Fresh perspective on the Program - from a die-hard fan

HerkHawl

Sophomore
May 11, 2007
86
173
33
Iowa Wrestling is a dynasty. Period. But even dynasties face transitions. No program can stay on top forever—and that’s healthy for the sport. What matters most is preserving culture, integrity, and respect—and on that front, Iowa remains unmatched.

Culture:
The program’s culture is real. You see it celebrated with athletes like Kennedy, Arnold, Cruz, Ybarra, Jesurogas, Lee, Kem, Marinelli, Young, and Murin; in transfers like Woods, Lugo, Teske, Bailey, Williams, Franek, and the Voinovichs—who have all experienced other programs; and in incoming stars like Mocco, Bassett, Teasdale, DeLuca, etc.

Standards are high, and excellence is expected. Moments like Mo’s celebration after beating Merrill, Shumate, and Stout aren’t just fun—they reflect a shared commitment to the program’s values.

Iowa’s culture comes with tough love. The program sets clear expectations:
- Scrutinizing admissions (AJ, Downey)
- Making hard calls on departures (Gross, Mo, Teasdale)
- Holding athletes accountable for behavior (Austin and others)
Meanwhile, Iowa avoids major scandals—tradition of DUIs, sexual assaults, cover-ups, eligibility manipulations, or steroid problems—protecting its reputation and integrity.

Historical Advantage and Modern Challenges:
Iowa has long had a recruiting edge thanks to its fan base, tradition, and national reputation. Wrestlers grew up dreaming of competing in Iowa City. That legacy helped attract elite talent even before NIL deals and modern RTCs. But today, that advantage is no longer enough. Athletes can go elsewhere for more money, modern training, or alternative post-collegiate paths. Technique, athleticism, and conditioning now matter as much or than grit and toughness. To stay on top, Iowa must modernize while preserving culture.

Generational Coaches and Staying Close:
Generational coaches—like Cael Sanderson, Dan Gable, John Smith, and perhaps soon Taylor—are rare. They don’t just win; they define eras. Only one program can truly benefit from that type of leadership at a time - and a lot of things need to fall in place in right way and at the right time (the OSU job was going to Scott/Perry/Espo before the Taylor bomb dropped, see what I did there Kyle) . For other programs, including Iowa, the goal is to stay as close to that rocketship as possible. In today’s landscape, a distant second is almost indistinguishable from fifth. Recruiting, RTC presence, and culture all need to work together to minimize the gap and maintain relevance.

Coaching Evolution:
Supporting Tom, Terry, Ryan, Telford, and D. Dennis doesn’t mean staying static. Iowa should strategically supplement the staff—or adjust a few positions—with experts who bring something new: technical innovation, freestyle knowledge, or modern athlete development. Potential additions include:
- Doug Schwab (top priority): Modernized version of Tom and Terry with proven success
- Brian Snyder, Robie, Pritzlaff, Dresser, Reader, Ben Askren: Freestyle and system-building expertise
- Bo Nickal, Jason Nolf, K. Snyder, Burroughs, Cary Kolat: Modern technique and developmental vision
- Tim Hartung, Strittmatter, Ironside, St. John, Mike Poeta, Brent Metcalf, Troy Nickerson, Cliff Moore, J. McGinness: Culture carriers and elite mentors
- No Dake.
This combination preserves Iowa’s culture while adapting to the sport today.

RTC: Men’s and Women’s:
Investing in both men’s and women’s RTCs is essential. Slippage on the men’s side impacts women’s wrestling, recruiting credibility, and brand reputation. RTCs help:
- Keep elite post-collegiate athletes connected
- Enhance recruiting pipelines
- Prepare athletes for international freestyle and senior competition

Learning from the UFC:
Iowa can also borrow lessons from MMA and UFC athletes—not to become an MMA gym, but to adapt training and athlete development. Key contributors could include:
- Henry Cejudo: Olympic gold, UFC champion, elite wrestling transitioning to MMA
- Aaron Pico: California HS phenom, representing modern talent pipelines
- Khabib Nurmagomedov, Arman Tsarukyan, Urijah Faber: Discipline, movement, and technical insights
These lessons cover conditioning, recovery, individualized planning, transitional grappling, and professional mindset, increasingly relevant in freestyle and NCAA wrestling.

Weight-Class Strategy - being that most of you are already talking next year (lol):
Immediate targeted focus on 133, 165 lbs and 197 lbs is necessary to stay competitive:
- 165 lbs prospects: Joey Blaze, Sealy, Routledge, Joy, Ryder Downey, Garvin, Scoles, Cholakyan, EJ Parco, (Riggins, D. Rhode)
- 197 lbs prospects: Rademacher, Mirasola (play with Oly RS with these 2), Shumate /Geog / Rogotzke
- Developing depth at these weights strengthens dual meet scoring, integrates elite HS talent, and prepares athletes for RTC and senior-level competition.
- 133 lbs prospects: Larkin, Sakamoto, B Davis, Ronnie Ramirez, Desmond, Fugitt, Nagao...

Broader Athletic Impact:
Wrestling success affects more than just the mat. Iowa’s dominance drives:
- TV placement and marketing visibility
- Recruiting for football and basketball
- Donor confidence and facility ROI
- Maintaining relevance protects Iowa’s position as Wrestletown, USA and as a flagship Big Ten program.
 
Last edited:

TherealGrip220

All-Conference
Oct 14, 2025
423
1,289
93
Iowa Wrestling is a dynasty. Period. But even dynasties face transitions. No program can stay on top forever—and that’s healthy for the sport. What matters most is preserving culture, integrity, and respect—and on that front, Iowa remains unmatched.

Culture:
The program’s culture is real. You see it celebrated with athletes like Kennedy, Arnold, Cruz, Ybarra, Jesurogas, Lee, Kem, Marinelli, Young, and Murin; in transfers like Woods, Lugo, Teske, Bailey, Williams, Franek, and the Voinovichs—who have all experienced other programs; and in incoming stars like Mocco, Bassett, Teasdale, DeLuca, etc.

Standards are high, and excellence is expected. Moments like Mo’s celebration after beating Merrill, Shumate, and Stout aren’t just fun—they reflect a shared commitment to the program’s values.

Iowa’s culture comes with tough love. The program sets clear expectations:
- Scrutinizing admissions (AJ, Downey)
- Making hard calls on departures (Gross, Mo, Teasdale)
- Holding athletes accountable for behavior (Austin and others)
Meanwhile, Iowa avoids major scandals—tradition of DUIs, sexual assaults, cover-ups, eligibility manipulations, or steroid problems—protecting its reputation and integrity.

Historical Advantage and Modern Challenges:
Iowa has long had a recruiting edge thanks to its fan base, tradition, and national reputation. Wrestlers grew up dreaming of competing in Iowa City. That legacy helped attract elite talent even before NIL deals and modern RTCs. But today, that advantage is no longer enough. Athletes can go elsewhere for more money, modern training, or alternative post-collegiate paths. Technique, athleticism, and conditioning now matter as much or than grit and toughness. To stay on top, Iowa must modernize while preserving culture.

Generational Coaches and Staying Close:
Generational coaches—like Cael Sanderson, Dan Gable, John Smith, and perhaps soon Taylor—are rare. They don’t just win; they define eras. Only one program can truly benefit from that type of leadership at a time - and a lot of things need to fall in place in right way and at the right time (the OSU job was going to Scott/Perry/Espo before the Taylor bomb dropped, see what I did there Kyle) . For other programs, including Iowa, the goal is to stay as close to that rocketship as possible. In today’s landscape, a distant second is almost indistinguishable from fifth. Recruiting, RTC presence, and culture all need to work together to minimize the gap and maintain relevance.

Coaching Evolution:
Supporting Tom, Terry, Ryan, Telford, and D. Dennis doesn’t mean staying static. Iowa should strategically supplement the staff—or adjust a few positions—with experts who bring something new: technical innovation, freestyle knowledge, or modern athlete development. Potential additions include:
- Doug Schwab (top priority): Modernized version of Tom and Terry with proven success
- Brian Snyder, Robie, Pritzlaff, Dresser, Reader, Ben Askren: Freestyle and system-building expertise
- Bo Nickal, Jason Nolf, K. Snyder, Burroughs, Cary Kolat: Modern technique and developmental vision
- Tim Hartung, Strittmatter, Ironside, St. John, Mike Poeta, Brent Metcalf, Troy Nickerson, Cliff Moore, J. McGinness: Culture carriers and elite mentors
- No Dake.
This combination preserves Iowa’s culture while adapting to the sport today.

RTC: Men’s and Women’s:
Investing in both men’s and women’s RTCs is essential. Slippage on the men’s side impacts women’s wrestling, recruiting credibility, and brand reputation. RTCs help:
- Keep elite post-collegiate athletes connected
- Enhance recruiting pipelines
- Prepare athletes for international freestyle and senior competition

Learning from the UFC:
Iowa can also borrow lessons from MMA and UFC athletes—not to become an MMA gym, but to adapt training and athlete development. Key contributors could include:
- Henry Cejudo: Olympic gold, UFC champion, elite wrestling transitioning to MMA
- Aaron Pico: California HS phenom, representing modern talent pipelines
- Khabib Nurmagomedov, Arman Tsarukyan, Urijah Faber: Discipline, movement, and technical insights
These lessons cover conditioning, recovery, individualized planning, transitional grappling, and professional mindset, increasingly relevant in freestyle and NCAA wrestling.

Weight-Class Strategy - being that most of you are already talking next year (lol):
Immediate targeted focus on 133, 165 lbs and 197 lbs is necessary to stay competitive:
- 165 lbs prospects: Joey Blaze, Rademacher, Sealy, Routledge, Joy, Ryder Downey, Garvin, Scoles, Cholakyan, EJ Parco, (Riggins, D. Rhode)
- 197 lbs prospects: Rademacher, Mirasola (play with Oly RS with these 2), Shumate /Geog / Rogotzke
- Developing depth at these weights strengthens dual meet scoring, integrates elite HS talent, and prepares athletes for RTC and senior-level competition.
- 133 lbs prospects: Larkin, Sakamoto, B Davis, Ronnie Ramirez, Desmond, Fugitt, Nagao...

Broader Athletic Impact:
Wrestling success affects more than just the mat. Iowa’s dominance drives:
- TV placement and marketing visibility
- Recruiting for football and basketball
- Donor confidence and facility ROI
- Maintaining relevance protects Iowa’s position as Wrestletown, USA and as a flagship Big Ten program.
I like it Herk and very common thoughts that I have, I commend you
 
Jun 3, 2025
379
943
93
I like it Herk and very common thoughts that I have, I commend you
Of course you would:
 

Dean111!

Sophomore
Mar 12, 2003
102
145
43
No mention of the University of Iowa's womens wrestling program? An oversight, intentional, influential, historic metric, a contribution (role) in the evolution of the University of Iowa's athletic program?
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: DirtyJohns

HerkHawl

Sophomore
May 11, 2007
86
173
33
ChatGPT much... lots on Emdashes is a dead give away
Wow detective, nothing gets pass you!

I wrote the post myself. I used AI only to correct grammar and punctuation, make lists and make the writing more concise.

If using AI for basic editing is considered wrong or shameful, that seems at odds with most people's concerns about whether the program itself is adapting to modern dynamics.

The specific names, candidates, and examples I referenced—including the observations about the influence of UFC after recently attending an RFA event—were my own. They didn’t come from AI.

I'm happy to share the dated ChatGPT activity showing exactly how it was used: for cleanup and formatting, not for ideas or analysis.

If you want to compliment the post, I’m happy to take it at face value—without the suggestion that the ideas were beyond my ability (simply because they're beyond yours) and therefore must have come from ChatGPT.
 

98lberEating2Lunches

All-Conference
Feb 11, 2018
765
1,334
93
Wow detective, nothing gets pass you!

I wrote the post myself. I used AI only to correct grammar and punctuation, make lists and make the writing more concise.

If using AI for basic editing is considered wrong or shameful, that seems at odds with most people's concerns about whether the program itself is adapting to modern dynamics.

The specific names, candidates, and examples I referenced—including the observations about the influence of UFC after recently attending an RFA event—were my own. They didn’t come from AI.

I'm happy to share the dated ChatGPT activity showing exactly how it was used: for cleanup and formatting, not for ideas or analysis.

If you want to compliment the post, I’m happy to take it at face value—without the suggestion that the ideas were beyond my ability (simply because they're beyond yours) and therefore must have come from ChatGPT.
It's all good. Use of ChatGPT for tiding up is fine in my book. OP is great.
 
Last edited:

98lberEating2Lunches

All-Conference
Feb 11, 2018
765
1,334
93
And I dont see alot of emdashes. The writing tools on this site dont offer bullets to create lists....so I used dashes, not as emdashes, as an alternative
There are enough, and it's a rarely used punctuation. Formatting ordered bulleted list used to work for me on this site, but stop some time ago. I thought it was only me. My whole format bar us greyed out.
 

heldyhawk606

Senior
Oct 10, 2001
154
434
63
Since you mention both men's and women's RTCs - let's ask the question of if the current setup is even the correct setup? We've already seen the top female wrestler competing for the "men's" RTC - and another former women's team member reaching incredible heights while repping a local wrestling club. If all things are on the table, what is the proper setup to oversee the growth of BOTH senior level teams?
 

BringBackBradBanks

All-Conference
Jul 19, 2022
596
1,274
93
I’ll be honest I didn’t read a word of this. Let’s call it like it is, Spencer Lee saved us for about six or seven years (Brining in Desanto, being a leader, etc.) and now we are in serious trouble. Angelo is the only elite wrestler on the roster next season, and we aren’t having a Bo Bassett and Melvin in the pipeline. I guess we will try and by some portal guys, but that’s working about 25% of the time right now.
 
Last edited:

BrianLafevre

Senior
Jun 30, 2025
217
758
93
Iowa Wrestling is a dynasty. Period. But even dynasties face transitions. No program can stay on top forever—and that’s healthy for the sport. What matters most is preserving culture, integrity, and respect—and on that front, Iowa remains unmatched.

Culture:
The program’s culture is real. You see it celebrated with athletes like Kennedy, Arnold, Cruz, Ybarra, Jesurogas, Lee, Kem, Marinelli, Young, and Murin; in transfers like Woods, Lugo, Teske, Bailey, Williams, Franek, and the Voinovichs—who have all experienced other programs; and in incoming stars like Mocco, Bassett, Teasdale, DeLuca, etc.

Standards are high, and excellence is expected. Moments like Mo’s celebration after beating Merrill, Shumate, and Stout aren’t just fun—they reflect a shared commitment to the program’s values.

Iowa’s culture comes with tough love. The program sets clear expectations:
- Scrutinizing admissions (AJ, Downey)
- Making hard calls on departures (Gross, Mo, Teasdale)
- Holding athletes accountable for behavior (Austin and others)
Meanwhile, Iowa avoids major scandals—tradition of DUIs, sexual assaults, cover-ups, eligibility manipulations, or steroid problems—protecting its reputation and integrity.

Historical Advantage and Modern Challenges:
Iowa has long had a recruiting edge thanks to its fan base, tradition, and national reputation. Wrestlers grew up dreaming of competing in Iowa City. That legacy helped attract elite talent even before NIL deals and modern RTCs. But today, that advantage is no longer enough. Athletes can go elsewhere for more money, modern training, or alternative post-collegiate paths. Technique, athleticism, and conditioning now matter as much or than grit and toughness. To stay on top, Iowa must modernize while preserving culture.

Generational Coaches and Staying Close:
Generational coaches—like Cael Sanderson, Dan Gable, John Smith, and perhaps soon Taylor—are rare. They don’t just win; they define eras. Only one program can truly benefit from that type of leadership at a time - and a lot of things need to fall in place in right way and at the right time (the OSU job was going to Scott/Perry/Espo before the Taylor bomb dropped, see what I did there Kyle) . For other programs, including Iowa, the goal is to stay as close to that rocketship as possible. In today’s landscape, a distant second is almost indistinguishable from fifth. Recruiting, RTC presence, and culture all need to work together to minimize the gap and maintain relevance.

Coaching Evolution:
Supporting Tom, Terry, Ryan, Telford, and D. Dennis doesn’t mean staying static. Iowa should strategically supplement the staff—or adjust a few positions—with experts who bring something new: technical innovation, freestyle knowledge, or modern athlete development. Potential additions include:
- Doug Schwab (top priority): Modernized version of Tom and Terry with proven success
- Brian Snyder, Robie, Pritzlaff, Dresser, Reader, Ben Askren: Freestyle and system-building expertise
- Bo Nickal, Jason Nolf, K. Snyder, Burroughs, Cary Kolat: Modern technique and developmental vision
- Tim Hartung, Strittmatter, Ironside, St. John, Mike Poeta, Brent Metcalf, Troy Nickerson, Cliff Moore, J. McGinness: Culture carriers and elite mentors
- No Dake.
This combination preserves Iowa’s culture while adapting to the sport today.

RTC: Men’s and Women’s:
Investing in both men’s and women’s RTCs is essential. Slippage on the men’s side impacts women’s wrestling, recruiting credibility, and brand reputation. RTCs help:
- Keep elite post-collegiate athletes connected
- Enhance recruiting pipelines
- Prepare athletes for international freestyle and senior competition

Learning from the UFC:
Iowa can also borrow lessons from MMA and UFC athletes—not to become an MMA gym, but to adapt training and athlete development. Key contributors could include:
- Henry Cejudo: Olympic gold, UFC champion, elite wrestling transitioning to MMA
- Aaron Pico: California HS phenom, representing modern talent pipelines
- Khabib Nurmagomedov, Arman Tsarukyan, Urijah Faber: Discipline, movement, and technical insights
These lessons cover conditioning, recovery, individualized planning, transitional grappling, and professional mindset, increasingly relevant in freestyle and NCAA wrestling.

Weight-Class Strategy - being that most of you are already talking next year (lol):
Immediate targeted focus on 133, 165 lbs and 197 lbs is necessary to stay competitive:
- 165 lbs prospects: Joey Blaze, Sealy, Routledge, Joy, Ryder Downey, Garvin, Scoles, Cholakyan, EJ Parco, (Riggins, D. Rhode)
- 197 lbs prospects: Rademacher, Mirasola (play with Oly RS with these 2), Shumate /Geog / Rogotzke
- Developing depth at these weights strengthens dual meet scoring, integrates elite HS talent, and prepares athletes for RTC and senior-level competition.
- 133 lbs prospects: Larkin, Sakamoto, B Davis, Ronnie Ramirez, Desmond, Fugitt, Nagao...

Broader Athletic Impact:
Wrestling success affects more than just the mat. Iowa’s dominance drives:
- TV placement and marketing visibility
- Recruiting for football and basketball
- Donor confidence and facility ROI
- Maintaining relevance protects Iowa’s position as Wrestletown, USA and as a flagship Big Ten program.
What is this gibberish? Incoming stars like Basset and Teasdale?

Tim Hartung!!!??

A.I. is not the answer - nor is Doug Schwab as you suggested.
 

IRON HAWK

Senior
Nov 6, 2025
384
542
93
I SIR IRON HAWK can fix the OPs post if he wants next time!!! I have a GIFT!!!!


What is this gibberish? Incoming stars like Basset and Teasdale?

Tim Hartung!!!??

A.I. is not the answer - nor is Doug Schwab as you suggested.
The ANSWER I have ALREADY told you ALL!!!! It is $$$$$$ AND the ability to USE the $$$$$$ as you wish/need TWOOOO !!!!!
 

BringBackBradBanks

All-Conference
Jul 19, 2022
596
1,274
93
Everyone on this thread is lost but HerkHawl and me. We can’t wait for Brian Ferentz to lead the football team to historic offensive heights in 2026. And we both expect Todd Lickliter to use his innovative offensive prowess to take the men’s basketball team to new heights this March!!
 

Cedarfalls

Junior
Jul 4, 2025
64
239
33
Everyone on this thread is lost but HerkHawl and me. We can’t wait for Brian Ferentz to lead the football team to historic offensive heights in 2026. And we both expect Todd Lickliter to use his innovative offensive prowess to take the men’s basketball team to new heights this March!!
😂😂😂
 
  • Like
Reactions: SEKPoke

HerkHawl

Sophomore
May 11, 2007
86
173
33
How does TT lose a ross with so many dodgers on team! Hmmm

How does PSU lose on Bassett, Miller, Lee, Forrest, etc. How does Michigan miss on Metcalf? How does Purdue miss on Mendez? How does Illinois miss on Vincent Robinson? How does Ohio St miss on Byrd. How does Illinois miss on Davino? And on and on and on. And what makes this question less relevant is that there is a real answer now....MONEY. And OSU needs a star HWT now, Iowa needs one in 3 years. Desperation means someone needed Ross more.
 
  • Like
Reactions: T8KUDWN and sdvike

District 4

All-Conference
Feb 16, 2018
835
1,980
93
Iowa Wrestling is a dynasty. Period. But even dynasties face transitions. No program can stay on top forever—and that’s healthy for the sport. What matters most is preserving culture, integrity, and respect—and on that front, Iowa remains unmatched.

Culture:
The program’s culture is real. You see it celebrated with athletes like Kennedy, Arnold, Cruz, Ybarra, Jesurogas, Lee, Kem, Marinelli, Young, and Murin; in transfers like Woods, Lugo, Teske, Bailey, Williams, Franek, and the Voinovichs—who have all experienced other programs; and in incoming stars like Mocco, Bassett, Teasdale, DeLuca, etc.

Standards are high, and excellence is expected. Moments like Mo’s celebration after beating Merrill, Shumate, and Stout aren’t just fun—they reflect a shared commitment to the program’s values.

Iowa’s culture comes with tough love. The program sets clear expectations:
- Scrutinizing admissions (AJ, Downey)
- Making hard calls on departures (Gross, Mo, Teasdale)
- Holding athletes accountable for behavior (Austin and others)
Meanwhile, Iowa avoids major scandals—tradition of DUIs, sexual assaults, cover-ups, eligibility manipulations, or steroid problems—protecting its reputation and integrity.

Historical Advantage and Modern Challenges:
Iowa has long had a recruiting edge thanks to its fan base, tradition, and national reputation. Wrestlers grew up dreaming of competing in Iowa City. That legacy helped attract elite talent even before NIL deals and modern RTCs. But today, that advantage is no longer enough. Athletes can go elsewhere for more money, modern training, or alternative post-collegiate paths. Technique, athleticism, and conditioning now matter as much or than grit and toughness. To stay on top, Iowa must modernize while preserving culture.

Generational Coaches and Staying Close:
Generational coaches—like Cael Sanderson, Dan Gable, John Smith, and perhaps soon Taylor—are rare. They don’t just win; they define eras. Only one program can truly benefit from that type of leadership at a time - and a lot of things need to fall in place in right way and at the right time (the OSU job was going to Scott/Perry/Espo before the Taylor bomb dropped, see what I did there Kyle) . For other programs, including Iowa, the goal is to stay as close to that rocketship as possible. In today’s landscape, a distant second is almost indistinguishable from fifth. Recruiting, RTC presence, and culture all need to work together to minimize the gap and maintain relevance.

Coaching Evolution:
Supporting Tom, Terry, Ryan, Telford, and D. Dennis doesn’t mean staying static. Iowa should strategically supplement the staff—or adjust a few positions—with experts who bring something new: technical innovation, freestyle knowledge, or modern athlete development. Potential additions include:
- Doug Schwab (top priority): Modernized version of Tom and Terry with proven success
- Brian Snyder, Robie, Pritzlaff, Dresser, Reader, Ben Askren: Freestyle and system-building expertise
- Bo Nickal, Jason Nolf, K. Snyder, Burroughs, Cary Kolat: Modern technique and developmental vision
- Tim Hartung, Strittmatter, Ironside, St. John, Mike Poeta, Brent Metcalf, Troy Nickerson, Cliff Moore, J. McGinness: Culture carriers and elite mentors
- No Dake.
This combination preserves Iowa’s culture while adapting to the sport today.

RTC: Men’s and Women’s:
Investing in both men’s and women’s RTCs is essential. Slippage on the men’s side impacts women’s wrestling, recruiting credibility, and brand reputation. RTCs help:
- Keep elite post-collegiate athletes connected
- Enhance recruiting pipelines
- Prepare athletes for international freestyle and senior competition

Learning from the UFC:
Iowa can also borrow lessons from MMA and UFC athletes—not to become an MMA gym, but to adapt training and athlete development. Key contributors could include:
- Henry Cejudo: Olympic gold, UFC champion, elite wrestling transitioning to MMA
- Aaron Pico: California HS phenom, representing modern talent pipelines
- Khabib Nurmagomedov, Arman Tsarukyan, Urijah Faber: Discipline, movement, and technical insights
These lessons cover conditioning, recovery, individualized planning, transitional grappling, and professional mindset, increasingly relevant in freestyle and NCAA wrestling.

Weight-Class Strategy - being that most of you are already talking next year (lol):
Immediate targeted focus on 133, 165 lbs and 197 lbs is necessary to stay competitive:
- 165 lbs prospects: Joey Blaze, Sealy, Routledge, Joy, Ryder Downey, Garvin, Scoles, Cholakyan, EJ Parco, (Riggins, D. Rhode)
- 197 lbs prospects: Rademacher, Mirasola (play with Oly RS with these 2), Shumate /Geog / Rogotzke
- Developing depth at these weights strengthens dual meet scoring, integrates elite HS talent, and prepares athletes for RTC and senior-level competition.
- 133 lbs prospects: Larkin, Sakamoto, B Davis, Ronnie Ramirez, Desmond, Fugitt, Nagao...

Broader Athletic Impact:
Wrestling success affects more than just the mat. Iowa’s dominance drives:
- TV placement and marketing visibility
- Recruiting for football and basketball
- Donor confidence and facility ROI
- Maintaining relevance protects Iowa’s position as Wrestletown, USA and as a flagship Big Ten progra
 

District 4

All-Conference
Feb 16, 2018
835
1,980
93
Wow detective, nothing gets pass you!

I wrote the post myself. I used AI only to correct grammar and punctuation, make lists and make the writing more concise.

If using AI for basic editing is considered wrong or shameful, that seems at odds with most people's concerns about whether the program itself is adapting to modern dynamics.

The specific names, candidates, and examples I referenced—including the observations about the influence of UFC after recently attending an RFA event—were my own. They didn’t come from AI.

I'm happy to share the dated ChatGPT activity showing exactly how it was used: for cleanup and formatting, not for ideas or analysis.

If you want to compliment the post, I’m happy to take it at face value—without the suggestion that the ideas were beyond my ability (simply because they're beyond yours) and therefore must have come from ChatGPT.
I didn’t read past "incoming stars" like Bassett and Teasdale. Yikes.
All i read was DENIAL
 
  • Haha
Reactions: WexfordWarrior

98lberEating2Lunches

All-Conference
Feb 11, 2018
765
1,334
93
I see the problem with Iowa wrestling. I don't know what an Emdash is. Neither do the Brands.
Think of it as a cousin to the hyphen and brother of the endash.

(Tom and Terrry, it's a dash the width of the letter 'm'. I trust you can figure out endash now, but if you can't, get back to me.)
 
  • Like
Reactions: Ktrain1969