Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Bryce Meredith

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American collegiate wrestler and mixed martial artist
Bryce Meredith
Meredith in 2018
BornBryce Robert Meredith
(1995-04-29)April 29, 1995 (age 29)
Cheyenne, Wyoming, U.S.
Other namesMisfit
Height5 ft 8 in (1.73 m)
Weight135 lb (61 kg; 9.6 st)
DivisionBantamweight (2021–present)
Fighting out ofPhoenix, Arizona, U.S.
TeamMMA Lab
WrestlingNCAADivision IWrestling[1]
Years active2021–present
Mixed martial arts record
Total7
Wins7
By knockout2
By submission3
By decision2
Losses0
Other information
UniversityUniversity of Wyoming
Notable school(s)Cheyenne Central High School
Mixed martial arts record fromSherdog
Medal record
Collegiate Wrestling
RepresentingtheWyoming Cowboys
NCAA Division I Championships
Silver medal – second place2016 New York141 lb
Silver medal – second place2018 Cleveland141 lb
Bronze medal – third place2017 St. Louis141 lb
Big 12 Championships
Gold medal – first place2018 Tulsa141 lb
Silver medal – second place2017 Tulsa141 lb
Bronze medal – third place2016 Kansas City141 lb

Bryce Robert Meredith (born April 29, 1995) is an American professionalmixed martial artist, formerfreestyle and graduatedfolkstyle wrestler who currently competes in thebantamweight division ofBellator MMA. Incollege, where he competed at 141 pounds, he was a three–timeNCAA Division I All–American and the 2018Big 12 Conference champion out of theUniversity of Wyoming.[2]

Wrestling career

[edit]

High school

[edit]

Meredith attendedCheyenne Central High School in the state ofWyoming. He went on to become a four-time state (WHSAA) champion with a record of 123 wins and 8 defeats. He was also a four-time NHSCA All-American and was ranked amongst the top-100 recruits in the country.[3][2]

University

[edit]

NC State

[edit]

Meredith then committed toNorth Carolina State University as a class of 2014 recruit.[4] He competed for just one season as aWolfpack at 133 pounds (14'-15') and compiled 15 wins and 6 losses during regular season, but was not on thestarting lineup for the NCAA championships.[3]

University of Wyoming

[edit]

After just one year attending NCSU, he transferred to his home state,Wyoming. His coaches from both universities explain that Meredith was feelinghomesick and it was affecting him and his performance.[5]

As asophomore ('15-'16), he quickly made a difference from last year, going up in the rankings from #31 to #5, finishing the season with 29 wins and 5 losses and winning a bronze medal at theBig 12 Conference. Despite his accomplishments during regular season, Meredith was an underdog at theNCAA tournament. As the fourteenth seed, he went on to defeat the second, third and sixth seeds to make it to the finals, where he faced the top–seed and eventual two–time NCAA championDean Heil and lost by points.[6] This marked Meredith in the history of the program as the first finalist since 1996.[2]

As ajunior ('16-'17), he opened up the season with a Northern Colorado Open title and compiled a dual-meet record of 11–3. In the post-season, he made the finals of the Big 12s where he facedDean Heil, whom he had lost to at last year's NCAA finals. He was once again defeated on points, earning runner–up honors and an automatic qualification ticket for theNCAAs. At the tournament, he was the number ten seed and as such, he defeated three opponents including the second seed before falling to the sixth seeded wrestler in the semifinals. Due to his last match's result, he was thrown to the semifinals of the consolation bracket, where he defeatedJaydin Eierman to make it to the bronze medal match, where he waspinned by the second seed, whom he had beaten before, placing fourth.[7][2]

Meredith had his most successful season as asenior ('17–'18). He opened up with a victory over ninth–ranked Chad Red fromNebraska[8] and then went on to compete at the Cliff Keen Invitational, where he lost totwo–time Cadet World Champion and fifth seedYianni Diakomihalis in the semifinals and placed third.[9] He then dominated the rest of the regular season, claiming an RTOC title (namedOutstanding Wrestler)[10] and posting a 16–0 record at duals, with notable wins over top–ranked Seth Gross, second–rankedJaydin Eierman and two–time defending NCAA championDean Heil.[11] In the post–season, he once again defeated Heil in the Big 12 finals to claim his first title of the tournament.[12] He entered theNCAA championships as the top–seed and defeated three unseeded opponents until the semifinals, where he defeatedJoey McKenna to reach the finale. He lost his final match againstYianni Diakomihalis, the only man to beat Meredith as a senior.[13] Overall, Meredith became a two–time NCAA finalist, three–timeAll-American and a Big 12 champion with a record of 108 wins and 21 losses.[2]

Freestyle

[edit]

2018–2019

[edit]

Meredith made his senior level debut inRussia in December 2018 at the prestigious Alans International, where he lost his only match.[14] A month later (January 2019), he competed at the Dave Schultz Memorial International and claimed a bronze medal, after losing his semifinal match and defeating two other wrestlers in the consolation bracket.[15] He then made an appearance at the US Open in April, where he went 2–2 and did not place. After his performance at the US Open, he attended the Last Chance Qualifier for the World Team Trials In an attempt to make the team, but was stopped byDean Heil.[16] Seven months later, he competed at the Bill Farrell International, failing to place.[17]

In his last tournament of the year, Meredith went on to compete at the US Nationals of December, where he performed outstandingly in comparison to his last appearances.[18] He opened up bytech'ing multiple–time age–group national champion Josh Saunders and once again two–time NCAA championDean Heil before being stopped himself by eventual winner of the tournamentJordan Oliver. He then continued to tech his competition in the consolation bracket, once again defeating Saunders and also three–timeAll-American Ethan Lizak before being defeated himself bytwo–time Cadet World Champion andreigning NCAA championYianni Diakomihalis. He was defeated again by OlympianFrank Molinaro in a close 6–7 decision to place sixth, failing to qualify for the2020 US Olympic Team Trials.[19][20]

2020

[edit]

Meredith travelled toCuba to attend the Granma y Cerro Pelado International in February. He started up with a win but went on to lose his next two matches before winning the bronze–medal match.[21]

After being unable to compete due to theCOVID-19 pandemic until October, Meredith downed recently graduated high schoolerBeau Bartlett on October 20 at theNLWC II on points in a high–pace and close match (8–6)[22] andIowa standout Austin DeSanto on November 1 at theHWC Showdown Open, by points (11–3).[23] On November 24 at the WRTC Underground I, Meredith was defeated in a frenetic and close match byNCAA champion Seth Gross, seven points to ten.[24] He then competed at theFlo 8-Man Challenge: 150 lbs on December 18, where he was eliminated in the first round byWorld Championship runner–up (70kg)James Green.[25]

Mixed martial arts career

[edit]

Early career

[edit]

After graduating from theUniversity of Wyoming, Meredith announced his intentions of competing inmixed martial arts.[26][27] Meredith made his professional debut on May 21, 2021, atLFA 108, in abantamweight bout against Steven Merrill, where despite facing early adversity by beingdropped, he was able to pound his way into a technical knockout victory in the first round.[28]

In his sophomore performance on April 8, 2022, atLFA 128, Meredith defeated Jay Viola via technical knockout in the third round.[29]

Meredith faced Nathan Fought on September 9, 2022, atLFA 141, defeating him via rear-naked choke in the first round.[30]

Bellator MMA

[edit]

On February 14, 2023, it was announced that Meredith had signed a multi-fight deal withBellator MMA and would make his debut on March 31, 2023, atBellator 293 against Brandon Carrillo.[31] He won the fight by a rear-naked choke submission in the first round.[32]

Meredith faced Miguel Peimbert on October 7, 2023 atBellator 300.[33] He won the fight via unanimous decision.[34]

Meredith debuted with theProfessional Fighters League (PFL) atPFL 1 on April 4, 2024 and won his bout against Ty Johnson by unanimous decision.[35][36]

Meredith returned to Bellator to face John MaCalolooy on September 7, 2024 atBellator Champions Series 4. He won the fight via technical submission due to a rear-naked choke in the first round.[37]

Mixed martial arts record

[edit]
Professional record breakdown
7 matches7 wins0 losses
By knockout20
By submission30
By decision20
Res.RecordOpponentMethodEventDateRoundTimeLocationNotes
Win7–0John MaCalolooyTechnical Submission (rear-naked choke)Bellator Champions Series 4September 7, 202413:15San Diego, California, United States
Win6–0Ty JohnsonDecision (unanimous)PFL 1 (2024)April 4, 202435:00San Antonio, Texas, United States
Win5–0Miguel PeimbertDecision (unanimous)Bellator 300October 7, 202335:00San Diego, California, United States
Win4–0Brandon CarrilloSubmission (rear-naked choke)Bellator 293March 31, 202323:11Temecula, California, United States
Win3–0Nathan FoughtSubmission (rear-naked choke)LFA 141September 9, 202214:36Vail, Colorado, United StatesCatchweight (139.8 lb) bout; Fought missed weight.
Win2–0Jay ViolaTKO (punches)LFA 128April 8, 202231:04Sioux Falls, South Dakota, United StatesCatchweight (140 lb) bout.
Win1–0Steven MerrillTKO (punches)LFA 108May 21, 202113:55Sioux Falls, South Dakota, United StatesBantamweight debut.

Freestyle record

[edit]
Senior Freestyle Matches
Res.RecordOpponentScoreDateEventLocation
Flo 8-Man Challenge DNP at 150 lbs
Loss18–14United StatesJames GreenTF 0–10December 18, 2020Flo 8-Man Challenge: 150 lbs

United StatesAustin, Texas

Loss18–13United States Seth Gross7–10November 24, 2020WRTC Underground I

United StatesMadison, Wisconsin

Win18–12United States Austin DeSanto11–3November 1, 2020HWC Showdown Open

United StatesIowa City, Iowa

Win17–12United StatesBeau Bartlett8–6October 20, 2020NLWC II

United StatesState College, Pennsylvania

2020 Granma y Cerro Pelado3rd place, bronze medalist(s) at 65 kg
Win16–12February 9–17, 20202020 Granma y Cerro Pelado

CubaHavana, Cuba

Loss15–12Cuba Cristian SolenzalTF 0–11
Loss15–11CubaAlejandro ValdésTF 0–10
Win15–10Cuba Hernandez4–0
2019 US Nationals 6th at 65 kg
Loss14–10United StatesFrank Molinaro6–7December 20–22, 20192019 US Senior Nationals - US Olympic Trials Qualifier

United StatesFort Worth, Texas

Loss14–9United StatesYianni DiakomihalisTF 0–10
Win14–8United States Josh SaundersTF 16–6
Win13–8United States Ethan LizakTF 10–0
Loss12–8United StatesJordan OliverTF 0–10
Win12–7United StatesDean HeilTF 18–8
Win11–7United States Josh SaundersTF 11–1
2019 Bill Farrell Memorial at 65 kg
Loss10–7United States Evan HendersonTF 0–10November 15–16, 20192019 Bill Farrell Memorial International Open

United StatesNew York City, New York

Win10–6United StatesDean HeilTF 18–7
Loss9–6United StatesJordan OliverTF 0–11
Win9–5United States Earl HallTF 13–3
Win8–5Tajikistan Rob MathersFall
2019 US Last Chance WTT DNP at 65 kg
Loss7–5United StatesDean HeilTF 0–10May 5, 20192019 US Last Chance World Team Trials Qualifier

United StatesEast Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania

Win7–4United States Ben Whitford7–6
2019 US Open DNP at 65 kg
Loss6–4United StatesJoey McKennaTF 0–10April 24–27, 20192019 US Open National Championships

United StatesLas Vegas, Nevada

Win6–3United States Montell Marion9–4
Loss5–3United StatesJaydin EiermanFall
Win5–2United States Josh FinesilverTF 10–0
2019 Dave Schultz M. International3rd place, bronze medalist(s) at 65 kg
Win4–2United States Andrew Alirez7–2January 24–26, 20192019 Dave Schultz Memorial International

United StatesColorado Springs, Colorado

Win3–2United States Brandon Wright6–4
Loss2–2United States Bernard FutrellTF 1–12
Win2–1United States Andrew Alirez8–7
Win1–1United States Joshua DziewaTF 13–2
2018 Alans 32nd at 65 kg
Loss0–1Russia Imam AdzhievTF 0–10December 7–9, 20182018 Alans International

RussiaVladikavkaz,Russia

NCAA record

[edit]
NCAA Championships Matches
Res.RecordOpponentScoreDateEvent
2018 NCAA Championships2nd place, silver medalist(s) at 141 lbs
Loss12–4Yianni Diakomihalis4–7March 15–17, 20182018 NCAA Division I Wrestling Championships
Win12–3Joey McKenna1–0
Win11–3Sa`Derian PerryFall
Win10–3Vincent Turk5–2
Win9–3Colton Schilling5–1
2017 NCAA Championships 4th at 141 lbs
Loss8–3Kevin JackFallMarch 16–18, 20172017 NCAA Division I Wrestling Championships
Win8–2Jaydin Eierman8-–
Loss7–2George DiCamillo7–10
Win7–1Kevin Jack6–5
Win6–1Johnathan HathawayMD 8–0
Win5–1Mike LongoMD 12–4
2016 NCAA Championships2nd place, silver medalist(s) at 141 lbs
Loss4–1Dean Heil2–3March 17–19, 20162016 NCAA Division I Wrestling Championships
Win4–0Joey McKenna5–3
Win3–0Micah Jordan5–2
Win2–0Kevin Jack5–4
Win1–0Robert MathersMD 16–3

Stats

[edit]
SeasonYearSchoolRankWeigh ClassRecordWinBonus
2018SeniorUniversity of Wyoming#1 (2nd)14133–294.29%51.43%
2017Junior#10 (4th)31–879.49%58.97%
2016Sophomore#14 (2nd)29–585.29%47.06%
2015FreshmanNorth Carolina State University#31 (DNQ)13315–671.43%38-10%
Career108–2183.72%50.39%

[11]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Bryce Meredith - Wrestling".University of Wyoming Athletics. Retrieved2020-06-27.
  2. ^abcde"Bryce Meredith - Wrestling".University of Wyoming Athletics. Retrieved2020-06-27.
  3. ^ab"Bryce Meredith - 2014-15 - Wrestling".NC State University Athletics. Retrieved2020-06-27.
  4. ^"Fi - The Best Recruiting Classes in the Country".flowrestling.org. 5 May 2014. Retrieved2020-06-27.
  5. ^Ryan.Holmgren@trib.com, Ryan Holmgren (25 December 2015)."Bryce Meredith rediscovers love for Wyoming during breakout sophomore year".Casper Star-Tribune Online. Retrieved2020-06-27.
  6. ^Spey, Mister (2016-03-30)."The 2016 NCAA Wrestling championships complete recap".Bloody Elbow. Retrieved2020-06-27.
  7. ^grappleCy (2017-03-20)."2017 NCAA Wrestling Championships Recap & Final Results/Brackets".Wide Right & Natty Lite. Retrieved2020-06-27.
  8. ^"Photos: Nebraska defeats Wyoming in opening dual".JournalStar.com. 17 November 2017. Retrieved2020-06-30.
  9. ^staff, Star-Tribune (2 December 2017)."Wyoming's Bryce Meredith places third at Cliff Keen Invitational".Casper Star-Tribune Online. Retrieved2020-06-30.
  10. ^"2017 RTOC Final Brackets and Team Scores – Reno Tournament of Champions". Retrieved2020-06-30.
  11. ^abLLC, ACS."Bryce Meredith (Wyoming) Profile".wrestlestat.com. Retrieved2020-06-30.
  12. ^staff, Star-Tribune (5 March 2018)."Wyoming's Meredith, Colgan win Big 12 wrestling championships".Casper Star-Tribune Online. Retrieved2020-06-30.
  13. ^Brandon.Foster@Trib.com, Brandon Foster (17 March 2018)."Wyoming's Bryce Meredith loses national championship match".Casper Star-Tribune Online. Retrieved2020-06-30.
  14. ^davis.potter@trib.com, Davis Potter (19 April 2020)."Bryce Meredith was an All-American at Wyoming. Now he hopes to eventually be an Olympian".Casper Star-Tribune Online. Retrieved2020-06-30.
  15. ^staffsports@wyosports.net, WyoSports (27 January 2019)."Bryce Meredith third at Dave Schultz tourney".Wyoming Tribune Eagle. Retrieved2021-05-19.
  16. ^"Princeton WC and New Jersey RTC adds two-time NCAA finalist Bryce Meredith".teamusa.org. August 5, 2019. Archived fromthe original on 2019-08-06.
  17. ^Cain, Brandon M. (2019-11-16)."OSU wrestling: Alex Dieringer, Jordan Oliver win Bill Farrell to qualify for 2020 Olympic Trials".Cowboys Ride For Free. Retrieved2021-05-19.
  18. ^"2019 Senior Nationals: Lightweight Preview – Home Mat Advantage Wrestling". 17 December 2019. Retrieved2021-05-19.
  19. ^"2019 Senior Nationals Men's Freestyle – Final Results".iawrestle.com. 2019-12-23. Retrieved2020-06-30.
  20. ^WyoSports, Jeremiah Johnke (28 March 2020)."Dream delayed: Meredith eyes 2021 Olympics".WyoSports.net. Retrieved2020-06-30.
  21. ^"Pantaleo and Cox win titles, seven others claim medals at Cerro Pelado in Cuba".Team USA. February 16, 2020. Archived fromthe original on April 14, 2023. RetrievedJune 30, 2020.
  22. ^"Meredith and Bartlett entertain at NLWC dual on Tuesday".Team USA. October 20, 2020. Archived fromthe original on 2020-10-23.
  23. ^Goodwin, Cody."Wrestling: At HWC's Showdown Open, Jaydin Eierman adds signature win ahead of Iowa career".Des Moines Register. Retrieved2020-11-02.
  24. ^"Gross, Meredith set to meet at WRTC Underground 1 Open".InterMat. Retrieved2020-11-08.
  25. ^"Bajrang tops Green to win Flo 8-Man Challenge at 150 pounds".InterMat. Retrieved2020-12-19.
  26. ^WyoSports, Jeremiah Johnke (29 March 2020)."MMA career awaits Meredith after wrestling".WyoSports.net. Retrieved2020-06-30.
  27. ^"Meredith looking beyond Olympics to MMA".InterMat. Retrieved2020-06-30.
  28. ^Sherdog.com."LFA 108 Highlight Video: Bryce Meredith Pounds Out Steven Merrill".Sherdog. Retrieved2021-05-22.
  29. ^Sherdog.com."Aaron McKenzie Edges Lucas Clay, Captures Vacant Lightweight Title at LFA 128".Sherdog. Retrieved2022-04-09.
  30. ^Staff; Staff (2022-09-09)."LFA 141: Talundzic vs. Brown Full Results".Cageside Press. Retrieved2022-09-29.
  31. ^"Bryce Meredith Signs With Bellator, Set To Fight At Bellator 293".Heavyweight Nation. 2023-02-14. Retrieved2023-02-15.
  32. ^Tyler Treese (2023-03-31)."Bellator 293 'Golm vs. James' Play-by-Play, results & round scoring".Sherdog.com. Retrieved2023-04-01.
  33. ^"Historic Bellator 300 gets eight new prelim fights".MMA Junkie. 2023-09-15. Retrieved2023-09-15.
  34. ^Staff (2023-10-07)."Bellator 300: Nurmagomedov vs. Primus Full Results".Cageside Press. Retrieved2023-10-08.
  35. ^Staff (2024-04-04)."2024 PFL 1: Delija vs. Moldavsky Full Results".Cageside Press. Retrieved2024-04-05.
  36. ^Sherdog.com."2024 PFL 1 Regular Season Play-by-Play, Results & Round Scoring".Sherdog. Retrieved2024-04-08.
  37. ^Heck, Mike (2024-09-07)."Bellator San Diego video: Bryce Meredith brutally chokes Jon Macalolooy unconscious".MMA Fighting. Retrieved2024-09-19.

External links

[edit]
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bryce_Meredith&oldid=1282693153"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp