Stevan Mićić Explained

Stevan Mićić
Birth Name:Стеван Андрија Мићић
Fullname:Stevan Andrija Mićić
Nationality:
Hometown:Cedar Lake, Indiana, U.S.
Birth Place:Mesa, Arizona, U.S.
Country:
Sport:Wrestling
Event:Freestyle and Folkstyle
Club:Chicago Galaxy International Wrestling Club
Collegeteam:Michigan
Agent:Ruby Sports & Entertainment
Weight:57 kg
Worlds: (2023)
Regionals: (2019)
Medaltemplates: Michigan Wolverines

Stevan Andrija Mićić (Serbian: Стеван Андрија Мићић; born 4 April 1996) is a Serbian-American freestyle and folkstyle wrestler who competes at 57 kilograms (125 pounds). He won a gold medal at the 2023 World Wrestling Championships in Belgrade, Serbia. He is the first wrestler representing Serbia to win a medal in men's freestyle wrestling at the World Wrestling Championships.

He has also claimed two bronze medals at the European Championships (2018 and 2020), a silver medal at the 2019 European Games, and bronze medals at the Mediterranean Games (2018 and 2022) while representing Serbia.[1] In college, he is a three-time NCAA Division I All-American and the '18 Big Ten Conference champion for the Michigan Wolverines.[2]

Biography

Background

Stevan Mićić was born on April 4, 1996, in Mesa, Arizona, United States, to parents Stevan and Lori Mićić. In his early years, Stevan grew up in Northwest Indiana within the Serbian culture, an area within the Chicago metropolitan area, which has one of the largest Serbian populations outside of Serbia.

High school

Stevan graduated from Hanover Central High School in Cedar Lake, Indiana in 2014. He was named the 2014 Indiana state recipient of the Dave Schultz High School Excellence Award. He is a three-time Indiana state champion, winning at 126 pounds (2014), 113 pounds (2013), and 106 pounds (2012) and finishing third at 103 pounds as a freshman (2011). Stevan graduated with a career prep record of 184-5, including a perfect 141-0 over his final three seasons. He was ranked as the nation's No. 19 overall recruit by InterMat and No. 1-ranked 126-pound wrestler.

College career

He was a student at the University of Michigan and runner-up at the NCAA national championships in 2018.

At the end of 2018, he had a collegiate wrestling record 74 wins and 13 defeats. At the 2019 NCAA national championships in the quarterfinal, he beat Iowa wrestler Austin DeSanto 3-2.

For the 2019–20 season, Mićić did not compete after qualifying for the Olympics through his finish at the 2019 World Championships, utilizing an Olympic redshirt. He planned to return in 2021 with one year of eligibility remaining, despite not competing during regular season, but pulled out of the 2021 NCAA Championships due to an injury.[3]

International career

Mićić wrestled for the United States at junior levels, winning a bronze medal at 55 kg at the 2015 Junior World Championships in Salvador, Brazil.[4] From 2018, he started to represent Serbia at senior levels. Mićić holds dual citizenship and chose to compete for the birth country of his father. He participated in the 2018 European Wrestling Championships, held in Kaspiysk, Dagestan, Russia where he lost to Zaur Uguev of Russia, but won a bronze medal after defeating Levan Vartanov of Spain. The bronze medal was also Serbia's first European medal in freestyle wrestling.[5] Later at the 2018 Mediterranean Games in Tarragona, Spain, Mićić took another bronze medal at 65 kg. At the 2019 European Games, he won a silver medal, defeating world No.1 Süleyman Atlı of Turkey and U23 world bronze medallist Taras Markovych of Ukraine en route.[6]

Mićić qualified for the 2020 Summer Olympics by finishing fifth at the 2019 World Wrestling Championships in Kazakhstan, where he lost 5–4 in the quarterfinal against Süleyman Atlı and lost 4–3 in a bronze-medal match against the host country's Nurislam Sanayev.[1] However, winning the 2021 Poland Open Ranking Series event helped Mićić to be the top seed at the Tokyo Olympics.[7]

He won one of the bronze medals in the 65 kg event at the 2022 Mediterranean Games held in Oran, Algeria.[8] He won one of the bronze medals in the 57kg event at the 2022 World Wrestling Championships held in Belgrade, Serbia.[9] [10]

At the 2023 World Wrestling Championships, again in Belgrade, Serbia, Micic went 5-0 to win the gold medal at 57kg. To win the gold, he defeated three former world champions: 2018 and 2019 World/2020 Olympic 57kg gold medalist Zaur Uguev in the quarterfinals, 2022 57kg champion Zelimkhan Abakarov in the semifinals, and 2022 61kg champion Rei Higuchi in the finals.[11] This was Serbia's first senior-level gold medal in men's freestyle wrestling.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: September 22, 2019. Amine, Micic qualify weight for Olympics, the top efforts of U.S. collegians wrestling for other nations. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20200809113250/https://www.teamusa.org/USA-Wrestling/Features/2019/September/22/US-collegians-for-other-countries. 9 August 2020. Team USA.
  2. Web site: Stevan Micic - Wrestling. 2020-12-17. University of Michigan Athletics. en.
  3. Web site: Micic will not compete this NCAA wrestling season. 2021-02-25. InterMat.
  4. News: Iran Takes Junior World Freestyle Title Despite Azerbaijan's Triple Gold. United World Wrestling. 17 August 2015. 3 January 2019.
  5. News: Russia Bounces Back To Win Trio of Golds After Azerbaijan Snags Pair. United World Wrestling. 5 May 2018. 3 January 2019.
  6. News: Russia Advances 3 to European Games Finals, World Champ Uguev Falls. United World Wrestling. 25 June 2019. 12 August 2019.
  7. News: Wrestler Vinesh Phogat named top seed for Tokyo Olympics. Olympics.com. 21 June 2021. 22 July 2021.
  8. Web site: Wrestling Results Book . https://web.archive.org/web/20220704135758/https://gdm2022-pdf.microplustimingservices.com/WRE/ResultBook/GDM2022_WRE_v1.6.pdf . 4 July 2022 . 4 July 2022 . 2022 Mediterranean Games.
  9. News: Iveson . Ali . 17 September 2022 . Dake and Ghasempour retain wrestling world titles in Belgrade . InsideTheGames.biz . 17 September 2022.
  10. Web site: 2022 World Wrestling Championships Results Book . https://web.archive.org/web/20220918183512/https://cdn.uww.org/s3fs-public/2022-09/final-book-2022-senior-world-championships_compressed.pdf?VersionId=zoTz_Ra8zK5EkVhfrZuDG5THXf4.3ik. . 18 September 2022 . 18 September 2022 . United World Wrestling.
  11. Web site: Spey . Andrew . 18 September 2022 . 2023 World Championship Live Blog: Day 3. 18 September 2022. Flo Wrestling.