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  • Spencer Lee Dominates En Route to Olympic Berth; Retherford in Repechage

    The final discipline to hit the mat in the World OG Qualifier was men’s freestyle which took center stage on Saturday. The American contingent consisted of Spencer Lee at 57 kg and Zain Retherford at 65 kg. Both needed to qualify for their respective weights for the 2024 Olympic Games. 
    One out of two, Lee, was able to finish the job; however, Retherford does have a chance to qualify through repechage tomorrow. 
    A three-time Cadet/Junior world champion, Lee focused on his collegiate career at Iowa and did not compete internationally for six-plus years. He returned with wins at the Bill Farrell and the Pan-American Championships, earlier this year; however, he put the entire world on notice with a dominant performance in Istanbul. 
    Lee started and finished his day with remarkably quick finishes. His tournament began with a :22 second tech over Morocco’s Ben Tarik. Lee worked from a front headlock to get a takedown and then proceeded to transfer into a leg lace for four turns and a quick end to the bout. 
    The three-time NCAA champion lightweight only went the full distance in one of his four matches. In the Round of 16, Lee gave up a regular two-point takedown and a four-point double leg to Wanhao Zou of China. Trailing 6-2, Lee got in on a low single and was able to gather the second leg after Zou tried to kick over. He kept the leg for a takedown and also three turns to quickly jump ahead 10-6. Zou turned up the pace late in the second period; however, it wasn’t enough and he came up short, 10-9. 
    Against 2022 European Champion Vladimir Egorov (North Macedonia) it was much of the same. Lee got an early takedown but really blew open the match with his skills from par terre. Initially, Lee started working with a more folkstyle-centric reinforced bar tilt and it yielded a set of exposure points, though Egorov was able to get two of his own. Lee readjusted, caught a leg lace, and then ended the contest. All in only :53 seconds. 
    With an Olympic berth hanging in the balance, Lee took on Kazakhstan’s Rakhat Kalzhan. He hit his Kazakh opponent with a move that American fans have become accustomed to seeing - his dump. That hold netted him two points and then Lee moved into a trapped arm gut. Four turns later, Lee was officially headed to Paris. Once again, it was remarkably quick - only :35 seconds. 
    Like Lee, Retherford had to battle back from an early deficit in his opening match. He gave up a takedown to Stefan Coman (Romania), but never wavered and imposed his will before securing a fall midway through the second stanza. 
    Retherford made short work of his next opponent, Ibrahim Guzan (Yemen), needing less than a period to rack up 11 points for an 11-0 tech. 
    That win set up a much-anticipated bout with 2021 World bronze medalist Tulga Tumur Ochir (Mongolia). As expected, Tumur Ochir was a handful for the 2023 70 kg world champion. Tumur Ochir got on the board first with a takedown set up by an arm spin. Those two points were the only ones awarded during the first period. Retherford jumped ahead with a takedown from single leg with about 1:30 remaining in the contest. The Hodge Trophy winner secured the score as the final seconds were ticking off on Retherford’s shot clock. 
    During the waning seconds of the bout, with Retherford leading on criteria, Tumur Ochir got in on a single leg. Retherford looked to expose the Mongolian; however, he ended up surrendering a total of four points during the exchange. A failed challenge would bring the score to 7-2 in favor of Tumur Ochir, the same score it would end at. 
    Not only did Tumur Ochir win, but he won his next match which locked up a quota for Paris. With his win, Retherford was pulled back into repechage. He’ll face Alibeg Alibegov (Bahrain) in his first match tomorrow. Retherford will need to win four matches to book his trip to Paris.

    Earl Smith -

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    Final Greco-Roman Olympic Quota Tracker

    Friday marked the final day of competition in Greco-Roman from the Last Olympic Games Qualifier in Istanbul, Turkey. That means that the entire field has been determined for Greco-Roman at the 2024 Olympic Games. With that being said, below are the countries that have qualified for the Olympics in Greco, who earned that qualification quota, and when. 
    As a reminder, though the wrestler earns a quota for their country, it doesn't necessarily mean that they will be the ones wrestling in Paris; however, in many countries that is the case. In the three weights where the United States qualified, none of the wrestlers that earned the quota's won the Olympic Trials. In those instances, another column has been added to denote the wrestler who won the Trials. 
    60 kg

    67 kg

     
    77 kg

    87 kg

    97 kg

    130 kg

    Earl Smith -

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    Bey Wins Three But Falls One Match Shy of Olympic Qualification

    The Greco-Roman portion of the World OG Qualifier came to an end from an American standpoint on Friday afternoon. Despite a great effort from Kamal Bey, the US Olympic Greco-Roman contingent finished the way it started the tournament - with three wrestlers headed to compete in Paris, France at the 2024 Olympic Games. 
    On Thursday, Bey fell in the qualification round of the 77 kg weight class. He was pulled back into repechage as Russian Sergei Kutuzov won his semifinal bout Thursday afternoon. 
    While Bey had a chance at qualifying for Paris, it was a longshot as he’d have to reel off four straight wins. 
    Bey nearly pulled off that feat as he started his journey through repechage with a 9-1 tech over Tsimur Berdyieu (AIN - Belarus). That propelled him into a contest with Sweden’s Per Olofsson. Like his first repechage bout, Bey was not significantly pushed and cruised to a 7-1 victory. 
    Next up was Georgia’s Iuri Lomadze in the bronze medal match. Lomadze was a two-time European medalist, who earned a bronze in the continental tournament earlier this year. 
    Lomadze appeared to have an early advantage as Bey was hit with passivity giving the Georgian wrestler an opportunity to work from par terre. Though Lomadze was the top wrestler, it was Bey who countered for a four-point score of his own. Lomadze’s corner challenged to no avail, which gave Bey a 5-1 lead. Late in the second period, Lomadze hit a duck-under and put the American on his back, but it was deemed a two-point hold; not four points. Bey avoided giving up a fall and escaped with a 5-4 victory. 
    With the Olympics looming in the balance, the two bronze medalists, Bey and Hungary’s Zoltan Levai squared off. An unremarkable first period ended 2-0 in favor of Levai with the scoring coming from a passivity call and Bey stepping out while avoiding a throw attempt on the ensuing par terre restart. 
    The second period started with Levai pushing the pace and controlling the center and therefore getting a second passivity point. 
    Bey wasn’t able to really get to any favorable offensive positions until the final :20 seconds of the bout when he was shooting low up into the body. Those attempts were fended off by Levai and the clock hit zero on the match and Bey’s hopes for Paris with a 3-0 loss. 
    Although women’s freestyle took place on Friday, no American women were in action because all six weights had already been qualified for the Olympics. 

    Earl Smith -

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    • Spencer Lee Dominates En Route to Olympic Berth; Retherford in Repechage

      Spencer Lee Dominates En Route to Olympic Berth; Retherford in Repechage

    • Final Greco-Roman Olympic Quota Tracker

      Final Greco-Roman Olympic Quota Tracker

    • Bey Wins Three But Falls One Match Shy of Olympic Qualification

      Bey Wins Three But Falls One Match Shy of Olympic Qualification



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