Wrestling Canada Lutte Wrestling Canada Lutte

DONATE

Brock captures seventh U SPORTS wrestling title sweep at home

February 24, 2020

CATHARINES, Ont. (U SPORTS) – The Brock Badgers won their seventh straight U SPORTS wrestling championship sweep Saturday in their home gymnasium with four women’s gold medals and three men’s. They pulled off the sweep on home soil, winning their 10th women’s title and 20th men’s title in the Bob Davis Gymnasium in St. Catharines.

“We’ve been looking forward to this all year,” said head Coach Marty Calder. “To be able to win here in front of our home crowd is everything.”

Despite the wrestling dynasty that Brock has become, Calder said the pressure was more on winning the 2020 title and less on continuing the legacy of success.

“It’s hard to put the pressure to sustain that on them. They’re just looking at this national championship – our team, this year,” he said. “Maybe that’s why we’re able to do it because we’re not looking to load the last six years on our back and say we have to keep it going.

“We’re extremely proud of the effort these student-athletes make day in and day out in the wrestling room and the classroom.”

Brock finished first in the men’s with 76 points, with Saskatchewan (54) and Concordia (45) rounding out the podium. On the women’s side, Brock came in top spot with 55 points, ahead of Saskatchewan (42) and Alberta (34).

Among the four women’s gold medals won by Brock were the two captured by Julie Steffler and Hannah Taylor, who were rivals on the wrestling mat for four years before becoming Brock Badgers teammates.

A year ago, Taylor beat Steffler, who was with Western at the time, to win her second straight women’s 59 kg title. After graduating with her undergrad degree, Steffler decided to switch to Brock to take a Master of Professional Kinesiology, and brought with her one more year of U SPORTS eligibility.

“It really feels like a big family at Brock,” said Steffler, who sat out her third year at Western after tearing her ACL. “We’ve had an ongoing rivalry, but we’ve always respected each other so it’s been awesome to be her teammate.”

After watching Steffler win the 59 kg gold medal bout, Taylor dominated the 63 kg final, beating Lakehead’s Madison Clayton.

“It means a lot. I’m at a new weight class so I wanted to continue being dominant,” she said. “It also feels great to have the home crowd and showcase what Brock is about and our abilities as athletes.”

Taylor said she has enjoyed having her former rival now pushing her as a teammate.

“It’s good that I have such a strong competitor as a teammate,” she said. “I get pushed by her every single day, so it’s a good relationship. I’m grateful to have her as my teammate.”

The first gold medal of the day Saturday came from fourth-year Badgers wrestler Ligrit Sadiku, who beat Calgary’s Emmanuel Olapade in the men’s 65 kg final.

While it was Sadiku’s third straight U SPORTS title, the Summerside, P.E.I. native admitted his attention is also focused on making Team Canada for the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo.

“This isn’t what my ultimate goal is. I want to go to the Olympics, so this is just a stepping stone,” said Sadiku, who will next compete in the Pan American Olympic Qualification Tournament in Ottawa from March 13-15. “Just winning isn’t enough, so I’m glad I was challenged. Even though I won, I’m not happy with it. I let off the gas a bit and he took advantage of that. That’s the mistake I made and that’s what I’ll learn from.”

While the Olympics are also a large goal for Brock’s Clayton Pye., a gold in the men’s 100 kg category was a big relief.

The fifth-year Ingersoll, Ont., native won the U SPORTS title in 2018 but lost in the semifinals last year. He came into the 2020 U SPORTS Championships having won the Olympic Trials in Niagara Falls in December.

“There was just so much pressure on me to win, and I was pretty dominant throughout the tournament, but I was still a little bit nervous because it meant so much more,” Pye said. “I really wanted to win.”

In addition to the gold medals won by Taylor, Steffler, Sadiku and Pye, other Badgers winning their divisions were Cruiz Manning (men’s 68 kg), Skylar Grote (women’s 67 kg) and Shauna Kuebeck (women’s 82 kg).

Other teams with multiple gold medalists in their respective weight classes included Saskatchewan’s Alex Schell (women’s 48 kg), Logan Sloan (men’s 54 kg), Carson Lee (men’s 82 kg) and Hunter Lee (men’s 90 kg), Guelph’s Kyle Robinson (57 kg) and Alexander Chaves (men’s 72 kg) and Concordia’s Jayd Davis (women’s 55 kg), Guseyn Ruslanzada (men’s 76 kg) and Aly Barghout.

Western’s Madison Parks (women’s 51 kg), Lakehead’s Marco Palermo (men’s 61 kg), and Alberta’s Haley Heffel (women’s 72 kg), also captured gold for their schools.

 

Full Results

TEAM STANDINGS

Men

Rank School Points
1 Brock 76
2 Saskatchewan 54
3 Concordia 45
4 Alberta 40
5 Guelph 40
6 Calgary 39
7 McMaster 38
8 Fraser Valley 26
9 Lakehead 22
10 Western 20
11 Algoma 13
12 UNB 6
13 Ryerson 3
14 Queen’s 2
15 Toronto 2
16 York 2

 

Women

Rank School Points
1 Brock 55
2 Saskatchewan 42
3 Alberta 34
4 Calgary 34
5 Western 34
6 Concordia 31
7 Lakehead 22
8 Guelph 21
9 York 11
10 McMaster 10
11 Toronto 7
12 Fraser Valley 6
13 Algoma 2
14 Queen’s 2
15 Ryerson 0
16 UNB 0

 

 

INDIVIDUAL MEDALISTS

Men

54 kg

  1. Logan Sloan (Saskatchewan)
  2. Josh Skory (Calgary)
  3. Broderick Collison (Algoma)

57 kg

  1. Kyle Robinson (Guelph)
  2. Garette Saunders (Brock)
  3. Francesco Fortino (McMaster)

61 kg

  1. Marco Palermo (Lakehead)
  2. Jordan Wong (Alberta)
  3. Joseph Martin (Brock)

65 kg

  1. Ligrit Sadiku (Brock)
  2. Emmanuel Olapade (Calgary)
  3. Isaiah Springer (Alberta)

68 kg

  1. Cruiz Manning (Brock)
  2. Connor Quinton (McMaster)
  3. Ali Rahguzar (Fraser Valley)

72 kg

  1. Alexander Chaves (Guelph)
  2. Aidan McKeage (Alberta)
  3. Aaron Orszak (Concordia)

76 kg

  1. Guseyn Ruslanzada (Concordia)
  2. Ben Zahra (McMaster)
  3. Ty Bridgwater (Brock)

82 kg

  1. Carson Lee (Saskatchewan)
  2. Ameen Aghamirian (McMaster)
  3. Sam Barmish (Concordia)

90 kg

  1. Hunter Lee (Saskatchewan)
  2. Karan Dhillon (Fraser Valley)
  3. Ignatius Pitt (Brock)

100 kg

  1. Clayton Pye (Brock)
  2. Jasonpreet Bains (Fraser Valley)
  3. Job Reinhart (Guelph)

120 kg

  1. Aly Barghout (Concordia)
  2. Richard Deschatelets (Brock)
  3. Anthony Parker (Western)

 

INDIVIDUAL MEDALISTS

Women

48 kg

  1. Alex Schell (Saskatchewan)
  2. Samantha Romano (Brock)
  3. Calista Espinosa (Fraser Valley)

51 kg

  1. Madison Parks (Western)
  2. Taylor McPherson (Alberta)
  3. Bailey Agard (York)

55 kg

  1. Jayd Davis (Concordia)
  2. Hannah Little (Guelph)
  3. Grace Chambers (Calgary)

59 kg

  1. Julie Steffler (Brock)
  2. Amy Bellavia (Calgary)
  3. Laurence Beauregard (Concordia)

63 kg

  1. Hannah Taylor (Brock)
  2. Madison Clayton (Lakehead)
  3. Katie Mulkay (Alberta)

67 kg

  1. Skylar Grote (Brock)
  2. Ellise Daynes (Calgary)
  3. Amanda Savard (Concordia)

72 kg

  1. Haley Heffel (Alberta)
  2. Berit Johnson (Saskatchewan)
  3. Jennifer Nwamadi (Western)

82 kg

  1. Shauna Kuebeck (Brock)
  2. Maddison Haney (Saskatchewan)
  3. Tyanna Soucy (Western)

 

INDIVIDUAL HONOURS

Men

Outstanding Wrestler:  Guseyn Ruslanzada, Concordia (76 kg)

Rookie of the Year: Carson Lee, Saskatchewan, (82 kg)

Fox 40 Coach of the Year: Marty Calder, Brock

Student-Athlete Community Service Award: Harrish Satheswaran, York

 

Women

Outstanding Wrestler:  Julie Steffler, Brock (59 kg)

Rookie of the Year: Jayd Davis, Concordia (55 kg)

Fox 40 Coach of the Year: Daniel Olver, Saskatchewan

Student-Athlete Community Service Award: Jennifer Nwamadi, Western (72 kg)