A College Fan's Super 32 Cheat Sheet

A College Fan's Super 32 Cheat Sheet

Who you should be watching at Super 32 if you are a fan of a Division 1 team.

Oct 27, 2017 by Wrestling Nomad
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There are a couple marquee events on the high school wrestling calendar, dates every fan circles to watch. This weekend's Super 32 in Greensboro, NC, is one of those mega events.

If you primarily watch NCAA wrestling, specifically at the Division I level, Super 32 is a great time to familiarize yourself with the prospects your team has recruited. Or you could be scouting the wrestlers your boys will be seeing in a few years. Either way, it's a tremendous opportunity to learn about the best high school wrestling has to offer.

Remember, brackets will be on FloArena late Friday night, and every match will be archived. WATCH LIVE HERE.

Arizona State: Julian Chebove, 126

The Sun Devils can claim both Chlebove and Nick Raimo. Anytime you have two guys in one recruiting class who can both win Super 32, you're feeling good about yourself and the future of your team.

Watch Julian Chlebove's win at FloNationals:



Penn State: Brody Teske, 120

The three-time undefeated Iowa state champion is in the same weight as Adam Busiello, a class of 2019 commit to Penn State. While it's probably extreme to say this matchup is a de facto future wrestle-off, it is an early chance for Nittany Lions to decide who they want starting at 125 in a few years.

SUPER 32 LIGHTWEIGHT PREVIEW


Michigan: Joey Silva, 132

Silva is trying to enter the rarified air of becoming a thee-time Super 32 champ. This time though, he's taking the No. 1 ranking with him into Greensboro, courtesy of his WNO win (video below). With 15 of the 20 ranked guys all in one bracket, Silva once again gets a chance to separate himself from the field.



Ohio State: Quinn Kinner, 132

The final piece of Ohio State's recruiting puzzle, Kinner has exploded on the scene this year. He won a New Jersey state title and made the finals of FloNationals, and now the Buckeyes' future 141 is searching for a Super 32 belt.

Iowa: Anthony Cassioppi, 285

The Illinois prep certainly competes just about as often as he can, so there's no shortage of opportunities to see the future Hawkeye on the mat. But this is one of the few accomplishments missing from Cassioppi's trophy case.

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Minnesota: Patrick McKee, 120

The 120lb bracket this weekend will have a pretty drastic effect on how we look at the 125lb prospect rankings. From Patrick McKee trying to defend his ranking to Penn State's future 125s being at the same weight, Gophers fans should have a much more clear picture on where McKee stacks up against his future competition by Sunday evening.

Oklahoma State: Anthony Montalvo, 182

The only member of the 2018 class to verbal to the Cowboys so far, he's going to need to redeem himself after not placing in Fargo. Montalvo should find himself in the starting lineup immediately after his freshman year.

NC State: Jakob Camacho, 126

Last year, Camacho was more under the radar and had not committed yet. Since then though, he's beaten Adam Busiello (video below), Pat Glory, and Alex Thomsen. Wolfpack fans will love the way this kid competes.



Missouri: Brock Mauller, 145

First of all, great name. Second of all, he's a kid local to Columbia, MO, trains with Mike Eierman, and is on pace to be a four-time Missouri state champ. Seems like the perfect recipe for a future Tigers All-American.


Virginia Tech: Mitch Moore, 138

Mitch Moore will have a pretty big chip on his shoulder this weekend. He lost in last year's finals to Vito Arujau and is coming off a loss to Jacori Teemer at Who's #1. Which is my way of saying, I pity the fool that has to deal with his hellacious short offense.

SUPER 32 MIDDLEWEIGHT PREVIEW

South Dakota State: Alex Lloyd, 145

Coming off a JJ Classic title, Lloyd has to be among the favorites this weekend. A great fit for SDSU coaches Chris Bono and Jon Reader, Lloyd comes from the Pinnacle club program.

Penn: Anthony Artalona, 145

Artalona certainly has something to prove after being pinned at Who's #1. This has long been the knock on Artalona, that his folkstyle resume is not quite on par with his freestyle resume. If he can translate the creativity that helped him never lose a freestyle match in Fargo, we'll be in for one fun weekend.


Others To Watch

Iowa State: Chris Foca, 170
Drexel: Antonio Mininno, 120
UNC: Mason Phillips, 145
Oklahoma: Tommy Hoskins, 120
Northern Iowa: Michael Blockhus, 138
Wisconsin: Jeremy Schoenherr, 138
Virginia: Alex Cruz, 132
Buffalo: Peter Acciardi, 220
Chattanooga: Jared Ball, 195
Edinboro: Cody Mulligan, 182
Lock Haven: Emil Soehnlen, 170
Wyoming: Chase Zollman, 132
Nebraska: Jake Silverstein, 152
SIUE: Justin Ruffin, 152
Northwestern: Erich Byelick, 160
Oregon State: Brandon Kaylor, 113
Air Force: Cody Phippen, 113
Lehigh: Jaret Lane, 120
Campbell: Aden Reeves, 120
Rider: Chris Wright, 126
Ohio: Jordan Earnest, 285
Army West Point: Paul Robinson, 285
Cornell: Ryan Moore, 126
Hofstra: Dylan Ryder, 113

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