Selection Sunday

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Shannon Scovel | krikya18.com | March 13, 2025

Breaking down the 2025 DI wrestling brackets

2025 DI wrestling: selection show

All 330 NCAA wrestling championship qualifiers learned their seed on Wednesday afternoon, eight days before they all take the mat in Philadelphia to compete against one another for championship honors under the bright lights of the Wells Fargo Arena. Here's what you need to know about leaders of each weight class, their path to success and under-the-radar names to watch next week. 

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125 pounds

Title contenders: No. 1 Luke Lilledahl, No. 2 Matt Ramos, No. 3 Eddie Ventresca, No. 4 Vince Robinson, No. 5 Richie Figueroa
All-American sleeper: No. 27 Tristan Daugherty 

The 125-pound weight class, as usual, is chaos. No athlete enters the NCAA tournament undefeated, and only one athlete — 2023 NCAA finalist and Big Ten bronze medalist Matt Ramos — comes in with just one loss. Ramos is currently seeded No. 2 after falling to Penn State's No. 1 seed Luke Lilledahl in the Big Ten semifinals. Lilledahl then went on to win the conference tournament over No. 9 Caleb Smith of Nebraska 4-3. Smith and Lilledahl could rematch in the quarterfinals if the first round goes chalk and Smith beats No. 8 Sheldon Seymour of Lehigh. 

Richard Figueroa, last year's national champion at the weight, comes in as the No. 5 seed following a loss to North Dakota State’s Tristan Daugherty at Big 12s. Meanwhile, Daugherty comes in as the No. 27 seed after posting a 10-14 record on the year. His record may not suggest that he could be in the mix for All-American honors, but his win over Figueroa this point in the season immediately elevates him into this conversation. 

The only other returning All-American in the bracket is South Dakota State's Tanner Jordan, who will, much like last year, attempt to make the podium from a 20+ seed. This year, he's seeded No. 23 with a first-round match against in-conference foe Stevo Poulin. Jordan is 0-2 against Poulin, most recently losing to the Northern Colorado star 14-6 in last year's dual. The winner of Poulin vs. Jordan will take on the winner of No. 7 Troy Spratley of Oklahoma State, who has been ranked as high as No. 2 this year, and No. 26 Keyveon Roller of Virginia. 

133 pounds

Title contenders: No. 1 Lucas Byrd, No. 2 Drake Ayala 
All-American sleeper:  No. 26 Kai Orine

For most of the year, the 133-pound weight class was led by Lehigh’s Ryan Crookham, a sophomore who finished third last season and started the 2024-2025 season with a 5-0 record. After Crookham announced his decision not to compete in the postseason due to injury, Iowa’s Drake Ayala slotted into the No. 1 spot, only to be leapfrogged by Illinois’ Lucas Byrd several days later after Byrd topped Ayala in the Big Ten finals by fall. 

Byrd, a two-time All-American for the Illini, now comes into the NCAA tournament as an undefeated No. 1 seed with Ayala sitting at the No. 2 seed. Ayala's only other loss this year came against No. 13 Tyler Knox who sits on Byrd's side of the bracket and will take on No. 20 Blake Boarmann of Chattanooga in the first round. This doesn't mean that the Hawkeye has an easy path back to the finals, though, as his first match will come against Missouri's No. 31 Kade Moore, who has career wins over All-Americans Evan Frost and Sam Latona. The winner of that match will face the winner of No. 15 Anthony Noto, a former All-American at 125 pounds, vs. No. 18 Julian Farber of Northern Iowa. 

All-Americans Nasir Bailey, Dylan Shawver and Kai Orine and will also be in the mix, seeded No. 3, No. 10 and No. 26 respectively. One first-round match to circle is Orine vs. Ohio State's No. 7 Nic Bouzakis. Both of these wrestlers are wild and put on a show. There's nothing predictable about the outcome of that match. 

141 pounds

Title contenders: No. 1 Brock Hardy, No. 2 Beau Bartlett, No. 3 Jesse Mendez, No. 4 Josh Koderhandt, No. 5 Cael Happel, No. 6 Vance Vombaur, No. 7 Tagen Jamison, No. 8 Andrew Alirez
All-American sleeper: No. 14 Sergio Lemley

Nebraska All-American Brock Hardy blew up the 141-pound bracket last weekend when he beat 2024 NCAA champion Jesse Mendez and All-American Vance Vombar in his conference semifinals and finals respectively to win Big Tens and earn the No. 1 seed. Jesse Mendez, who won the NCAA tournament last year in a short-time takedown against Bartlett, meanwhile lost to Bartlett for the second time this year in the consolation finals, to earn the No. 3 seed while Bartlett is at the No. 2. 

The Big 12 conference results created similar disruption in the national seeds, with Oklahoma State's Tagen Jamison beating 2023 NCAA champion Andrew Alirez, only to fall to Northern Iowa's Cael Happel in the finals. Happel now leads that group as the No. 5 seed, followed by Jamison at the No. 7 and Alirez at the No. 8 seed. Navy's Josh Koderhandt, who won the EIWA tournament, comes in at No. 4. Of this group, Jamison, Happel and Koderhandt are all looking for the first All-American honors of their career. Happel and Jamison though could both hit All-Americans in their second matches if the bracket goes chalk, with Happel set to No. 12 Sam Latona of Virginia Tech if Latona beats No. 21 Dylan Chappell, and Jamison likely to wrestle No. 10 CJ Composto if both of these athletes win their first round matches against No. 26 Eligh Rivera of Princeton and No. 23 Josh Edmond, respectively. 

149 pounds

Title contenders: No. 1 Caleb Henson, No. 2 Ridge Lovett, No. 3 Shayne Van Ness, No. 4 Paniro Johnson, No. 5 Kyle Parco
All-American sleeper: No. 11 Sammy Alvarez

Virginia Tech's Caleb Henson is back to defend his crown. The 2024 NCAA champion junior earned his No. 1 seed with an 18-0 record, including a 2-0 performance at the ACC championships, where he claimed his second title. Now he'll have the benefit of being the opposite side of the bracket of two Big Ten foes — No. 2 Ridge Lovett and No. 3 Shayne Van Ness — after Lovett, Van Ness and Iowa's No. 5 Kyle Parco battled each other out at their conference tournament. Henson's reward for his strong performances thus far this year will be a first-round match against the winner of the pigtail battle between No. 33 Teague Travis and No. 32 Wynton Denkins, the former of whom finished in the Round of 16 last year and was a late addition to the Oklahoma State lineup in place of Carter Young. Lovett, meanwhile, will have No. 31 Sam Cartella of Northwestern. 

Big 12 champion Paniro Johnson will also be a name to watch at the No. 4 seed, as he seems to be hitting his prime here in the heat of the postseason. Johnson will take on No. 29 Jack Gioffe of Virginia in the first round, and, if he wins and the match above him goes chalk, he could see Ohio State All-American No. 23 Dylan D'Emilio in the second round. 

157 pounds

Title contenders: No. 1 Tyler Kasak, No. 2 Meyer Shapiro 
All-American sleeper: No. 22 Ed Scott

Injuries have defined the 157-pound weight class this year, but, as the athletes head into the final two weeks of the season, it's Penn State's Tyler Kasak, who emerges as the No. 1 seed. Kasak is 18-1 on the year, with his lone loss coming during his injury default match against Maryland's Ethen Miller. Meanwhile, Miller, who earned the No. 1 seed at Big Tens, secured the No. 10 seed, giving him a first-round matchup with in-conference foe No. 23 Chase Saldate. Miller beat Saldate 4-2 in their last meeting. 

On the opposite side of the bracket is No. 2 Meyer Shapiro of Cornell, who has had his fair share of injuries but will now look to string together five winning matches and compete for his first NCAA title. Shapiro finished third last year at 157 pounds, while Kasak took third at 149 pounds. Shapiro could have a tough second-round match on this side of the bracket, though. If he beats first-round opponent No. 31 Noah Castillo, he'll face the winner of No. 15 Johnny Lovett and No. 18 Jacori Teemer. Iowa's Teemer finished second at the weight class last year but has taken four losses this year after battling injuries most of the season. 

The parity at this weight produced a number of elite first-round matches, including No. 19 Cobe Siebrecht vs. No. 14 Jude Swisher and No. 11 Matty Bianchi vs. No. 22 Ed Scott. Ohio State's Brannon Cannon at the No. 5 seed will also be a name to watch as Cannon built a name for himself in his first Big Ten tournament by making the finals and will now chase his first All-American honors in Philly. His first round match will be No. 28 Chris Hamblin of Oregon State, with the winner facing the victor in the bout between No. 12 Caleb Fish and No. 21 Logan Rozynski of Lehigh. 

165 pounds

Title contenders: No. 1 Mitchell Mesenbrink, No. 2 Peyton Hall, No. 3 Mikey Caliendo
All-American sleeper: No. 26 Paddy Gallagher

Heading into the Big Ten championships last weekend, Penn State's No. 1 Mitchell Mesenbrink was the runaway favorite to win this weight class after finishing as a runner-up last year to Iowa State's David Carr. Mesenbrink is still the top seed and the most likely title contender, but Iowa's No. 3 Mikey Caliendo closed the gap and gave Mesenbrink a 4-1 match after being teched earlier in the season. For Caliendo to get another shot at Mesenbrink in the NCAA finals this year, though, he'll need to go through No. 2 Peyton Hall of West Virginia, who won Big 12s last weekend and enters NCAAs with a 30-1 record, his lone loss coming against Terrell Barraclough earlier in the year. Barraclough is the No. 4 seed and in a position to earn All-American honors for the first time in his career for Utah Valley after spending the first four years of his career as a backup for Penn State. 

The big problem for everyone in this bracket will be No. 5 Julian Ramirez, who won the Ivy League championships last weekend and already has wins over two NCAA champions in his career: David Carr and Shane Griffith. Michigan's Beau Mantanona will also be a problem, as he's a pinner and can put almost anyone on their back. Mantanona will have Tyler Lillard of Indiana first, an athlete he beat 8-5 earlier this year. 

174 pounds

Title contenders: No. 1 Keegan O'Toole, No. 2 Levi Haines, No. 3 Dean Hamiti
All-American sleeper: No. 16 Lorenzo Norman 

The top three in this weight could all win NCAAs on any given day. Missouri's two-time NCAA champ Keegan O'Toole paces the group after earning sudden victory wins over No. 2 Levi Haines and No. 3 Dean Hamiti earlier this year. Haines won Big Tens and NCAAs last year at 157 pounds and just claimed another Big Ten title this year up at 174 pounds against No. 8 Lenny Pinto. His win, and his subsequent No. 2 seed, puts him in a good spot in the bracket, opposite Pinto, No. 24 All-American Lennox Wolak, No. 9 All-American Carson Kharchla, No. 13 All-American Cade DeVos and Cliff Keen runner-up No. 16 Lorenzo Norman. 

Haines will still have a tough road, as he'll be expected to meet No. 3 Dean Hamiti in the semifinals if both of them can survive their first three matches. Just to demonstrate the depth of the weight, Hamiti's first-round match will come against All-American Jackson Turley of Rutgers. The winner will get the victor between No. 19 Jared Simma and No. 14 Matty Singleton. 

184 pounds

Title contenders: No. 1 Carter Starocci, No. 2 Parker Keckeisen, No. 3 Max McEnelly 
All-American sleeper: No. 15 Dylan Fishback

Not only does 184 pounds have two former NCAA champions in No. 1 Carter Starocci vs. No. 2 Parker Keckeisen, but Minnesota freshman Max McEnelly also inserted himself into the title conversation when he earned a takedown against four-time NCAA champion Starocci in the Big Ten finals. Starocci ended up beating McEnelly 8-5 in the conference finals, but McEnelly's performance put the country on notice. He'll be expected to meet Parker Keckeisen — who won his fifth Big 12 title — in the semifinals. 

Starocci has a reasonably smooth path to the semifinals, though he does have three All-Americans that he could clash with, including No. 4 Dustin Plott of Oklahoma State, No. 5 Bennett Berge of South Dakota State and No. 17 Gavin Kane of North Carolina. On the other side, McEnelly could see All-American No. 6 Chris Foca in the quarterfinals, while Keckeisen could meet with All-American Edmond Ruth of Illinois at No. 10. 

This is Starocci's weight until proven otherwise, but Keckeisen is in peak form, and McEnelly proved he can compete with the champ. Buckle up. The 184-pound bracket is full of storylines. 

197 pounds

Title contenders: No. 1 Jacob Cardenas, No. 2 Stephen Buchanan, No. 3 AJ Ferrari, No. 4 Josh Barr
All-American sleepers: No. 14 Zach Glazier

Michigan graduate student Jacob Cardenas secured the No. 1 seed in the NCAA tournament with his first Big Tens on Sunday night. Iowa's Stephen Buchanan, who lost to Cardenas in the finals, earned the No. 2 seed, while 2021 NCAA champion AJ Ferrari picked up the No. 3 seed. Buchanan losing the No. 1 seed to Cardenas sets up a potential rematch with Ferrari in the semifinals, and Ferrari has the last win over the Hawkeye back in 2022.

Cardenas doesn't have an easy draw on his side either, though, as he'll be expected to rematch No. 4 Josh Barr in the semifinals, an athlete he has split matches with thus far this year. All-Americans Trey Munoz and Stephen Little at the No. 13 and No. 12 spots, respectively, on Cardenas' side of the bracket are also notable. 

285 pounds

Title contenders: No. 1 Gable Steveson, No. 2 Wyatt Hendrickson, No. 3 Greg Kerkvliet 
Under-the-radar names to watch: No. 14 Gavin Hoffman

Heading into the season, two big questions surrounded 285 pounds: 1.) Can reigning NCAA champion Greg Kerkvliet challenge 2021 Olympic gold medalist Gable Steveson? 2.) What kind of jumps can All-American Wyatt Hendrickson make up new head coach David Taylor? The first question was answered at Big Tens, as Steveson beat Kerkvliet three takedowns to none with a score of 10-3 to claim his fourth Big Ten title. Steveson earned the No. 1 seed with that win, putting Kerkvliet at the No. 3. Big 12 champion Wyatt Hendrickson survived four-time All-American Cohlton Schultz to win his conference title, remain undefeated and position himself opposite to No. 1 Steveson at the bracket at the No. 2. 

Both Schultz and All-American Yaraslau Slavikouski could await Steveson in the second and third rounds of the tournament. Meanwhile, EIWA champion Owen Trephan sits at the No. 4 seed while Iowa's Ben Kueter's third-place Big Ten finish earned him the No. 5, an excellent position for the rookie big man. Kueter could have a rematch against All-American Nick Feldman in the second round, though Kueter has shown he can win that match. 

One fun potential second-round match to watch is No. 7 Isaac Trumble vs. No. 10 Dayton Pitzer. Pitzer beat Trumble at ACCs, forcing Trumble to need a wildcard to make it into this tournament. A healthy Trumble is a dangerous thing for the weight, but Pitzer also made it clear that he's not afraid to compete (and win) against the U23 gold medalist Wolfpack veteran. 

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