Examples of the top-women which are unable to compete against the average men

by Anonymous (no login)

 
Continue to rave? )))))

We have examples of the top-women (Olimpic level) which are unable to compete against the men of an average level.

To repeat? Please::::

Guy (56 kgs own weight) lifts more than women 72 and even 90 kgs

Tables of Comparison of male's and female's collegiate american records


Goodwin made quick work of his first opponent when he pinned Michaela Hutchinson (OKC) in just 50 seconds, but he suffered a 15-5 loss to eventual champ Travis Evans (GVC) in the second round. Goodwin rallied with a 14-7 win over UNAs Ty Martin and a pin of USFs Doug Thompson in 3:38. Danas Clayton McKim ended Goodwins run with a 25-10 technical fall in the consolation semifinals.
DWU Athletic Department

CHANUTE, Kan. Michaela Hutchison of Oklahoma City University fell 17-2 in a technical fall in her debut with the OCU mens wrestling team, but the Stars prevailed 36-11 over Neosho County (Kan.) on Wednesday at the Neosho County Gym.
Story courtesy of Oklahoma City Sports Information Office

If everything goes according to plan, the 105-pound wrestler might do that in Athens this summer, making history in the process. Women's wrestling is the only new sport added to the Games this year, and with a growing collection of international medals around Miranda's neck, the 24-year-old from Saratoga is one of the most promising Olympic hopefuls on the mat today.

If everything goes according to plan, the 105-pound wrestler might do that in Athens this summer, making history in the process. Women's wrestling is the only new sport added to the Games this year, and with a growing collection of international medals around Miranda's neck, the 24-year-old from Saratoga is one of the most promising Olympic hopefuls on the mat today. <...>
Growing up on the Peninsula, there were no girls wrestling teams for Miranda to join, so she perfected her snap-downs and headlocks on boys. She was the first woman on the Stanford wrestling team, where she grappled for five years and beat a man just once
OLYMPIC QUEST: Patricia Miranda

Ms. Pang continued to wrestle in women's tournaments in Canada even after she came to Princeton. She placed fourth in the nationals in the 112-pound weight class in 2003, but did not go to the nationals for the last two years, preferring instead to practice with the Princeton men's team to keep in shape.
In fact, she never wrestled competitively for the university until this year. The coach, Michael New, approached her during the summer after learning that he would probably not have a wrestler for the 125-pound weight class, the lightest in N.C.A.A. wrestling.
Since other schools, like Princeton, are often without men who can or want to make the 125-pound limit, Ms. Pang has won two matches by forfeit. She has, as she expected to, lost the rest of her matches, sometimes by early pins. She did last the entire three rounds against her opponent from Western New England College's, though she lost by a score of 14-8.

Yet it was not until the 11th match of the season, on Feb. 5, that Ms. Pang got to wrestle on her home turf at Dillon Gym, this time against a Harvard sophomore, Robbie Preston, who was a three-time national champion at 119 pounds when he attended Blair Academy, a boarding school in Blairstown.
Audrey Pang has even won twice, by forfeit

There are no data about Sara McMann's wons in wrestling with men.


See also Lucia Rijker (video)

Where are "a lot of wons of the women above the men"?






Posted on Aug 13, 2009, 5:58 AM
from IP address 95.37.206.49


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