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DMV Trying to bring Olympic Gold In Wrestling, 97kg: Snyder (USA) vs. Goziumov (AZE)


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His losing the NCAA title as a freshman may be just enough to keep him off the best five alltime, let alone best ever.....but he has a chance to put up an incredible resume by the time his tenure is over and very well could be considered top three or best ever by some when all said and done.

 

The top 5-6 wrestlers alltime are monumental legends in their sport, tough feat to accomplish.

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We shall see how history defines him:

 

His losing the NCAA title as a freshman may be just enough to keep him off the best five alltime, let alone best ever.....but he has a chance to put up an incredible resume by the time his tenure is over and very well could be considered top three or best ever by some when all said and done.

 

The top 5-6 wrestlers alltime are monumental legends in their sport, tough feat to accomplish.

World champion at 19, no one can top that, it's more prestigious than an NCAA title, not to mention jumping weight classes to wrestle bigger guys simply to take out the best. Pretty much everyone who works with him says he will be the best ever. College wrestling is a part of the equation, but not the majority of it. What he did v the monster at NCST was one of the most incredible victories college wrestling has seen. Snyder was 220 vs a 255lb cut up defending champion. Snyder could have smoked the 197 class but he went after 285s.

 

179-0 in HS only giving up one take down, he won the 3 biggest tournaments in the country. He wins the world championship at 19 and the wins the heavy weight NCAA title at 20 as the lightest heavy weight taking down a 2 time defending champion. Youngest two time junior medalist including a gold.

 

The kid was going to take a year off to prepare for the Olympics bc of the weight class differences, but he decided he'd just go win it all at 285lbs. That's movie stuff. You don't just jump to the 285 division but he did and beat a much bigger guy who was a two time defending champion, the guy had won 80 matches in a row? Something like that I think. I imagine most think being the best ever is well within his grasp.

 

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"Kyle Snyder is the best wrestler ever," wrote Jordan Burroughs, an Olympic gold medalist and three-time world champion, in a March Twitter post.

 

"He's so good," Burroughs said recently after leading a clinic at Morgan State. "I always tell him he reminds me of me when I first graduated from college, but he's a couple years younger. … So he's a whole cycle ahead of me and doing things that I only dreamed of when I was 19 or 20 years old."

 

After his deliberate choice to stop obsessing over results, Snyder took off. Last September, he stunned everyone but those in his inner circle by sweeping to a world championship at age 19, the youngest American wrestler ever to do so. He had planned to take a year away from Ohio State to prepare for the Olympics but changed his mind in the middle of last season and captured the NCAA 285-pound title from the seemingly unbeatable Nick Gwiazdowski.

 

Just like that, he announced he was the future of the sport in this country.

 

"When you watch Kyle Snyder, what you're seeing is potential realized," said Tom Ryan, his coach at Ohio State. "Now, 99 percent of the time, that doesn't happen. So you ask yourself, what makes this person different? Well, I've been around many people who love this sport. But this guy is at an extraordinary level in terms of having a deep love of what he's doing."

 

Olympic wrestler Kyle Snyder through the years

The least surprised observers were those who've been around Snyder the longest.

 

"We're kind of at a point where it's not a shock," said his dad, Steve. "We're way beyond doubting him."

 

As Kyle developed in the Warhawks wrestling club and then at Good Counsel High School, Steve often told him he would surely lose one day. He wanted his son to know it would be OK to falter. Only Kyle never did — he went 179-0 in three years of high school wrestling, blitzing through the toughest tournaments in the country.

 

When he was a toddler, his parents noticed the uncommon coordination with which he bounded around the family home. But Kyle was more than athletic. He sought contact, even if that meant rough-housing with his brother, Steven, three years his elder.

 

"They broke a sectional [sofa]," their mother, Tricia, recalled. "And the repair guy came in and looked at them. He said, 'I'll make it bulletproof.' But yeah, holes in the walls, just from running and falling into a wall. They were rolling, touching, grabbing, in the car or wherever. They were just in constant motion."

 

Kyle hadn't even reached first grade when his parents took him to South Carroll High School to practice with the Warhawks.

 

"I think it was just by luck," Steve said. "There was no real science behind it. It was just let's find him something simple to do."

 

Kyle actually preferred football, but he was a natural on the mat, able to hold his own with kids three and four years older than he was.

 

Even as a child, he lived to compete.

 

 

His parents laughed recently as they remembered the jump rope record he set at Linton Springs Elementary, which of course, still stands.

 

In high school, he'd spend an evening with his girlfriend and then retreat to the garage for sets of pull-ups.

 

"To this day, if he goes to a house and there's a ping pong table, two hours later, he's still playing," Steve said. "He will have played everyone on the property and he'll be in a full sweat."

 

He followed his brother to Good Counsel.

 

"He'd started coming around as a sixth-grader," said his high school coach, Skylar Saar. "And he'd toss around some of our 130-pounders. They weren't bad wrestlers either."

 

Snyder worked so fervently and so loved the sport that Saar contemplated naming him a captain when he was still in ninth grade.

 

The coach and his young star would grapple in practice.

 

"Freshman year, I'd beat him," Saar recalled. "By sophomore year, I was barely hanging on. Junior year, he just tore me apart. I couldn't do anything."

 

Snyder possessed rare gifts for analyzing his opponents and devising new plans of attack. He wore out his phone and his iPad watching videos of Olympians Burroughs and Cael Sanderson. Then he put his own twists on their best moves. These skills were the seeds of the craft he's still honing today.

 

"I'm not really that artistic of a guy," he said. "I can't really draw. But wrestling might be … it just makes sense to me."

 

Snyder eventually ran out of viable competition in high school. But coaches at the Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs had noticed him and extended an unusual offer. Skip your senior year of wrestling, they told him, and move west to train with the national team.

 

"It wasn't too difficult of a decision," said Snyder, who graduated from a nearby high school in Colorado Springs. "I was mature even when I was younger in high school, and I knew what I wanted to do with my life. It was the next step to go there and train with the toughest guys."

 

The same logic steered him to Ohio State, where he felt he'd have the best training partners available in college wrestling. By then, the pressure to be perfect had begun to mount. Not only had Snyder never lost a high school match, Buckeyes fans viewed him as the prodigy who would take a rapidly improving program over the top.

 

"You're Kyle Snyder's mom?" one man said to Tricia at the team's early season wrestle-offs. "We've been waiting for you."

 

 

His parents believe he crashed so hard after losing the NCAA final as a freshman in part because he had accepted the burden of such expectations.

 

Pain still flashed across Steve's face as he described his son's sobs at the team hotel in St. Louis.

 

"We didn't know what to even say," he remembered. "It had nothing to do with the fact he lost or that he got pinned on ESPN. What was killing me was I knew how upset he was."

 

The irony was Kyle had helped Ohio State capture the team national championship. So he had to compose himself for the celebration that evening.

 

Within a few days, he was set on his new course.

 

"My goals have kind of changed over the last two years," he said. "I used to just want to win every match. If I won every match, I was happy. But then you lose a couple matches, don't wrestle that well in some, and you're not that happy.

 

"So I changed my goals to instead of thinking about winning and losing, I'm more just focused on the effort I put into each match and myself as a wrestler."

 

A bounty of Maryland Moments at Rio Games

From the moment on New Year's Eve when Snyder announced his unexpected return for his sophomore season at Ohio State, wrestling geeks buzzed about a possible showdown between him and Gwiazdowski, a 255-pound bear from N.C. State who had won the last two NCAA titles in the 285-pound class.

 

Gwiazdowski was up to 88 wins in a row and had 35 pounds on Snyder when the two met at a sold-out Madison Square Garden in March. It was the most-hyped collegiate wrestling battle in some time, and Snyder loved every bit of the build-up.

 

"I think it invigorated him for months leading up to it," Ryan said.

 

In this case, reality did not disappoint. Gwiazdowski led 5-3 with 22 seconds left in the third period when Snyder lunged in and snared his legs for a two-point takedown. Then, 25 seconds into overtime, Snyder cinched his arms around Gwiazdowski's massive thighs and bulled him to the mat for another takedown, this one decisive.

 

Snyder followed that up by beating 2012 gold medalist Jake Varner two out of three times at Olympic Trials to earn his spot in Rio. His parents and two of his three siblings will be there to cheer after a successful Go Fund Me campaign to cover their travel expenses. Saar and Ryan will be there as well, having learned never to turn down a front-row seat for the Snyder show.

 

Rio Olympics: What to watch Sunday, the last day

Given his age, Snyder could wrestle in at least three Olympics if he stays healthy. He's talked to friends about wrestling in four or five.

 

"He works hard, he's coachable, he's just a great dude all around and he's going to be the face of USA wrestling when I step away from the sport," Burroughs said. "He's going to be the guy everyone looks up to, if they're not already."

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