Posts by Mick Torres
Yorkville on top at Sycamore
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By Patrick Z. McGavin
For the IWCOA
Yorkville solved the ultimate riddle.
How do you get to the top of the mountain without quite reaching the top?
The answer: with a wealth of quantity and quality.
Despite not fielding an individual champion, the Foxes captured the Sycamore Invitational Saturday with 502 points, easily outdistancing runner-up McHenry (444.50) and third-place Oak Forest (436.50).
Class 1A power Tolono (Unity) was fourth at 430.50. Belvidere co-op was fifth at 404. The host Sycamores had 393 for seventh. Class 2A power Mahomet-Seymour was seventh at 372.50.
Ranked No. 16 in 3A, the Foxes had two second-place finishes, one third-place finish, a fourth-place and three fifth-place performers.
That was enough to secure the coveted top team prize.
“This is a tournament where you get a lot of matches in,” Yorkville coach Jake Oster said. “We wrestled consistently. We didn’t have any winners, but most of our guys only lost one match, and they came back and got third, fifth or second.”
The 26-team field offered a range of clashing styles and different looks. The prestigious invitational served multiple purposes.
“There were a lot of good individuals from schools that we don’t normally see, some 2A and 3A, schools, and it’s good to have those different looks from different parts of the state,” Oster said.
“Different guys wrestle differently, and it’s good to see how our guys react to these different styles.”
Bloomington had a tournament best three individual champions at 120, 132 and 220. Mahomet-Seymour was the only other double-winner, with champions at 106 and 195.
With the start of regionals about a month away, the Sycamore Invitational provided a vital measuring stick to assess its spot in the larger firmament.
“This is a great testing point,” Oster said. “There are little things we see that we are doing well, and little things that we have to improve on.
“Right now, it’s about getting healthy and having everybody ready to go. We had a couple of guys out. With what we brought here, they wrestled really well.
Sycamore Invitational champions:
106 – Caden Hatton, Mahomet-Seymour
In a showdown of two top-5 wrestlers, No. 5 Caden Hatton of Mahomet-Seymour pulled out the 4-2 decision over Kaneland’s Cameron Phillips for the championship.
“My neutral was definitely my toughest position today,” he said. “Nobody could really stop me, honestly.”
By improving his record to 24-4, he also defeated Yorkville’s Raymond Cavey 6-4 in the semifinals.
“I like a lot of freestyle stuff,” Hatton said. “I don’t like tying up much. Today was a big win for me, at this weight. It has definitely boosted my confidence.”
Ranked No. 4, Phillips (16-2) had two falls to reach the finals.
Rock Island’s Truth Vessey, ranked No 10, defeated Cavey by majority decision, 14-3, for third place. Brayden Tuenissen, of Belvidere co-op, defeated Angelina Cassioppi of Hononegah, 6-0, for fifth-place.
113 – Bryce Durlacher, Mundelein
Mundelein’s Bryce Durlacher put on a technical tour de force with two pins and two decisions.
In an electrifying final, Durlacher (20-1) defeated York’s Zach Parisi 5-4.
Durlacher won by fall over Nazareth’s Javaughn Jossell. He earned the tough 6-3 decision over Rochelle’s Xavier Villalobos in the semifinals.
Ranked No. 7 in 3A, Parisi (25-3) defeated Yorkville’s Jack Ferguson in the quarterfinals. He dominated Rock Island’s Samuel Niyonkuru with a 16-1 technical fall in the semifinals.
Villalobos defeated Niyonkuru by major decision for third place. Ferguson defeated McHenry’s Jimmy Norris by technical fall for fifth place.
120 – Carson Nishida, Bloomington
Bloomington’s Carson Nishida utilized balance, footwork and excellent technique for the 5-0 victory over Oak Forest’s Tyler Evitts for the individual championship.
Ranked No. 2 in 2A, he has an inimitable style.
“I call it laidback, doing my own thing,” Nishida said after he improved to 25-3. “Listening to my coaches, and trusting my own instinct a lot.”
He was dominant with a technical fall and fall in the preliminary rounds to qualify for the finals.
“I’m always trying to get the first takedown, always trying to score as many points as possible,” he said. “Not to sound too cocky, but I do this pretty often.
“I have been working hard for this the last 12 years of my life. I have dedicated everything just for wrestling. I love the sport.”
Evitts (15-2) posted narrow victories in the preliminaries to reach the title.
Rock Island’s Daniel McGhee (19-6) defeated Glenbrook South’s Max Brown 14-6 for third place. Glenbrook South’s Arnold Park defeated Kaden Inman of Tolono (Unity) 10-7 for fifth place.
126 – Chase Beckett, Portage WI
Chase Beckett of Portage (Wisconsin) was the only out of state individual champion.
He defeated Oak Forest’s No. 4 Caden Musselman 8-1. He posted pins over Marcus Santos of Glenbrook South and Dominic Girardin of Belvidere co-op to qualify for the final.
Musselman (13-2) won by majority decision over Pedro Jimenez of McHenry. He defeated Yorkville’s Dom Coronado 15-10 in his semifinal bracket.
Coronado recovered to defeat Girardin 13-4 for third place. Kaneland’s Caden Grabowski captured fifth place with a pin over Willowbrook’s Isaiah Smith.
132 – Dylan Watts, Bloomington
Bloomington picked up its second individual championship as Dylan Watts secured the 12-3 major decision over Frankie Salcedo of Grayslake North.
Watts posted a fall over Portage’s Jeffry Jones in the quarterfinals and a dominant 17-1 technical fall over Andrew Mohr of Cary-Grove.
Salcedo recorded a technical fall over Ryan Rink of Tolono (Unity) and an 8-1 decision over Joe Loranger of Oak Forest.
In the third-place match, Mohr posted the pin over Loranger. In the fifth-place match, Kamryn Labeau of Belvidere co-op won by fall over Rink.
138 – Aoci Bernard, Rock Island
Rock Island senior Aoci Bernard made good on a personal vow.
“This is my second time at this tournament,” he said. “My first time here, I finished 8th, and I told myself if I came back, I wanted to improve against that.”
Ranked No. 5 in 2A, Bernard (22-2) won by injury default after Grayslake North’s No. 10 Armen Jerikian was unable to compete due to illness.
He showed superb athleticism, quickness and power at the point of attack in his preliminary bouts.
“I am fast and explosive, and I am at my best just getting into my attack,” Bernard said. “Setting up my opponent and using my movement, I like to push the pace.
“I just like to go into my shoot, and work, work and work until they can’t go anymore.”
He won by majority decision and decision to reach the final.
Until his illness, Jerikian had a fall and 8-4 decision over Logan Miller of Marengo.
Young had a dominant 17-2 technical fall over Miller in the third-place match. Sycamore’s Trent DuMont recorded a fall over York’s Jack Connell for fifth place.
145 – Antonio Alvarado, Belvidere (co-op)
In a signature final, No. 10 Antonio Alvarado of Belvidere co-op recorded the late third period pin over previously undefeated Tavius Hosley of Tolono (Unity).
Alvarado (22-3) won by technical fall and a fall in reaching the final.
Ranked No. 3 in 1A, Hosley (24-1) won by fall of Erick Nova of Mundelein and handed Drew Kested of Sterling his first loss with the 7-3 decision.
Ranked No. 3 in 2A, Kested defeated Bloomington’s Jacob Barger of Bloomington 3-0 for third place. Oak Forest’s Connor Nowicki won by pin over Nowa for fifth place.
152 – Brayden Peet, Sycamore
Sycamore’s Brayden Peet continued his rampaging assault toward perfection by defeating Glenbrook South’s Will Collins 8-3 in the championship.
Ranked No. 3 in 2A, Peet (26-0) also had a technical fall and fall in the run-up to the finals.
He felt very much at home.
“This felt great, especially since we didn’t have the tournament last year because of Covid,” Peet said. “This was my last year, so it felt great to be home and win it.”
He has a flamboyant, driven style. He is fearless, a bit of a whirling dervish who simply overwhelms the opposition.
“I am just trying to maintain that intensity and be very aggressive, and be able to get up from the bottom,” Peet said.
“I am very confident in being able to do what I want to do.”
Collins (6-1) defeated Yorkville’s Luke Zook by major decision, and and defeated McHenry’s Ruben Melgarejo 6-0 in the semifinals.
Oak Forest’s Ivan Corral defeated Melgarejo by 13-1 major decision for third place. Zook defeated Braeden Heinold 4-2 for fifth place.
160 – Chris Moore, McHenry
3A top-ranked McHenry’s Chris Moore was virtually untouchable. He performed at another level with three consecutive major decisions.
His 22-7 major decision win over Sycamore’s Gus Cambier earned him the most valuable wrestler award.
“Everything was clicking for me today,” he said. “I was getting my shots down, and my fakes were also there, and they were falling for them a little bit.”
Moore (30-0) also defeated Yorkville’s Brody Williams 24-9 and Thomas Tate 28-13.
No. 3 in 2A, Cambier (21-3) won by fall and decision to reach his half of the final.
Glenbrook South’s Patrick Downing defeated Tate 10-4 for third place. Williams defeated Nat Nosler of Tolono (Unity) 7-3 for fifth place.
170 – Brody Hallin, McHenry
In a draw marked by highly ranked competition, McHenry’s Brody Hallin defeated Sycamore star Zack Crawford 5-1 in a riveting championship showdown.
No. 2 in 3A, Hallin edged 2A No. 2 Brennan Houser 3-2 of Mahomet-Seymour in the quarterfinals and posted a major decision 10-2 win over Nick Mabutas in the semifinals.
“I knew a lot of these guys I’d be going up against were bigger or had a greater reach than I did,” Hallin said. “I just wanted to stay patient and pace them out, and work my way against them and tire them out.”
The title path provided a sharp line for tracking his own progress.
“In the past years I was here at this tournament, and I got like second or third,” he said. “It feels great to know I am improving and getting better.”
No. 6 in 2A, Crawford (21-2) had a 6-1 decision over Kaden Combs and a pin over Joe Castenada of Oak Forest to capture his half of the brackets.
Mabutas won by fall over Castenada for third place. Houser won by fall over Combs for fifth place.
182 – Drew Surges, St. Charles North
Even with a perfect start to his junior season, St. Charles North’s Drew Surges knew he had to operate outside of his comfort zone.
“I was probably more offensive today than I have ever been,” he said. “I was attacking a lot more.”
Surges (19-0) defeated Henry Goetz 8-3 for the championship.
He also had a fall and technical fall in his two preliminary matches leading up to the finals.
“Today, I felt like I had to be the aggressor,” he said. “I felt like I had to come in and be better than anybody else in my division.
“I just had to be better.”
Goetz (15-2) posted victories over Sycamore’s Gable Carrick and Evan Grazzini of York to capture his half of the bracket.
Grazzini (23-5) defeated Belvidere’s A.J. Piloni for third place. McHenry’s Caleb Rezmer defeated Hunter Eastin of Tolono (Unity) by 14-3 major decision for fifth place.
195 – Mateo Casillas, Mahomet-Seymour
In one of the most challenging brackets, Mahomet-Seymour’s Mateo Casillas outdueled Yorkville’s Hunter Janeczko 4-2 in a brilliant, tactical final.
No. 2 in 2A, Casillas (30-1) defeated Rock Island’s Steven Marquez and Bloomington’s Anthony Curry by decision to reach the final.
Ranked No. 7 in 3A, Janeczko (19-2) posted a scintillating 4-3 quarterfinal victory over Nick Nosler of Tolono (Unity). He defeated Jack Callen by major decision in the semifinals.
Curry defeated Callen by major decision 14-4 for third place. Nosler (24-2) defeated Andrew Marquez of Rock Island for fifth place.
220 – Jack Weltha, Bloomington
Bloomington’s Jack Weltha is his severest critic.
“Overall, I am still not where I need to be,” he said. “There are areas where I need to keep working and get better.”
Ranked No. 2 in 2A, Weltha (23-1) captured arguably the deepest division in the tournament with a 4-0 decision over Yorkville’s highly regarded sophomore Ben Alvarez for the championship.
“I need to work more on my offense, and my movement, but this feels really good,” Weltha said. “We are a 2A team, and this is mostly a 3A tournament.”
Weltha had a fall and a 5-4 decision over previously undefeated Gabe Kaminsky of Nazareth in the semifinals.
Ranked No. 4 in 3A, Alvarez (29-4) had a fall and a 3-2 decision over Joey Pineda in his half of the draw.
Kaminsky (18-1) recovered from his first defeat to beat Pineda 6-3 for third place. Colton Crowley of Mahomet-Seymour pinned Logan Sowell of Cary-Grove for fifth place.
285 – Lee Smith, Rockford East
Sophomore Lee Smith of Rockford East captured the major decision 13-5 victory over Karson Richardson of Tolono (Unity) for the individual championship.
No. 6 in 2A, Smith (11-1) posted a 0:17 second fall in the quarterfinals over Camden Harms of Mahomet-Seymour. He also posted a first period fall of Eli Gustafson of Rock Island.
No. 10 at 220 in 2A, Richardson (23-2) recorded a pin over Dallas Dinkla of Grayslake North and a 10-3 decision over Sycamore’s Lincon Cooley.
No. 6 in 2A, Cooley (22-1) responded to his first loss by pinning Gustafson for third place. McHenry’s Luis Acleto defeated Hampshire’s Patryk Barnas by injury default for fifth place.
Downstate/Out-of-state roundup for Jan. 8
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By Curt Herron
For the IWCOA
Cahokia wins title at Carbondale’s Murdale Tournament
On a weekend where 12 teams won individual titles at Carbondale’s 60th annual Murdale Tournament, Cahokia was one of the few among top scoring squads who didn’t put anyone on top of the awards stand.
But three seconds, two thirds, two fourths and a fifth helped lead the Comanches to the championship of the 24-team competition with 168 points, giving them a good advantage over runner-up Murphysboro, who had 144 points, while Quincy edged the host Terriers 124-122 to claim third place and Anna-Jonesboro beat out Fairfield 119-118 for fifth.
Leading the way for coach EJ Brooks’ Comanches were second-place finishers Nick Deloach, Jr. (152), Corron Midgett (170) and Berylonte Shegog (285). Demerious McGill (126) and Correion Midgett (182) took third and Nicholas Scott (106) and Damien Phipps (160) finished fourth.
“My kids battle hard at every weight,” Brooks said. “We are a young team and my inexperienced guys got some much-needed mat time. The tournament was great for my team to build on as we head into the later part of the season. Great win, but we still have work to do.”
Top finishers for coach Shea Baker’s runner-up Red Devils were champions Arojae Hart (138) and Dayton Hoffman (160) and second-place finishers Liam Fox (126) and Patrick Campbell (145) while Kaiden Richards (106) and Bryce Edwards (132) took third place.
Marion also had a pair of champions, Nate Dampier (152) and Kanye Gunn (285). The other 10 title winners were Carlyle’s Tyson Waughtel (106), Harrisburg’s Tony Keene (113), Centralia’s Nate Lecrone (120), Richland County’s Carson Bissey (126), Benton’s Mason Tieffel (132), Anna-Jonesboro’s Caleb Mays (145), Quincy’s Kayden Garrett (170), Mt. Vernon’s Jared Shafer (182), Carbondale’s Aiden Taylor (195) and Glenwood’s Jaidyn Lee (220).
Waughtel (25-0), Keene (20-0), Dampier (27-1), Hart (21-1), Bissey (13-1), Tieffel (31-2), Mays (28-2), Shafer (19-2) and Gunn (18-2) owned some of the top records of champions following the competition.
Other second-place finishers were Carbondale’s Gabriel Roman (120) and Aiden Murphy (138), Anna-Jonesboro’s Drew Sadler (106), Goreville’s Briley Lehmen (113), Herrin’s Blue Bishop (132), Highland’s Ben Mitchell (160), Quincy’s Bryor Newbold (182), Harrisburg’s Bryant Lester (195) and Mt. Zion’s Remington Hiser (220).
Two of the closest title matches were at 160, where Hoffman edged Mitchell 2-0 in sudden victory, and at 195, where Taylor captured a 5-4 triumph over Lester.
Keene, Lecrone, Bissey, Dampier, Garrett, Shafer, Lee and Gunn all recorded falls in their title matches while Hart captured his title win by technical fall and Waughtel and Mays both claimed major decisions in the finals.
Also claiming third place finishes were Fairfield’s Konnor Dagg (195), Payton Allen (220) and Jaxon Combs (285), Marion’s Brennan Vogt (113), Frankfort’s Eli Klus (120), Mt. Vernon’s Bradden Davis (138), Benton’s Holden Allsopp (145), Effingham’s Jon Perry (152), Carbondale’s Isaiah Duckworth (160) and Carlyle’s Owen Birkner (170). Allen (22-1) suffered his first loss to champion Lee in the semifinals.
Others finishing in fourth were Frankfort’s Gavin Mann (138), Hunter Stitley (220) and Tutt Braxton (285), Mt. Zion’s Bradley Wilson (120) and Devin Mahan (170), Quincy’s Evan Wakefield (113) and Gage Bringer (195), Anna-Jonesboro’s Brett Smith (126), Highland’s Tyson Rakers (132), Pinckneyville’s Abel Runyon (145), Carbondale’s Brenden Banz (152) and Fairfield’s Landon Stewart (182).
Championship matches at Carbondale’s Murdale Tournament
106 – Tyson Waughtel (Carlyle) over Drew Sadler (Anna-Jonesboro), 9-0
113 – Tony Keene (Harrisburg) over Briley Lehman (Goreville), F 1:07
120 – Nate Lecrone (Centralia) over Gabriel Roman (Carbondale), F 4:23
126 – Carson Bissey (Richland County) over Liam Fox (Murphysboro), F 5:26
132 – Mason Tieffel (Benton) over Blue Bishop (Herrin), M. Fft
138 – Arojae Hart (Murphysboro) over Aiden Murphy (Carbondale), TF 4:38
145 – Caleb Mays (Anna-Jonesboro) over Patrick Campbell (Murphysboro), 11-0
152 – Nate Dampier (Marion) over Nick Deloach, Jr. (Cahokia), F 3:54
160 – Dayton Hoffman (Murphysboro) over Ben Mitchell (Highland), SV 2-0
170 – Kayden Garrett (Quincy) over Corron Midgett (Cahokia), F 4:54
182 – Jared Shafer (Mt. Vernon) over Bryor Newbold (Quincy), F 1:37
195 – Aiden Taylor (Carbondale) over Bryant Lester (Harrisburg), 5-4
220 – Jaidyn Lee (Glenwood) over Remington Hiser (Mt. Zion), F 1:09
285 – Kanye Gunn (Marion) over Berylonte Shegog (Cahokia), F 3:42
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Freeport claims top honors at Polo Invitational
Freeport captured six titles and had another finalist among its nine participants to help it capture the title at the 16-team Polo Invitational with 195 points while Genoa-Kingston took second place with 130 points and the host Marcos finished third with 116 points. Richmond-Burton edged Parkview/Albany of Wisconsin 99-98.5 for fourth place.
Winning titles for coach Anthony Dedmond’s Pretzels were Cadence Diduch (120), Markel Baker (126), Tyler Calam (132), Jaylon Hail (145), Tarrone Jackson (152) and Braxton Castle (182) while Donavyn Fernandez (160) claimed second place.
Diduch (13-3), who captured Fargo and IWCOA girls titles in the summer, won her second title this season in a boys tournament, after also taking first at Rockford East, where unbeaten Baker (15-0), an IWCOA champion and 2020 IHSA runner-up, joined her as a title winner. Baker received the Outstanding Wrestler Award for the lower weights while Diduch continues to impress in boys competition.
“Markel Baker was the lower level Most Valuable wrestler,” Dedmond said. “And Cadence Diduch won at 120 pounds, pinning her opponent in the finals. I believe she may be the first female to win this tournament. We took nine wrestlers and ended with six champions. I am extremely happy with our effort, even through these difficult times.”
Leading the way for coach Ashton Brown’s runner-up Cogs was champion Aiden Vasak (160) and second-place finishers Nathan Dutton (145) and Brady Brewick (152). Placing third were Patrick Young (106), Shayden McNew (113) and Michael Sauber (182) while Julian Torres (195) finished fourth.
Winning titles for Richmond-Burton were Clay Madula (106) and Emmett Nelson (113) while Fulton got titles from Ben Fosdick (138) and Zane Pannell (170) and champions for Erie/Prophetstown were Andrew Bomleny (195) and Elijah Friedrichsen (285). Parkview/Albany’s Wesley Egan (220) also won a title.
Champions with the best records by win percentage include Baker (15-0), Friedrichsen (18-1), Nelson (20-2), Pannell (21-3), Bomleny (17-3), Jackson (16-3), Diduch (13-3) and Hail (12-3).
Other second-place finishers were Oregon’s Lane Halverson (132), Seth Stevens (138) and Evan Flaharty (285), Lisle’s Ryan Hsu (106) and Joe Raineri (195), Polo’s Wyatt Doty (126) and Wyatt Queckboerner (182), North Boone’s Gavin Ekberg (113), Richmond-Burton’s Dalton Youngs (120), Durand’s Logan Braun (170) and Harvest Christian’s Jacob Janisko (220).
In the narrowest title victory, Bomleny edged Raineri 2-1 at 195 while Calam won 9-6 over Halverson at 132, Fosdick captured a 7-4 victory over Stevens at 138 and Vasak was a 7-4 winner over Fernandez at 160.
Nelson, Diduch, Hail, Jackson, Egan and Friedrichsen won titles by fall, Pannell was a winner by technical fall and Baker and Castle claimed major decisions.
Others who claimed third-place finishes were West Carroll’s Noah Rannow (120), Richmond-Burton’s Dane Sorensen (126), Oregon’s Anthony Bauer (145), Polo’s Braydon Altherr (152), Lisle’s Diego Lopez (160), Jefferson’s Karlondo Dubois (195), Erie/Prophetstown’s Nick Ballard (220) and North Boone’s Ethan Delgado (285).
Also taking fourth were Polo’s Lucas Nelson (132), Nicholas Cain (160), Wayde Reimer (170) and Blake Diehl (220), Lisle’s Brady Collins (126) and Norbert Guzik (138), Harvest Christian’s Sam Macek (106), Oregon’s Griffin Marlatt (113), Durand’s Ethan Foster (120), Dakota’s Tristen Alexander (145), Richmond-Burton’s Stephen Tower (152) and North Boone’s Garrett Louis (182).
Championship matches at Polo Invitational
106 – Clay Madula (Richmond-Burton) over Ryan Hsu (Lisle), 11-5
113 – Emmett Nelson (Richmond-Burton) over Gavin Ekberg (North Boone), F 3:10
120 – Cadence Diduch (Freeport) over Dalton Youngs (Richmond-Burton), F 3:55
126 – Markel Baker (Freeport) over Wyatt Doty (Polo), 14-4
132 – Tyler Calam (Freeport) over Lane Halverson (Oregon), 9-6
138 – Ben Fosdick (Fulton) over Seth Stevens (Oregon), 7-4
145 – Jaylon Hail (Freeport) over Nathan Dutton (Genoa-Kingston), F 1:18
152 – Tarrone Jackson (Freeport) over Brady Brewick (Genoa-Kingston), F 0:52
160 – Aiden Vasak (Genoa-Kingston) over Donavyn Fernandez (Freeport), 7-4
170 – Zane Pannell (Fulton) over Logan Braun (Durand), TF
182 – Braxton Castle (Freeport) over Wyatt Queckboerner (Polo), 16-8
195 – Andrew Bomleny (Erie/Prophetstown) over Joe Raineri (Lisle), 2-1
220 – Wesley Egan (Parkview/Albany, WI) over Jacob Janisko (Harvest Christian), F 1:30
285 – Elijah Friedrichsen (Erie/Prophetstown) over Evan Flaharty (Oregon), F 1:53
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Geneseo finishes first at Morton’s Bob and Liz Schnarr Invitational
Zachary Montez and Anthony Montez each won their third-straight tournament titles and Tim Stohl added another championship to help Geneseo claim top honors with 215.5 points in Morton’s 16-team Bob and Liz Schnarr Invitational.
Coach Jon Murray’s Maple Leafs won their second title, also taking first on December 4 at Rockford East’s Giardini and they were fifth at Hinsdale Central’s Whitlatch two weeks later. Geneseo opened the season at Antioch’s DeRousse, where it took seventh and Anthony was second and Zachary took third.
Normal West claimed second place with 185.5 points while Triad scored 158 points to finish in third place with Normal Community (143.5), Central DeWitt of Iowa (135.5) and the host Potters (103) rounding out the top-six teams.
Finishing second for Geneseo was Jack Snyder (132) and Levi Neumann (285) while Carson Raya (126) and Harrison Neumann (170) were third and Josh Hock (145) and Aiden Damewood (152) finished fourth.
Top performers for coach Adam Richards’ runner-up Wildcats were champions Austin Johnston (126) and Brock Leenerman (182) and second-place finishers Cody Sears (138) and Ben Smith (195) while Matt Bicknell (113), Froylan Racey (120), Xavier Edwards (152) and Noah Passoni (160) all took third place.
Other champions were Triad’s Colby Crouch (120), Chase Hall (138) and Aiden Postma (145), Normal Communuity’s Cole Gentsch (106) and Cooper Caraway (195), Mascoutah’s Santino Robinson (132) and Logan Will (170) and Central DeWitt’s Carter Donovan (152) Sam Gravert (285).
Also finishing second were Notre Dame’s Ian Akers (106) and Joey Mushinsky (160), Morton’s Zane Ely (113) and Connor Kidd (120), Normal Community’s Brock Bacus (126) and Matthew Hudelson (182), Lincoln’s Isaac Decker (145), Dunlap’s Nick Mueller (152), Triad’s Landon Tourville (170) and Limestone’s Aydan Trueblood (220).
In one of the biggest title matchups, Crouch pinned Kidd in 2:16 at 120 in a clash of unbeatens. Crouch improved to 21-0 while Kidd suffered his first loss following 21 wins.
And Anthony Montez improved to 27-2 with a 10-2 major decision at 160 over Mushinsky, who hadn’t lost in his first 24 matches.
The closest title matches featured Zachary Montez edging Ely 4-2 at 113, Donovan beating Mueller 8-6 at 152 and Gravert prevailing 4-1 over Levi Neumann at 285.
Other falls in title matches were recorded by Gentsch, Johnston, Robinson, Hall, Postma and Will while Anthony Montez, Leenermam, Caraway and Stohl won major decisions.
Some of the other top records for champions of the competition belong to Gentsch (24-0), Robinson (19-1), Caraway (23-2) and Leenerman (8-1). Others with an .800 win percent or better are second-place finishers Mueller I(15-2), Decker (21-3), Trueblood (13-3), Akers (21-5) and Ely (21-5)
Also placing third were Normal Community’s Caden Correll (106), Morton’s Jamison Almasy (138), Peoria High’s Malachi Washington (195) and Triad’s Matthew Hobbs (285).
Additional fourth-place finishers were Morton’s Caleb Lenning (106) and Owen Gray (195), Normal Community’s Jaren Frankowiak (113) and Dylan Conway (120), Notre Dame’s Jac Couri (126) and Chase Daugherty (132), Lincoln’s Dawson McConnell (160) and Nico Sundeen (182), Peoria High’s Kenny Rutherford (138), Triad’s Nathan Engler (220) and Springfield High’s Shamar Richardson (285).
Championship matches at Morton’s Bob & Liz Schnarr Invitational
106 – Cole Gentsch (Normal Community) over Ian Akers (Notre Dame), F 0:52
113 – Zachary Montez (Geneseo) over Zane Ely (Morton), 4-2
120 – Colby Crouch (Triad) over Connor Kidd (Morton), F 2:16
126 – Austin Johnston (Normal West) over Brock Bacus (Normal Community), F 3:59
132 – Santino Robinson (Mascoutah) over Jack Snyder (Geneseo), F 0:31
138 – Chase Hall (Triad) over Cody Sears (Normal West), F 0:51
145 – Aiden Postma (Triad) over Isaac Decker (Lincoln), F 3:31
152 – Carter Donovan (Central DeWitt) over Nick Mueller (Dunlap), 8-6
160 – Anthony Montez (Geneseo) over Joey Mushinsky (Notre Dame), 10-2
170 – Logan Will (Mascoutah) over Landon Tourville (Triad), F 4:48
182 – Brock Leenerman (Normal West) over Matthew Hudelson (Normal Community), 16-5
195 – Cooper Caraway (Normal Community) over Ben Smith (Normal West), 13-4
220 – Tim Stohl (Geneseo) over Aydan Trueblood (Limestone), 12-4
285 – Sam Gravert (Central DeWitt) over Levi Neumann (Geneseo), 4-1
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Sandwich captures title at Prairie Central Hawk Classic
Sandwich had three champions and two second-place finishers to easily capture the title of Prairie Central’s 36th annual Hawk Classic in Fairbury.
Coach Derek Jones’ Indians won their first tournament title of the season after scoring 199.5 points. Beardstown edged Hoopeston Area 137-134.5 for second place in the 12-team event while the host Hawks were fourth with 128 points to finish just ahead of El Paso-Gridley (127) and Camp Point Central (123).
Winning titles for Sandwich, whose previous-best finish was second-place at Plano, were Evan Reilly (138), Aidan Linden (152) and Alex Alfaro (182) while Miles Corder (126) and Bryce Decker (160) placed second. Ashlyn Strenz (106), Nolan Bobee (145) and Connor Holly (195) took third while Kadin Kern (120) and Sy Smith (132) were fourth.
“We wrestled tough,” Jones said. “A couple years ago we took home second and many of the same kids were competing today. I knew we were capable of bringing home some hardware if we wrestled up to our ability.
“Evan Reilly is one of the many senior leaders in the program and he makes my job easy as a coach. He needs to finish the season strong, but has all the ability in the world to make it on the podium in Champaign. Alex Alfaro is another kid that makes my job easy. He spent less than three minutes on the mat, pinning every kid in the first period on his way to the title.
“Aidan Linden is stepping up as the vocal leader of the team this year. He is doing and saying many of the correct things. He wants to finish his career and cement his legacy in the strong Sandwich Tradition of wrestling. He has already put his name in the record books here at Sandwich and will continue to succeed on the wrestling mat. He teched his way through the tournament.
“We wrestled with 11 scoring wrestlers at the tournament, but we will, if everything goes correctly, wrestle with all 14 weights come IHSA Regionals. We are still getting some kids back at 113 and 285. I am excited to see what we can do as a full lineup come the IHSA State Series.
Leading the way for coach Joe Kolb’s runner-up Tigers were champion Owen O’Hara (285) and second-place finisher Alex Dieme (145). Taking third place were Bryan Gil (132) and Jacob Hoffman (182) while Luis De La Cruz (113) and Wyatt Petersen (160) both finished fourth.
Other champions were Ridgeview’s Danny Tay (113), Payton Campbell (126) and Evan Antonio (220), Hoopeston Area’s Talon Nelson (120), Angel Zamora (160) and Abel Colunga (170), Cumberland’s Hank Warfel (106), Herscher’s Austin Grise (132), El Paso-Gridley’s Dax Gentes (145) and Prairie Central’s Connor Steidinger (195). Sandwich’s Reilly was the OWA for the lower weights while Hoopeston Area’s Colunga received that honor for the upper weights.
Also claiming second-place finishes were Cumberland’s Iysten Syfert (170), Colby Ryan (195) and Noah Carl (285), Richwoods’ Colton Boyer (106) and Jeremiah LeFlore (120), Camp Point Central’s Jack Thompson (113) and Conner Griffin (152), Prairie Central’s Donavan Lewis (132), El Paso-Gridley’s Waylon Melick (138), Ridgeview’s Connor Feit (182) and Plano’s Andrew Harrelson (220).
Only two of the title matches were decisions and just one was a close one, at 126, where Campbell edged Corder 3-2. Recording falls were Nelson, Grise, Gentes, Zamora, Colunga, Alfaro, Steidinger, Antonio and O’Hara while Tay pinned Thompson in a pool match and Linden got a win by technical fall. Reilly won a major decision and Warfel came up one point shy of doing the same.
Some of the champions who possess the best records are Steidinger (19-0), O’Hara (16-0), Colunga (28-1), Antonio (23-1), Gentes (21-2), Reilly (20-2), Linden (31-3), Zamora (24-3), Warfel (22-4) and Campbell (21-4). Among the best records for second-place finishers are Carl (24-3), Ryan (23-3) and Syfert (24-4).
Also turning in third-place finishes were El Paso-Gridley’s Logan Gibson (120) and Tyler Roth (126), Prairie Central’s Jerome Brown (138) and Owen Steidinger (170), Plano’s Gio Diaz (152) and Alex Diaz (285), Richwoods’ Rykis Doss (113), Illini West’s Shawn Watkins (160) and Hoopeston Area’s Hunter Cannon (220).
Other fourth-place finishers were Richwoods’ Bernard Cox (126), Mike Vincent (152) and Connor McDonald (170), Camp Point Central’s Paul Schenck (106) and Konnor Bush (145), El Paso-Gridley’s Parker Duffy (182) and JJ Evans (285), Illini West’s Jacob Carpenter (138), Plano’s Carnell Walls (195) and Prairie Central’s Duane Lewis (220).
Championship matches at the Prairie Central Hawk Classic
106 – Hank Warfel (Cumberland) over Colton Boyer (Richwoods), 7-0
113 – Danny Tay (Ridgeview) over Jack Thompson (Camp Point Central), F 3:14 (pool)
120 – Talon Nelson (Hoopeston Area) over Jeremiah LeFlore (Richwoods), F 5:27
126 – Payton Campbell (Ridgeview) over Miles Corder (Sandwich), 3-2
132 – Austin Grise (Herscher) over Donavan Lewis (Prairie Central), F 5:24
138 – Evan Reilly (Sandwich) over Waylon Melick (El Paso-Gridley), 13-4
145 – Dax Gentes (El Paso-Gridley) over Alex Dieme (Beardstown), F 1:49
152 – Aidan Linden (Sandwich) over Conner Griffin (Camp Point Central), TF 2:25
160 – Angel Zamora (Hoopeston Area) over Bryce Decker (Sandwich), F 3:35
170 – Abel Colunga (Hoopeston Area) over Iysten Syfert (Cumberland), F 1:27
182 – Alex Alfaro (Sandwich) over Connor Feit (Ridgeview), F 0:49
195 – Connor Steidinger (Prairie Central) over Colby Ryan (Cumberland), F 1:51
220 – Evan Antonio (Ridgeview) over Andrew Harrelson (Plano), F 3:40
285 – Owen O’Hara (Beardstown) over Noah Carl (Cumberland), F 4:43
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Seneca wins championship at rescheduled Irish Invite
While the field was significantly different from the Seneca Irish Invite that was scheduled for early December, that proved to be just fine for both the hosts and several of the other top finishers in the 12-team event.
Seneca beat Kewanee 183.5-170 for top honors while Pontiac took third with 139 points. Illiana Christian, Ottawa and University High rounded out the top half of the field.
Leading the way for coach Todd Yegge’s champion Fighting Irish were champions Robby Nelson (132), Owen Feiner (145) and Chris Peura (195), second-place finishers Kyler Hahn (106), Tommy Milton (113), Bill Farcus (120), Will Milton (138) and Kyle Hamby (170). Finishing third were Nate Othon (132) and Ryan Flynn (138) while Jaden Casey (126) and Alex Bogner (220) were fourth.
Top performers for coach Charley Eads’ runner-up Boilermakers were title winners Nathaniel Hampton (120), Max Kelly (138) and Kadin Rednour (152) and second-place finishers Hayden Davis (126) and Will Taylor (132) while Waylan Lambert (113) and Jaxson Hicks (160) both finished third.
Somonauk’s Shea Reisel captured her second invitational title of the season in a boys tournament to add to her first at Plano, where she won the OWA for the lower weights.
Also winning titles were Pontiac’s Aidan Scholwin (106) and Hunter Travis (170), University High’s Isaiah Im (220) and Hunter Otto (285), Marian Catholic’s Joey Baranski (126), Putnam County’s Connor Brooker (160) and Eureka’s Landon Wierenga (182).
Others who finished second were Pontiac’s Dylan Ramsey (145), Jackson Crawford (182), Hunter Melvin (195) and Iziah Wright (285), University High’s Zach Gross (152), Deer Creek-Mackinaw’s Gage Sweckard (160) and Ottawa’s Ryan Wilson (220).
The closest title match was at 152 where Rednour claimed a 4-2 decision over Gross. Recording falls on the title mat were Reisel, Hampton, Kelly and Otto while Wierenga, Peura and Im all won titles in a pool formal with three falls. Getting wins by technical fall were Feiner and Travis while Baranski and Nelson won major decisions and Brooker fell one point short of getting a major decision.
As the result of teams having more than one individual entered at a number of weight classes, Seneca and Pontiac had two of the top three placewinners at three weights. Seneca took first and third at 132 and second and third at 138. while Pontiac finished second and third at 285.
With the rescheduled tournament happening over a month after its original date, there were naturally several different schools that took part who would not have been on hand on December 4. That includes all of the teams who finished between second- and fifth-place and even featured an out-of-state squad, Illiana Christian, which was an Illinois school located in Lansing from 1945-2018, when it relocated across the border to Dyer, Indiana.
Also claiming third-place finishes were Ottawa’s Jack Huggins (106) and Matt Finley (195), Illina’s Alex Bosman (152) and Gage Bambic (182), Pontiac’s Aaron Shrewsbury (220) and Kaden Gregory (285), Eureka’s Garrett Kean (120), Somonauk’s Aiden Rowan (126), Deer-Creek Mackinaw’s Justice Rockhold (145) and Marian’s Lloyd Mills (170).
Additional fourth-place finishers were Illiana’s Jorge Bosio (120), Benjamin Bruinsma (145), Marc Rozendal (160) and Graham Goodfellow (195), Marian’s Ian Toosevich (113) and Tanner Clasen (170), Ottawa’s Nico Stanfil (132), Deer Creek-Mackinaw’s Peyton Hixon (138), Eureka’s Derrick Wiles (152), Pontiac’s Santi Pina (182) and Putnam County’s Alex Johll (285).
Championship matches at Seneca’s Irish Invitational
106 – Aidan Scholwin (Pontiac) over Kyler Hahn (Seneca), 7-4 (pool)
113 – Shea Reisel (Somonauk) over Tommy Milton (Seneca), F 1:15
120 – Nathaniel Hampton (Kewanee) over Bill Farcus (Seneca), F 3:23
126 – Joey Baranski (Marian Catholic) over Hayden Davis (Kewanee), 9-0
132 – Robby Nelson (Seneca) over Will Taylor (Kewanee), 10-1
138 – Max Kelly (Kewanee) over Will Milton (Seneca), F 0:31
145 – Owen Feiner (Seneca) over Dylan Ramsey (Pontiac), TF
152 – Kadin Rednour (Kewanee) over Zach Gross (University High), 4-2
160 – Connor Brooker (Putnam County) over Gage Sweckard (Deer Creek-Mackinaw), 8-1
170 – Hunter Travis (Pontiac) over Kyle Hamby (Seneca), TF
182 – Landon Wierenga (Eureka) over Jackson Crawford (Pontiac), F 3:29 (pool)
195 – Chris Peura (Seneca) over Hunter Melvin (Pontiac), F 2:20 (pool)
220 – Isaiah Im (University High) over Ryan Wilson (Ottawa), F 2:22 (pool)
285 – Hunter Otto (University High) over Iziah Wright (Pontiac), F 0:41
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Lockport finishes fourth at the Cheesehead Invitational
Lockport scored 523.5 points to finish fourth in the 28-team Cheesehead Invitational that was held in Kaukauna, Wisconsin, falling 3.5 points behind the third-place team, Millard South of Nebraska. Simley of Minnesota won the title with 642.5 points while Southeast Polk of Iowa was second with 600 points.
Joliet Catholic Academy took seventh with 422.5 points, Yorkville Christian beat Edwardsville 236-232.5 for 16th and Aurora Christian was 21st with 202.5 points.
Leading the way for coach Josh Oster’s fourth-place Porters were championBrayden Thompson (170) while Andrew Blackburn-Forst (220) took third place. David Vukobratovich (113) finished fourth, Keegan Roberson (145)took fifth, Nore Turner (106), Carlos Munoz-Flores (132) and Paul Rasp (182) all placed sixth, Paul Kadlec (160) was seventh and Aidan Nolting (195) finished eighth. Two years ago, Blackburn-Forst also took third while Roberson and Munoz-Flores both placed seventh.
Thompson, who improved to 26-0, captured a 1-0 decision over Millard South’s Antrell Taylor in the 170 title match after claiming a 6-4 semifinals victory over Kasson-Mantorville’s Cole Glazier after opening the tournament with four-straight falls. Four other Porters lost in the semifinals, Turner, Vukobratovich, Roberson and Blackburn-Forst. And four were beaten in the quarterfinals, Munoz-Flores, Kadlec, Rasp and Nolting.
Coach Ryan Cumbee’s seventh-place Hilltoppers were paced by champion Dillan Johnson (285), second-place finishers Gylon Sims (113) and Mason Alessio (145), fourth-place finisher Owen Gerdes (220) and ninths from Shay Korhorn (126) and Owen O’Connor (138). Two years ago, Sims finished fifth in the tournament.
In title matches, Johnson won a 17-6 major decision over Stoughton’s Griffin Empey at 285 while Sims dropped an 8-5 decision to Millard South’s Miles Anderson at 113 and Alessio lost a 3-2 decision to Southeast Polk’s Joel Jesuroga at 145. Gerdes fell in the quarterfinals.
Johnson followed four-consecutive falls with a 13-3 major decision in the semifinals over Amery’s Robert Beese. Sims opened with two falls, a win by technical fall and a major decision before capturing a 4-1 decision over Wisconsin Rapids’ Preston Spray in the semifinals. And Alessio had a win by technical, a default and two close decisions to advance him to the semifinals, where he won a 7-4 decision over Lockport’s Keegan Roberson.
Aurora Christian received third-place efforts from Braden Stauffenberg (152) and Nathan Wemstrom (195) and a seventh-place showing from Deven Casey (106). Stauffenberg and Wemstrom both advanced to the semifinals while Casey reached the quarterfinals match.
Leading Edwardsville were third-place finisher Dylan Gvillo (138) and sixth-place finishers Jorden Johnson (152) and Evan Holderer (195). Gvillo and Johnson both lost in the semifinals while Holderer fell in the quarterfinals.
Yorkville Christian was led by eighth-place efforts from Tyler Martinez (160) and Michael Esquivel (285) and a ninth from Jackson Gillen (170). Esquivel and Martinez both lost in the quarterfinals while Gillen won four-straight matches in the consolation bracket.
Montini Catholic’s top finisher was Jayden Colon (145), who took fourth place after winning twice in the consolation bracket following a quarterfinals loss.
Some of the individuals from the competition who have win percentages of .800 or better are Thompson (26-0), Dillan Johnson (16-0), Stauffenberg (29-3), Gvillo (27-3), Alessio (18-3), Gillen (26-4), Vukobratovich (19-4), Sims (17-4), Wemstrom (24-5) and Jorden Johnson (25-6).
Championship matches at the Cheesehead Invitational (involving Illinois athletes)
113 – Miles Anderson (Millard South, NE) over Gylon Sims (Joliet Catholic Academy), 8-5
145 – Joel Jesuroga (Southeast Polk, IA) over Mason Alessio (Joliet Catholic Academy), 3-2
170 – Brayden Thompson (Lockport) over Antrell Taylor (Millard South, NE), 1-0
285 – Dillan Johnson (Joliet Catholic Academy) over Griffin Empey (Stoughton, WI), 17-6
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Washington takes fourth place at The Clash XIX Duals
Washington took fourth place in Bracket A behind champion Waverly-Shell Rock, Iowa, runner-up Apple Valley, Minnesota and third-place Owatonna, Minnesota at The Clash XIX Duals, which took place in LaCrosse, Wisconsin.
In Bracket B, Huntley placed seventh and in Bracket C, Hersey finished third while Glenbard North took sixth.
Coach Nick Miller’s fourth-place Panthers beat G-E-T/Melrose-Mindoro, WI 41-27 in the quarterfinals before falling 46-29 to Apple Valley in the semifinals and 42-27 to Owatonna for third place. Leading Washington were Kannon Webster (132/138) and Tyler Casey (220), who both went 6-0, and posting 5-1 records were Peyton Cox (120/126) and Justin Hoffer (195).
Huntley won its first three duals but then lost in the quarterfinals to Shakopee, MN and in the consolation round to Northfield, MN. Leaders for the Red Raiders were Sam Henkle (132) and Ryder Hunkins (182), who both finished 5-0 while Alessio Pezzela (145) went 4-1.
Hersey beat Ankeny Centennial, IA for third and North Scott, IA in the quarterfinals and fell to Saint Michael Albertville, MN in the semifinals. Leading the way for the Huskies were Manny Mejia (220), who went 6-0, and Anthony Cambria (182), who finished 5-1
Glenbard North beat Klein, TX in the consolation semifinals but fell to North Scott, IA for fifth in their bracket and lost to Ankeny Centennial, IA in the quarterfinals. Going 6-0 for Glenbard North were Dominic Marre (113) and Paul Woo (126) while Paulie Robertson (285) finished 5-0.
Abe’s Rumble/ Mid-States Recap
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By Curt Herron
For the IWCOA
Lena-Winslow/Stockton captures title at Abe’s Rumble
Four individuals went 8-0, three more finished 7-1 and another three posted 6-2 records to help Lena-Winslow/Stockton capture the title at the 58-team Abe’s Rumble in Springfield, which concluded on Thursday.
Six of the top-eight teams that were in Rob Sherrill’s IWCOA Class 1A rankings at the time were on hand for the two-day competition in the capital city, No. 1 Tremont, No. 3 Lena-Winslow/Stockton, No. 5 Canton, No. 6 Unity, No. 7 Vandalia and No. 8 Coal City, and all but one of those squads earned top-five positions in the tournament, with Coal City finishing second, Vandalia placing third, Tremont taking fourth and Unity claiming fifth.
Coach Kevin Milder’s Pantherhawks had an average margin of victory of 32.6 points in their eight victories and only one team came within 12 points of them, which happened in the championship dual meet of the Gold Division when they captured a 43-33 win over Coal City.
Lena-Winslow/Stockton, which is now ranked second behind Dixon, defeated Vandalia 37-23 in the semifinals, won 55-15 over El Paso-Gridley in the quarterfinals and opened the championship round with a 47-30 triumph over Canton after claiming a 46-31 victory over Murphysboro. In pool L, the champions won 60-15 over Quincy Notre Dame, 65-0 over Pontiac and 61-6 over Hoopeston Area.
Finishing with 8-0 records for the champions were Garrett Luke (145), Marey Roby (160), Drew Mensendike (195) and Henry Engel (220/285). Three individuals finished 7-1 marks, Griffin Luke (170), Connor Vincent (182) and Mike Haas (220/285) while Carson McPeek (132), Zach White (138) and Jared Dvorak (152) all posted 6-2 records.
“Really proud of the kids and the way they wrestled,” Lena-Winslow/Stockton coach Kevin Milder said. “Great team effort to get through a very tough Abe’s Rumble Tournament. I thought our kids came ready to compete at the start of pool matches and carried it over into the tournament. Very proud of our effort.”
Coal City, who moved up to third in the rankings, reached the championship dual with a 48-22 semifinals win over Tremont, a 36-31 triumph over Unity in the quarterfinals and wins of 51-19 over Rockridge and 59-15 over Monticello. In pool K, it won 60-15 over Canton, 67-6 against St. Joseph-Ogden and 52-17 over Murphysboro.
Coach Mark Masters’ second-place Coalers received a 7-0 performance from Zach Finch (152/160), 7-1 showings from Culan Lindemuth (106) and John Housman (113), a 5-1 effort from Derek Carlson (160/170) and 6-2 records from Blake Dillon (138) and Michael Gonzalez (285) while Landin Benson (152/160) won all three of his matches.
Vandalia, who’s now ranked fifth, defeated Tremont 38-27 to take third place. Before falling 37-23 to Lena-Winslow/Stockton in the semifinals, the Vandals won 48-27 over Seneca in the quarterfinals and beat Oakwood/Salt Fork 51-23 and Warrensburg-Latham/Mt. Pulaski 60-12 to kick off its route to third-place. They won four times in pool F, beating Illini Bluffs, Rockridge, Mt. Zion and Westville/Georgetown-Ridge Farm.
Sophie Bowers went 10-0 at 113 to lead the way for coach Jason Clay’s Vandals. Finishing with 9-1 records were Cutter Prater (138), Eric McKinney (152) and Eric Barenfanger (220/285) while 8-2 marks were posted by Owen Miller (132) and Logan Nance (145) and Jayden Rosetto (220/285) went 7-2.
Tremont, which fell to sixth in the rankings, advanced to the semifinals with a 49-24 win over Oregon in the quarterfinals and wins of 49-21 over Sherrard and 55-18 over Peotone. It also claimed wins over Sparta, Morrison, Clifton Central/Iroquois West and Farmington in pool B.
Leading the way for coach TJ Williams’ Turks were 9-0 finishers Bowden Delaney (120), Lucas Wendling (170) and Cooper Wendling (195/220) while Logan Stedman (160) finished 8-2 and Josiah Grant (126), Mason Mark (132) and Levi Leitner (152) all went 7-2.
Unity, which is now ranked fourth, won 52-27 over El Paso-Gridley to finish fifth after beating Oregon 50-24. Going 9-0 to lead coach Logan Patton’s Rockets were Kaden Inman (120/126), Tavius Hosley (145/152), Grant Albaugh (182), Nick Nosler (195) and Karson Richardson (220/285) while Oran Varela (285) went 7-0, Kyus Root (170) finished 7-2 and Joey Young (106) went 6-2.
El Paso-Gridley bounced back from its quarterfinals loss to Lena-Winslow/Stockton with a 36-30 victory over Seneca before falling to Unity 52-27 in the fifth-place dual. Going 9-0 to lead coach Joe Cliffe’s Titans was Charlene Hamilton (113) while Waylon Melick (138) went 8-1 and Logan Gibson (120), Tyler Roth (126), Conlee Landrus (132), Dax Gentes (145) and Ethan Whitman (7-2) all posted 7-2 records.
Oregon won 42-36 over Seneca to finish seventh. Coach Justin Lahman’s Hawks were led by Lane Halverson (132) and Ethan George (160/170), who both went 8-1 while Anthony Bauer (145/152) finished 7-1 and Gabe Eckerd (160/170) went 7-2. Coach Todd Yegge’s Fighting Irish were led by Kyler Hahn (106), Owen Feiner (145/152) and Chris Peura (195/220), who all went 9-0, and Jaden Casey (120/126), who finished 8-1.
Reed-Custer won 57-24 over Canton to take ninth place. Leading the way for the Comets were 9-0 finishers Ryan Tribble (138) and Kody Marschner (220) while Samuel Begler (126) went 8-1, Gunnar Berg (285) went 7-1 and Rex Pfeifer (170) and Brandon Moorman (182) finished 7-2. And the Little Giants were led by Trevor Hedges (126), who went 7-0, and Joseph Norton (170/182), who finished 6-0 while Andrew Hedges (152) and Danny Murphy (170/182) both went 3-0. Going 6-2 were Trevor Putman (220) and Weston Swise (285).
Macomb edged Oakwood/Salt Fork 42-40 to finish 11th. Going 8-1 for the Bombers were Max Ryner (182) and Ethan Ladd (195) while Cohen Green (113) and Jack Mansfield (120) both finished 7-2. The Comets were paced by 10-0 performances from Carter Chambliss (120/126) and Reef Pacot (132) while Joe Lashuay (160/170) went 10-1, Brayden Edwards (106) finished 8-2 and Brysen Vasquez (160/170) went 7-2.
Stillman Valley won 43-35 over Sherrard to claim 13th place. Aiden Livingston (160/170), Andrew Forcier (182) and Braxton Jennings (220/285) all went 9-0 and Jack Seacrist (152/160) finished 8-0 to lead the Cardinals. Henry Hildreth (120/126) went 7-1 while Mack Jones (106/113) finished 7-2 and Michael Paneralle (106/113) went 6-2. The Tigers were led by Austin Fratzke (138/145), Ryder Roelf (182/195) and Walker Anderson (195/220) who all turned in 9-0 records and Lilly Russell (106), who finished 4-0.
Auburn defeated Rockridge 45-30 for 15th place. Dresden Grimm (132/138) went 8-0 and Cole Edie (285) finished 6-0 to lead the Trojans. Going 7-1 was Skylar Fay (182/195) while Gage Lopez (120/126) and Quinten Chizmar (145/152) both finished 6-2. Leading the Rockets were Reese Finch (145/152), who went 7-0, Nathan Petreikis (182/195), who finished 6-0, and Jude Finch (126/132), who went 7-1.
Clifton Central/Iroquois West won the Silver division title 45-36 over Monticello. Leading the way for the division champion Comets were Kodey Krumweide (145), who went 7-1, while Giacomo Panozzo (285) finished 7-2 and Damian Bailey (160) and Hunter Hull (220) both went 6-2. The Sages received 7-2 efforts from Sam Spencer (106), Tristan Slade (132), Ethan Alexander (170/182) and Myles VonBehren (195/220) while Jaxon Trent (138/145) went 6-2.
Westville/Georgetown-Ridge Farm beat Frankfort Community 45-33 for third place in the Silver division. Rylee Edwards (182/195) went 9-0, Gabe Kiddoo (120/126) finished 7-0 and Camron Stinespring (220) went 7-2 to lead the Tigers. Gavin Mann (138/145) went 9-1 and Hunter Stitley (220) finished 8-2 to lead the Redbirds.
Newman Central Catholic edged Erie/Prophetstown 42-39 for fifth in Silver division. The Comets were led by Carter Rude (126/132), Brendan Tunink (145/152) and Mason Glaudel (152/160), who all went 9-0 while Brady Grennan (126) finished 8-0 and Daniel Kelly (138) and Hunter Luyando (170/182) both went 7-2. Leading the Panthers were Elijah Friedrichsen (285), who finished 9-0, Jaelin Hawkins (106), who went 8-0, and Wyatt Goossens (113), Andrew Bomleny (195) and Nick Ballard (220) who all finished 8-1.
Peotone won 54-18 over Warrensburg-Latham/Mt. Pulaski to finish seventh in the Silver. The Blue Devils were led by Marco Spinazzola (138/145), who went 8-0, and Alejandro Cardenas (220/285), who finished 6-2. Going 8-1 for the Cardinals was Luke Hall (160) and Walker Allen (195) while Vincent Fiore (138) and Austin Stock (182) both went 7-2.
Anna-Jonesboro defeated Beardstown 42-36 for ninth place in the Silver division. The Wildcats was led by Caleb Mays (145/152), who finished 8-0, and TJ Macy (132/138) who went 7-1, while Drew Sadler (106/113) and Zoee Sadler (113) both finished 6-1. The Tigers were led by Owen O’Hara (285), who finished 10-0, and Alex Dieme (145/152), who went 6-2.
Murphysboro claimed a 45-30 win over Benton for 11th place in the Silver division. Top performers for the Red Devils were Kaiden Richards (106/113), who went 8-0, Arojae Hart (138/145), who finished 5-0, Bryce Edwards (132/138), who went 6-1 and Landon Norris (106/113), Liam Fox (126), and Dayton Hoffman (160) who all finished 6-2. Leading the way for the Rangers were Mason Tieffel (126/132), who went 9-0, and Avery Grimes (152), who finished 8-1.
Hoopeston Area won 54-21 over Camp Point Central/Brown County/Southeastern to claim 13th in the Silver division. Leading the Cornjerkers with 7-1 records were Talon Nelson (120), Abel Colunga (170/182) and Hunter Cannon (220/285). The Panthers were led by Jack Thompson (113), who went 8-0, Hayden Hurley (106/113), who finished 4-0, Conner Griffin (152), who went 8-1, and Kanye Mitchell (120), who finished 7-2.
Knoxville defeated Sacred-Heart-Griffin 42-30 for 15th place in the Silver division. Leading the Blue Bullets with a 9-0 record was Hunter Fox (160/170) while Dalton Hutchison (220) went 4-0, Hunter Johnson (106/113) finished 8-1 and William Stowe (285) went 7-2. The Cyclones were led by Cory West (182), who finished 8-0, and Michael Ference (126), who went 7-1.
Lawrenceville/Red Hill beat Roxana 43-36 to take first place in the Bronze division. Leading the way for the Indians with an 8-0 record was Brian Seed (170) while Brianna Richey (106) and Nathan Blackwell (182) went 7-1 and Shaina Hyre (113/120) and Hayden Frey (145/152) finished 6-2. The Shells were led by Hunter Bailey (195) and James Herring (220), who both went 8-0, Lleyton Cobine (126), who finished 7-1, and James Colman (106), Bryan Rodriguez (145/152) and Justin Laws (285), who all went 6-2.
Shelbyville defeated Robinson 42-34 in the third-place match in the Bronze division. Going 8-0 for the Rams was Calvin Miller (120) while Will Fox (145/152) finished 5-1. Morgan Fiscus (120) went 4-0 and Dalton Woods (285) finished 7-1 to lead the Maroons while Keaton Alt (113/120), Jared Hermann (160) and Austin Hargrave (195/220) all went 6-2.
Illini Bluffs captured a 42-36 win over Farmington for fifth in the Bronze division. Leading the way for the Tigers with an 8-0 record was Paul Ishikawa (138/145) while Wyatt Knowles (106/113) went 4-0, Hunter Robbins (106/113), Avery Speck (120/126), Jackson Carroll (126/132) and Ian O’Connor (132/138) all finished 7-1. Posting 8-0 records to lead the Farmers were Keygan Jennings (113/120) and Rese Shymansky (182/195) while Connor Huber (132) and Austin Utt (170/182) both went 6-2.
Quincy Notre Dame beat Dwight/Gardner-South Wilmington 42-36 to take seventh place in the Bronze division. The Raiders were led by Luke Bliven (132/138), who went 5-1. Finishing with a 7-0 record for the Trojans was Samuel Edwards (220) while Austin Burkhardt (170/182) and Evan Sandeno (170/182) both went 5-1.
PORTA/A-C Central/Greenview/Havana won 42-40 over Riverdale for ninth in the Bronze. The Bluejays were led by Trace Shaub (195/220), who went 7-0, and Issac Guinan (285) who went 4-0. Going 8-0 for the Rams were Brock Smith (132/138), Eli Hinde (145), Collin Altensey (152) and Alex Watson (160). Thad Jacobs (113/120) went 6-0, Ethan Mathis (106/113) finished 4-0 and Tharren Jacobs (106/113) went 6-2.
Carlinville won 42-33 over Prairie Central for 11th place in the Bronze division. The Cavaliers were led by Jake Schwartz (145), who went 8-0, while Ronald LaPlante (120) and Noah Byots (160) both finished 6-2. Leading the way for the Hawks was Connor Steidinger (195/220), who finished 8-0, while Drake Clemons (106), Tyler Bippus (138/145), Owen Steidinger (170/182) and Duane Lewis (220/285) all went 6-2.
St. Joseph-Ogden defeated Cumberland/Newton 33-27 for 13th in the Bronze division. Leading the way for the Spartans were Emmitt Holt (113) and Holden Brazelton (120/126), who both went 7-0. Going 8-0 to pace the Pirates was Iysten Syfert (170/182) while Hank Warfel (106/113), Colby Ryan (195/220) and Noah Carl (285) all finished 7-1.
Pontiac captured a 36-30 victory over Mt. Carmel for 15th place in the Bronze division. Hunter Travis (170/182) went 5-1 to lead the Indians.
Olympia/Heyworth defeated Mt. Zion 54-24 for first place in the Copper division. Leading the Spartans were Austin Swan (182), who finished 7-0, Dylan Eimer (106/113), who went 6-1 and Aiden Fosdick (113/120), who finished 4-1. Lawrence Trimble (160) went 5-1 to lead the Braves.
Hillsboro captured a 36-30 victory over Sparta for third in the Copper division. Magnus Wells (220) went 8-0 to lead the Hilltoppers while Zander Wells (152/160) finished 6-2. Leading the Bulldogs were Eli Coop (285), who went 7-1, and Cody Dickerson (195), who finished 6-2.
Litchfield/Mt. Olive defeated Wilmington 42-36 for fifth place in the Copper Division. Alex Powell (106/113) went 8-0 to lead the Purple Panthers while Seth Kenter (160) finished 6-2. The Wildcats were led by Blake Shirey (285), who finished 8-0, while Landon Dooley (120/126) and Jacob Prescott (138) both went 6-2.
Deer Creek-Mackinaw won 33-18 over Walther Christian for eighth in the Copper division. Gage Sweckard (160/170) went 8-0 to lead the Chiefs. Morrison, who also competed in the tournament, was led by Nathan Schaefer (220), who went 5-0, while Camden Pruis (126), Donny Reavy (138) and Kayden White (182) all finished 4-1.
McHenry edges Hersey for Mid-States Classic title
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McHenry edges Hersey for Mid-States Classic title
One-half point. That’s all that separated McHenry and Hersey for top honors at the Mid-States Wrestling Classic that was held in Whitewater, Wisconsin last week.
McHenry captured the championship by a 278-277.5 margin over Hersey while Nicolet, Wisconsin was just behind the leaders and finished third with 274 points.
Ten Illinois squads participated in the 38-team event with Downers Grove South finishing fourth with 221 points while Wauconda took sixth place with 196 points.
Leading the way for coach Jake Guardalabene’s champion Warriors were title winners Chris Moore (160) and Brody Hallin (170) while Luke Zunkel (220) placed third and Pedro Jimenez (126) took fourth. The previous-best showing for McHenry in a tournament was a fourth in Prospect’s Mudge-McMorrow, where it placed one spot behind Hersey.
Moore improved to 26-0 after claiming a 3-1 decision over Poynette’s Cash Stewart in the 160 finals. Moore, who’s first in 3A in the IWCOA rankings, followed a win by technical with two major decisions, including a 14-5 win over Hersey’s Billy Spassov in the semifinals, to earn his trip to the title mat. He won his third title of the season, adding to firsts at Prospect and the Dvorak.
In the 170 title match, Hallin won another close decision, this one 4-3 over Nicolet’s Braeden Ott to improve to 25-1 on the season. Hallin, who’s ranked third in 3A, advanced to his third finals and added to his title win at Prospect when he followed two falls with a 7-1 semifinals win over Whitewater’s Carter Friend.
Zunkel (23-4) recorded two falls before losing in the 220 semifinals to Hersey’s Manny Mejia by a 10-3 score. But then he won his next two matches, beating Wauconda’s Matthew Merevick by a 5-4 score in the third-place match.
Jimenez (20-9) used a major decision, decision and fall to advance to the 126 semifinals, where he lost to the eventual champion, Oconomowoc’s Quintin Wolbert, by an 8-3 score. He won his next match but then lost by fall in 2:42 in the third-place match to Bradley-Bourbonnais’ Levi Greenlee.
“This was a total team win,” Guardalabene said. “We brought 13 wrestlers, 11 of them placed and all 13 scored points.This tournament was won in the wrestlebacks for us.”
Top finishers for coach Joe Rupslauk’s second-place Huskies were runner-up Manny Mejia (220), third-place finishers Esteban Delgado (120) and Oleg Simakov (285) and fourth-place finisher Billy Spassov (160). Hersey just missed adding to the Joliet Central Mac McLaughlin Invite title that it won earlier this season.
Mejia (21-5) advanced to the finals at 220 thanks to a win by technical fall, two pins and a 10-3 semifinals win over McHenry’s Luke Zunkel but he was pinned in 1:46 by Reedsville’s unbeaten Cole Ebert in the finals.
Delgado (22-9) bounced back from a 1-0 quarterfinal loss to New Trier’s Wilson Wright with four-straight wins in the consolation bracket. After winning the first by technical fall, he won the next three by decision, claiming an 8-2 victory over Waukesha North’s Antonio Del Rio to claim third place at 120.
Simakov (23-7) used a fall and a decision to advanced to the 285 semifinals, where he dropped a 1-0 decision to Appleton North’s Ethan Hansen (16-2), who won the championship. Simakov responded with a pair of wins, including a 3-2 decision over Nicolet’s Max Stulmacher in the third-place match.
Spassov (20-4) also advanced to the 160 semifinals, where he lost 15-4 to Moore. After beating Harvard’s Bailey Livdahl 11-1 in the consolation semifinals, he lost the third-place match 9-0 to Union Grove’s Cooper Willis.
Other Illinois champions were Bradley-Bourbonnais’ Ethan Spacht (106), Morton’s Connor Kidd (120) and New Trier’s Jack Cummings (195).
Spacht (8-0), who’s ranked sixth in 3A, won all four of his matches by fall, recording three of those in the opening period, including in the 106 championship match which he won with a pin in 1:32 over Round Lake’s Grayson Kongkaeow to capture his first title of the season.
Kidd (18-0) advanced to the 120 title mat with three-straight falls and then captured a 14-2 major decision over New Trier’s Wilson Wright for the championship. Kidd, who’s ranked fourth in 2A, also won titles at Joliet Central and Mascoutah.
Cummings (19-2) got falls in his first two matches and then won 11-4 over Downers Grove South’s Noah Rapinchuk in the semifinals before capturing a dramatic 5-3 overtime win in the 195 finals over Appleton North’s Brock Arndt. Cummings, who’s ranked sixth in 3A, won a title at Antioch earlier this season.
Round Lake’s Grayson Kongkaeow (19-6) was pinned in 1:32 by Spacht in the 106 finals. Kongkaeow, who’s best previous finishes this season were thirds at Conant and Prospect, beat Harvard’s Brian Hernandez 13-6 in two overtimes in the quarterfinals and won 11-5 over Wauconda’s Lucas Galdine in the semifinals.
New Trier’s Wilson Wright (16-4) fell 14-2 to Kidd in the 120 finals. He followed a fall with a 1-0 decision over Hersey’s Esteban Delgado and claimed a 10-5 decision over Downers Grove South’s Donnie Fields to reach the finals for the second time this season, with Antioch being the other.
Downers Grove South’s Jimmy Nugent (19-5) recorded falls in his first three matches to reach the 145 title mat, where he lost 12-4 to Cedar Grove-Belgium’s unbeaten Cael Erickson. This was the best finish this season for Nugent, who’s seventh in 3A at 138, placing one spot better than he did at Hinsdale Central.
Round Lake got a second finalist when Aidan McCain (21-5) reached the finals at 182, where he fell 11-5 to Delavan-Darien’s unbeaten Cole Hanson. McCain recorded four-straight falls, with one in 3:37 over Johnsburg’s Kyle Rasper in the semifinals. McCain equaled his best showing of the season, a second at Prospect.
Other third-place finishers from Illinois schools were Wauconda’s Lucas Galdine (14-3) at 106, Bradley-Bourbonnais’ Levi Greenlee (16-5) at 126, Morton’s Steven Marvin (19-4) at 132, Downers Grove South’s Luke Swan (21-4) at 138, Bradley-Bourbonnais’ AJ Mancilla (21-2) at 170, Downers Grove South’s Will Schuessler (21-6) at 182 and Harvard’s Nathan Rosas (18-1) at 195.
Additional Illinois competitors who finished fourth were Round Lake’s Alejandro Cordova (20-10) at 113, Johnsburg’s Landon Johnson (11-5) at 132, Wauconda’s Colin Husko (17-2) at 145, Downers Grove South’s Noah Rapinchuk (12-8) at 195 and Wauconda’s Matthew Merevick (15-5) at 220.
Fifth-place finishers from Illinois were Morton’s Zane Ely (17-4) at 113, Downers Grove South’s Donnie Fields (18-8) at 120, Harvard’s Ivan Rosas (13-2) at 145 and New Trier’s Matthew Boyer (20-3) at 152.
Brownsburg, Indiana dominates Saint Thomas More New Year’s Challenge
With a team that has been ranked as high as tenth nationally in the field, the story of The New Year’s Challenge for Illinois teams was basically who would finish in second place.
Brownsburg, ranked second in Indiana and 13th nationally, completely dominated the 18-team competition in Danville that is hosted by The High School of Saint Thomas More in Champaign, winning each of its six duals by an average of 56.8 points.
In the championship dual meet, the Bulldogs forfeited at two weights and recorded nine falls and had a win by technical fall to claim a 68-12 victory over Ridgeview/Lexington.
Other than forfeits, Brownsburg only lost five matches with three of those coming on pins in their closest victory, a 59-18 win over Mattoon, on the opening day of the event.
But while the Green Wave was one of eight teams to advance to the championship bracket, they lost 42-39 to Ridgeview/Lexington in the quarterfinals and took sixth place.
Even with its close victory over Mattoon, Ridgeview/Lexington won its first five duals by an average of 36.6 points. It advanced to the title meet with a 62-9 victory over Mahomet-Seymour’s junior-varsity team. It was the best tournament showing of the season for the Colfax school that co-ops with Lexington, topping a fifth-place effort at Clinton. On the first day of the event, the second-place finishers beat Bismarck-Henning Rossville-Alvin Cooperative/Armstrong, Pittsfield and North Boone.
The top performer in the competition for coach Jeremy Lopshire’s runner-up Mustangs was Evan Antonio, who won all six of his matches at 220. Daniel York went 5-1 at 106 and Caeden Lopshire finished 4-1 at 160.
East Alton-Wood River avenged an earlier defeat when it edged Mahomet-Seymour’s JV 37-36 to claim third place to go 5-2 in the competition. The Oilers nipped Attica of Indiana 37-36 in the quarterfinals before falling 54-6 to Brownsburg in the semifinals.
On the first day, coach Tim Donohoo’s team claimed victories over Clinton, Westosha Central of Wisconsin and Illinois Valley Central while falling to Mahomet-Seymour’s JV.
Leading the Oilers was Jason Shaw (126), who went 7-0, while Aaron Niemeyer (113) and Tyler Adams (120) both went 6-1.
Mahomet-Seymour’s JV also had a good tournament, claiming wins over Illinois Valley Central, Clinton, East Alton-Wood River and Westosha Central on the first day and edging Seeger, Indiana 34-33 to help it go 5-2 over the two days.
Leading the Bulldogs were Caleb Bundren, who went 4-0 at 138 and 145, Hayden Hart (170/182), who finished 3-0, Lukas Altstetter (106/113), who went 6-1 and Deandre Hughey (145/152), who finished 5-1.
Bismarck-Henning Rossville-Alvin Cooperative/Armstrong beat Mattoon 45-33 to take fifth place. After falling to Brownsburg in the quarterfinals, the Blue Devils defeated Attica, Indiana 51-24. On the first day, it beat North Boone and Pittsfield and fell to Ridgeview.
Top performers for Bismarck-Henning Rossville-Alvin Cooperative/Armstrong were Landen Toellner (106) and Gavin Golden (195), who both finished 5-1.
Following its loss in the quarterfinals to Ridgeview, Mattoon beat Seeger 48-30 but then fell in its final match to take sixth. The Green Wave went 2-1 on the first day with wins over Alleman and Edwardsville’s JV while falling to Brownsburg.
Leading the way for Mattoon was Aidan Blackburn (152), Aidan Spurgeon (195) and Leo Meyer (220/285), who all finished 6-0, Brady Foster (120), Mick Porter (138) and Kiefer Duncan (145), who all went 5-1 and Ben Capitosti (132), who finished 4-1.
Clinton was led by Trevor Willis (152), who went 8-0, as well as Cayden Poole (126) and Tyler Fair (132/138), who finished 7-1, and Kristan Hibbard (160), who went 6-2.
Top performers for Edwardsville’s junior-varsity were Max Miller (160/170), who went 4-0, Jayden Cole (113), who finished 6-1, Ben Weakley (170/182), who went 5-1 and Nick Helton (145), who finished 4-1.
Leading the way for North Boone were Maysen Smith (138/145) and Logan Witte (138/145), who both went 6-1, and Garrett Louis (182), who finished 5-1.
Top performers for Saint Thomas More were Brody Cuppernell (195) and Henry Wurl (220), who both finished 6-0, and Joe Clavey (152), who went 5-1.
Mason Davis (170/182) went 7-0 to pace Pittsfield while Tucker Cook (182/195) finished 5-1. And Alleman’s Charlie Jagusah (285) also went 7-0.
Civic Memorial takes second at Diamond State Duals
Civic Memorial fell 46-29 to Willard, Missouri in the championship dual meet of the 14-team Diamond State Duals in Springdale, Arkansas last week
The Eagles won seven dual meets by an average of 42.1 points with the closest being a 51-30 victory over Har-Ber, Arkansas before falling in the finals. Coach Jeremy Christeson’s squad, which won titles at its own invite and at Mascoutah, captured a 54-20 semifinals victory over Arlington, Tennessee to advance to the title meet of an event that featured teams from five different states.
Leading the way for Civic Memorial was Abe Wojcikiewicz (170/182), who went 8-0. Finishing with 7-1 records were Bradley Ruckman (106/113), Joey Biciocchi (132/138), Bryce Griffin (138/145) and Michael Bridgeman (220), while Colton Carlisle (182/195) finished 6-1, Logan Cooper (285) went 4-1 and Ben Skaggs (145/152) finished 6-2.
In the title meet, Willard won four of the first five matches to take an early 19-6 advantage. Wojcikiewicz, Cooper and Biciocchi all recorded falls, Ruckman won by technical fall and Aiden Turner got a win by forfeit. The Eagles won five of the first seven matches in the semifinals to grab an early 27-12 lead and closed with wins in the last four matches.
Short-handed DeKalb captures Flavin Invite
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By Curt Herron
For the IWCOA
DEKALB – When a team faces the prospect of being without four individuals that it hoped to be competing on the final day of a major tournament, it’s a good bet that their chances of winning a championship will be greatly diminished.
That’s just the scenario that DeKalb faced on Thursday at its own Flavin Invite but instead of making excuses for the disappointing turn of events, it found a way to defeat three quality opponents, with two of those victories coming in dramatic fashion.
The Barbs followed up on a 42-24 win over 2019 champion Mukwonago of Wisconsin with a 35-31 victory over Father Ryan of Tennessee and then wrapped up the title of the Champion’s pool of the 26-team tournament with a 33-32 triumph over Marist. On the first day of the invite, DeKalb captured a 73-3 win over Pewaukee of Wisconsin and won 50-24 over Glenbard West.
It was a clutch performance for a program that’s second in Class 3A in Rob Sherrill’s IWCOA rankings. Coach Sam Hiatt’s Barbs not only needed to claim a win in the final march against Father Ryan but could afford to lose by no more than a decision in the last match of their dual meet against coach Brendan Heffernan’s 3A fifth-ranked RedHawks.
That capped a 5-0 showing over the two days for DeKalb, a program which placed fourth in the Class 3A dual team finals in 2019 and qualified again for state in 2020. Winning a title at their own Flavin Invite, named for the man who started the Barbs’ program and also coached at Northern Illinois University, 1977 IWCOA hall of famer Don Flavin, is another significant accomplishment in a season where the team has also placed third at the Dvorak and fourth at the Dan Gable Donnybrook.
The most notable Barb who was unable to compete was Bradley Gillum, a three-time state qualifier who won the IWCOA title and was second in the IHSA in 2020. The top-ranked individual at 182 in 3A was a runner-up at last week’s Dvorak and also was second at the Dan Gable Donnybrook.
Individuals who also competed in the Dvorak and on the first day of the Flavin but sat out on day two of the event were Jacob Luce, Damien Lopez and Caleb Wall, who combined to go 5-1. Lopez placed sixth in 2020 in the IHSA and is ranked third at 152. Two who didn’t take part in the Dvorak but went 2-1 in the champion’s pool were Rory Burright, who had another win on day one, and Hussein Thahab.
“We had some guys out, but at the end of the year it could be like that and we don’t know,” said Hiatt, a 2019 IWCOA hall of famer who’s a 2000 DeKalb graduate that was a four-time placewinner and a state champion as a senior. “We could have had a bad attitude going into it with having four guys out but it was a whole-team effort.
“Getting ready for the end of the year, these duals are huge. That’s why we have the Flavin and try to get as many tough teams as we can because we want that experience for the end of the year. Father Ryan, Marist and Mukwonago are all good and we had a lot of good teams here. Four years ago we made it 32 teams instead of 16 teams and it’s really picked up.”
DeKalb’s Danny Aranda, who went 4-1 at 120 and 126, competed in the final matches of his team’s victories over Father Ryan and Marist.
Against Father Ryan, his 9-1 win over Brody Gobbell at 120 proved to be the difference in what was a 31-31 tie heading into that match. Then against the RedHawks with the hosts holding a 33-29 lead, Aranda did his job again, avoiding a major decision and a tie after bumping up to 126 to meet Will Denny, who won an 8-3 decision.
“You can’t really let pressure get into your head, it’s going to mess with you,” Aranda said. “You have to do your own job and make sure that it gets done and not let the team down. Make sure that you do your job and listen to your coaches and listen to your teammates.
“All of our guys are good and we’re going to get the job done, no matter who is missing. I like how we all have a good mindset and we find a way to get the job done. If we’re losing or we’re down, we keep fighting and we keep grinding. Our team is just a whole bunch of grinders and it doesn’t matter if we’re missing four guys, we’re going to get the job done.”
Barbs who posted 5-0 records in the competition were Kaden Klapprodt at 106, Danny Curran at 132, Tommy Curran at 145 and 152 and Lukes Schmerbach at 170 and 182.
Austin Martin went 4-1 at 138 and 145 and Burright went 3-1 at 113 and 120 while Lopez won both of his matches at 152 and Wall also went 2-0 at 160. Thahab went 2-1 at 152 and 160 and Nate Sauer went 2-1 at 285 and finishing with 3-2 efforts were Bryson Buhk at 195 and Gavin Engh at 220 and 285.
In the final dual meet between the Barbs and RedHawks, the hosts jumped out to a 21-6 lead after five matches thanks to a win by technical fall by Danny Curran at 132, a pin by Martin in 3:05 at 145, a forfeit win for Tommy Curran at 152 and a 14-2 major decision from Thahab over Ryan Lanigan at 160 while Marist led briefly at 6-5 following a fall by Matthew Cornfield in 2:50 at 138.
Marist responded with four victories in the next five matches to close to within 27-25 as Tommy Boland received a forfeit win at 170, Peter Marinopoulos won a 14-5 major decision over Buhk at 195, Ghee Rachal had a fall in 1:42 at 220 and Mike Maloney won 4-2 over Engh at 285 while the Barbs got a fall from Schmerbach in 1:57 at 182.
After Klapprodt won 6-2 over George Marinopoulos at 106, Michael Esteban countered with a 14-2 major decision over Ben Lopez at 113 to pull Marist to within 30-29. But Burright won 4-1 over Luka Anoshenko at 120 to put the hosts up by four and after Denny took an 8-3 lead over Aranda in the finale at 126, he was unable to score again.
“It was awesome,” Schmerbach said. “The team came together and everyone kind of unified and we all realized what we had to do. We realized that people had to get pins, and get majors and bonus points are key, and you can’t give up any bonus points. All in all, the team did great. Everyone’s different and has their own style, but when it comes down to a big dual like that, people have to wrestle for the team, they have to step up. Our coach said that you have to be a hero today and that there’s guys who have to step up and there’s just times that you have to realize that maybe you are the one that has to do it.
“I like just how close we are together. Everyone bonds together and it’s awesome. The team really works well together and practices are always good because everyone always works really hard. And the team just keeps persevering and we keep coming through. Everyone doubted us here because we had four guys out and they were like, ‘you’re not going to win this’. But we came together and just showed it.”
After winning the first six matches to jump out to a 25-0 lead in their victory over Mukwonago, the Barbs needed to stage a big rally in order to claim the narrow win over Father Ryan, a perennial state power in Tennessee, who wound up edging Marist by criteria in its first dual of the champions’ pool to help it claim second place in the competition.
Recording falls against Mukwonago were Danny Curran in 0:17 at 132 and Klapprodt in 3:01 at 106 while Martin got a win by technical fall at 138. Burright (120), Aranda (126), Schmerbach (170) and Buhk (195) all won major decisions and Tommy Curran (145), Thahab (152) and Engh (220) all won decisions by three points.
In the Barbs’ meet against Father Ryan, they fell behind 25-13 through eight matches with Danny Curran winning a major decision at 132, Tommy Curran getting a fall in 1:54 at 145 and Schmerbach capturing a 6-5 win over Joey Terry at 170 while Martin fell 5-4 to Chancery Deane at 138.
But Buhk got a fall in 4:58 at 195 and Engh added a fall in 0:52 at 220 before Nate Sauer won 5-4 over Abraham Cromartie on a tiebreaker at 285 to put the hosts up at 28-25.
After Klapprodt won an 8-5 decision over Ethan Lampert at 106 to make it 31-25, Father Ryan’s Joseph Calvin countered with a quick fall at 113, which forced a tie and that set the stage for Aranda’s major decision at 120 to wrap up the victory.
“It’s just good that everyone came together with our deficit of having four people out,” Klapprodt said. “We had to come together as a team and finish strong and knew we could dominate in this tournament as long as we did what we needed to do. Everybody has a great bond and friendship and we all get along together. Our team just fits together well.
“You have to be a leader. If you’re winning a match, you have to score as many points as you can. Bonus points are key, especially in these really close matches. And if you’re losing, you can’t let up bonus points at all. It’s great since teams come out here from all over the place and we just have to defend our home base, this is where we’re at. If anybody wants to come in here and take it from us, it’s not going to happen.”
In a sign of just how competitive the Flavin was, all but one of Marist’s five dual meets were decided by four points or less. The RedHawks went 1-2 in the champion’s pool to finish third. After falling 33-33 by criteria to Father Ryan, they won 38-36 over Mukwonago. On the first day of the event, they beat Yorkville Christian 45-22 and Deerfield 38-34.
The RedHawks brought a young team to both the Flavin and the Dvorak, where they placed seventh. Of the individuals who competed in those tournaments, half are freshmen or sophomores and just two are seniors. The seventh-place showing at the Dvorak and a third at the Flavin demonstrates that Marist can compete with the best in Class 3A.
Marist last took part in the IHSA dual team finals in 2014 when it placed second to Oak Park and River Forest under Heffernan, a 1999 Marist graduate who was a two-time medalist for 1995 IWCOA hall of famer and National Wrestling Hall of Fame Illinois chapter inductee Mark Gervais, who he succeed as head coach in 2008.
“We love the dual team format like this,” said Heffernan, who comes from a family that has produced several outstanding coaches. “Obviously, number one, it’s great because everyone gets a lot of matches, but two, there’s so many lessons that our young guys need to learn. The last thing I said before we prayed was that every point counts and then we go out and our first dual was a tie and it went down to the criteria, so that was awesome and good for them to experience. We’re just enjoying seeing the young guys competing as hard as they’re competing and doing as well as they’re doing. And they’re giving a lot of energy and enthusiasm to the seniors, too, which is nice.
“We need these guys to start truly believing how tough they are. Now they see that we are right there with everybody and anybody. Their challenge now is to train that way. We plan on getting a lot better by the time that February rolls around, so it should be exciting.”
Leading the way for Marist with 5-0 records were Peter Marinopoulos at 195 and Rachal at 220 and 285 while Esteban went 4-1 at 113 and Boland was 4-1 at 160 and 170.
Turning in 3-1 efforts were Denny at 126, Ricky Ericksen at 145 and 152 and Maloney at 220 and 285. Cornfield went 2-1 at 138 while George Marinopoulos went 3-2 at 106.
“This was great competition coming off of the Dvorak,” Denny said. “My bracket had a couple of ranked kids in it, so that was great. Then coming here with great teams. We battled with two tough matches the first day and then had a team from Tennessee with great competitors and that was something new. I’m just a freshman so on the first day of practice I was super excited seeing what the team was bringing to the table.”
In Marist’s first dual of the champion’s pool, things were looking good for Father Ryan when it won the first four matches to go up 18-0 and six of the first eight to grab a 30-9 advantage with the lone wins by the RedHawks during that stretch coming on Ericksen’s 6-0 decision over Sawyer Rutherford at 145 and a fall by Boland in 3:47 at 160.
But the RedHawks responded with falls from Conor Phelan in 1:59 at 182, Peter Marinopolous in 2:30 at 195 and Rachal in 4:00 at 220 to close to within 30-27. Maloney won a 3-0 decision over Cromartie to tie things at 30-30 and George Marinopoulous captured a 1-0 decision over Lampert to give the RedHawks their first lead at 33-30.
But Calvin evened it again at 33-33 with an 8-5 decision over Esteban and the Tennesseans got the victory thanks to first points,16-10, which is far down on the list of criteria.
“I actually didn’t wrestle in the Dvorak, I was a helper,” Maloney said. “So wrestling heavyweight this week, I had to eat a lot because I had to wrestle up since I’m usually at 195, so it was a challenge. Ghee Rachal is a great kid. I want to wrestle 220, but I can’t because of him. I like that everyone is friends with everyone.”
The RedHawks bounced back from their tough setback to Father Ryan by claiming a 38-36 win over Mukwonago in the second round. Recording falls in that dual were Cornfield in 3:22 at 138, Boland in 2:00 at 160, Peter Marinopoulos in 1:12 at 195, Rachal in 1:22 at 220, George Marinopoulos in 4:48 at 106 and Esteban in 2:31 at 113 while Ricky Ericksen won 6-4 in sudden victory over Devin Lawrence at 152 and Brandon Weber (132) and Luka Anoshenko (120) both lost decisions.
“In duals, you get a little more nervous and tense-up because you feel like the pressure is on, but you just need to control those feelings,” Esteban said. “I started to open up a little more and focus on my attacks and trying to control the pace. I like the type of bond that we have.”
Father Ryan edged Marist 33-33 on criteria by first points scored in the first round of the pool and responded to its 35-31 defeat to DeKalb with a 54-24 victory in its finale against Mukwonago. The school from Nashville went 5-1 and got 6-0 performances from Calvin at 113, Calvin Eason at 126 and 132 and Ben Stigamier at 152.
Mukwonago finished 2-3 after going 0-3 in the champion’s pool. Leading the way for the fourth-place finishers in the tournament was Hayden Chitwood, who went 5-0 at 182.
Claiming fifth place overall and first place in the gold pool was Washington, which finished with a 4-1 record. Prospect went 4-2 to finish second in the pool while Deerfield placed third and Glenbard West was fourth to round out the top-eight.
Washington, which is ranked second in Class 2A, was the IHSA 2A runner-up to Lemont in 2020 and has advanced to the championship mat in the 2A dual team finals for the last six seasons, winning four-straight championships from 2016-2019. Deerfield, which is ranked fourth in 2A, hopes to advance to dual team state for the first time since 2017.
In the gold pool, Washington won 42-33 over Deerfield, 39-27 over Prospect and 45-21 against Glenbard West. Prospect beat Glenbard West 37-28 and Deerfield 39-33 while Deerfield captured a 35-33 victory over Glenbard West.
Leading the way for coach Nick Miller’s Panthers with 5-0 records were Peyton Cox at 126, Kannon Webster at 132, Donnie Hidden at 195 and 220 and Tyler Casey at 220 and 285. Cael Miller went 4-1 at 152 and Justin Hoffer went 3-1 at 195 and 220. Going 3-2 were Josh Biagini at 138 and Blake Hinrichsen at 160 and 170.
In one of the biggest showdowns of the day, Webster won a 9-4 decision over Prospect’s Will Baysingar at 132 in a clash of two juniors who’ve won state titles. Webster is a 2020 IHSA champion who’s top-ranked at 126 in Class 2A while Baysingar is a two-time medalist and 2021 IWCOA champion who’s ranked third in 3A at 126.
And in another interesting clash in the pool that featured top-ranked individuals from Class 2A and 3A at 195, Hidden, an IWCOA champion and two-time placer in 2A claimed an 11-6 decision over Glenbard West’s Philip Dozier, a two-time qualifier who took in 3A at the IWCOA.
Prospect received 6-0 showings from Joel Muehlenbeck at 106 and 113, Tom Miller at 120 and Lennon Steinkuehler at 138. Going 5-1 for the Knights were Will Baysingar at 132 and Jacob Grzesiak at 195 and 220 while Damien Puma went 4-1 at 145 and 152.
Leading Deerfield with 6-0 records were Lucio Morgan at 145, Benjamin Shvartsman at 152 and 160, Aiden Cohen at 170 and Braeden Wittkamp at 182 and 195. Going 4-2 for coach Marc Pechter’s Warriors were Luke Reddy at 113, Jordan Rasof at 120, Renzo Morgan at 132 and 138 and Stamos Tsakiris at 152 and 160.
Leading Glenbard West with 4-1 efforts were Ulises Rosas at 113, Isaiah Perez at 126 and Philip Dozier at 195. Also for the Hilltoppers, Pat Shadid went 3-1 at 170 and turning in 3-2 records were Carson Prunty at 106, Max Konopka at 160 and Morley Coval at 285.
Lockport placed ninth and Yorkville Christian tenth after the two were the top-two finishers in the Silver Pool, in which Pewaukee, Wisconsin took third and Minooka was fourth.
The Porters, who are ranked third in 3A, were missing several top performers who took part in the Powerade Tournament in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania. They included champion Brayden Thompson as well as two other medalists, Andrew Blackburn-Forst, who was fifth, and Keegan Roberson, who placed sixth.
Lockport closed the competition with a 45-17 victory over Yorkville Christian to finish 5-1. The Porters also won 60-11 over Pewaukee and 62-3 against Minooka. Coach Josh Oster’s squad hopes to qualify for the dual team finals for the third-straight season and for the sixth in seven years and capture its first trophy since 2017, when it capped a three-run of trophies that culminated in a state championship.
Leading the Porters with a 5-0 finish was Aidan Nolting at 195 while Nore Turner went 4-0 at 106, Carlos Munoz-Flores went 3-0 at 132 and Paul Kadlec went 3-0 at 160.
Paul Rasp went 4-1 at 182 while Matt Giorgetti was 3-1 at 113 and Jad Alwawi went 3-1 at 126. Going 2-0 were Liam Zimmerman at 106 and 113 and Ben Markham at 120.
Going 6-0 to lead Yorkville Christian, which is ranked ninth in Class 1A and beat Minooka 55-19 and Pewaukee 56-18, were Noah Dial at 138 and 145 and Jackson Gillen at 170. Also for the Mustangs, Aiden Larsen went 4-1 at 106 while going 4-2 were Isaac Bourge at 120, Braulio Flores at 138 and 145, Drew Torza at 152 and Michael Esquivel at 285.
In what some might consider to be an upset, Gillen, who’s ranked fifth in 1A at 170, recorded a fall in 5:55 over Sycamore’s Zack Crawford, who was top-ranked at 160 in 2A.
Minooka, who also fell 42-34 to Pewaukee, received 5-1 efforts from AJ Frescura at 113 and Joseph Westerhoff at 170 while Chase Musser went 4-2 at 106 and Louis Johnson went 4-2 at 195.
Oswego beat Glenwood 39-30 to take first in the bronze pool with a 4-2 record while Crystal Lake Central defeated Providence Catholic 45-30 for third place in that pool. The Panthers went 4-2 with their other pool wins being 45-31 over Providence and 46-30 over Crystal Lake Central.
Leading Oswego was Andrew Johnson, who went 6-0 at 160, while Brayden Swanson went 5-1 at 113 and Vincent Manfre went 4-1 at 106. Going 4-2 were Ryan Goddard at 120, Logan Guerrero at 126 and 132, Brayden Hedquist at 126 and 132, Joseph Griffin at 152 and Michael Sturm at 220.
Glenwood, which is tenth in Class 2A and won 41-34 over Crystal Lake Central and 42-35 over Providence, was led by 6-0 showings by Aden Byal at 145 and Alex Hamrick at 285. Going 4-2 for the Titans were Brandon Bray at 195 and Jaidyn Lee at 220.
Dillon Carlson went 6-0 at 160 and 170 to pace Crystal Lake Central, which is ranked sixth in Class 2A and hopes to get back to dual team state for the first time since 2017 and its first trophy since 2016. Going 5-1 for coach Justen Lehr’s Tigers was Leonardo Diaz at 285 and Erik Maldonado went 4-1 at 182 and 195. Posting 4-2 records were Payton Ramsey at 106, Cayden Parks at 145 and 152 and Connor Lezama at 152 and 160.
Providence was led by 6-0 efforts by Billy Meiszner at 132 and Liam McDermott at 220 while Kyle Lindsey went 5-1 at 138, RJ Schneider went 4-2 at 285 and Geno Papes went 3-1 at 145 and 152.
Several other teams in the competition had individuals who turned in good performances.
Andrew got 5-0 efforts from Max Siegel at 113, Trevor Silzer at 120 and 126 and Jack Cronin at 195 while Casey Griffin went 3-0 at 120.
Glenbard East was led by Andrew Gron, who went 6-0 at 132 and 138 and Diego Garcia, who went 6-0 at 138 and 145 while Waleed Binmahfooz went 5-1 at 106.
Grant received a 5-0 showings from Ivan Hernandez at 285 while Cameron Lattimore went 4-1 at 220 and Ayanne Jazinski went 3-1 at 106.
Plainfield South received 6-0 efforts from Rocco Silva went at 120 and John Pacewic at 195 and 220 while Rudy Silva went 5-1 at 113 and Matthew Janiak went 5-1 at 170.
Sycamore received 5-0 showings from Brayden Peet at 152, Gus Cambier at 160, Gable Carrick at 182 and Lincoln Cooley at 285 while Zack Crawford went 4-1 at 170.
Taft received a 6-0 performance from Colin Roque at 132 and 138 while Patrick Diete went 4-1 at 126.
Wheaton North got 5-0 finishes from Sam Lemp at 132 and Devin Medina at 152 while going 4-1 were JD Jones at 138, Mikey Rosch at 170 and Eli Cook at 182.
And York got 5-0 efforts from Zach Parisi at 113 and 120, Sean Berger at 126 and Evan Grazzini at 182 while Jack Connell went 5-1 at 145 and 152.
Holiday Invitationals Roundup for Week of 12/27
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By Gary Larson, For the IWCOA
Ed Ewoldt Wrestling Invitational
Lincoln-Way East won its second team title of the season at this year’s 16-team Ed Ewoldt Wrestling Invitational, posting a 240-218.5 scoring edge over second-place Yorkville.
Coach Kevin Rockett’s Griffins led all teams with eight wrestlers in the finals and tied third-place Downers Grove North (165.5) with three individual champions on the day. The Griffins are currently ranked 9th in 3A by the IWCOA and also won a team tournament title at Niles West this season. Like many teams over Christmas break, Lincoln-Way East did not have a full lineup entered at Wheaton Warrenville South.
“Winning the overall team (title) was a nice way to cap off the day,” Rockett said. “We had some underclassmen step up and capture their first individual tournament championships (Tyson Zvonar and Alex Lizak), and senior Jack Marion was our third champ for the day and captured his second individual (title) this season.
“We would have liked to finish the medal round with a few more wins in the finals but we can still take away positives from every match. Our coaching staff is happy with our progress and is looking forward to continuing this start into the new year.”
Host WW South (127.5) finished third in the one-day Ewoldt tourney on Dec. 29. Hoffman Estates (109), Dixon (107.5), Waubonsie Valley (105.5), Plainfield East (85), West Chicago (83.5), and Lyons Township (75) rounded out the top 10 team finishers.
Lincoln-Way East got individual titles from Zvonar at 120, Lizak at 138, and Marion at 152 pounds. Also reaching the title mat and placing second were Noah Ciolkosz (106), Connor Koehler (126), Domanic Abeja (145), Dominic Adamo (160), and Alex Knaperek (285).
The Griffins also got a fourth-place finish from Jacob Hassan (220), fifths from Brayden Mortell (113) and Caden O’Rourke (182), and a sixth from Kevin Byrne (132).
Second-place Yorkville sent four wrestlers to the finals and got individual titles from Hunter Janeczko (195) and Ben Alvarez (220). Placing second for the Foxes were Jack Ferguson (113) and Luke Zook (152), and winning their final matches of the day on the third-place mat were Raymond Cavey (106), Dominic Recchia (120), Ryder Janeczko (126), and Brody Williams (160).
Yorkville got fourths from Sebadtian Westphal (138) and Justin Wiesbrook (285), a fifth from Colten Stevens (170), and a sixth from Cole Farren (145).
Also winning individual Ewoldt titles were Elgin’s Julius Avendano (106), Plainfield East’s Aidan Villar (113), Lyons Township’s Gunnar Garelli (126), West Chicago’s Pierre Baldwin (132), Downers Grove North’s Harrison Konder (145), Waubonsie Valley’s Antonio Torres (160), Hoffman Estates’ Jalen Curtis (170), Downers Grove North’s Ben Bielawski (182), and Downers Grove North’s Jordan Lewis (285).
Also placing second were West Chicago’s Connor Zentner (120), WW South’s Jaidyn Buziecki (132), Hoffman Estates’ Israel Vargas (138), Dixon’s Steven Kitzman (170), Waubonsie’s Andrew Meister (182), Evanston’s Anthony Joyner (195), and Dixon’s Justin Dallas (220).
Finishing third in Wheaton were WW South’s Ben Westmaas (113), Plainfield East’s Hunter McCloskey (132), Dixon’s Cade Hey (138), Lyons’ Ben Zeman (145), WW South’s Zean Al Obaidi (152), WW South’s Corey Gul (170), Hoffman Estates’ Josh Ellery (182), DG North’s Griff Keown (195), Evanston’s Sheldon Kinzer (220), and Luke Buntin (285).
Fourth-place finishers included DG North’s Tyler Tango (106), Waubonsie Valley’s Sebastian Sifuentes (113), DG North’s Josh Penaflor (120), Dixon’s Chris Sitter (126), Waubonsie’s Ethan Wojtowich (132), West Chicago’s Mason Dupasquier (145), Dixon’s Jayce Kastner (152), WW South’s Sedeeq Al Obaidi (160), Larkin’s Max Zamudio (170), Oak Lawn’s Evan Zambrano (182), and Hoffman Estates’ Rahmal Graham (195).
The Ewoldt’s Outstanding Wrestler Award, as voted on by coaches, was Downers Grove North’s Harrison Konder (145), who improved to 17-1 with his 6-1 decision win on the title mat against Lincoln-Way East’s Domanic Abeja. Konder posted two falls to reach the finals, over Oak Lawn’s John Parquette and Lyons’ Ben Zeman.
Ed Ewoldt Wrestling Invitational championship matches:
106: Julius Avendano (Elgin) over Noah Ciolkosz (LW East), F 3:21
113: Aidan Villar (Plainfield East) over Jack Ferguson (Yorkville), 7-5
120: Tyson Zvonar (LW East) over Connor Zentner (West Chicago), F 3:19
126: Gunnar Garelli (Lyons) over Connor Koehler (LW East), 8-2
132: Pierre Baldwin (West Chicago) over Jadyn Buziecki (WW South), F 3:26
138: Alex Lizak (LW East) over Israel Vargas (Hoffman Estates), 11-2
145: Harrison Konder (DG North) over Domanic Abeja (LW East), 6-1
152: Jack Marion (LW East) over Luke Zook (Yorkville), 5-3
160: Antonio Torres (Waubonsie) over Dominic Adamo (LW East), 3-2
170: Jalen Curtis (Hoffman Estates) over Steven Kitzman (Dixon), 4-3
182: Ben Bielawski (DG North) over Andrew Meister (Waubonsie), TF 3:45
195: Hunter Janeczko (Yorkville) over Anthony Joyner (Evanston), F 1:23
220: Ben Alvarez (Yorkville) over Justin Dallas (Dixon), 4-3
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60th Red Schmitt Holiday Tourney
Marmion coach Nate Fitzenreider can best explain the way his Cadets won the team title at this year’s 25-team, 60th annual Red Schmitt Holiday Tourney, hosted by Granite City:
“We brought twelve wrestlers and put everyone in the gold pool,” he said. “We had a team record of 39-3 on the first day. An overall team record of 63-15 over two days. We were missing three weight classes and still won the tournament over four or five highly- ranked Missouri teams.
“I was very impressed with our team, overall.”
Marmion, currently ranked 4th in Class 3A in Rob Sherrill’s IWCOA rankings, out-pointed second-place Whitfield (MO) 321-270.5 to win its title. Lafayette (MO) placed third with 269.5, Plainfield North placed fourth with 264.5, and Neosho (MO) rounded out the top five finishers with 247.5.
Marmion also won team titles at Barrington’s 32-team Moore/Prettyman and at Downers Grove South’s 16-team Larry Gassen dual-team tournament this season. The Cadets also placed fifth at the 30-team Dan Gable Donnybrook tournament in Iowa, and fourth at the Crown Point, Indiana tournament.
Other Illinois teams finishing in the top 10 were Moline (8th), Mahomet-Seymour (9th), and Triad (10th). Also competing in Granite City were Batavia, Bloomington, Cahokia, Collinsville, Quincy, Belleville East, Normal Community West, Huntley, Alton, Mascoutah, and host Granite City.
All 12 Marmion wrestlers finished in the top eight of their divisions, led by second-place finishes from Donny Pignoni (106), Jameson Garcia (120), and Sean Scheck (220). Marmion got third-place finishes from Tyler Perry (170) and Jack Lesher (182), fifths from Santino Scolaro (138), John Conover (152), Kenny Siwicki (160), and Teddy Perry (195), a sixth from Jerred Durian (285), a seventh from Tegan Chumbley (145), and an eighth-place finish from Charlie McCarthy (195).
Second-place Whitfield (MO) got individual titles from Porter Malecki (120) and Keith Milley (285), and a second-place finish from Chase Brock (182). Placing third for Whitfield were Alexander Rallo (126), Evan Binder (132) and Gavin Linsman (138). Six of Whitfield’s 12 wrestlers entered in Granite City placed in the top eight of their weight classes.
Also winning individual titles in Granite City were Batavia’s Ino Garcia (106), St. Clair’s Ryan Meek (113), Triad’s Colby Crouch (126), Plainfield North’s Jacob Macatangay (132), Moline’s Kole Brower (138), St. Clair’s Brock Woodcock (145), Neosho’s Trent Neece (152), Bolivar’s Tyson Moore (160), Buchanan’s Brett Smith (170), Belleville East’s Dominic Thebeau (182), Mahomet-Seymour’s Mateo Casillas (195), and Lafayette’s Tommy Hagan (220).
Others placing second were Plainfield North’s Cayden Amico (113), CBC’s Kolby Warren (126), Mascoutah’s Santino Robinson (132), Lafayette’s Drew Doehring (138), Moline’s Noah Tapia (145), Mahomet-Seymour’s Braeden Heinold (152), Plainfield North’s Jared Gumila (160), Christian Brothers’ Aidan Bowers (170), Bloomington’s Anthony Curry (195), and Plainfield North’s Kaden McCombs (285).
Third-place finishers included Mahomet-Seymour’s Caden Hatton (106), Lafayette’s Dylan Roth (113) and Aiden Schoen (120), Batavia’s Cael Andrews (145), Cahokia’s Nick Deloach (152), Buchanan’s Charos Sutton (160), Bolivar’s Blake Goodman (195), Mahomet-Seymour’s Colton Crowley (220), and Neosho’s Nico Olivares (285).
Fourth-place finishers included Bolivar’s Forrest McMannes (106), CBC’s Dillon White (113), Bloomington’s Carson Nishida (120), Moline’s Alec Schmacht (126), Alton’s Deontae Forest (132), Triad’s Chase Hall (138), Buchanan’s Seth Littrell (145), Christian Brothers’ Mario Robledo (152), Moline’s Parker Terronez (160), Bolivar’s Trey Brewer (170), Lafayette’s Andrew Wier (182), Christian Brothers’ Cameron Cavins (195), Plainfield North’s Leo Tovar (220), and Cahokia’s Jason Dowell (285).
Red Schmitt Holiday Tournament championship matches:
106: Ino Garcia (Batavia) over Donny Pignoni (Marmion), 7-1
113: Ryan Meek (St. Clair) over Cayden Amico (Plainfield North), 8-1
120: Porter Matecki (Whitfield) over Jameson Garcia (Marmion), 5-0
126: Colby Crouch (Triad) over Kolby Warren (CBC), F 0:58
132: Jacob Macatangay (Plainfield N.) over Santino Robinson (Mascoutah), 3-2
138: Kole Brower (Moline) over Drew Doehring (Lafayette), 13-5
145: Brock Woodcock (St. Clair) over Noah Tapia (Moline), 7-4
152: Trent Neece (Neosho) over Braeden Heinold (Mahomet Symour), 7-5
160: Tyson Moore (Bolivar) over Jared Gumila (Plainfield North), 11-0
170: Brett Smith (Troy Buchanan) over Aidan Bowers (Christian Bros.), 8-4
182: Dominic Thebeau (Belleville E.) over Chase Brock (Whitfield), 5-2
195: Mateo Casillas (Mahomet Seymour) over Anthony Curry (Bloomington), 4-0
220: Tommy Hagan (Lafayette) over Sean Scheck (Marmion), 15-4
285: Keith Miley (Whitfield) over Kaden McCombs (Plainfield N.), 10-2
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Lincoln Holiday Tournament
Rock Island edged Lincoln-Way Central 242-231.5 at this year’s 23-team Lincoln Holiday Tournament, as Rock Island sent four wrestlers to the finals, getting Individual titles from Truth Vessey (106) and Aoci Bernard (138) and second-place finishes from Tyler Barbee (126) and Andrew Marquez (195).
Normal Community (182.5), Champaign Centennial (173), and St. Patrick (147) rounded out the top five team finishes, followed by Galesburg (136.5), Marengo (131), Pekin (130.5), Rochester (96.5) and host Lincoln (84.5).
The tight finish between Rock Island coach Joel Stockwell’s Rocks and Lincoln-Way Central meant every point was at a premium, and Rock Island got scoring from 11 wrestlers in earning the team win.
The Rocks received those ever-important team points from third-place finishers Daniel McGhee (120), Tristan Willoughby (145), and Matthew Cook (152), fourth-place finisher Samuel Niyonkuru (113), tenth-place finishers Elian Marshall (160), and Eli Gustafson (285), and 13th-place finisher Omareon Gay (132).
Additionally, non-scoring Rocks wrestler Rebecca Ferguson placed seventh at 106.
Lincoln-Way Central sent five wrestlers to the title mat, getting individual championships from Joey Malito (120) and MJ Hollingsworth (152) and runner-up finishes from Conor Smetana (138), Max Becker (145), and Braeden Barrett (285).
The Knights entered 15 wrestlers in the tournament also got team scoring thanks to a fifth-place finish from Dustin Kozlowski (160), sixths from Gracie Guarino (106), Caden Harvey (132) and Paul Claussen (195), a seventh from Ameer Alamawi (126), a ninth from Nathan Jarres (220), and a tenth from Jake Bodenchak (170).
Non-scoring Lincoln-Way wrestlers included fourth-place finisher Lance Valentine (160) and fifth-place finisher Tim Key (152).
Also winning individual titles in Lincoln were Normal’s Cole Gentsch (113), Galesburg’s Rocky Amendarez (126), St. Patrick’s Sean Conway (132), Lincoln’s Isaac Decker (145), Peoria Notre Dame’s Joey Mushinsky (160), Lanphier’s Gabe Orosco (170), Pekin’s Shamon Handegan (182), Normal’s Cooper Caraway (195), St. Patrick’s Alex Goworowski (220), and Pekin’s Tyler Haynes (285).
Second-place finishers included Notre Dame’s Ian Akers (106), Urbana’s Cordaro Sims (113), Galesburg’s Gauge Shipp (120), Marengo’s Ethan Struck (132), Centennial’s Tyler Easter (152), Highland’s Ben Mitchell (160), St. Patrick’s Gio Hernandez (170), Danville’s Phillip Shaw (182), and Centennial’s Jack Barnhart (220).
Finishing third in their weight classes were Normal’s Caden Correll (106), St. Patrick’s Olin Walker (113), Normal’s Brock Bacus (126), Rochester’s Nolan Mrozowski (132) and Cole Peters (138), Kenwood’s Joshua Butler (160), Centennial’s David Navarra (170), Rantoul’s Keddrick Terhune (182), Limestone’s Merrick McNeese (195), Pekin’s Karson Lamb (220), and Marengo’s Michael Macias (285).
Fourth-placers in the tournament included Centennial’s Jaiden Smith (106), Normal’s Dylan Conway (120), Centennial’s Trevor Schoonover (126), Limestone’s Cosmo Palmgren (132), Taylorville’s Gage Rusher (138), Galesburg’s Alex Baughman (145), Lanphier’s Connor Janssen (152), Jerseyville’s Liam McGuire (170), Danville’s Micah McGuire (182), East Peoria’s Zach Eaton (195), Galesburg’s Jeremiah Morris (220), and Springfield’s Shamar Richardson (285).
Lincoln Holiday Tournament championship matches:
106: Truth Vessey (Rock Island) over Ian Akers (Notre Dame), 15-5
113: Cole Gentsch (Normal) over Cordaro Sims (Urbana), 6-1
120: Joey Malito (LW Central) over Gauge Shipp (Galesburg), 7-5
126: Rocky Almendarez (Galesburg) over Tyler Barbee (Rock Island), Inj.
132: Sean Conway (St. Patrick) over Ethan Struck (Marengo), 11-5
138: Aoci Bernard (Rock Island) over Conor Smetana (LW Central), F 5:53
145: Isaac Decker (Lincoln) over Max Becker (LW Central), TF 4:21
152: MJ Hollingsworth (LW Central) over Tyler Easter (Centennial), F 0:53
160: Joey Mushinsky (Notre Dame) over Ben Mitchell (Highland), F 2:37
170: Gabe Orosco (Lanphier) over Gio Hernandez (St. Patrick), 7-5
182: Shamon Handegan (Pekin) over Phillip Shaw (Danville), F 1:01
195: Cooper Caraway (Normal) over Andrew Marquez (Rock Island), 10-3
220: Alex Goworowski (St. Patrick) over Jack Barnhart (Centennial), 4-1
285: Tyler Haynes (Pekin) over Braeden Barrett (LW Central), 5-2
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Lockport, Homewood-Flossmoor wrestlers compete at Powerade
Illinois’ top-ranked Class 3A wrestler at 170 pounds put a national feather in his cap at this year’s Powerade Wrestling Tournament.
Lockport’s Brayden Thompson won an individual title at 172 pounds at the formidable tournament, held from Dec. 28-30 in Canonsburg, PA.
This year’s Powerade, hosted by Canon-McMillan high school in Pennsylvania, featured nearly 600 participants from 66 schools. Many of the top high school programs in the country attended, including perennial powers like Wyoming Seminary (PA) and Blair Academy (NJ).
Thompson was seeded #7 at 172 and he topped wrestlers seeded #3 and #4 en route to winning the title.
Thompson, unbeaten and ranked #1 at 170 in Rob Sherrill’s IWCOA rankings, won by 15-4 decision in the round of 16 before winning a 3-1 decision in his quarterfinal match against third-seeded Luke Geog of St. Edward (OH).
Thompson won a 4-3 semifinal decision over #8 Michael Delllagatta of St. Joseph (NJ), setting up his title shot against #10 Daniel Wask of Blair Academy.
Thompson’s 3-2 UTB win over Wask earned him his Powerade title.
Both Lockport and Homewood-Flossmoor had wrestlers competing in the Powerade. In addition to Thompson, the Porters got a fifth-place finish from Andrew Blackburn-Forst (215) and a sixth from Keegan Roberson (145). Logan Shaw (138) also competed for the Porters.
“Overall our four kids wrestled well,” Lockport assistant coach Jameson Oster said. “Brayden (Thompson) was able to win close matches in different ways. The last three matches he wrestled against nationally-ranked opponents were all one score matches, where he was able to wrestle smart and show his grit and ability to ride kids in tight matches.
“Andrew (Blackburn-Forst) wrestled smart and stayed offensive throughout the tournament. In his 5th-place match, Andrew widened the gap against a tough opponent he wrestled earlier in the tournament.”
Oster liked the toughness Shaw showed in fighting his way through the consolation bracket, and said that Roberson wrestled his best matches of the season in Pennsylvania.
“(Roberson) is looking more offensive and getting to his positions,” Oster said. “Keegan had a couple matches he ended up losing, but he was right there to win them at the end.”
Homewood-Flossmoor got a fifth-place finish from Vincent Robinson (126), and seventh-place finishes from Deion Johnson (106) and Justin Thomas (215).
“Vincent lost a tough match in the semis in UTB against the #1 wrestler in (Pennsylvania),” Homewood-Flossmoor coach Jim Sokoloski said. “Deion and Justin wrestled well, minus a few mistakes here and there. Jaydon Robinson continues to knock on the door in national tournaments, once again finishing one win away from reaching the podium. I was very proud of how our three placers responded in their placing matches.
“They all responded and won their last matches in convincing fashion. That really showed me their character and perseverance, which will pay dividends come February.”
Fremd wins six titles to roll to Berman Classic championship
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By Curt Herron
For the IWCOA
PALATINE – After not being held last season for the first time since it began in 1955, Palatine’s Berman Holiday Wrestling Classic staged its return on Tuesday with 15 teams competing in the 66th-annual event, which is Illinois’ oldest regular season tournament. It’s named in honor of longtime assistant coach and tournament manager Al Berman, a 2001 IWCOA hall of famer who along with his wife Sally, were integral parts of an event which featured some of the best competition in the state for many years.
Considering that the United States is experiencing a record-setting number of COVID-19 cases, it’s not surprising that one half of the brackets had nine or less entrants, including one with only five, and the average for the tournament was just over nine individuals at each weight class.
Fremd dominated the competition, placing 10 of its 11 individuals in the top three with seven of them advancing to the title mat and six winning championships. Coach Jeff Keske’s Vikings, who are tenth in Class 3A in the IWCOA rankings, scored 214 points to win the team title by 90 points as it became the fifth Mid-Suburban League school to win the event and just the third to do so since the last time that a Palatine school won a title, which was in 1988 when the host Pirates repeated as tournament champions.
The battle for the rest of the top-five spots was tight as Oak Forest used four finalists and three champions to claim second place with 124 points while Hinsdale South placed four in the top-three to take third place with 117.5 points, edging fourth-place York (116.5) and fifth-place Mundelein (114.5).
Fremd, which took second in the 2019 Berman and turned in fifth-place finishes in its two earlier tournaments this season, Barrington’s Moore-Prettyman and Prospect’s Mudge-McMorrow, hopes that its balanced lineup that features several ranked individuals has what it takes to be a factor not only in the MSL but to also help it win its third regional title and first since 1996, when it made its lone appearance in the IHSA dual team finals.
Winning titles for the champion Vikings were Wiley Jessup (106), Evan Gosz (113), Maddox Khalimsky (132), Charlie Fifield (145), Casey Bending (220) and Cristian Gonzalez (285) while Matt Meehan (160) placed second and Jake Crandall (126), Jared Werner (170) and AJ Del Mar (182) all claimed third place.
“The Berman tournament has been going on for 66 years, so we take a lot of pride in winning this tournament,’ said Keske, a Libertyville graduate who competed for 2000 IWCOA hall of famer Dale Eggert. “Maybe there’s not as many teams as we originally thought but we still feel really good about our performance today, getting seven guys in the finals and having several guys who won tournaments for the first time ever today, so that was really cool to see.
“The work ethic has been great and everyone has been really supportive of this team and the leaders have really stepped up to make everyone feel part of the group, and not the varsity guys, so we feel really good about that and what we’re doing moving forward. Today we only had three seniors in the lineup today and we were missing three weight classes. We’re looking forward to the end of the season and this last month before the postseason and we know that in order to achieve our goals that we’re going to need all 14 wrestlers to pitch in and help out. We’re really looking forward to that challenge ahead of us in the next month.”
Oak Forest and Lake Park both had three champions while York and Leyden each had one. Winning titles for coach Shawn Forst’s runner-up Bengals were Tyler Evitts (120), Ivan Corral (152) and Joe Castaneda (170) while Caden Muselman (126) took second and Joe Loranger (132) placed fourth.
Winning titles for Lake Park (82, ninth) were Dominik Mallinder (126), Mikey DiBenedetto (138) and Joey Olalde (160) while York got a title from Evan Grazzini (182), second-place finishes from Zach Parisi (113) and Sean Van Sleet (132) and a third from Dom Begora (285) while Sean Berger (126) had the most falls in the least time with three in 7:13.
The other champion in the field, Leyden’s Colin O’Neill (195), received the tournament’s Outstanding Wrestler Award. Other top finishers for Leyden (92, seventh) were second-place finishers Sebastian Rojas (182) and Gus Tosterud (220) and Russell Klug (132), who placed third.
Leading the way for coach Steve Matozzi’s third-place Hornets were runner-up Alec Miller (152) and third-place finishers Oscar Choi (120), Manny Wallace (160) and Griffin Carr (220). Fifth-place Mundelein’s top finishers were runner-up Henri Ortiz (195) and third-place finisher Erick Nova (145).
Maine South (97.5, sixth) had six top-four finishers. They were Christos Vaselopulos (106) and Nathan Beltran (138) in second, Teddy Flores (113) in third and Nico Chisari (160), Cole Cichowski (170) and Tommy Porrello (195) in fourth. Rolling Meadows (85, eighth) had two second-place finishers, Alan Velasquez (120) and Dominic Andrejek (170) while Kyle King (113), Ben Escalante (126) and Jaiden Montgomery (145) placed fourth.
Grayslake North (81, tenth) was led by runner-up Connor Kozanecki (145), third-place finishers Armen Jerikian (138) and Alex Carbajal (152) and fourth-place finisher Nik Green (285). Zion-Benton (75, 11th) received a second-place finish from Sean Taylor (285) and fourths from Jon Marquez (106), Luis Medina (120) and Julian Zetina-Torres (152).
South Elgin (42.5, 12th) got a third from Will Ardson (195) and a fourth from Andre Rios (138) and Palatine (40, 13th) got a third from Emmanuel Rodriguez (106) and a fourth from Leonel Franco (220). And the top placer for short-handed Minooka (34, 14th), the tourney’s three-time defending champion, was Tyler Green (182), who took fourth.
Here’s a summary of the Berman Holiday Classic champions along with the other top-four finishers at their weight classes:
106 – Wiley Jessup, Fremd
When Fremd senior Wiley Jessup began his high school career, he didn’t get the opportunity to train against someone who was older and had experienced success. So as he finishes up with the Vikings, the sixth-place finisher in the IWCOA finals is happy to be able to practice with and give guidance to a talented newcomer, freshman Evan Gosz.
The pair continued their tournament success as both won championships to kick off a dominant performance for the team champions as Jessup claimed top honors at 106 with a fall in 3:02 over Maine South sophomore Christos Vaselopulos and Gosz followed with a title at 113. For the third straight tournament, Jessup and Gosz both advanced to the title mat with the senior taking top honors at Prospect and second at Barrington while the freshman captured firsts at both events.
“It’s really awesome to see Evan as a freshman doing that well,” Jessup said. “I enjoy it because I wish I had someone like that for me when I was a freshman. I kind of try to pass on my knowledge to him because he’s a really good wrestler now. We’re very in line with each other (the team) and very supportive of one another and it’s really fun at dual meets and tournaments just watching how others do and supporting them. I’m really proud of what coach Keske has made of this program because he’s brought a lot of his experience and skills here. I’m really proud of how the whole team is doing this year and is performing really well against tough teams that we had tough losses to last year.”
Jessup (18-2), who’s ranked fourth at 106 in Class 3A, advanced to his third-straight tournament finals with a fall in 0:47 over Palatine junior Emmanuel Rodriguez. Vaselopulos (13-6) became one of two Hawks who advanced to the title mat in their initial individual invite when he recorded a 7-5 semifinal win over Zion-Benton freshman Jon Marquez.
In the third-place match, Rodriguez (5-3) turned in his best tournament finish of the season and gave the host Pirates their top showing for the day when he captured a 5-2 victory over Marquez (10-8), who also finished fourth at Antioch in his initial prep tournament.
113 – Evan Gosz, Fremd
It certainly says a lot about a freshman when he can not only advance to three-consecutive tournament finals to begin his high school career but also win titles in all three of those events, and that’s just what Fremd freshman Evan Gosz has accomplished thus far.
Gosz (23-1), who’s ranked seventh in Class 3A, added to his championships at Barrington and Prospect with a Berman Classic title at 113 when he captured a 7-1 victory over York junior Zach Parisi in the finals. It was a rematch of the Mudge-McMorrow title match where Gosz won by fall in 3:25. The Vikings freshman recorded a fall in 1:15 in the semifinals over Rolling Meadows senior Kyle King.
“It feels good,” Gosz said. “I was told that high school was a lot tougher, and obviously it is with a lot stronger guys, but I think because of my background of wrestling in IK and wrestling around has really helped me out. He helps me out and teaches me the ropes and stuff, so that’s fun. I’m just hoping that I can finish as strong as I’ve started.”
Parisi (16-2), who has suffered both of his losses to Gosz, advanced to his second-straight tournament final with a 9-3 semifinals win over Maine South sophomore Teddy Flores.
Flores (14-3) claimed third place with a fall in 5:17 over King (7-11), who claimed a third-place finish in his initial tournament this season, which was at Vernon Hills.
120 – Tyler Evitts, Oak Forest
After qualifying for state for the last two seasons, Oak Forest senior Tyler Evitts is hoping that the third time will be the charm for him to reach the awards stand for the first time and he’s off to a good start after improving to 11-1 following an 8-2 victory over Rolling Meadows junior Alan Velasquez in the 120 title match.
Evitts was one of three champions and four finalists for the runner-up Bengals, who placed six of their seven competitors in the top five at their weights. He advanced to the title mat with a fall in 3:19 over Hinsdale South senior Oscar Choi.
“This feels pretty good because sophomore year when I came here I took fifth, so this is an improvement,” Evitts said. “I like how I’m shooting and I actually took a shot. As a freshman, sophomore and junior I probably had 10 shots.”
Velasquez (12-7), whose previous best finish this season was a third at Rockford East, was one of two finalists for the Mustangs. He earned his spot opposite Evitts with a 5-3 semifinals decision over Zion-Benton freshman Luis Medina.
In the third-place match, Choi (8-7), a 2020 state qualifier who won a title at his school’s Matozzi Invite, became the first of three Hornets to take third place when he recorded a fall in 2:14 over Medina (6-4).
126 – Dominik Mallinder, Lake Park
After finishing second to Plainfield North’s Jacob Macatangay at 126 in Class 3A at the IWCOA finals, Lake Park senior Dominik Mallinder has understandably been focused on another trip to the awards stand this season in the IHSA finals.
Ranked eighth in a weight class that features four others who have placed first or second at state, Mallinder is 13-3 following a 6-1 win in the 126 finals over Oak Forest junior Caden Muselman. Mallinder, a Berman champ in 2019 and runner-up at Conant and Glenbrook South this year, had two falls, with one in 2:54 in the semifinals over Rolling Meadows sophomore Ben Escalante.
“Getting second place at that tournament (IWCOA) really put a fire under me and made me realize that I need to work harder to get first place,” Mallinder said. “It was a very good opportunity. There’s a lot more to be done but I feel good with where I’m at right now.”
Muselman (12-2), who’s ranked second in 2A at 132, is a two-time state qualifier who placed fourth in the IWCOA finals in 2A at 126. Competing in his first invitational tournament of the season, he earned his spot in the finals with a fall in his opener and then a 5-2 semifinals decision over Fremd junior Jake Crandall.
Crandall (19-7) was one of three Vikings to place third after winning by technical fall over Escalante (11-5), whose best finish this season was second-place at Rockford East.
132 – Maddox Khalimsky, Fremd
Boosted by a fourth-place finish at 126 in 3A at the IWCOA finals, Fremd junior Maddox Khalimsky hopes to make another run at the awards stand this season in Champaign. He improved to 19-3 and became one of his team’s six champions after winning a 9-3 decision over York junior Sean Van Sleet in the 132 finals.
Khalimsky reached his second tournament finals, with Prospect being the other, and won his first title of the season. Ranked ninth in Class 3A, he recorded a fall in 0:48 in his first match and then captured a win by technical fall in the semifinals over Oak Forest senior Joe Loranger.
“Everybody’s doing their part and we have good partners in the room, so everybody is getting better,” Khalimsky said. “Coach Keske is doing all of the right things and making sure we stick with the technique. He’s bringing in other coaches from outside of our room to come and wrestle with us to improve our technique. We’re building upon what we’ve already got and we will be better. Even though we didn’t have a complete season (last year), it was a complete season. In my freshman year, I didn’t even make it to sectionals so I’m glad that I kind of got to show off what I learned in that last-minute opportunity.”
Van Sleet (12-3) advanced to the finals with a pair of decisions, which included a 10-4 victory over Leyden sophomore Russell Kleg in the semifinals.
In the third-place match at 132, Kleg (10-3) claimed a 10-2 major decision over Loranger (4-3).
138 – Mikey DiBenedetto, Lake Park
After opening the season with a title at Conant, Lake Park junior Mikey DiBenedetto wasn’t so pleased with his next trip to a tournament finals, when he took second by sudden victory at Glenbrook South. He made his third trip to the finals and won a second title with a 10-3 victory over Maine South junior Nathan Beltran in the 138 title match.
DiBenedetto, a two-time state qualifier who’s ranked sixth in 3A, improved to 15-2 after recording a fall in 1:44 in his first match and then getting a pin in 4:50 in the semifinals against Grayslake North senior Armen Jerikian.
“Dominik is my partner and we’re pushing each other in the gym,” DiBenedetto said. “Even though I was a qualifier, I’m not satisfied with that, I really want a state title, I’m working for that. I’m running all of the time and lifting weights all of the time and am pushing me and Dom. As a team, we connect and we click, we know how to push each other and when we’re about to quit, we tell each other that you’ve got to keep going and pushing it. We’re not just teammates, we’re all friends outside of wrestling.”
Beltran (15-3), competing in his first invitational tournament of the season, advanced to the finals with a pair of falls, winning in 2:25 in his first match and then getting a pin in 1:48 over South Elgin junior Andre Rios in the semifinals.
Jerikian (14-3) equalled his third-place finish at Vernon Hills when he finished third with an 11-3 major decision over Rios (14-7), whose best finish was a second at Fenton.
145 – Charlie Fifield, Fremd
Fremd senior Charlie Fifield used a dominating performance to capture the 145 title and to become the fourth of six individuals from his team who won Berman Classic titles after winning by technical fall in the title match over Grayslake North senior Connor Kozanecki.
Ranked sixth at his weight, the 2020 state qualifier and 2019 Berman runner-up, also took second at Prospect and third at Barrington this season. He improved to 25-3 after recording a fall in his first match and then getting a win by technical fall over Mundelein’s Erick Nova in the semifinals.
“It was kind of a nice break coming to a tournament like this,” Fifield said. “It was nice to get in here and to dominate and see a lot of guys have success. I like our team camaraderie. We’re just really close and tight-knit as compared to other years. A lot of guys are leading in their own ways, whether that’s vocally or by example. It’s just a really good atmosphere and I love to be a part of the team.”
Kozanecki (17-5), who also claimed second place at Richmond-Burton, opened with a 6-0 decision before recording a fall in 2:54 in the semifinals over Rolling Meadows senior Jaiden Montgomery.
In the third-place match, Nova (3-1) captured the third win by technical fall in the bracket in his victory over Montgomery (4-2) for his team’s second-best finish of the day.
152 – Ivan Corral, Oak Forest
Last season could have been a frustrating one for Oak Forest’s Ivan Corral since it appeared that the 2020 state qualifier might not get a chance to go back to state. But thanks to the IWCOA, he not only qualified for state for a second time, he finished fifth at 132 in Class 2A.
Boosted by that trip to the awards stand, the Bengals senior has even bigger hopes for this season and is off to a strong start with a 13-3 record after capturing top honors at 152 in the Berman Classic, which was his first invitational tournament of the season. He had falls in his first two matches, including one in 4:52 in the semifinals over Zion-Benton junior Julian Zetina-Torres and then claimed a 9-3 decision over Hinsdale South sophomore Alec Miller in the title match.
“We’ve been shut down once or twice already this year because of COVID, so it was nice to get out here for our first tournament of the year,” Corral said. “I think I wrestled pretty good. I like the brothership that we’ve formed over the years.”
Miller (4-3), who entered the event with just one win in three matches, used a pin and a win by technical fall to advance him to the semifinals, where recorded a fall in 4:56 over Grayslake North freshman Alex Carbajal.
Carbajal (12-8), whose best tournament showing had been a fourth at Richmond-Burton, bounced back from his semifinal loss to get a fall in the third-place match in 2:20 over Zetina-Torres (7-8).
160 – Joey Olalde, Lake Park
For a while, it appeared as if Joey Olalde was Texas-bound and would complete his high school career there. But the move didn’t last long and the senior is happy to still be at Lake Park after he improved to 16-0 with a 6-0 decision over Fremd junior Matt Meehan in the 160 finals to give him his third invite title of the season.
Olalde, who’s tenth-ranked in Class 3A at 160, added to his previous championship wins at Conant and Glenbrook South. He opened the day with two falls, including one in 4:54 over Maine South senior Nico Chisari in the semifinals.
“I’m 16-0 right now,” Olalde said. “Dom Mallinder pushes me in the room every day. There’s a big weight difference but he’s still a guy who gets after it. It’s a crazy story that I moved to Texas before the state series, so I didn’t get a chance to wrestle in that. But I just moved back a few months ago, so I’m excited to get back out here and show Illinois what’s up. We’re up and coming. It’s good that we have me and Dom as senior captains to push each other and Mikey, too. It’s great to be back in Illinois. Nothing beats this.”
Meehan (20-4) was one of the seven Vikings who reached the title mat. He got there with a pair of major decisions, including by a 16-2 margin in the semifinals against Hinsdale South senior Manny Wallace.
Wallace (14-5), who won a title at his own Matozzi invite, took third place with a fall in 1:29 over Chisari (8-5), who was competing in his initial individual invite of the season.
170 – Joe Castaneda, Oak Forest
There was a common theme for Oak Forest’s three champions and four finalists at the Berman Classic and that was that all of them were able to be state qualifiers at the IWCOA finals, which includes junior Joe Castaneda, who took first at 170 with a 7-4 decision over Rolling Meadows senior Dominic Andrejek.
Castaneda (14-6) made the most of his first individual invite of the season by advancing in his opener due to injury default and then capturing a 7-6 semifinal victory over Fremd junior Jared Werner.
“I weighed in at about 158, and I wrestled up to 170 and I still managed to take first,” Castaneda said. “I already took time off from staying in shape and being in practice and some of our teammates are getting sick again. If we weren’t down in numbers, I think we could do pretty good downstate, too, but it makes it harder in practice and in terms of competing for state as a team.”
Andrejek (16-6), whose best previous tournament finish this season was a third at Rockford East, won a pair of two-point decisions to advance to the finals, including a 10-8 overtime triumph over Maine South senior Cole Cichowski in the semifinals.
Werner (3-1) performed well in his season debut, getting two falls and bouncing back from his narrow semifinal loss with a 7-4 victory in the third-place match over Cichowski (8-6), who was competing in his first individual tournament this year.
182 – Evan Grazzini, York
York junior Evan Grazzini was one of only two Berman Classic champions who didn’t need to go the full six minutes in any of his three matches as he captured the title at 182 with a fall in 2:53 over Leyden’s Sebastian Rojas to improve to 15-4 on the season.
Grazzini opened with a win by technical fall before getting a pin in 3:37 over Fremd sophomore AJ Del Mar in the semifinals to become one of the three Dukes to reach the title mat and the only one to capture a title, which also was the initial championship for the team who had no title winners at Prospect, where Grazzini placed third.
“It feels great,” Grazzini said. “This is my first one in high school. I need to stay within myself. When I stick to my game plan and I wrestle like I know how to wrestle, I’m a pretty good wrestler and I think that will be the difference-maker when it gets time to go downstate. We have a really strong team and we work well together. Everybody has the same goals and we’re rolling. It allows us to thrive with us all wanting the same thing and being able to work together, it’s great.”
Rojas (2-1) won his first match of the season by injury default and advanced to the finals with a fall in 3:01 in the semifinals over Minooka’s Tyler Green, who was also seeing his first competition of the season.
Del Mar went 2-1 on the day with two falls, with the last one coming in the third-place match where he recorded a pin in 1:36 over Green.
195 – Colin O’Neill, Leyden
Leyden senior Colin O’Neill not only claimed his second tournament championship in two tries when he claimed top honors at 195 but he also was the Berman Classic’s Outstanding Wrestler Award winner after recording a fall in 3:55 over Mundelein senior Henri Ortiz.
O’Neill, who was ranked eighth in Class 3A at 182, added to the Conant championship that he won at 195 to start the season. He advanced to the title mat with a 9-4 decision over Maine South junior Tommy Porrello. He credits much of his improvement to his coach, John Kading, a 2000 IWCOA hall of famer.
“I started off kind of rough and missed the first week or so of wrestling,” O’Neill said. “I was no more so scared as I would say, determined, to push myself harder than I would before. I have a short amount of time in a week and x amount of hours at practice. There’s definitely a lot more to work on, not even for myself since I think I’m doing good, but more for what our coach wants us to do. He sees so much potential in every wrestler. He’s one of the best, so I’m grateful.”
Ortiz (2-1) recorded two falls to reach the finals, with one in 4:51 in the semifinals against South Elgin junior Will Ardson (13-5), who took third place after capturing a 10-4 victory over Porrello.
220 – Casey Bending, Fremd
Fremd junior Casey Bending captured his first tournament title of the season and joined five Vikings teammates on top of the award stand after capturing top honors at 220 with a 3-0 victory over Leyden senior Gus Tosterud.
Bending, who finished third at Prospect, improved to 24-6 after opening with a pair of falls, including one in 3:00 over Hinsdale South junior Griffin Carr in the semifinals.
“As a team, we definitely earned this spot after going through other tournaments,” Bending said. “We’ve had really great conditioning and I’d say that all of the conditioning has paid off. I don’t know where I’d be without coach Keske. I play in two other sports, football and track and field. Not only does wrestling help you physically, but it also changes you mentally and emotionally. I’m glad that I’ve been able to wrestle with them since junior high school. I’m glad that I could have someone just looking after me and also have someone that I can get some tips from.”
Tosterud (12-4), an IWCOA qualifier who placed fourth at Conant, recorded two first-period falls to become one of three finalists for the Eagles. In the semifinals, he won by fall in 1:38 over Palatine senior Leonel Franco.
Carr (11-7), who took third at the Matozzi invite, claimed third place again when he won by injury default over Franco (13-6), who placed third at Buffalo Grove.
285 – Cristian Gonzalez, Fremd
Fremd senior Cristian Gonzalez captured his initial varsity tournament title and did so by winning three decisions, with the last one being a 7-6 victory over Zion-Benton senior Sean Taylor in the 285 title match.
Gonzalez, who is 10-1, won 3-1 in his opener and then captured a 5-0 decision over York junior Dom Begora in the semifinals to earn a spot as one of his team’s seven finalists and six champions that helped lead 10th-ranked Fremd to the team title.
“This was my first varsity tournament ever,” Gonzalez said. “It was a great feeling, surreal almost. I came off the mat and saw everyone cheering me on and knowing what our team accomplished was a great feeling. Our slogan is ‘all in’ and everybody is really committed to that this year. Everybody is doing everything that they can for the team at all times, whether that’s in practice or in a match, they’re leaving everything on the mat. We have some really good guys at our lighter weights that start us on a really good note and we have good guys throughout. It’s a really good program overall and we showed that today and I hope that we can continue to show that for the rest of the season.”
Taylor (12-2) opened with a pair of falls, with the second of those coming in 2:40 in the semifinals against Grayslake North junior Nik Green. Begora (7-5) recorded a fall in 1:56 in the third place-match against Green (6-4).
Detroit Catholic Central edges Mount Carmel for Dvorak title
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By Curt Herron, For the IWCOA
MACHESNEY PARK – There wasn’t very much separating the top two scoring teams at the 33rd annual Al Dvorak Invitational at Harlem in Machesney Park as Detroit Catholic Central and Mount Carmel battled throughout the two days for who would emerge as champions.
When all was said and done on Sunday, the Caravan had more champions, 3-2, and more finalists, 6-3, but the Shamrocks were able to place at 11 weights while Mount Carmel had nine medalists and that proved to be good enough to help the program that features four returning individual champions which has won eight Michigan Division 1 championships since 2010 to become the first program from their state to win a Dvorak title, prevailing by a 234.5-230 margin.
Coach Mitch Hancock’s championship squad got titles from Dylan Gilcher (138) and Manuel Rojas (182), a second-place effort from Drew Heethuis (120), third-place showings from Simon Dominguez (106) and Darius Marines (152) and a fourth-place finish from Clayton Jones (132).
Mount Carmel continued its success in the Dvorak, finishing second for the third time in six years and it’s placed among the top-four teams in each of the last seven tournaments.
Leading the way for coach Alex Tsirtsis’ Caravan, who are first in 3A in Rob Sherill’s IWCOA rankings, are champions Seth Mendoza (106), Sergio Lemley (126), and Ryan Boersma (285), second-place finishers Eddie Enright (132), Colin Kelly (160) and Elliott Lewis (195) and third-place finisher Damian Resendez (113). Boersma and Lemley also won titles in 2019 and Boersma placed for the third time.
“We’ve had three meat-grinder weeks in a row, we were in Iowa in the beginning of December, the Ironman last week and here this weekend and it’s really good to see growth of the kids,” Tsirtsis said. “Not necessarily our top three guys because they’ve been performing well week in and week out but getting those other guys to really step up and they’ve knocked a lot of rust off and they keep getting better.
“This is going to be our first time of the year that we can have an extended training period, so we’re really looking forward to that for the next few weeks just trying to get better. We did a really good job getting better this week in the room with short time. I’m excited to get in there and have these guys really focus on polishing up things.”
DeKalb, which is second-ranked in 3A, took third place with 167 points. Leading coach Sam Hiatt’s Barbs were champion Tommy Curran (145), runner-up Bradley Gillum (182) and fourth-place finishers Danny Aranda (120) and Damien Lopez (152).
Lockport, which is ranked third in 3A, finished fourth with 150 points. Pacing coach Josh Oster’s Porters were champion Brayden Thompson (170), second-place finishers David Vukobratovich (113) and Andrew Blackburn-Forst (220) and fourth-place finishers Logan Swaw (145) and Paul Kadlec (160).
Amery, Wisconsin took fifth with 138.5 points while Aurora Christian, ranked fifth in 2A, was sixth with 131 points. Top performers for coach Danny Alcocer’s Eagles were champion Braden Stauffenberg (152), second-place finishers Deven Casey (106), Joe Fernau (126) and Taythan Silva (145) and third-place finisher Nate Wemstrom (195).
Marist, which is ranked fifth in 3A, took seventh place with 127.5 points. Leading the way for coach Brendan Heffernan’s RedHawks were champion Peter Marinopoulos (195) and third-place finisher Ghee Rachal (220), who placed in the event for the third time.
Hersey (112.5, eighth), Plainfield North (106, ninth), St. Charles East (105, tenth), Libertyville (98.5, 11th) and Dakota (97, 12th) rounded out the top third of the 36-team event.
Also winning championships were Crystal Lake South’s Josh Glover (113), St. Charles East’s Ben Davino (120), Plainfield North’s Jacob Macatangay (132), McHenry’s Chris Moore (160) and Amery’s Koy Hopke (220).
Other second-place finishers were Moline’s Kole Brower (138), Conant’s Ethan Stiles (152), McHenry’s Brody Hallin (170) and Glenbard North’s Paulie Robertson (285).
Davino was the recipient of the tournament’s Outstanding Wrestler Award while Dakota’s Maddux Blakely had the most falls in the shortest amount of time, which was four.
Fifteen individuals added to the medals that they won in the 2019 tournament and another got to the awards stand for the first time since 2018.
Here’s a breakdown of the champions of the 33rd annual Al Dvorak Invitational along with the placewinners who are in their weight class:
106 – Seth Mendoza, Mount Carmel
Few Illinois high school wrestlers will be able to say that during their first month in the sport that they’ve already won two titles in elite tournaments and also posted a fifth-place showing in one of the nation’s top events. But that’s just what Mount Carmel freshman Seth Mendoza has achieved during his impressive debut after rolling to four decisive victories to capture the 106 pound Dvorak championship, following up on a fifth-place showing at the Walsh Ironman one week earlier and a championship at the Dan Gable Donnybrook in Iowa the previous weekend.
Mendoza, who is off to a 19-2 start and is top-ranked at 106 in Class 3A, recorded falls in his first match and in the quarterfinals against Plainfield North’s Maddox Garbis before claiming a win by technical fall against Jacobs’ Dominic Ducato in the semifinals. He capped off his tournament trifecta with a 9-2 victory in the championship over another freshman who is off to a great start, Aurora Christian’s Deven Casey.
“It makes me feel great,” Mendoza said. “Just going out there and dominating and having fun. I was unsatisfied (at the Ironman) because I know that I could have done a lot better and I’ll get them back later. We’re working hard every day in the room with all of our guys who have been in finals. But even the guys who haven’t been in the finals, they’re still coming out here and placing and doing pretty good. Our team in general has been doing really good so we just need to keep that up.”
Casey has also had a very impressive debut during which time he kicked things off with a title at Barrington’s Moore-Prettyman tournament and then fell just shy of a medal at the Ironman, when he lost to Mendoza in the blood round. He owns a 17-4 record and is ranked second at 106 in 2A after getting a fall in his first match and winning 18-5 over Yorkville’s Raymond Cavey in the quarterfinals. He captured a 3-2 semifinal victory over Belvidere/Belvidere North’s Brayden Tuenissen to reach the finals.
Ducato (16-4), a junior who placed fourth in the IWCOA finals and is ranked fifth in 3A after settling for fourth place following a 3-1 loss to Detroit Catholic Central’s Simon Dominguez (11-3). Three other freshmen also joined Mendoza and Casey on the awards stand. Tuenissen (15-3) claimed an 8-0 victory over Amery’s Brendan Burke (9-4) for fifth-place and for in the seventh-place match, Glenbard North’s Kalani Khiev (11-2), who won a title at Conant, claimed a 9-2 win over Edwardsville’s Levi Wilkinson (17-5).
113 – Josh Glover, Crystal Lake South
There’s no better way to kick off tournament performances than by winning a Dvorak championship in your initial individual competition of the season. That’s what Crystal Lake South senior Josh Glover accomplished in a new setting when he captured an 8-4 victory over Lockport’s David Vukobratovich to claim the 113 pound championship.
Glover, who was third in the IWCOA finals and second in 2019 at state while at Marian Central Catholic, improved to 19-0 and is top-ranked in Class 2A. After getting a fall in his first match, he beat Marist’s Michael Esteban 8-0 in the quarterfinals and followed that with a 13-1 major decision over Plainfield South’s Rudy Silva in the semifinals.
“This is my first year here after transferring to South,” said Glover. “I love it and the team’s a lot of fun. I wanted to put it all on the line and to test myself against these 3A kids to try to scale how I’ll do at the tournament. I’ve expanded my variety of different leg attacks and that was a big part.”
Vukobratovich, a senior who is 9-2 and ranked second in 3A, definitely made a name for himself this week after winning an overtime tiebreaker over an Ironman placer, Homewood-Flossmoor’s Deion Johnson, in a dual meet and then being one of three Porters to reach the title mat. After recording falls in his first two matches, he won by technical fall over Hersey’s Maksim Mukhamedaliyev in the quarterfinals and claimed a 9-6 semifinals victory over Mount Carmel’s Damian Resendez.
Resendez (15-4), a sophomore who is ranked third at 113 in 3A with a third at the Donnybrook and a third at the IWCOA finals to his credit, claimed third place with a win by technical fall over Silva (15-4), a sophomore ranked eighth in 3A who was a finalist at Barrington. Freshman Esteban (14-4) placed fifth with a 13-6 decision over freshman Mukhamedaliyev (15-10) while Round Lake sophomore Alejandro Cordova (15-8) got a fall in 5:14 over Plainfield North sophomore Cayden Amico (18-5) to finish seventh.
120 – Ben Davino, St. Charles East
In order for an individual to win the Outstanding Wrestler Award at the Dvorak Invitational, you’d better leave quite an impression on the coaches and St. Charles East’s Ben Davino has already demonstrated that he’s very good at doing just that. The Saints sophomore received the ultimate recognition in the 36-team competition after wrapping up his two-day performance with a 13-4 major decision in the 120 title match over Detroit Catholic Central’s Drew Heethuis, who was a Michigan Division 1 state champion last season.
Davino, who improved to 15-1 and ranks first in 3A, was one of four Illinois individuals to wrestle for titles at the Ironman, where he lost a 5-2 decision to Blair Academy’s Mark Anthony McGowan in the 120 finals. A champion at 113 in the IWCOA finals in June, he kicked off his Dvorak run with a pair of wins by technical fall, with one coming in the quarterfinals over Aurora Christian’s Josh Vasquez. Davino earned his spot in the title match with a 3-1 victory over Libertyville’s Caelan Riley in the semifinals.
“It was nice, there was a lot of good competition and I had a lot of fun wrestling,” Davino said. “It’s the whole process of getting better throughout it. Taking the losses and using them as fuel and using them to learn. I’m super happy to be with my coaches, they are super helpful and they add a lot of value to my wrestling. They know what they are talking about, and it’s awesome.”
Riley (17-3), a senior who’s ranked fifth in 3A, claimed third place with a 7-0 victory over DeKalb sophomore Danny Aranda (13-4), who is ranked sixth in 3A. Riley took second at Barrington, was sixth at the IWCOA finals and placed third in the 2019 Dvorak. Aranda, who was second at the Gable Donnybrook and took fifth at the IWCOA, also reached the semifinals, where he dropped a 5-2 decision to Heethuis.
Marist freshman Will Denny (15-3) is ranked eighth in 3A after claiming an 11-3 victory over Conant junior Sammy Santangelo (9-3) in the fifth-place match. Vasquez (14-6), a freshman who is ranked sixth in 2A, suffered an injury in a consolation match and defaulted in the seventh-place match against Milton freshman Aiden Slama (16-2).
126 – Sergio Lemley, Mount Carmel
Sergio Lemley won his first Illinois tournament since capturing the IHSA 3A title at 113 as a freshman for the Caravan when he claimed a 5-1 victory in the Dvorak finals at 126 over Aurora Christian’s Joe Fernau, who also won an IHSA 3A title in 2020 at 106 competing for Montini Catholic. Lemley, who improved to 20-1 and is ranked second at 126 at 3A, also was a state champion last season in Indiana competing for Chesterton. Both were finalists in the 2019 Dvorak with Lemley taking first at 113 and Fernau second at 106.
After recording a win by technical fall in his first match, Lemley won a 14-5 major decision over Detroit Catholic Central’s Anthony Walker in the quarterfinals. He advanced to the title mat after getting a fall in 4:39 over Glenbard North’s Paul Woo in the semifinals. This is the second tournament championship of the year for the junior, who also won at the Gable Donnybrook and placed third at the Ironman where he suffered his lone loss, a 3-1 overtime defeat in the semifinals to Homewood-Flossmoor’s Vincent Robinson.
“Right now I’m kind of unsatisfied,” Lemley said. “I still have Vincent ahead of me so that’s what I’m looking forward to and working toward every day. Right now I’m just taking my time and looking forward to Christmas break and it should be fun. Our 60-pounder, Colin Kelly, has been improving every day and these guys have been putting in the work and we’re improving.”
Fernau, a senior who has a 17-4 record and is ranked third in 2A, was a runner-up at Barrington and fell one win shy of placing at the Ironman. He opened with a fall and then claimed a 10-2 major decision over Jacobs’ James Wright in the quarterfinals. In a dramatic semifinal match, Fernau got a third-period escape to capture a 1-0 victory over Providence Catholic senior Billy Meiszner, who’s ranked fifth in 3A and was an IWCOA runner-up.
Dakota junior Phoenix Blakely (14-3), a 2021 IWCOA and 2020 IHSA 1A champion who is top-ranked in 1A, won a 10-0 major decision over Wright (17-4), a junior who is ranked sixth in 3A. Meiszner (9-2) claimed a 5-1 victory in the fifth-place match over Woo (8-4), a senior who’s ranked tenth in 3A and placed fifth in the Dvorak in 2019. And in the seventh-place match, Milton junior Matt Haldiman (16-3) won by fall in 5:02 over Marist junior Jesse Herrera (13-4), who placed fourth at the IWCOA.
132 – Jacob Macatangay, Plainfield North
A lot of competitors would be thrilled to have a perfect record at this point and to also have won a championship at the state’s top in-season tournament, but Jacob Macatangay saw on Sunday that he still has work on some things in order to make a run at another state championship, which he accomplished with an IWCOA 3A title at 126 in June.
The Plainfield North senior, who’s ranked second in 3A and is a two-time state placewinner, improved to 19-0 after winning the title at 132 by a 7-4 score over Mount Carmel sophomore Eddie Enright, who’s 11-6. He led 5-4 heading into the final period and got a late takedown to seal the victory. That came after he had a battle in the semifinals which he won 9-8 over Bolingbrook senior Joe McDermott. After getting a fall in his opener, he claimed a 16-2 victory over Dakota freshman T.J. Silva in the quarterfinals.
“He was just really long and tall so I had to get to my offense, I had to get my angles and set up my moves,” Macatangay said. “It was a close match, a little too close for comfort. It was a tough tournament and I’m just glad that I came up on top. Our team is really a close-knit team and we grew together, we’re all ;pretty old now and have experienced high school wrestling and we’ve just got better from there.”
Enright, who’s ranked fifth in 3A has a fourth-place finish at the Gable Donnybrook and a fourth in the IWCOA to his credit. He recorded a fall in 3:19 over Detroit Catholic Central’s Clayton Jones (10-2) in the semifinals. Enright also won 5-3 by sudden victory over St. Charles East sophomore Tyler Guerra (15-4) in the quarterfinals after opening with a win by fall. Guerra, who’s sixth-ranked in 3A and fell one win shy of earning a medal at the Ironman, captured third place with a 10-1 victory over Jones.
Silva (11-3), who’s ranked fourth in 1A, took fifth place when he recorded a fall in 2:35 against McDermott (10-6). And in the seventh-place match, Glenbard North junior Solomon Gilliam (9-5), who placed second at Conant, claimed a 7-5 victory over Marian Central Catholic freshman Vance Williams (17-8), who’s ranked sixth in Class 1A.
138 – Dylan Gilcher, Detroit Catholic Central
Dylan Gilcher improved to 11-0 and became the first of three competitors from out of state and the first of two from his team to win a Dvorak title when he captured a 3-1 victory in the 138 finals over Moline’s Kole Brower. The Detroit Catholic Central junior, who’s a two-time Michigan Division 1 champion, got a takedown in the first period and led 3-0 going into the third period as he handed Brower his first loss in 18 matches. The Maroons senior, who was an IWCOA champ at 132, is top-ranked in 3A at his weight.
Brower, who won a title last week at Prospect, earned his spot in the finals after capturing a 10-3 semifinals victory over Dakota senior Maddux Blakely, who’s ranked second in Class 1A and placed third at state in both 2021 and 2020. After opening with a fall, Brower won by technical fall over DeKalb junior Austin Martin in the quarterfinals.
Blakely (16-1), who won the award for most falls in the least time with four and took fifth in the Dvorak in 2019, claimed third-place by injury default at 2:57 over Edwardsville senior Dylan Gvillo (19-2), who’s ranked third in 3A. Gvillo, an IWCOA runner-up who placed at the Dvorak in 2018, advanced to the semifinals where he fell 12-3 to Gilcher.
Belvidere/Belvidere North sophomore Colin Young (16-4) captured a 12-3 victory over Martin (13-6) in the fifth-place match and St. Charles East sophomore Gavin Connolly (12-4) won a 2-0 decision over Mount Carmel junior Nam Doan (5-8) in the seventh-place match.
145 – Tommy Curran, DeKalb
When a competitor only needs two minutes to wrap up business in a Dvorak Invitational championship match, they’ll certainly take that result. And that’s just what DeKalb senior Tommy Curran did in the 145 finals when he recorded a fall in 2:00 over Aurora Christian junior Taythan Silva to remain perfect on the season with a 17-0 record.
Curran, who took second in the 2019 Dvorak, is top-ranked and won his second title of the season, with the Gable Donnybrook being the other. The two-time state runner-up and three-time placewinner clearly wants to end up on top of the awards stand in Champaign this season. Curran won 12-1 in the semifinals over Dakota’s Tyler Simmer after claiming a 3-1 quarterfinal win over Lockport’s Logan Swaw and recording a win by technical fall before that.
“It was a really good tournament that was really well run,” Curran said. “We came here as a team to compete and I feel like we did that. We’re still improving as a team and I definitely think that we can be team state champs at the end of the year, and that’s our goal as a team. I was state runner-up twice and I was a Dvorak runner-up two years ago. So it feels really good to get on top of the podium and I want to keep working hard and continue on with the season. It’s going to be a fun one, we’re really looking forward to it.”
Silva, a junior who’s 18-3 and top-ranked in 2A with a Barrington title to his credit, followed up on a major decision in his opener with a 4-3 quarterfinal win over Moline junior Noah Tapia, the IWCOA 3A champion at 138 who is second-ranked in 3A and won a title at Prospect last weekend and was unbeaten and is now 18-1. Silva earned his spot in the finals when he claimed a 6-2 semifinals victory over Belvidere/Belvidere North junior Antonio Alvarado, who’s ranked eighth in 3A.
Tapia, who placed sixth in the 2019 Dvorak, bounced back from his quarterfinals setback to claim third place with a fall in 1:18 against Swaw (12-3), a junior who is ranked sixth in 3A. In the fifth-place match, Alvarado (10-3) won 8-2 over Dakota senior Simmer (14-3), who’s ranked second in 1A. The seventh-place match featured two out-of-state competitors going at it with Milton’s Royce Nilo (13-3) claiming an 8-0 major decision over Detroit Catholic Central’s Steven Shellenberger (8-4).
152 – Braden Stauffenberg, Aurora Christian
When you can pull out a dramatic win against an individual who won a state title in June and is a two-time placer, it’s definitely something to get pumped up about. And based on some of the other quality performances that Aurora Christian’s Braden Stauffenberg has already had this season, the senior should continue to be a contender in any event.
Stauffenberg improved to 23-2 after getting a late takedown and nearfall to record a 7-3 victory over Conant’s Ethan Stiles in the 152 championship match. Ranked second in 2A after finishing fifth at the Ironman and winning a title at Barrington, the senior is hopeful that he can greatly improve upon his sixth-place finish in 2020 while competing for Montini Catholic, where he was a teammate with Stiles. Stauffenberg, who took seventh in the 2019 Dvorak, advanced to the finals with a 3-0 semifinals win over DeKalb’s Damien Lopez after winning 3-2 against Detroit Catholic Central’s Darius Marines, a 2021 Michigan Division 1 state champ, in the quarterfinals that followed a major decision.
“It feels good coming in my senior year at Aurora Christian and my last year at the Dvorak, so ending up with a ‘W’ feels great,” Stauffenberg said. “We all as a team have one goal and that’s to win the team state and individual state. Overall, our goal is to come out and perform our hardest and win these types of matches in hard-fought tournaments. I did not have my junior year, which is one of the biggest seasons for a wrestler. So we’re ready to grind and ready to win.”
Stiles, a junior who won the IWCOA 3A 145 title and took third place in 2020, suffered his first defeat in 11 matches. After opening the Dvorak with a fall, Stiles won by technical fall over St. Charles East’s Lane Robinson in the quarterfinals and won a 13-6 decision in the semifinals over Crystal Lake Central’s Dillon Carlson, who’s ranked fourth in 2A.
In the third-place match, Lopez (13-3), a senior who’s ranked third in 3A with a third-place showing at the Donnybrook to go with his sixth-place IHSA showing in 2020 and second at the Dvorak in 2019, dropped an 8-6 decision to Marines. Carlson (17-3), a runner-up at Barrington, won the fifth-place match by injury default over Milton’s Michael Schliem (15-5). And Edwardsville senior Jorden Johnson (19-2), who’s ranked tenth in 3A, claimed seventh place with a 7-4 victory over Amery’s Wyatt Ingham (7-4).
160 – Chris Moore, McHenry
The 160 Dvorak championship match featured a clash of the top two rated individuals in Class 3A, McHenry junior Chris Moore and Mount Carmel sophomore Colin Kelly, and Moore captured a 3-1 victory to improve to 21-0 on the season while Kelly fell to 16-4.
Moore, an IHSA 2A champ at 113 in 2020 for Aurora Christian and an IWCOA 2A runner-up at 138 at Marian Central Catholic, added to a title win at Prospect by going 4-0 with two decisions following a pair of wins by technical fall, which included a quarterfinals win over Conant’s CJ Gilbert. In the semifinals, he defeated Marist’s Tommy Boland 14-7.
“I feel real good,” Moore said. “I felt like I had a good tournament and scored a lot of points and was moving a lot better than I have been. We wrestled a little bit over the offseason in a couple of tournaments but it mainly was just training hard and getting prepared for this year. There’s a little bit that we have to work on to get better and now it’s just getting prepared for the state series.”
Kelly, a third-place finisher in the IWCOA finals who was third at the Gable Donnybrook, followed up on a tech fall with a 6-2 quarterfinals win over Hersey senior Billy Spassov, who’s ranked fourth in 3A and has a Joliet Central title and third at Prospect to his credit, before winning 11-2 over Detroit Catholic Central’s Tatum Bunn in the semifinals.
Spassov (16-2) captured a 4-0 victory in the third-place match over Lockport senior Paul Kadlec (10-5), who’s ranked ninth in 3A and placed sixth at the IWCOA. Boland (14-2), who’s ranked fifth in 3A and was fifth at the IWCOA and in the 2019 Dvorak, won by injury default over Bunn (3-3) for fifth place. And Gilbert (12-4), who’s a senior, took seventh place by injury default over Plainfield North senior Jared Gumila (20-3), who’s ranked seventh in 3A and was fourth in the IHSA in 2020.
170 – Brayden Thompson, Lockport
Two unbeatens met up in the 170 championship match with Lockport junior Brayden Thompson claiming a 2-0 decision over McHenry senior Brody Hallin. Thompson, who’s 12-0 and top-ranked in 3A, advanced to the finals with an 8-5 victory over Milton’s Aeoden Sinclair while Hallin, who’s 20-1 and ranked third in 3A, prevailed 3-2 in his semifinals match against Amery’s Eddie Simes.
Thompson, who was a champion at the Dan Gable Donnybrook, took third in the IHSA in 2020 at Montini Catholic and placed fifth in the Dvorak in 2019, got a fall in his first match followed by a win by technical fall in the quarterfinals over Libertyville junior Austin Gomez, who’s ranked fifth with a second at Prospect and a third at Barrington.
“They have a good room with good coaches right now, so it’s awesome,” Thompson said. “Making weight and doing everything that we do as a team is awesome to be able to do that again this year. We’re coming man and we’re gunning for that state title, for sure, 100 percent. Jameson and Josh Oster have a lot of knowledge behind what they do and they’ve been there and done it. My goal is not to just win state, it’s to be the number one kid in the country.”
Hallin, a three-time state qualifier and fourth-place finisher in the IWCOA finals who won a title at Prospect, got a fall in his first match and then captured a 5-1 quarterfinals victory over Detroit Central Catholic’s Cameron Adams.
In an all-Wisconsin clash for third, Sinclair (17-1) won 5-3 over Simes (9-2). Gomez (17-6) claimed fifth place by injury default over DeKalb senior Lukes Schmerbach (15-4), who’s ranked sixth with a fifth in 3A. And for seventh place, Adams (9-3) was a 4-1 winner over Crystal Lake Central junior Ben Butler (15-9), who’s ranked ninth in 2A..
182 – Manuel Rojas, Detroit Catholic Central
DeKalb senior Bradley Gillum, who won an IWCOA 3A title at 170 and was second in the IHSA in 3A at 160 in 2020, hoped to capture a Dvorak title at 182 against Detroit Catholic Central senior Manuel Rojas, a two-time Michigan Division 1 state champ, but his hopes were dashed due to an injury, which forced him to default in 2:22.
Gillum, who is 16-2, is top-ranked in 3A after opening with a win by technical fall and then recording a fall in 1:36 over Marist’s Conor Phelan in the quarterfinals and capturing a 3-2 semifinal victory over Crystal Lake South’s Shane Moran, who’s top-ranked in 2A. Gillum, a three-time state qualifier, also took second place at the Gable Donnybrook.
For third place, Libertyville senior Josh Knudten (18-2) captured a 7-5 decision over Moran. Knudten is ranked third with a title at Prospect and a second at Barrington and also placed fifth at the IWCOA. Moran (18-2) is a two-time state placewinner, finishing fourth at the IWCOA and sixth at the IHSA in 2020.
In the fifth place match, Amery’s Grant Cook (11-2) was a 5-0 winner over Mount Carmel sophomore Rylan Breen (12-8), who’s ranked ninth in 3A. And for seventh place, St. Charles East sophomore Brandon Swartz (13-4) claimed a 5-2 decision over Belvidere/Belvidere North junior A.J. Piloni (11-4).
195 – Peter Marinopoulos, Marist
As a freshman, Peter Marinopoulos was a team manager for Marist. Two years later as a junior, he’s one of the 14 champions in the Dvorak Invitational following a 7-3 win over Mount Carmel senior Elliott Lewis in the 195 finals. And even though he qualified for the IWCOA Class 3A finals in June, Marinopoulos, who owns a 16-0 record, had an injury default in his first match and a medical forfeit in the next due to an injury that occurred in the sectional.
Marinopoulos, who’s ranked second in 3A, got a pin in his first match, claimed a 9-8 win over Aurora Christian’s Nate Wemstrom in the quarterfinals and won 4-2 over Avery’s Kale Hopke, a Wisconsin Division 2 state champion, in the semifinals. Lewis, who’s 11-5 and ranked third in 3A and took fifth in the Dvorak in 2019, won his first match by fall and beat Dakota’s Noah Wenzel on an ultimate tiebreaker. He won 6-3 over Conant’s Henry Chang in the quarterfinals and 7-3 over DeKalb’s Bryson Buhk in the semifinals.
“This is my first year coming here,” Marinopoulos said. “In my freshman year, I was a manager and watching all of my teammates wrestle. So now coming here and competing, it was actually really nice that I won. I was really excited to start wrestling with all of the good guys to get me better, so I’m just glad to be here. I was really excited to get back in the room and start wrestling again with all of my teammates to start getting better. It’s really exciting and it’s helping with the recruiting process, so it’s great.”
In the third-place match, Wemstrom defeated Wenzel by a 9-1 score. Wemstrom (19-3), a senior who is ranked third in 2A, won a title at Barrington and was fourth in the 2019 Dvorak. Wenzel (16-2), a sophomore who is ranked second in 1A, claimed fourth place at the IWCOA finals.
For fifth place, Hopke (9-2) captured a 5-4 victory over Buhk (12-6), a senior who’s ranked fourth in 3A and placed fifth in the IWCOA finals. And in the seventh-place match, Detroit Catholic Central freshman Connor Bercume (11-2) won 8-3 over Libertyville junior Cole Matulenko (17-5). who won a title at Prospect.
220 – Koy Hopke, Amery
Lockport ‘s Andrew Blackburn-Forst isn’t likely going to find himself trailing 6-0 in the first period of many matches this season, but that’s just where the IWCOA champ and two-time placewinner who’s top-ranked in 3A was against Amery sophomore Koy Hopke in the 220 finals. After the Porter senior closed the gap to 7-4, Hopke claimed a 10-4 win.
Blackburn-Forst (4-1) had praise for his opponent, who won a Wisconsin Division 2 state title last season, but also admits that he hasn’t had much time to get into top shape after turning in an all-state season as a defensive lineman and helping Lockport to win the IHSA Class 8A football championship. Blackburn-Forst reached the finals with three first-period falls, pinning Hersey’s Manny Mejia in 0:39 in the quarterfinals and Plainfield South’s John Pacewic in 1:50 in the semifinals. Hopke (10-0), whose team won the Division 2 dual team championship, advanced with three falls, needing just 0:24 in the first two before requiring 2:19 in the semifinals against Marist’s Ghee Rachal.
Rachal (13-2), a senior who’s ranked second in 3A, recorded a fall in 4:58 over Pacewic (12-2), who’s fifth in 3A, to claim third-place. Both also placed in the 2019 Dvorak with Rachal taking third and Pacewic eighth. Rachal, who took fourth at the IWCOA finals, also placed at the Dvorak in his freshman year, making him one of two in the field to be a three-time medalist while Pacewic also has a Barrington title to his credit this season.
Providence Catholic senior Liam McDermott (18-2), who’s ranked sixth with a title at Antioch to his credit, won 3-1 over Detroit Catholic Central senior Sean Field (8-4) for fifth. And Yorkville sophomore Ben Alvarez (18-3), who’s ranked seventh and was third at Barrington, claimed a 13-6 win over Grant junior Cameron Lattimore (10-9) for seventh. .
285 – Ryan Boersma, Mount Carmel
Repeating as a Dvorak champion and being a three-time medalist at the Invitational is always an impressive accomplishment, but that’s especially the case when an athlete pulls off that performance in just three visits to the event, which is just what Mount Carmel senior Ryan Boersma achieved when he claimed a 4-1 victory over previously-unbeaten Glenbard North senior Paulie Robertson in the event’s final championship at 285. He placed third as a freshman and won a title as a sophomore at Providence Catholic.
Boersma (19-2), who’s top-ranked at 285 with a first in the Gable Donnybrook and a fifth at the Ironman to his credit, opened with two major decisions, including a 9-1 quarterfinals victory over Plainfield North’s Kaden McCombs, who’s ranked ninth in 3A. The Mount Carmel senior, who’s a three-time state qualifier who won the IWCOA title in June and was fifth at 285 in the IHSA in 2020, earned his spot in the finals with a fall in 3:25 over Crystal Lake South sophomore Andy Burburijia, who’s ranked eighth in 2A.
“It’s obviously not the result that I wanted there, but it’s good to know what I need to work on,” Boersma said of the Ironman. “That’s the whole purpose of going there early in the year so we know what to work on. I’m building toward state, and team state, especially. The official IHSA title, that’s what we’re in the hunt for. We had a really good tournament here and I think we’ll continue to improve. Coach Tsirtsis is awesome and we’re going to keep getting better and hopefully show that at both individual and team state.”
Robertson, who’s 11-1 and ranked second in 3A with a title at Conant and a third-place finish at the IWCOA to his credit, followed a fall with a 6-0 quarterfinal win over Hersey junior Oleg Simakov and won 3-1 in sudden victory over Amery senior Robert Beese. Beese (10-1) recorded a fall in 4:29 over Simakov (19-6) to claim third place, McCombs (18-6) captured a 5-0 decision over Burburijia (16-5) for fifth place and Crystal Lake Central junior Leo Diaz (17-5), who’s ranked ninth in 2A, got a pin in 1:34 against Bolingbrook senior Frank Oliveira (4-3) in the seventh-place match.
Haak-led Portage prevails over Riverside-Brookfield at Harvard
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By Curt Herron
For the IWCOA
HARVARD – Tim Haak and his son Shane obviously have a lot of great memories about Harvard’s Sciacca/Holtfreter Tournament, a staple in the sport for over half a century, and they were fortunate to be able to add another special chapter to the fascinating story on Saturday.
For 27 years, Tim was the head coach at Harvard, where he set an IHSA record for wins at a program with 636, which also ranked in the top-five nationally when he retired in 2014 as head coach in both wrestling and football. His program advanced to dual team state 13 times, placed four times with a title in 1992 and won 26 regional titles. He coached 105 qualifiers, 40 placewinners and 10 state champions and was on the IHSA wrestling advisory committee and also the IWCOA Board of Directors. Tim was inducted into the IWCOA hall of fame in 2001 and in 2018 he received the Lifetime Service to Wrestling award from the National Wrestling Hall of Fame Illinois Chapter.
Harvard has the rare distinction of having had three head coaches who were inducted into the IWCOA hall of fame, with tournament namesakes John Sciacca (1986) and Richard Holtfreter (1993) the others. Thanks to the efforts of their hall of fame coaches as well as six decades of dedicated Hornets athletes, the school has won over 1,100 dual meets, which ranks second behind Granite City.
On Saturday, the pair returned to Harvard with 2008 graduate Shane as head coach and Tim assisting him for Portage High from Portage, Wisconsin. Thanks to seven individuals placing fourth or better, the Warriors were able to capture the title of the 54th annual tournament with 170.5 points while Riverside-Brookfield finished in second place with 162.5 points and Harvard claimed third place with 157.5 points.
“This is gratifying,” said Tim Haak, who has assisted Shane for four years. “I know two years ago when we came, my wife asked how is it going to feel when you come back. I said that it was going to be surreal but as soon as the whistle blows, we’re going to be for our guys. The neat thing is that I get a chance to coach with my son and he’s taken a program that had very few kids in it and built it up.
“I was at Woodstock, where I graduated from, when coach Sciacca coached here and I coached under coach Holtfreter when I first came here. It’s rewarding to see that former athletes are back coaching and you can see how tough they are and the style of wrestling continues. It’s exciting for me to come back because you give your whole life here, you want it to succeed, so I was real excited when David (Schultz) became the head coach. And it’s about building relationships. I’m close to many of them and still stay in contact with so many of our former wrestlers and football players. It’s humbling that you can build those life-long relationships and I’ve been very fortunate.”
Nine schools had individual champions with the host Hornets leading the way with three. Prairie Ridge (134), Woodstock (134) and Richmond-Burton (132) finished fourth-through sixth in the 12-team competition and all of those schools had two champions.
Winning titles for Harvard were Brian Hernandez (106), Ivan Rosas (145) and Nathan Rosas (195) while Riverside-Brookfield’s lone champion was Brock Hoyd (170) and Portage’s only title winner was Chase Beckett (126), who also was also received tournament’s outstanding wrestler award. He was one of several team members who competed in the tournament in 2019, when he won a title and his team took third place.
Harvard’s head coach is David Schultz, a 2001 graduate of the school who was a Class A runner-up at 275 during his senior season. He was coached by Tim Haak and his father, Neil Schultz, who is also a former Harvard wrestler who was Haak’s assistant coach for 20 years and ran tournaments there and the 2013 IWCOA hall of famer was on hand again to help during the tournament’s return following its one-year hiatus.
“It’s a tournament that I wrestled in and obviously grew up in,” said Shane Haak, who’s in his seventh year at Portage. “It’s cool for Portage to bring them down here but just the tradition of the tournament since there’s countless Division I All-Americans and state place-winning teams that have wrestled in it.
“Also what the sport does for your life as well and how it shapes you to be a better person and the Harvard program has certainly done that to countless individuals over the past 50-something years with the three hall of fame coaches and now David Schultz being here.”
The top two Illinois teams in the field made trips to the IHSA dual team tournament in 2020 with coach Nick Curby’s Riverside-Brookfield team advancing in 2A and Schultz’s Harvard squad qualifying in 1A.
“We took second at the Fenton Invite a couple of weeks ago and were second here, it was a great job,” Curby said. “We had our hopes set and going into the second day we were leading. We didn’t have the semifinal round that we wanted, but we have a lot of young guys still in the lineup and they’re still learning. They’re going to take their lumps, but it’s about learning from that and continuing to move forward and to get better and it will start showing up in the matches.
“On that state team we had seven or eight sophomores so we knew that we’d have some experience going into last year and we got as much out of last year as we could. We’ll have a nice blend of upperclassmen and underclassmen on this team. And it’s just about how those guys step in and start filling the shoes that we have to fill at the varsity lineup and they’ve been doing a great job. They’re not want to be yet but they’re working on it. As a coach, I can’t ask for anything more than the hard work that they’re putting in.”
Prairie Ridge got titles from Tyler Evans (120) and Eddie Ferree (160), Woodstock’s champions were Alex Iversen (152) and Gavin Loiselle (220), and Richmond-Burton got titles from Emmett Nelson (113) and Brody Rudkin (132). Also winning tournament titles were Belvidere/Belvidere North’s Kamryn LaBeau (138), Woodstock North’s Henry Goetz (182) and Bremen’s Eric Perez-Nava (285).
Individuals who lost in the finals were Portage’s Landon Heitmeier (138), Jordan Starr (170) and Jack Callen (195), Richmond-Burton’s Clay Madula (106) and Isaac Jones (145), Bremen’s Charles Portis (113) and Jesus Sanchez (132), Riverside-Brookfield’s Mateo Costello (126), Prairie Ridge’s Charlie Ferree (152), Harvard’s Gabe Sanchez (182), Belvidere/Belvidere North’s TJ Mitchell (220), North Boone’s Ethan Delgado (285) and Portage extras Jayson Kreier (120) and Oz Gaytan (160).
The top three teams in the points standings all had seven medal winners for top-four finishes and the next three teams had six individuals who advanced to the awards stand. All but one of the schools in the 12-team event were able to have multiple medalists.
Here’s a list of the tournament champions and their weight classes:
106: Brian Hernandez, Harvard
Harvard’s Brian Hernandez became the first of three champions for the host school when he recorded a fall in 3:17 over Richmond-Burton’s Clay Madula in the 106 finals.
This was the second tournament finals appearance for the senior, who placed second at Vernon Hills and he is now ranked sixth in Class 1A. After getting a first period fall in his opening match, Hernandez defeated Elmwood Park’s Jack Dombeck 12-6 in the semifinals to earn his spot on the title mat.
“I’m excited to show what I can do this year,” Hernandez said. “I participated in a tournament and I got second there when I wrestled 113. I love my teammates. Everybody is very talented and has their own set of skills. I can always count on my team to come through and if it’s a tough meet, I’m confident sending out any one of them on the mat and am sure that they can get the job done.”
Madula reached the finals with a fall in 3:37 over Riverside-Brookfield’s Matt Decosola in the semifinals. Dombeck bounced back from his semifinal loss by getting a win by technical fall and then recording a fall in 5:12 in the third-place match against Woodstock North’s Anthony Matejzk, who pinned Decosola to assure himself of a medal.
113: Emmett Nelson, Richmond-Burton
Emmett Nelson used two falls and a victory by technical fall to become the first of Richmond-Burton’s two champions. In the 113 finals, he won by fall in 3:49 over Bremen’s Charles Portis.
Nelson, a freshman who won a title and was co-outstanding wrestler at his school’s DuBois Classic and took third at Rockford East, beat North Boone’s Gavin Eckberg by technical fall in 3:56 to earn his spot in the finals.
“It’s been a great season so far,” Nelson said. “In middle school, we didn’t get two seasons my last two years so it’s great to come back. I haven’t brought home any state medals yet but this year I’m hoping to. Our program has grown a lot over the years and there’s a lot of big guys coming in.”
Portis advanced to the title mat with a fall in his first match and a 2-1 decision over Woodstock’s Daniel Bychowski in the semifinals. Eckberg recorded two falls in the consolation bracket and claimed third place with a pin in 5:49 over Bychowski.
120: Tyler Evans, Prairie Ridge
Prairie Ridge’s Tyler Evans captured his first tournament title of the year following a second at Prospect and a fourth at Barrington when he recorded a fall in 0:28 in the title match over Portage’s Jayson Kreier.
Evans, a junior ranked seventh in Class 2A who placed fourth in the IWCOA finals, recorded a fall in 1:17 in the semifinals over another Portage opponent, Jeffrey Jones, to earn his spot on the title mat.
“In the years past, we haven’t really had that good of a team,” Evans said. “This year we have a brand new coach who is a younger coach who came into the room and he’s really everybodys’ season around. Everybody is putting in the work and It’s really paying off.”
Riverside-Brookfield’s Quintavius Murrell pinned Jones in 3:59 to reach the third-place match, where he was a winner by technical fall in 2:19 over Richmond-Burton’s Dalton Youngs.
126: Chase Beckett, Portage
Portage senior Chase Beckett received the tournament’s outstanding wrestler award after getting two pins and a win by technical fall to claim top honors at 126 which he secured with a fall in 2:35 in the finals over Riverside-Brookfield’s Mateo Costello. The 2020 Wisconsin Division 2 state runner-up and 2019 Sciacca/Holtfreter Tournament champion had never won an OWA before.
Costello, a senior and two-time state qualifier who is ranked eighth in 2A with a title win at Fenton, opened with a pair of falls before capturing a 4-2 victory over Woodstock’s Max Hodory in the semifinals.
“I was very happy coming to this tournament and not only winning it but also getting the most outstanding wrestler ,” Beckett said. “But I feel like our biggest accomplishment and the thing that I was most proud of is our team. It was a big goal of the Haaks to come here to win this tournament being how historically significant it is to their careers. So we were very excited to come here and ultimately come out on top as a team and I think we earned it. The fact that we had a solid wrestler at every weight class and they fought hard and fought for every team point.The Haaks do so much for me. They’ve developed me as a wrestler and I continue to improve no matter which level I’m at and that’s for every kid on our team, too. They’re always working on building the best team and making us the best wrestlers and the best versions of ourselves, on and off the mat.”
Prairie Ridge’s Mikey Meade got bumped into the consolation bracket after falling to Beckett in the quarterfinals. But he responded with two falls and a 12-6 decision over Hodory to reach the third-place match, where he won 5-3 over Harvard’s Marques Merida, who also had two falls and a decision in the consolation bracket following a quarterfinal loss to Hodory.
132: Brody Rudkin, Richmond-Burton
Brody Rudkin became Richmond-Burton’s second champion of the day when he went 4-0 which featured two falls and a decision to send him to the 132 title mat where he won by technical fall in 5:04 over Bremen’s Jesus Sanchez.
Rudkin, a sophomore who was second at Rockford East and third at his own tournament, earned his spot in the finals with a fall in 3:42 over Woodstock North’s Landan Creighton. Meanwhile, Sanchez reached the finals with two falls, including one in 0:46 over Riverside-Brookfield’s Josh Gonzalez in the semifinals.
“We’ve had a relentless training center going on with state champions Jordan Blanton and Ryan Prater and it’s a great experience,” Rudkin said. “I always try to get to state and I want to build up until I get to my senior year.”
Prairie Ridge’s Ryan Koelblinger bounced back from a quarterfinal loss to Sanchez to claim third place after recording a fall and a win by major decision over Creighton before recording a fall in 1:35 over Gonzalez in the third-place match.
138: Kamryn LaBeau, Belvidere/Belvidere North
Kamryn LaBeau was the only champion for Belvidere/Belvidere North after winning all three of his matches with first-period falls, capping his day with a title win at 138 with a pin in 0:45 over Portage’s Landon Heitmeier.
LaBeau, a senior who had a third-place finish at Rockford East, advanced to the finals with a fall in 1:36 over North Boone’s Maysen Smith while Heitmeier advanced with a pin in 1:59 over Richmond-Burton’s Nate Madula.
“It’s crazy,” LaBeau said. “I come out here and I’m nervous every time before my match, but as soon as you step on the mat, it all just goes away and you think back to the wrestling room and do what you practice. I want to win conference and go to state, so I’m going to just keep working toward that and wrestling like I know how to.”
Harvard’s Daniel Rosas lost his quarterfinals match to LaBeau but then recorded three-consecutive falls in the consolation bracket, including one in the third-place match in 1:38 over Woodstock’s Travis Cote, who had a pair of falls in the consolation bracket after losing in the quarterfinals to Heitmeier.
145: Ivan Rosas, Harvard
The host Hornets picked up their second of three titles when senior Ivan Rosas claimed top honors at 145 after winning by technical fall in 3:01 over Richmond-Burton’s Isaac Jones. Rosas, who is ranked fifth in 1A, was a sixth-place finisher at the IWCOA finals.
Rosas earned his spot in the semifinals with a 12-4 major decision over Prairie Ridge’s Xander York. Jones followed up on a pin by claiming a 7-4 semifinals victory over Riverside-Brookfield’s Jacob Noe to reach the finals.
“We usually do pretty good every year and the last time that there was an IHSA event at the end of the year, we qualified for team state, and that was pretty nice,” Rosas said. “We always have a good group of wrestlers and just like the way that we bond, it’s nice. I love all of my teammates.”
York bounced back from his semifinal loss to the eventual champion by recording a fall and then winning 6-0 over Portage’s Garret Crawford in the third-place match.
152: Alex Iversen, Woodstock
Alex Iversen captured Woodstock’s first of two titles when he capped a day in which he had three pins with a fall in 5:06 of the 152 championship match over Prairie Ridge’s Charlie Ferree.
Iversen, a senior who also placed second at Richmond-Burton, recorded a fall in 2:29 in the semifinals over Riverside-Brookfield’s Cade Tomkins while Ferree won his first two matches by fall, which included a pin in 3:22 in the semifinals over Portage’s David Williams.
“I’ve been to this tournament before and I don’t think that I’ve placed before, so it’s really nice,” Iversen said. “This is a completely different feel than the duals because you’re watching everybody else wrestle and it gets you more hyped up for your own match. So it’s just a really nice feeling out there.”
Belvidere/Belvidere North’s Nick Taylor lost to Ferree in his first match but responded with a win by technical fall and a pin against Tomkins to advance him to the third-place match, where he got a fall in 2:24 over Harvard’s Kaden Vest, who fell in the quarterfinals to Tomkins and then won three-straight consolation matches, including a pair of two-point decisions.
160: Eddie Ferree, Prairie Ridge
Prairie Ridge’s Eddie Ferree recorded three-consecutive falls to capture the championship at 160, with the final pin coming in 1:11 over Portage’s Oz Gaytan in the finals.
Ferree, a senior, advanced to the title match with a fall in 3:50 over Riverside-Brookfield’s Ethan Ranft while Gaytan reached the finals with a fall in 5:45 over Belvidere/Belvidere North’s Jorge Hernandez in the other semifinal match.
“We have a great team right now but we’re also a young team,” Ferree said. “We just got a new coach this year, Justin Peete. It was great to see him step up and show us exactly what we need to do to succeed. Obviously I’m going to only have one year with him but I’m going to take full advantage of that.””
Bremen’s Konya Lewis-Hunt lost his first match to Ranft in the quarterfinals but then recorded three-straight falls, including one in 1:59 over Ranft to claim third place.
170: Brock Hoyd, Riverside-Brookfield
Brock Hoyd rolled to three wins by fall to give runner-up Riverside-Brookfield its lone champion. He capped off his day with a pin in 2:43 over Portage’s Jordan Starr.
It was the second tournament title of the season for Hoyd, who’s a senior, with the other coming at Fenton. Hoyd, a senior who qualified for state in 2019, earned his spot in the finals with a pin in 0:33 over Prairie Ridge’s Jimmy Stone while Starr advanced with a fall in 3:47 over Belvidere/Belvidere North’s Tayvione Wilson.
“It was frustrating when our season got cut short, but we had to make the most out of it, and we got a lot of matches, which was good,” Hoyd said. “This was some of the better competition that I’ve gotten this year, so it felt good to come out with the win. In my freshman year, (coach Nick) Curby kind of said it was a restart of the program since we didn’t have many achievements in past years. And then in my sophomore year, we qualified for state as a team, which was really big.”
Richmond-Burton’s Alex Reyna lost his opener to Hoyd but won a 4-3 decision over Wilson and then claimed a 10-2 decision over Woodstock’s Zach Canaday, who fell to Wilson in his first match.
182: Henry Goetz, Woodstock North
Woodstock North received its only championship from Henry Goetz who followed up on a pair of falls with a 5-0 decision over Harvard’s Gabe Sanchez in the 182 title match.
Goetz, a senior, advanced to the title match with a fall in 2:36 over North Boone’s Garrett Louis in the semifinals while Sanchez, a junior, recorded two pins, including one in 2:39 over Woodstock’s Jovanni Murillo in the semifinals, to earn a spot in the finals.
“I’m going to make the most of this year and do as much as I can,” Goetz said. “I’ve just been working on my neutral game and getting better. I feel more competitive and stronger out there so I feel good.”
Riverside-Brookfield’s Liam Cote fell to Goetz in the quarterfinals but responded with three-consecutive falls, with the last of those coming in the third-place match where he got a pin in 2:42 over Louis.
195: Nathan Rosas, Harvard
The host Hornets claimed the advantage for champions on the day with three when Nathan Rosas defeated Portage’s Jack Callen in a 7-3 decision in the 195 title match.
Rosas, a senior who’s ranked third in 1A who also won a title at Vernon Hills, finished in fifth place at the weight in 2021 in the IWCOA finals and in 2020 in the IHSA finals. He recorded falls in his first two matches, winning in the semifinals with a pin in 0:34 over Riverside-Brookfield’s Thurman Givens. Callen advanced with an 11-1 semifinals victory over Elmwood Park’s Jack Pedersen.
“It was really tough last year not being able to wrestle as many times as we were used to,” Rosas said. “I feel like I have to make up for what I lost last year. Our team looks solid this year and I think we’re going to do quite amazing, especially with the people that we have in the room. Wrestling and fighting every day us what we want.”
Pedersen bounced back from his semifinal loss to claim third place with a 5-3 victory over Woodstock’s Sean Ryan, who also fell to Pedersen in the quarterfinals before advancing with a pin and an 8-4 win over Givens.
220: Gavin Loiselle, Woodstock
Woodstock senior Gavin Loiselle followed a pair of first-period falls with a pin in 4:57 over Belvidere/Belvidere North’s TJ Mitchell to capture the 220 championship.
Loiselle, who also won a title at Richmond-Burton, recorded a fall in 1:12 in the semifinals over Portage’s Pierce Kristoff while Mitchell advanced to the finals with a fall in 0:37 over Elmwood Park’s Omari Evans.
“It’s really great to come out here every year,” Loiselle said. “This is really what we look forward to. Sure, the duals are nice, but coming out and getting to wrestle three or four matches in a day and getting to wrestle the better competition in the area. McHenry County is a really good area and a lot of people are cut from the same cloth.”
Kristoff beat teammate Eli Kimball by fall in 4:37 in the third-place match.
285: Eric Perez-Nava, Bremen
Bremen became the ninth team to capture an individual title in the event when Eric Perez-Nava won by fall in 1:37 over North Boone’s Ethan Delgado in the 285 finals.
“This is a really big deal because it’s my third year wrestling and I’m going through everything pretty quick,” Perez-Nava said. “It’s going good so far and it’s fun going to places and wrestling. It’s back to normal. I just try hard and practice hard and practice how you play.”
After both bounced back from semifinals losses with first-period falls, Moyoti-Hernandez pinned Givens in 3:31 to claim third place.
Lemont’s late charge wins Whitlatch title
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By Mike Garofola
HINSDALE — In a thrilling race to the finish line, it was Lemont that won by a nose.
Erik Murry’s men found themselves chasing eventual runner-up Glenbard West all throughout the second day of the 55th annual Rex Whitlach Invitational. Lemont drew back even with the Hilltoppers 180-180 and then fell behind one last time at 191-188 before a strong finish at the upper weights ensured Lemont the team championship at host Hinsdale Central.
Final score: Lemont 197, Glenbard West 195. Joliet Catholic finished hot on their heels in third with 192 points.
“I cannot tell you how proud I am of this team, which stayed together all weekend, fighting for every point, especially in the final round when every point was the difference between winning this great tournament, or finishing second overall,” Murry said.
Glenbard West rode its hot hand late into the afternoon but was unable to hold off Lemont. Stevenson (177) finished fourth and Geneseo (161) rounded out the top five on the leader board in a tournament that would highlight the strength of 2A wrestling, with Nos. 1, 3 and 7 (Joliet Catholic, Lemont, and Geneseo) proving they belong with the big boys.
“We obviously would have liked to hold on to the lead and win it all, but we asked a lot of the guys this weekend, and they came through with some terrific results and against a great field, which included some really terrific 2A schools,” said Glenbard West head coach, Nick Posegay.
Joliet Catholic vied for the tournament title despite being shorthanded.
“We were down two state medal winners, one of which is a state champion, but the guys did all that they could to stay close,” Joliet Catholic coach Ryan Cumbee said. “We’re very proud of the effort and third-place finish.”
Sevenson also went into the Whitlatch minus a few contributors.
“We’re proving with each weekend that we’re a very good tournament team,” Stevenson senior Cole Rhemrev said. “When we get healthy and at full strength, we’ll be even better, and we’ll be ready to go when conference and state comes around.” Rhemrev and teammate Lorenzo Frezza continue to shine in the lower weights for head coach Shane Cook.
Geneseo got marvelous performances from brothers Zachary and Anthony Montez and company, finishing 11 points clear of Lincoln-Way West to grab a well-deserved fifth place.
“We were thrilled to be a part of this terrific tournament,” Geneseo coach Jon Murray said. “It gives us a chance to see where we are and it exposes what we need to work on from here on out. To come away with our best finish in recent memory says a lot about the effort all of our guys put in.”
The Rex Whitlach tournament is one of the longest running tournaments in the state of Illinois, alongside Prospect’s Mudge-McMorrow and Palatine’s Berman Holiday Classic. The Whitlatch is named after the former Urbana High School star and two-time IHSA state champion, who went on to be named captain at the University of Illinois, where he earned MVP honors his senior year.
Whitlach, who passed away in October at the age of 84, was responsible for turning his own tournament into a high profile tournament which began with a modest four teams at its inception to this year’s incarnation of 21 teams.
106 – Matt Soltis, Lincoln-Way West
Matt Soltis might soon find his name in the state rankings following his successful run to the 106-pound title Saturday afternoon in Hinsdale.
The Lincoln-Way West senior dropped down from 113 for this tournament, and the move proved a good one for both Soltis and his head coach Brian Glynn, who was thrilled with the effort Soltis turned in.
“Matt did very well today, made adjustments when needed, especially when we pointed out leading into this weekend that he was looking for the granby way too much,” said Glynn, a two-tiime IHSA state champion and a two-time All-American at Illinois. “We worked on looking for different ways to attack and you saw in the second period how that was the turning point in the match.”
After consecutive stalemates midway the second period, Soltis delivered his winning granby, which led to a near fall late in the period to extend his lead to 6-2 over Lemont sophomore Carter Mikolajczak, and an eventual 8-4 decision.
“We worked on ways to use the granby this week and I almost had it in the first period, but missed it,” Soltis said. “When it was there in the second period, I went for it and got it.”
Soltis also defeated top seed Rocco Hayes of Sandburg in a hard fought 3-2 semifinal match.
113 – Zachary Montez, Geneseo
The odds were stacked in the 113-pound field when the top-rated man in 2A at 120, Joliet Catholic’s Gylon Sims dropped down to compete at 113.
The Hilltoppers’ junior came in as the reigning state champion, with another state medal on his resume (2nd at 106 in 2020) and figured to be the favorite in this division.
Enter Geneseo freshman Zachary Montez, No. 5 in Rob Sherrill’s IWCOA rankings before the Whitlach began and now at No. 2 after his smashing success at the tournament. Montez wrestled three marvelous matches to advance into his final with Sims, where he won a 6-4 overtime decision.
“I honestly felt like I was as good as (Sims) at the start of the tournament, and when I saw that he had to cut weight to make it to 113, I knew I’d be stronger and more conditioned against him because this is the weight I’ve been at this season,” said Montez, who won the Whitlatch OWA for his superb work over the two days.
“I’ve been working hard since the end of the season last year, especially with my fitness, so when we went to overtime, I knew I would be ready to go for whatever came my way,” Montez said.
Montez (18-2) started down after a scoreless first period, executed a nice escape and then a takedown near the edge after a wild scramble.
Sims roared back to level at 4-4 to force an extra session, which Montez quickly finished off with a takedown just 22 seconds into the overtime period.
“This was a big win for me, but there’s a lot of work to be done ahead of me to keep it going for the rest of the season,” said Montez, who also won at the Rockford East Invite after a third-place finish at Antioch.
120 – Bobby Conway, Brother Rice
When the aforementioned Sims dropped down to 113 for the Whitlatch, and a quartet of top 10-ranked 3A wrestlers at 120 in Sammie Hayes (Sandburg) Jalen Dunson (OPRF), Josh Killacky (Neuqua Valley) and Wilson Wright (New Trier) were out of action for the weekend, it created a window of opportunity.
Brother Rice freshman Bobby Conway climbed through that window, opening strong staying that way, ultimately recording a well-deserved 6-0 decision in his final over Jase Salin of Lincoln-Way West to claim his second individual crown of his career.
“It feel really amazing right now,” said Conway, who also collected the top prize at Lake County, Indiana recently.
“My plan going into the final was to get a lot of shots, keep moving and keep my balance, and to go to work each time I scored points.”
Conway did just that with a reversal at three minutes to go up 4-0 in the title match, before riding out the period to set up another strong two minutes, which culminated with a nicely-delivered takedown with 90 seconds remaining to ensure victory.
“(Rice) has been down a little bit but Alvaro Perez (138), James Crane (152), Tom Bennett (170) and myself are trying to help Brother Rice make a comeback,” said Conway, now 13-2 on the season.
126 – Lorenzo Frezza, Stevenson
The dynamic one-two punch of Lorenzo Frezza and his Stevenson teammate, Cole Rhemrev, continue to knock out the competition, with Frezza turning in another magnificent two days to win his first Whitlatch title.
Top-seeded Frezza defeated one of his biggest rivals in Brian Beers (20-4) of Barrington to collect his second major of the season, and to push the No. 5-rated Patriots junior’s overall record to 18-1.
“Obviously I would have liked to score more points but Brian and I know each other very well,” said Frezza, who also won a title at Barrington in November. “He’s not going to let me get much of anything off of him, so to get the lead and ride him hard in that second period was key.”
Frezza slipped free of Beers, who had his ankle, and during the ensuing scramble Frezza grabbed two points to increase his second period advantage to 3-0.
“(Beers) is a very talented wrestler and he’s tough to handle,” Stevenson coach Shane Cook said. “But Lorenzo’s ability to ride him throughout the second period and again in the third period was the way for him to seal the win.”
132 – Cody Tavoso, Hinsdale Central
On mat No. 1 and in his home gym, Cody Tavoso gave Red Devils fans reason to celebrate when the Hinsdale Central junior secured the top prize at 132 after his 3-1 decision over his West Suburban Conference rival, Luke Swan of Downers Grove South.
“It doesn’t get much better than this,” said an elated Tavoso (4-0) who held his top seed throughout, going ahead for good with a takedown of Swan (15-3) with just 45 seconds remaining in regulation.
“I was a little too passive in the second period but after getting below his knee on a couple of occasions, I was finally able to finish my shot for the winning takedown,” said Tavoso, who placed third at the Whitlatch as a freshmen in 2019.
“I just love everything about this sport,” Tavoso said. “My goal is to get downstate for a third straight time and come home with a state title.”
Tavoso defeated No. 6 Logan Kuhel-Trimmer (Joliet Catholic Academy) in his semifinal, 4-2, to advance.
“Cody is so passionate about this sport and his work ethic is second to none,” Hinsdale Central coach Jason Hayes said.
“He’s the first one in the room, and last one out. As our captain he sets an example for everyone to follow and he has high goals for himself, which include success in high school and at the collegiate level.”
138 – Cole Rhemrev, Stevenson
Cole Rhemrev (18-0) opened his 138-pound final with an unstoppable attack against Downers Grove North’s Harrison Konder, taking an early lead and building it to an 8-1 advantage after two periods.
The Patriots star eventually defeated No. 7 Konder(14-1) by a score of 15-9 to further validate his spot as the No. 4 man in the latest IWCOA poll.
“It was a good win for myself and the team, but I didn’t particularly like that I gave up those points in the third period. It’s not something that I want to get in the habit of doing,” said Rhemrev, who won by tech-fall in his opener and followed with a pin during during his quarterfinal to advance.
Rhemrev conceded takedowns from Konder to bring the sophomore closer at 8-3, and then moments later at 9-5, before a thunderous throw from Rhemrev made it 11-5.The two traded takedowns before the final whistle ended this high- scoring contest.
Rhemrev, a three-time state qualifier who also won the title at the Moore-Prettyman this year, was fourth overall in Hinsdale in 2019.
145 – Mason Alessio, Joliet Catholic
On a roster filled with several high profile names, three of which are reigning state champions, it’s easy to understand why Gylon Sims, Shay Korhorn, and Dillon Johnson are mentioned before teammate Mason Alessio.
But that’s not the case among Alessio’s coach and teammates, who fully recognize what they have in the Hilltoppers junior.
“Mason is a great story for us,” coach Ryan Cumbee said. “He was out all last year after having back surgery and we are so proud of him because of the extra work he put in to get himself to where he has not only become an important piece in our lineup, but also an extremely good wrestler who can compete at a high level.
“He’s a terrific athlete who’s not afraid of hard work, and he really showed what he’s made of in here,” said Cumbee, pointing to his heart.
Alessio (13-1) dominated all four of his opponents, opening and finishing in style with pins in under two minutes, while recording a pair of majors in between.
Belleville West senior Will Dahm (11-4) was second, with Noah Quintana (19-4) from West Aurora third.
152 – Moses Quintana, West Aurora
Part of the resurgence of the wrestling program at West Aurora is due to the fact that brothers Noah and Moses Quintana, heavyweight Jordan Lishman, and others have turned in some wonderful early-season performances to help the Blackhawks earn the No. 15 spot in the current IWCOA team poll.
Moses Quintana’s 152-pound title came at the end of a terrific two-day effort which featured a pair of pins and a nicely played 8-0 victory over Brennan Skoda of Glenbard West on the title mat.
(COVID) last year was tough on all of us, both in the classroom and in the room,” Quintana said. “We had to take it easy a year ago but this season we’re all pushing each other, working hard, and we’re all seeing good results from all of our hard work.”
Quintana was quick to say with a smile that his sophomore brother Noah is no challenge to him in the room or at home when the two spar.
Quintana (16-2) entered the Whitlatch as the No. 2 seed just behind Skoda, and took an early lead the Glenbard West senior with a takedown and came out of the second period with a 5-0 advantage.
The No. 9 rated Quintana added an escape and another takedown to ensure the first major tournament victory for the 2021 IWCOA state qualifier.
160 -Anthony Montez, Geneseo
Anthony Montez (20-2) pinned his way into his 160-pound final against top seeded Max Konopka (14-2) of Glenbard West. Montez used a takedown at the end the first period and another in the second period to double his advantage, before holding off his talented opponent en route to a 6-2 decision.
“I would have liked to score more points along the way and I wasn’t happy with myself for keeping him around by not doing so, but I kept my focus and I was confident throughout the match to get the title,” Montez said.
The Geneseo senior is a three-time state qualifier and finished fourth at the IWCOA state finals in June. He also won the title at Rockford East this season to go with a third-place finish at Antioch on Thanksgiving weekend.
“This was a big day for me, and my brother (Zachary), and a really important weekend for Geneseo wrestling because we showed we can compete at a high level tournament, and finish in the top five against some really great teams,” said Montez, who plans on wrestling at the collegiate level. Coe College in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, is one of a handful of programs Montez is considering.
Montez, while proud of his younger brother Zachary for his accomplishments, and OWA honors, echoed West Aurora’s Moses Quintana when quizzed as to who’s the best of the two in the Montez household.
“No way Zachary can beat me now, or ever,” the senior said with a smile.
170 – Alex Tagler, Lemont
When Alex Tagler claimed the top prize at 170 pounds for his Lemont teammates, it allowed the eventual team champions to stay neck-and-neck in the team race with Glenbard West.
Tagler started a late surge that earned he and and his mates the team trophy.
“Wrestling might be an individual sport, but it’s really a team sport when you’re in big tournaments like this one, so it was nice to help our team win the title,” said Tagler, now 15-1 after his 7-1 decision over top seed Nick Mabutas of Willowbrook.
“Throughout the tournament I felt like I kept good position, executed well with my attack, and defended just like I did in the final,” Tagler said. “I didn’t give much up and never allowed him to get comfortable or in sync.”
Tagler entered as the No. 7-rated man in 2A at 170 while Mabutas, champion last week at the Mickey Marchese tournament in Hoffman Estates, was No. 8 in 3A.
Tagler went up 5-0 with 30 seconds remaining in the second period, then prevented his opponent from taking a bite out of his lead after a wild scramble ended with both men falling far off the mat with seven seconds left on the clock.
“It felt good to get my first tournament win of the year. It’s something that will help motivate me heading into the second half of the year and into the state tournament,” said Taglor, whose victory drew Lemont within three points (191-188) of Glenbard West after the completion of the 170 matches.
182 – Ben Bielawski, Downers Grove North
In a title match at 182 between an experienced favorite and an upstart varsity newcomer, it was No. 1 Ben Bielawski of Downers Grove North who claimed the crown.
The Trojans’ junior was on his front foot against Barrington’s Ayden Salley (14-3), with some cutting-edge opening exchanges to race out to a 6-1 advantage, although the Broncos’ sophomore halved the lead to 6-3 after one period.
It was 10-5 when the second period came to a close in advance of an offensive explosion that ended 16-9 in favor of Bielawski.
“He was a tough opponent and one that I have respect for, but I made a couple of mistakes and mental errors to allow him to stay close, so that’s something we’ll get after back in the room,” said Bielawski, after celebrating his first major of the year, which moved his overall record to 14-0.
“Records and where my name is in the state rankings mean nothing to me — they’re just numbers. What’s important to me is to continue to work hard to earn a spot downstate, and win a state title,” admitted Bielawski, who has made that trip twice, both times with his older brother Drew, who is now at Western Michigan University.
“Ben is a terrific young man, whose work ethic is way up there,” Downers Grove North coach Chris McGrath said. “It’s that and his ability, drive, and desire that will help him reach his goals.”
Bielawski appreciates what the DGN program has given him.
“Coach McGrath and our staff are the reasons for my success thus far. He pushes me each and every day, and is the man that I trust to help me reach my potential,” said Bielawski, who is also a defensive end on the Trojans football team.
“I might be under the radar in my weight class but that’s okay, I like being there for now. But it only really matters when we’re down in Champaign.”
195 – Phillip Dozier, Glenbard West
Phillip Dozier continues to fight off the challenges associated with having the target of a No. 1 ranking on his back.
The Glenbard West senior tore through his first three opponents in just under 2 1/2 minutes before running into a stubborn and talented Zach Meyer of Barrington before being crowned champion at 195.
“Since eighth grade I’ve always been the one everyone is gunning for so it’s made me a better person and wrestler,” Dozier said. “So I don’t mind being the top- rated guy in the state.”
Dozier improved to 16-0 after his exciting match with Meyer (23-2) who came back from a 6-2 deficit to equalize at 8-8, before Dozier went ahead for good (10-8) late in the second period before winning a 12-9 decision.
“Dozier is so good, he has great hips, and he likes to use the headlock which we went in knowing,” Barrington coach Dave Udchik said. “If we get another chance with him it will be important not to chase the match early, because we feel Zach now knows he can go with him.”
Dozier is aware of the scouting report on him.
“I know a lot of my opponents think I’m a guy who exclusively uses the head lock, but the thing is it comes from a variety of angles and positions, and there are other parts of my game that I’ll use as well,” Dozier said.
Dozier, a two-time state qualifier and third-place state medal winner in June, plans to go into special education in college. Anderson College in South Carolina and Utica College in New York are two potential landing spots next fall for Dozier, who was also a Hilltoppers’ football player this past season.
220 – Marko Ivanisevic, Hinsdale Central
Marko Ivanisevic conjured up memories of the past when the Hinsdale Central sophomore joined his older brother Niko as a Whitlatch champion on Saturrday. Niko Ivanisevic won the crown at 220 four years ago.
Niko Ivanisevic went on to finish a spectacular final season for the Red Devils with a second-place state medal after falling to All-American Anthony Cassioppi and finishing the year with a sparkling 39-3 record.
Marko Ivanisevic would like nothing more to be the next decorated member in the Ivanisevic household. If his two-day performance in Hinsdale says anything it’s that his chance to enjoy a long postseason run is certainly a strong possibility.
“Marko (16-0) has a great support system at home with his family, and of course his big brother but he’s been putting in the extra work on his own, and it really showed this weekend,” said Red Devils head coach Jason Hayes, moments after Ivanisevics’ 6-1 decision over Tim Stohl of Geneseo.
“I was nine years old when Niko won this tournament, before going on a great run to reach the state final,” Ivanisevic said. “I remember all of the hard work and time he put in, in order to have the success he had. So I know it’s the only way to get to the next level.”
Like the heavyweight trio of Matt, Brian, and Jack Allen — all state champions — Ivanisevic would like nothing more than to give Hayes and the Red Devils another state championship at some point.
Interestingly, Niko Ivanisevic followed his brother Stefan to Princeton, where he has starred as an offensive lineman, while all three Allen brothers went on to do the same at Michigan State.
285 – Dillan Johnson, Joliet Catholic
All four of Dillan Johnson’s opponents were humbled by the brilliance of the Joliet Catholic Academy sophomore, whose masterclass effort over the two days here ended when he delivered his fourth and final pin of the tournament to earn first-place honors.
In all, the reigning 2A state champion needed just over six minutes to send off his rivals en route to claim his first major of the season, while running his overall record to a spotless 9-0.
“Dillan is a superb athlete, who has an incredible motor,” JCA coach Ryan Cumbee said. “He’s big, strong, and extremely quick for a guy his size. As a freshman he didn’t give up an offensive point.
“Dillan got a late start after being a part of our 4A state championship football team, but he’s making up for lost time with a lot of hard work and dedication.”
Johnson is inching his way back to form.
“I’ve been working hard with my footwork, drags, hitting my posts, and just getting in wrestling shape, but I feel like I’m getting closer with each week,” said Johnson, whose father Eric Johnson played in the NFL with the New York Jets.
Johnson pinned Downers Grove North heavyweight Jordan Lewis at 1:14 to win the title. Lewis is also working to get back into wrestling shape for coach Chris McGrath.
“Because of COVID, Jordan has basically been away from the sport for nearly 18 months, but he’s really come into his own since his sophomore year with us,” said McGrath, after Lewis survived in sudden death overtime (4-3) over Jordan Lishman of West Aurora to book his place in the final.
“Jordan is the first one in the room, has a big heart, and always finds a way to win the close ones, so we’re all very proud of him.”
Central Illinois Tournaments Roundup for 12/18
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For the IWCOA
El-Paso-Gridley edges Clifton Central/Iroquois West for Clinton Invitational title
El-Paso-Gridley edged Clifton Central/Iroquois West by the slimmest of margins, 206-205, to capture first place honors at Saturday’s Clinton Invitational. Farmington (145), Taylorville (130) and Ridgeview/Lexington (124) rounded out the top-five in the 12-team competition.
Leading the way for coach Joe Cliffe’s champion Titans were first-place winners Conlee Landrus (132), Dax Gentes (145) and Cody Langland (170) while Tyler Roth (126), Waylon Melick (138) and Ethan Whitman (160) placed second and Charlene Hamilton (120) and Jesse Gerber (285) finished third.
Top placewinners for coach Travis Williams’ second-place Comets were champion Kayden Cody (120), runners-up Kodey Krumweide (145), Gabe Alvarez (195) and Giacomo Panazzo (285), third-place Blake Hemp (113), Brayden Morris (138), Damian Bailey (160) and Auston Miller (182) and fourth-place Garron Perzee (170) and Hunter Hull (220).
Other title winners were Taylorville’s Gage Rusher (138) and William Blue (195), Rantoul’s Rashon Allen (160) and Keddrick Terhune (182), MacArthur’s Logan Roberts (106), Farmington’s Keygan Jennings (113), Clinton’s Cayden Poole (126), Illini West’s Lance Belshaw (152), Ridgeview/Lexington’s Evan Antonio (220) and University High’s Hunter Otto (285).
Also finishing in second place were Ridgeview’s Danny Tay (113) and Judson Stover (132), University High’s Zach Gross (152) and Isaiah Im (220), Farmington’s Austin Utt (170) and Reese Shymansky (182), Streator’s Nicholas Pollett (106) and Clinton’s Teegan West (120).
Others who turned in third-place finishes were Ridgeview/Lexington’s Daniel York (106) and Declan Bender (126), Farmington’s Connor Huber (132) and Chris Haggard (220), MacArthur’s Shaundell Watson (145), Clinton’s Trevor Willis (152), Rantoul’s Colyn Sarver (170) and University High’s Joe Hunt (195).
Also finishing fourth were MacArthur’s Jamarius Meyrick (106), Savion Essiet (113), Kadon Roberts (120), Mitchell Johnson (195) and Ethan Badon (285), Taylorville’s Aiden Seiler (132), Jordan Hamell (145), Hunter Gerlick (152) and Landon Molina (182), Farmington’s Jack Adams (126) and Connor Rutz (138) and Clinton’s Kristian Hibbard (160).
Clinton Invitational championship matches:
106: Logan Roberts (MacArthur) over Nicholas Pollett (Streator), 7-0
113: Keygan Jennings (Farmington) over Danny Tay (Ridgeview/Lexington), F 4:47
120: Kayden Cody (Clifton C./Iroquois W.) over Teegan West (Clinton), TF 5:58
126: Cayden Poole (Clinton) over Tyler Roth (El Paso-Gridley), 8-1
132: Conlee Landrus (El Paso-Gridley) over Judson Stover (Ridgeview/Lexington), F 0:21
138: Gage Rusher (Taylorville) over Waylon Melick (El Paso-Gridley), F 3:05 [pool]
145: Dax Gentes (El Paso-Gridley) over Kodey Krumweide (Clifton C./Iroquois W.), 9-1 [pool]
152: Lance Belshaw (Illini West) over Zach Gross (University High), F 2:42 [pool]
160: Rashon Allen (Rantoul) over Ethan Whitman (El Paso-Gridley), 8-1
170: Cody Langland (El Paso-Gridley) over Austin Utt (Farmington), F 4:36
182: Keddrick Terhune (Rantoul) over Rese Shymansky (Farmington), F 3:20
195: William Blue (Taylorville) over Gabe Alvarez (Clifton C./Iroquois W.), F 4:57
220: Evan Antonio (Ridgeview/Lexington) over Isaiah Im (University High), F 3:44
285: Hunter Otto (University High) over Giacomo Panazzo (Clifton C./Iroquois W.), F 4:26
Civic Memorial tops at Mascoutah
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Civic Memorial tops at Mascoutah
Civic Memorial captured this year’s 29-team Mascoutah Invitational, out-pointing second place Mattoon 219.5-202. The Eagles got team points from nine wrestlers, including two individual champions on the day.
Civic Memorial coach Jerry Christeson got individual titles from Bryce Griffin (138) and Abe Wojcikiewicz (170) and a second from Colton Carlisle (182). Placing third for the Eagles were Joey Ciciocchi (132) and Logan Cooper (285), fifth-place finishers were Brad Ruckman (106) and Ashton Reed (145), Brayden Moss (160) was sixth, and Nathen Herrin (120) placed seventh.
Triad (179), O’Fallon (173), Marion (141), Jacksonville (129), Morton (127), Quincy (119.5), Collinsville (115), and Normal (111) rounded out the top 10 team finishes.
Second-place Mattoon coach Brett Porter’s Green Wave had three champions in Brady Foster (113), Kiefer Duncan (145), and Aidan Spurgeon (195), and got a second-place finish from Logan Blackburn (120) and Leo Meyer (220). The Green Wave also got a third from Korbin Bateman (126) and a fifth from Aidan Blackburn (152).
Other individual champions included Normal’s Cole Gentsch (106), Morton’s Connor Kidd (120), Triad’s Colby Crouch (126), Marion’s Ricky Wade (132) and Nate Damphier (152), Quincy’s Owen Uppinghouse (160), Belleville East’s Dominic Thebeau (182), Waterloo’s Jordan Sommers (220), and O’Fallon’s Isaiah Hill (285).
Finishing second at Mascoutah were Normal’s Caden Correll (106), East Alton-Wood River’s Aaron Niemeyer (113) and Jason Shaw (126), Alton’s Deontae Forest (132), Murphyboro’s Arojae Hart (138), Jacksonville’s Trey Elliot (145), Carbondale’s Brenden Benz (152), Triad’s Sam Wheeler (160), Collinsville’s Austin Stewart (170), Normal’s Cooper Caraway (195) and Jersey’s Jayden Busch (285).
Also placing third at Mascoutah were Anna-Jonesboro’s Drew Sadler (106) and Caleb Mays (145), Morton’s Zane Ely (113), Triad’s Chase Hall (138), Jacksonville’s James Cotton (152), Highland’s Ben Mitchell (160), Quincy’s Kayden Garrett (170), Mt. Vernon’s Jared Shafer (182), Carbondale’s Aiden Taylor (195), and Roxana’s James Herring (220).
Fourth-place finishers included Fort Zumwalt North’s Nathaniel Provost (106), East St. Louis’ Jaymz Young (113), Waterloo’s Gavin Hearren (120) and Brandon Lloyd (170), and Murphysboro’s Liam Fox (126), Morton’s Steven Marvin (132) and Jamison Almasy (138), Triad’s Aiden Postma (145) and Jordan Clines (182), Collinsville’s Thomas Miller (152), O’Fallon’s Terence Willis (160), Marion’s Clayton Tanner (195), Mt. Vernon’s Ethan Rivera (220), and Roxana’s Justin Laws (285).
Mascoutah Invitational championship matches:
106: Gentsch (Normal) over Correll (Normal), 5-0
113: Foster (Mattoon) over Niemeyer (East Alton-Wood River), 6-0
120: Kidd (Morton) over Blackburn (Mattoon), F 3:55
126: Crouch (Triad) over Shaw (East Alton-Wood River), F :52
132: Wade (Marion) over Forest (Alton), 8-4
138: Griffin (Civic Memorial) over Hart (Murphysboro), SV-1
145: Duncan (Mattoon) over Elliot (Jacksonville), 5-3
152: Damphier (Marion) over Banz (Carbondale), F 3:56
160: Uppinghouse (Quincy) over Wheeler (Triad), F 4:58
170: Wojcikiewicz (Civic Memorial) over Stewart (Collinsville), TF 5:00
182: Thebeau (Belleville E.) over Carlisle (Civic Memorial), 12-5
195: Spurgeon (Mattoon) over Caraway (Normal), 12-5
220: Sommers (Waterloo) over Meyer (Mattoon), F 2:42
285: Hill (O’Fallon) over Busch (Jersey), F 3:49
Oakwood/Salt Fork claims top honors at Cumberland Skull and Crossbones
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Oakwood/Salt Fork claims top honors at Cumberland Skull and Crossbones
Oakwood/Salt Fork won four titles and had six finalists to help it claim top honors with 219.5 points at Saturday’s Cumberland Skull and Crossbones Tournament in Toledo.
Fairfield edged Lawrenceville/Red Hill 141-135 for second while Shelbyville (131) and Cumberland/Newton (127) rounded out the top five squads in the 15-team competition.
Winning titles for coach Mike Glosser’s champion Comets were Pedro Rangel (126), Reef Pacot (132), Bryson Capansky (138) and Grant Brewer (145) while Carter Chambliss (120) and Harley Grimm (220) finished second. Taking third place was Brysen Vasquez (160) while Doug Meyers (182) and Jamison Van Vickle (285) finished fourth.
Leading the way for coach Jordan Griffith’s second-place Mules was champion Payton Allen (220) and second-place finishers Konnor Dagg (195) and Jaxon Combs (285). Cole Simpson (138) placed third while Chase Phillips (126) and Scotty Cuff (132) took fourth.
Other champions were Lawrenceville/Red Hill’s Brian Seed (170) and Nathan Blackwell (182), Cumberland/Newton’s Colby Ryan (195) and Noah Carl (285), Carlyle’s Tyson Waughtel (106), Harrisburg’s Tony Keene (113), Shelbyville’s Calvin Miller (120), Effingham’s Jon Perry (152) and Robinson’s Jared Hermann (160).
Taking second were Cumberland/Newton’s Hank Warfel (106), Jerod Carl (145) and Isten Syfert (170), Monticello’s Cal Spence (152) and Kaleb Reid (160), Lawrenceville/Red Hill’s Dylan Aten (113), Harrisburg’s Briar Butler (126), Herrin’s Blue Bishop (132), Effingham’s Robert Reardon (138) and Litchfield’s Hunter Hancock (182).
Three of the closest title matches were decided by two points or less. Ryan won 8-7 over Dagg at 195, Seed prevailed 13-11 over Syfert at 170 and Pacot claimed a 5-3 victory over Bishop at 132.
Placing third were Robinson’s Keaton Ault (113), Austin Hargrave (195), Craig Markello (220) and Dalton Woods (285), Shelbyville’s Gage Smith (126), Kaz Fox (132), Will Fox (152) and Bradley Sanders (182), Litchfield/Mt. Olive’s Alex Powell (106), Herrin’s Brody Reagan (120), Monticello’s Jaxson Trent (145) and Carlyle’s Owen Birkner (170).
Finishing fourth were Mt. Carmel’s Satchel Taylor (106), Kenny Taylor (160) and Mason Rayborn (220), Lawrenceville/Red Hill’s Isaac Foster (120) and Hayden Fry (152), Warrensburg-Latham’s Vincent Fiore (145) and Mason Hawkins (170), Carlyle’s Franc Jackson (113), Monticello’s Eli Bailey (138) and Litchfield/Mt. Olive’s Devin Hansel (195).
Cumberland Skull and Crossbones championship matches:
106: Tyson Waughtel (Carlyle) over Hank Warfel (Cumberland/Newton), TF 3:19
113: Tony Keene (Harrisburg) over Dylan Aten (Lawrenceville/Red Hill), F 0:20
120: Calvin Miller (Shelbyville) over Carter Chambliss (Oakwood/Salt Fork), 6-1
126: Pedro Rangel (Oakwood/Salt Fork) over Briar Butler (Harrisburg), F 3:46
132: Reef Pacot (Oakwood/South Fork) over Blue Bishop (Herrin), 5-3
138: Bryson Capansky (Oakwood/South Fork) over Robert Reardon (Effingham), F 1:30
145: Grant Brewer (Oakwood/Salt Fork) over Jerod Carl (Cumberland/Newton), F 1:33
152: Jon Perry (Effingham) over Cal Spence (Monticello), F 5:15
160: Jared Hermann (Robinson) over Kaleb Reid (Monticello), F 2:52
170: Brian Seed (Lawrenceville/Red Hill) over Isten Syfert (Cumberland/Newton), 13-11
182: Nathan Blackwell (Lawrenceville/Red Hill) over Hunter Hancock (Litchfield/Mt. Olive), F 5:10
195: Colby Ryan (Cumberland/Newton) over Konnor Dagg (Fairfield), 8-7
220: Payton Allen (Fairfield) over Harley Grimm (Oakwood/South Fork), F 0:23
285: Noah Carl (Cumberland/Newton) over Jaxon Combs (Fairfield), F 3:20
LeRoy/Tri-Valley claims title at Metamora Holiday Classic
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LeRoy/Tri-Valley claims title at Metamora Holiday Classic
LeRoy/Tri-Valley had three champions and seven individuals who reached the title mat and that helped it to claim top honors at Saturday’s Metamora Holiday Classic.
Coach Brady Sant Amour’s Panthers scored 145 points to claim top honors in the 11-team competition while Peoria High edged Galesburg 116-111.5 for second place while Notre Dame was fourth with 95.5 points and the host Redbirds edged Richwoods 79.5-79 for fifth place.
Winning titles for LeRoy/Tri-Valley were Kobe Brent (113), Ethan Conaty (152) and Tyson Brent (182) while Brock Owens (120), Colton Prosser (126), Jack Green (132) and Andrew Moore (220) all claimed second-place finishes and Brady Mouser (106) finished fourth.
“We are a fairly young team, and had a couple starters out sick this past weekend,” Sant Amour said. “But our young freshman-sophomores really stepped up and performed this past weekend. Our upperclassmen performed how we expected with two first-place and two second-place finishes led by Ethan Conaty and Tyson Brent at 152 and 182.”
Top finishers for coach Shaun McGinnes’ runner-up Lions were champions Kenny Rutherford (138) and Tim Petty (285), second-place finishers Tuison Conner (145), Cedric Beckham (182) and Landon Newby-Holesome (285) and third-place performers Kaleb Lawson (170) and Saevion Brent (220).
Other champions in the competition were Notre Dame’s Ian Akers (106), Jac Couri (126), Chase Daugherty (132) and Joey Mushinsky (160), Galesburg’s Gauge Shipp (120) and Jeremiah Morris (220), Metamora’s Sam Ohl (145) and Brody Vancil (195) and Eureka’s Jack Godinez (170).
Also finishing in second-place were Kankakee’s Caleb Dickens (138) and Michael Bannerman (195), Morris’ Brandon Anderson (106), Notre Dame’s Eddie Couri (113), Galesburg’s Cheveyo Thomas (152), Putnam County/Hall Township’s Connor Brooker (160) and Pontiac’s Hunter Travis (170).
Richwoods had six third-place finishers, Colton Boyer (106), Rykis Doss (113), Barnard Cox (126), Jayden Putts (145), Mike Vincent (152) and Misael Quintero (182). Also placing third were Galesburg’s Jashon Parks (195) and Tyler Kemp (285), Metamora’s Carter Atherton (132) and Chase Packman (138), Morris’ Ian Wills (120) and Eureka’s Dillon Wiles (160).
Other fourth-place finishers were Morris’ Ella McDonnell (113) and Julian Gonzales (152), Eureka’s Garrett Kean (120) and Noah King (145), Metamora’s Aaron Andrade (132) and Max Largent (170), Kankakee’s Travon Jordan (182) and Rojelio Cornejo (285), Galesburg’s Emilio Torres (195) and Benny Vargas (220), Pontiac’s Chance Smith (126) and Notre Dame’s Tommy Miller (160).
Metamora Classic championship matches:
106: Ian Akers (Notre Dame) over Brandon Anderson (Morris), 4-0 [pool]
113: Kobe Brent (LeRoy/Tri-Valley) over Eddie Couri (Notre Dame), 6-1 [pool]
120: Gauge Shipp (Galesburg) over Brock Owens (LeRoy/Tri-Valley), TF 21-6 [pool]
126: Jac Couri (Notre Dame) over Colton Prosser (LeRoy/Tri-Valley), 7-4 [pool]
132: Chase Daugherty (Notre Dame) over Jack Green (LeRoy/Tri-Valley), 7-0 [pool]
138: Kenny Rutherford (Peoria High) over Caleb Dickens (Kankakee), F 2:52 [pool]
145: Sam Ohl (Metamora) over Tuison Conner (Peoria High), 16-6
152: Ethan Conaty (LeRoy/Tri-Valley) over Cheveyo Thomas (Galesburg), 11-3
160: Joey Mushinsky (Notre Dame) over Connor Brooker (Putnam Co./Hall Twp.), F 3:25
170: Jack Godinez (Eureka) over Hunter Travis (Pontiac), 4-1
182: Tyson Brent (LeRoy/Tri-Valley) over Cedric Beckham (Peoria High), 14-2
195: Brody Vancil (Metamora) over Micheal Bannerman (Kankakee), F 2:36
220: Jeremiah Morris (Galesburg) over Andrew Moore (LeRoy/Tri-Valley), 6-1 [pool]
285: Tim Petty (Peoria High) over Landon Newby-Holesome (Peoria High), 5-3
Rockridge edges Lena-Winslow/Stockton for Erie/Prophetstown title
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Rockridge edges Lena-Winslow/Stockton for Erie/Prophetstown title
Rockridge used five second-place and five third-place finishes to overcome Lena-Winslow/Stockton’s six titles to capture the team championship at Saturday’s Erie/Prophetstown Holiday Tournament in Erie by a 205.5-199 margin.
Newman Central Catholic (175), Erie/Prophetstown (136.5) and Illini Bluffs (114) rounded out the top five squads in the 14-team competition.
Coach Lucas Smith’s champion Rockets received second-place finishes from Cael Kuster (113), Jude Finch (126), Peyton Locke (160), Nathan Petreikis (182) and Sam Buser (285) while Bryan Blumenstien (132), Reese Finch (145), Cole McCabe (152), Zayd Evans (170) and Connor Shaffer (220) took third and Tyler Thiem (120) placed fourth.
Champions for coach Kevin Milder’s runner-up Panthers were Garrett Luke (145), Jared Dvorak (152), Marey Roby (160), Griffin Luke (170), Drew Mensendike (195) and Henry Engel (220) while Zach White (138) finished fourth.
Other champions were Newman Central Catholic’s Brady Grennan (120), Carter Rude (126) and Will Rude (138), Erie/Prophetstown’s Wyatt Goossens (113) and Elijah Friedrichsen (285), East Peoria’s Bailey Lusch (106), Illini Bluffs’ Ian O’Connor (132) and Morrison’s Kayden White (182).
Also finishing in second place were Illini Bluffs’ Fischer Dickinson (106), Avery Speck (120) and Paul Ishikawa (138), Newman Central Catholic’s Daniel Kelly (132) and Mason Glaudel (152), Erie/Prophetstown’s Jase Grunder (145) and Nick Ballard (220), Fulton’s Zane Pannell (170) and East Peoria’s Zach Eaton (195).
In a clash of IWCOA Class 1A state champions, Will Rude captured a 3-1 win over Ishikawa in the 138 finals. Rude was top-ranked in 1A at 145 while Ishikawa was ranked first at 138. Ishikawa won the 126 title in June and Rude was the champion at 138. In two other close title matches, Friedrichsen beat Buser 5-3 at 285 and Garrett Luke was a 7-5 winner over Grunder at 145.
Other third place finishers were Sherrard’s Austin Fratzke (138), Ryder Roelf (182) and Walker Anderson (195), Erie/Prophetstown’s Sophia Wheeler (106), Illini Bluffs’ Carson Overton (113), Orion’s Luke Moen (120), Polo’s Wyatt Doty (126), Newman Central Catholic’s Tom Powers (160) and Morrison’s Nate Schaefer (285).
Finishing fourth were Sherrard’s Pierce Findlay (113) and Jayden Thomson (132), Newman Central Catholic’s Brenden Tunink (145) and Hunter Luyando (170), East Peoria’s Kaden Rowland (182) and Jose Del Toro (285), Rock Falls’ Ryan McCord (160) and Josh Woodard (220), Sterling’s Nakynzy Canazos-Hodge (106), Illini Bluffs’ Jackson Carroll (126), Orion’s Nolan Loete (152) and Erie/Prophetstown’s Andrew Bomleny (195).
Erie/Prophetstown Tournament championship matches:
106: Bailey Lusch (East Peoria) over Fischer Dickinson (Illini Bluffs), F 1:40 [pool]
113: Wyatt Goossens (East Peoria) over Cael Kuster (Rockridge), F 3:39
120: Brady Grennan (Newman Catholic) over Avery Speck (Illini Bluffs), F 0:54
126: Carter Rude (Newman Catholic) over Jude Finch (Rockridge), F 5:23
132: Ian O’Connor (Illini Bluffs) over Daniel Kelly (Newman Catholic), 8-4
138: Will Rude (Newman Catholic) over Paul Ishikawa (Illini Bluffs), 3-1
145: Garrett Luke (Lena-Winslow/Stockton) over Jase Grunder (East Peoria), 7-5
152: Jared Dvorak (Lena-Winslow/Stockton) over Mason Glaudel (Newman Catholic), 11-6
160: Marey Roby (Lena-Winslow/Stockton) over Peyton Locke (Rockridge), F 3:31
170: Griffin Luke (Lena-Winslow/Stockton) over Zane Pannell (Fulton), 8-1
182: Kayden White (Morrison) over Nathan Petreikis (Rockridge), F 5:34
195: Drew Mensendike (Lena-Winslow/Stockton) over Zach Eaton (East Peoria), 9-4
220: Henry Engel (Lena-Winslow/Stockton) over Nick Ballard (East Peoria), F 3:10
285: Elijah Friedrichsen (East Peoria) over Sam Buser (Rockridge), 5-3
Unity captures top honors in own invitational
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Unity captures top honors in own invitational
Host Unity sent six individuals to the title mat and won two championships to help it capture top honors by a 218-202.5 margin over IC Catholic Prep in Saturday’s Unity Invitational, a 15-team tournament which was held in Tolono. Rochester (141), Peotone (130.5) and Benton (120) rounded out the top five in the field.
Winning titles for coach Logan Patton’s champion Rockets were Tavius Hosley (145) and Nick Nosler (195) while Braxton Manuel (152), Grant Albaugh (182), Karson Richardson (220) and Oran Varela (285) took second place and Kaden Inman (120), Hunter Eastin (195) and Chance Ingleman (285) finished third.
Leading the way for coach Jason Renteria’s runner-up Knights were champions Andrew Alvarado (113), Nick Renteria (126), Michael Calcagno (182), Jadon Mims (220) and Isaiah Gonzalez (285) while Omar Samayoa (132) and Brandon Navarro (170) finished second and Joseph Gliatta (145) claimed third place.
Other champions were Rochester’s Conner Carroll (106) and Nolan Mrozowski (132), Hoopeston Area’s Angel Zamora (160) and Abel Colunga (170), St. Joseph Ogden’s Holden Brazelton (120), Peotone’s Marco Spinazzola (138) and Bishop McNamara’s Luke Christie (152).
Also finishing in second place were Benton’s Jaden Courter (106) and Mason Tieffel (126), Peotone’s Kevin Hogan (145) and Oscar Vilalobos (195), St. Joseph-Ogden’s Emmitt Holt (113), Bishop McNamara’s Jackson Jeck (120), Rochester’s Cole Peters (138) and Lanphier’s Connor Janssen (160).
The closest championship matches were four-point decisions with Alvarado over Holt 4-0 at 113, Renteria beating Tieffel 8-4 at 126, Colunga over Navarro 6-2 at 170 and Mims defeating Richardson 8-4 at 220.
Other third-place finishers were Peotone’s Santino Izzi (126) and Ian Kreske (132), Danville’s Dalton Wells (138) and Phil Shaw (182), Hoopeston Area’s Ethan Schwartz (152) and Hunter Cannon (220), Carterville’s Brawnsen Bloodworth (106), Urbana’s Cordero Sims (113), Centralia’s Noah Morris (160) and Lanphier’s Gabe Orosco (170).
Finishing in fourth place were Centralia’s Lane Griffin (126), Levi Shook (152) and Elijah Johnson (195), Rochester’s Luke Gribbins (106), Adam Gribbins (113) and Drake Pfeiffer (120), Beardstown’s Bryan Gil (132) and Treysean Grant (145), Benton’s Avery Grimes (138) and Connor Dean (160), Danville’s Dalton Brown (170), Peotone’s Jackson Bergeron (182), Urbana’s Andre Hunt (220) and Carterville’s Zechariah Miller (285).
Unity Invitational championship matches:
106: Conner Carroll (Rochester) over Jaden Courter (Benton), 17-7
113: Andrew Alvarado (IC Catholic) over Emmitt Holt (St. Joseph-Ogden), 4-0
120: Holden Brazelton (St. Joseph-Ogden) over Jackson Jeck (Bishop McNamara), F 1:37
126: Nick Renteria (IC Catholic) over Mason Tieffel (Benton), 8-4
132: Nolan Mrozowski (Rochester) over Omar Samayoa (IC Catholic), F 0:39
138: Marco Spinazzola (Peotone) over Cole Peters (Rochester), F 3:10
145: Tavius Hosley (Unity) over Kevin Hogan (Peotone), 13-2
152: Luke Christie (Bishop McNamara) over Braxton Manuel (Unity), 13-1
160: Angel Zamora (Hoopeston Area) over Connor Janssen (Lanphier), F 2:39
170: Abel Colunga (Hoopeston Area) over Brandon Navarro (IC Catholic), 6-2
182: Michael Calcagno (IC Catholic) over Grant Albaugh (Unity), 9-3
195: Nick Nosler (Unity) over Oscar Vilalobos (Peotone), F 4:28
220: Jadon Mims (IC Catholic) over Karson Richardson (Unity), 8-4
285: Isaiah Gonzalez (IC Catholic) over Oran Varela (Unity), 5-0
Centennial wins Springfield Joe Bee Memorial Tournament
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Centennial wins Springfield Joe Bee Memorial Tournament
Centennial beat Cahokia 212-195 for top honors at Springfield High’s Joe Bee Memorial Tournament while LaSalle-Peru took third place with 134 points. Four of the eight teams had three champions, with Pekin (120) and Granite City (116) joining the top two teams in that distinction.
Winning titles for the coach Jeff Rieck’s champion Chargers were Trevor Schoonover (126), Kodiac Pruitt (160) and Jack Barnhart (220) while Jaiden Smith (106), Darell Dugar (113), Declan Pate (120), David Navarra (182) and Branden Harvey (195) were second while Freddy Mbangi (132), Nick Pianfetti (138), Leon Gordon (160) and Henry Spinela (170) took third place.
Capturing championships for coach Emanuel Brooks’ runner-up Comanches were Nicholas Scott (106), Nick Deloach Jr. (152) and Corron Midgett (170). Demerious McGill (126), Anthony Winters (145), Damien Phipps (160) and Berylonte Shegog (285) took second place while Dionte Scott (113) and Tyrese Brownlee (195) took third and Nehemiah Trimble (145) and Quinterrous Jones (220) finished fourth.
Other champions were Granite City’s Brenden Rayl (113), Caleb Scott (120) and Dylan Boyd (138), Pekin’s Ramez Watson (132), Shamon Handegan (182) and Tyler Haynes (285), Springfield High’s Alex Souva (145) and LaSalle-Peru’s Connor Lorden (195).
Also finishing second were Limestone’s Cosmo Palmgren (132) and Aydan Trueblood (220), Springfield High’s Chris Macklin (152) and Jackson O’Connor (170) and Granite City’s Braden Kelly (138).
Others claiming third place finishes were Pekin’s Dalton Davis (106) and Karso Lamb (220), LaSalle-Peru’s Reegan Kellett (120) and Connor Sines (152), Sacred Heart-Griffin’s Michael Ference (126) and Cor y West (182), Limestone’s Gabe Hodges (145) and Springfield High’s Shamar Richardson (285).
Also finishing fourth were Springfield High’s Ryan Hayes (113), Kaden Rios (120), Oliver Record-Frank (132) and Elijah Bell (170), LaSalle-Peru’s Kaleb Vela (126) and Gunnar Skoog (138), Sacred Heart-Griffin’s Lennon Long (152) and Jack Ludolph (195) and Granite City’s Jaylen Williams (160) and Mason Kelly (285).
Springfield High Joe Bee Memorial Tournament championship matches:
106: Nicholas Scott (Cahokia) over Jaiden Smith (Centennial), F 1:25 [pool]
113: Brenden Rayl (Granite City) over Darell Dugar (Centennial), F 2:30 [pool]
120: Caleb Scott (Granite City) over Declan Pate (Centennial), F 0:54
126: Trevor Schoonover (Centennial) over Demerious McGill (Cahokia), 9-1
132: Ramez Watson (Pekin) over Cosmo Palmgren (Limestone), 12-6
138: Dylan Bond (Granite City) over Braden Kelly (Granite City), Inj.
145:Alex Souva (Springfield High) over Anthony Winters (Cahokia), F 2:00
152: Nick Deloach Jr. (Cahokia) over Chris Macklin (Springfield High), F 4:52
160: Kodiac Pruitt (Centennial) over Damien Phipps (Cahokia), 10-4
170: Corron Midgett (Cahokia) over Jackson O’Connor (Springfield High), F 0:34
182: Shamon Handegan (Pekin) over David Navarra (Centennial), F 3:06 [pool]
195: Connor Lorden (LaSalle-Peru) over Branden Harvey (Centennial), F 0:22
220: Jack Barnhart (Centennial) over Aydan Trueblood (Limestone), 13-3
285: Tyler Haynes (Perkin) over Berylonte Shegog (Cahokia), F 1:27