Abraham WojcikiewiczAbraham Wojcikiewicz
Sam Janicki
Wrestling

Journeymen Collegiate Duals Next

Card to face North Dakota State, No. 1 Penn State

STANFORD, Calif. - No. 9 Stanford travels to Nashville for the Journeymen Collegiate Duals where it will face North Dakota State and No. 1 Penn State on Saturday.

Stanford boasts seven wrestlers ranked in the InterMat individual polls. As a team, the Cardinal is No. 9 in the Tournament rankings and No. 19 in the Dual rankings by InterMat. Stanford is ranked No. 23 as a team in the NWCA Coaches Poll.

InterMat Individual Rankings
125: Nico Provo - #12
133: Tyler Knox - #6
141: Jack Consiglio - #15
149: Aden Valencia - #14
157: Daniel Cardenas - #5
165: Hunter Garvin - #6
197: Angelo Posada - #19

Stanford picked up its first win of the season, defeating California Baptist, 29-12, in Riverside on Nov. 15. The Cardinal won six of 10 bouts against the Lancers - all by bonus points. Stanford was last in action on Dec. 5-6 at the Cliff Keen Las Vegas Invitational, earning a third-place finish as a team. Five Cardinal reached the podium individually, including third-place outings from Nico Provo (125), Jack Consiglio (141) and Daniel Cardenas (157). Aden Valencia (149) and Angelo Posada (197) each took fifth. Posada took home CKLV's Most Falls Award in the least amount of time.

Valencia was named the ACC Wrestler of the Week on Nov. 11. The 149-pounder knocked off then-No. 2 Casey Swiderski of Oklahoma State, 13-3, in Stillwater on Nov. 7 for the highest-ranked win of his young career. Consiglio collected the conference honor following his performance at CKLV, where he knocked off three ranked foe and outscored his opponents, 52-21. It was the first weekly honors for both Valencia and Consiglio, and the fourth and fifth all-time for Stanford as a member of the ACC, respectively.

Daniel Cardenas and Hunter Garvin competed at the NWCA All-Star Classic on Nov. 1 at Rutgers. Garvin defeated Lehigh’s Max Brignola, 4-1, at 165 pounds, while Cardenas fell in sudden victory, 7-2, to West Virginia’s Ty Watters at 157 pounds.

Last season, Stanford produced a pair of All-Americans and turned in another top 20 finish at the NCAA Championships. The Cardinal was 10-5 overall and 2-4 in ACC duals in 2024-25 despite not wrestling a 125-pounder all season. Stanford finished fifth at its first ACC Championships in Durham, North Carolina. Earning All-ACC honors for Stanford were Garvin (165) and Nick Stemmet (197). Garvin captured the 165-pound title becoming the first individual ACC champion for the Cardinal.

Stanford qualified eight wrestlers to the NCAA Championships in Philadelphia. The Cardinal was 18th as a team and had multiple All-Americans in back-to-back seasons. It was the fifth time in the past six years Stanford has produced multiple All-Americans in the same season, and the 11th time overall.

The No. 7 seed, Garvin reached the quarterfinals at the NCAA Championships, placing sixth at 165 pounds for a second consecutive season. He became the seventh multiple-time NCAA All-American in program history. Tyler Knox went from the No. 13 seed to an eighth-place finish at 133 pounds. He battled his way back through the consolation bracket to become just the fourth freshman NCAA All-American in school history, joining Joey McKenna (2016), Jaden Abas (2021) and Garvin (2024). The redshirt freshman became the 27th individual All-American for the Cardinal, which now boasts 39 All-America honors overall.

For the first time in program history, Stanford won the Ken Kraft Midlands Championships team title in 2024, claiming three individual crowns. Knox (133), Abas (149) and Lorenzo Norman (174) were the first Stanford individuals to win a Midlands title since Ryan Mango in 2012. Knox was voted the Dan Gable Most Outstanding Wrestler, while Norman took home the Jack Leese Champion of Champions award.

Stanford is under the guidance of Chris Ayres, The Matt Gentry Head Wrestling Coach. He is in his third season on The Farm and 20th overall as a collegiate head coach. A four-time Ivy League Coach of the Year, Ayres spent 17 seasons at the helm of the Princeton program before taking over the reins at Stanford. 

No. 9 Stanford vs. North Dakota State Probable Matchups
125: #12 Nico Provo OR Edwin Sierra (STAN) vs. #31 Ezekiel Witt (NDSU)
133: #6 Tyler Knox (STAN) vs. #29 Tristan Daugherty OR Ostin Blanchard (NDSU)
141: #15 Jack Consiglio (STAN) vs. Michael Olson (NDSU)
149: #14 Aden Valencia (STAN) vs. #24 Max Petersen (NDSU)
157: #5 Daniel Cardenas (STAN) vs. #21 Gavin Drexler (NDSU)
165: EJ Parco (STAN) vs. Boeden Greenley OR Tyler Secoy (NDSU)
174: Lorenzo Norman OR Collin Guffey (STAN) vs. Max Magayna (NDSU)
184: Abraham Wojcikiewicz (STAN) vs. #17 Aidan Brenot OR Andrew McMonagle (NDSU)
197: #19 Angelo Posada OR Brokton Borelli (STAN) vs. Devin Wasley (NDSU)
285: Luke Duthie (STAN) vs. Drew Blackburn-Forst OR Shilo Jones (NDSU)

No. 9 Stanford vs. #1 Penn State Probable Matchups
125: #12 Nico Provo OR Edwin Sierra (STAN) vs. #2 Luke Lilledahl (PSU)
133: #6 Tyler Knox (STAN) vs. #10 Marcus Blaze (PSU)
141: #15 Jack Consiglio (STAN) vs. #7 Aaron Nagao OR Nate Desmond OR Cael Nasdeo (PSU)
149: #14 Aden Valencia (STAN) vs. #1 Shayne Van Ness (PSU)
157: #5 Daniel Cardenas (STAN) vs. #8 PJ Duke OR Joe Sealey (PSU)
165: EJ Parco (STAN) vs. #1 Mitchell Mesenbrink (PSU)
174: Lorenzo Norman OR Collin Guffey (STAN) vs. #1 Levi Haines (PSU)
184: Abraham Wojcikiewicz (STAN) vs. #4 Rocco Welsh (PSU)
197: #19 Angelo Posada OR Brokton Borelli (STAN) vs. #8 Connor Mirasola OR Josh Barr (PSU)
285: Luke Duthie (STAN) vs. #13 Cole Mirasola OR Lucas Cochran (PSU)