Jacarra Winchester with the 7-2 win over her Indian opponent!
We Are!!!!Nick Lee wins again. I’ve never seen an opponent down by just one point be so incredibly gassed.
Yeah…he tried to steal that with his lunger breaks. He looked super quick when he wanted to be. Impressed with Nick’s composure at the end there.I think Lee’s opponent is currently in college majoring in acting….currently working on the play “I need a Lunger”
UM guys have taken large jumps too. Mason Parris as a prime example. They have figured it out too.That's a problem Russia is used to having. That's good news for USA
Thank you sir. So the arena link is working for you???Sebastian Rivera will follow Winchester on Mat D.
UWW issued an explanation—Iran must’ve been hot.My first thought was that it would stand as well. But I used Yianni as an example when it happened and it's still useful to demonstrate why it should be DT's points.
Yianni has amazing feel and if someone is in on his legs he'll wait for the exact moment before he's about to lose the position and try to initiate the turn himself, or at least appear to initiate the turn. His matches are always stopped to figure out who scored, usually when it's next to impossible to tell which wrestler initiated first.
I don't have the rulebook in front of me but I've always felt that if you're the wrestler in the defensive position there, it should be especially clear that you didn't merely jump into the driver's seat of a ride you had no choice in taking.
Sometimes it's clear, such as when the offensive wrestler loses their hold midway through, a strong indication that they didn't mean to take that ride.
Now look at the replay: DT never loses the hold, nor did he change direction. He did what he meant to do.
Where it's difficult to ascertain which wrestler initiated first, I think ties should "go to the runner," i.e., the offensive wrestler.
In the world of touch falls, that's a pin when Yazdani releases the hold and Taylor pushes back thru with his legs.