There are many examples that demonstrate the parity in Big Ten wrestling, but perhaps none better than the weekend Minnesota, Northwestern and Michigan just had. Last Saturday, the Wildcats and Wolverines battled it out in Evanston, Ill., and tied. Ten matches, anywhere between three and six points up for grabs per match, and they ended deadlocked at 17-17. The following day, Michigan edged Indiana 20-18. Score sound familiar? ThatâÄôs because Minnesota topped Penn State by the same count two days earlier. Then on Sunday, the Gophers snuck past Ohio State 18-16 . Four dual meets decided by a cumulative six points. And this weekend, itâÄôll probably be more of the same when No. 8 Minnesota hosts the No. 18 Wolverines and No. 16 Wildcats at the Sports Pavilion. The Gophers will grapple Michigan tonight at 7 p.m. and Northwestern on Sunday at 2 p.m. Of course, as redshirt freshman Sonny Yohn points out, these arenâÄôt the only Big Ten matchups expected to be close. âÄúEvery dual meetâÄôs going to look close on paper,âÄù he said. âÄúItâÄôs about who shows up to wrestle.âÄù Minnesota has been doing just that in early conference duals âÄî itâÄôs off to a 3-0 start. But the road only gets tougher. Yohn, whoâÄôs listed along with junior Brent Eidenschink as possible starters at 184 , is coming off an 0-2 weekend that included a 21-4 loss by technical fall to Ohio StateâÄôs 2nd-ranked Mike Pucillo last Sunday . He seems to be lacking no confidence, however, as he prepares for another daunting weekend. On Friday, itâÄôs the WolverinesâÄô No. 13 Anthony Biondo; Sunday, top-ranked and undefeated Jake Herbert of the Wildcats , who spent the 2007-2008 season training for the Olympics after winning the 2007 NCAA National Championship at 184. âÄúItâÄôs a great opportunity to prove [myself],âÄù Yohn said. âÄúIâÄôve got nothing to lose. Competing with guys [like this] each week is only going to make you better.âÄù If thatâÄôs the case, then whoever wrestles for the Gophers at 174 will be made better this weekend too. Redshirt freshman Kaleb Young and junior Matt Everson are both listed as probable starters, and whoever goes will run up against MichiganâÄôs No. 1 Steve Luke tonight . 174 and 184 arenâÄôt two of MinnesotaâÄôs strongest weight classes, but head coach J Robinson sees this weekend as a helpful litmus test for them. âÄúItâÄôs a good indication for our guys to see where they are and see what theyâÄôve got to do at those weight classes,âÄù he said. But Yohn doesnâÄôt want to just see where heâÄôs at âÄî he wants to win. Never mind that Herbert was an undefeated national champion in his last college season; Yohn feels he can beat anyone. âÄúYou have to have that mentality or youâÄôre never going to make it,âÄù he said. And if last weekend taught the Gophers anything, itâÄôs that they may well need a clutch win from an unexpected source. When redshirt freshman Zach Sanders and junior Jayson Ness âÄî MinnesotaâÄôs two best wrestlers in terms of win percentage and ranking âÄî both lost at Penn State last Friday, it was junior Gordon BierschenkâÄôs pin at 197 that regained the lead and propelled the Gophers to victory âÄî a victory that surprised even Robinson. âÄúIf someone would have said that weâÄôd beat Penn State without Ness or Sanders winning, I wouldnâÄôt have seen how that would have been possible,âÄù Robinson said. âÄúBut guys are stepping up and theyâÄôre doing what they have to do to make sure that we can win. I think thatâÄôs a positive thing for us right now.âÄù
Gophers Big Ten dual meets as competitive as ever
Published February 5, 2009
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