
Glory's Third Title Leads Six Tiger Placewinners at EIWAs, Three NCAA Auto Bids
March 05, 2023 | Wrestling
At 125, Glory won his third EIWA title, seeded second and defeating top-seeded Brett Ungar of Cornell 2-0 in the final. Glory spent the entire second period gaining riding time, later converting that for a point, and gained the first point of the match on an escape off the third-period start. Glory also won titles at 125 in 2019 and 2020, and his appearance in the final made him the first four-time EIWA finalist in program history, finishing second in 2022. Glory earned his fourth bid to the NCAA Championships by finishing in the top six at the meet and will head to Tulsa next week looking to earn a fourth All-American honor, which would make him the second wrestler in program history to do so, along with former teammate Matthew Kolodzik '21. Glory finished sixth at the NCAAs in 2019, qualified for the 2020 NCAAs before it was canceled due to the pandemic, and was the national runner-up in 2022 after Princeton did not compete during the 2021 season.
For the third time, @patrick_glory_ is an @EIWAwrestling champion!
— Princeton Wrestling (@tigerwrestling) March 5, 2023
Pat defeats Cornell's Brett Ungar 2-0 in the final at 125!
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At 149, 14th-seeded senior Keller earned his third EIWA placewinning finish of his career, placing eighth in Sunday's first session to add to an eighth-place finish at 141 in 2019 and a fourth-place finish last year at 149.
At 157, 10th-seeded rookie Whalen won his seventh-place match 6-0 over 12th-seeded Tyler Williams of Drexel in Sunday's first session to earn a placewinning finish in his EIWA debut.
At 165, second-seeded senior Monday came up just short against top-seeded Julian Ramirez of Cornell in the final, 6-5, finishing his EIWA career with four top-three finishes and each of the first three coming at 157 pounds. Monday was a third-place finisher as a rookie, runner-up as a sophomore and EIWA champ last year.
Against Ramirez, after each wrestler had a takedown and an escape in the first period, Monday took a lead with an escape off the second-period start, but after Ramirez's second takedown of the match, another Monday escape tied it at 5-5. Ramirez started down in the third period, and an intentional escape gave Ramirez what became the decisive point of the match after the Cornell sophomore fended off Monday's attempts over the final two minutes.
Monday clinched his fourth NCAA bid with an 8-2 win over Columbia's third-seeded Josh Ogunsanya in the semis.
Back to his third straight @EIWAwrestling finals, last year's champion at 157, Quincy Monday will wrestle for the title at 165!
— Princeton Wrestling (@tigerwrestling) March 5, 2023
Quincy, seeded second got an early takedown against third-seeded Josh Ogunsanya of Columbia in an 8-2 win!
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At 184, fifth-seeded junior Nate Dugan followed his eighth-place finish a year ago at 174 with a fifth-place finish at 184 this year, getting a first-period takedown and adding a third-period escape to counter two second-period escapes from fourth-seeded Jacob Ferreira of Hofstra and win 3-2.
Fifth-seeded Nate Dugan wins his fifth-place match over Hofstra's fourth-seeded Jacob Ferreira, 3-2!
— Princeton Wrestling (@tigerwrestling) March 5, 2023
Nate took the lead on this first-period takedown, and a third-period escape point was decisive.
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At 197, third-seeded sophomore Stout made it 2-for-2 in NCAA bids and in top-three EIWA finishes, closing the conference tournament with an 11-1 win over Navy's fourth-seeded Jacob Koser. Stout built a 4-1 lead with two first period takedowns before breaking it open in the third period, adding a reversal, two two-point near-falls and the riding-time point. Stout was the runner-up at 197 as a freshman last year.
Luke Stout starts his Tiger career 2 for 2 in top-three EIWA finishes!
— Princeton Wrestling (@tigerwrestling) March 6, 2023
Third-seeded Luke is an 11-1 winner over fourth-seeded Jacob Koser of Navy at 197, getting it going with this takedown right off the start!
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Princeton finished seventh in the 17-team field with 81.5 points. Cornell won the team title at 165.5, with Lehigh (120.5), Penn (106), Columbia (95), Navy (95) and Army West Point (82.5) were the top six.
Here's a link to Saturday's recap and Princeton results. Complete results are available here.
Seeds in parentheses
125
Semifinals
(2) Patrick Glory (Princeton) wins by major decision over (3) Ryan Miller (Penn), 12-0
Finals
(2) Patrick Glory (Princeton) wins by decision over (1) Brett Ungar (Cornell), 2-0
149
Consolation Round of 4
(4) Trae McDaniel (Army West Point) wins by decision over (14) Marshall Keller (Princeton), 7-1
Seventh-Place Match
(3) Max Brignola (Lehigh) wins by decision over (14) Marshall Keller (Princeton), 8-3
157
Consolation Round of 4
(11) Nick Delp (Bucknell) wins by decision over (10) Ty Whalen (Princeton), 9-2
Seventh-Place Match
(10) Ty Whalen (Princeton) wins by decision over (12) Tyler Williams (Drexel), 6-0
165
Semifinals
(2) Quincy Monday (Princeton) wins by decision over (3) Josh Ogunsanya (Columbia), 8-2
Finals
(1) Julian Ramirez (Cornell) wins by decision over (2) Quincy Monday (Princeton), 6-5
184
Semifinals
(1) Tate Samuelson (Lehigh) wins by decision over (5) Nate Dugan (Princeton), 6-1
Consolation Semifinals
(6) David Key (Navy) wins by decision over (5) Nate Dugan (Princeton), 11-4
Fifth-Place Match
(5) Nate Dugan (Princeton) wins by decision over (4) Jacob Ferreira (Hofstra), 3-2
197
Semifinals
(2) Jacob Cardenas (Cornell) wins by decision over (3) Luke Stout (Princeton), 8-1
Consolation Semifinals
(3) Luke Stout (Princeton) wins by fall over (5) Trey Rogers (Hofstra), 3:36
Third-Place Match
(3) Luke Stout (Princeton) wins by major decision over (4) Jacob Koser (Navy), 11-1