Kollin Moore with the “Upset” of Brett Pfarr, B1G Photos, IX

Buckeye wrestler Kollin Moore is no longer a surprise as his freshman season moves to its final week. In the B1G Championship Moore reverses the result against Pfarr from earlier in the year. Moore nearly pinned Pfarr and had him on the ropes from the very beginning of the match. Moore becomes the latest in a growing list of recent Buckeye freshman champions.

B1G Wrestling Championship Photos III

More Cody Burcher. Bo Jordan vs. Amine, Michigan. B1G Championships, March 4-5, Bloomington, Ind.

Bo Jordan v. Mark Hall, B1G Championships, VIII

Bo Jordan had to battle through surgery and injury to get to the B1G Championship. While one might worry about his mat conditioning against the young Phenom Mark Hall, as the match wore on it was Jordan who finished with strength, hitting a winning doubleleg takedown in overtime. The relief and joy is visible.

Future Champ Luke Pletcher, B1G Championships, VII

Luke Pletcher has the skill. What he has that makes that skill work, and why he will win a lot, is an aggressive style that shows he is unafraid to fail and comfortable learning from adversity. This trait has propelled the great ones: Logan Stieber, Nathan Tomasello, Bo and Micah Jordan, Myles Martin and of course, Kyle Snyder.

Here is Pletecher, Micah Jordan and a bit more of Tomassello, from the B1G Championships in Bloomington, Ind.

Kyle Snyder in B1G Wrestling Win, VI

Kyle Snyder wins his semifinal bout in the 2017 B1G Championships in Bloomington Ind. Also Kollin Moore and a game Jake Ryan

Tomasello Over Clark, B1G Wrestling V

With a time expiring sit out for the win over Iowa’s Cody Clark, Nathan Tomasello added his third B1G title.

Enjoy Myles Martin’s Epic Match vs. Bo Nickal, B1G Photos IV

The action of coaches and wrestlers was intense, the action on the mat was furious. Yet a another dramatic chapter of Martin vs Nickal

B1G Wrestling Championship Photos II

Luke Pletcher, bookending photos of Micah Jordan, finished fourth as a true freshman in the B1G Wrestling Tournament. Micah Jordan in his dramatic win over Iowa’s Brandon Sorenson.

B1G Wrestling Championship Photos I

Some action from Bloomington: Top, Jake Ryan battled for an NCAA spot despite fighting off nagging injury. Cody Burcher, pride of Gnadenhutten, dispatches his Iowa opponent. Several shots of Nathan Tomasello’s winning showdown with Michigan’s Stevan Micic.

Buckeyes Capture 1st Outright B1G Wrestling Title Since 1951

Kollin Moore took the mat for the 197 title bout vs veteran Brett Pfarr of Minnesota. When he finished, the freshman had given Ohio State its first outright B1G Wrestling title since before the the Nash was a thing. Action just completed at famed Assembly Hall on the Indiana University campus.

Despite a creeping Penn State effort to within half a point, dramatic title wins by Nathan Tomasello, Bo Jordan and Moore gave the finishing edge to add the latest historic achievement of the Tom Ryan era!

Kyle Snyder, so good it’s not even news anymore, went on to put the exclamation on a remarkable team title run by beating respected and game to the end senior Connor Medbery of Wisconsin. Despite being outweighed by what looked like 60 pounds, Snyder won a man sized battle of strength and quickness at both ends, 8-5.

Today started with Ohio State boasting a robust 18-1/2 point lead. But it was clear that would change. While Ohio State had six wrestlers in the finals, Penn State had four in the consolation semis, which preceded the finals. Also Penn State’s sure fire champions were at weights that preceded four Buckeye finalists.

So nerves were a little tight when the Ohio State lead, which had actually bulged to about 23, had shrunk to a half point when Bo Jordan took the mat for the 174 title bout.

Jordan faced off against the gifted freshman Mark Hall of Penn State. Hall jumped out to an early lead but increasingly Jordan’s strength became the story. First it was simply working out of deep shots that Hall usually would expect to convert.

But by the third period it was evident Jordan had simply worn young Hall down. When Jordan nearly converted a cross face takeover as a counter of another deep shot, you could tell the match was done. It did go to overtime but Hall couldn’t stop the onslaught. Jordan, no longer worried about Hall’s ability to counter, hit the takedown and Ohio State’s team title was effectively won.

Kollin Moore hit an instant takedown and started a surprising mauling of the older Pfarr. Moore and Pfarr contested a later takedown, each wrestler appearing to be in danger of losing by fall. Moore eventually did get control earning more than just the takedown. From my vantage point looking right at Pfarr’s shoulder I’m pretty sure he was pinned. The ref, twisting around for the angle was not able to catch it. No matter. The damage was done.

While falls cannot be challenged, the point was moot. Ohio State had exhausted its challenges the night before in the Nickal/Martin match. That appeared to be a problem when a few close calls went against the Buckeyes in the finals.

On the mat next door to Moore/Pfarr was Matt McCutcheon. The PSU wrestler needed a pin to keep mathematical possibility alive for Penn State. But young Kollin Moore didn’t wait. He won the OSU title on his own.

Ohio State number crunchers were fairly confident of an Ohio State win because nearly all had already banked Kyle Snyder’s first place points. From that perspective, most fans had already assumed the team win after Jordan’s win.

Still, Snyder took the mat knowing his team had already won the title. Not that he probably minds. Heavyweight matches are often overlooked for two reasons: outcomes are usually decided by that time and often enough the matches are not all that entertaining. Often, just to keep the excitement of the meet or tourney going, the order is shifted to put the most entertaining match at the end.

That is not the case in the Snyder era. In whatever meet he competes, young Kyle is the sensation. People tend to stay in their seats to watch the Olympic champion put his talent on display. Few wrestlers have done for the sport and the weight class what Kyle Snyder is doing.

No match this weekend was more exciting than Nathan Tomasello’s earlier 133 title bout. Tomasello effectively won the title on a locked hands penalty against Iowa’s Cory Clark. Tomasello surrendered a tying takedown with 15 seconds left. Not to be denied, Tomasello twisted free as time expired. The point stood after a challenge and Nathan Tomasello became the rare Ohio State three time B1G champion.

Luke Pletcher failed in his 141 third place match, but fourth is quite an achievement for the true freshman who was called into emergency service when Ke-Shawn Hayes was injured and out for the year. Luke wrestled a class heavier than his preferred weight. Luke is going to be quite a champion. Like the great Ohio State champions of recent years Pletcher relentless presses the action. He s not afraid of a move failing–which they sometimes did this weekend–but as he grows and learns that confidence with parlay into pressure match winning points.

Micah Jordan and returning NCAA champion Myles Martin came up short in the title bouts. After the greatest win of his collegiate career in the semis versus Brandon Sorenson, Jordan learned he is still no match for Penn State’s Zain Retherford. Retherford was ruthless in his domination. As was true in their first encounter, Jordan held Reterford off for a bit, but then the punishment began and Jordan was dispatched by a tech fall.

Martin also entered the finals after another epic win in a semi-final rematch with the similarly brutal Bo Nickal of Penn State. But when Sammy Brooks hit an early six point move to nearly pin Martin, the match was effectively over. It ended at 12-2.

Kollin Moore won B1G freshman of the year and Tom Ryan won coach of the year.

The legacy of Tom Ryan only grows. No doubt there was still a bitter taste from having to share the title with Iowa in 2015. Now he and his Buckeyes can say they alone are the best. No argument here.