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    Y2CJ41

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  3. Christopher Bohn

    Christopher Bohn

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Popular Content

Showing content with the highest reputation since 11/09/2023 in all areas

  1. So, one of my favorite parts of wrestling season is sampling the different hot dogs the schools present during the year. For disclosure, my son Chris Bohn and wrestles for Munster, the hot dog testing tour will follow the Munster schedule. I also taste test the dogs plain. Today I was at Goshen High School. The hot dog was $3. It was pretty plump, and was definitely not cheap. The bun has the perfect amount of "freshness", meaning it wasn't hard, but it wasn't soaked. I will definitely be picking up a couple of more tomorrow. The Goshen hot dogs get 6 slices of pizza out of 8. The next stop on the tour is Valparaiso high school on December 2. Thank you for reading.
    25 points
  2. I can't believe all these parents who grew up in the tougher times have produced such wimpy kids.
    23 points
  3. UncleJimmy

    Zach Davis Update

    We often lose track of of these wrestlers after high school, but it’s comforting to me knowing while I sleep that Zach and his brothers, Jacob and Adam, are protecting me and our country. Thought this was pretty cool and wanted to share.
    23 points
  4. Congratulations to Jake Hockaday Congratulations to from Brownsburg for signing with Oklahoma. Projected to wrestle 133. View full signing
    19 points
  5. Congratulations to Bray Emerine Congratulations to from Floyd Central for signing with Southeastern. Projected to wrestle 184. View full signing
    14 points
  6. Don't you have schoolwork to do? Quit finding my mistakes!
    13 points
  7. Congratulations to Justin Boone Congratulations to from Yorktown for signing with Manchester. Projected to wrestle 141. View full signing
    12 points
  8. If Frankfort doesn't have the best ones, it's a huge missed opportunity.
    12 points
  9. Congratulations to Tony Wood Congratulations to from Jay County for signing with West Liberty. Projected to wrestle 141, 149. View full signing
    12 points
  10. Christopher Bohn

    Valpo weiners

    Today the Munster wrestling schedule brought me to Valparaiso High School where I sampled their supply of hotdogs. The hot dogs were $3 and were taste tested plain. The Valparaiso concession stand is in the middle of the hallway, and reminded me of that McDonald's that sat in the middle of the Chicago Skyway. The dogs were cooked using those rollers you find in any quality 7 Eleven. The result of using these rollers was that there was a small char on the hot dogs that I appreciate. The hot dogs didn't have a premium taste, but they weren't cheap. The buns were fresh. These dogs were a bit smaller than last week's and not as juicy. My final score for these dogs is 5.75 slices of pizza out of 8. As a side note, I brought my 14 year old nephew with me today. He gave the hot dogs 6.5 slices of pizza out of 8. The next stop on the tour is December 6 at Munster high school for senior night. Thank you for reading. Side note, I couldn't add a picture of the hot dog for some reason. If I figure it out, I will post it.
    11 points
  11. Coach Mike Day of Centerville earned his 500th career win today. Heck of an accomplishment! Congratulations Coach Day!
    11 points
  12. By Anna Kayser In 2008, IndianaMat emerged as an informational resource for high school wrestling across the state of Indiana, filling a communication void and connecting the wrestling community from border to border. Fifteen years later, it continues to serve as the epicenter of the Indiana wrestling community, from providing feature stories on prominent athletes to weekly rankings across regions. This is the story of how it began. For years, a message board run by the Indiana High School Wrestling Coaches Association (IHSWCA) served as the main source of communications for wrestlers, fans and coaches – both high school and college coaches looking to recruit – on lineups, rankings (loose rankings, if any at all) and results. It was late-November, peak holiday and weight-cutting season for wrestlers across the state with less than one month of official practice under their belts, when the message board got hacked and effectively rendered useless. There was no Twitter – or X, as it’s now known – to provide instantaneous information like there is today. Facebook was just gaining traction, officially surpassing MySpace as the most used social media app earlier that year. “[The message board] was your go-to place to get wrestling information,” Joe Caprino, creator of IndianaMat, said. “You didn’t have access to cell phones and such – everyone was communicating that way. It was really popping at times, especially during the season.” The old message board served as an initial connection for wrestling fans in the state, which is how the trio of Caprino, Chad Hollenbaugh (who had previously coached with Caprino) and Eric McGill ­(a former two-time state champion at Munster High School and Cornell University wrestler) formed to create a new information center. With the first week of competition looming, there was a frenzy for information and no resource to turn to. Caprino, Hollenbaugh and McGill knew something new was needed – and quickly. View full article
    11 points
  13. By JEREMY HINES Thehines7@gmail.com When Brady Byrd was young, he would wake up early, pack his wrestling gear in his parent’s vehicle and make the long journey to whatever tournament they could find. Often, hours later, he would return with a couple of losses to show for his effort. “Brady started wrestling in fifth grade,” his father, Sean said. “Every tournament around us was at least an hour drive. Normally he would go 0-2. But he kept doing it and kept doing it. Sometimes he would even move up weight classes just to get matches.” While the losses piled up, so did Byrd’s determination. If wrestling was easy, he might not have ever fallen in love with the sport. The losses helped build him into one of the best wrestlers in Washington High School history. “That prepared me,” Brady said. “Not a lot of kids at this level have been on the losing side like I have. It took me a long time before I started to see success. For the longest time my worst sport was wrestling. Being on that losing side taught me to never shy away from anything. I was not going to quit just because I wasn’t good at it. That’s never a valid reason to quit. You have to get better. That’s the only option.” Now, Byrd is the first Fargo double All-American to ever come out of the prestigious Maurer Caughlin Wrestling Club. Byrd finished third in freestyle this year and seventh in Greco-Roman. He is currently ranked No. 5 in the state at 106 pounds and has his sights set on taking the top of the platform at the state finals. He’s come a long way – but it was never easy. “The biggest thing with Brady, is that a lot of guys see him now, succeeding and being a good wrestler,” Washington coach Aaron Cissell said. “But nobody looks deep enough to see all the struggles and tournaments where he would lose. He stuck with it. It’s all paying off now. He has overcome all of that and fought to be successful.” Brady started wrestling 106 pounds as a freshman. At the time he weighed just 91 pounds. He’s always been a smaller guy. This, his senior season, is the first time he’s had to cut any weight at all. And even now, the cut is minimal. Sean, his dad, was a state placer in high school. “I placed seventh my senior year at 112 pounds,” Sean said. “Our styles are similar except that I was all heart and toughness and didn’t have technique. Brady is heart, toughness and has excellent technique. “I was a Region guy who was coached by Hall of famer Walt Prochno Kankakee Valley. Brady wrestles the region style in southern Indiana - tough and gritty.” Brady agrees that toughness and grit are keys to his success. “The grit is what makes me successful,” Brady said. I’ve always had it. A lot of kids don’t like to wrestle me. I stay in their face and stay physical.” Injuries have plagued Brady in his young career. He has suffered an ankle and a knee injury but has bounced back from both. “Brady is the most determined and hardest working guy I’ve ever seen,” Cissell said. “He is tough in all areas.” Brady owns Washington’s winning percentage record, but he wants to set the school’s win record and pin record this season. Both are well within his grasp. He also wants to become the third wrestler from his school to qualify for the state finals (Mark Kelsey did it in 1984 and Aaron Brower in 2003). He also wants to become the first Washington wrestler to place at state. Brady also does whatever is necessary to help his team. Coaches have learned to rely on him with helping teach moves in a way the other wrestlers can understand. “People really respect Brady,” Sean said. “So, when we are teaching moves, it’s better to have a Brady show them because he can speak their language and they really feed off of him.” Brady would like to wrestle in college and even the Olympics one day. He has excellent grades and was named to the Academic All-State Team. Outside of wrestling Brady enjoys competitive bass fishing, hunting and playing pickle ball. “Brady is the most determined kid you’ll ever meet,” Sean said. “He works hard at everything, and the work is finally starting to pay dividends.” Brady has started this young season off with 15 consecutive wins. He hopes for much more as the year goes on. He loves the sport and enjoys working at it. “Wrestling is one-on-one,” Brady said. “People call me crazy because I train so much. I don’t like relying on other people to win. I like relying on myself. What I put in is what I get out.”
    9 points
  14. We just keep our roster at single digits, so we don't have to do wrestle-offs.....
    9 points
  15. Not me. I meal plan for my kid and then make him watch me eat junk all the while I tell him he is soft.
    8 points
  16. Agree. This is a hot dog only thread. Create your own thread if you want to discuss pizza and/or popcorn. Also........let's please keep the class hot dog and hot dog wrestle back discussion at a minimum in this thread. I do not care about the best 4A or 3A hot dogs.........I just want to know which hot dog is the best.
    8 points
  17. By Anna Kayser When Brownsburg opens its doors to kick off the 2023-24 wrestling season on Nov. 29 vs. Westfield, it will be the first time in 291 days that Parker Reynolds steps onto the mat in competition. Nine months and 18 days full of doctor’s visits, blood tests, surgeries, physical therapy and pushing himself to the limit, all for a young athlete to return to wrestling stronger than he left it. Parker, the 138-pound freshman starter in last year’s Bulldog lineup, had his first high school campaign riddled with a then-mysterious condition causing numbness in his hands. A season which had incredible high points – on Dec. 10 at the Walsh Jesuit Ironman, he defeated the eventual 138-pound state champion from Ohio – was challenged by a mix of physical and mental hurdles. “When I wrestled, I would lose all feeling. It was almost like there were knives in my forearms, it hurt really, really bad,” Parker said. “It started to almost become a mental thing because before a lot of matches, I wouldn’t know if it was going to come up or not and it almost freaked me out before every match. I was worried that my hands were going to go numb, and it really started messing with me when I wrestled.” Following a semi-state loss to end his freshman season, Parker immediately began seeing a series of doctors to diagnose his condition. They tested his heart, musculoskeletal system and blood for autoimmune diseases before being referred to a group of specialists on thoracic outlet syndrome (TOS) – one being Dr. George G. Sheng, a vascular surgeon with Ascension Medical Group. According to the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, TOS – a condition often found in pitchers due to their repetitive throwing motion – refers to a series of syndromes where compression of nerves, arteries and veins in the lower neck and upper chest causes pain or numbness in the surrounding areas. Parker, after undergoing another series of tests with Dr. Sheng, was diagnosed with both neurogenic and venous TOS, two of the three syndromes related to TOS causing his hands to turn purple, numbness and the sensation of feeling knives in his forearms. The constant movement of the shoulder forward – similar to a pitcher’s throwing motion – at a young age can affect the placement of ribs before they’re entirely developed, leading to a partial blockage of different nerves and veins making up the spinal system. Parker became the first wrestler Dr. Sheng had seen with TOS, and in turn became the first to undergo a procedure to remove the first rib on his right side in an effort to alleviate his symptoms. The recovery timeline for this surgery to treat TOS is one year. “Nobody thought he was going to be able to wrestle this year – not even the surgeon, not even us,” Josh Reynolds, Parker’s dad, said. “He was going to have to put the work in, he was going to have to go to physical therapy and see how his body [healed].” Parker has TOS on both sides of his body, but an early expectation of having two rib-removal surgeries faded as the April 3 surgery on his right side relieved most symptoms on both. However, the doubt of a possible second surgery and how his body would rebound expanded the unknown from one year to potentially never wrestling again. “This is the longest I’ve ever gone without having a match, I felt like so much was getting taken away from me. There was a lot of doubt [if I would ever wrestle again],” Parker said. The beginning stages of Parker’s recovery can be summed up in two words: Boring and grueling. Unable to do anything where he might feel pressure in his left side, the rising sophomore found himself unable to do all of his favorite things – wrestling, as well as enjoy fishing and a number of water activities at his family’s vacation home in Florida. After months of being in a dark place mentally, from not knowing what was going on with his body to possibly being unable to wrestle for at least a year, Parker began seeing a mental coach. “[Parker’s mental coach] has probably been one of the biggest influences in all of this,” Josh said. “He was a calming voice to Parker and saying ‘Listen, you’ve got to listen to your body. If you’re not right, you can’t come back prematurely.’” Taking the next step in his rehab process by beginning light, lower body-focused workouts helped, too, and Parker’s parents saw a noticeable change mentally. And then, a lump on his neck appeared and severe nosebleeds began, sparking a series of blood tests with the possibility of lymphoma or leukemia. The average size of a lymph node is under 1.5 centimeters in diameter, and Parker’s grew to near 3 centimeters. “He’d make comments like, “I don’t know what I can do if I can’t wrestle. That’s all I’ve ever done, I’ve been wrestling since I was four.’” Josh said. “As a family, it was tough especially for my wife and I because we’re just saying we want [Parker] healthy and in his eyes, ‘Well if I’m healthy I can wrestle.’” Parker had another surgery in July to remove the entire growth from his neck. The tests for leukemia came back negative, and instead he was diagnosed with Epstein Barr virus – another form of mononucleosis – likely caused by the hit his immune system took with the removal of his rib. He was cleared to return to practice in August, with stipulations from his surgeon: He couldn’t be taken down and was only allowed to be in situations which he could control. But he could build his entire daily routine around wrestling and gaining strength for the season. “Coach [Chad] Red said, “You tell me when and where and I’m with you every step of the way,’” Josh recalled. “That’s when we saw this mental transition. [Parker] was working with the mental coach, doing one-on-ones with Coach Red, practicing twice a day [plus lifting weights] and he was changing his mindset.” Over the summer, Parker lost close to 10 pounds. After being cleared by his physicians, he began working out and practicing three times a day, before school and after school, to get himself back in wrestling shape for Brownsburg’s impending Oct. 30 practice. “After a couple months, you can see he’s getting smoother and feeling better,” Brownsburg head wrestling coach Darrick Snyder said. “Now, we’re working through with him that he’s not going to be the same dude at our opening meet that he will be at the end of the year. He’s going to take some leaps this season.” Now, Parker’s coming back with a vengeance – finally stepping onto the mat with more answers than questions. Along with a renewed sense of confidence in his health and wrestling ability, he’s entering this season with three things he didn’t have last year: A tattoo on his lower ribs of a quote by Moliére, a French playwright, reading, “The greater the obstacle, the more glory in overcoming it.” A list of all the wrestlers he beat last season who placed at the state championships in Indiana or surrounding states. And a necklace with his first rib, removed when this all started, to wear around his neck before each of his matches during his improbable comeback campaign.
    8 points
  18. I don’t think we are at Red and Lee level yet: they are a Sophomore and Junior. But I get the anticipation. I said 3 years ago I had Hockaday winning 4. That being said: Thrine had one of the best Freshman campaigns I’ve ever seen: and I’m old and have seen 39 years of Championships. I’d like to toss my Homeboy Lil Vargo in the conversation. Don’t blink is all I’m saying. Either way take my money.
    8 points
  19. Good news reported on Wawassee's Facebook page.
    8 points
  20. For a school with less than 250 kids, the Cowan Blackhawks sure have burst onto the scene of 1A wrestling. They've done it with the help of a couple of Rebels. https://wzbd.com/index.php/2023/11/16/hard-work-love-of-sport-crucial-in-cowans-reputation-as-model-small-school-program/
    8 points
  21. I find this topic interesting. My kid worked 2x as hard as I did. My youth was spent playing baseball, soccer, basketball, etc. In Middle school I ran XC, played basketball, wrestled, baseball, & ran track. Local wrestling club was 2x a week for freestyle in spring. When not doing that I was playing pickup basketball with friends, organizing a baseball game in the local field with soda cans & paper plates as bases with ghost runners, doing the same for football games etc. I cant remember the last time I saw ANY kids doing any of this. The reason?...we have monetized youth sports & make them practice 24/7, and we call them soft. These kids we call soft are going to club practices, RTCs, and academies all week every week starting at early ages. How many are single sport athletes at ages younger than 12? Many. Kids arent softer, just different & burnout is real.
    7 points
  22. Kids same. Parents different. Our fault as parents.
    7 points
  23. Look at the Brackets and I think it will tell you a story.....120 pounds @ Ironman had close to twice the amount of wrestlers then the other weights or at least an extra round. And the names that are in that weight class are some pretty great wrestlers. I mean Jake went 4-2 in a 64 man bracket others were 32 man brackets and the quality of the opponent @120 was exceptional. Lost to Leo DeLuca#2 @120 in the country currently and Jordyn Raney Ranked #4 in the country @126. Blaze, Jax,Forrest, Lilledahl. Great competition for sure. But 4-2 at the ironman is 4 wins at the Ironman.
    7 points
  24. Y2CJ41

    Area Code Wars

    Maybe we should do some sort of area code wars where each area code puts together a team and we have some duals to prove it!
    7 points
  25. buttler73

    Ironman Updates

    Kresja Knocked off Bennet #5 in the country at 145.
    6 points
  26. Big win for Kresja over ranked kid from st.eds!
    6 points
  27. Last night was senior night for the Munster wrestling team. But, I guess that wasn't important enough to open the concession stand for the dual against Highland. So I had to endure without my favorite in season food. For last night, Munster gets 8 slices of pizza out of 8. But those slices all have anchovies, pineapple, and jalapeno on top of them. And my dogs licked them. Next stop on the tour is Dec 13 at Hanover Central High School. Thank you for reading.
    6 points
  28. We started an elem league down south. It's exploded from a handful of teams to 16 teams. My goal is to always maximize matches and minimize time. This Sunday Madison will host a 5 way, 4 matches guaranteed, full JV surface. Will start at 10:00 and be done by 3:00. Owen Valley hosts an 8 way. Last weekend Scottsburg did a 10 way w/ 8 full surfaces, 4 rounds of wrestling and 2 full JV surfaces. This not only gets matches but creates camaraderie amongst the parents and kids. WE are building programs from the ground up. Elem duals blows away double elimination tournaments! Teams this year - Colt Wrestling Ky, Columbus East, Columbus North, Eastern, Edgewood, Henryville, Indian Creek, Jeffersonville, Jennings County, Madison, North Knox, Owen Valley, Shelbyville, Scottsburg, Southwestern, West Washington Yeah I know free advertising... hit me up, we are always looking to expand
    6 points
  29. Bravo. I love to see other people have success. I've never said a thing about Crown Point. See I'm not a troll. I understand my school has been down for a number of years, We are at least back to respectability. I just support my team. I can take the heat. We aren't on Crown Point's level in wrestling. Just like Crown Point ain't on ours at Football. See how Sophomoric that sounds? I ain't the one Dawggie. I care about me and mine not you and yours. I'm holding enough I don't need to compare.
    6 points
  30. It's a new breed. The weight cutting thing has always been shifting away from that dynamic. My kid is an 8th grader, he cuts for some bigger tournaments but wrestles whatever for Jr. High in season. I've heard tons of stories already this year that makes my eyes roll. Here's the deal, kids are different, parents are. Don't be soft and don't cuddle your kids. I used to tell my parents when I coached youth - let's go get beat up, let's get a fat lip, let's get smoked. Today's parents don't like to hear that!
    6 points
  31. Mattyb

    Hockaday to OU

    I’m hoping it’s the real OU… Ohio University!!!!
    6 points
  32. Oh boy, newbie coming for the General
    6 points
  33. Congratulations to Conner Specht Congratulations to from Jay County for signing with Manchester. Projected to wrestle 285. View full signing
    6 points
  34. Is he wrestling the whole Trine team?
    6 points
  35. Teams only post duals score with out individual matches. Tune in Monday
    6 points
  36. Y2CJ41

    Area Code Wars

    The 317 will have Center Grove, Cathedral, and Brownsburg!! YIKEES
    6 points
  37. I make my first grader cut 15-20 pounds for local tournaments and 25-30 for the national ones. 3 nights per week I make him sleep in the snow in just his underwear. Ain't no soft kids in my house, he wrestles 500+ matches per year and is a 47 time national champ.
    5 points
  38. Plenty of progress made here, I feel like the problem is solved. Congrats to all involved.
    5 points
  39. Your comments are laughable at best. You sure do have a lot to say. Care to share your name or do you just want to be another keyboard warrior all season? Landon Clouser
    5 points
  40. #8 Guillermo Rivera LC d #4 Angelo Vargo Penn
    5 points
  41. The internet has tech falled TrackWrestling today.
    5 points
  42. BrodyHardcastle

    Hockaday to OU

    Surprised know one has talked about it, but Willie Saylor announced Jake would be committing to Oklahoma. Another great one slips out of the hands of IU or Purdue.
    5 points
  43. Congratulations to Maddox Cade Congratulations to from Southmont for signing with Heidelberg. Projected to wrestle 141. View full signing
    5 points
  44. Silas Frye has been putting in some work. Holy cow 20 matches already...
    5 points
  45. One bite, everyone knows the rules, Frankie.
    5 points
  46. I've heard it all before. Most thought the same thing when he wrestled Frazier. I saw Frazier mauling people last week for VT. Freestyle is not folkstyle. I've seen guys win Fargo 4 times and never win state. I've seen guys win state who didn't know what Fargo was. Head to head during the season will determine who is the champ.
    5 points
  47. Talks to much
    5 points
  48. I waited a week to be gracious and diplomatic: Kevon Russel from Fort Wayne Snider should be ranked at 157. 2X SSQ. Ticket rounder in an injury shortened season. Had 4 losses on the season: 3 tough ones to Jackson Todd a 7th placer who graduated. And 7-0 to Betz in the ticket round. All after a meniscus tear during football season. Has beaten guys that are ranked at the weight.
    5 points
  49. Mattyb

    Area Code Wars

    @TeamGarcia is not paying!!! He’s definitely bootlegging the feed or sneaking in!!! Doing mean streets of Muncie style .
    5 points
  50. 5 points
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