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Owen and Bennett Lead Blue Hawks in 50th Year of DSU Wrestling
| by Galen Morton, SID |
| November-15-08 |
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Brett Owen overpowering another opponent (File photo)
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Complete Results - Click Here
Dickinson State opened their 50th year of wrestling in fine style recently in an open tournament at Dakota Wesleyan University in Mitchell, S.D. The Blue Hawks recorded 12 falls and both Shane Bennett (174) and Brett Owen (184) won their respective weight classes. Owen left no doubt in his championship match by pinning Mitch Lunning (Augustana College). Bennett, who was the NAIA runner-up in 2007 at 165 pounds, defeated Kody Koster (Buena Vista University) in an 11-5 decision.
Other positive signs came from Jose Serrato (149), Nick Zumwalt (157) and Stanton Schlecht (165) who were runners-up in their weight divisions. Meanwhile Blake Hunter (133) took 3rd place and Edgar Mercado (141) and Tod Molesworth (197) both grabbed 6th place.
Owen had an outstanding tournament. There was no official “wrestler-of-the-week” acknowledged by the host school Dakota Wesleyan, however the Blue Hawk grapplers didn’t seem to pay attention and appropriately gave Owen that title in a team vote. The senior from Polson, Mont., whipped through two opponents by fall--Alex Monegro (unattached) and Nick Henning (Augustana College)--in about two-and-a-half minutes per man. Julian Mancha (Buena Vista University) succumbed to Owen by forfeit to set the stage for the gold medal match for 184-pounders. Lunning and the rest of the onlookers today did not have to wait long for the suspense to end and it did so in dramatic fashion. Owen flipped Lunning and put his shoulders to the mat in an economical 1:15 for the championship.
Bennett powered through Chris Diaz (William Penn University) 9-1, edged Martin Beeler (Northwestern College) 3-1 and Royce Thomas (WPU) 7-6, before taking on Koster.
Jose Serrato defeated four opponents in the 149-pound bracket but was not able to match wits with Ben Knight (Morningside College) and was went down in a fall at 2:00. Nick Zumwalt also seemed to breeze in the early rounds, winning three matches with one pin. However, Zumwalt was no match for Josh Swanson in the championship bout and had to settle for 2nd place. Stan Schlecht was the 2008 runner-up in the 165-pound class and he had a good start to his senior season. He won three matches, two of which were decided by falls, but then came up short against Gavin Nelson in the finals, 11-5.
The squad will take a breather and then split-up after their Thanksgiving break with competitions going on at the prestigious Cliff Keen Invitational in Las Vegas, Nev., while others will be headed to Moorhead, Minn., to test their readiness in the Moorhead State University Open. Both tournaments start at 8:00 am (MST) on December 6th.
Three Top Recruits Named High School All-Americans
| by Galen Morton, SID |
| June-23-08 |
Three prep stars who have signed letters of intent to wrestle for the Blue Hawks, have been recognized for their athletic accomplishments by Wrestling USA Magazine.
David Lau (160 lb.) of Flathead High School in Kalispell, Mont., Isaac Romero (112 lb.), of Sunnyside High School in Sunnyside, Wash., and Colton Zier (145 lb.) of Riverside High School in Basin, Wyo., were named to the magazine’s All-America Team.
Lau was the Montana state champion in his senior season and he was a state finalist in his junior year. Romero was a three-time state-finalist and was the Washington State champion in his senior season for the Grizzlies. He compiled a 162-10 prep record. Zier competed four times at the state tournament and he was a Wyoming State finalist each year, winning the state title his last three seasons.
The Dickinson State University wrestling program is coming off its two best finishes in school history--the Blue Hawks finished 3rd at the NAIA National Tournament in both 2007 and 2008. In the last 13 years under Coach O’Donnell’s tutelage, DSU has had 12 Top-10 national finishers, 48 All-Americans, seven finalists and five national champions.
Dickinson State Takes 3rd Place at NAIA National Tournament; Schlecht Wins Again
| by Galen Morton, SID |
| March-10-08 |
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Justin Schlecht enjoying his 3rd NAIA National Championship
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NAIA Championship Results
Story from NAIA Web Page: Click Here
Sports Illustrated Faces in The Crowd: Click Here
The Blue Hawks’ NAIA #1 ranked Justin Schlecht (197) won his third straight national title, pinning McKendree freshman Andrew Sanchez in 4:06 Saturday night in Sioux City, Iowa. Schlecht was named the meet's outstanding wrestler and also the National Wrestling Coaches Association NAIA wrestler of the year. "I think of it as one year at a time," said the sculpted art education major. "Winning three times feels great, but you have a new approach every year."
Schlecht leaves a career at DSU in which he pinned his opponents 69 times in a 140-22 overall record. He was 17-1 at the national tournament with 13 pins. "It has been a great experience--lots of fun with a great bunch of guys," added Schlecht.
In the championship bout at 165 pounds, Robert Davis of Menlo defeated Stanton Schlecht, 10-3, thereby preventing a history-making evening because of Justin’s championship later in the evening.
Dickinson State finished in third place in the team standings for the second year in a row. Lindenwood University won the title with 130 points. McKendree was second (109.5), followed by DSU’s 107.5 points. Great Falls, Mont., was fourth (101) and Dana College fifth (91.5).
Head Coach Thadd O’Donnell was very pleased with his team’s achievements, stating “The first day was tough for us—this is the national tournament so there are no slouches. We could have shut down, but the team showed a lot of heart to compete at the level they did.” Coach O’Donnell
The Blue Hawks had six All-Americans: Cory Johnston (125, 4th), Eli Zuniga (133, 8th), Stanton Schlecht (165, 2nd), Justin Schlecht (197, Champion), Matt Michaelson (197, 4th) and Karter Kleeman (285, 4th). DSU added Colt Goff to its list of high achievers as he earned NAIA Academic All-American status. Goff stated, "it is an honor to be acknowledged for the things outside of the wrestling room that promote the sport.” He knows hard work is required, but that thanks must be extended to, “my family and friends for their unwavering support.”
The big-meet experience of a seasoned veteran such as Johnston really paid dividends for the Hawks. He, like the rest of the team, knew their opening day was not up to DSU standards, but he also felt that the sun would rise on day 2, and that it they had a fresh opportunity. “This team showed unbelievable heart, but that’s what we have done all year,” shared Johnston. “I will always remember this tournament—I didn’t take off my singlet until I had to just before the banquet. Some of the younger guys, especially Michaelson and Owen were truly inspirational for the rest of us.” Johnston also believes that he started to wrestle better once he clinched All-American status, even though he sustained a cut over his eye. “It was easier to enjoy the moment and just go bout-by-bout. Next year’s team will have championship character and they can build on that; they should settle for nothing less.”
The always glib Stanton Schlecht related his feelings about the tournament. “We didn’t wrestle to our full potential the first day, but we kept fighting. We weren’t going to make excuses and we showed our character by how well we wrestled the next day.” On a personal level, Stan believes that, “with the way the tournament ended, I think for myself and the rest of the guys we are hungry for next year.” Matt Michaelson echoed the younger Schlecht's feelings regarding next year. "We are losing some major points with our seniors (Kleeman, Justin Schlecht, Jake Toavs and Johnston), but we still have three All-Americans returning."
Michaelson's title hopes were derailed by Sanchez in an exhausting, 11-minute quarterfinal bout. Michealson said that his opponent "wrestled well--better than I did, and that was hard to come back from." Still, the two-time state champion from Dickinson HS likes the 197-lb class better than his previous 184-lb division. "It's obvious that with Schlecht, the 197-lb class was very tough this year, but they all are. But the bigger, 197-pound guys fit my style better." It sure looks that way Matt, but make no mistake, this returning All-American will be a major force at any weight class.
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