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Penn State Wrestling

Penn State Wrestling Rankings: Starter Cracks Top 5

Will Penn State wrestling starter Braeden Davis bounce back?
Photo by Penn State Wrestling: Braeden Davis

The latest wrestling rankings are out via Intermat, and one Penn State wrestler cracked the top five.

Other than that, well, not much changed.

Aside from Braeden Davis, Penn State’s 133-pounder who moved from No. 6 to No. 5, everybody else stayed put.

There’s an easy explanation for this: Penn State didn’t have an opponent last week. The team ended its regular season against American Friday, Feb. 21, and won’t compete again until this weekend’s Big Ten championships, scheduled for March 8-9 in Evanston, Illinois.

71: Pins, Star Seniors Propel Penn State Wrestling to a Big Regular-Season Finale

What Davis moving up means is that nine of Penn State’s starters are in the top five, including four No. 1s and four No. 2s.

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WHY DAVIS MOVED

With Aaron Nagao injured, Braeden Davis is Penn State wrestling’s starter at 133.

Photo by Penn State Athletics: Braeden Davis

So why did Davis move when nobody else did? It’s a good question. He does have a good resume. Although Davis does have three losses, he has some big-time wins which help his top five case. Davis has beaten Rutgers’ Dylan Shawver (No. 10), Little Rock’s Nasir Bailey (No. 6) and Ohio State’s Nic Bouzakis (No. 12). All of Davis’ losses are to quality competition, too. He lost to No. 1 Drake Ayala (Iowa), No. 2 Lucas Byrd (Illinois) and Lehigh’s Ryan Crookham, who was No. 1 before suffering a season-ending injury that took him out of national championship contention. That could be another reason Davis moved.

THE REST OF THE GUYS

Penn State wrestling star Carter Starocci may have been onto something when he predicted teammate Josh Barr would win multiple national titles.

Carter Starocci improves Penn State’s winning margin 26-5 with his convincing win over Iowa’s Angelo Ferrari.

For the rest of the guys, nothing changed. Luke Lilledahl is still No. 8 at 125. Beau Bartlett remains No. 1 at 141. At 149, Shayne Van Ness stayed at No. 2. At 157, No. 1 Tyler Kasak didn’t go anywhere, no did top-ranked Mitchell Mesenbrink at 165. Levi Haines, who won it all at 157 last year, is still No. 2 at 174 behind Missouri’s Keegan O’Toole. Carter Starocci is still the king at 184. Josh Barr is No. 2 at 197 and defending heavyweight champ Greg Kerkvliet is is No. 2 behind former Olympic Gold Medalist Gable Steveson of Minnesota.

The Big Ten Champions are scheduled for Saturday, March 8 and Sunday, March 9 in Evanston, Illinois.

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