Trey Kibe, Cael Valencia, & Nate Schon's School Lists In One Place
Trey Kibe, Cael Valencia, & Nate Schon's School Lists In One Place
Top-30 juniors Trey Kibe, Cael Valencia, and Nate Schon recently spoke to us about their school lists and what colleges they're looking at.
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On February 16, Pennsylvania state champ Trey Kibe announced he had committed to Penn State. Less than a month later he took to social media once more to announce he had changed his mind and was re-opening his commitment.
I have decided to de-commit from Penn State University.. I will be taking some time to thoroughly reconsider my future plans
— Trey Kibe (@TreyKibe) March 10, 2020
With his recruitment open again, Kibe shared his top four schools with us.
Trey Kibe School List
- NC State
- Virginia Tech
- Stanford
- Lehigh
Kibe was a 2019 PIAA state champion and was fourth this year in a bracket that featured five wrestlers in the top 12 of the national rankings. Kibe is currently #9 at 170 and #24 on the Junior Big Board.
NC State makes a lot of sense for a couple of reasons. Kibe projects as a 174-pounder and three-time NCAA qualifier, Daniel Bullard, will be a senior next season for the Wolfpack. Kibe also goes to Mifflin County High School where the Hidlay brothers attended and Trent Hidlay recently posted a picture of the two working out.
Welcoming @TreyKibe to the Members Only Garage. How bout that! pic.twitter.com/HM0KSSDUpq
— Trent Hoagie Hidlay (@hoagieboyhidlay) April 13, 2020
NC State's 2020 recruiting class does feature Dylan Reinert, who knocked off Kibe in the third-place match at the 2020 PIAA State Championships. The two are very familiar with one another as Kibe defeated Reinert the previous year in Hershey in the quarterfinals.
Watch Kibe and Reinert's battle from the 2020 PIAA State Championships.
Much like their ACC rival, Virginia Tech has had a lot of success in Pennsylvania recently. The class of 2020 saw the Hokies nab PA hammers Hunter Catka, Sammy Hillegas, and Clayton Ulrey. If NCAA champion Mekhi Lewis stays down at 165 for the rest of his career, the path to the lineup is much clearer in Blacksburg. Cody Hughes qualified for NCAAs this year at 174-pounds but was a senior this season and there's no clear replacement waiting in the wings.
Stanford will be salty next season as the Cardinal return five NCAA qualifiers including Real Woods, Shane Griffith, and Nathan Traxler who were all ranked in the top 15 to end the season and will add Southern Scuffle champ Jaden Abas to the lineup as well. One hole in the lineup for Stanford is 174 and Kibe could help the Cardinal jump another level.
Lehigh is the only Pennsylvania school that made the final cut for Kibe, and while 174 is not as big of a need for the Mountain Hawks with Edmond Ruth and Jake Logan at the weight in Bethlehem, Lehigh is always known for their depth.
No matter which school Kibe picks, they will be getting a certified hammer that will have the ability to impact the lineup immediately.
If you follow college recruiting closely, you know that 24 of the top 30 guys on the Junior Big Board have publicly announced their verbal, meaning 80 percent of the best kids in the country seem to have their commitment for the next level.
Of those six who haven't yet, many counted Cael (pronounced "Ky Ell") Valencia as someone they knew where he was going. You might think, well he's Zahid and Anthony's little brother, there's no doubt he's going to Arizona State. The Sun Devils are definitely an option, and a strong one, but after speaking with Cael and his father Ruben, they're still a long way from making a decision.
I hesitate to even call it a school list, because he still has four official visits left and speaks frequently with coaches from all of the remaining teams. Ruben in fact did not even specifically rule out any other schools joining the fray, but from the sounds of things it is unlikely as they'd have some serious catching up to do as the following programs have put a lot of work into trying to land Valencia.
Cael Valencia's College Options
- Arizona State
- Iowa
- Michigan
- North Carolina
- Ohio State
- Oklahoma State
- Penn State
- Stanford
I listed them alphabetically because there is no clear leader at this time and again, they haven't told any of these coaches definitively that they are out of the running. However, it was Stanford who was the first to reach out last June 15, and that's where he has taken his only official visit to at this point. Ruben mentioned each of the coaches there has made an effort to develop a relationship with Cael and they are very well aware of the strong academic options Stanford could provide.
We also received Trey Kibe's school list yesterday, and Stanford is an option for him as well. Although we have both of them projected as 174s in college, it's not necessarily an either/or situation. We've had conversations about Kibe getting as big as 197, and Valencia could wind up anywhere from a 165 to 184 depending on how much growing he has left to do.
Kibe was briefly committed to Penn State before re-opening his recruiting process. The Nittany Lions have a ton of talent already in those areas, the 165-197 range, and that's before factoring in Alex Facundo being committed from this 2021 class. However, I don't think that factors in much to Facundo's decision and I know it doesn't play into Valencia's. But there's no doubt PSU would have to get creative to maximize starting years out of Joe Lee, Carter Starocci, Aaron Brooks, Michael Beard, Facundo, and Valencia.
Some wrestlers only have their eyes on the Big Ten, and while the strength of that conference no doubt appeals to the Valencias, they're not dead set on attending there. However, several Big Ten powers have aggressively pursued Cael, including Michigan. Freestyle aspirations are certainly in Cael's future, and the Cliff Keen Wrestling Club should have excellent partners for him in Logan Massa, Myles Amine, and now Alex Dieringer. He'd also be a good fit lineup-wise, especially if Cam Amine can make 157 and Jaden Bullock can go either 165 or 174.
Valencia has had two excellent battles with Ohio State commit Paddy Gallagher, one in the Fargo quarters and again in the finals of Doc B. A Gallagher/Valencia combo would be an excellent 1-2 punch for tOSU, but they've also got four years left of Carson Kharchla and three for Rocky Jordan, so if they can make the money work and Gallagher can hold 157 for a few years, the Buckeyes will be extremely strong in the back half of their lineup.
A team on the rise with a young coaching staff hungry to chase down those Big Ten powers also has their eye on Cael Valencia. North Carolina has made a serious impression on Cael thanks to the tireless efforts of Coleman Scott and Tony Ramos, and they already landed Sonny Santiago from the class of 2020. Santiago and Valencia train together at the Monster Garage, the club run by Ruben, so the Tar Heels would not only keep their California pipeline going but keep the two longtime friends and training partners together.
Speaking of the Monster Garage, it's getting a facelift and will soon be back to full force. Ruben's team is training in there and he is anticipating another run along the lines of what they had a few years ago with Anthony and Zahid, Aaron Pico, and Cade Olivas. So we'll likely see another string of Southern California hammers soon enough.
As has been the case for a couple of years now, Coleman has been going toe-to-toe with his old coach John Smith on the recruiting trail, and that's no different here. Chris Perry and Tyler Caldwell envision Valencia having an even better career than the ones they had. This being Oklahoma State, they'd probably like to keep Cael at 165. They brought in the top recruiting class of 2020, with Luke Surber, Dustin Plott, Daniel Jezik, and AJ Ferrari having to fill out 174-197. The Cowboys already have commitments from juniors Victor Voinovich and Travis Mastrogiovanni, meaning they'd like to keep them at 149 and 157 respectively if Valencia commits. All of this on top of guys like Travis Wittlake and Anthony Montalvo already in Stillwater, and Valencia may be looked at as a luxury by the rest of the country if he decides to don the Orange & Black in college.
Iowa was poised to win a national title this year, but to keep that run going they understand the importance of recruiting. They've also made it clear with the Abe Assad/Cash Wilcke situation that the best man will go regardless of age. That would come into play here if Patrick Kennedy goes 165 and Nelson Brands drops back down to 174. He'd be a senior when Valencia is a redshirt freshman, with Abe Assad also in his senior year 184 if he doesn't redshirt.
Bringing it back around to Arizona State, there will obviously be the pull of his older brothers, as well as the relationship the family has established with Zeke Jones and Lee Pritts. They appear to also have an opening coming at 165, with Jacori Teemer at 157 and Trey Munoz up at 174. So they could make a ton of sense lineup wise right as the team is going through a shift with two coaches leaving and the 2015 recruiting class graduating.
While I spent the vast majority of this article looking at lineup fit and how Cael would fit into the rosters of these schools, it was repeatedly stressed throughout the conversation that they're not too concerned with it. Ruben wants his son to make a choice where he will feel comfortable and confident for wrestling and his life afterward, and if there's a lineup conflict so be it, the coaches will work that out.
Whenever this quarantine ends, I expect Cael Valencia to come out guns blazing. A season in which he won Super 32, Reno, Doc B, and 5 Counties ended with a stunning loss in the state finals. He wants to make sure that's not any coach's last memory of him.
One of the nation's best big men has put out his school list. Below are the final five for Nate Schon (Selinsgrove, PA).
Nate Schon School List
- Rutgers
- Pitt
- Ohio State
- NC State
- Penn
Most of these programs are in the market for a heavyweight, which is where Schon sees himself in college after spending his first three years in high school at 220 pounds. He's placed every year in AAA at the Pennsylvania state tournament, finishing eighth as a freshman, winning the title as a sophomore, and making the finals this season.
Rutgers used sophomore Alex Esposito at Big Tens, though they also have three years left of Kyle Lightner, but he only wrestled nine matches this season. They'd only be about three hours from home and would allow Schon to wrestle a Big Ten schedule. However, they already have an excellent big man committed from the 2021 class in Kyonte Hamilton. The National Prep champ is ranked second at 220 and is #4 on the Junior Big Board.
Pitt is a bit of a wildcard, with Colby Whitehill coming in from their 2020 recruiting class to replace graduated senior and new Pittsburgh Wrestling Club member Demetrius Thomas. Schon finished #14 in our 220lb rankings, while Whitehill was seventh at 285. The two never wrestled in high school.
Ohio State has already picked up a verbal from the #7 junior in the country in Paddy Gallagher, so Schon would give them another blue-chip from this class. Columbus would be a good fit as he could take over for transfer Tate Orndorff after a redshirt year, allowing Orndorff to finish out his eligibility and Gavin Hoffman to close out his career at 197.
The rising senior, who also plays football and may be interesting in trying to do both sports at the next level, has already taken visits to Rutgers and Pitt. Ohio State was supposed to be his next visit prior to travel being shut down due to COVID-19, and he is also hoping to take visits to Philadelphia and Raleigh.
Pennsylvania has long been a fertile recruiting ground for the ACC, and the Wolfpack currently have two starters from there in the Hidlay brothers. Their high school is about an hour away from Selinsgrove. If Schon went there and redshirted it'd allow Deonte Wilson to graduate, but that would coincide with Owen Trephan's junior year.
Schon, who is our 30th-rated prospect on the 2021 Big Board, is also considering staying in-state to get an Ivy League education at Penn. The Quakers' current heavyweight Ben Goldin would be gone, but their best 285lb recruit from a year ago in Joey Slackman would be a junior. Slackman had a 6-7 record this year.
Lineup-wise, Ohio State probably makes the most sense, though they did have Nick Boykin redshirting this year. The development of Trephan and Slackman will also come into play, which will be harder to quantify the longer this quarantine goes on and difficult to gauge before signing begins on November 11, 2020.