Novice Registered: December 13, 2005 Posts: 230 | Right behind you Frank. Just hobbling along, hoping to live out my golden years. Yeah right! They lied. |
Novice Registered: December 13, 2005 Posts: 230 | I was thinking the same thing. Hey, great minds... But, I didn't want to shift the focus of this thread from DI. But it does put a little shine on Dlagnev's season, doesn't it. Back on task, I've been combing the college web sites in my spare time (Okay, I'm easily distracted) and I can't find any DI national champions from Nevada, Mississipi, Arkansas, Alabama, South Carolina, Kentucky, West Virginia, Rhode Island, District of Columbia, New Hampshire (that's no surprise, their all political science majors), Maine, Alaska or Georgia. But, as Dennis Miller might say, "I could be wrong." |
State Qualifier Registered: March 21, 2005 Posts: 1035 |
I just realized that I had left this question unanswered. Greg Strobel was a nat'l champ at Oregon State. He has been at several colleges and clubs since leaving UNO. He's tne head whistle at Lehigh now. |
State Qualifier Registered: March 21, 2005 Posts: 1035 |
Hammerlock, You are either an old duffer like me or a historian if you remember Uetake. But he wasn't the first wrestler from Japan to win the nationals for Okie State. In 1962 Masaaka Hatta beat my college roommate, Frank Freeman, 7-4 in the championship match at Stillwater, OK. Hatta's dad was the head of the amateur wrestling federation in Japan and Myron Roderick, coach at Okie St. had met him in international competition. Roderick recruited Hatta and then Hatta's younger brother, who placed but never won the nationals. I think Uetake was third and then I believe there was another placer before the well dried up. Maybe the scorekeeper at OSU who knew how to run an abacus retired and nobody could teach his replacement. |