finished in 20th place with 23.5 points, their first top-25 finish since
2005, helping Henson earn Amatuer Wrestling News Rookie Coach of
the Year accolades.
In addition to his work with the Mountaineers, Henson
started the Mountaineer Regional Training Center, drawing a number
of national and international-level wrestlers to Morgantown to train.
In the summer of 2014, he guided assistant coach Nick Marable to a
spot on the U.S. World Team, and continues to coach Marable, former
Olympian Clarissa Chun and national team member Jessica Medina
through the MRTC.
A native of St. Charles, Mo., Henson came to WVU from
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2015-16 WEST VIRGINIA WRESTLING
Missouri, where he spent two seasons as head assistant coach.
In just two seasons at Missouri, he assisted in producing the No.
2-ranked recruiting class in the nation in 2013 in addition to leading
the Tigers to two consecutive conference titles and seven All-America
finishes, including one national champion this past season.
Prior to Missouri, Henson was the assistant head coach at
Oklahoma from 2009-11. While there, he helped secure the No. 2 recruiting class in the country, coached seven wrestlers to All-America
status at the NCAA Championships and helped the program become
the top academic squad in the Big 12 during his tenure. Before Henson arrived at Oklahoma, the Sooners hadn’t had an All-American in
two years.
Prior to his stint with Oklahoma, Henson served as the head
assistant at Cal Poly (2007-09), volunteer assistant at Nebraska
(2006-07), along with stops as an assistant at Army (2002-03) and
Penn State (2000-02).
During his time at Penn State, Henson assisted head coach
Troy Sunderland in taking the Nittany Lions from 35th in the country
to sixth with a pair of top-five recruiting classes in just two years.
He has mentored numerous national champions, such as Michael
Lightner (Oklahoma), Byron Tucker (Oklahoma), Paul Donahoe (Nebraska) and J’den Cox (Missouri), along with several All-Americans, Big
12 Champions, Big 10 Champions and Pac 12 Champions, including:
Shane and Dane Valdez (Oklahoma), Witt Durden (Oklahoma) and Josh
and Scott Moore (Penn State), Chad Mendes (Cal Poly), Chase Pami
(Cal Poly), Boris Novachkov (Cal Poly), Jarrod Patterson (Oklahoma),
Zach Bailey (Oklahoma), Kyle Terry (Oklahoma), Tyler Caldwell (Oklahoma) and Eric Lapotsky (Oklahoma).
Henson has been widely recognized as one of the elite
assistant coaches in the country. Tim Foley of Intermat rated him as
the best in the nation in an article from 2010, stating that "Henson's
intensity is legendary and seemingly always transferred to his grapplers. There is nothing coincidental about his arrival in Norman and
the Sooners impressive 2009-2010 turnaround."
Along with collegiate coaching, Henson is also the current
head coach for the Sunkist Kids Wrestling Club, which has more current world and Olympic wrestlers than any other wrestling club in the
United States. Out of the seven freestyle wrestlers who represented
Team USA at the 2012 Olympic Games in London, three came from
the Sunkist Kids. Included in that group is Olympic gold medalist Jordan Burroughs at 74 kg/163 lbs. Also representing the United States
in the Olympics in 2012 were Sam Hazewenkil (55 kg/121.3 lbs. and
Tervel Dlagnev (120 kg/264.6 lbs.).
Henson's resume as a competitor speaks for itself. He went
on to become one of the most celebrated wrestlers in the history of
the United States, as one of just a few wrestlers in USA history to
earn three world medals. In 1998, Henson became a world champion
for Team USA at the World Wrestling Championships, in Tehran, Iran,
which eventually led to him winning the John Smith Award for USA
Wrestler of the Year. He earned a silver medal at the 2000 Olympic
Games at 55 kg (121 lbs.) in Sydney, Australia, and won the bronze
medal at the 2006 World Wrestling Championships at 35 years of
age.
Additionally, Henson was named USOC Athlete of the Month
of September 1998, and was a finalist for the Sullivan Award in 1999
for his efforts in the World Championships. In all, Henson has won
more than 15 freestyle titles at the international level.
Henson started his collegiate wrestling career at Missouri,
where he was a Big Eight Champion and All-American for Missouri in
1991. He then transferred to Clemson, where he became a twotime NCAA Champion, finishing his career with a 71-0 record. He
was named as Clemson's Male Athlete of the Year in 1994 and was
inducted into the Clemson Athletics Hall of Fame in 2000. Henson
returned to Missouri in 1995 to earn a degree in parks, recreation
and tourism management.
Henson and his wife, Stephanie, have four children: Jackson,
Wyatt, Ruby and Georgia-Kate. They also have two dogs Biggie Smalls
and Nelly.
125
ZEKE
MOISEY
Sophomore
Northampton, Pa.
Bethlehem Catholic
2014-15 (FR.)
• 2015 NCAA Runner-Up at 125 pounds
• 2015 NCAA All-American, WVU’s first since 2007
• First unseeded wrestler to make the NCAA finals since
2003
• Big 12 Wrestler of the Week (Feb. 9)
• Two-time WVU Student-Athlete of the Week
• Led the team with a 32-14 mark overall
• Scored six pins, two tech. falls and eight major decisions
• Defeated six ranked opponents over the course of the season
• Ranked inside the top-25 by Flo Wrestling and InterMat at
various points in the season
• Took third place at the Michigan State Open (Nov. 2) while
wrestling unattached, topping then-No. 19 Conor Youtsey
(Michigan) in an 11-8 decision
• Placed fourth at the Hokie Open (Nov. 9), wrestling unattached
• Won a 12-2 major decision over Arizona State’s Judson Preskitt (Nov. 13) in his first official bout for the Mountaineers
• Went 6-1 to take third at the Navy Classic (Nov. 22),
winning a 5-2 decision over No. 18 Ben Willeford (Cleveland
State)
• Took eighth place at the Cliff Keen Invitational in Las Vegas
(Dec. 6)
• Pinned No. 10 Sean Boyle of Chattanooga in 2:27 at the
Virginia Duals (Jan. 9)
• Went 2-1 in Big 12 action, winning a 13-5 major decision
over Iowa State’s Kyle Larson (Feb. 7) and topping Oklahoma’s Ryan Millhof 7-3 in tiebreaker one (Jan. 18)
• Was the runner-up at 125 pounds at the 2015 Big 12
Championship (March 7), defeating Millhof in a 5-0 decision
before dropping a 5-3 decision to No. 9 Eddie Klimara of
Oklahoma State
• Upset four seeded wrestlers to advance to the finals of the
2015 NCAA Championships in St. Louis (March 21)
• Opened the tournament with a 14-6 major decision over No.
15 seed Chasen Tolbert of Utah Valley
• Upset No. 2 seed Nahshohn Garrett of Cornell in a 5-2
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2015-16 WEST VIRGINIA WRESTLING
decision in the second round
• Advanced to the semifinals with a 5-2 decision over Big 12
foe Klimara, the seventh seed, in the quarterfinals
• Pinned No. 6 seed Thomas Gilman of Iowa in 52 seconds in
the quarterfinals
• Dropped a 9-5 decision to No. 4 seed Nathan Tomasello of
Ohio State in the finals
HIGH SCHOOL
• Competed for Jeff Karam at Bethlehem Catholic
• Finished in the top-5 at the state tournament all four years
• Boasted a career record of 141-14
• Took first at Beast of the East
• Dapper Dan All-Star Team honoree
• Dreamteam USA
• Also wrestled for Randy Cruz at Weaver Elite
PERSONAL
•
•
•
•
Son of Scott and Kelly Moisey
Has two brothers
Born August 14
Chose WVU over Arizona State
125
ZEKE
MOISEY
Sophomore
Northampton, Pa.
Bethlehem Catholic
Season
2014-15
Weight
125
56 Team Points |56 TDs
Overall
32-14
Duals
13-5
Big 12
3-2
Falls
6
MD
8
TF
2
Date
Opponent
School
Wt. Class
Result Type
Score
TD
Place
Michigan State Open
11.2.14
Andrew Lenz
St. Catharine
125
W*
Tech. Fall
22-5 (6:34)
Derek Elmore
Northern Illinois
125
W*
Fall
1:26
#11 Nathan Tomasello Ohio State
125
L*
MD
6-19
# 19 Conor Youtsey
Michigan
125 W* Dec. 11-83rd
Hokie Invitational
11.9.14
Nick Hermann
Virginia
125
L*
Med. Forfeit
# 5 Joey Dance
Virginia Tech.
125
L*
Dec.
1-3
Will Mason
Viginia
125
W*
Dec.
8-2
4th
11.13.14
Judson Preskitt
Arizona State
125
W
MD
12-2
4
Navy Classic
11.22.14
Brant Leadbeter
Navy
125
W
MD
19-5
Joaquin Marquez
The Citadel
125
W
Fall
0:36
#19/18*Ben Willeford Cleveland State
125
L
Dec.
3-7
Michael Russo
Brown
125
W
Dec.
4-1
Anthony Tutolo
Kent State
125
W
Dec.
9-2
Kevon Powell
Ohio
125
W
Dec.
14-8
#19/18* Ben Willeford Cleveland State
125
W
Dec.
5-2
3rd
Journeymen/Asics Northeast Duals
11.29.14
Derek Elmore
Northern Illinois
125
W
Dec.
10-7
3
11.29.14
Sean McCabe
Rutgers
125
W
Dec.
9-3
4
11.29.14
#2 Nahshon Garrett
Cornell
125
L
MD
8-19
1
Cliff Keen Las Vegas Invitational
12.5.14
Trenton Piatt
Western State Colo. 125
W
Dec.
10-5
#9 Nathan Tomasello Ohio State
125
L
Dec.
10-15
Sean McCabe
Rutgers
125
W
Dec.
4-2
Joe DeAngelo
N.C. State
125
W
Dec.
9-4
12.6.14
Chasen Tolbert
Utah Valley
125
W
Dec.
14-10
Trey Andrews
Northern Colorado
125
L
Dec.
2-6
Ronnie Bresser
Oregon State
125
L
Dec.
6-12
8th
12.19.14
Kaleb Lemaire
Lock Haven
125
W
MD
12-3
5
01.03.15
Jacob Reyes
Grand Canyon
125
W
Tech. Fall
21-4 (6:51) 7
01.04.15
Ares Carpio
Arizona State
125
W
Fall
0:39
1
Virginia Duals
01.09.15
#10 Sean Boyle
Chattanooga
125
W
Fall
2:27
2
01.09.15
#19/20 Kory Mines
Edinboro
125
L
SV-1
4-6
1
01.09.15
#17 Paul Petrov
Bucknell
125
L
Dec.
3-4
1
01.10.15
Ares Carpio
Arizona State
125
W
Fall
2:50
1
01.16.15
#10 Eddie Klimara
Oklahoma State
125
L
MD
2-10
0
01.18.15
Ryan Millhof
Oklahoma
125
W
Dec.
7-3 TB-1
1
02.06.15
Hunter Jones
Clarion
125
W
MD
15-6
6
02.07.15
Kyle Larson
Iowa State
125
W
MD
13-5
5
02.15.15
Zak Hassan
Ohio
125
W
MD
17-8
7
02.20.15
#18/19 Kory Mines
Edinboro
125
L
Dec.
4-8
1
02.22.15
Dom Forys
Pitt
125
W
MD
14-5
6
Big 12 Championships
03.07.15
Ryan Millhof
Oklahoma
125
W
Dec.
5-0
03.07.15
#9 Eddie Klimara
Oklahoma State
125
L
Dec.
3-5
2nd
NCAA Championships
03.19.15
# 15 Chasen Tolbert Utah Valley
125
W
MD
14-6
03.19.15
#2 Nahshon Garrett
Cornell
125
W
Dec.
5-2
03.20.15
#7 Eddie Klimara
Oklahoma State
125
W
Dec.
5-2
03.20.15
#4 Thomas Gilman
Iowa
125
W
Fall
0:52
03.21.15
#4 Nathan Tomasello Ohio State
125
L
Dec.
5-9
2nd
5
2015-16 WEST VIRGINIA WRESTLING
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