Actually, in the overtime match referred to there was a point taken for stalling earlier in the match. There was also a point taken for fleeing the mat in overtime when the wrestler avoided contact and stepped out of bounds. That's the definiton of fleeing the mat. Nobody likes to see a match end that way, especially the offical.

In an earlier match, a point was awarded for stalling when a wrestler repeatedly straggled back from out of bounds and eventually took a knee to catch a breather. He lost by a point. Another stall call and not popular with the coach but its the rule.

I saw several "riding the hips" calls for stalling.

I guess what you see is all how close you are to the action and what it is you are looking for. I thought the officiating was about on par -- some good, some bad -- just like the coaching and the wrestling. Not calling stalling or fleeing decides the match just as much as calling it, it just decides it for the other wrestler.