Another great example of what conditioning can do for you in this sport. Kasey seems to have an unlimited supply.
@xyxy11245 жыл бұрын
@ yana do you wrestle ?
@TheDave202327 күн бұрын
thats hard, when you are on the way to win by points. The guy was good, and used same technic skills like she often use, but at 7:00 he was to risky and defeated himself. He should have tried to bring her to the ground with his legs. But so she fell forward onto her side and turned on him while his legs were between her thighs and he couldn't free himself from this situation in time. The Rev was also very very accurate
@donaldconfalone24106 жыл бұрын
That was awesome, no one saw that coming! Good job,you stuck in tough, you wore him down, and that pin was pretty good the way you turned that around on him take some heart and strength!
@supremegamerx84705 жыл бұрын
why you every where feminist?
@butchmccain17713 жыл бұрын
Damn! Kasey really proves that she actually has balls to compete, defeat and pin the boys...she is so skilled, tough, strong and very talented. Congratulations and best of luck to her! Wow!
@koshersalaami3 жыл бұрын
He got outfoxed. She made a very shrewd move. His feet hooked into her thighs made sense for breaking her down but upside down they were raised and couldn’t brace on the mat to help him escape. By the time he got his feet down it was too late.
@gustavomartinez42816 жыл бұрын
Ref called that pin a little too fast
@WPWANE6 жыл бұрын
Gustavo_dfad no, he did not.
@genny18145 жыл бұрын
Gustavo_dfad he did
@immunegarden51044 жыл бұрын
I'm a kase fan but get def was very generous
@bradgardner91882 жыл бұрын
yes WAY too fast in my day you had to hold him down for several sec to call a pin
@bradgardner91882 жыл бұрын
im curious..... it used to be you had to hold the other person down for so many seconds to call a pin. im watching now and its like as soon as the shoulders are down for split sec its a pin.... when did that change ??
@jimmeyjohn4 жыл бұрын
Wrestling has changed a lot since I wrestled. In order to pin someone, you had to have control. Kasey was NOT facing her opponent, therefore she did NOT have control. SHE IS a GOOD wrestler.
@why-even-try-brotendo3 жыл бұрын
Your interpretation of control is flawed. If we are back to back with our arms interlocked the stronger person has control of where they are going. It is clear Kasey was in control or else the opponent would have rolled out.
@jimmeyjohn3 жыл бұрын
@@why-even-try-brotendo It WASN'T my interpretation, IT was the ref that ran MY match. I had the SAME situation as Kasey, the guy had a figure 4 on me, I rolled over, grabbed his legs and CRANKED back on him PUTTING his shoulders on the mat. He could NOT move and his shoulders were FLAT on the mat. When the time ran out, I asked him about the near fall points which would have gave me the win and the ref told me "If you would have turned and FACED him, I would have slapped the mat". Now, THIS happened in 1973, and I was in Indiana so maybe THAT made the difference. Oh well.
@koshersalaami3 жыл бұрын
Either that or the Indiana ref was wrong
@carlosruiz95286 жыл бұрын
@WRESTLING & WAVERUNNER FISHING FAMILY Is there any video shot from another angle?
@petrgabriel7782 жыл бұрын
Zajímavé, jak žena Kasey Baynon zvrátila výsledek.
@dpbaynon7 жыл бұрын
Nice article written about Kasey in the Local paper this week... www.statesboroherald.com/section/1/article/83383/ By JOSH AUBREY jaubrey@statesboroherald.com From the “Battle of the Sexes” tennis match between Billie Jean King and Bobby Riggs in 1973 to Annika Sorenstam teeing it up against the men on the PGA tour, the debate about females competing with males continues, usually based around the argument that men are stronger and faster, which can give them a marked advantage. That brings us to Statesboro high wrestler Kasey Baynon, who is wrestling against boys and having plenty of success. Last year, Baynon was the only female in Georgia to advance to the state individual competition, where she went 2-2, just missing out on placing in state. “She is a once in a career talent,” said Bulloch Academy wrestling coach Andy Tomlin. “She trained with us a couple of years back when we had our club team. There is nobody quite like her.” Tomlin’s Gators have won four straight state championships, but Baynon has beaten their best the past two years. “She is as good as advertised,” Tomlin said. “In her weight class, most schools will be wrestling an eighth or ninth grader against her. With her strength and experience she will kill most of those young kids.” Baynon comes from a wrestling family. Her father Dean wrestled when he was younger, and her older brother - also named Dean - and younger brother Aaron both wrestle as well. “I started in gymnastics and did that until about seventh grade,” Baynon said. “But with both brothers wrestling since they were three or four, I was kind of the practice partner. I finally started doing it competitively in eighth grade.” While her dad was supportive, Baynon said it still took him a little time to get over the fact that she was wrestling boys. “I lost my first match and got a bloody nose,” she said. “But he saw how determined I was, and he loves watching so he got on board pretty quick.” Statesboro High head coach Bo Viness has been with the Blue Devils for just two years, but heard a lot about Baynon even before he took the job. “I was doing my student teaching at William James when I heard about this girl wrestling the boys at Statesboro High,” Viness said. “I thought maybe it was just people exaggerating how good she was until I came here myself and saw her wrestle with my own two eyes.” Viness has now coached Baynon for two seasons and thought enough of her to make her captain of this year’s team. “She is the hardest worker on the team,’’ he said. “She is invaluable to our success. She already has 30 wins this season. The school record is 44 and I expect her to easily surpass that by the end of the season.” As for the sideshow aspect to being the only girl at most meets, Viness says that passes pretty quickly. “Coaches come up to me all the time complimenting Kasey for her ability, as well as her sportsmanship and technique,” Viness said. “The only thing really different when Kasey wrestles is the crowd. It’s usually much bigger around her match and louder as well.’’ Baynon credits her brothers not only with getting her hooked on wrestling but with making her better at the sport as well. “My older brother Dean was always heavier, so wrestling him helped me get stronger,” she said. “I also picked up his signature move of ‘riding legs,’ which has helped me a lot.” “Aaron is my younger brother, and we have been closer in weight so wrestling him helped me get used to what I would face in high school.” Aaron has never seen his sister wrestling as something different. Wrestling her from the time he was 5 years old, he has seen her grow in the sport, but isn’t surprised by her success. “I always knew she would be good,” Aaron said. “From the first time we wrestled each other she had the drive and determination to be great. I feel like wrestling together for so many years helped me as much as it helped her.” Baynon’s talents have been showcased nationwide as she competes in matches with other girls with her Team Georgia club based out of Valdosta. “She placed eighth in one of the premiere events in the country up in North Dakota,” Viness said. “Most recently she finished third overall at the Super 32 held in Greensboro, North Carolina in October.” There are only around 30 colleges in the country that have women’s wrestling, and obviously many are looking at Baynon, who has already committed to Emmanuel College in Georgia. This year, Baynon is 30-11 and has her mind set on becoming the first girl to place in state competition in Georgia. “I plan on making history,” said Baynon. “I really want to be the first female wrestler to place in state. They are sanctioning girls wrestling next year so this is the last year girls will be allowed to wrestle boys.” Baynon and the Blue Devil wrestling team will host the area dual meets this Saturday beginning at 10:30 am. Show less
@luckyking7515 жыл бұрын
What’s her weight
@RonDvorkin7 жыл бұрын
Do boys forfeit rather than take a beating from Kasey? He seemed scared!
@teller12906 жыл бұрын
As much as females are pressing into the sport, it must still be strange for a teen boy to give it his best shot against a girl...and she rebuffs him, and through greater determination and conditioning, in the end she has him standing there watching her arm raised instead of his. Must be an oddly illuminating moment in how teen boy might see girls, women later on in life as competitors, companions, friends, adversaries, leaders.
@teenagedouchebag37865 жыл бұрын
Ron Dvorkin just uncomfortable wrestling a girl. I doubt he was scared, just a normal teenage boy reaction. Either that or he was try not to get a boner
@kckcmctcrc4 жыл бұрын
My son was an average HS Wrestler...But on his team there were two Girls who were State Champions (Texas). The Average Boys (my son included) took regular whoopings from girls at practice. They got use to it...prolly enjoyed it.
@Musicvidsetc4 жыл бұрын
@@kckcmctcrc That's really interesting and supports my thinking that the elite girls are better than all but the excellent-to-elite boys. I recently saw a boy who had about a .500 record against boys get not only beat but pinned in about a minute by two different girls, two nights in a row to go winless against girls. BTW, were the girls you mentioned State Champs for girls or for girls and boys? Thx
@jakobwang13502 жыл бұрын
What just happened? He was winning
@lazinsocialista47732 жыл бұрын
🥶🥶🥶Ela venceu ?
@domdelgado91636 жыл бұрын
Alright wrestler known from experience kid on the black made stupid mistake laying on his back and giving her the quick pin
@BobrLovr2 жыл бұрын
why tho
@jeanvandenberg48884 жыл бұрын
Of course not nice for the boy!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!