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Heartland Duals: Missouri’s K–8 Girls Are Back and They’re Coming for Gold

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Council Bluffs, Iowa | April 3–4, 2026

Mid America Center

There’s something different about this group, and if you’ve been around Missouri girls wrestling, you already know what it is.

This isn’t just another team pulling up to the Heartland Duals. This is a statement roster. This is depth, experience, and a standard that’s been built over years, not weeks. And when the whistle blows Friday morning inside the Mid America Center, Missouri’s K–8 girls aren’t just stepping onto the mat… they’re stepping into expectation.

How the Battle Unfolds

The Heartland Duals isn’t an individual tournament; it’s war by lineup.

Dual-style wrestling means every match matters. Every weight. Every point. Team vs. team. Lineup vs. lineup.

  • Friday (April 3): Pool Play
    Teams are grouped into pools, battling for position. The top teams advance into the elite Diamond Bracket.
  • Saturday (April 4): Placement Rounds
    Brackets are set. Now it’s survival. Championship runs, placement fights, and no easy matches left.

You don’t hide in a dual. You contribute—or you get exposed.

Last Year: Missouri Made Noise

The Line-up was stacked:

52 – Trinh Tse

58 – Aizley Cupp

65 – Cedar Arnold

73 – Katilyn Schull

82 – Crickett Arnold

82 – Hanna Schuster

89 – Kinsley Rife

95 – Zolah Williams

101 – Haddie Cornine

101 – Piper Weaver

107 – Zainab Aldabri

113 – Ava Rife

120 – Dylan Parn

126 – Jauzlyean Gray

138 – Natalee Joiner

150 – Ohana Phillips

165 – Teagan Morgan

185 – Temperence Watson

Missouri didn’t just show up in 2025, they made people pay attention.

  • Opened with a 69–6 dismantling of Nebraska Red
  • Took a tough loss to Minnesota Storm (57–33)
  • Bounced back with dominant wins over Kansas (63–18) and Indiana Gold (66–18)
  • Locked in a Diamond Bracket spot

Then came the moments that define teams. The brackets…

How it started:

A border war win over Kansas.

A rematch with Minnesota in the semis.

How it ended:

A gritty, emotional fight for 3rd place that came down to the final match.

With the dual on the line, Temperence Watson needed a fall, and delivered in 45 seconds. That’s not just wrestling, that’s identity.

This Year’s Team: Even Deeper, Even Hungrier

If you thought last year was strong, take a hard look at this lineup.

Missouri rolls into 2026 with:

  • 16 State Champions
  • 2 State Finalists (Runner-Ups)

That’s not depth—that’s firepower.

2026 Missouri K–8 Girls Roster Highlights:

55 – Blakely Reed

59 – Trinh Tse

64 – Adalynn Porter

69 – Grace Warren

75 – Cedar Arnold

80 – Katilyn Schull

85 – Charity Sperry

90 – Crickett Arnold

95 – Elizabeth Smith

100 – Kinsley Rife

105 – Ally Miller

110 – Haddie Cornine

115 – Zaina Albadri

115 – Brooklyn Cooley *reserve

120 – Victoria Harvey

120 – Elizabeth Schull *reserve

125 – Ava Rife

135 – Brynlea Lahr

150 – Bristol Starks

165 – Ava Allen

185 – Mia Holmes

Sixteen champions. Two finalists. Across nearly every weight class.

There are no soft spots in this lineup.

The Returners: Experience Meets Expectation

And here’s where it gets real dangerous.

Missouri isn’t starting over, they’re reloading.

Returning athletes from last year’s squad include:

  • Trinh Tse
  • Cedar Arnold
  • Katilyn Schull
  • Crickett Arnold
  • Kinsley Rife
  • Haddie Cornine
  • Zaina Albadri
  • Ava Rife

These are girls who have already been in the fire. They’ve wrestled under pressure. They’ve felt what it’s like when a dual comes down to one match.

That matters. You can’t teach that in a practice room.

The Bigger Picture: Missouri Is Setting the Standard

Let’s be clear, this isn’t just about one weekend in Iowa, this is about what’s happening in Missouri.

Women’s wrestling is growing nationwide, but Missouri isn’t following the trend, Missouri is driving it.

At the youth level, at the high school level, and beyond, we’re seeing something special take shape:

  • Girls starting earlier
  • Competing more often
  • Training freestyle year-round
  • And building real depth across every age group

This K–8 team is proof of that pipeline.

These aren’t just good young wrestlers. These are future high school champions. Future national contenders. Future college athletes.

And they’re learning right now what it means to represent something bigger than themselves.

The Mission

Last year: 3rd place.

This year: That’s not enough.

This group isn’t coming to hang around the podium, they’re coming for the top spot, and if you’ve been paying attention, you already know; they’ve got everything it takes to go get it.

Missouri doesn’t just show up anymore. Missouri sets the tone.

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