Oklahoma State University Athletics

Cowboy Wrestling Faces First Road Tests at Air Force and Arizona State
November 20, 2025 | Cowboy Wrestling
The Basics
The No. 4 Oklahoma State wrestling team heads west for a pair of duals this weekend. First, the Cowboys face
Air Force Friday, November 21, at 8:30 p.m. CT, then OSU faces Arizona State Sunday, November 23, at 2 p.m. CT. Oklahoma State comes into the weekend with four ranked wins, including its highest-ranked win since 2012 after last weekend's National Duals Invitational. All 10 Cowboys are ranked in the latest Intermat rankings, with Troy Spratley, Sergio Vega, Landon Robideau, Dee Lockett, Zack Ryder, Cody Merrill and Konner Doucet ranked in the top 10.
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On the Air
OSU's dual with Air Force will be streamed on FloWrestling, while the Cowboys' dual against the Sun Devils can be seen on ESPN+. Rex Holt is the voice of Cowboy Wrestling, and live radio coverage will be carried on 93.7 KSPI-FM. Stats and results can be found on @CowboyWrestling on X, as well as statbroadcast.com.
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The Series: Air Force
The Cowboys lead the all time series with the Falcons, 6-0, and have never allowed more than six points in any of the meetings. In last season's matchup in Gallagher-Iba Arena, Oklahoma State took a 43-6 victory. The Cowboys are 3-0 when facing Air Force in Colorado Springs.
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The Series: Arizona State
Oklahoma State leads the all time series with Arizona State, 42-4, and has won 21 straight matches against the Sun Devils. The Cowboys took the last meeting, 33-6, and the last time the Cowboys lost to Arizona State was in 1993.
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About the Cowboys
The David Taylor era is in full swing after a third-place finish with a pair of individual champions at the NCAA Championships in March. The Cowboys return six NCAA qualifiers and added three more out of the portal, including Richard Figueroa II, Casey Swiderski and Alex Facundo. Despite losing NCAA champions Wyatt Hendrickson and Dean Hamiti Jr., the Cowboys are primed for another deep run in March.
Affectionately known as "Sparky," Troy Spratley is back and ready for another deep run this season in the Cowboys' leadoff spot. A 2025 national finalist, Spratley holds down the 125-pound slot and is ranked second headed into the season behind last season's NCAA champion. In his first action this season, Sparky left no doubt
and picked up a technical fall victory in his first bout of the season.
The Cowboy lineup this season features multiple transfers who are set to make immediate impacts, including 2024 national champion Richard Figueroa II, 2024 All-American Casey Swiderski, Alex Facundo and Zack Ryder. Konner Doucet retakes the reins at heavyweight after sitting behind Hendrickson in 2025, while Cowboy veteran
Teague Travis aims to get back to the NCAA Championships. In Doucet's first action this season, he collected a technical fall victory. Over the 16 duals he started over the previous two years, he didn't produce a bonus point win.
Coach Taylor's first freshman class will undoubtedly leave its mark on the 2025-26 squad. The hometown hero LaDarion "Dee" Lockett set out to put the country on notice at 165 pounds already. Other freshman in the lineup include Minnesota native Landon Robideau, Arizona product Sergio Vega and potentially California's Ronnie
Ramirez. Lockett, Robideau and Vega all won their opening bouts as Cowboys, with Lockett and Robideau taking down All-Americans. The trio is 15-0 in their young careers.
Last year's highly touted freshman Cody Merrill came into the season ranked 10th at 197 pounds after going 12-2 last year with three wins over ranked opponents in various tournaments. Merrill is 4-1 on the young season with a win over an All-American.
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The Opening Act
David Taylor's opening season for the Cowboys brought the Cowboy faithful a new hope. Taylor's Cowboys dominated the competition by going 13-1 in dual action, finishing the season unblemished at home in seven matches and winning 10 matches against ranked opponents, including Oregon State, Arizona State, Oklahoma, Virginia Tech, NC State, West Virginia, Northern Iowa, Iowa State, Missouri and Little Rock in dual action. Taylor also led the Cowboys to a Big 12 title for the first time since 2021. On the biggest stage of collegiate wrestling, Oklahoma State had a pair of Cowboys, Wyatt Hendrickson and Dean Hamiti Jr., crowned national champions. It marked the first time since 2016 the Cowboys had multiple NCAA champions in the same season. Taylor's Cowboys never left the top three in the rankings, climbing as high as two in the polls.
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Hey Now, You're an All-Star
On November 1, Zack Ryder and Casey Swiderski competed in the NWCA All-Star Classic. Casey Swiderski led off the night for the Cowboys by facing Michigan's three-time All-American Lachlan McNeil. Swiderski controlled the match and nabbed the lone takedown of the bout to win, 4-2. The win vaulted Swiderski up to No. 2 in the poll at 149 pounds. Ryder dominated what was considered the match of the weekend, as he took down Maryland's Jaxon Smith at 184 pounds. Ryder collected the only bonus-point win of the event with his major decision over Smith, 14-4. He took down Smith four times and did not allow a takedown. Smith, a three-time national qualifier, had only given up bonus points twice in his career - once to Carter Starocci and the other to Aaron Brooks, who have nine national titles between them. Ryder's win turned heads around the country, and it was seen in the polls as he climbed to fourth at 184 pounds.
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New Kids On the Block
David Taylor took the recruiting world by storm, as he brought in the second ranked recruiting class in the country entering his second season at the helm. The Cowboys led the nation with eight signees ranked inside FloWrestling's Top 100 Big Board. The group is spearheaded by blue-chip prospects LaDarion "Dee" Lockett, Landon Robideau and Sergio Vega, who make up half of the top six overall spots. Of the 10 wrestlers in the class, six are in-state products while the others hail from Pennsylvania, Minnesota, Arizona and California. The full list includes Kruz Goff, Ishmael Guerrero, Beau Hickman, Austin Johnson, Lockett, Ronnie Ramirez, Robideau, Kody Routledge, Ethan Teague, and Vega.
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The Douce(t) is Loose
A familiar face for Cowboy fans, Konner Doucet is back in the lineup for the 2025 season after sitting behind Hodge Trophy winner Wyatt Hendrickson last season. Doucet comes into the season ranked ninth. The two-time NCAA qualifier is primed for a breakout season after going 1-0 in his only dual action against Air Force last season and collecting four wins at the Michigan State Open where he took first. In Doucet's first action this season, he collected a technical fall victory. Over the 16 duals he's started over the past two years, he didn't produce a bonus point in one of them. After his weekend at the National Duals Invitational, Doucet now has a three bonus-point wins already this season.
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The Power of the Pivot
The Cowboys brought in transfers Richard Figueroa II, Casey Swiderski, Alex Facundo, Zack Ryder and Gary Steen to bolster the lineup this season and if last year's transfers are any indication of what they can do in David Taylor's program, the sky is the limit for those five. Last year's transfers that started for the Cowboys were Caleb Fish, Cam Amine, Dean Hamiti Jr. and Wyatt Hendrickson. All four of them earned All-America status and two of them went on to win national titles.
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Made for the Moment
True freshman Landon Robideau and Dee Lockett made their Cowboy debuts on November 7 against Stanford, both facing All-Americans in Daniel Cardenas and Hunter Garvin. Unafraid of the moment, Robideau picked up a major decision victory and Lockett used a gutsy second-period rideout to pick up a 2-1 win. Other true freshman Sergio Vega was incredible in his debut as well, picking up a technical fall win. Of the Cowboys' 33 points in last Friday's opener, the true freshman accounted for 12 of them. The trio is now a combined 15-0 and all are ranked No. 2 in the country in their respective weight classes. Â
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Built for Bonus
The Oklahoma State wrestling team has won 25 bouts this season, collecting bonus points in 13 of them, including one fall, seven technical falls and three major decisions.
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Wrestling's House of Horrors
No venue in America has a richer wrestling tradition than Gallagher-Iba Arena, home of the Oklahoma State wrestling program since 1939. In its beginning as Gallagher Hall, the gymnasium was named for Ed Gallagher, but when renovations were completed in January 1988, it was renamed Gallagher-Iba Arena to honor the late Mr. Henry P. Iba, Oklahoma State's legendary basketball coach. Alongside 54 NCAA championship banners, Gallagher and Iba's names have looked over Oklahoma State's historic venue for nearly 40 years.
Since 1939, Oklahoma State has captured 25 NCAA team titles, completed 45 perfect campaigns at home and won over 90% of its duals inside Gallagher-Iba Arena. The building's opening coincided with the longest home unbeaten streak in program history, as the Pokes won their first 37 duals inside GIA as part of a 67-dual unbeaten streak at home. That stretch still stands as the program's longest home unbeaten streak, as OSU never suffered defeat from 1933 to February 1951.
Oklahoma State's next-longest home unbeaten streak occurred from the 1959 finale to the middle of the 1967 season, going undefeated for 57 duals in a row. Not far behind, the Cowboys won 51 consecutive duals inside Gallagher-Iba arena from 1986-1993, good for the third-longest such streak in program history. More recently, John Smith guided the Cowboys to a 26-dual home winning streak from 2018-2022. Not long after the streak was snapped, Oklahoma State defeated South Dakota State on February 4, 2022, for the program's 500th victory inside the venue.
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The Home of Wrestling
Oklahoma State is the gold standard in the college wrestling world. On the national level, the Cowboys have won 34 NCAA team titles, crowned 145 NCAA individual champions and earned 492 All-America honors. No other program comes close to those astounding numbers. It's a similar story on the conference level, with OSU winning 56 team titles and Cowboy wrestlers combining for 297 individual championships.
From an individual perspective, any list of the greatest wrestlers in NCAA history must include Oklahoma State's Yojiro Uetake, who was a perfect 57-0 with three NCAA titles, and Pat Smith, the first four-time NCAA champion in history. Pat's older brother, John Smith, was a two-time NCAA champion for the Cowboys and went on to win six straight world gold medals from 1987-92. His OSU teammate, Kenny Monday, also won gold in 1988 and 1989 as part of his four world medals. That group is just part of Oklahoma State's consistent representation on the Olympic stage every four years. Since 1924, 32 Oklahoma State wrestlers have fought their way to Olympic team membership a total of 41 times, with nine athletes winning 11 gold medals.
All told, 40 members of the Cowboy wrestling family have been inducted into the National Wrestling Hall of Fame, the most in the country.
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NCAA Team Championships
1. Oklahoma State 34
2. Iowa 24
3. Penn State 13
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NCAA Individual Champions
1. Oklahoma State 145
2. Iowa 85
3. Iowa State 71
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NCAA All-Americans
1. Oklahoma State 492
2. Iowa 367
3. Iowa State 310
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Olympians
1. Oklahoma State 41
2. Iowa 23
3. Oklahoma 22
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The No. 4 Oklahoma State wrestling team heads west for a pair of duals this weekend. First, the Cowboys face
Air Force Friday, November 21, at 8:30 p.m. CT, then OSU faces Arizona State Sunday, November 23, at 2 p.m. CT. Oklahoma State comes into the weekend with four ranked wins, including its highest-ranked win since 2012 after last weekend's National Duals Invitational. All 10 Cowboys are ranked in the latest Intermat rankings, with Troy Spratley, Sergio Vega, Landon Robideau, Dee Lockett, Zack Ryder, Cody Merrill and Konner Doucet ranked in the top 10.
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On the Air
OSU's dual with Air Force will be streamed on FloWrestling, while the Cowboys' dual against the Sun Devils can be seen on ESPN+. Rex Holt is the voice of Cowboy Wrestling, and live radio coverage will be carried on 93.7 KSPI-FM. Stats and results can be found on @CowboyWrestling on X, as well as statbroadcast.com.
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The Series: Air Force
The Cowboys lead the all time series with the Falcons, 6-0, and have never allowed more than six points in any of the meetings. In last season's matchup in Gallagher-Iba Arena, Oklahoma State took a 43-6 victory. The Cowboys are 3-0 when facing Air Force in Colorado Springs.
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The Series: Arizona State
Oklahoma State leads the all time series with Arizona State, 42-4, and has won 21 straight matches against the Sun Devils. The Cowboys took the last meeting, 33-6, and the last time the Cowboys lost to Arizona State was in 1993.
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About the Cowboys
The David Taylor era is in full swing after a third-place finish with a pair of individual champions at the NCAA Championships in March. The Cowboys return six NCAA qualifiers and added three more out of the portal, including Richard Figueroa II, Casey Swiderski and Alex Facundo. Despite losing NCAA champions Wyatt Hendrickson and Dean Hamiti Jr., the Cowboys are primed for another deep run in March.
Affectionately known as "Sparky," Troy Spratley is back and ready for another deep run this season in the Cowboys' leadoff spot. A 2025 national finalist, Spratley holds down the 125-pound slot and is ranked second headed into the season behind last season's NCAA champion. In his first action this season, Sparky left no doubt
and picked up a technical fall victory in his first bout of the season.
The Cowboy lineup this season features multiple transfers who are set to make immediate impacts, including 2024 national champion Richard Figueroa II, 2024 All-American Casey Swiderski, Alex Facundo and Zack Ryder. Konner Doucet retakes the reins at heavyweight after sitting behind Hendrickson in 2025, while Cowboy veteran
Teague Travis aims to get back to the NCAA Championships. In Doucet's first action this season, he collected a technical fall victory. Over the 16 duals he started over the previous two years, he didn't produce a bonus point win.
Coach Taylor's first freshman class will undoubtedly leave its mark on the 2025-26 squad. The hometown hero LaDarion "Dee" Lockett set out to put the country on notice at 165 pounds already. Other freshman in the lineup include Minnesota native Landon Robideau, Arizona product Sergio Vega and potentially California's Ronnie
Ramirez. Lockett, Robideau and Vega all won their opening bouts as Cowboys, with Lockett and Robideau taking down All-Americans. The trio is 15-0 in their young careers.
Last year's highly touted freshman Cody Merrill came into the season ranked 10th at 197 pounds after going 12-2 last year with three wins over ranked opponents in various tournaments. Merrill is 4-1 on the young season with a win over an All-American.
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The Opening Act
David Taylor's opening season for the Cowboys brought the Cowboy faithful a new hope. Taylor's Cowboys dominated the competition by going 13-1 in dual action, finishing the season unblemished at home in seven matches and winning 10 matches against ranked opponents, including Oregon State, Arizona State, Oklahoma, Virginia Tech, NC State, West Virginia, Northern Iowa, Iowa State, Missouri and Little Rock in dual action. Taylor also led the Cowboys to a Big 12 title for the first time since 2021. On the biggest stage of collegiate wrestling, Oklahoma State had a pair of Cowboys, Wyatt Hendrickson and Dean Hamiti Jr., crowned national champions. It marked the first time since 2016 the Cowboys had multiple NCAA champions in the same season. Taylor's Cowboys never left the top three in the rankings, climbing as high as two in the polls.
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Hey Now, You're an All-Star
On November 1, Zack Ryder and Casey Swiderski competed in the NWCA All-Star Classic. Casey Swiderski led off the night for the Cowboys by facing Michigan's three-time All-American Lachlan McNeil. Swiderski controlled the match and nabbed the lone takedown of the bout to win, 4-2. The win vaulted Swiderski up to No. 2 in the poll at 149 pounds. Ryder dominated what was considered the match of the weekend, as he took down Maryland's Jaxon Smith at 184 pounds. Ryder collected the only bonus-point win of the event with his major decision over Smith, 14-4. He took down Smith four times and did not allow a takedown. Smith, a three-time national qualifier, had only given up bonus points twice in his career - once to Carter Starocci and the other to Aaron Brooks, who have nine national titles between them. Ryder's win turned heads around the country, and it was seen in the polls as he climbed to fourth at 184 pounds.
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New Kids On the Block
David Taylor took the recruiting world by storm, as he brought in the second ranked recruiting class in the country entering his second season at the helm. The Cowboys led the nation with eight signees ranked inside FloWrestling's Top 100 Big Board. The group is spearheaded by blue-chip prospects LaDarion "Dee" Lockett, Landon Robideau and Sergio Vega, who make up half of the top six overall spots. Of the 10 wrestlers in the class, six are in-state products while the others hail from Pennsylvania, Minnesota, Arizona and California. The full list includes Kruz Goff, Ishmael Guerrero, Beau Hickman, Austin Johnson, Lockett, Ronnie Ramirez, Robideau, Kody Routledge, Ethan Teague, and Vega.
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The Douce(t) is Loose
A familiar face for Cowboy fans, Konner Doucet is back in the lineup for the 2025 season after sitting behind Hodge Trophy winner Wyatt Hendrickson last season. Doucet comes into the season ranked ninth. The two-time NCAA qualifier is primed for a breakout season after going 1-0 in his only dual action against Air Force last season and collecting four wins at the Michigan State Open where he took first. In Doucet's first action this season, he collected a technical fall victory. Over the 16 duals he's started over the past two years, he didn't produce a bonus point in one of them. After his weekend at the National Duals Invitational, Doucet now has a three bonus-point wins already this season.
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The Power of the Pivot
The Cowboys brought in transfers Richard Figueroa II, Casey Swiderski, Alex Facundo, Zack Ryder and Gary Steen to bolster the lineup this season and if last year's transfers are any indication of what they can do in David Taylor's program, the sky is the limit for those five. Last year's transfers that started for the Cowboys were Caleb Fish, Cam Amine, Dean Hamiti Jr. and Wyatt Hendrickson. All four of them earned All-America status and two of them went on to win national titles.
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Made for the Moment
True freshman Landon Robideau and Dee Lockett made their Cowboy debuts on November 7 against Stanford, both facing All-Americans in Daniel Cardenas and Hunter Garvin. Unafraid of the moment, Robideau picked up a major decision victory and Lockett used a gutsy second-period rideout to pick up a 2-1 win. Other true freshman Sergio Vega was incredible in his debut as well, picking up a technical fall win. Of the Cowboys' 33 points in last Friday's opener, the true freshman accounted for 12 of them. The trio is now a combined 15-0 and all are ranked No. 2 in the country in their respective weight classes. Â
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Built for Bonus
The Oklahoma State wrestling team has won 25 bouts this season, collecting bonus points in 13 of them, including one fall, seven technical falls and three major decisions.
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Wrestling's House of Horrors
No venue in America has a richer wrestling tradition than Gallagher-Iba Arena, home of the Oklahoma State wrestling program since 1939. In its beginning as Gallagher Hall, the gymnasium was named for Ed Gallagher, but when renovations were completed in January 1988, it was renamed Gallagher-Iba Arena to honor the late Mr. Henry P. Iba, Oklahoma State's legendary basketball coach. Alongside 54 NCAA championship banners, Gallagher and Iba's names have looked over Oklahoma State's historic venue for nearly 40 years.
Since 1939, Oklahoma State has captured 25 NCAA team titles, completed 45 perfect campaigns at home and won over 90% of its duals inside Gallagher-Iba Arena. The building's opening coincided with the longest home unbeaten streak in program history, as the Pokes won their first 37 duals inside GIA as part of a 67-dual unbeaten streak at home. That stretch still stands as the program's longest home unbeaten streak, as OSU never suffered defeat from 1933 to February 1951.
Oklahoma State's next-longest home unbeaten streak occurred from the 1959 finale to the middle of the 1967 season, going undefeated for 57 duals in a row. Not far behind, the Cowboys won 51 consecutive duals inside Gallagher-Iba arena from 1986-1993, good for the third-longest such streak in program history. More recently, John Smith guided the Cowboys to a 26-dual home winning streak from 2018-2022. Not long after the streak was snapped, Oklahoma State defeated South Dakota State on February 4, 2022, for the program's 500th victory inside the venue.
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The Home of Wrestling
Oklahoma State is the gold standard in the college wrestling world. On the national level, the Cowboys have won 34 NCAA team titles, crowned 145 NCAA individual champions and earned 492 All-America honors. No other program comes close to those astounding numbers. It's a similar story on the conference level, with OSU winning 56 team titles and Cowboy wrestlers combining for 297 individual championships.
From an individual perspective, any list of the greatest wrestlers in NCAA history must include Oklahoma State's Yojiro Uetake, who was a perfect 57-0 with three NCAA titles, and Pat Smith, the first four-time NCAA champion in history. Pat's older brother, John Smith, was a two-time NCAA champion for the Cowboys and went on to win six straight world gold medals from 1987-92. His OSU teammate, Kenny Monday, also won gold in 1988 and 1989 as part of his four world medals. That group is just part of Oklahoma State's consistent representation on the Olympic stage every four years. Since 1924, 32 Oklahoma State wrestlers have fought their way to Olympic team membership a total of 41 times, with nine athletes winning 11 gold medals.
All told, 40 members of the Cowboy wrestling family have been inducted into the National Wrestling Hall of Fame, the most in the country.
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NCAA Team Championships
1. Oklahoma State 34
2. Iowa 24
3. Penn State 13
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NCAA Individual Champions
1. Oklahoma State 145
2. Iowa 85
3. Iowa State 71
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NCAA All-Americans
1. Oklahoma State 492
2. Iowa 367
3. Iowa State 310
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Olympians
1. Oklahoma State 41
2. Iowa 23
3. Oklahoma 22
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