GOLDEN, Colo. – Oregon State won four meets to win the Jack Hancock Duals
Invitational on Saturday, and the victories pushed the Beavers to the 900 mark
in all-time dual meet wins in a wrestling history dating back to the 1909
season. OSU heavyweight Ty Watterson recorded three pins as he kept his record
perfect this season, and also remaining unbeaten for the Beavers were
125-pounder Jake Gonzales, 133-pounder Bobby Pfennigs, 141-pounder Kyle Larson,
149-pounder Derek Kipperberg and 174-pounder Jeremy Larson.
The Beavers (5-0 overall, 1-0 Pacific-10) captured the tournament championship
with a 25-12 win over Western State, which is ranked No. 7 nationally in NCAA
Division II; that gave Oregon State an all-time record of 900-286-26 in dual
meets.
“That’s something,” OSU head coach Jim Zalesky said of being just the third NCAA
Division I school to reach 900 dual wins. “Not many schools can say that.
Nine-hundred and still building – I hope we get a lot more wins this year and in
the future.”
To reach the finals, OSU beat Division I squads Utah Valley State 49-0 and
Eastern Michigan 28-9 in pool competition, then topped Chadron State, another
Division II school that received votes in the national poll, 46-3 in the
semifinals at Steinhauer Fieldhouse. Chadron State beat host Colorado School of
Mines 30-15 for third place in the 13-team event.
“It was a pretty good day,” Zalesky said. “I thought we wrestled well overall.
It was also good that we saw the things we need to work on. We had success, but
we saw things we need to get better at.”
Against Western State, the Beavers led just 16-12 with two matches to go but got
a decision from 197-pounder Travis Gardner to secure the victory and then a pin
from Watterson to wrap it up.
“Western State battled us hard,” Zalesky said. “They tried to slow us down in
some matches and they kept some matches close – that’s where we saw what we have
to work on. They wrestled hard and gave us a match, and that’s what you want to
have.”
Watterson, ranked seventh nationally in the National Wrestling Coaches
Association poll and eighth by Amateur Wrestling News, improved to 5-0 this
season with his three pins and a forfeit victory on Saturday. All four times
he’s wrestled this season, Watterson has pinned his opponent and three of those
have come in the first period.
“That’s a good way to go,” Zalesky said. “Ty is wrestling well, attacking, and
being tough on top, and sometimes being tough on top is what it comes to in big
tournaments.”
Watterson now has 20 pins in his career, moving the senior into a tie for 27th
place on OSU’s list of all-time leaders. With a 59-19 career record, he’s eight
wins from moving onto the Beavers’ all-time top 50 in career wins.
Jeremy Larson, ranked 19th nationally in the NWCA poll and 12th by AWN, had one
pin and three major decisions on Saturday to also improve to 5-0 this season. In
his four matches that haven’t ended in a pin, the senior has averaged over 17
points per match this season.
“Jeremy is wrestling hard and going on offense a lot, and that’s what we’ve been
preaching,” Zalesky said. “He’s been attacking and wearing guys out. All of our
seniors wrestled well today, wrestled very tough.”
Besides Watterson and Larson, Pfennigs picked up two pins and two decisions and
Kipperberg won four decisions. Gonzales, a sophomore, had a pin, a major
decision, a decision and a forfeit for his four victories; Kyle Larson, a
junior, earned a pin, a major decision and two decisions.
The Beavers recorded six pins against Chadron State, getting falls from
Gonzales, Pfennigs and Kyle Larson to start the meet and then from sophomore
184-pounder Kyle Bressler, Gardner and Watterson to finish the meet. That was
the most pins in a meet for OSU since it also recorded six in a 42-9 win over
Cal Poly on Dec. 14, 1998.
Oregon State’s win over Utah Valley State included four pins, by Pfennigs,
Jeremy Larson, Bressler and Gardner. The 49-0 margin of victory over UVSC was
the Beavers’ biggest since a 49-0 win over Portland State on Jan. 9, 2004.
OSU had one pin in its victories over Eastern Michigan and Western State. In its
five dual meets this season, the Beavers have recorded 17 pins.
“This was good for today, but our next competition is a step up,” said Zalesky,
whose team returns to action at the prestigious Cliff Keen Las Vegas Collegiate
on Dec. 1-2. “We’ve got two weeks to go get to work and get better.”
Oregon State’s next home meet will be Dec. 8 against Oregon in the season’s
first Civil War, presented by Northwest Dodge Dealers.