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My two cents...

125 - Nico gets it done this year, but not this weekend.
133 - Conaway gets 4th place, about where he ends up at the nationals.
141 - Jimmy needs to win his first match to get the confidence for his ticket. Its been awhile since he’s looked good and it will probably be another year.
149 - Who would have thought a year ago that Tshirt would be a 3 seed? I think Zane wins it, but MUCH more difficult than expected against a better field that has shown so far this season, including a Sorensen that will be content to wait this one out on a frustrated Zane. Regardless of a possible upset, Zane wins it all in 2 weeks.
157 - I can’t believe that IMar was 100% in their first match and I’m sure that IMar would be the last to admit his true condition. Regardless of the outcome, the big match will happen in 2 weeks.
165 - Morelli hasn’t shown much offense and staying close only gives hope, but I’m not very hopeful.
174 - I think this is a very tough field. Bo will win or loose the championship on ONE big move.
184 - MM punches his ticket if his body holds out. I think that’s all we can hope for at this time.
197 - Smack is finally 100% healthy this year and the great results will continue for our undefeated champ.
Hwt - Nevillis needs JUST 2 wins agains some tough dudes to move on. If all is true that he has progressed a lot since his first appearance 4 weeks ago, I think that makes 8.

Penn State's future: Nick Suriano vs Spencer Lee - Super 32 Finals

If you haven't watched this match, you will immensely enjoy it. It looks like a college 125 match... with elites wrestling against each other. The heavy hand fighting is indicative of a great college match. Enjoy... as I did again, Willie did and the wrestling community did.

http://www.flowrestling.org/video/723220-113-1so-nick-suriano-nj-vs-2fr-spencer-lee-pa

Coaches Show 3-2-16

Cael described the team as "a little more focused, a little more intense," and said the energy level was high. Ironhead asked about the guys who are helping the starters get ready for Big Tens and nationals. He singled (well...doubled?) out Vincenzo Joseph ("looking really good") and Anthony Cassar, who is doing well at freestyle and NLWC practices He said the backup guys have more energy now too, because they know their time is coming. Said the coaches mainly work on the mental game at this point. It's their job to bring energy and passion to practices, and make sure the wrestlers are "feeling good,..feeling confident" going into the tournament. (Apparently, the coaches' efforts to have the team feeling good and confident don't extend to their choices of music played at practice. "A lot of repeat music...obnoxious stuff" with a particular number by Adele mentioned as a prime offender, and blamed on Cunningham.)

Cael mentioned that all 10 wrestlers are seeded, but noted that three will have to wrestle above their seeds to qualify automatically for nationals. He said he thought Gulibon and Morelli should make it in on a wild card bid, if necessary, but that we don't want it to come down to that.

On Gulibon: "You get what you earn. He's gotta wrestle and win some matches. He's gotta have that fighting spirit, enjoying the battle. He's been looking good; good enough to get in there and win it. We're going to need points from him at nationals."

On Morelli: "He's had some nice wins over some decent guys, and close matches with some really good guys. It's all up to him."

On Nevills: "He looks a whole lot better today than he did the week going into the Lehigh match. He has steadily gotten stronger, steadily gotten better, and he moves well. He's a winner, mentally tough." He said they've been trying to push him hard, then rest him, so that he's not worn down for the tournaments.

On McCutcheon: "He's not going to be wearing a brace. He's been moving a lot better, feeling a lot better without it."

He said he has changed over the years since his early days coaching at Iowa State. He used to hope the opposing teams would lose matches or suffer upsets, but that now he has learned not to worry too much about what the other guy is doing. "Focus on your team; if the other guy does well, we have to go out there and do better." When asked how the coaches decide which coaches sit in a wrestler's corner, said he'll usually take the more inexperienced kids, or that some of the kids might connect better with one coach than another, and that would help make the decision. Said at the Scuffle, he was in the corner for a few losses, so....."who doesn't want to sit in Zain's corner or Nolf's corner?"

On scouting individual opponents: "We're aware of the tendencies of our opponent. The better the opponent, the more you're aware." Said he doesn't watch as much film as Cody and Casey do. "We do want to know 'What's their attack?'...'Does he have a turn we need to be aware of?' ", but he's more concerned with having our guys continue to improve in all areas "and make them adjust to us. If you're a little bit outmanned, you need more of a plan."

Frank Molinaro was then interviewed. Said these guys are "really special kids, all of 'em. They're a different level of maturity. We have kids who are freshmen who live their lives like adults." Mentioned Nolf and Zain who would do anything the coaches asked them to do. Nolf is willing to make himself vulnerable in practice. Most wrestlers don't like to change much during the season; he changes day-to-day. "He tries to get me tired; I gotta get physical with him. He gets better every week. I gotta survive somehow." With Zain, "I have to warm up an extra 30 minutes and cool down an extra 20, or I won't be able to pick up my son later." Said "nobody wants to lose...even in practice."

As for himself, he was happy to get the chance last minute to wrestle in the Pan Am Games, taking the gold against a guy who had beaten him 10-0 a couple years ago ("I didn't even know what happened."). Said he's mainly working on improving his conditioning and sharpening his nutrition. "There's still a lot left for me."

SR/BHF

Penn State's match notes for B1G Championships (Morelli at 165)

PSU releases its match notes for this weekend's Big Ten tourney and it's Geno Morelli who is listed at 165 pounds. Media day later today, but here's the press release, courtesy of SID Pat Donghia\

-–

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa.; February 24, 2016 -- The Penn State Nittany Lion wrestling team (16-0, 9-0 B1G) will take part in the 2016 Big Ten Wrestling Championships on March 5-6 at the University of Iowa in Iowa City. Action on Saturday, March 5, begins with at 11 a.m. Eastern, with a 7 p.m. Eastern session to follow. Sunday’s session begins at 1 p.m. Eastern. Big Ten Pre seeds come out on Monday, Feb. 29, post-press.

The Nittany Lions head to the Big Ten Championships looking for their fifth title in the last six years. Penn State won four Big Ten titles in a row from 2011 through 2014. Head coach Cael Sanderson’s crew is coming off an historic regular season. Penn State went 16-0 overall, 9-0 in Big Ten duals, sharing the conference regular season crown with Iowa. The team won its sixth straight Southern Scuffle title, claimed a share of its third Big Ten Regular Season (dual meet) title and won the 2016 NWCA National Dual Championship with a 29-18 win over Oklahoma State on Sunday, Feb. 21.

Head coach Cael Sanderson’s line-up features a blend of experience and youth. Five returning All-Americans dot the Nittany Lion line-up and four Nittany Lions are ranked No. 1 nationally at their weights. Two of those top-ranked Lions are making their Big Ten Championship debuts, with a total of four Lions wrestling in their first B1G tournaments.

Senior Nico Megaludis will enter his final Big Ten tournament with a 24-2 overall record at 125. Megaludis is a three-time All-American who has a 9-4 all-time mark in the Big Ten tournament. Megaludis is ranked No. 4 by InterMat and No. 4 in the final NCAA Coaches Poll. He has a No. 5 RPI as well. Classmate Jordan Conaway also heads into his final Big Ten tourney. Conaway, also a returning All-American, is 22-3 overall at 133 with a 5-3 mark in Big Ten Championship action. He is ranked No. 5 by InterMat, No. 5 in the Coaches Poll and has a No. 3 RPI. Junior All-American Jimmy Gulibon is 10-8 at 141 and is ranked No. 21 in the final coaches poll. Gulibon enters the Big Ten tournament with a 5-5 all-time record at the event as well.

Sophomore All-American Zain Retherford will carry a 25-0 record at 149 into his second Big Ten Championships. Retherford is ranked No. 1 in the coaches poll, has the No. 1 RPI and ranked No. 1 by InterMat. Red-shirt freshman Jason Nolf carries a 26-0 mark at 157 into his first Big Ten Championship. Nolf is ranked No. 1 by the coaches, No. 1 by InterMat and has the No. 3 RPI. Junior Geno Morelli will head to his first Big Ten Championship with a 17-7 overall record at 165 and the nation’s No. 9 RPI. Red-shirt freshman Bo Nickal heads to his first Big Ten Championship with a 26-1 mark at 174. Nickal is ranked No. 1 in the final coaches ranking, No. 1 by InterMat and has the No. 2 RPI.

Sophomore Matt McCutcheon has a 14-4 mark at 184 and is ranked No. 11 in the final coaches poll and No. 12 by InterMat. McCutcheon has the nation’s No. 12 RPI. Senior Morgan McIntosh is a two-time All-American and heads to Iowa City with a 24-0 record at 197. McIntosh is ranked No. 1 by the nation’s coaches, No. 1 by InterMat and has the top RPI in the country as well. Red shirt freshman Nick Nevills will continue his late-season comeback by making an appearance in his first Big Ten Championship. Nevills is 5-1 at 285 but did not wrestle enough matches to qualify for either a coaches ranking or RPI. Nevills is ranked No. 16 by InterMat.

The Big Ten received 71 total automatic qualifiers to the 2016 NCAA Championships: seven at 125, nine at 133, seven at 141, six at 149, seven at 157, six at 165, nine at 174, seven at 184, six at 197 and seven at 285.

The Nittany Lions head to New York City and one of the world’s most venerable venues for the 2016 NCAA Wrestling Championships. The three-day event takes place in Madison Square Garden on March 17-19. Action begins on Thursday, March 17, with session one at 11 a.m. Eastern. The full event airs on the ESPN family of networks.


#1 PENN STATE NITTANY LIONS (16-0, 9-0 B1G)
WT NAME EL HT/HS REC

125 #4 Nico Megaludis Sr. Murrysville, Pa./Franklin Regional 24-2

9-4 All-Time in B1G Tournament / #4 InterMat / #5 RPI


133 #5 Jordan Conaway Sr. Abbottstown, Pa./New Oxford 22-3

5-3 All-Time in B1G Tournament / #5 InterMat / #3 RPI


141 #21 Jimmy Gulibon Jr. Latrobe, Pa./Derry 10-8

5-5 All-Time in B1G Tournament / NR InterMat / NR RPI


149 #1 Zain Retherford So. Benton, Pa./Benton 25-0

3-1 All-Time in B1G Tournament / #1 InterMat / #1 RPI


157 #1 Jason Nolf Fr. Yatesboro, Pa./Kittanning 26-0

0-0 All-Time in B1G Tournament / #1 InterMat / #3 RPI


165 Geno Morelli Jr. DuBois, Pa./DuBois 17-7

0-0 All-Time in B1G Tournament / NR InterMat / #9 RPI


174 #1 Bo Nickal Fr. Allen, Texas/Allen 26-1

0-0 All-Time in B1G Tournament / #1 InterMat / #2 RPI


184 #11 Matt McCutcheon So. Apollo, Pa./Kiski Area 14-4

3-1 All-Time in B1G Tournament / #7 InterMat / #12 RPI


197 #1 Morgan McIntosh Sr. Santa Ana, Calif./Calvary Chapel 24-0

7-3 All-Time in B1G Tournament / #1 InterMat / #1 RPI

2015 Big Ten Champion (197)


285 Nick Nevills Fr. Clovis, Calif./Clovis 5-1

0-0 All-Time in B1G Tournament / #16 InterMat / NR RPI


All Individual Rankings are Coaches Poll as of 2/25/16

Team ranking is InterMat Tournament Power Index (TPI) as of 2/23/16

InterMat ranking listed is final regular season as of 2/23/16

Mark Hall @MN State Tournament

I'm up here in St. Paul for the MN State Tournament and figured I'd try to give ya'll some updates on the future Nittany Lion. Hall helped his Apple Valley Eagles win their 6th State title while he was competing. Today, he begins his quest for a record 6th State Title (Nobody has ever won 6, very few have ever won 5). Some in MN have the idea that since he repeated 7th grade from Kentucky to MN that this is tainted, but we have the opportunity to see some real history on Saturday from one of the best to ever do it in MN.

Some highlights from his team campaign:
1. He got a takedown in under 5 seconds. He's out here trying to set records left and right.
2. He bumped up to 182 and got a match against MN stud recruit Lucas Jeske (pretty sure he was a Fargo Runner-Up, this summer). He pinned Jeske. Hall's pin on a St. Michael stud cost STMA a team point. STMA and Valley have battled for AAA supremacy in MN in recent years. Many get after Valley for having move-ins and transfers, but STMA has also had their fair share, lately.

Today and tomorrow are the individual tournament. I will try to update this after his first two matches, tonight/tomorrow morning.

Regarding the Silvis book delivery stunt:

Expectations of Membership. In exercising the responsibilities of trusteeship, the Board of Trustees is guided by the expectations of membership, each of which is equally important:
.......
13. Extend goodwill to one another and to all members of the University community.

Seems pretty clear that Silvis' stunt violated this section of the Standing Order. This is not an extension of goodwill by Silvis, it is a breach of that rule. He did it to antagonize his fellow board members and for no other reason. It was an "in your face" move. He could have privately sent that book to anyone he wished. As others have noted, this may actually harm the University, since it is a promotion of the very false narrative over which Spanier is suing the University.

Note that the Standing Order says each of these 13 Expectations is equally important. Thus, by the terms of the standing orders of the University (which have been waved in the faces of our Trustees ever since we first got decent ones, in 2012) Paul Silvis has committed, at least, a breach of the Expectations equivalent to a breach of these other, equivalent Expectations:

1. Understand and support the University's mission, vision, and values
2. Act in good faith at all times and in the best interests of the University in a non-partisan manner
8. Disclose promptly and fully any potential or actual conflicts of interest, and personally maintain exemplary ethical standards;
10. Maintain confidentiality without exception

So, is it now appropriate for the Alumni Trustees to deliver every Bill Keisling column, every story about Mark Dambly testifying before a public corruption GJ in Allentown, and every story about Dambly having forgotten about his jail time, and every piece of written dirt and slime about any of the OG and their recent clone replacements to the full board, regardless of truth?

If Expectation 13 is out the window, are all of them out the window? Can everyone commence talking about confidential matters? Can they all commence openly soliciting profitable business deals for themselves and their companies and their friends' and families' companies from the University? As opposed to secretly?

By the way, are the values referenced in Expectation 1 above the same "Penn State Values" E. Barron told us about a few weeks ago? I forget, do they include making a public promise then doing nothing in furtherance of it and not explaining it?

Is this what a PSU trustee should be doing?

You know the book by Ron Smith, Wounded Lions Joe Paterno, Jerry Sandusky, and the Crises in Penn State Athletics A rogue program, an iconic coach, and an unspeakable tragedy?

Well, word is Paul Silvis brought 20 copies of Ron Smith's book to the BOT meeting and handed them out. Here is a trustee handing out a book that slanders the very institution he is supposed to be defending....

Dan Bernstein trying to shame Penn State into denouncing Paterno statue

@Dan_Bernstein just spent 40 minutes of air-time sh!tting all over PSU, JoeBots, Anthony Lubrano and even Sandy Barbour and Eric Barron. The audio will be available tomorrow, but the most interesting part: (edit) Dan said some people from the Board of Trustees meetings reached out to him and said something to the effect of, "it's everything you think but 10 times worse."

Bernstein said these former trustees stepped down or quit, and they had a particular disdain for Anthony @lubrano, whom he called out by name.

Again, the audio will be available tomorrow. Until then, here's Bernstein's column (no link) attempting to shame PSU into denouncing the Paterno statue. This is the blueprint of what our leadership will have to overcome when they choose to honor Joe Paterno.

Bernstein: Penn State, Paternos Still Insulting Victims

February 23, 2016 3:38 PM
By Dan Bernstein

By not decrying it, they tacitly endorse it, this latest re-victimization of at least 32 boys whose rape at the hands of Jerry Sandusky was facilitated by Joe Paterno and the Penn State football program.

Neither the university nor the family of the shamed former head coach offered comment when asked by Philly.com about the construction of two new statues of Paterno and the plan by the artists to send one of them on a national tour. This re-imagined version of the mothballed original has an upraised clenched fist instead of a “number one” sign, a defiant gesture that tells those boys — now men — how little they continue to matter in the dark, sick heart of the Paterno cult.

The two sculptors casting the replicas told the website that one will be given to the Paterno family, and the other will be available “for all the fans and the people that bleed blue and white” so that the image is “making a statement.”

Paterno’s own sworn testimony and later statements to investigators said it all, however, that for years he knowingly allowed a child predator to use Penn State football as part of a personal farm for cultivating new victims. But reality has not deterred the JoeBots from creating alternate worlds in which this never happened, and none of this was said.

The builders of the new statue will make money indeed, if they charge a nominal fee for these zombies to line up for pictures with their fallen icon. These people are compelled to feed their insatiable desire to be defined essentially by the success of a college football team. Their own self-worth is so much a function of Penn State and Paterno that they have created complicated personal fantasy worlds in which everything can be as it once was.

To date, there are 32 victims and counting, with $93 million in settlements paid out by the school and counting. But that is not as important to these people as revising Paterno’s history to ease their own pain, trying to make themselves feel whole again.

When the original was first taken down from its place outside Beaver Stadium, the university correctly assessed that it would represent for victims “a recurring wound” and would be “a source of division and an obstacle to healing.” It was and is the obvious right thing.

There was pushback at the time, though, and the ensuing years have only brought a stronger desire to restore it, as the JoeBots have coalesced outside the school and are still rotting it from within. A Quinnipiac poll a year ago found that 59 percent of Pennsylvania residents wanted the statue put back, with strong support across gender and age groups.

The new Penn State administration has already softened the school’s stance. They’ve realized that their constituency is motivated deeply and in twisted enough fashion to ignore the obvious message to victims raped on their campus, in their football building, over many years by a beloved, trusted coach. Of course that coach was allowed unfettered access to children and facilities long after many, including Paterno, were well aware of his criminal behavior.

Athletic Director Sandy Barbour kept open the possibility that Penn State would reinstall the statue, telling USA Today, “if, and or when there comes a time, it will be in good shape.” President Eric Barron is also reconsidering all that stuff his predecessor said about any obstacles or recurring wounds, saying last year, “A decision is not imminent. I will follow a process of deliberation and discussion that will take time.”

That’s why the school is now choosing silence when asked about the new version and the planned traveling roadshow. This is fine with them now, until we hear otherwise.

Same goes for members of the Paterno family, who have seen their patriarch’s own admissions under oath change their futures irreparably. They hire lawyers and PR consultants and fan the flames amid the worshipful lost souls, but there’s no going back. They won’t comment either, because they have to embrace any help with imaging, those 32 or more victims be damned.

They’d be better off instead heeding the words of son Jay Paterno near the end of the award-winning documentary film Happy Valley. Of the family name, he says, “It used to mean one thing, now it means something else.”

The sooner that truth is actually recognized, the better. Instead, we get continued efforts to lionize a man who spent years knowing he was doing less than everything in his power to protect innocent children from a monster. Such things must continue to be called out and shouted down by those who actually care.

32 victims. $93 million. 0 statues.

Dan Bernstein is senior columnist on CBS Chicago and co-host of “Boers & Bernstein” on Chicago’s 670 The Score.

SIAP: Ryan Bagwell racked up another win in the fight for the truth--

this time he got an order from the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia regarding Frank Fina's emails.

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Not sure what the significance of the 2013 dates is, but there is likely some good stuff there if it is a Frank Fina email and they want to keep it hidden. Will be interesting to see if Seth Williams appeals this order.



.

Didn't see a recap of Better Call Saul

I felt it was a great episode. I anticipated that the Pryce issue would cause the start of a bigger relationship between Saul and Mike. Loved Saul's brother taking the air out of the room and Saul regaining his footing after Kim gives him a squeeze on the leg.

Next up? Saul LOVED defending Pryce and is slipping. He is going to be caught between corporate and snake oil lawyer. As such, he's going to invent "Saul" so that Jimmy, big time lawyer, and Saul the sleazy/fun lawyer. So he'll develop two identities; Jimmy and Saul. As some point, Jimmy (of course) will screw up his job and his relationship. He's slippin Jimmy. But, he will be successful, the the point his brother can only dream about.

Great character development.
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