Is This USA's Best Beat The Streets Lineup Ever?
Is This USA's Best Beat The Streets Lineup Ever?
The annual Beat The Streets event brings together the best wrestlers from the USA and around the world to showcase the sport in New York City. This year might be the best line up in history. Check out how 2017 stacks up to the past.
Team USA has been taking on the best of the world at the annual Beat The Streets event in New York City since 2011, and each year a stunning amount of firepower is assembled to provide explosive entertainment to wrestling fans worldwide.
But does this year feature the greatest lineup of Americans ever at the event? It's close, but there is a good argument to be made that this team is the best in Beat the Streets history.
First, let's take a look at the matchups for Wednesday, May 17, in Times Square.
Comparing this lineup to previous years is difficult, as the number of matches, weight classes, and styles vary from year to year. Senior men's freestyle traditionally makes up the bulk of the matches, except for last year when there was a diverse hodge-podge of styles, with juniors getting the lion's share of stage time.
In the table below, you can see a list of the other men's freestyle participants by year, except for the aforementioned 2016 event.
Burroughs owns the most hardware of any Beat the Streets competitor, with an Olympic gold, three world golds, and a world bronze in his collection.
Three other 2017 Americans have world medals to their names. Kyle Snyder has an Olympic and world gold in the last two competitions. Logan Stieber has a 2016 world gold, and James Green won a bronze at the 2015 World Championships.
Also in the lineup this year is Tony Ramos, who doesn't have a world medal yet but has made two world teams in 2014 and 2015. This year's lineup also features two of the best active wrestlers who have yet to make a U.S. world team, Jordan Oliver and David Taylor.
The 2017 Beat the Streets lineup is rounded out by Zain Retherford, a junior world silver medalists and Hodge Trophy winner, and Nick Gwiazdowski, the most recent 120kg U.S. Open champ, putting him in prime position to make his first world team at the trials next month in Lincoln, Nebraska.
That year essentially matched this year for credentials; however, if you consider David Taylor 2.0 at 86kg to be an improved version of the 74kg DT, then 2017 holds the edge.
The 2014'ers have made more world teams, but Green's world bronze puts the 2017 team over the top. The current team also has more active wrestlers and is more likely to add to its career totals.
David Taylor, Kyle Dake, and Kellen Russell rounded out that group, adding eight more NCAA titles to its score. With raw numbers, 2013 is hard to beat, but when judging the caliber on a pound for pound basis, the argument for 2017 becomes much stronger.
As strong as that team was, the current U.S. lineup already sports one more world medalist, with potentially more to come in the future.
It's worth pointing out, however, that neither Burroughs nor Varner had yet to win any world or Olympic medals when they wrestled in the inaugural international Beat the Streets. Many of the accolades they would earn would come later in their careers, just as you can expect the 2017 team to add to their trophy case as they continue their careers.
Ultimately, the final judgement will have to wait until everyone has hung up his shoes and called it a career. If David Taylor continues to beat Olympic gold medalists, if Nick Gwiazdowski makes the first of many world teams, if Jordan Oliver starts a long reign at 65kg, or if Zain Retherford continues to progress and usurps that role at 65kg, then 2017 will go down as the best lineup of American wrestlers in history.
But even if the all-stars in this year's lineup never wrestle another match, Times Square will see a performance of historical proportions that you don't want to miss.
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But does this year feature the greatest lineup of Americans ever at the event? It's close, but there is a good argument to be made that this team is the best in Beat the Streets history.
First, let's take a look at the matchups for Wednesday, May 17, in Times Square.
WT | Matchup |
---|---|
EX | Daton Fix (USA) vs. Austin DeSanto (USA) |
48kg | Victoria Anthony (USA) vs. Yuki Irie (Japan) |
69kg | Tamyra Mensah (USA) vs. Miwa Morikawa (Japan) |
58kg | Helen Maroulis (USA) vs. Yuzuru Kumano (Japan) |
65kg | Jordan Oliver (USA) vs. Frank Chamizo (Italy) |
57kg | Anthony Ramos (USA) vs. Steven Takahashi (Canada) |
61kg | Logan Stieber (USA) vs. Shingo Arimoto (Japan) |
65kg | Zain Retherford (USA) vs. Daichi Takatani (Japan) |
70kg | James Green (USA) vs. Nobuyoshi Takojima (Japan) |
86kg | David Taylor (USA) vs. Takahiro Murayama (Japan) |
97kg | Kyle Snyder (USA) vs. Koki Yamamoto (Japan) |
125kg | Nick Gwiazdowski (USA) vs. Katsutoshi Kanazawa (Japan) |
74kg | Jordan Burroughs (USA) vs. Sohsuke Takatani (Japan) |
In the table below, you can see a list of the other men's freestyle participants by year, except for the aforementioned 2016 event.
YR | KG | NAME |
---|---|---|
2015 | 57 | Tony Ramos |
2015 | 65 | Brent Metcalf |
2015 | 74 | David Taylor |
2015 | 74 | Jordan Burroughs |
2015 | 86 | Jake Herbert |
2015 | 97 | Kyle Snyder |
2015 | 125 | Tervel Dlagnev |
2014 | 57 | Nahshon Garrett |
2014 | 61 | Jimmy Kennedy |
2014 | 65 | Jordan Oliver |
2014 | 65 | Logan Stieber |
2014 | 65 | Brent Metcalf |
2014 | 74 | David Taylor |
2014 | 74 | Jordan Burroughs |
2014 | 86 | Ed Ruth |
2014 | 97 | Kyle Snyder |
2013 | 55 | Obe Blanc |
2013 | 60 | Reece Humphrey |
2013 | 60 | Coleman Scott |
2013 | 60 | Logan Stieber |
2013 | 66 | Kellen Russell |
2013 | 66 | Brent Metcalf |
2013 | 74 | Kyle Dake |
2013 | 74 | David Taylor |
2013 | 74 | Jordan Burroughs |
2013 | 84 | Keith Gavin |
2013 | 96 | JD Bergman |
2013 | 120 | Tervel Dlagnev |
2012 | 55 | Sam Hazewinkel |
2012 | 60 | Logan Stieber |
2012 | 66 | Jared Frayer |
2012 | 74 | Jordan Burroughs |
2012 | 84 | Keith Gavin |
2012 | 96 | JD Bergman |
2012 | 120 | Tervel Dlagnev |
2011 | 55 | Henry Cejudo |
2011 | 60 | Shawn Bunch |
2011 | 66 | Brent Metcalf |
2011 | 74 | Jordan Burroughs |
2011 | 84 | Jake Herbert |
2011 | 96 | Jake Varner |
2011 | 120 | Tervel Dlagnev |
2017
The one constant you'll notice in every event is Jordan Burroughs. The Olympic champ and three-time world champ has taken the mats at every Beat the Streets international competition, including last year when he and Olympic bronze medalist J'den Cox were the only two senior men's freestylers.Burroughs owns the most hardware of any Beat the Streets competitor, with an Olympic gold, three world golds, and a world bronze in his collection.
Three other 2017 Americans have world medals to their names. Kyle Snyder has an Olympic and world gold in the last two competitions. Logan Stieber has a 2016 world gold, and James Green won a bronze at the 2015 World Championships.
Also in the lineup this year is Tony Ramos, who doesn't have a world medal yet but has made two world teams in 2014 and 2015. This year's lineup also features two of the best active wrestlers who have yet to make a U.S. world team, Jordan Oliver and David Taylor.
The 2017 Beat the Streets lineup is rounded out by Zain Retherford, a junior world silver medalists and Hodge Trophy winner, and Nick Gwiazdowski, the most recent 120kg U.S. Open champ, putting him in prime position to make his first world team at the trials next month in Lincoln, Nebraska.
2015
The 2015 squad gives this year a run for its money when it took on a talented Cuban team at the event dubbed "Salsa in the Square." The Americans featured 2017 wrestlers Ramos, Burroughs, Taylor, and Snyder. Additionally, four-time world team member Brent Metcalf was the 65kg rep. World silver medalist Jake Herbert was at 86kg, and two-time world bronze medalists Tervel Dlagnev wrestled 125kg.That year essentially matched this year for credentials; however, if you consider David Taylor 2.0 at 86kg to be an improved version of the 74kg DT, then 2017 holds the edge.
2014
In 2014, when Team USA took on a collection of world all-stars. The Americans rolled out five of the same wrestlers as this year: Stieber, Oliver, Burroughs, Taylor, and Snyder. So the comparison comes down to Nahshon Garrett, Jimmy Kennedy, Ed Ruth, and Metcalf versus Ramos, Retherford, Green, and Gwiazdowski.The 2014'ers have made more world teams, but Green's world bronze puts the 2017 team over the top. The current team also has more active wrestlers and is more likely to add to its career totals.
2013
The 2013 event featured more wrestlers than any other previous Beat the Streets, with 12 Americans taking the mat in a split location competition. Half the team was in Manhattan's Grand Central Station for "Rumble on the Rails," and the other half was in Los Angeles for "United 4 Wrestling." That lineup, like this year's, featured four world medalists, with 2012 Olympic bronze medalist Coleman Scott joining Burroughs, Dlagnev, and Stieber. It also featured world team members Obe Blanc, Reece Humphrey, Keith Gavin, and JD Bergman.David Taylor, Kyle Dake, and Kellen Russell rounded out that group, adding eight more NCAA titles to its score. With raw numbers, 2013 is hard to beat, but when judging the caliber on a pound for pound basis, the argument for 2017 becomes much stronger.
2012
The 2012 squad was back down to only seven wrestlers for "Grapple in the Apple." Each one of the seven were at one point world team members, including 2012 Olympians Jared Frayer and Sam Hazewinkel.As strong as that team was, the current U.S. lineup already sports one more world medalist, with potentially more to come in the future.
2011
Beat the Streets' first Times Square event, the "Battle on Broadway," presents perhaps the strongest challenge to 2017's best-ever claim. It featured an astonishing three Olympic gold medalists, in Burroughs, Jake Varner, and Henry Cejudo. It also had two other world medalists in Herbert and Dlagnev as well as Brent Metcalf and Shawn Bunch.It's worth pointing out, however, that neither Burroughs nor Varner had yet to win any world or Olympic medals when they wrestled in the inaugural international Beat the Streets. Many of the accolades they would earn would come later in their careers, just as you can expect the 2017 team to add to their trophy case as they continue their careers.
Ultimately, the final judgement will have to wait until everyone has hung up his shoes and called it a career. If David Taylor continues to beat Olympic gold medalists, if Nick Gwiazdowski makes the first of many world teams, if Jordan Oliver starts a long reign at 65kg, or if Zain Retherford continues to progress and usurps that role at 65kg, then 2017 will go down as the best lineup of American wrestlers in history.
But even if the all-stars in this year's lineup never wrestle another match, Times Square will see a performance of historical proportions that you don't want to miss.
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