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| Steve Mocco (born December 28, 1981) is an American amateur wrestler. Starting his collegiate wrestling career at the University of Iowa, Mocco was the 285-pound NCAA Division I runner-up in 2002 and champion in 2003. After taking an Olympic redshirt year, Mocco transferred to Oklahoma State University to wrestle for coach John Smith. In his first year at OSU, Mocco won the 285 title in 2005 without losing a match. With one year remaining, Mocco has a chance to become one the most successful collegiate heavyweights of all-time. In high school, Mocco was one of the most dominant heavyweights in recent history . He won four state titles, three of which were at wrestling powerhouse Blair Academy in New Jersey. He also won three Junior National titles in wrestling and one in judo. Mocco was the 2001 ASICS Tiger High School Wrestler of the year and was one of the most sought-after recruits in history. Mocco may currently be the most controversial figure in American college wrestling. After he first announced that he wanted to leave Iowa, there was rampant speculation that he would transfer to Lehigh University; his decision to go to Oklahoma State was seen by many as a dagger in the back. Oklahoma State and Iowa are the two most successful programs in college wrestling history and are bitter rivals. After announcing that he would transfer to Oklahoma State, Mocco became an instant figure of derision in Iowa. He is also hounded by those who claim that he only has one move- the foot sweep- and that he will lose to anyone who can counter that. The fact that he won the 2005 NCAA title in overtime with a foot sweep has been intreperted by his critics as a sign of weakness and by his supporters as a fact that, even when his opponent knows what's coming, Mocco's strength, speed and abilities will overcome that. On January 15th 2006, Mocco was pinned by Cole Konrad of Minnesota in the finals of the National Duals. This loss, the first pin of Mocco's collegiate career, ended an 85 match win streak. Mocco also lost to Konrad in November of 2005, but that match (at the NCWA All-Star Meet) was considered an exhibition. He lost again to Konrad on March 18, 2006, in the 2006 NCAA title match. [ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for Steve Mocco ] Some related entries: Brian White | Steve Hartsell | Evel Knievel | Mitch Kupchak | James Mashburn | Frank Leahy | Eddie Colon | Kaitlin Sandeno | Annia Hatch | Charles Comiskey | Allen Iverson This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article Steve Mocco; it is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL. | Searches on eBay |
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