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Photo: Sam Janicki

Brackets released for Pac-12 Wrestling Championships

The Pac-12 has finalized its championship bracket for the 2024 Pac-12 Wrestling Championships on Sunday, March 10 at Gill Coliseum in Corvallis, Oregon.

Nine of the 10 weight classes will be represented by all six of the conference's wrestling programs while the 174-lb. group will have five wrestlers competing. The top two seeds in each class will receive byes, while first-round matches will feature the No. 6 seed against the No. 3 seed, and the No. 5 seed against the No. 4 seed.

Each weight class has multiple wrestlers in both the InterMat Individual Rankings and the NCAA Coaches' Individual Rankings with five of the 10 classes having four grapplers included in at least one of the rankings. The field also is made up of eight Pac-12 champions in their weight class including six winners from last year.

Two wrestlers will try to join a very exclusive club of becoming a 4-time Pac-12 champion in the same weight class, done only previously by Arizona State's Zeke Jones (118 lb, 1987-90) and CSU Bakersfield's Stephen Neal (Heavyweight, 1996-99). Arizona State's Cohlton Schultz has won the heavyweight division each of the last three years while his teammate Jacori Teemer was the 157-lb champion in 2020, 2021 and 2022 before redshirting last year due to injury. Oregon State's Trey Munoz is shooting for his third straight title at 184-lb as well as 149-lb Kyle Parco from Arizona State. Parco beat 2021 champion Jaden Abas from Stanford last year in the final and they are the top two seeds in their class again this year.

The full bracket can be viewed here.

LIVE BRACKET UPDATES here.

First session matchups begin at 10:00 a.m. PT from Gill Coliseum, while the second session will begin at 4:45 p.m. PT. Both sessions will be available via Oregon State's live stream platforms (Mat 1 and Mat 2) and on Pac-12.com. Championship finals will be broadcasted on Pac-12 Network and the Pac-12 Now App, with coverage beginning at 6:00 pm PT. For more information, click here.

For those looking to attend, tickets are on sale to the general public here.

125:
1. Brandon Kaylor, Oregon State
2. Nico Provo, Stanford
3. Richard Figueroa, Arizona State
4. Dominic Mendez, Cal Poly
5. Richie Sandoval, CSU Bakersfield
6. Jeremiah Reno, Little Rock

133:
1. Nasir Bailey, Little Rock
2. Zeth Romney, Cal Poly
3. Julian Chleblove, Arizona State
4. Gabe Wisenhunt, Oregon State
5. Dom Lajoie, Stanford
6. Santino Sanchez, CSU Bakersfield

141:
1. Cleveland Belton, Oregon State
2. Jesse Vasquez, Arizona State
3. Jason Miranda, Stanford
4. Cael Keck, Little Rock
5. Abe Hinrichsen, Cal Poly
6. Luis Ramos, CSU Bakersfield

149:
1. Kyle Parco, Arizona State
2. Jaden Abas, Stanford
3. Chance Lamer, Cal Poly
4. Nash Singleton, Oregon State
5. Kyle Dutton, Little Rock
6. Brock Rogers, CSU Bakersfield

157:
1. Jacori Teemer, Arizona State
2. Daniel Cardenas, Stanford
3. Matthew Bianchi, Little Rock
4. Legend Lamer, Cal Poly
5. CJ Hamblin, Oregon State
6. Devyn Che, CSU Bakersfield

165:
1. Joseph Bianchi, Little Rock
2. Hunter Garvin, Stanford
3. Chance McLane, Arizona State
4. Kekana Fouret, Oregon State
5. Guillermo Escobedo, CSU Bakersfield
6. Michael Goldfeder, Cal Poly

174:
1. Adam Kemp, Cal Poly
2. Tyler Brennan, Little Rock
3. Mason Reiniche
4. Cael Valencia, Arizona State
5. Thor Michaelson, Stanford

184:
1. Trey Munoz, Oregon State
2. Tony Negron, Arizona State
3. Jack Darrah, Stanford
4. Triston Wills, Little Rock
5. Kendall La Rosa, Cal Poly
6. Braden Smelser, CSU Bakersfield

197:
1. Stephen Little, Little Rock
2. Nick Stemmet, Stanford
3. Justin Rademacher, Oregon State
4. Jarad Priest, Cal Poly
5. Jacob Meissner, Arizona State
6. Ryan Arrington, CSU Bakersfield

285:
1. Cohlton Schultz, Arizona Sate
2. Trevor Tinker, Cal Poly
3. Boone McDermott, Oregon State
4. Peter Ming, Stanford
5. Josiah Hill, Little Rock
6. Jake Andrews, CSU Bakersfield