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  1. 2009 Dec 22

    Podcast 12/22: Doc Heads to Vegas

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    By HuskerLocker

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    Tags: mbb, wbb, bo pelini, tom osborne, jordan burroughs, wrestling

  2. 2009 Dec 21

    WRESTLING: Burroughs Out for Season; Huge Blow to NU

    219 views

    By HuskerLocker

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    Defending national champion Jordan Burroughs, one of the best Nebraska wrestlers in history will miss the remainder of the season with a torn posterior and lateral cruciate ligament.

    The 157-pounder tore the ligaments in Saturday's dual vs. Central Michigan. Burroughs lost the match 3-2 to CMU's Steve Brown, snapping his 44-match winning streak.

    Head coach Mark Manning will seek - and likely be granted - a medical redshirt; Burroughs, at 7-1, should fall well below the 30-percent benchmark set by the NCAA.

    “You don’t replace a young man like Jordan,” Manning said. “On the other hand, it gives other guys on the team an opportunity to step up. It also gives our team great lessons in life that relate to athletics. It shows them you have to protect yourself and make the most of your opportunities because you are not promised anything. We’ll move on from this and our team will be fine.”

    In Burroughs' absence, the Huskers are essentially anchored by two wrestlers: 197-pounder Craig Brester and 174-pounder Stephen Dwyer. Heavyweight Tucker Lane remains ranked in the top 20, but has experienced a hot-and-cold start to the year.

    Tags: wrestling, jordan burroughs

  3. 2009 Oct 26

    WRESTLING: NU Starts Season at No. 7

    222 views

    By HuskerLocker

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    Nebraska opens No. 7 in the Intermat preaseason poll after its first Big 12 Championship last year. Not surprisingly, defending national champion Jordan Burroughs starts the year No. 1 at 157 pounds, Craig Brester is No. 2 at 197 behind Iowa State rival Jake Varner, Stephen Dwyer is No. 6 at 165 and heavyweight Tucker Lane is ranked ninth in a loaded division.

    Nebraska will face at least nine opponents inside the top 25, starting with Wisconsin on Nov. 15.

    1. Iowa
    2. Iowa State
    3. Ohio State
    4. Cornell
    5. Minnesota
    6. Oklahoma State
    7. Nebraska
    8. Missouri
    9. Boise State
    10. Maryland
    11. Wisconsin
    12. Edinboro
    13. Central Michigan
    14. Penn State
    15. Indiana
    16. American
    17. Arizona State
    18. Oklahoma
    19. Lehigh
    20. Virginia
    21. Michigan State
    22. Harvard
    23. Cal Poly
    24. Penn
    25. Duke

    Tags: wrestling, jordan burroughs, craig brester, stephen dwyer, tucker lane

  4. 2009 Mar 07

    WRESTLING: Undefeated Burroughs Worth The Price of Admission

    382 views

    By SMcKewon

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    He’s got a broad back. A twitch so quick that he can drop to his knees – and rise from them, almost as fast as the eye can track it. He is almost impossible to take down because of these two attributes. The fortunate wrestler that even makes a successful shot on Nebraska’s Jordan Burroughs has little chance of actually completing it for two points.

    And yet it’s not Burroughs’ athleticism and speed that’s most impressive about his current undefeated season, which included his second straight Big 12 Championship in NU Coliseum.

    It’s the look the 157-pounder has just before the match begins. The presence. The swagger. The way he steps back from his foe, adjusts his headgear, and then stones the guy with a double leg shot so quick it looks like a form tackle in football. There isn’t anything odd or unmistakable about it, either. It’s a guy who knows he owns the mat, and the competitor placed on it with him.

    Burroughs didn’t always have it. Used to be a puppy, as NU coach Mark Manning says it. But now, that dog’s got bite and glare.

    “He’s like Tom Brady walking on to the field,” Manning said.
    Manning is just as quick to point out the undefeated Burroughs hasn’t won anything yet. The expected Big 12 title, which came when Burroughs beat Missouri’s Michael Chandler in the finals Saturday night, is one thing.

    “I was Big 12 champion last year, too,” he said.

    But he has to finish with a run through the NCAA Championships. And no Husker has ever been an undefeated national champion. NU’s Bryan Snyder, also a 157-pounder, came closest, going undefeated two straight years in 2001 and 2002 only to lose twice in the NCAA finals in overtime. Snyder’s last lost came down to nothing more than an escape.

    Sometimes he drops by Nebraska’s wrestling room. He’s NU’s only four-time All-American.

    “I give him his due for that,” Burroughs said.

    In two weeks, Snyder might have to return the favor.

    Burroughs throttled his first competition Saturday in the same fashion he has all year, beating Neil Erisman, the nation’s No. 10 wrestler, 16-6. Burroughs let Erisman tire himself out over the first two periods before drilling him with takedowns in the third. He can afford to, at this point, because opponents are so wary of his quickness that they spend much of the match just trying to fend off his shots and keep the contest close.

    But then he had to fight against Chandler. Brady faced his New York Giants, so to speak. Chandler got the first takedown of the match, then rode Burroughs for a full 90 seconds.

    “I can’t even remember the last time that happened,” Burroughs said. “A couple bad things flashed through my head.”

    Chandler, with his small, squat body, often fell into a three-point stance – he looked like some eight-man football fullback – that made him hard to take down. Burroughs had slip and move and feint, but he got three takedowns – two of them right at the end of the first and second periods. When it mattered, he converted.

    Now he goes to nationals with a 30-0 mark and No. 3 ranking. Third, you say? Yep. Gregor Gillespie of Edinboro and Mike Poeta of Illinois, both undefeated, are ranked ahead of Burroughs. Gillespie won the 149 national title in 2007. Poeta got the finals last year before losing to Cornell’s Jordan Leen – whom Burroughs has already beaten this year.

    Based on competition alone, Burroughs, who has beaten seven of the nation’s current top ten wrestlers, should get the first seed. Even then, he’ll face a brutal draw. NCAA champions. Tough defensive guys. Probably Chandler again.

    But after finishing third at 149 last year – Burroughs lost to Brent Metcalf, who’s poised to repeat this year, a guy Burroughs would like to wrestle again in an all-star match of some kind next year – there isn’t a whole lot more for him to do. Except win it all. Which means not losing for a whole season.

    Point blank: It’s hard to do.

    “Anything less than first would be a disappointment,” Burroughs said.

    If he achieves it, and becomes the first Husker in history to do so, you’d really have ask yourself: Has any Husker athlete had a better season in 2008-09 than Burroughs? Maybe NU football player Ndamukong Suh. And that’s it.

    Tags: jordan burroughs, wrestling

  5. 2009 Mar 07

    WRESTLING: Huskers Tie (But Really Beat) Iowa State for Big 12 Title

    984 views

    By SMcKewon

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    Before the finals round of the Big 12 Championships, Nebraska’s wrestling team sat in the locker room normally used by NU’s volleyball squad.

    The Cornhuskers trailed No. 3 Iowa State by 64-58, and the Cyclones had seven wrestlers in the finals. NU only had five. Those odds are nearly impossible, and don’t typically equal a conference title.

    But Nebraska looked at the glass Big 12 trophy, one of many won by the volleyball team, that was sitting in that locker room, staring right back at them.

    “We got this,” undefeated 157-pounder Jordan Burroughs told his teammates.

    And so Nebraska did, catching the Cyclones by the 184-pound finals and surpassing them on Craig Brester’s upset of No. 1 Jake Varner at 197. ISU managed to forge a tie with top-ranked David Zabriskie’s 3-1 win the heavyweight match, but it was the kind of tie, frankly, that felt like a Husker win.

    Yes, NU beat ISU, 70-70, for its first Big 12 Championship and the first male Big 12 title of any kind since 2007.

    “Nebraska wrestling is all heart, and all hard work,” NU coach Mark Manning said. “A lot of people didn’t think we had a chance…I love this team, and I love these guys.”

    Said Brester: “Everybody though ISU was too deep for us. But we knew if we do what we can, we’d hope to get the job done.”

    NU won four individual titles – needing every one of them – out of their upper weight wrestlers: Burroughs won at 157; Brandon Browne, just two weeks after the death of his mother, Thayes, won an emotional title at 174; Vince Jones won at 184 and Brester, the meet’s outstanding wrestler, beat Varner – a defensive stalwart whom many had seen as untouchable – 4-3 in his third try this season.

    That match clinched the tie for the Huskers. Brester notched a takedown with nine seconds left in the second period to get a 3-0 lead, then held on the third period, resisting a final-minute flurry of moves and shots by Varner, to win the match. It felt like a national title match, and it’s likely that Brester and Varner will meet for a fourth time at the NCAA Championships in St. Louis.

    “The No. 1 guy and we were tied with ISU,” Brester said. “There’s not gonna be a bigger match.

    The Husker fans inside the Coliseum roared as Brester was presented to all four sides of the arena as the winner. Manning picked Brester off the ground as he left the mat, then Brester and Varner, in one of those great moments, crossed path in the cool down area as Varner made his way to an indoor racquetball court, slamming the glass screen behind him.

    How’d Brester get the takedown on Varner? He slipped a throw attempt by Varner, who lost his balance. Brester then wheeled his way around for the two points, and didn’t let Varner escape before time expired.

    “It was a kind of a scramble, and I got the takedown,” Brester said.

    Browne’s victory was no less dramatic. He got a takedown of Mizzou’s Raymond Jordan with four seconds left in the match, which touched a giant celebration from the Plattsmouth senior. Browne hadn’t wrestled since the death of his mother right before the ISU dual, and took five days off before preparing for the Big 12 meet.

    As Browne left the mat, he hugged his brother, 197-pounder Cameron Browne, and his father in the hallway. Browne took a half-minute to collect himself after reporters asked him the first question.

    “It’s the first meet my dad gone to without (his mother) since I was kid,” Browne said. “It’s unbelievable. Unbelievable. To have this be my last match here, you can’t ask for anything more.”

    Said Manning: “To go through what he went through, he comes out and beats two great competitors…I told the team, ‘no team in the country has gone through adversity like you have.’”

    Burroughs won a closer-than-expected match over Mizzou’s Michael Chandler, beating him 6-4. Burroughs gave up only his second takedown of the year. And Jones, at 184, beat ISU’s Jerome Ward for the third time this season, 3-0. Stephen Dwyer was the only NU wrestler not to win his title match, losing in overtime to Nick Marable, 3-1.

    He didn’t win a title, but redshirt freshman heavyweight Tucker Lane won crucial points in his division with an upset of third-ranked Jared Rosholt in the consolation match, 3-2. Lane scored an early takedown and successfully fended off Rosholt in the closing minute of the match for the win. In the semifinals, Lane nearly beat No. 1 David Zabriskie, controlling the match for the full seven minutes before falling in triple overtime, 3-1.

    Every Husker wrestler except 141-pounder Curtis Salazar won a match Saturday. At 125, redshirt freshman Andy Pokorny pinned Missouri’s Troy Dolan in an opening match before losing two straight. Sophomore Matt Vacanti beat Todd Schavrien 7-2, then narrowly lost to No. 1 seed Nick Fanthorpe, then lost to Schavrien 4-3 in a match that had Husker fans booing the referees for not calling a stalling penalty. Vacanti recovered, though, to win a challenge match over Oklahoma’s Brian Shelton – one of Vacanti’s best wins of the year. Ironically, Shelton didn’t have to challenge Vacanti, and if he hadn’t, Nebraska could not have forged the tie for the title.

    For the night, NU automatically qualified six wrestlers for the NCAA Championships, and planned to get two more wild card bids with Vacanti and Sanders. Eight bids would put the Huskers right in the hunt in St. Louis. Iowa will be the prohibitive favorite, but Nebraska’s upper weight wrestlers could again pull a coup.

    After all, they just did.

    “It’s a very mature group,” Manning said. “They just keep on getting better and keep on fighting. They epitomize what this state’s all about.”

    Undefeated Burroughs worth the price of admission

    Tags: wrestling, jordan burroughs, craig brester, vince jones, tucker lane, brandon browne, stephen dwyer, mark manning, jake varner

  6. 2009 Mar 06

    The 'Mini BCS' of Big 12 Wrestling Comes to Lincoln

    263 views

    By SMcKewon

    Blog post image

    Since the Big Eight became the Big 12 in 1996, Nebraska’s wrestling team has won as many league championships as the number of ghost orchids in a pine forest. Oklahoma State has ruled the roost for most of those tournaments, with Iowa State and Oklahoma picking up the table scraps.

    NU’s best chance was last year, when it rolled into the tourney with the nation’s No. 2 team, but finished second to ISU at what coach Mark Manning calls a “mini-BCS bowl.”

    Manning recalled the frustration of that missed opportunity in 2008 by pausing and shaking his head a little. His team dropped some key consolation matches that provided the Cyclones with their final margin of victory.

    But now, ranked fourth and bunched closely with No. 3 Iowa State and No. 5 Missouri, Nebraska could get an even better shot in 2009. The Huskers host the event in the NU Coliseum Saturday. No bags. No travel. No hassle. Plenty of rest. And enough sterling wrestlers in the upper weights to make a run at the crown.

    The mini-BCS has come to Lincoln. With just five teams in the Big 12, the meet is a one-day event Saturday, with fourth and fifth seed matches starting at 11 a.m., semifinals at noon, consolation matches at 4 p.m., and finals, which will be televised live on Fox Sports Network, at 7.

    “Fans are in for a great treat,” Manning said. “A lot of close matches and a lot of great matchups. It’s gonna be a great day for wrestling fans… you can’t really hide. You don’t really have an easy match. Every match will be highly contested.”

    Leaning in the entryway of the NU wrestling room Tuesday, Manning said it would be a “great accomplishment,” if the Huskers, who finished 17-3-1 in their dual season and took first at the Las Vegas Invitational back in December, were able to nip ISU and Mizzou for its first league crown.

    But, he said, it’ll take energy, aggression, and maybe a little surprise at one of the lower weights, where Nebraska has struggled at times during the season. Generally, though, NU hopes to rely on their cache of strong upper weight wrestlers, beginning with undefeated and third-ranked 157-pounder Jordan Burroughs and continuing through No. 15 heavyweight Tucker Lane.

    Burroughs, No. 3 174-pounder Brandon Browne and No. 11 184-pounder Vince Jones should all be favorites at their weights. At 165, 197 and heavyweight, NU’s Stephen Dwyer, Craig Brester and Lane have already technically qualified for the NCAA Championships, as the Big 12 was allotted five bids for each weight class. That’s how strong they are.

    Brester, ranked second, will likely have to beat No. 4 Max Askren of Missouri – Brester’s won two straight – and Iowa State’s top-ranked Jake Varner – Brester’s lost two straight – to claim the league crown. No. 8 Dwyer will need to avenge losses to Mizzou’s Nick Marable and ISU’s Jon Reader to win his first award.

    “It’s definitely a pretty stacked weight class,” Dwyer said, adding that, aside from nationals, the Big 12 meet is as “big time” as NU’s season gets.

    “I haven’t won a Big 12 championship,” he said. “And I really want to.”

    Lane, just a redshirt freshman, has the toughest draw. If he can survive a 4/5 piggyback match against Oklahoma’s Nathan Fernandez, he’ll be staring at the nation’s top three wrestlers: Iowa State’s David Zabriskie, Missouri’s Mark Ellis and Oklahoma State’s Jared Rosholt. Lane split with Zabriskie, lost narrowly to Rosholt and didn’t face Ellis.

    “It was a big week of preparation for me,” Lane said. “They’re all tough guys with a lot of experience wrestling in big matches.”

    Nebraska’s biggest team competition should be ISU, who stunned the Huskers 30-10 in a dual two weeks ago at the NU Coliseum. The Huskers wrestled, however, without Browne, who lost his mother, and 125-pounder Andy Pokorny, who missed weight.

    In a teleconference Wednesday, Manning called the Cyclones the team to beat, since they have balance throughout the weight classes, and could beat NU at those three key upper weights.

    Iowa State coach Cael Sanderson played down the “favorite” tag.

    “Maybe that’s just a strategy or something,” Sanderson said. “Just like any other team, we’ve got to wrestle, get in there and get the job done. With only a few rounds of wrestling, just one match can have a significant impact and make a big difference in the outcome.”

    Watch out for Missouri, too. The Tigers beat ISU in a dual, almost did the same to Nebraska, and have the one wrestler, Michael Chandler, who has given Burroughs any sort of trouble this year at 157 pounds. Like the Huskers, though, Mizzou is not particularly strong in the lower weights.

    MU coach Brian Smith said a Big 12 title would be “another step” that many deemed unthinkable just a decade ago.

    “When I first got here I was laughed when I said we would do that, but I know we’re right in the hunt,” Smith said. “We’ve been in the hunt for the last couple years…it would also be meaningful to the entire state and the athletic department at Missouri because they’ve never won an overall Big 12 male championship.”

    Both programs should bring vocal fans to Lincoln, Brester said. Dwyer, meanwhile, said he remembers the Oklahoma State contingent quite well. The Cowboys have few top-end wrestlers, but might gobble up a couple titles in the lower weights. Oklahoma probably brings up the rear with a young team, but could act as spoiler to NU, ISU or Mizzou.

    Put the fans of all five programs into NU Coliseum, and the joint might jump like it does for Husker volleyball.

    Dwyer said he’ll take that over a road trip any day.

    “It’s so much less strenuous on your body,” he said. “I love wrestling at home.”

    Want to know which Huskers have the best chance at a title! Check out our primer!

    Join our Husker Locker Wrestling Fans Group!

    Tags: wrestling, big 12 wrestling championships, jordan burroughs, craig brester, stephen dwyer, mark manning, tucker lane

  7. 2009 Feb 15

    WRESTLING: Burroughs Shatters His Own Record, Huskers Roll

    198 views

    By SMcKewon

    Blog post image

    Nebraska 157-pound wrestler Jordan Burroughs is so quick and athletic that he can perform a double shot on his knee and swivel around an opponent in all of five seconds.

    That's part of how you notch 113 takedowns for a season, eclipsing your old school record of 98 by a wide margin - and there's still one more dual to go.

    Burroughs helped Nebraska beat North Carolina 24-15 and UNC Greensboro 43 to -1 with technical falls in both duals - and 21 total takedowns for the night. One of those wins was a 15-point hammering of ranked opponent, UNC's Thomas Scotten.

    NU is now 17-2-1 for the year, and will go for the Big 12 title next week vs. Iowa State. That's a biggun, folks.

    If you're wondering how Greensboro lost a point, by the way, it was for unsportsmanlike conduct after NU's Matt Vacanti pinned Casey Boyle.

    Read more here.

    Tags: wrestling, jordan burroughs

  8. 2009 Feb 05

    WRESTLING: Jersey Boys Help Huskers to Historic Win

    769 views

    By SMcKewon

    Blog post image

    Photo courtesy of Huskers.com

    While the rest of Nebraska’s wrestling team leaned toward the mat on cushioned folding chairs, the New Jersey boys sat cross-legged on the floor under the Gatorade jug.

    It was a fitting image, considering Sicklerville, N.J. products Vince Jones and Jordan Burroughs were responsible for the fourth-ranked Cornhuskers’ 17-16 dual victory over Oklahoma State Thursday night. With NU’s only major decision wins, both scored a crucial bonus point that helped offset No. 2 Craig Brester stunning loss at 197 pounds.

    “We’ve been doing this since high school,” Jones said of he and Burroughs, who have been teammates and friends since youth. “That we can continue it in college is great…growing up, my dream was always to beat Oklahoma State, because they kept winning national championships. We’ve come a long way.”

    They also gave Nebraska (15-2-1) its second straight win over the Cowboys (13-5) – the first time in the program’s history. NU didn’t secure the win until 125-pounder Andy Pokorny staved off a pin attempt late in his match. Jones and

    Burroughs, watching, yelled together with 20 seconds left.

    “We were hoping Pokorny would stay off his back,” Burroughs said.

    Pokorny still lost 12-3, but not by enough points for OSU to recapture what it lost to Jones and Burroughs.

    Jones, ranked eleventh by the National Wrestling Coaches’ Association at 184 pounds, won 11-2, securing the major decision on a takedown with two seconds left in the match. Burroughs, third at 157 pounds, put on a dominant performance, blasting tenth-ranked Neil Erisman 21-9 with ten takedowns, the first of which came just four seconds into the match.

    “I’m always hoping for a technical fall,” Burroughs said. “I try to set the tone.”

    That Burroughs did, mixing takedowns with terrific defensive recoveries. Erisman was one of the few wrestlers to take effective shots against the speedy Burroughs, but he never coverted any of them into points. Burroughs walked out of a couple, and turned two more into takedowns of his own.

    The junior stayed perfect at 24-0, notching his team-leading 11th major decision of the season.

    It was a performance NU coach Mark Manning had been awaiting. Burroughs has been flat, Manning said, in recent weeks, including a narrow 4-3 win over Raymond Foster at Missouri last week.

    Two days before the OSU match, Manning said, he saw “a spark” back in Burroughs’ wrestling.

    It might have had something to do with the season-high 2,826 fans at the Bob Devaney Sports Center who huddled around one end of the arena, and held up “2” cards each time Burroughs scored a takedown.

    “We loved it, being out here,” Burroughs said. “We want the spotlight. We love the atmosphere and big matches.”

    The crowd roared loudest at the end Jones’ match. The senior is generally NU’s most entertaining – and arguably most frustrating wrestler – getting in trouble, out, and back in with frequency. Thursday, he fought off OSU sophomore Cody Hill in the waning moment of the match and scored an unlikely takedown that brought legendary OSU Coach John Smith off the bench stomping and fussing after the buzzer.

    “Vince did a great job,” Manning said. “He’s really trying to be more consistent.”

    NU also got wins from Robert Sanders at 149 pounds,

    Stephen Dwyer at 165, Brandon Browne at 174. Each won in the final period by three points or less.

    The night’s biggest surprise came at 197, where Brester was taken down twice in the last 33 seconds by No. 8 Clayton Foster. Brester was out of rhythm much of the match, lunging wildly for shots and missing. Foster wrestled defensively until the very end, when he took advantage of his tiring opponent.

    “Clayton Foster is a tough guy - I’m sure he’ll learn from it,” Manning said of Brester, who stormed out of the main arena upon losing, while Foster hit his chest. “

    Oklahoma State scored its other victories at 125, 133, 141 and heavyweight.

    Nebraska next wrestles Sunday at Oklahoma.

    Join our wrestling fans group!

    Tags: wrestling, jordan burroughs

  9. 2008 Nov 20

    NU Wrestlers Beat Mocs

    303 views

    By SMcKewon

    Blog post image

    Nebraska wrestling’s first dual of the 2008-2009 campaign will go down as a 29-15 win over Tennessee-Chattanooga. But it might be better remembered as the start to a very intriguing season.



    The sixth-ranked Cornhuskers unveiled an altered lineup Thursday in front of 598 fans at the NU Coliseum, moving one of their best wrestlers, junior Jordan Burroughs, from 149 pounds to 157. That means Chris Hacker and Robert Sanders, slated to battle for wrestling time at 157, will drop a weight instead vie for position there.



    Burroughs, ranked No. 3 nationally, kicked off competing at his new weight by dominating No. 19 Joey Knox in a 17-7 major decision that included seven takedowns.



    “Jordan had grown into a big 149-pounder,” NU Coach Mark Manning said. “So he’ll go at 157 for us. We made that decision earlier in the week. It’s gonna be good for us. Really Chris Hacker and Robert Sanders are 149-pounders.”



    The move takes Burroughs out of a ultra-competitive weight class that included Iowa’s Brent Metcalf – who beat Burroughs last year – and puts him in a more wide-open national race.



    “It kinda bothers me a little bit, knowing I was a 149-pounder last year,” Burroughs said after the match. “I’m just doing what’s better for myself, so I’m not really thinking about what anyone else thinks. It’s my decision. I’m just doing what’s healthy for me, and what makes me feel strong.”



    The rest on Thursday was business as usual. Sort of. At 125 pounds, redshirt freshman Andy Pokorny scratched because of illness, and NU had to forfeit. At 184, Levi Wofford wrestled instead of Vince Jones and, under the circumstances, scored an impressive 15-3 major decision that included nine back points.



    Fourth-ranked Brester had a quick night at 197, pinning UTC’s Ethan Winel in two minutes, 45 seconds. Brester had a takedown 19 seconds into the match, and finally worked Winel to his back for the fall just before the first period had ended. Brester joked he was trying win swiftly Thursday as his former high school, Howells, was playing a state championship football game in nearby Memorial Stadium.



    “The old man told me to make it quick,” Brester said. “…You just take what’s there. I saw an opening there, and I took it, and it worked out. It’s always nice to get done early.”



    No. 3 Brandon Browne shrugged off what he called a slow start to take a 12-6 decision UTC freshman Jason McCroskey, who came into the match 6-0. Browne busted an 8-5 match with a reversal late in the second period.



    “As the match went on, I got more comfortable,” Browne said. “I had to relax and started doing what I do best, the points would start coming.”



    At 165, Stephen Dwyer handled the Mocs’ Seth Garvin 9-3 in a defensive match. Nebraska’s Tucker Lane scored a 5-3 win over Cody Sliger thanks to a reversal early in the third period.



    The Huskers’ two losses of the night were 141 and 149 pounds. At 141, Curtis Salazar held a 3-2 lead over fourth-ranked Cody Cleveland after one period, but Cleveland scored the pin just 38 seconds into the third period after Manning said Salazar got “a little tentative.” Brian Litch lost at 149 pounds to Dan Waddell 11-4. Waddell had six takedowns and a point for riding time.



    Nebraska next heads to Omaha for the Kaufman-Brand Open on Nebraska-Omaha’s campus. Wrestlers from many of the nation’s top programs, including Iowa and Iowa State, will be there.



    “It’ll be a grind,” Brester said. “A long day.”


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    Tags: nu wrestling, jordan burroughs

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