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In Episode 062 of the Athletor Podcast, we sit down with Mike Grey, head coach of Cornell University and a 2X NCAA All-American. Mike dives into the strategic nuances of coaching at the NCAAs, revealing his approach to assisting wrestlers with their game plans and the multifaceted considerations involved in preparing for high-stakes competition. The discussion offers a detailed look into Cornell's personalized training methodology, beginning with the initial evaluation of a wrestler's technique, addressing challenges when an athlete struggles with new techniques, and deciding when to encourage a wrestler's unique style versus reinforcing fundamental skills. Grey also shares his insights on the recruitment process, including potential red flags that could deter Cornell's interest in a prospective athlete. Furthermore, he provides an in-depth analysis of the adjustments made between the second and third matches of the notable Vito Arujau vs. Ryan Crookham bout. Rounding out the conversation, Coach Grey reflects on Cornell's impressive second-place finish at the nationals, outlining the steps and improvements necessary for Cornell to surpass powerhouse teams like Penn State and secure a national championship. This episode is a masterclass in wrestling coaching, strategy, and the pursuit of excellence at the collegiate level.
Auckland's Mt Smart Stadium will now officially be known as Go Media Stadium Mt Smart. Outdoor advertising company Go Media have secured a a naming rights deal with Auckland Stadiums. The deal will last one year, but both parties involved are keen to extend it after that timeframe. Go Media co-owner Mike Grey says he aims to bring more content to the stadium and get behind the events hosted at the venue. LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Auckland's Mt Smart Stadium will now officially be known as Go Media Stadium Mt Smart. Outdoor advertising company Go Media have secured a a naming rights deal with Auckland Stadiums. The deal will last one year, but both parties involved are keen to extend it after that timeframe. Go Media co-owner Mike Grey says he aims to bring more content to the stadium and get behind the events hosted at the venue. LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
A mining company in Perth is hoping to lure Kiwi workers over. Mineral Resources has launched an advertising campaign targeting New Zealanders...and is offering salaries of $150-thousand for some roles. Chief Executive Mike Grey told Heather du Plessis Allan that New Zealand has a high cost of living and wages that aren't great. He says this gives people who are willing to take a new lease on life the opportunity to get ahead - and they can take the money home. LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Er man sportsinteresseret, kan man ikke undgå at have stødt ind i navnet på ishockey spilleren fra Frederikshavn Mike Grey, der trodsRead More
Mike sits down with Comedian Mike Grey, to talk about relationships, Kevin Samuels, being humbled, is therapy a scam?, taking personal responsibility, Maine, identity politics, metal bands, and punk rock philosophers.
Your host John Manning returns with WBA's Jeremy Childers in an interview with Mike Grey, Vice President & Chief Business Officer of United Infrastructure Group, a bridge and heavy highway builder of the Southeast. They talk in great detail about the planning and execution throughout the project life cycle of design-builds in construction. This podcast was originally recorded in Salem, Virginia.
Mike Grey is the David Dunlop '59 Head Coach of Wrestling for the Cornell Big Red. Coach Grey just finished his 1st season as head coach where his team finished 7th at NCAA's with Yianni Diakomihalis winning his 3rd NCAA Title, Vito Arujau finished 3rd and Jon Loew finished 7th. Cornell was also the Ivy League Champs and brought the E.I.W.A Title back to Ithaca. Mike Grey talks about his first year at the helm as well as what he has learned from Rob Koll and the coaching tree of Cornell as well as what to expect in the future for the Big Red. Feel free to tweet to us and tell us who you would like to hear from next! If you've enjoyed this episode, please subscribe and leave a rate and review on Apple Podcasts! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Interview mit dem Leipziger Sänger Mike Grey, der sich zwischen Nu Metal, Grunge und Emo Rock / Pop bewegt. Wir schauen auf seine musikalischen Inspirationen bei Nirvana, Slipknot, Korn und Linkin Park und seinen Veränderungen durch das Singen auf Deutsch. Songwriting und Musik machen als Weg aus der Depression #notjustsad sind ebenso Themen wie besserer Umgang mit sich selbst und Beziehungen (neuer Song "Ist meine Liebe was wert?"). Wir haben das Interview sehr genossen und neue Seiten an Mike Grey entdeckt.Du möchtest deinen Podcast auch kostenlos hosten und damit Geld verdienen? Dann schaue auf www.kostenlos-hosten.de und informiere dich. Dort erhältst du alle Informationen zu unseren kostenlosen Podcast-Hosting-Angeboten. kostenlos-hosten.de ist ein Produkt der Podcastbude. Gern unterstützen wir dich bei deiner Podcast-Produktion.
This is the first of two special “Live from TAPPICon” podcast episodes, each including four of our live mini-interviews from the 2021 event. Designed and run by working professionals in the industry, TAPPICon features multiple program tracks, an exhibit floor, networking events and more. Our guests for this episode are:· Mike Grey, senior vice president at Valmet Inc., discussing technology, Resilience, and how both shape our industry;· Earn Sakornpan, product manager at Cosasco, who tells us how corrosion monitoring helps his customers protect their valuable assets;· Eric Blazej, national industrial sales manager at Proco, who tells us how their products help customers avoid catastrophic failure; and· Jennifer Piercy, executive director, Pulp & Paper Advisory Board at NCSU, who shares her passion for helping talented students find their place in our industry. These interviews capture only a fraction of the energy of TAPPICon. To experience it in person, mark your calendars for the TAPPICon 2022, which will be held May 1-5 in Charlotte, NC. Learn more at www.tappicon.org. Also, be sure to check out “Live from TAPPICon—Part 2”, where we welcome four more industry professionals to Paper360°'s Better Together podcast.
Mat Chat Episode 110: Mike GreyDavid Mirikitani talks with Cornell head coach Mike Grey to discuss the busy summer, the program and what the future looks like for the team.
ABOUT THIS EPISODE Mark Grey is a 3x NCAA qualifier for Cornell. He was a multiple-time, age-group and junior national champion. In high school, Mark wrestled for Blair Academy and the legendary Jeff Buxton. Mark's older brother is Cornell University head coach Mike Grey (episode 81). Please enjoy! Instagram: @markgrey26 Picture: Tony Rotundo * PRESENTED BY MANSCAPED This episode is brought to you by Manscaped. Save 20% off on your next purchase with the promo code ‘WCML'. Shop Manscaped now. * FANS If you enjoy the podcast, would you please consider leaving a short review on Apple Podcasts/iTunes? It takes less than 60 seconds, and it really makes a difference in helping to convince hard-to-get guests. I also love reading the reviews! * TEXT THE SHOW –Keyword: Wrestle –Number: 224-54 * FOLLOW the PODCAST Twitter: @Ryan_N_Warner Instagram: Wrestling Changed My Life Facebook: Wrestling Changed My Life Website: wrestlingchangedmylife.com Shop merchandise at our Online Store: Store.WrestlingChangedMyLife.com *** ABOUT Presented by Spartan Combat and hosted by Ryan Warner, the award-winning Wrestling Changed My Life Podcast features in-depth interviews with wrestlers, fighters and coaches. New episodes are released every Monday and Wednesday. Wrestling Changed My Life is the fastest growing wrestling podcast and has been featured as high as #28 on Apple's Top Sports Podcasts Charts.
Kozak and Spey join the show to break down Russia's Olympic Team and Team USA's chances against them in Tokyo. Run of Show 00:00 Intro 01:08 Mike Grey is making moves in Ithaca 09:41 Russian Olympic Team introduction 13:55 Team USA's chances against Russia (with pics) 53:33 Historical Olympic data 1:08:35 Questions from friends 1:19:30 Chael Sonnen's Jordan Burroughs video
Alright Y'all buckle up were going belly to belly with Cornell University Head Wrestling Coach Mike Grey. Newly appointed head coach, Big Red All-American and New Jersey's first 4 x State Champ Mike Grey joins us for episode 114. Coach Grey has been in the game at high level both as an athlete and coach for many years. Mike stopped by to discuss his new role as head coach of the Big Red and what his vision for the future looks like. With the Olympics not to far off we also get into a little Spartan RTC talk & the impact on the program at Cornell. And most importantly we get into Pork Roll v. Taylor Ham! Stay Connected!!! https://cornellbigred.com/sports/wrestling https://www.instagram.com/bigredwrestling/?hl=en https://spartancombat.com/collections/spartan-rtc https://www.instagram.com/SpartanXapparel/ The Airey Bros. IG @aireybros / https://www.instagram.com/aireybros/ https://www.blacksheependurance.com/podcast Premium Content : AB/DC Programming / B-Role & Mix Tapes / Accountability Coaching https://www.patreon.com/AireyBros Value for Value https://www.paypal.com/donate?hosted_button_id=BHCAKFGH6TNF2
Alright Y'all buckle up were going belly to belly with Cornell University Head Wrestling Coach Mike Grey. Newly appointed head coach, Big Red All-American and New Jersey's first 4 x State Champ Mike Grey joins us for episode 114. Coach Grey has been in the game at high level both as an athlete and coach for many years. Mike stopped by to discuss his new role as head coach of the Big Red and what his vision for the future looks like. With the Olympics not to far off we also get into a little Spartan RTC talk & the impact on the program at Cornell. And most importantly we get into Pork Roll v. Taylor Ham! Stay Connected!!! https://cornellbigred.com/sports/wrestling https://www.instagram.com/bigredwrestling/?hl=en https://spartancombat.com/collections/spartan-rtc https://www.instagram.com/SpartanXapparel/ The Airey Bros. IG @aireybros / https://www.instagram.com/aireybros/ https://www.blacksheependurance.com/podcast Premium Content : AB/DC Programming / B-Role & Mix Tapes / Accountability Coaching https://www.patreon.com/AireyBros Value for Value https://www.paypal.com/donate?hosted_button_id=BHCAKFGH6TNF2
Scott Casber and Kyra Jones talk the state of wrestling with Mike Grey, Rob Koll, and Chance Leonard. Plus, we talk about Leonard's filmmaking debut!
Run of Show 0:00 - fun and easy banter 0:02 - Jordan Oliver to NYCRTC 0:07 - NYRCRTC & NJRCTC + J'den Cox are joining forces 0:11 - Austin Gomez is transferring to Wisconsin 0:15 - more Rob Koll, Mike Grey, Stanford, and Cornell talk 0:34 - U23 WTT recap 0:47 - how the transfer portal helps and hurts certain wrestlers 0:52 - finishing up U23 WTT recap 1:03 - questions from friends
Run of Show 0:00 - Everyone 0:01 - Rob Koll is really the coach at Stanford 0:22 - Team USA crushed everyone at Pan Ams with no Cuba 0:27 - A little tribute to Bratke once again trying to make him cry 0:35 - Bratke’s final alien hour and looking back on some of his favorites over the years 0:45 - Brief U23 recap 01:20 - A couple questions from friends 01:27 - Final thoughts on Bratke and his final word
Pumped to have Cornell’s Associate Head Coach, Mike Grey, join the podcast today! Mike, a high school phenom that was the first 4x State Champ in New Jersey, has had an interesting career as both an athlete and coach and I’m excited to dive into his story today! This is especially a must-listen for all of you Cornell fans! We talk about: - His Beginning In Wrestling - High School State Championships (4x NJ State Champ) - Handling Losses - Heading to Cornell - Athletic Career - Athlete to Coach Transition - Family Culture at Cornell - Relationship with Rob, Yianni - Excitement for the Program - Spartan Combat RTC Rebranding If you enjoy this episode, let me know! And, be sure to SUBSCRIBE to the podcast and go through the archives to hear more great stories. If you want to support the podcast, be sure to leave a 5-star rating & review on Apple Podcasts and shop some apparel on BASCHAMANIA.com! For all partnership and sponsorship inquiries, email info@baschamania.com. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Honors & Accomplishments: • Part of eight Ivy League and six EIWA title teams, all of whom finished in the top 10 at the NCAA championships. • Has assisted in the development of nine NCAA champions and 31 All-Americans. • Helped teams to a 100-20 dual meet record, including 40-0 against Ivy schools. Coaching Experience: • Assistant Coach, Cornell University (2013-present) • Volunteer Assistant Coach, Cornell University (2011-13) Wrestling Experience: • Cornell University (2006-11) • Two-Time NCAA All-American • Two-time EIWA Champion • Four-time first-team All-Ivy League selection • 2008 Rev Wrestling National Freshman of the Year • 117-30 career record --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/daniel-ward9/support
In this Episode we had the honor of sitting with entrepreneur and leader Mike Grey! Born and raised in North Carolina Mike give us some dope gems on the importance of building your own personal temple before looking to get into a relationship. He also give us some needed tools on the power of Discipline, and Self Love during your years of being single!
Girl Talk at the Dan Gable Museum. We hear personal stories from athletes and coaches often. However, we rarely get the opportunity to listen to the perspective of a coaches wife. In this episode we sit down with Kaille Grey, and discuss Cornell Wrestling, baby Declan, coaching, and more! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/girltalkatthedgm/support
Mike Grey is the associate head coach at Cornell, where he’s been a member of the coaching staff since 2011. As an athlete, Coach Grey was a 2x All American for Cornell and was New Jersey’s first 4x state champ. In this episode, we talk about Coach Grey’s upbringing, his family, the journey to win four NJ state titles, and what he’s learned coaching with the great Rob Koll. If you’re a Big Red fan and enjoyed this episode, you may also want to check out the episode with Gabe Dean (episode 71). This episode is brought to you by the Wrestling Changed My Life store. Please go to Store.WrestlingChangedMyLife.com for T’s, Hoodies, Stickers, Coffee Cups, and a ton more. All proceeds from sales go to support the podcast.
It's a special look back at 20 years of the Super 32 on the Short Time Wrestling Podcast! Back in 2000, I was still in college at Old Dominion. I was working on tracking down results from any and all high school tournaments and after attending my first USA Wrestling Cadet & Junior Nationals the summer prior, I started covering more off-season stuff for the first iteration of Mat Talk Online. This involved fall folkstyle events from USAW and the AAU, spring freestyle and paying attention to out-of-state tournaments where Virginia teams participated. One of those tournaments popped up in 2000, my fourth year in college at ODU and my fourth running Mat Talk Online. It was the Super 32. I first noticed it that fall when a local wrestler in the coverage area of the newspaper I was working at won at 119 pounds. George Dodson was an Eagle Scout from Denbigh High Sc hool who never reached the Group AAA state tournament. Then I saw Drake Dickenson’s name. Drake wrestled at Magna Vista in the Southwest portion of Virginia before crossing the state line to wrestle for Dave Barker at Eden-Morehead. And that’s how it all began for me. This list is a look back at things that make me go “oh wow,” and is not designed to be an inclusive list. During the 2005-08 years, I ran InterMat for the NWCA, which then owned the site. So my knowledge of high school wrestling from that era was in top form. Prior to 2005, I worked and lived in Virginia, so that’s where the lion’s share of my knowledge existed. In 2000, the very first champion was at 101.1 pounds and it was host Morehead’s Chris Moore defeating future Virginia four-time state champion Matt Epperly of Christiansburg, Virginia. Epperly went on to wrestle at Virginia Tech and qualified for the NCAA Division I Championships twice. Current UNC Pembroke coach Othello “O.T.” Johnson claimed a title at 163 pounds, beating Chris Ward of James Madison High School in Virginia. One time in Fargo, Ward got out after curfew. Team Virginia coach Ben Summerlin ran him outside until he puked. In 2001, David Barker cites this as a turning point in the tournament’s second year. Virginia powerhouse Great Bridge shows up and crowns four champions. Daren Burns, who wrestled at UNC Greensboro, was third at 190 pounds. He got better. In 2002, the word is out. The Super 32 is now challenging the Lock Haven Fall Classic as the top preseason event on the east coast and the event is starting to gain traction nationally. A middle school division is added as well. Ashtin Primus from Connellsville, Pennsylvania comes down and cradles his way to a title. Future Division III All-American Donny Ooton of Great Bridge wins at 140, while future Old Dominion All-American Chris Brown wins at 145. In 2003, we’ve got nationally ranked wrestlers hitting one another before the finals. Eric Hoffman, a future NJCAA national champion from Iowa Central and D1 national qualifier comes out from Iowa where he falls in the finals to Dusty McKinney at 125. A pair of future two-time D1 All-Americans meet in the finals at 103 where Tyler Nauman of Middletown, Pennsylvania beats eighth-grader Scotti Sentes of Riverside, Florida, 6-2. Primus wins another title, this time at 135. Future Missouri All-American Raymond Jordan of New Bern, North Carolina beats future Limestone Division II national champion Dan Scanlan of Loudoun County, Virginia 4-1 in the finals at 171. Scores of future Division I wrestlers who don’t place. Moving to 2004, Ashtin Primus wins his third straight Super 32. Hammer champions include – well, they were pretty much all hammers. At 112, Ian Moser of Delaware beat Walker Faison of Virginia in a bout with two of the best lightweights in the country. New Jersey brought a strong group from Bound Brook as Nick Murray and Andrew Flanagan won titles. Top-ranked wrestlers Patrick Bond of Great Bridge, Cody Gardner of Christiansburg and Kenny Lester of Oviedo, Florida swept the top three weights. In 2005, Brandon, Florida’s talented crop of hammers comes in, led by Eric Grajales at 103 pounds. Grajales bests Steve Mitcheff of Ohio 7-0 in the finals. Among the names at 103 were Matt Snyder and Nic Bedelyon of Pennsylvania – shout out to the late Wayne Danger – Eric Dunnett of New Jersey, Zeke Hofer from Colorado, Joey Lazor of Georgia and Andrew Williams of Virginia. No, I’m not going to load up all these brackets, because this is where the podcast will get significantly larger. UWW media guy Eric Olanowski was also in this bracket. At 112, North Carolina’s Brandon Davis emerged as the champion, but wasn’t heard from much in college. Current Huntingdon College head wrestling coach Matt Oliver, beat Marshall Peppelman in the semifinals and felt to Davis in the final. Anyone remember Ryan Fields from Ohio? Yup. He was the champ at 119, beating future D1 All-American Walter Peppelman in the finals. Future All-American Jarrod Garnett of Virginia Tech doesn’t place. 13-seed Abbie Rush, a future Boston U. wrestler, stormed into the finals, beating future All-American Peter Yates and past champ Ian Moser. He falls to Mike Robinson of Lewistown, Pa., who later on in the year will hand Mike Grey of Delbarton, New Jersey, his first high school loss at the Beast of the East. Robinson was given a #42 seed at the Super 32 and won it. He was unseeded when he fell in the finals to Kellen Russell at the Beast. Tyler Nauman beat Peter Yates in the blood round. Bishop Lynch from Texas came out and brought some studs as Luke Silver and Luke Ashmore won titles. Christiansburg’s Andrew Clement won 10 matches – although two were forfeits – to claim third at 140. Nick Nelson, a future All-American at Virginia, stopped Ashtin Primus in his bid for a fourth title with a fall in the finals at 145. Nelson had earlier edged Bubba Jenkins and then beat Matt Cathell of Delaware and Bryan Tracy of Paulsboro, New Jersey in the semis. Jon Reader of Davison, Michigan had four pins and a major to reach the finals against Matt Epperly. Reader won 4-1. Future NCAA champion Dustin Kilgore was third, losing by fall in the quarters to eventual champion Tommy Spellman of New Jersey. Spellman beat Reynolds’ Lawrence Beckman in the finals. Yes, of those Reynolds Beckmans. You know what, if I do this for every year, it’ll be longer than the three-hour finals show I put on from the Asian Championships. So let’s look at JUST THE FINALS for 2006 and the numbers. Nine Division I All-Americans, of them, there was two-time champion David Taylor from Graham, Ohio. You also have Division II champion Tommy Abbott of Delaware, two-time NJCAA champion and NAIA All-American Jamelle Jones, also of Delaware. The head-to-heads of note saw Pennsylvania’s Troy Dolan beat Jarrod Garnett of Delaware. Man, Delaware had a good crop of guys in that era. Collin Dozier of Virginia over Tyler Nauman of Pennsylvania, Dustin Kilgore of Ohio beat Jordan Blanton of Illinois in a battle of future three-time All-Americans. Jones beat future NCAA finalist Chris Honeycutt of St. Edward at 189. New York’s Kyle Dake, wrestling at 112, lost to Virginia’s Michael Garafalo and Georgia’s Joey Lazor and finished 7/8. Olanowski won this bracket by the way. At 119, returning champion Brandon Davis of North Carolina fell to the 7/8, which wasn’t yet wrestled. Among champion Frank Perrelli’s victims – a guy named Creed, a Levi Strauss, Scotti Sentes and Josh Kindig. That was just to reach the finals. Ok, the first two were more for name effect. His opponent, Gabriel Espinosa of Florida beat Travis Coffey of North Carolina, Nic Bedelyon and Eric Grajales to reach the finals. Nick Nelson repeated, winning at 145 pounds with a 5-3 win over Tommy Abbott. Future Division III champion Vincent Renaut was ousted in the blood round by future Buffalo Bull John-Martin Cannon at 152. Scott Winson beat Ben Bennett in the semis at 160, Jordan Blanton beat Cam Simaz in the semis before falling to Kilgore in the finals. Moving to 2007, which was the second-to-last year I attended because when you move away from the East Coast, getting to North Cacka-lacky ain’t so easy. First, the finals stats: seven Division I All-Americans, one three-time D1 champion, and a Greco-Roman World teamer – Max Nowry. At 125, Eric Grajales beat Pennsylvania’s Jordan Oliver 1-0, Collin Palmer of Ohio beat Kenny Courts of Pennsylvania 4-2 at 135. Future All-Americans to fall were Walter Peppelman, who lost to Tony Jameson of Ohio and Ed Ruth, who lost to Michigan’s Jacob Burge 5-4 at 171. Anthony Clinton of North Carolina won by injury default over Virginia’s Max Huntley, who hadn’t yet transferred to Blair Academy. Now, the fun stuff. A.J. Schopp beat Devin Carter for third at 103, Jeremy Sandoval of Texas beat Tony Ramos for fifth at 125, Jarrod Garnett beat Josh Kindig for third at 130, Marshall Peppelman beat R.J. Pena of Oregon for third at 140, future All-American from The Citadel, Odie Delaney was fifth at 215. Other “what the heck” stats include: Max Nowry beating A.J. Schopp in the semis, Grajales beating Ramos 8-0 in the semis, future Cornell backup Joe Stanzione beating Joey Lazor. There’s some weird tie-in there with Dake if you can do the math. Collin Palmer over Taylor Massa in the semis. Sightings of C.J. Napier of Kansas and Carson Fields of Georgia at 135. Another Kansan, Aldon Isenberg finishing second to Trevor Melde of New Jersey at 140. The aforementioned free-wheeling Tony Jameson of Ohio. Future four-time NAIA champion Brock Gutches beating future Division III All-American Emmanuel Ajagbe of New Jersey in the consolation semis at 145. Joe Booth making his national breakout performance at 152. My friend Nate Schy still can’t stand him from his fantasy wrestling draft picks. He even told him such on Facebook. Eric Cubberly of Ohio beat Scotty Winston of New Jersey in the finals at 160. Ed Ruth beat Jordan Blanton in the semifinals and this is before Ruth ever went to Blair. Jacob Burge’s semifinal op
Mike Grey talks about his Youth, His High School Career, and his Time at Cornell.
Cornell assistant coach Mike Grey joins Chad Dennis on Episode 25 of The MatBoss Podcast to talk about life at Cornell, coaching with Rob Koll and of course, what it's like coaching two-time NCAA Champion and U.S. Open Champion Yianni Diakomihalis. About MatBoss: Created by coaches for coaches, MatBoss for iPad® integrates wrestling stats directly into the video you record for each match, completely replacing the need for labor-intensive pencil and paper scoring systems. It's the wrestling stats app our sport has been waiting for. Focus on coaching, not busy work Improve through video analysis Make data an advantage Eliminate scoring errors Increase exposure Become a digital coach For more information, visit MatBossApp.com SUBSCRIBE & FOLLOW TO THE SHOW @MatBossApp | Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Stitcher | Spreaker | Google Play Music | RSS SUPPORT THE SHOW And if you're a fan of the extensive and broad-based reach of the shows on the Mat Talk Podcast Network, become a TEAM MEMBER today. There are various levels of perks for the different levels of team membership. If you like wrestling content -- scratch that -- if you LOVE great wrestling content, consider becoming a team member. You'll get some cool stuff too. Looking to start a podcast of your own? Get a free month with Libsyn by using the promo code MTO when you sign up. You'll get the remainder of the month from when you sign up as well as the next month free. It'll be enough time to kick the tires and lights some fires.
What does a great university and employer partnership look like? Mike and Rebecca from Gradconsult give us the inside track on what's what and what's not.
Have a listen to interviews with local businesses supporting the St Albans Museum Trust fundraiser recently at The Alban Arena. We chatted to Morgan Howell from Supersize Art, Paul Murray from The Phoenix Barber Co, Eddie & Dave from Empire Records, Andy Kilvington - one of the organisors & Mike Grey from The St Albans [...]
Sudden History gets a chance to speak with the fourth wrestler so far from the our list of the "Best Non-NCAA Champions" of the 2000's, Mack Lewnes. Along with Travis Lee, Troy Nickerson and Mike Grey, Lewnes made Cornell a destination where top recruits could flourish and would become a part of a consistent national powerhouse. Mack is very appreciative and understanding of his place on Sudden History's list and in the history of our sport. He is also very open about one of the lowest points of his career, an 0-2 performance at the 2009 NCAA Championships, when he came in as the undefeated top seed. Earl also starts the show off with a story of their first interview together. Subscribe to Sudden History iTunes | Stitcher | Spreaker | SoundCloud | Google Play Music | RSS
We're bringin' back the craic with the first episode of our new series! In this edition we have the incredibly influential Mike Grey who discusses the 87 Live in Ireland concert, his experience with Toronto Police Pipe Band, and his life as a composer. That's all in addition to the normal chat, birls, and wild tangents!