You've made that assertion several times. It's wrong, but it is heard.I guess, but I think you're just seeing what you want to at this point.
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You've made that assertion several times. It's wrong, but it is heard.I guess, but I think you're just seeing what you want to at this point.
Dangit, I thought I was done--but jousting is so addictive.You've made that assertion several times. It's wrong, but it is heard.![]()
It has nothing to do with wrestling, and everything to do with the USOC's procedures for arbitrating decisions such as this.Pretty much agree with you completely here.
A question on 1:
Has a football, basketball, hockey, soccer or baseball game ever been decided by arbitration? Maybe so--but I'm unaware. Why wrestling? Serious question--not sour grapes.
That's a pretty good point. I'm not very tuned in to that machine--but it sounds like a dubious enterprise. I won't absolve Koll of his role in it, however--just because it's legal doesn't make it less slimy.It has nothing to do with wrestling, and everything to do with the USOC's procedures for arbitrating decisions such as this.
Koll and his band of Cornell lawyers followed an established procedure for this protest. Take your concerns to the USOC.
So Koll was of the opinion that the challenge should not have been accepted according to the rules, thereby costing his wrestler the match. The arbitrator agreed with him after Koll followed the process specified by the USOC, thereby reversing the loss. The process is there for *exactly* this reason.That's a pretty good point. I'm not very tuned in to that machine--but it sounds like a dubious enterprise. I won't absolve Koll of his role in it, however--just because it's legal doesn't make it less slimy.
I understand both what you are saying, and why probably most people wouldn't agree with me--but I think my answer is still yes. Litigation is always an option--but I admire those that fight the urge to use it more than most others.So Koll was of the opinion that the challenge should not have been accepted according to the rules, thereby costing his wrestler the match. The arbitrator agreed with him after Koll followed the process specified by the USOC, thereby reversing the loss. The process is there for *exactly* this reason.
And Koll is slimy for following the designated process?
Which attorneys will Koll have in Dake’s corner tomorrow vs Dieringer ?
Same lawyers Koll retained for the Yanni Appeal ?
Will they have a table in the corner for laptops, briefcases and legal note pads ?
Generalizations are never good.Last one - Q: What do you call 25 attorneys buried up to their chins in cement?
A: Not enough cement.
Breaking News: Attorney Alan Dirt-Show-Its (aka Dershowitz) will be sitting in Koll's corner for the upcoming Dake and Yianni matches.
He has promised to interrupt the matches whenever necessary to share a long rambling rant that Dake and Yianni are simply exercising forms of free speech when they stall, use hands-to-the-face, lock fingers, or grab an opponent's singlet.
If that approach doesn't work, he has vowed to sue on behalf of his clients and, if required, to claim that the referee's decisions are patently anti-Israel.
COACH?!? Is this really you??But I wasn't.. taylor was not (and still is not) the best wrestler in the USA and certainly not the world (that honor belongs to sadulaev). As for your girlfriend, I have no doubt that she would likely be one of my biggest fans.
I once had a wrestler who placed third at a tournament with only two entrants total (including himself). True story.
Woah, I am not saying Taylor is bad AT ALL. On the contrary he is an absolute hammer and standout guy. My comments were simply that he's 4th best in the usa which some took offense to.
On the Cornell comment I am by no means a fan of their program and certainly not dake and koll (read my comment on the dake/dieringer thread). I am happy that this match is going to be re-wrestled because i personally think the officials botched it when they gave the win to Zain. No bias in that thinking and i am 100% ok with winning the spot and repping the USA again
The irony of bringing up hands to the face with Yianni when he's set to wrestle Zain, the man who personally inspired the hands to the face rules emphasis. Zain and dean heil are the only two wrestlers in recent memory who single handedly lead to rule changes because of the way they competed.
Do you argue that Taylor had the best year of any Male American? If you do, then that makes you an idiot.
Americans saw it, the world saw it, hopefully you were paying attention too. DT had an EPIC year and fully deserved UWW WOY award. Does this make him the best American? No, but by god he earned that award.
Your memory is curious at best.The irony of bringing up hands to the face with Yianni when he's set to wrestle Zain, the man who personally inspired the hands to the face rules emphasis. Zain and dean heil are the only two wrestlers in recent memory who single handedly lead to rule changes because of the way they competed.
Say what? Zain was the receiver of hands to the face. He's literally been slapped numerous times.The irony of bringing up hands to the face with Yianni when he's set to wrestle Zain, the man who personally inspired the hands to the face rules emphasis. Zain and dean heil are the only two wrestlers in recent memory who single handedly lead to rule changes because of the way they competed.
I'm sorry, but this might be one of the most ridiculous things I've seen on here. People may like this sport because it's hard, but they certainly don't like it because it's "not fair." What absolute drivel. You might as well live by the motto "Nothing should be better than it is right now!" It's now completely clear that you're just grasping at straws to try to justify an opinion you know isn't right because of your fandom of Zain, which is fine if you admit it. But don't try to couch that homerism in some pseudo-intellectual stuff about how "actually it's better if our sport isn't fair." The lack of ambition and desire for things to be better is completely antithetical to the character of the sport.Dangit, I thought I was done--but jousting is so addictive.
Another thing I don't like about this is the whole role model thing. People like this sport, in particular because it's so hard, and often enough, not fair. There's a life lesson there that resonates with a lot of people--myself included. Take your lumps, whether you deserve or not--apply passion (as Zain so elquently said in the post quoted above)--keep working. I give Yianni a lot of deference in this afair--but Koll not so. This process tells future competitors you can whine your way out of that dynamic. I don't like it. @js8793, most in "your" camp espouse this sanctimonious deference to fairness--but it just rings a tad bit hollow to me. Let's keep wrestling on the dang mat and out of lawyerly hands (no offense tikk).
Ok, come on now. Don't play dumb about it. I love Zain. He's one of my all-time favorite PSU wrestlers, but he was the most notorious hands to the face guy in college wrestling for years. In fact, one of the major talking points during his world team run in 2017 was that he needed to tone down the hands to the face because it will get called in freestyle, like it did against Oliver at the open. Pico almost started his MMA career early at junior trials when he wrestled Zain because Zain's hand was permanently in his face. It's not a moral failure on his part. The rules allowed him to do it and when they didn't in freestyle, he toned it down. But don't act like he wasn't that guy.Say what? Zain was the receiver of hands to the face. He's literally been slapped numerous times.
You're drawing false equivalencies. The equivalent in baseball wouldn't be a strike 3 call. It would be the umpires forgetting to record the 3rd out, giving the team an extra opportunity when the game should be over, and they win. Then the courts say "no the game was already over." Nothing about this is subjective like you all try to make it out to be. The match was over with Yianni winning. Then, after the match, the rules were not followed and the result was flipped. The courts just negated the post match result flip.I also posted in another forum this.
I'm good with the best wrestler representing the USA. Yianni is other wordly... But I'm not fine with courts making the decidion. This sucks that a court several months later decides the winner. Should have been determined right there ...that day. If it was opposite and Zain petitioned courts...I'd feel the same way. Whatever it takes.....GET the courts out of sports.
Imagine it happening during game 7 of the World Series of a strike 3 call that was actually a ball...or if your Canadian..the last match for the Canadian Curling Championship.
Imagine this...wrestler A wins the National Championship and puts his team ahead by 2 points, which is all it takes to win the Team National Championships. Wrestler B petitions the courts and 2 months later they negate the match for whatever reason (right or wrong). Now we don't have a National Champion at a weight and no team champion yet....2 Months later. Now both wrestlers are now walking around 20 pounds over weight and have to start cutting. Since both wrestler A and wrestler B need time heal (weight issue) and both want to wrestle in Spain as a warm up....we set the wrestle off for mid August. For the March National Championship team and individual at that weight. Sounds AWESOME!![]()
You will have to forgive Hotshoe. He has never subscribed to Flo so he undoubtedly missed many of the watermelon killer's matchesOk, come on now. Don't play dumb about it. I love Zain. He's one of my all-time favorite PSU wrestlers, but he was the most notorious hands to the face guy in college wrestling for years. In fact, one of the major talking points during his world team run in 2017 was that he needed to tone down the hands to the face because it will get called in freestyle, like it did against Oliver at the open. Pico almost started his MMA career early at junior trials when he wrestled Zain because Zain's hand was permanently in his face. It's not a moral failure on his part. The rules allowed him to do it and when they didn't in freestyle, he toned it down. But don't act like he wasn't that guy.
I never said I don't want things better--so don't say I did. I'm saying typically, people at least play lip service to sports as giving good life lessons. Maybe you have had a completely fair life at large--if so--congrats! Most of us don't have that luxury--and to many parents who enroll their kids in sports--the goal is to expose them to the tough lessons of life in a somewhat protected and regulated environment. I know I do. I think settling a game in a courtroom setting is a gigantic buzzkill, and is structurally worse than the occasional injustice. Sorry I don't agree with you, but that's is how I feel. If you need examples of parents who agree with me--scroll through Greg Martin's twitter feed.I'm sorry, but this might be one of the most ridiculous things I've seen on here. People may like this sport because it's hard, but they certainly don't like it because it's "not fair." What absolute drivel. You might as well live by the motto "Nothing should be better than it is right now!" It's now completely clear that you're just grasping at straws to try to justify an opinion you know isn't right because of your fandom of Zain, which is fine if you admit it. But don't try to couch that homerism in some pseudo-intellectual stuff about how "actually it's better if our sport isn't fair." The lack of ambition and desire for things to be better is completely antithetical to the character of the sport.
Ok, come on now. Don't play dumb about it. I love Zain. He's one of my all-time favorite PSU wrestlers, but he was the most notorious hands to the face guy in college wrestling for years. In fact, one of the major talking points during his world team run in 2017 was that he needed to tone down the hands to the face because it will get called in freestyle, like it did against Oliver at the open. Pico almost started his MMA career early at junior trials when he wrestled Zain because Zain's hand was permanently in his face. It's not a moral failure on his part. The rules allowed him to do it and when they didn't in freestyle, he toned it down. But don't act like he wasn't that guy.
You will have to forgive Hotshoe. He has never subscribed to Flo so he undoubtedly missed many of the watermelon killer's matches
Jesse Delgado? Retreating off the edge and riding below the waist. However, you have different tiers for world champions so continue on.The irony of bringing up hands to the face with Yianni when he's set to wrestle Zain, the man who personally inspired the hands to the face rules emphasis. Zain and dean heil are the only two wrestlers in recent memory who single handedly lead to rule changes because of the way they competed.
Goalpost moving. What you're saying was not the assertion.Ok, come on now. Don't play dumb about it. I love Zain. He's one of my all-time favorite PSU wrestlers, but he was the most notorious hands to the face guy in college wrestling for years. In fact, one of the major talking points during his world team run in 2017 was that he needed to tone down the hands to the face because it will get called in freestyle, like it did against Oliver at the open. Pico almost started his MMA career early at junior trials when he wrestled Zain because Zain's hand was permanently in his face. It's not a moral failure on his part. The rules allowed him to do it and when they didn't in freestyle, he toned it down. But don't act like he wasn't that guy.
Zain's college career remains one of the great mysteries of life for non-subscribers, up there with the Nazca Lines.No one needed Flo to follow Zain's college career closely.
#youaretryingtoohard
#yourejustupsettheywereyourfatherinlawswatermelons
That is not an accurate analogy.You're drawing false equivalencies. The equivalent in baseball wouldn't be a strike 3 call. It would be the umpires forgetting to record the 3rd out, giving the team an extra opportunity when the game should be over, and they win. Then the courts say "no the game was already over." Nothing about this is subjective like you all try to make it out to be. The match was over with Yianni winning. Then, after the match, the rules were not followed and the result was flipped. The courts just negated the post match result flip.
+1 for the gifThe emphasis on hands-to-the-face (aka The Zain Rule) is one of the better salt-in-the-wound cases in NCAA wrestling history.
For years, Zain was permitted to post on the head, push it, jam it, turn it every-which-way-including-loose, and thus give himself an unfair advantage over his competition. Opposing fan bases were persistently antagonized by the tactic, with one team's fans expressing outrage of the highest order. Life was so unfair.
And then came salt in the wound . . . Zain was the recipient of some "whatever-you-do-I-can-do-harder" medicine for his head during his senior season, which of course did not phase him. He did not retaliate, but just kept beating dudes en route to his third straigt undefeated season, second straight Dan Hodge Trophy, and third straight NCAA title. Cael, on the other hand, wanted to twist the knife. Knowing he had the NCAA in his back pocket (based on something he read somewhere a few dozen times), he made a phone call. Shortly after Zain graduated, and with Penn State Wrestling still celebrating it's 7th team championship in 8 years, the Zain Rule was released by the NCAA.
And to that aforementioned highly outraged fan base, Cael was all like:
![]()
So yeah, we celebrate The Zain Rule.![]()
The emphasis on hands-to-the-face (aka The Zain Rule) is one of the better salt-in-the-wound cases in NCAA wrestling history.
For years, Zain was permitted to post on the head, push it, jam it, turn it every-which-way-including-loose, and thus give himself an unfair advantage over his competition. Opposing fan bases were persistently antagonized by the tactic, with one team's fans expressing outrage of the highest order. Life was so unfair.
And then came salt in the wound . . . Zain was the recipient of some "whatever-you-do-I-can-do-harder" medicine for his head during his senior season, which of course did not phase him. He did not retaliate, but just kept beating dudes en route to his third straigt undefeated season, second straight Dan Hodge Trophy, and third straight NCAA title. Cael, on the other hand, wanted to twist the knife. Knowing he had the NCAA in his back pocket (based on something he read somewhere a few dozen times), he made a phone call. Shortly after Zain graduated, and with Penn State Wrestling still celebrating it's 7th team championship in 8 years, the Zain Rule was released by the NCAA.
And to that aforementioned highly outraged fan base, Cael was all like:
![]()
So yeah, we celebrate The Zain Rule.![]()
+1 for the gif
+1 for the gif