Penn State Sports Magazine
Issue link: https://comanpub.uberflip.com/i/629829
or 165-pound redshirt freshman
Shakur Rasheed, it was one of
the initial reasons why he chose
Penn State.
A New York state champion recruit from
Longwood High School, Rasheed took his
o;cial visit to University Park a couple
years ago when the Nittany Lions set the
NCAA attendance record in what was
head coach Cael Sanderson's 9rst dual
meet inside the Bryce Jordan Center.
"When I saw that, it was like, 'Wow. I
can't wait to get out there,' " Rasheed re-
cently recalled. He is expected to make
his BJC debut Feb. 5 when Penn State
hosts defending national champion Ohio
State. "I love the spotlight."
In spite of a winter storm that hit Centre
County Dec. 13, 2013, Rasheed, along with
thousands of wrestling fans, trekked to
State College to see the Nittany Lions
topple Pittsburgh, 28-9, under the spot-
light, of course. Rasheed was in the stands
and helped make up an o;cial attendance
of 15,996, but the university's count in-
cluded all the ticket sales, along with
everyone else in the building – from the
wrestlers on the mat, to the security guards
at the door, to the cashiers in the conces-
sion stands. And they encouraged all the
sta:ers to work that day.
Nevertheless, Penn State set a record,
and it stood until Iowa hosted Oklahoma
State on the turf of Kinnick Stadium Nov.
14 – dubbed "Grapple on the Gridiron."
The Hawkeyes won a close one against the
Cowboys, 18-16, and they shattered the
Nittany Lions' record with a 9gure of 42,287.
Sanderson had an ear toward Iowa City
that day, saying beforehand, "If it works,
maybe we'll look into doing something
like that here."
But before any steps are taken toward
such an event, PSU has to make sure the
ends justify the means. There are methods
in place to measure the current demand
for wrestling tickets, and they could de-
termine whether a match in Beaver Sta-
dium – or somewhere else that can hold
at least 42,288 people – would pay o:.
For the 9rst time under Sanderson, Penn
State scheduled two matches inside the
BJC this season. It costs the program ap-
proximately $50,000 to host a dual in the
multi-event facility, which is operated in-
dependently of the university. By moni-
toring ticket sales, Sanderson said, he's
able to partly measure the level of current
fan interest and determine whether two
events are worth the cost. If nothing else,
call it market research.
"That's why we did that," he said of the
decision to host two BJC duals. "We wanted
to see what kind of demand we had."
It might also help decide other ventures
in the future, such as an outdoor match.
So far, though, the data has been mixed.
Penn State held its first BJC dual meet
of the season Dec. 13. It was against a
Wisconsin team that had only two na-
tionally ranked wrestlers in its starting
lineup, and the Nittany Lions dominated,
36-7. For the first time in three BJC tries
under Sanderson, there were clusters of
empty blue chairs mat-side and vacant
seats throughout the arena. Although it
would have been the third-highest dual
meet total in college wrestling all of last
season, the announced attendance of
only 12,862 came up well shy of the
school record.
An Olympic gold medalist, a four-time
undefeated NCAA champion, a coach who
has led Penn State to four national titles
in the past 9ve seasons, Sanderson rarely
encounters defeat, let alone has to ac-
knowledge it. But that mark snapped Penn
State's streak of 27 consecutive home sell-
outs, and he wasn't exactly happy about
it.
"I don't know what the deal is," Sanderson
said a few days before the Wisconsin date,
acknowledging how the Lions were still
more than 4,000 tickets short of a sellout.
"I wanted to see where we are at. I wanted
to see what kind of demand we have. Ob-
viously, we're a little disappointed."
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