@@MidwestWrestle Illinois Corn Stars is wearing the singlet with the U.S. Flag Banner on the back. The other competitor is wearing a singlet with the name 'Indiana Outlaws' on the back; unless wrestlers were borrowing jerseys from another team.
@@irish00011 Competition uniforms are only regulated at events hosted by academic institutions during the regular wrestling season and post-season championship series. During those events, all wrestlers must wear singlets or two-piece uniforms that are school-issued and bear the school's name and/or insignia. When competition is hosted by private organizations such as this, wrestlers may wear singlets or two-piece uniforms bearing any markings they wish. For any number of reasons (perhaps one or both were last-minute substitutions-just one example scenario), singlets representing their private team may not have been available, and so they chose to wear what they had available. While it is possible that they borrowed the singlets, it is equally if not more likely that the singlets they wore belonged to them from prior or concurrent team affiliations. Wrestlers can and often do wrestle for multiple teams throughout an off-season.
This match description is incorrect. At least one of the wrestlers is misidentified.
Why do you feel that way?
@@MidwestWrestle Illinois Corn Stars is wearing the singlet with the U.S. Flag Banner on the back. The other competitor is wearing a singlet with the name 'Indiana Outlaws' on the back; unless wrestlers were borrowing jerseys from another team.
@@irish00011 Competition uniforms are only regulated at events hosted by academic institutions during the regular wrestling season and post-season championship series. During those events, all wrestlers must wear singlets or two-piece uniforms that are school-issued and bear the school's name and/or insignia. When competition is hosted by private organizations such as this, wrestlers may wear singlets or two-piece uniforms bearing any markings they wish. For any number of reasons (perhaps one or both were last-minute substitutions-just one example scenario), singlets representing their private team may not have been available, and so they chose to wear what they had available. While it is possible that they borrowed the singlets, it is equally if not more likely that the singlets they wore belonged to them from prior or concurrent team affiliations. Wrestlers can and often do wrestle for multiple teams throughout an off-season.