When Gable Steveson took to the mat during the high school wrestling season, a dominant performance usually followed. After all, the Apple Valley senior heavyweight stretched his winning streak to 173 matches and won his fourth consecutive Class 3A championship by pinning his four state tournament opponents in a combined 2 minutes, 11 seconds.
It was clear the Gophers-bound Steveson was ready to face a higher level of competition. And on Friday and Saturday, he'll get that challenge in the Marine Corps U.S. Open wrestling championships in Las Vegas.
Steveson, 17, is moving up to the senior freestyle division — the sport's highest — and will compete at 125 kilograms (275.5 pounds), with an opportunity to advance to the World Team Trials from May 18-20 in Rochester, Minn., if he finishes in the top seven.
Will he have jitters, nerves? Not likely. Steveson will be playing with house money in Vegas.
"I'm just going to go out there and let it fly. I'm not holding back," he said. "I'm just a young kid in the bracket with nothing to lose."
This will be Steveson's debut at the senior level — by age, he's still eligible to wrestle in the junior division — and the field in his weight class is impressive. The top three pre-seeds announced Monday are Dom Bradley, 29, a two-time U.S. Open champ; Zach Rey, 29, a runner-up at the Olympic team trials in 2016; and Jake Varner, 32, an Olympic gold medalist in 2012. Steveson was pre-seeded fifth, just ahead of Minnesota Storm club teammate Tony Nelson, 27, a two-time NCAA champion for the Gophers.
"For him to be at the age he is — and he's wrestling at the heavyweight division — it's really tough," said Gophers head assistant coach Luke Becker, who works with Steveson during training with the Storm. "Most of the time, it takes guys to really develop into men before they can compete [at that level]. He's done a great job and is one of the best out there right now."
Added Josh Barlage, Steveson's coach at Apple Valley: "It tells us what we've already known — how good he is. For him to be throwing his hat in the ring against those caliber of wrestlers is great."