Skip to content
USA Wrestling
International
Women
USAW

Gracenote Sports predicts USA to win eight 2020 Olympic wrestling medals, with Mensah-Stock and Gray golden

Share:

by Gary Abbott, USA Wrestling

Images of 2019 World champions Tamyra Mensah-Stock and Adeline Gray.

To mark the recent six-month from the 2020 Olympic date, Gracenote Sports has released its Virtual Medal Table for the 2020 Olympics, predicting the final medal count for every sport being contested in Tokyo.

Not only does Gracenote Sports provide the total medal count prediction for the Olympic Games, but it also predicts who will win every single medal in every sport during the Games.

In wrestling, Gracenote Sports predicted that United States would win eight Olympic medals, including gold medals from Tamyra Mensah-Stock at 68 kg women’s freestyle and Adeline Gray at 76 kg women’s freestyle.

Based on this prediction, the USA haul would include three silver medals: Jordan Burroughs at 74 kg men’s freestyle, David Taylor at 86 kg men’s’ freestyle and Kyle Snyder at 97 kg men’s freestyle.

The three bronze medals predicted by Gracenote for Team USA include Nick Gwiazdowski at 125 kg in men’s freestyle, Sarah Hildebrandt at 53 kg in women’s freestyle and G’Angelo Hancock at 97 kg in Greco-Roman.

This prediction did not take into consideration that Hildebrandt has announced that she will make her Olympic quest at 50 kg. Of course, the U.S. Olympic wrestling team will not be finalized until April, so at this time, none of these predicted U.S. medalists have yet secured their spot in the Olympic Games.

Overall, the Gracenote Virtual Medal Table has Russia winning the most wrestling medals with 9 (5 gold-2 silver-2 bronze). The USA (2-3-3) and host Japan (1-4-3) are next with eight medals. Turkey (1-2-3) is next in the predicted wrestling medal count with six medals, followed by Ukraine (1-1-2) with four medals.

Four nations are predicted to get three medals, Hungary (1-1-1), India (1-0-2), Korea (0-1-2), Sweden (0-0-3). Seven countries are predicted to finish with two wrestling medals: Azerbaijan (1-0-1), China (1-0-1), Georgia (1-0-1), Cuba (0-2-0), Kazakhstan (0-0-2), Germany (0-0-2) and Serbia (0-0-2). In total, 27 different nations are expected to win a wrestling medal, according to Gracenote.

It is interesting that while Gracenote predicts Japan to win five medals in women’s freestyle, it predicts no women’s freestyle gold medals for Japan, with four silvers and a bronze in women’s freestyle. In 2016 at the Rio Olympics, Japan also won five Olympic women’s freestyle medals, but four of them were gold medals.

When it comes to overall medals, the United States is predicted to head the medal list with 117 medals, including 47 gold, 36 silver and 34 bronze. Rounding out the top 10 in the Gracenote predictions are China with 87 (43-21-23), Russia with 66 (25-19-22), Japan with 65 (30-24-11), Australia with 44 (17-16-11), Great Britain with 42 (13-12-17), the Netherlands with 41 (16-9-16), France with 37 (6-16-15) and Germany with 35 (9-12-14). See the top 10 medal chart at the end of this story.

For more information on the Gracenote 2020 Virtual Medal Table for January 2020, click here.

GRACENOTE SPORTS 2020 VIRTUAL MEDAL TABLE FOR WRESTLING
January 2020

Predicted medalists (by country)


RUSSIA – 9 medals (5 gold, 2 silver, 2 bronze)
Zaur Uguev, 57 kg FS gold
Zaurbek Sidakov, 74 kg FS gold
Abdulrashid Sadulaev, 97 kg FS gold
Artem Surkov, 67 kg GR gold
Musa Evloev, 97 kg GR gold
Gadschimurad Rashidov, 65 kg FS silver
Sergey Emelin, 60 kg GR silver
Aleksandr Chekhirkin, 77 kg GR bronze
Sergey Semenov, 130 kg GR bronze

UNITED STATES – 8 medals (2 gold, 3 silver, 3 bronze)
Tamyra Mensah-Stock, 68 kg W gold
Adeline Gray, 76 kg W gold
Jordan Burroughs, 74 kg FS silver
David Taylor, 86 kg FS silver
Kyle Snyder, 97 kg FS silver
Nick Gwiazdowski, 125 kg FS bronze
Sarah Hildebrandt, 53 kg W bronze
G’Angelo Hancock, 97 kg GR bronze

JAPAN – 8 medals (1 gold, 4 silver, 3 bronze)
Kenchiro Fumita, 60 kg GR gold
Yui Susaki, 50 kg W silver
Mayu Mukaida, 53 kg W silver
Risako Kawai, 57 kg W silver
Hiroe Minagawa, 76 kg W silver
Yuki Takahashi, 57 kg FS bronze
Takuto Otoguro, 65 kg FS bronze
Yukako Kawai, 62 kg W bronze

TURKEY – 6 medals (1 gold, 2 silver, 3 bronze)
Riza Kayaalp, 130 kg GR gold
Suleyman Atli, 57 kg FS silver
Taha Akgul, 125 kg FS silver
Fatih Erdin, 86 kg FS bronze
Yasemin Adar, 76 kg W bronze
Metehan Basar, 87 kg GR bronze

UKRAINE – 4 medals (1 gold, 1 silver, 2 bronze)
Zhan Belenyuk, 87 kg GR gold
Alla Cherkosova, 68 kg W silver
Oleksandr Khotsianivskyi, 125 kg FS bronze
Oksana Livach, 50 kg W bronze

HUNGARY – 3 medals (1 gold, 1 silver, 1 bronze)
Tamasz Lorincz, 77 kg GR gold
Viktor Lorincz, 87 kg GR silver
Emese Barka, 57 kg W bronze

INDIA – 3 medals (1 gold, 2 bronze)
Bajrang Punia, 65 kg FS gold
Deepak Punia, 86 kg FS bronze
Vinesh Phogat, 53 kg W bronze

KOREA – 3 medals (1 silver, 2 bronze)
Kim Hyun-Woo, 77 kg GR silver
Kim Seung-Hak, 60 kg GR bronze
Ryu Han-Soo, 67 kg GR bronze

SWEDEN – 3 medals (3 bronze)
Henna Johansson, 62 kg W bronze
Jenny Fransson, 68 kg W bronze
Alex Kessidis, 77 kg GR bronze

AZERBAIJAN – 2 medals (1 gold, 1 bronze)
Maria Stadnik, 50 kg W gold
Sharif Sharifov, 97 kg FS bronze

CHINA – 2 medals (1 gold, 1 bronze)
Rong Ningning, 57 kg W gold
Zhou Feng, 68 kg W bronze

GEORGIA – 2 medals (1 gold, 1 bronze)
Geno Petriashvili, 125 kg FS gold
Elizbar Odikadze, 97 kg FS bronze

CUBA – 2 medals (2 silvers)
Ismael Borrero Molina, 67 kg GR silver
Oscar Pino Hinds, 130 kg GR silver

KAZAKHSTAN – 2 medals (2 bronze)
Nurislam Sanayev, 57 kg FS bronze
Daulet Niyazbekov, 65 kg FS bronze

GERMANY – 2 medals (2 bronze)
Aline Focken, 76 kg W bronze
Denis Kudla, 87 kg GR bronze

SERBIA – 2 medals (2 bronze)
Mate Nemes, 67 kg GR bronze
Mikhail Kajaia, 97 kg GR bronze

IRAN – 1 medal (1 gold)
Hassan Yazdanicharati, 86 kg FS gold

NORTH KOREA – 1 medal (1 gold)
Pak Yong-Mi, 53 kg W gold

KYRGYZSTAN – 1 medal (1 gold)
Aisuluu Tynbekova, 62 kg W gold

BULGARIA – 1 medal (1 silver)
Taybe Yusein, 62 kg W silver

ARMENIA – 1 medal (1 silver)
Artur Aleksanyan, 97 kg GR silver

ITALY – 1 medal (1 bronze)
Frank Chamizo Marquez, 74 kg FS bronze

FRANCE – 1 medal (1 bronze)
Zelimkhan Khadjiev, 74 kg FS bronze

ROMANIA – 1 medal (1 bronze)
Emilia Vuc, 50 kg W bronze

NIGERIA – 1 medal (1 bronze)
Odunayo Adekuoroye, 57 kg W bronze

MOLDOVA – 1 medal (1 bronze)
Victor Ciobanu, 60 kg GR bronze

ESTONIA – 1 medal (1 bronze)
Heiki Nabi, 130 kg GR bronze

Predicted medalists, by weight class and style

Men’s freestyle medalists


57 kg
Gold – Zaur Uguev (Russia)
Silver – Suleyman Atli (Turkey)
Bronze – Nurislam Sanayev (Kazakhstan)
Bronze – Yuki Takahashi (Japan)

65 kg
Gold – Bajrang Punia (India)
Silver – Gadschimurad Rashidov (Russia)
Bronze – Takuto Otoguro (Japan)
Bronze – Daulet Niyazbekov (Kazakhstan)

74 kg
Gold – Zaurbek Sidakov (Russia)
Silver – Jordan Burroughs (USA)
Bronze – Frank Chamizo Marquez (Italy)
Bronze – Zelimkhan Khadjiev (France)

86 kg
Gold – Hassan Yazdanicharati (Iran)
Silver –David Taylor (USA)
Bronze –Deepak Punia (India)
Bronze –Fatih Erdin (Turkey)

97 kg
Gold – Abdulrashid Sadulaev (Russia)
Silver – Kyle Snyder (USA)
Bronze – Sharif Sharifov (Azerbaijan)
Bronze – Elizbar Odikadze (Georgia)

125 kg
Gold – Geno Petriashvili (Georgia)
Silver –Taha Akgul (Turkey)
Bronze –Nick Gwiazdowski (USA)
Bronze –Oleksandr Khotsianivskyi (Ukraine)

Women’s freestyle medalists

50 kg
Gold – Maria Stadnik (Azerbaijan)
Silver –Yui Susaki (Japan)
Bronze –Emilia Vuc (Romania)
Bronze –Oksana Livach (Ukraine)

53 kg
Gold – Pak Yong-Mi (North Korea)
Silver –Mayu Mukaida (Japan)
Bronze – Sarah Hildebrandt (USA)
Bronze –Vinesh Phogat (India)

57 kg
Gold – Rong Ningning (China)
Silver – Risako Kawai (Japan)
Bronze – Emese Barka (Hungary)
Bronze – Odunayo Adekuoroye (Nigeria)

62 kg
Gold – Aisuluu Tynbekova (Kyrgyzstan)
Silver – Taybe Yusein (Bulgaria)
Bronze – Yukako Kawai (Japan)
Bronze – Henna Johansson (Sweden)

68 kg
Gold – Tamyra Mensah-Stock (USA)
Silver – Alla Cherkosova (Ukraine)
Bronze – Jenny Fransson (Sweden)
Bronze –Zhou Feng (China)

76 kg
Gold – Adeline Gray (USA)
Silver – Hiroe Minagawa (Japan)
Bronze – Yasemin Adar (Turkey)
Bronze – Aline Focken (Germany)

Greco-Roman medalists

60 kg
Gold – Kenchiro Fumita (Japan)
Silver – Sergey Emelin (Russia)
Bronze – Kim Seung-Hak (Korea)
Bronze –Victor Ciobanu (Moldova)

67 kg
Gold –Artem Surkov (Russia)
Silver – Ismael Borrero Molina (Cuba)
Bronze – Ryu Han-Soo (Korea)
Bronze – Mate Nemes (Serbia)

77 kg
Gold – Tamasz Lorincz (Hungary)
Silver –Kim Hyun-Woo (Korea)
Bronze – Alex Kessidis (Sweden)
Bronze –Aleksandr Chekhirkin (Russia)

87 kg
Gold – Zhan Belenyuk (Ukraine)
Silver – Viktor Lorincz (Hungary)
Bronze – Metehan Basar (Turkey)
Bronze – Denis Kudla (Germany)

97 kg
Gold – Musa Evloev (Russia)
Silver –Artur Aleksanyan (Armenia)
Bronze –Mikhail Kajaia (Serbia)
Bronze – G’Angelo Hancock (USA)

130 kg
Gold – Riza Kayaalp (Turkey)
Silver –Oscar Pino Hinds (Cuba)
Bronze – Heiki Nabi (Estonia)
Bronze –Sergey Semenov (Russia)

x

Read More#