Dunlap wrestlers learning, laying groundwork for future

Article Source Written By: Stan Morris of the Journal Star

Dunlap is a little over a month into its first season of high school wrestling.

While wins may have been tough to come by, the enthusiasm for laying the groundwork and improving are evident.

“It’s been a great experience,” said coach Rick Mathern, who previously coached high school wrestling in North Dakota. “They’re learning what wrestling is all about. I’m just trying to keep the enthusiasm high and I’m good at that. That’s probably my best asset. We’re trying to enjoy the process.”

A roster that started out around 24 boys and girls has whittled down to 16. And the majority of those are in their first year of wrestling at any level.

Like captains Vivek Panicker and Ryan Schuck.

Panicker had only wrestled with friends before and decided to turn that into something competitive.

“I just thought, what could go wrong?” said Panicker, a junior who also competes in track and field. “Last two years of high school, might as well try something else new.”

Not a bad start. He finished fourth at 160 pounds at the varsity Chatham Glenwood Titans Invitational the first weekend of December.

“That was my first tournament ever,” Panicker said. “I’ve never wrestled in a high school tournament ever, so placing in my first one surprised me but I was really glad about it. It motivated me to do even better.”

Schuck, a sophomore, is not new to new adventures. He’s also a part of Dunlap’s two-year old lacrosse program. He was talked into coming out for wrestling by a teammate.

“Might as well test the waters,” he said. “I’ve had no experience. I couldn’t tell you how points worked or what you did in a wrestling match before. (But) I like the physicality of it. A lot of sports, you can’t win just off determination and practice and hard work. This, you have to grit and have to work through it and I enjoy that facet.”

Schuck was one of three Eagles to place at the Washington JV tournament on Dec. 21, coming in third at 182 pounds.

It was at Washington where Mathern began to notice a change in his young group.

“I could just see little gains starting to happen, from a toughness standpoint especially,” Mathern said. “We’re not rolling over like we were in December when we went to Chatham.”

Both Panicker and Schuck are excited about being on the ground floor of Dunlap’s new adventure.

“It’s an honor,” Schuck said. “I know in other sports I look up to the guys I see that have come first and set the groundwork. To be able to do that for people who come after us, I’m happy to be a part of this. And I know they’re going to improve upon it. We’ve got great freshmen, great people in the youth program.”

Dunlap is setting its sights on the Mid-Illini Conference JV meet Feb. 1 at Metamora.

“The reality is that is the competition level where I think we’ll be able to see some benchmarks happen,” Mathern said. “Our goal is we want to be better in that tournament than we were December 1.

″(Schuck and Panicker) have been great leaders for me. They came in with the strength that we needed and are doing everything they’re supposed to be doing in the room. I’m really hoping we’re able to turn some heads when we get to that JV regional in early February.”

Panick has already seen the improvements from everyone.

“We’re just trying to get in the motion of things, just trying to figure out how things work and I think we’ve done a pretty good job of that,” Panicker said. “We had to take it to the basics and figure out how to maybe just get a power half (move), or something simple. There’s good energy (in the wrestling room).”

The reception from coaches, fans and other area wrestlers has also impressed Mathern.

“There are some great coaches in this region,” Mathern said. “Everywhere we go, I have coaches tell us how jacked they are, so excited that we’re starting the program. It’s really awesome to see. We’re getting shellacked and (wrestlers like state ranked Jared Dowell of Pekin and Broc Shymansky of Farmington) are letting us know to keep it going and are encouraging our kids.”

Mathern is already looking forward March, when he can begin implementing an offseason workout regimen, have a team camp and begin to build a parents booster club, among other things.

“This is a fly by seat of your pants year, but it’s been so much fun because the joy these guys get out of watching their teammates get wins, when wins are hard to come by, is fantastic,” Mathern said. “They’re not jaded by the sport yet. Wrestling is hard. It brings a lot of people down sometimes, but the excitement is real.”

Stan Morris can be reached at 686-3214 or smorris@pjstar.com.

Area wrestlers shine at Morton’s Bob and Liz Schnarr Invitational

Article Source Written By:Stan Morris of the Journal Star

Eight Journal Star area wrestlers captured individual titles Saturday at the Bob and Liz Schnarr Invitational in Morton.

Notre Dame brought five wrestlers and all five reached title matches, with three earning championships. The Irish received firsts from Tristan Daugherty (126 pounds), Grant Peterson (132) and Daniel Driggs (182).

Daugherty (24-0 and ranked No. 1 at 126 in Class 1A) and Peterson (25-0 and ranked No. 6) remained unbeaten on the season. Daugherty was also named Outstanding Wrestlers, after getting a 40-second pin and two technical fall victories.

Host Morton put five in championship matches, with two champions (Tristan Parker at 170, Ethan Gray at 220), and scored 160.5 points to finish an area-best fourth in the team standings. Lincoln (206.5) won the team championship.

Peoria High placed fifth (159.5 points), led by championship bout pins from Maldonado Guyton at 152 and Tyson Heerman at 160.

The other area champion was Payton Murphy of Deer Creek-Mackinaw, who won the 106-pound title bout.

Doty, Eastland find wrestling success

Article Source Written By: BY CODY CUTTER ccutter@saukvalley.com 815-632-2532 @CodyCutter35

Ethen Doty lets his wrestling skill and accolades do all of the talking when it comes to his success.

Silence is golden on the wrestling mat, and it figures that Doty – a kid of few words – quietly built up enough success to win a state championship last year.

Last year’s Class 1A state champion at 126 pounds, Doty has continued his winning ways for the West Carroll-Eastland cooperative at as the calendar turns to 2020.

“It’s been good so far,” Doty said. “I could do better. Everyone knows what I do now compared to last year, but I’m still going.

“I kind of felt like last year I was the underdog, more or less. Now this year I’m at the top, and everyone’s coming for me.”

Now up one class at 132, wrestlers at that weight now know him well with the “state champion” title to his name. It’s a label that sometimes makes him nervous, and Doty admitted that it sometimes can be a bother to have. It’s a challenge that the Eastland junior keeps firmly in mind each time he walks onto the mat – and so far, so good.

“Mentally, you got to break it down in your head and block it out,” he said.

Doty’s state title, however, came in an unusual circumstance. During the title bout, Aurora Christian’s Cameron Johnson injured his shoulder after just 27 seconds of grappling.

Of last year’s three local state champion wrestlers, Doty is the only one that returns; Fulton’s Eli Pannell (220) and Newman’s Brody Ivey (152) have graduated. Doty will look to become the first back-to-back local state champion since Fulton’s Tyler Fleetwood won two in a row in 2017 (120) and 2018 (132).

Doty burst onto the scene as a freshman; he placed fifth at state at 120, and finished with 38 wins and 8 losses. The win to earn the fifth-place medal came against Kankakee Bishop McNamara’s Caleb Magruder in only 59 seconds.

He hasn’t lost a match since, running his streak to 66 after the ThunderCats’ 7-2 holiday trip to the St. Thomas More New Year’s Challenge in Danville. He had 45 wins last year, and has 20 so far this season.

“He’s pretty much the same kid he was when he came in as a freshman,” coach Jeff McIntyre said. “His demeanor hasn’t changed, he’s still the same kid. He doesn’t come in with the attitude that practice should center around [him].”

During the dual with Attica, Indiana, on Saturday, Doty earned his 100th win by fall. He now has 103 in his 2½-year career against his eight freshman losses.

“I didn’t know I was that close,” he said. “My dad told me that I was at 99 the match before.”

Only a handful of wrestlers in the program have reached the 100-win mark since the West Carroll consolidation in 2005. He’ll be joined by senior Eli Dertz with four more wins.

Dertz (19-3) has made a name for himself with his power lifting records, and has wrestled at 220 most of the year, but has been in some heavyweight bouts this season. He also had a highlight win in Danville; he beat Dawson Pruitt of Westville, 1A’s No. 2 wrestler at 220, in a 3-1 overtime decision.

“I feel like I can wrestle with these better guys because I’m more in shape and have better technique,” Dertz said. “That gives me some confidence that I have a good chance to go to state and wrestle some of these real good kids.”

Like Doty, Dertz also is from Eastland, and six more wrestlers trade in their schooltime blue and orange for Thunder green and black.

Doty attended West Carroll schools growing up and moved to Eastland in seventh grade. He started wrestling when he was 6, but Eastland didn’t have any type of wrestling program when he arrived – it once had co-oped with Polo and Milledgeville a decade ago.

McIntyre reached out to Eastland a few years ago to start a middle school co-op and see where things would go from there. Doty won two IESA state championships along the way.

Four years later, a typical starting lineup now has an about-even mix of Eastland and West Carroll kids. Of the eight wrestlers with at least 15 wins, four are Cougars and four and Thunder.

Doty and Dertz have had to do some hallway recruiting. Getting to know more people outside of their school walls is a great thing, said Dertz, who played football with Pearl City kids.

“The interest is starting to pick up,” Dertz said. “When you get a new co-op, some kids don’t know what it is and will get a little timid about it. Ethen’s an Eastland kid, and everyone knows him, so when he wins state, kids think ‘Oh, maybe I can go out for wrestling and have success, too.’ Kids want to come out and have their own success, and it’s become part of Eastland now.”

Doty’s brother, Wyatt, is a freshman at 120, and older brother is glad to have him along. Wyatt is 20-2, and West Carroll’s Cam Simpson (195) also has a 20-2 record.

“He follows along, and knows what he’s doing so far,” Ethen said. “He’s not doing that bad. Hopefully [he] goes to state this year. It’ll look like I did something to help make him go.”

The trio leads the team in wins at the turn of the year. West Carroll’s Kelden McCombie (160), Briar Nevills (113), and Trapper Hartman (126), and Eastland’s Bishop Groezinger (170) also have more than 15 wins.

The team is 15-3 in dual meets, which doesn’t include a December trip to a dual tournament at Western Dubuque High School in Epworth, Iowa, where the team fielded a mostly junior varsity lineup.

“They’re rivals in football, and they’ll put that big ‘X’ on the calendar, but we don’t have any of that here,” McIntyre said. “They get along famously. You really wouldn’t have an idea of who’s from what school. They came together real nice, and we don’t have a problem.”

Prior to Doty’s fifth-place finish as a freshman, only three wrestlers from Eastland or Lanark High had ever medaled at state: Mike Nansel (167) in 1983, and Pat Dapkus (189) and Nathan Hoffberg (171) in 2001 all finished third.

Since West Carroll High School formed in 2005, only four other wrestlers from there have medaled: Jacob Klein (182) took sixth in 2013, and a trio of grapplers saw the podium in 2017 – Nate Schultz (182) was third, and Andrew VanKampen (120) and Josh Anderson (285) were fifth.

This year’s team has athletes that can add to that list.

“We’re not doing bad this year,” Doty said.

Big meets are coming up this month for the ThunderCats. They host state powers Dakota and Lena-Winslow/Stockton on Jan. 16, and are in the Bob Lueders Invitational in Clinton, Iowa, on Jan. 25.

Perfect weekend for CM’s Bechtold, Tyus and Tyus in Arkansas

Article Source Written By: Greg Shashack, gshashack@thetelegraph.com

Three Civic Memorial wrestlers went unbeaten in a grueling weekend at the Diamond State Duals in Springdale, Arkansas.

Juniors Peyton Bechtold, Caleb Tyus and Caine Tyus all got through the two-day event including 10 dual matches without a loss. CM went 7-3 to place fourth in the 12-team tourney with schools from Arkansas, Oklahoma, Missouri, Louisiana and Illinois.

Bechtold finished 10-0 with six pins, including five in the first period. Three of his matches came at 170 pounds with the other seven at 160. Bechtold is 18-2.

Caleb Tyus kept his perfect record intact with nine victories to push his season mark to 22-0. Tyus finished with seven wins by fall and two by technical fall. Six of those pins, including one wrestling up at 138, came in the first period.

Caine Tyus went to 22-1 while matching his twin with a 9-0 weekend with seven wins by fall and two by tech fall. Tyus had one pin at 145 pounds with his other victories coming at 138.

Freshman Abe Wojcikiewicz finished 9-1 with seven pins. Wojcikiewicz went 7-1 at 145 and 2-0 at 152 to get to 24-3 for the season. Sophomore Colton Carlisle also got to 20 wins by going 8-2 with two wins at 160 and a 6-2 finish at 152. He is 20-4.

Sophomore Ben Skaggs went 8-2, including 6-1 at 113 and 2-1 at 106 to improve to 16-7. Sophomore Dominic Tannler went 6-4 in his season debut, swapping out with Skaggs at 106 and 113. Soph Evan Zobrist went 5-3 at 126 to move his record to 10-8. Alex Miranda (12-5), another sophomore, went 3-1 while splitting time at 170 and 182. Senior Shug Walker finished 6-4 at 195 and is 12-11.

CM won its six-team pool with dual victories over Shiloh Christian (51-24), Springdale (39-24), Sulphur (45-21), Excelsior Springs (47-26) and Nixa (53-24). In the Navy Bracket, the Eagles beat Cass (47-29) and Excelsior Springs (53-30) before losing to North Desota 45-33. In the finals, CM lost to eventual champion Seneca (48-32) in the semis and to Nixa (46-34) to place fourth.

Odom, Reynolds each take 2nd at Cheesehead

Article Source Written By: Matt Kamp mkamp@edwpub.net 

KAUKAUNA, Wis. – Edwardsville senior Luke Odom came up a win short of his third championship at the Cheesehead Invitational, while seniors Lloyd Reynolds and Caleb Harrold enjoyed top-four finishes at the prestigious tournament.

Odom (160 pounds) and Reynolds each took second and Harrold (182) finished fourth for the Tigers, who took 12th as a team with 316 points. Edwardsville was the third-best team out of Illinois, trailing only second-place Mount Carmel (554.4 points) and 11th-place Aurora Christian (322.5 points). DeKalb finished 13th with 299 points, followed by Lockport in 14th with 281 points. Minnesota’s Simley won with 614.5 points.

“The guys fought hard. They all had a lot of matches and were able to weather it. They will all be sore tomorrow, but in the long run everybody got better and we’re on our way to meeting our second-half goals,” EHS coach Jon Wagner said.

A year ago, Edwardsville had three champions in Odom (138), Noah Surtin (120) and Josh Anderson (220). It took seventh as a team.

The Tigers entered Saturday with a chance to match their total for champions, but they came up short with Odom suffering his first loss – he is now 28-1 – in the championship match of 160 pounds and Reynolds falling in the championship match of 285 pounds. Harrold lost in the semifinals to the country’s top-ranked wrestler in the 182-pound weight class.

After winning at 138 pounds last year and 126 pounds as a sophomore, Odom opened this year’s tournament with six straight victories, including three by pin, to set up a 160-pound championship match with Arrowhead Union’s Keegan O’Toole, the top-ranked wrestler in the country and in the tournament. Odom was seeded second in the tournament.

Thanks to a pair of takedowns, O’Toole led 4-1 after two periods and he extended the lead to 6-1 after a reversal just 11 seconds into the third. The eighth-ranked wrestler in the country, Odom recovered with an escape and takedown to whittle the lead down to 6-4 before allowing a reversal and nearfall made the score 10-4 with 36 seconds left. Odom made it 10-6 with a late escape, but a takedown from O’Toole finished off the match.

A Mizzou recruit, O’Toole is a three-time state champion in Wisconsin. He is 24-0 this season.

“Luke had a marquee match-up there. Personally, I thought Luke did an admirable job. I definitely believe in Luke’s abilities. It was a great match. Luke had two takedowns in the match,” Wagner said.

At 285 pounds, Reynolds won six straight, including a 1-0 win over Mount Carmel’s Elliot Lewis in the semifinals, to make it to the championship match in a battle of the top two seeds. Reynolds was ranked No. 1, followed by Howard.

Facing Tennessee’s top-ranked James Howard of McCallie High School, Reynolds trailed 2-0 going into the third period after a first-period takedown. Starting on top in the third, Reynolds surrendered an escape six seconds in and couldn’t rebound, losing 3-0.

Howard is now 15-2, while Reynolds is 27-2.

“(Howard) was a fairly athletic, physical heavyweight. Lloyd just came up short,” Wagner said.

Harrold was a win away from becoming the third Tiger to advance to the final, but he ran into a buzzsaw by the name of Patrick Kennedy in the semifinals. The top-ranked wrestler at 182 pounds, Kennedy, from Kasson-Mantorville, pinned Harrold in 38 seconds to drop him to 23-5. Kennedy, who ultimately won the title, is an Iowa recruit.

Harrold bounced back to win 6-4 over Stoughton’s Brandt Spilde before being pinned in 2:04 by Simley’s Gavin Nelson in the third-place match. Harrold is now 24-6.

“I thought Caleb had a phenomenal tournament. He did what he had to do to get back in the fourth-place match. I’m proud of him,” Wagner said.

Lincoln wrestlers grab championship in Morton tournament

Article Source Written By: Randy Sharer

The Lincoln High School wrestling team scored 206.5 points to win the 11-team Bob and Liz Schnarr Invitational on Saturday at Morton where runner-up Normal Community scored 203. Deer Creek-Mackinaw was ninth (78).

Area winners included Lincoln’s Austin O’Donoghue (145) and JT Guzzardo (195), Dee-Mack’s Payton Murphy (106) and the NCHS trio of Brock Bacus (120), John Carter Owen (138) and Ethan Johnson (285).

Other NCHS placers were Cody Correll (2nd at 126), Anderson Ryan (2nd at 145), Jacob Bergelin (2nd at 160), Will Naour (3rd at 113) and Jacob Ogg (3rd at 220).

Also placing for Lincoln were Trevor Bree (2nd at 132), Isaac Decker (3rd at 120), Brandon Sweitzer (3rd at 152) and Jared Merriman (3rd at 182). Dee-Mack placers were Branson Bottorff (2nd at 285) and Kyle Huff (2nd at 170).

GCMS-Fisher 1st at Argenta: GCMS-Fisher scored 212 points to win the Argenta-Oreana Invitational by eight points over runner-up Rochester.

The Falcons’ three champions were Cale Horsch (126), Kaden Gream (145) and Payton Kean (195). Placing second for GCMS-Fisher was Braylen Kean (170). Taking third for the Falcons were Andrew Ferguson (120), Cole Maxey (132) and Markus Miguel (285).

GCMS-Fisher went 8-3 in the final round and won every head-to-head matchup with Rochester to overcome a 14-point deficit.

York defends Kaneland championship

Article Source Written By: By Kevin McGavinDaily Herald Correspondent

Josh Mathiasen barely broke a sweat Saturday afternoon in Maple Park.

After a first-round bye, Mathiasen, a York senior heavyweight wrestler, had back-to-back first-period falls to ease to the championship of the Margaret Flott Invitational at Kaneland High School.

Alex Gutierrez and Matt Cozzi also captured titles for the Dukes at 120 and 132 pounds, respectively, as York defended its team championship with a 222.5-181.5 victory over Crystal Lake South.

Romeoville was third with 149 points, followed by East Aurora (112.5), Woodstock North (82.5), Proviso East (73), Naperville North (60.5), St. Charles North (56) and Kaneland (45).

“Last year was our breakthrough here,” York coach Nick Metcalf said. “All the teams are better this year, but our team is very good. We’re looking for (Mathiasen) to be our next state-placer-slash-state-champion.”

Mathiasen improved to 14-1 after returning to action last week at the rugged Flavin Invitational in DeKalb, where the Dukes went 5-1 in the bracketed dual-meet tournament to capture the consolation championship.

“I was working on perfecting my moves,” said Mathiasen, who missed two weeks with an ankle sprain. “I have the fire in me. I am ready to take it as far as I can.”

Gutierrez and Cozzi both captured their titles with second-period falls.

“It was putting in the hard work in the gym on our days off,” Gutierrez said of his championship run.

Guttierez, a junior, looks to make a deeper postseason run this winter after failing to get out of the regional the last two seasons.

“Not the outcome I wanted, but hopefully it will change this year,” Gutierrez said of his first two regional tournaments.

“When he shot on me, I defended,” Cozzi said of his victorious pin. “I reversed him. I defended him and did a go-behind move.”

Naperville North coach Tom Champion dispatched his junior-varsity lineup to the nine-team tournament.

Robert Padgett also returned to the lineup after being saddled with a nagging groin injury.

The Naperville North senior scored the lone point of the championship match at 220 pounds.

“This is my first time wrestling in two weeks,” Padgett said. “(Champion) got me into the JV to get me some matches in. I chose down and rolled out (to score the lone point on an escape).”

Runner-up Crystal Lake South had the most bountiful day in terms of crowning champions.

The Gators had back-to-back champions to start the final round with falls by Amador Castro and Christian Olsen at 106 and 113 pounds.

“I was just staying calm, trying to get my attacks,” Castro said.

Castro, a sophomore, improved to 16-3.

Olsen is a 14-2 with his first tournament title of his junior campaign.

“I was just working my stuff on top,” Olsen said. “The whole time, I was adjusting for the fall.”

Peyton Timmons’ first-period fall in the championship at 145 pounds gave the Crystal Lake South his 20th win on the season against two defeats.

“I was able to turn him and get the finish,” Timmons said of his abbreviated victory. “I pinned him with a half-Nelson. I have a lot of confidence going into the state tournament.”

One class later, the Gators’ 152-pound representative Shane Moran, a sophomore, improved to 10-1 with a 5-0 verdict over St. Charles North newcomer Drew Surges.

“I was just too weak,” said Surges, a freshman who fell to 14-3. “I wasn’t moving fast enough.”

St. Charles North crowned its lone champion at 195 pounds as Colman Gonnella had nothing but falls in his round-robin competition.

“I used a three-quarter half-Nelson,” Gonnella said. “It was very smooth. A three-quarter half-Nelson is different from a full-Nelson (an illegal move) because you’re coming from the side.”

The host Knights were short-handed as freshman Lane Robinson, a 120-pounder, finished third to pace the team.

“It was kind of a down day,” Kaneland coach Kenny Paoli said. “We were missing five or six varsity wrestlers. We wrestled a lot of lower-level guys. Guys are on vacation, guys are injured.”

Naperville Central sweeps the competition at Schaumburg

Article Source Written By: Mike GarofolaDaily Herald Correspondent

State ranked wrestling teams Libertyville, Naperville Central and Bolingbrook did not disappoint a big crowd at host Schaumburg Saturday afternoon.

No. 13 Libertyville closed out No. 22 Bolingbrook (8-3) on the final bout of their contest, as did No. 14 Naperville Central against Schaumburg to signal the start of an entertaining day of wrestling.

After its 39-31 victory in its opener, Naperville Central (18-4-0) would stay perfect the rest of the way after sending off both Libertyville (36-29) and then Bolingbrook 42-18.

“It’s been a busy, but two pretty good days,” said Central head coach Noah Fitzenreider. “But we still have a lot of work ahead of us.”

The Redhawks, without their 106 and 285-pounders on Saturday, immediately began to chase 12 forfeit points against Schaumburg (8-8-0) but soon took over the proceedings by outscoring the Saxons 24-3.

Grant Hansen’s major decision at 145 and a pin from Tyler Bobnick at 170 would fuel a late comeback from the Saxons, who drew within five at 36-31, until Angelo Eklou’s thrilling 9-8 decision gave Central its first win of the day.

It was more of the same against Libertyville, which would erase consecutive pins from Tommy Porter (113) and Tyler Driessens (120) to make a game of the second contest.

Danny Pucino, No. 2 in the state at 138, inspired the Wildcats’ comeback with his 16-5 major decision triumph and with Josh Knudten (160) and Chase Baczek (170) lending a hand Libertyville closed the gap to 30-23 until an Eklou pin at 220 dashed the hopes of coach Dale Eggert’s club.

“This was an exciting day of wrestling. Naperville is a tough ride, Bolingbrook tore us apart with their lower weights and Schaumburg battled right until the end,” opined Eggert, whose team went 2-1 just before the new year against Barrington, Cary-Grove and Yorkville.

“You saw the value of earning bonus points, and not giving them away today, especially against Bolingbrook who went way up on us. Pucino, Knudten, Chase, and Adam Pressley, who bumped up to 95 got us 22 points, but it was Bronson Mitran staying away from getting pinned that was the difference.”

The Wildcats (10-2) would edge Bolingbrook 40-38, then defeat Schaumburg, 40-26.

“We’ve had a lot of injuries of late, but we’re getting closer to being 100% which should put us in real good shape for the last part of the season,” said Baczek (22-4), who recently was fourth at the prestigious Dvorak Invite, and has improved dramatically from a year ago when he was 29-13 overall.

“I’m attacking and riding so much better than last year,” added Baczek, 3-0 on the day.

Driessens, and Eklou were also 3-0, as was junior Shane Roth (18-5), who went 5-1 last weekend at DeKalb, and 3-0 when the Redhawks traveled to Grant on Friday for three matches.

“We had some great senior leaders in our room last year, but guys like Driessens, Ryan Silva, Sean King and Eklou have really stepped to be the new leaders, and with an influx of new guys to our lineup, who are hungry to win and be successful, we’re having a good year thus far,” said Roth, back from a broken nose suffered at the Marchese Invite last month.

“If we can get ourselves healthy, and turn up the work in the room from here on out, we could have a real solid run in us but we’ve got to do the little things so much better, and have to understand in order to be the best, we have to be at our best at all times,” said Fitzenreider.

Schaumburg coach Mike LeVanti was encouraged at some levels despite going winless on the day, but he was not happy with one area in which his club struggled.

“We gave up far too many bonus points and did not get enough of them for ourselves,” LeVanti said. “We competed well against quality opponents, but it wasn’t enough to just compete.

“Grant (Hansen) was very good against Pucino, who moved up to 145 to wrestle Grant, and we had a few other bright spots, but we’ll have to be ready against an improving team from Palatine next week Friday.”

Libertyville will host league rival Warren next week, while Naperville Central hosts Wheaton North on Thursday.

Big Blue Wrestling Wins Three at D3 National Challenge

Article Source

The Millikin wrestling team won all three of its dual matches at the D3 National Challenge in Cleveland, Ohio on January 4.
          Millikin opened the day with a 24-18 win over #22 Stevens Institute of Technology.  With the match tied at 18-18, Frank Tomaskovic scored the decisive victory for the Big Blue with a win by fall at 1:32 over Bruce Parola at 285.  Freshman Peter McCusker won by fall at 149 for Millikin and Bradan Birt pinned Stefan Major at 165.  The Big Blue’s other wins in the match went to D’Anthony Hopkins at 141 pounds 5-1 and to Taylor McGiffen at 184 pounds 12-6.
          The Big Blue cruised past Case Western Reserve 40-9 and edged the University of Chicago 22-18.           
          In the win over Case Western Reserve, Millikin winners were Zac Blasioli, Hopkins, McCuster, Tristan BirtBradan Birt, Jake Tisa, AJ FoxLogan Hagerbaumer and AJ Fox(details below).
          In the match against the University of Chicago, Millikin picked up a forfeit at 125 pounds and followed with wins by freshmen Sean McKenna at 141 pounds and McCuster at 149.  Bradan Birt picked up his third win of the win with a win by fall.  Birt is now 19-1 on the season.  Millikin’s final win went to Hagerbaumer at 197 pounds.

#17 Millikin 24 #22 Stevens 18
                                                                                      Millikin          Stevens
125-Zac Blasioli lost to Ahkil Vega 11-10 SV-1                                         3
133-Joey Rivera lost to Kyle Slendorn Fall 5:32                                        6
141-D’Anthony Hopkins won over Trevor Mastorio 5-1          3
149-Peter McCusker defeated Joe Schneider Fall 3:21           6
157-Tristan Birt lost to Dylan Van Sickell 13-6                                         3       
165-Brandan Birt defeated Stefan Major Fall 1:52                 6
174-Jake Tisza lost to Nicco Ziccardi                                                       3
184-Taylor McGiffen won over Robbie Gennat 12-6              3
197-Logan Hagerbaumer lost to Michael Dooley 8-3                                 3
285-Frank Tomaskovic won over Bruce Parola Fall 1:32        6
                                                                                      24                18

Millikin 40 Case Western Reserve 9
                                                                                      Millikin          CWRU
125-Zac Blasioli defeated Adam Kates 18-2 TF 2:39              5
133-Joey Rivera lost to Joey Clayton Fall 0:16                                         6
141-D’Anthony Hopkins defeated Manhatten Catton Fall 1:18 6
149-Peter McCuster won over Andrew Hoover 5-3                3
157-Tristan Birt defeated Jack Chipps Fall 2:27                    6
165-Bradan Birt won over Thomas Gallagher 18-0 TF 3:48    5
174-Jake Tisa defeated Kyle Roberts Fall 0:28                      6
184-AJ Fox defeated Stephen Andryc Fall 1:30                     6
197-Logan Hagerbaumer lost to Brian Kent 10-4                                     3
285-Evan Betz won over Grant Robinson 6-0                       3
                                                                                      40                9

Millikin 22 University of Chicago 18
                                                                                      Millikin          Chicago
125-Joey Rivera won by Forfeit                                          6
133-Zac Blasioli lost to Griffin Seyfried 4-3                                              3
141-Sean McKenna defeated Gage Bayless 10-4 MD             4
149-Peter McCuster defeated Alec Gleason 3-2                     3
157-Tristan Birt lost to Steve Bonsall 11-0 MD                                         4
165-Bradan Birt defeated Maguire Pecci Fall 4:43                 6
174-Jake Tisza lost to Kyle Peisker 15-0 TF 3:03                                      5
184-Taylor McGiffen lost to Ben Sarasin 8-4                                            3
197-Logan Hagerbaumer defeated Nick Caralo 10-4             3
285-Frank Tomaskovic lost to Cole Fibranz 7-2                                        3
                                                                                      22                18

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Maroon Wrestling Takes Two of Three Duals at D3 National Challenge

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CLEVELAND, Ohio – The No. 13 University of Chicago wrestling squad took two of three duals in an impressive performance at the D3 National Challenge, held Saturday at Case Western Reserve University.

The Maroons defeated Alma (41-0) and the host Spartans (44-12) in two dominant matches before falling to Millikin in a tight one, 22-18.

Seniors Kyle Peisker (174 pounds) and Steve Bonsall (157 pounds) and rookie Griffin Seyfried (133) each went a perfect 3-0 on the day with Peisker picking up one pin and two technical falls.

Bonsall and Seyfried also each earned a pin and sophomore Ben Sarasin (184) was also perfect on Saturday with a 2-0 record and a pin against Alma. First-year Cole Firbranz (285) went 2-0 with a pin over Alma to round out the Maroons’ multiple match winners.

Jason Crary (165), Caleb Jeffreys (197, pin), Dominick Reo (184, pin) and Will Britain (165) also went a perfect 1-0 for UChicago to round out the Maroons’ leaders.

“It was a pretty good outing,” said Head Coach Leo Kocher. “Our six upper weight classes went 16-2 on the day. We gave up six points each dual because we could not put someone in the 125-pound weight class on the mat. Our loss to Millikin was a 5-5 split on matches. It was a hard-fought dual against a team with four individuals ranks in the top 10 in Division III. Both teams had come from behind wins.”

UCHICAGO 41, ALMA 10
125 – Nicolas Dawson (A) won by forfeit
133 – Griffin Seyfried (UC) def. Will Kidder by fall, 2:08
141 – Brendan Ladd (A) def. Chaise Hauck by major decision, 16-4
149 – Alec Gleason (UC) def. Mason Priest by decision, 6-1
157 – Steve Bonsall (UC) def. Joseph Muzzin by fall, 5:19
165 – Will Britain (UC) def. Jayce Kuehnlein by decision, 10-4
174 – Kyle Peisker (UC) def. Lucas Brewer by tech fall, 16-0 (3:14)
184 – Ben Sarasin (UC) def. Gus Richter by fall, :55
197 – Nick Carola (UC) def. Austin Popp by fall, :47
285 – Cole Fibranz (UC) def. Peter Nicaj by fall, 1:01

UCHICAGO 44, CASE WESTERN RESERVE 12
125 – Adam Kates (CWRU) won by forfeit
133 – Griffin Seyfried (UC) def. Duncan Clayton by tech fall, 17-2 (5:09)
141 – Gage Bayless (UC) def. Manhattan Gatton by fall, :50
149 – Mitchell Arch (CWRU) def. Alec Gleason by fall, :32
157 – Steve Bonsall (UC) def. Brandon Barton by fall, 4:22
165 – Jason Crary (UC) def. Issac Collier by decision, 3-0
174 – Kyle Peisker (UC) def. Kyle Roberts by fall, 1:51
184 – Dominick Reo (UC) def. Stephen Andryc by fall, 5:27
197 – Caleb Jeffreys (UC) def. Joey Shulik by fall, 1:49
285 – Will Hare (UC) def. Grant Robinson by fall, 1:55

MILLIKIN 22, UCHICAGO 18
125 – Joey Rivera (MU) won by forfeit
133 – Griffin Seyfried (UC) def. Zac Blaisioli by decision, 4-3
141 – Sean McKenna (MU) def. Gage Bayless by major decision, 13-0
149 – Peter McCusker (MU) def. Alec Gleason by decision, 3-2
157 – Steve Bonsall (UC) def. Tristan Birt by major decision, 11-0
165 – Bradan Birt (MU) def. Maguire Pecci by fall, 4:43
174 – Kyle Peisker (UC) def. Jake Tisza by tech fall, 14-0 (3:03)
184 – Ben Sarasin (UC) def. Taylor McGiffen by decision, 8-4
197 – Logan Hagerbaumer (MU) def. Nick Carola by decision, 10-4
285 – Cole Fibranz (UC) def. Frank Tomaskovic by decision, 7-2

NEXT MATCH:

  • Wednesday, Jan. 15: North Central at UChicago, 7 p.m. CT