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2026 College Postseason

Grand View separates from pack after day two of NAIA Men's Wrestling Championships

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by NAIA

PARK CITY, Kan. – (Featuring information courtesy of Jason Bryant) – The 2026 NAIA Men’s Wrestling National Championships wrapped up day two at Heartland Credit Union Arena, sending finalists to championship night and solidifying All-American honors.


The final day of competition will take place on Saturday, March 7, at 11:00 a.m. CT with Session V, featuring consolation semifinals and consolation placements (3rd, 5th, and 7th place matches). Session VI will showcase the championship finals, taking place at 7 p.m. CT. 


See the most updated bracket, HERE. 


Grand View (Iowa) leads the team race with a total of 163.5 points, followed by Life (Ga.) in second with 134 points. Oklahoma City (86.5), Southern Oregon (77), and Doane (Neb.) (75.5) round out the top five.


See the full team leaderboard, HERE. 


1. Grand View 163.5

2. Life 134

3. Oklahoma City 86.5

4. Southern Oregon 77

5. Doane 75.5

6. Embry-Riddle 70

7. Southeastern 69.5

8. Indiana Tech 51

9. Marian 47

10. Campbellsville 46.5



Finals Matchups

#1 Ray Ray Harris (Doane) vs. #6 Isaac Hampton (Southern Oregon)


#1 Aaron Lucio (Southeastern) vs. #2 Gabe Gonzales (Grand View)


#8 Logan Wagner (Marian) vs. #11 Yoshiya Funakoshi (Embry-Riddle)


#5 Victor Guzman (Cumberland) vs. #2 Elijah Larsen (Grand View)


#1 John Wiley (Oklahoma City) vs. #3 Douglas Terry (Life)


#1 Cam Robinson (Grand View) vs. #2 Jonathan Kervin (Indiana Tech)


#1 Tate Picklo (Oklahoma City) vs. #3 Kris Ketchum (Grand View)


#1 Tyson Beauperthuy (Doane) vs. #7 Navarro Nanpuya (Georgetown)


#1 Garavous Kouekabakilaho (Grand View) vs. #3 Asher Ruchti (Southern Oregon)


#13 Koen Mattern (Hastings) vs. #2 Kenneth Copley (Embry-Riddle)


#1 Ray Ray Harris (Doane) Dec #4 Elijah Cater (Grand View) 5-1

#6 Isaac Hampton (Southern Oregon) Dec #10 Braydon Pacheco (Friends) 12-6


#1 Aaron Lucio (Southeastern) Dec #5 Nick Alayan (Rochester Christian) 6-1

#2 Gabe Gonzales (Grand View) Maj #6 Luke Rioux (Indiana Tech) 12-2


#8 Logan Wagner (Marian) Dec #13 Tyler Rhue (Southern Oregon) 4-2

#11 Yoshiya Funakoshi (Embry-Riddle) Maj #10 Mauro Michel (Life) 11-2


#5 Victor Guzman (Cumberland) Maj #8 Carlos Stanton (Arizona Christian) 9-1

#2 Elijah Larsen (Grand View) Dec #3 Nik Yancey (Campbellsville) 10-7


#1 John Wiley (Oklahoma City) Fall #5 Bryce Boumans (Grand View) 6:38

#3 Douglas Terry (Life) Dec #2 Fabian Padilla (Life) 3-0


#1 Cam Robinson (Grand View) Maj #5 Alexander Couto (Life) 11-0

#2 Jonathan Kervin (Indiana Tech) Dec #6 Anthony Federico (Southeastern) 7-3


#1 Tate Picklo (Oklahoma City) Dec #4 Daniil Gorshkov (Embry-Riddle) 7-2

#3 Kris Ketchum (Grand View) Dec #2 Roman Garcia (Central Methodist) 1-0


#1 Tyson Beauperthuy (Doane) Maj #5 Isaiah Twait (Corban) 15-5

#7 Navarro Nanpuya (Georgetown) Dec #3 Tre Morrisette (Life) 9-5


#1 Garavous Kouekabakilaho (Grand View) Dec Omari Smith (Oklahoma City) 4-2

#3 Asher Ruchti (Southern Oregon) Dec #2 Gio Jackson (Life) 1-0


#13 Koen Mattern (Hastings) Dec #1 Zeph Sivels (Midland) 2-1

#2 Kenneth Copley (Embry-Riddle) Dec #6 Antonio Garcia (Corban) 3-2


No. 13 Koen Mattern of Hastings (Neb.) is the lowest-seeded wrestler to make the finals. He's the second finalist in school history and the first since Trenton Munoz in 2022.


Oklahoma City currently sits in third place and is in position to surpass the program’s best finish, a fourth-place showing in 2012.


All-Americans Bryce Boumans of Grand View (Iowa) and Jeron Jackson of Doane (Neb.) join their fathers as NAIA All-Americans. Boumans' father was a two-time NAIA champion for UMary in 1993-1994, while Jackson's dad was an NAIA runner-up in 1994 at heavyweight for Lindenwood.


There will be 12 different schools represented in the finals.


Four schools, Evergreen (Wash.), Georgetown (Ky.), Rochester Christian (Mich.) and William Woods (Mo.), earned the first individual All-American honors in school history. 


Georgetown and Marian (Ind.) put wrestlers into the finals for the first time in school history. 


The final day of competition will take place on Saturday, March 7, at 11:00 a.m., with Session V featuring consolation semifinals and consolation placements (3rd-, 5th-, and 7th-place matches). Session VI will showcase the championship finals, taking place at 7 p.m. 


The Parade of All-Americans will begin at 6:30 p.m., with doors opening at 6 p.m.


Fans can watch the event live via FloWrestling, NAIA Network, and Urban Edge Network, or follow live results on TrackWrestling.


For more information on the 2026 NAIA Men’s Wrestling National Championships, click HERE.