Nathan Tomasello

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

FullnameNathan Khalid Tomasello
NationalteamAmerican
Born (1994-05-01) May 1, 1994 (age 31)
Height1.52 m (5 ft 0 in)
Nathan Tomasello
Nathan Tomasello in June 2018
Personal information
Full nameNathan Khalid Tomasello
National teamAmerican
Born (1994-05-01) May 1, 1994 (age 31)
Height1.52 m (5 ft 0 in)
Weight125 lb (57 kg)
Websitenatowrestling.com
Sport
CountryUnited States
SportWrestling
Event(s)
Freestyle and Folkstyle
College teamOhio State
ClubTitan Mercury WC
Oklahoma RTC
Coached bySam Hazewinkel
Medal record
Men's freestyle wrestling
Representing the  United States
US National Championships
Silver medal – second place2019 Fort Worth (SN)57 kg
Bronze medal – third place2017 Las Vegas57 kg
Men's collegiate wrestling
Representing the Ohio State Buckeyes
NCAA Division I Championships
Gold medal – first place2015 St. Louis125 lb
Bronze medal – third place2016 New York125 lb
Bronze medal – third place2017 St. Louis133 lb
Bronze medal – third place2018 Cleveland125 lb
Big Ten Championships
Gold medal – first place2015 Columbus125 lb
Gold medal – first place2016 Iowa City125 lb
Gold medal – first place2017 Bloomington133 lb
Gold medal – first place2018 East Lansing125 lb

Nathan Khalid Tomasello (born May 1, 1994) is an American freestyle and graduated folkstyle wrestler who competes at 57 kilograms.[1] He currently competes in the Bantamweight division of Real American Freestyle (RAF), where he is a former RAF Bantamweight Champion.

In freestyle, Tomasello has medaled at multiple national and international competitions, most notably the Alexander Medved Prizes, Bill Farrell Memorial, and US Nationals.[1] In college, he was an NCAA champion in 2015, a four–time Big Ten Conference champion, and a four–time All–American for the Ohio State Buckeyes.[2]

High school

As a high schooler, Tomasello was a four–time Ohio (OHSAA) state champion in Division II out of the Cuyahoga Valley Christian Academy. He graduated with an undefeated record of 51 wins and no losses as a senior and 178 wins with 5 losses overall.[3] Tomasello was then recruited by the Ohio State University.[3]

College

During his first collegiate season (2013–14), Tomasello was redshirted and compiled an undefeated 19–0 record competing in open tournaments.[4] As a freshman, Tomasello claimed the NCAA and Big Ten Conference titles after a highly successful regular season, ending his season with a 33–4 record.[5][6] As a sophomore and a junior, Tomasello remained undefeated throughout both regular seasons, claimed the B1G titles, but both times lost in the semifinals of the national tournaments and came back for third, becoming a three–time All–American.[7][8][9] In his final year, his only loss during regular season was to freshman phenom from Iowa Spencer Lee, a multiple–time age–group freestyle World Champion, and would go on to compile a 7–1 record during this time frame.[10][11] After becoming a four–time B1G champion, at his last NCAAs, Tomasello was once again knocked off on the semifinals, coming back to place third, giving an end to an outstanding career.[12]

Freestyle career

2014–2017

During his first years competing in the senior freestyle level (2014–2016), Tomasello racked up experience from the US Nationals and the US Olympic Team Trials.[13][14]

Throughout 2017, Tomasello claimed the Ion Corneanu Memorial International, placed third at the US Open and the US World Team Trials and second at the US U23 World Team Trials, and Alexandr Medved Prizes.[15][16][17]

2019–2021

After not competing in 2018, Thomasello placed sixth at the 2019 US Open and second at the Bill Farrell Memorial as well as the US Senior Nationals, qualifying for the 2020 US Olympic Team Trials with the latter result.[18][19] In 2020, Thomasello only got to compete once due to the COVID-19 pandemic, placing second at the Cerro Pelado International.[20]

After more than a year of inactiveness, Tomasello competed at the rescheduled US Olympic Team Trials in April 1–3, 2021 as the seventh seed, in an attempt to represent the United States at the 2020 Summer Olympics.[21] After losing first round to US National Champion Vito Arujau, he bounced back with two straight victories to place third.[22]

Tomasello then registered to compete at the prestigious 2021 Poland Open in early June, and moved from 57 to 61 kg on a days notice.[23] Tomasello ultimately went 0–3, suffering dominant losses.[24]

Tomasello came back in big fashion 2021 US World Team Trials from September 11 to 12, intending to represent the country at the World Championships at 61 kilograms.[25] He scored brilliant upsets over 2019 NCAA champion Nick Suriano and returning World medalist Joe Colon to make his way to the best-of-three finale, where he faced Pan American Games gold medalist Daton Fix.[26] He was dropped in two straight matches, placing second at the tournament.[27]

Freestyle record

NCAA record

Stats

Awards and honors

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI