The FILA Worlds Are Under Way

So in case you haven’t noticed: the FILA Worlds are under way. And the U.S. already has some metal. Jake Herbert pulled off a Silver Medal after coming up short against Zaurbek Sokhiev of Uzbekistan on Tuesday in the 84 kg/185 lbs. It was close, but not close enough. He lost the match 1-0, 1-0.

Jake Herbert was the first U.S. wrestler to advance to a gold medal match at the world championships, where he took a silver.

Jake Herbert was the first U.S. wrestler to advance to a gold medal match at the world championships, where he took a silver.

“It stinks, having to stand on the podium with a silver medal. I came in here to win a gold medal and I believed I could do it,” Herbert said. “Seeing that other guy’s flag go up and hearing that other guy’s anthem being played, and then seeing him get a World Championships belt, that gives me something to shoot for next year. I didn’t know the champion got a belt. I want that belt.” Herbert also said that he had one thing on his mind going into the MesseCenter: walking out of the MesseCenter with a gold medal draping his neck. Next year he’ll have the belt as well as the gold medal.

Heavyweight Tervel Dlagnev capped an amazing tournament by defeating Georiga’s Alex Mobedadze 2-0, 2-0 in their bronze medal match at 120 kilos.

Talking about how he has come from a sixth place finish in the NCAA tourney four years ago, he said “I’ve definitely come a long way. I still have a long way to go. I obviously didn’t get the color I wanted. It definitely was nice to get on the podium though.”

Russia has clinched the team title with 53 points. Azerbaijan is second with 39. The U.S. has jumped up to sixth place with 19 points.

Herbert will receive a $25,000 bonus from the Living the Dream Medal Fund for winning a silver medal while Dlagnev earns $15,000 for capturing a bronze medal.

Day 3 of the seven-day tournament will see three more U.S. wrestlers take the mat. Dustin Schlatter (74 kg/163 lbs.) will compete in freestyle while the women’s freestyle tournament starts with Clarissa Chun (48 kg/105.5 lbs.) and Jessica Medina (51 kg/112.25 lbs.) ready to go. Chun won a World title in 2008.

Related posts:

  1. What It Takes – Northwestern’s 184 lb Jake Herbert
  2. Big Ten 2009 Tourney Results and Highlights
  3. Sanderson and Team Travel to Lehigh Nov. 13
  4. Should Brent Metcalf Have to Apologize For His Last Second Push?
This entry was posted in Matches, Stories & News and tagged , , , , by Jon. Bookmark the permalink.

About Jon

I started wrestling my freshman year of high school in 2000 in Northern California. My first match lasted about 16 seconds and ended with me on my back. I am proud to say that my second one lasted a bit longer, but sad to report that it ended the same way. That year was my hardest year. I lost every match except for one. My sophomore year I threw out my back and couldn’t wrestle but I still showed up to practice nearly every day and became the general “mat monkey.” Junior year I was back. This was the year that I suffered most of my injuries. I broke fingers, cracked ribs and dislocated both my shoulders at the same time. It was also the best record I had.

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