Girls tournament roundup: Conant, Kelly, Lanphier

By Mike Garofola for the IWCOA
CONANT GIRLS TOURNAMENT
The annual Conant Girls Tournament is unique in that it can accommodate 40-plus teams while breaking down each weight class into 8-girl brackets to allow the level of talent on hand to match others of equal ability.
Pratt Gymnasium saw 47 divisions spread across the 14 weight divisions, and although team scores were not kept, fans of the sport were able to view several national- and state-ranked wrestlers compete.
Lockport’s reigning 130-pound state champion and 2023 state runner-up Claudia Heeney (21-1) pinned her way to the 135-pound title, capped by her pin at 2:46 over Kaneland’s Dyani Torres (24-7).
The Lockport star, who is in the top 30 of the most recent USA Wrestling national poll, was a dazzling 29-2 a year ago.
Another nationally ranked wrestler is Glenbrook North sophomore Ariella Dobin, who won her 28th of the season without a loss when she recorded a fall at 3:54 over Alyssa Bentley from Warren Township at 120 pounds.
Dobin, fourth a year ago at state, earned All-American honors in 2024 after her sixth-place Freestyle finish.
Montini Catholic senior Katelyn Bell (25-3) began the final round of play in style when she pinned two-time state qualifier Riley Kongkaeow (27-2) to win the 100-pound crown.
Bell became the first female wrestler in the Broncos program to claim a state medal when she did so last year with her sixth place finish. Bell is ranked No. 3 in the state, while Kongkaeow is ranked fifth.
“(Bell) has won five tournaments this season, and her three losses all came at out-of-state tournaments,” Montini coach Mike Bukovsky said. “She is an outstanding wrestler, and an even better young lady.
“She is the epitome of a high school student-athlete, and commands the respect of the entire Montini community. She’s one of our leaders in the room, and her work ethic and toughness are equally respected in the boys program.”
Lincoln-Way’s 2024 state medal winner Zoe Dempsey (29-1) continued her marvelous season when she needed just over three minutes on the day to earn the 110-pound crown over Valeria Pesantes (9-2) from Elk Grove.
Dempsey sits just behind Kaneland’s No. 1 Angelina Gochis in the state polls. It was a pin by Dempsey in the final match of the IWCOA dual-team state final against Schaumburg that clinched a 40-38 win to give Lincoln-Way the state title.
Ireland McCain (26-4), a two-time state medalist and three-time state qualifier, gave Round Lake its lone championship on the day after the Panthers senior pinned her way to the 115-pound title.
Kaneland senior Brooklyn Sheaffer, who would watch teammate Angelina Gochis win a state title last season in Bloomington, won her title at 125 Saturday when she bookended a pair of pins around a hard fought 12-9 decision win in her semifinal against Oak Park and River Forest’s Anahi Banuelos.
The two-time state qualifier, and sixth place state medalist in 2023, then defeated Riley Moore from Highland Park with a pin at 4:23 for the 125-pound title.
New Trier’s No. 4 Jillian Giller (29-1) won her fourth major title of the season after her terrific three-match effort at 140-pounds, in which she finished with a pin in 31 seconds over Ava Burns (21-4) from Lake Park.
The Trevians senior previously won at Niles West, Berman Holiday Classic and Dundee-Crown.
Hinsdale South’s two-sport star (softball) and two-time state qualifier Callie Carr stayed perfect on the year following another superb day on the mats. The Hornets’ junior used a 19-4 tech-fall to win her 155-pound final against Dana Holt (14-2) from Highland Park.
The Fargo qualifier, is also a two-time conference champion, who went 27-5 a year ago.
2023 state champion, and 2024 state runner-up Alicia Tucker (Plainfield Central) is now 12-1 on the season after overwhelming the field at 170 pounds.
The Wildcats senior, who was 36-2 last season, recorded a tech fall and two pins, one of which came in her final with Romeoville’s Mariyah Mani (20-8).
Ottawa’s No. 2 Juliana Thrush would flex her collective muscle in order to win the 235-pound crown over the talented senior from Fremd, Jasmin Ocampo (13-2) who recently won at the Sally Berman Holiday Classic.
“Juliana put in a ton of time during the offseason,” Ottawa coach Peter Marx said. “She trained with some of the best in the state, and competed in a number of national level tournaments, including junior nationals at Fargo. She has made great strides with her positioning, and her offense on her feet, and the new take-down rules have been a great benefit to her.
“If she continues to wrestle as she has, she has a legit shot at going deep into the state tournament with Chloe (Hoselton, Prairie Central) and Phoenix (Molina, Unity) both great heavyweights and competition for Juliana.”
Thrash, sixth a year at state, is now 21-2.
Other individual champions at Conant were: Ashley Hammond (105, Larkin), Jasmine Zavaleta (130, 20-4, Conant), Kennedy Murray (145, 23-3, Evanston) and Isabel Peralta (190, 27-3, Oak Forest).
Conant Girls Tournament A Group results:
100A
1st: Katelyn Bell (Montini) 25-3, d. Riley Kongkaeow (Round Lake) 27-2, (F 5:06)
3rd: Leah Stringfellow (Glenbrook N) 16-1, d. Monica Alvarez (Lincoln-Way C) 21-7, (D 6-1)
5th: Emily Peyton (Lincoln-Way C) 22-9, d. Sunny Aitzemkour (New Trier) 15-9, (D 14-10)
7th: Isabel Gwaltney (Ottawa) 11-13, d. Lourdes Hernandez (Elgin) 0-3, (F 1:22)
105A
1st: Ashley Hammond (Elgin (Larkin) 3-0, d. Alexandra Sebek (Oak Forest) 2-1, (Inj. 0:25)
3rd: Daniela Santander (Romeoville) 22-3, d. Valerie Aligia (Glenbard S) 8-7, (TF-1.5 4:00 (17-2)
5th: Mali Patino (Elgin) 1-1, d. Tori Ooms (Downers Grove (South) 10-7, (F 1:37)
7th: Natasha Flores (Warren) 3-11, d. () , . (Bye)
110A
1st: Zoe Dempsey (Lincoln-Way C) 29-1, d. Valeria Pesantes (Elk Grove) 9-2, (F 1:35)
3rd: Sophia Orcasitas (Oak Forest) 17-13, d. Nour Al Radi (Niles West) 8-8, . (F 1:16)
5th: Zoe Zerial (Lincoln-Way C) 10-6, d. Samantha Albaugh (Evanston) 10-11, (F 3:39)
115A
1st: Ireland McCain (Round Lake) 26-4, d. Aaliyah Vazquez (Warren) 19-4, (F 3:14)
3rd: Marjorie Rodriguez (Oak Forest) 25-7, d. Jayden Kurowski (Romeoville) 10-13, (F 0:56)
5th: Val Munoz (Ottawa) 8-15, d. Vanessa Osorio (Mundelein) 18-9, (D 5-0)
7th: Daniela Pallares (Elgin) 1-2, d. Oyetola rachael Jacobs (Evanston) 2-9, (F 3:14)
120A
1st: Ariella Dobin (Glenbrook N) 28-0, d. Alyssa Bentley (Warren) 21-7, (F 3:54)
3rd: Janiya Moore (Metea) 32-3, d. Jesslynne Ochoa (Romeoville) 17-9, (F 4:26)
5th: Pearl Lacey (OPRF) 12-6, d. Samantha Gipson (Evanston) 18-11, (F 3:30)
7th: Ciara Bolf (Ottawa) 7-16, d. () , . (Bye)
125A
1st: Brooklyn Sheaffer (Kaneland) 26-2, d. Riley Moore (Highland Park) 10-6, (F 4:23)
3rd: Gianna Arzer (Grayslake C) 25-3, d. Nichole Castillo (Glenbard S) 15-9, (TF-1.5 1:54 (17-2)
5th: Frankie Abasta (R.-Brookfield) 9-6, d. Emily Pizano (Elgin) 1-2, (F 3:54)
7th: Anahi Banuelos (OPRF) 1-2, d. Samantha De La Torre (Romeoville) 3-9, (F 1:14)
130A
1st: Jasmine Zavaleta (Conant) 20-4, d. Claire Bray (Lincoln-Way C) 21-12, (F 1:34)
3rd: Brianna Perez (Round Lake) 18-10, d. Zuzanna Wegiera (Neuqua) 8-4, (F 1:34)
5th: Jane Kelly (Warren) 24-7, d. Angelica Solis (R.-Brookfield) 8-9, (F 1:43)
7th: Caroline Marogy (Buffalo Grove) 9-5, d. Helen Yuan (Metea) 7-13, (MD 17-8)
135A
1st: Claudia Heeney (Lockport) 29-2, d. Dyani Torres (Kaneland) 24-7, (F 2:46)
3rd: Ewa Krupa (Conant) 24-3, d. Brianna Garcia (Romeoville) 15-9, (For.)
5th: Emily Anaya (R.-Brookfield) 10-7, d. Haley Fugelseth (Warren) 4-4, (F 1:30)
7th: Aryna Latushkina (Vernon Hills) 15-9, d. Aileen Trejo (Evanston) 8-6, (F 1:15)
140A
1st: Jillian Giller (New Trier) 29-1, d. Ava Burns (Lake Park) 21-4, (F 0:31)
3rd: Alketa Picari (Metea) 23-7, d. Lloyd Kowalczyk (Fremd) 11-7, (MD 12-3)
5th: Ava Weatherford (Ottawa) 10-3, d. Khloe Heerdegen (Mundelein) 15-7, (TF-1.5 4:13 (18-2)
7th: Ella Giertuga (Lincoln-Way C) 23-12, d. Jessica Sanchez (Round Lake) 13-11, (D 11-4)
145A
1st: Kennedy Murray (Evanston) 23-3, d. Lyobosa Odiase (Oak Forest) 24-5, (F 5:03)
3rd: Joscelin Ritthamel (Lake Park) 25-5, d. Alex Arquillo (Glenbard S) 18-9, (F 2:39)
5th: Karimot Lawal (Palatine) 17-8, d. Hanna Bairstow (Warren) 11-7, (F 4:26)
7th: Cassidy Graham (Grant) 21-14, d. Giovanna Sampognaro (Lake Park) 16-12, (F 1:55)
155A
1st: Callie Carr (Hinsdale S) 22-0, d. Dana Holt (Highland Park) 14-2, (TF-1.5 5:06 (19-4)
3rd: Danely Villagomez (R.-Brookfield) 10-4, d. Adr Bille (Oak Forest) 19-14, (F 0:23)
5th: Ashley Fugelseth (Warren) 14-11, d. Zamaya Taylor (Elgin (Larkin) 1-2, (F 5:11)
7th: Isabella Vernon (Evanston) 9-12, d. () , . (Bye)
170A
1st: Alicia Tucker (Plainfield (Central) 12-1, d. Mariyah Mani (Romeoville) 20-8, (F 1:35)
3rd: Sabrina Cargill (Palatine) 21-3, d. Lily Ludford King (Grant) 12-10, (TF-1.5 3:06 (15-0)
5th: Jenna Lee (Lincoln-Way C) 16-12, d. Addison Shay (Warren) 1-2, (F 0:49)
7th: Alyssa Dunn (Romeoville) 4-5, d. Lindy Hamilton (New Trier) 7-12, (F 1:41)
190A
1st: Isabel Peralta (Oak Forest) 27-3, d. Sadie Kinsella (Kaneland) 15-6, (F 1:09)
3rd: Janiah Murray (Yorkville) 11-2, d. Zyon Jordan (Plainfield (Central) 7-5, (F 2:22)
5th: Jadelin Caballero (Elgin (Larkin) 2-1, d. Myra Vicencio (Lockport) 21-9, (D 8-1)
7th: Fatima Gomez (Evanston) 11-9, d. () , . (Bye)
235A
1st: Juliana Thrush (Ottawa) 21-2, d. Jasmin Ocampo (Fremd) 13-2, (MD 11-0)
3rd: Riley DePolo (Lincoln-Way C) 19-12, d. Zuza Cebulski (DG South) 6-5, (F 1:59)
5th: Andrea Gordillo (Elgin) 2-1, d. Lariyah Apollo (OPRF) 2-3, (F 4:43)
7th: Kayllee Farias (Warren) 12-10, d. () , . (Bye)
JACK GARDNER MEMORIAL GIRLS TOURNAMENT
The Jack Gardner Memorial Girls Tournament attracted 14 teams to Springfield on Saturday, and when it was over, it would be Springfield Co-op that took home the championship trophy at Lanphier.
Springfield Co-op’s 59 points were the most scored by any team (per Track Wrestling, followed by North Mac (28), Quincy (26), Eisenhower (25.0) of Decatur and University (23) to round out the top five.
Although a handful of weight divisions were sparse, one of the top 235-pounders in the state in Unity’s Phoenix Molina was on hand to showcase her magnificent talent. Molina placed second in state a year ago with 28-6 overall record.
Molina lost in her state final to nationally-ranked Chloe Hoselton (Prairie Central) in a thrilling 2-1 ultimate tie-breaker contest, and figures to be one of the favorites this season along with Hoselton and Julianna Thrush from Ottawa.
Molina registered the fastest tech-fall on the day at 1:39, while adding a tourney high 35 total match points.
1st place: Springfield Co-op (59 points)
The tourney champs would celebrate four individual champions in Phoenix Criss (105), Reaghan Madura (110, 18-4), Madison Bradley (120, 10-8), and Ariella Miloncus (130, 16-5), plus three runners-up in Meredith Gumz (120), Tala Asad (135), Makenna Smith (170), and Crishonna Seals (235).
Adding to the final total were third-place medal winners Cecelia Irwin (110), Jazlyn Britton (115), Leah Kean (120), Lily Walden (125) and Maya Bennett (155).
Springfield Co-op recorded a tourney high (13) pins on the day, and 147 total match points to help them cruise to victory.
2nd place: North Mac (28)
Ashley Ronan (115) and teammate Maggie Hawkins (170) earned championship trophies, with Constance Brand second overall at 125 pounds. Ronan was second to the aforementioned Phoenix Molina with (32) total match points.
3rd Place: Quincy (26)
Zoe Boyd (7-3) who was first at 135 pounds, led the tournament with three pins in 4:02 minutes, along with Hailey Watson from Normal University. Maggie Quinn was second at 155 for Quincy.
Other individual champions at Kelly were Hailey Watson (Normal University, 125), Jessica Toomey (Mt. Zion, 145), Anna Vasey (Tolono Unity, 155, 22-3), Phoenix Molina (Tolono Unity, 235, 20-3).
Jeff Gardner girls tournament results:
105
1st: Phoenix Criss (Springfield) 10-3, d. Jasmine Johnson (Rantoul) 5-7, (F 3:44)
110
1st: Reaghan Madura (Springfield) 18-4, d. Carlly Ho (Rochester) 16-6, (F 2:00)
3rd: Cecelia Irwin (Springfield) 8-13, d. Elizabeth Farney (Unity) 9-15, (F 5:45)
115
1st: Ashley Ronan (North Mac) 3-0, d. Lucie Eisenbarth (Rochester) 16-10, (Dec 11-10)
3rd: Jazlyn Britton (Springfield) 2-10, d. Danielle Porter (Eisenhower) 4-7, (F 2:00)
120
1st: Madison Bradley (Springfield) 10-8, d. Meredith Gumz (Springfield) 9-6, (TF-1.5 1:44 (18-3)
3rd: Leah Kean (Springfield)
125
1st: Hailey Watson (University) 3-0, d. Constance Brand (North Mac) 1-1, (F 1:11)
3rd: Lily Walden (Springfield) 3-9, d. Lana Jackson (Eisenhower) 1-7, (F 4:58)
5th: Maryn Tarver (Hillsboro) 0-1, d. () , . (Bye)
130
1st: Ariella Miloncus (Springfield) 16-5, d. Joselyn Hauck (University) 1-1, (F 1:33)
3rd: Alena Warren (Eisenhower) 2-7, (F 0:21)
135
1st: Zoe Bloyd (Quincy () 7-3, .d. Tala Asad (Springfield) 3-13, (F 2:45)
3rd: Arrayah Yellowhair (Eisenhower) 1-5, d. Vynessah Verry (Auburn) 0-3, (F 0:32)
145
1st: Jessica Toomey (Mt. Zion) 2-0, d. Claire Zorns (Unity) 5-16, (F 1:10)
155
1st: Anna Vasey (Unity) 22-3, d. Maggie Quinn (Quincy () 7-1, (F 1:11)
3rd: Maya Bennett (Springfield) 11-11, d. Zaniah Manuel (Eisenhower) 1-7, (F 0:34)
5th: Corinne Walker (University) 0-1, d. () , . (Bye)
170
1st: Maggie Hawkins (North Mac) 2-0, d. Makenna Smith (Springfield) 4-11, (F 2:23)
235
1st: Phoenix Molina (Unity) 20-3, d. Crishonna Seals (Springfield) 2-6, (TF-1.5 1:39 (20-3)

KELLY GIRLS INVITATIONAL
The 14-team invite at Kelly in the Brighton Park neighborhood featured three high profile clubs that were participants in the recent IWCOA dual-team state tournament in December.
Morton, Phoenix Military Academy and Homewood-Flossmoor each enjoyed varying degrees of success at the dual-team tournament, and all three were all on hand at Kelly. And in the end it would be Morton which had too much firepower and depth for the field.
The Mustangs amassed 171.5 points, far more than second-place Wheeling (120.5) and third place Kelly (112). Reigning city champion Phoenix Military Academy was fourth with 109 points, with Homewood-Flossmoor next at 102.
1st place: Morton (171.5 points)
The tourney champs had far too much firepower for this 14-team affair with four individual champs: Andaira Marron (100), Hope Donnamario (105), Monica Garcia (120) and Anali Wilson at 190.
Donnamario, a 2024 state qualifier with a 33-10 record, would pin her way to her title, as did Marron and Wilson. Garcia would register the quickest tech-fall on the day at 1:44 during her tournament opener.
The Mustangs received a second-place medal from Isabella Sanchez (155) and third overall from Brianna Carbajal at 115, while the trio of Karla Munoz (110), Fatima Martinez (115) and Quetzali Delgado (135) contributed fourth-place finishes.
“There was a lot of good wrestling at Kelly on Saturday,” Morton coach Fernando Arratia said. “The girls are improving, and highly-motivated after this weekend.”
“Andaira (Marron) at 100 is a hard-working young lady, and I’m super happy to have her in our program. Things just click for her, and although the only other sport she played was soccer, watching her wrestle you would think she has been doing it for a while.
“Hope Donnamario (105) is really motivated this year after having a couple of years of success under her belt. She is tough, and has a ton of confidence. Our 120-pound champ, Monica Garcia, is hungry and has really grown. She wants to reach new heights this season. She has really figured things out in her wrestling, and can still improve.
“Anali Wilson (190) is a first-year wrestler who really cares about her success and she began the season hot, before an injury slowed her down a bit. This weekend she looked to be back in form, adjusting when things didn’t pan out in her matches to earn some good wins.”
Arratia was quick to praise three other Mustangs: Brianna Carabal, Violet Mayo, and Isabel Sanchez, for the work they’re putting in.
“Bri) is so tough, and I believe is flying under the radar, while Violet and Isabel are great partners in the room,” he said. “Isabel found her confidence at this tournament, and Violet is on the verge of developing something new in her wrestling.”
The Mustangs were one of 16 lucky participants invited to the first-ever IWCOA dual-team state tournament on December 28 at tourney host Hoffman Estates High School.
The Mustangs earned fourth-place honors in the consolation bracket after going 1-2 in their first three contests of the tournament.
“(What) a great experience for the girls,” Arratia said. “We have a young team, and the exposure to something like that tournament was a really good thing for all of us. We obviously would have liked to have a little more success but in the big picture, we were competitive against some really great teams. It gave all the girls a morale boost, and it really unified the team.”
2nd place: Wheeling (120.5)
The Wildcats have won the last two MSL East titles, and are led by its two champions at Kelly, in junior Elise Burkut (130) and sophomore I Orendarchuk (155).
Teammates Haydee Cruz (100), Layah Woods (135) and Krystal Diaz (145) were all third overall, while Isabella Gomez was fourth at 120.
3rd place: Kelly (112)
The tourney hosts celebrated the effort from 170-pound champion Sara Martinez Lopera, who also won a CPS title a year ago.
Earning second place medals for Kelly were Leylani Bahena (130), N’Dyia Mahon-Godfrey (190) and Laura Sofia Martinez Lopez at 235. Annie Aguilar-Cruz (105), Liliana Monserrat Dimas (140) and Bryana Diaz (170) would add team points with their fourth place medals.
Others earning championship medals at Kelly were London Gandy (110, Homewood-Flossmoor), Alejandra Flores (115, Bolingbrook), Gia Mezzano (125, Ridgewood),
Viola Piancetto (135, Prospect), America Cabrera (140, Phoenix Military Academy), Aj Grant (145, Phoenix Military Academy), Rim Ayouchi (235, Taft).
Final Team Standings: Morton 171.5, Wheeling 120.5, Kelly 112.0, Phoenix Military Academy 109.0, Homewood-Flossmoor 102.0, Bolingbrook 91.5, Mother Macauley 55.5, Ridgewood 53.0, Prospect/Taft 52.0 each, Cumberland 36.0, Metamora 35.0, Glenbard North 30.0, Niles North 0.0.
Kelly Girls Invitational results:
100
1st: Andaira Marron (Morton) d. Elanie Taboada (Prospect) (F 4:41)
3rd: Haydee Cruz (Wheeling) d. Ella Quigley (Mother McCauley) (F 0:46)
105
1st: Hope Donnamario (Morton) d. Mikaela Najera (Bolingbrook) (F 1:06)
3rd: Grace Aeschliman (Metamora) d. Annie Aguilar-Cruz (Kelly) (F 0:57)
110
1st: London Gandy (Homewood-Flossmoor) d. Jordan Rodriguez (Bolingbrook) (F 3:28)
3rd: Kaydence Klein (Metamora) d. Karla Munoz (Morton) (F 0:30)
115
1st: Alejandra Flores (Bolingbrook) won by decision over Diana Lopez-Jimenez (Phoenix Military Academy) (Dec 10-5)
3rd: Brianna Carbajal (Morton) d. Fatima Martinez (Morton) (F 1:18)
120
1st: Monica Garcia (Morton) d. Mia Thomas (Phoenix Military Academy) (F 2:55)
3rd: Jennifer Arenas (Taft) won by decision over Isabella Gomez (Wheeling) (Dec 4-1)
125
1st: Gia Mezzano (Ridgewood) d. Nayeli Nieto (Bolingbrook) (F 2:12)
3rd: Marisol Castro-Duran (Phoenix Military Academy) d. Mylee Edwards (Metamora) (F 3:59)
130
1st: Elise Burkut (Wheeling) d. Leylani Bahena (Kelly) (F 1:49)
3rd: Sophia Kellikidis (Ridgewood) won by disqualification over Nyima Outlaw (Bolingbrook) (DQ)
135
1st: Viola Pianetto (Prospect) d. Amara Nwoye (Homewood-Flossmoor) (F 3:40)
3rd: Layah Woods (Wheeling) d. Quetzalli Delgado (Morton) (F 1:11)
140
1st: America Cabrera (Phoenix Military Academy) won by decision over Maggie Zuber (Mother McCauley) (Dec 4-3)
3rd: Rachel Griggs (Homewood-Flossmoor) d. Liliana Monserrat Dimas (Kelly) (F 3:51)
145
1st: Aj Grant (Phoenix Military Academy) won by major decision over Natalie Beaumont (Cumberland) (Maj 12-2)
3rd: Krystal Diaz (Wheeling) d. Denise Brown (Homewood-Flossmoor) (F 3:44)
155
1st: Nikol Orendarchuk (Wheeling) d. Isabella Sanchez (Morton) (F 1:28)
3rd: Violet Mayo (Morton) d. Rachel Nugin (Homewood-Flossmoor) (F 4:52)
170
1st: Sara Martinez Lopera (Kelly) d. Summer Nichols (Cumberland) (F 1:27)
3rd: Olivia Haywood (Homewood-Flossmoor) d. Bryana Diaz (Kelly) (F 2:44)
190
1st: Anali Wilson (Morton) d. N`Dyia Mahon-Godfrey (Kelly) (F 2:13)
3rd: Gabriella Teufackmomo (Mother McCauley) d. Gianna Tammo (Glenbard North) (F 0:18)
235
1st: Rim Ayouchi (Taft) d. Laura Sofia Martinez Lopera (Kelly) (F 1:18)
3rd: Asreilla Wallace (Glenbard North) d. Esther Delcid (Kelly) (F 2:29)
Stevenson snares sixth straight Conrad title

By Mike Garofola for the IWCOA
During its five previous successful races to the finish line at tourney host Leyden, Stevenson has had enough to stop the advances of Conant on four occasions, and Notre Dame last season.
There have been some close calls along the way: seven points (184-177) in 2023 over Conant; and last year when ten points (208-198) separated the Patriots from Notre Dame.
Saturday afternoon inside historic Chuck Farina Field House, the Patriots saw Notre Dame within 19 points of their lead, halfway through the final round before putting the Dons out of reach for good.
Individual champions Shawn Kogan (132) and Mikey Polyakov (138), plus 15 team pins, 6 team t-falls and a whopping 394 total match points proved too much, as the Patriots earned 200.0 total points to win its sixth consecutive Randy Conrad championship, 200-174 over Notre Dame.
Conant (155.5) placed third, Burlington Central (119.5) was fourth, and host Leyden (115.5) finished fifth.
“We have a great room, with great coaches, and all of us are ready for the second half of the season,” Kogan said. “If we stay healthy we can produce some really good individual and team results.”
Kogan is having a magnificent season, and he and Polyakov are battling in the room.
“I have the best partner with Shawn,” Polyakov said. “We push each other every day, and that’s the way our room is. We have really good depth, which is so important in tournaments.”
The Patriots claimed seven top-three medals, Notre Dame and Conant had six each, and Stevenson had 11 total medalists.
Randy Conrad Invite individual champions:
106: Ray Long, Notre Dame
One year ago, after claiming the first regional title of his young career, Notre Dame’s Ray Long found himself in the ultimate 106-pound group of granite at the Grayslake Central sectional. Long’s season ended there, with a sparkling 37-10 overall record.
From that sectional, Montini’s Allen Woo, Wauconda’s Gavin Rockey, Grayslake Central’s Vince DeMarco and St. Patrick’s Daniel Goodwin advanced to Champaign and finished first, second, fourth and fifth in state, respectively, with over 150 combined victories.
“I learned a lot last year,” Long said. “I was close to the top four, but I knew t was so much extra work that I needed to put in, to help me have a great chance to get onto the podium at state.”
Long improved to 29-3 Saturday, after his 19-7 major decision triumph in the finals over Daniel Berdich (21-8) from Stevenson.
“I am fortunate to have a great partner like John (Sheehy) in our room, who brings so much intensity, and toughness (to him) that helps me prepare for each opponent that I take on,” Long said.
Long, the No. 5 man (2A) in the state, was third at the Dvorak, and sixth overall at nationals in Greco.
Charles Dominguez (Vernon Hills) was third at Leyden, Duncan Tenezaca (Maine East) fourth, Ryu Yamazaki (Conant) fifth and Ryne Sauberlich (Harlem) sixth overall.
113: Eduardo Vences, Burlington Central
Burlington Central’s Eduardo Vences (17-9) could not have been more pleased with his first major title of the season, following a marvelous performance in his 113-pound final with Conant’s Damian Ramos (17-9).
Vences sits just outside the top 10 in the most recent 2A state poll, and he cruised to victory with a 16-4 major decision.
Vences opened the third period with a 9-2 advantage, and with a stealthy move he extended his lead to 16-2 on his way to the title.
“It feels really good to finally win a tournament championship,” admitted the Burlington Central sophomore. “I’ve been working hard in the room to get better each time I go out there, so winning means that extra work is beginning to pay off.”
Vences, who was second at the Rus Erb in late December, opened with a pin and then followed with back-to-back majors.
“I’ve tried to be more aggressive in my attacks, and in that third period, I just went for it and really didn’t let up until the final whistle.
Stevenson junior Evan Mishels was third, Tony Lopez (Vernon Hills) fourth, Justin Forbes (De La Salle) fifth and Alex Gudgeon (Highland Park) sixth.
120: Jeremiah Lawrence, De La Salle
De La Salle head coach Jason Davidson is blessed with a terrific triple threat on his Meteors club, in Jeremiah Lawrence, Marquis Mays and David McCarthy, all of whom brought home championship trophies from Leyden.
Lawrence was clearly the best in his weight class, witnessed by his second straight title. He used three lightning-quick tech-falls, including a 19-3 (3:03) match winner in his final against Ayush Bajaj (18-12) from Stevenson.
“Last year I left a lot of points out there, so I worked incredibly hard during the offseason at perfecting my craft to make a serious run at a state title,” said Lawrence, who was third a year ago at 106 in Class 1A, finishing with a 27-5 overall record.
The two-time state qualifier, and current No. 5 man in the state, said his 3-2 win over second-ranked Aiden Larsen (Yorkville Christian) as his best match of the season, following his claiming his second major title of the year at Plano.
Emmett Arens (Conant) was third, Jaydee Doke (Harlem) fourth, Alex Rodriguez (Leyden) fifth, and James Cohen from Vernon Hills sixth.
126: John Sheehy, Notre Dame
It was clear from the start that the rest of the field at 126-pounds would be chasing No. 3 John Sheehy (29-3), as the Notre Dame senior had the wind in his sails from the onset en route to his second Leyden title and second tournament title of the season.
After his marvelous three-match effort, which ended with a 15-7 major decision victory over Conant’s 2024 3A state qualifier Luis Flores. It was the third time Sheehy has beaten Flores this year.
“Ray (Long) is a great partner to have in the room,” Sheehy said. “We have contrasting styles so we attack and defend each other in so many different ways.”
Sheehy is a two-time state qualifier who finished fourth in state last year at 113, and the circumstances surrounding that state medal last is a story in itself: Sheehy suffered a case of appendicitis at 4 a.m. on the morning of first day in Champaign.
“I was overweight, and obviously feeling really uncomfortable,” Sheehy said. “I found a way to make weight, and went out and won my first two matches on Thursday, then lost my semifinal (to state runner-up Edgar Mosquera of Riverside-Brookfield) after being up six. I won my next match in consolation before losing my third-place match.”
Josh Vazquez (Montini Catholic) and Xavier Villabos (Rochelle) are just ahead of Sheehy in the most recent state polls.
“My confidence is so much better this year,” Sheehy said. “I feel that I can get back downstate and reach my goal of getting into the state final.”
Nathan Corder (Harlem) was third, Gabriel Quintana (Harvard) fourth, Marcelo Cantu (Stevenson) and Sabir Aliev (Vernon Hills) were fifth and sixth respectively.
132: Shawn Kogan, Stevenson
Stevenson’s No. 5 Shawn Kogan (26-1)continues to roll on after the Stevenson star smashed three opponents at Leyden, including Maine East’s Dulguun Nyamdavaa (17-8) in his 132-pound final with a 17-1 tech-fall (2:27) victory.
His Randy Conrad crown marks Kogan’s third major title of the season. The junior recently won at Palatine’s Berman Holiday Classic, and claimed the top spot on the first weekend of the season at Barrington.
“After a little down time from our tournament schedule, we were back at it this week,” Kogan said. “Mikey (Polyakov) and I have been hard at work in preparation for the last half of the season.
“With the regular season winding down, I’m really looking forward to the Illini Classic next weekend, where I’m hoping to face (Lyons’ No. 6) Griff Powell and (Marist’s No. 2) George Marinopoulos. That will be my biggest test of the year.”
Kogan earned 27.5 team points for the Patriots’ cause, second-best in the tournament along with Conant senior Victor Chevganov, and just 0.5 behind tourney leader Ilia Dvoryannikov from Vernon Hills.
Austin Lee (Burlington Central) finished third, Izayah Oleniczak (Harlem) fourth, Brady Krueger (Notre Dame) fifth, and Melvin Cannon (De La Salle) sixth.
138: Mikey Polyakov, Stevenson
It was his old NSC rival from Grant, Erik Rodriguez who dashed the hopes of Mikey Polyakov for an individual title recently at the 69th Berman Holiday Classic, but the Stevenson sophomore feels his odds of changing his luck against Rodriguez are growing.
Polyakov improved his record to 21-8 after two quick pins sent him into the finals against Conant’s Matt Goolish (16-7), where his 9-0 major decision victory over the Cougars’ senior gave him his first major title of the season.
Polyakov enjoyed a 6-0 advantage into the second period against Goolish. He chose down to start the period and never conceded a point along the way.
“Erik is a great opponent, but I feel like I’m closing the gap on him each time we meet, despite being 0-3 against him so far,” said Polyakov, who was a sectional qualifier a year ago in his rookie season, finishing with a 26-17 overall record.
“Shawn (Kogan) has been a tremendous help to me in my training. I’ve doubled up my workout each day, I did a lot of lifting in the offseason, trained at Brunson, and really worked hard on my slide-bys, tilts, positioning and ‘re-attacks’ that have made a big difference in the way I’ve wrestled this year.”
Mike Miranda (Leyden) was third, Jonathan Kruse (Burlington Central) fourth, Owen Recoy (Harlem) fifth, and Telmen Bayanbileg (Maine East) sixth overall.
144: Victor Chevganov, Conant
Conant’s Victor Chevganov figures that ‘flying under the radar’ is his best approach to his final season at Conant.
After a 13-21 record a year ago, the Cougars senior has done a complete 180 with his first tournament title of the campaign, to go along with an impressive 22-6 record following his pin at 3:01 over Stevenson senior Devitt Narens, now 18-11.
“I just wasn’t very good last year,” Chevganov said. “I wasn’t engaged at all both physically or mentally, but I did not want to end things the same way as last year, so I set out to make my senior year a great one.
“I was up (five points) in the final at Niles West and ended up losing in overtime, so I promised myself since then to do even more in the room because I feel like I can be one of those guys everyone overlooks in the postseason.
“It’s kind of like my teammate from last year, Tanner Cosgrove. He came out of nowhere to get downstate. That’s my plan this season, and to go after a medal.”
Brennan Peters (Harvard) was third, Andrew Diaz (Vernon Hills) fourth, followed by Cole McGuire (Burlington Central) and John Carr from Notre Dame.
150: Preston Fadness, Harlem
While his teammates from Harlem were chasing state power and NIC-10 rival Hononegah at the Huntley regional a year ago, Preston Fadness (19-8) was on the sidelines with a broken ankle.
But the Huskies senior persevered. Following his season-ending injury, he put in plenty of offseason training and extra work, which would include time in both Greco and Freestyle action.
“It (the broken ankle) was a big setback, but at least it happened during my junior year, so it gave me one more year of wrestling.”
Since his fifth-place finish in early December at the Mickey Marchese tournament put his record at 4-2, Fadness has gone 15-6. He opened Saturday’s action with a decision win, then won by major decision to reach the finals.
Fadness then won a hard-fought 5-3 decision over Notre Dame’s Joseph McCarthy (10-9) to win his Conrad title.
“We have a very good room and I have good partners, so I feel like I can improve with each week leading up to regionals,” Fadness said. “The plan is to advance into sectionals.”
Andrew Garcia (Maine East) third, Aidan Elliott (Stevenson) fourth, Leo Flores (Richards) fifth, Skaba Kokumbaev (Conant) sixth.
157: Deniz Ozturk, Notre Dame
No, it’s not an illusion that Notre Dame senior Deniz Ozturk was a 2023 sectional qualifier at 215, and then a sectional qualifier at 165 last season.
“Nope, it’s true,” Ozturk said. “I really was a 215-pounder as a sophomore. But I made a huge commitment to get fit and in shape for my senior year. I’m doing all the right things in my diet and training, and this year I feel really great. I’m ready to compete at a high level.”
Ozturk is now 21-2 after his 13-1 major decision victory over Jayden Corchado from Highland Park.
“I obviously lost a lot of weight, but I did it in a healthy way,” Ozturk said. “I think that wrestling at 215 actually made me more prepared to compete at 157.
“The adjustment was a little difficult at the start, but I believe my pace has helped me a lot at this weight. It’s something that has really not allowed my opponents to rest during our matches.”
Ozturk would like to continue to wrestle at the next level, perhaps at nearby Triton College.
Giorgi Solorio-Alvarez (Vernon Hills) was third, Jeremy Castro (Leyden) fourth, Kosuke Hirata (Stevenson) fifth and Jaewon White of Conant sixth.
165: Ilia Dvoriannikov, Vernon Hills
Vernon Hills’ Ilia Dvoriannikov (23-1) has enjoyed plenty of success at 175 pounds this season, and could very well enjoy more before the postseason begins.
The Vernon Hills junior won at his home tournament, then won a title at Buffalo Grove at 175, and was fifth overall at the prestigious Dvorak – again at 175.
However it’s at 165 where the 2024 (2A) state runner-up will do most of his damage from here on out, with the hopes of another Grand March in Champaign come February.
“I still might compete at (175) before regionals, but I feel like I am most dangerous at 165, where I will have the best chance of winning a state title,” said the soft-spoken Dvoriannikov.
He lets his work on the mats do his talking for him. He did so Saturday, winning a Conrad title with a pin at 0:58 against Notre Dame’s Dean Lazaris (18-12).
A state qualifier as a freshman with a 31-11 record, Dvoriannikov won three straight hard-fought, one-point victories at state last season to advance into the 165-pound final against Dunlap star Nick Mueller (43-3) now wrestling at Upper Iowa University.
Mueller’s 4-2 victory would give Dunlap its first state title in program history, while providing the motivation for Dvoriannikov to reach for the stars this time around.
Dvoriannikov would like nothing more than to become the first state champion for the Vernon Hills program since 2011, when heavyweight Jeremy Brazil won it all. That same year, Vernon Hills’ Gideon Yim was second at 125.
Jackson Spizzirri (Conant) was third overall, Jake Rhymes (Burlington Central) fourth, Dominic Ganir (Leyden) fifth and Josh Olex (Stevenson) sixth.
175: Marquis Mays, De La Salle
Affable De La Salle senior Marquis Mays just laughs when he recounts at what weight he competed at a year ago.
“I was in our lineup at 215 last season – can you believe it?” the three-year varsity veteran said with a wide smile.
“It’s where I was needed last year, and I felt really good about helping our team win our own regional team title,” Mays said. “But now that I’m at the weight I should be, I feel like I have a great chance of getting downstate.”
Last season Mays had state medalist Josue Hernandez (third) at 175, and current teammate, Terrelle Jackson holding down the 215 spot in the lineup.
“Having both David (McCarthy) and Terrelle in the room pushing me each day has made me so much better,” added Mays, after his 15-5 major decision victory over Holden Wiegel (11-5) from Burlington Central earned him a Conrad title.
Mays plans to attend Michigan State University where he’ll major in finance.
Chris Quizphi (Leyden) finished third, Peter Escamilla (Notre Dame) fourth, Philip Boyko (Stevenson) fifth and Timur Arzumanov (Vernon Hills) sixth.
190: Mike Taheny, Richards
A bigger, stronger, and more focused Mike Taheny is back from back-to-back appearances in Champaign, and the Richards senior is ready to make the third trip downstate a memorable one.
“There’s no doubt my desire to get past that barrier of not earning a state medal motivated me,” Taheny said. “And the extra work that I’ve put in has raised my level of confidence to where it needs to be to help me get on top of the podium.
Taheny improved to 23-1 overall after recording his second straight tech-fall victory Saturday, the second one coming over Stevenson’s Everett Ciezak (21-10) on the title mat at 5:30.
The No. 3 man in 2A now has four major titles to his credit (Antioch, Fenton, Glenbrook South) one season after going 2-2 at state to end his season at 31-5.
Cayden Parks (Crystal Lake Central) and Jack Paris from Fenwick currently sit just ahead of the 2024 regional and sectional champ Taheny, who has applied to the Naval Academy where he wants to continue to wrestle, while earning a degree in either computer science, cyber-security or high level mathematics.
Notre Dame senior Michael Keany was third, Terrelle Jackson (De La Salle) fourth, Michael Junitz (Burlington Central) fifth, and Jaiden Thorney (Conant) sixth.
215: Erick Worwa, Leyden
Make it two-straight Randy Conrad titles for Leyden star Erick Worwa, who advanced into the Conant sectional last season as a sophomore, and used that experience to provide the type of motivation needed to go even further in 2025.
“When you’re around so much talent in your weight class at sectionals, you realize how good they are, and how much more you have to work in every area to get back there and qualify downstate,” Worwa (25-2) said.
Worwa put forth a terrific effort against Highland Park sophomore Daniel Derbedyenyev (10-10) that led to a 19-2 (2:00) tech-fall victory on Saturday’s title mat.
“I put so much into my offseason training, and came out this year so much more focused on the sport,” Worwa said. “It’s just coming out in each match ready to battle, and to do whatever it takes to win.”
Worwa has now won three tournament titles this year.
Cully Nelson (Harlem) was third, Bo Branum (Harvard) fourth, Enrique Benitez (Conant) fifth, and Jonathan Keats (Vernon Hills) sixth.
285: David McCarthy, De La Salle
De La Salle’s No. 2 David McCarthy squashed his heavyweight rivals on Saturday, posting three pins in just over five minutes to claim his third major title of the season. He also won title at Conant and Plano this year.
He won a Conrad title Saturday with a fall at 0:42 against Harlem’s Chandler Jack (24-8).
“I worked extensively during the offseason on my movement, hand-fighting, and looking more for openings for me to attack,” McCarthy said. “The improvement in those areas has been a big part of my success thus far.”
The three-year Meteors veteran won a sectional title last season at Hope Academy before going on to earn a fifth-place 1A state medal, the 26th in program history.
The chances of a bigger, better finish this season in Champaign for McCarthy comes from some magnificent results on the season over high-profile heavyweight stars.
McCarthy has beaten No. 3 (1A) Jaylen Torres, the state runner-up from Wheaton St. Francis, No. 6 (1A) Ray Phelps (Hope Academy) in addition to a pin over the No. 2 man at 3A, William Cole from Round Lake.
“I just have to stay healthy, and stay mentally and physically strong from here on out,” McCarthy said.
Aidan Jaffray from Leyden finished third, Connor Moynihan (Notre Dame) fourth, Reece Parinello (Burlington Central) fifth, and Justin Lopez (Highland Park) sixth.
Final Team Standings: Stevenson 200.0, Notre Dame 174.0, Conant 155.5, Burlington Central 119.5, Leyden 115.5, Vernon Hills 113.0, Harlem 112.5, De La Salle 99.5, Highland Park 58.5, Maine East 53.0, Harvard 42.0, Richards 37.0, Lakes Community 0.0
Randy Conrad Invite results:
106
1st: Ray Long (Notre Dame) 29-3, d. Daniel Berdich (Stevenson) 21-8, (MD 19-7)
3rd: Charles Dominguez (Vernon Hills) 15-7, d. Duncan Tenezaca (Maine East) 15-8, (MD 13-2)
5th: Ryu Yamazaki (Conant) 7-18, d. Ryne Sauberlich (Harlem) 9-7, (TF-1.5 3:11 (16-1)
113
1st: Eduardo Vences (Central) 17-9, d. Damian Ramos (Conant) 17-9, (MD 16-4)
3rd: Evan Mishels (Stevenson) 18-12, d. Tony lopez (Vernon Hills) 11-12, (MD 12-2)
5th: Justin Forbes (De La Salle) 2-1, d. Alex Gudgeon (Highland Park) 7-4, (F 1:01)
120
1st: Jeremiah Lawrence (De La Salle) 3-0, d. Ayush Bajaj (Stevenson) 18-12, (TF-1.5 3:03 (19-3)
3rd: Emmett Arens (Conant) 2-1, d. Jaydee Doke (Harlem) 18-12, (D 10-3)
5th: Alex Rodriguez (Leyden) 5-7, .d. James Cohen (Vernon Hills) 5-11, (F 5:32)
126
1st: John Sheehy (Notre Dame) 29-3, d. Luis Flores (Conant) 2-1, (MD 15-7)
3rd: Nathan Corder (Harlem) 14-8, d. Gabriel Quintana (Harvard) 4-6, (F 4:28)
5th: Marcelo Cantu (Stevenson) 14-6, d. Sabir Aliev (Vernon Hills) 10-11, (F 0:57)
132
1st: Shawn Kogan (Stevenson) 26-1, d. Dulguun Nyamdavaa (Maine East) 17-8, (TF-1.5 2:27 (17-1)
3rd: Austin Lee (Central) 20-7, d. Izayah Olejniczak (Harlem) 16-10, (D 13-7)
5th: Brady Krueger (Notre Dame) 23-11, d. Melvin Cannon (De La Salle) 1-2, (F 2:39)
138
1st: Mikey Polyakov (Stevenson) 21-8, d. Matt Goolish (Conant) 16-7, (MD 9-0)
3rd: Mike Miranda (Leyden) 3-1, .d. Jonathan Kruse (Central) 1-3, (TF-1.5 2:29 (18-0)
5th: Owen Recoy (Harlem) 15-7, d. Telmen Bayanbileg (Maine East) 3-10, (MD 13-2)
144
1st: Vic Chebganov (Conant) 22-6, d. Devitt Narens (Stevenson) 18-11, (F 3:01)
3rd: Brennan Peters (Harvard) 8-9, d. Andrew Diaz (Vernon Hills) 11-13, (D 7-1)
5th: Cole McGuire (Central) 9-7, d. John Carr (Notre Dame) 4-3, (D 10-4)
150
1st: Preston Fadness (Harlem) 19-8, d. Joseph McCarthy (Notre Dame) 10-9, (D 5-3)
3rd: Andrew Garcia (Maine East) 9-6, d. Aidan Elliott (Stevenson) 1-3, (D 16-12)
5th: Leo Flores (Oak Lawn Richards) 14-7, .d. Shaba Kokumbaev (Conant) 2-4, . (F 2:31)
157
1st: Deniz Ozturk (Notre Dame) 21-12, d. Jayden Corchado (Highland Park) 4-6, (MD 13-1)
3rd: Giorgi Solorio-Alvarez (Vernon Hills) 9-6, d. Jeremy Castro (Leyden) 1-2, . (MD 14-6)
5th: Kosuke Hirata (Stevenson) 9-15, d. Jaewon Willhite (Conant) 6-6, (F 4:16)
165
1st: Ilia Dvoriannikov (Vernon Hills) 23-1, d. Dean Lazaris (Notre Dame) 18-12, (F 0:58)
3rd: Jackson Spizzirri (Conant) 16-13, d. Jake Rhymes (Central) 4-7, (MD 15-4)
5th: Dominic Ganir (Leyden) 13-13, .d. Josh Olex (Stevenson) 2-6, (F 4:50)
175
1st: Marquis Mays (De La Salle) 3-0, d. Holden Wiegel (Central) 11-6, (MD 15-5)
3rd: Chris Quizphi (Leyden) 16-7, .d. Peter Escamilla (Notre Dame) 8-11, (TF-1.5 4:00 (16-1)
5th: Philip Boyko (Stevenson) 11-4, d. Timur Arzumanov (Vernon Hills) 11-8, (F 1:47)
190
1st: Mike Taheny (Oak Lawn Richards) 23-1, .d. Everett Ciezak (Stevenson) 21-10, (TF-1.5 5:30 (23-7)
3rd: Michael Keany (Notre Dame) 17-9, d. Terrelle Jackson (De La Salle) 1-2, (SV-1 7-4)
5th: Michael Junitz (Central) 22-9, d. Jaiden Thorney (Conant) 11-18, (TF-1.5 4:16 (16-0)
215
1st: Erick Worwa (Leyden) 25-2, .d. Daniel Derbedyenyev (Highland Park) 10-10, (TF-1.5 2:00 (19-2)
3rd: Cully Nelson (Harlem) 15-11, d. Bo Branum (Harvard) 6-9, (F 1:53)
5th: Enrique Benitez (Conant) 4-1, d. Jonathan Keats (Vernon Hills) 7-10, (F 1:57)
285
1st: David McCarthy (De La Salle) 3-0, d. Chandler Jack (Harlem) 24-8, (F 0:42)
3rd: Aidan Jaffray (Leyden) 10-14, .d. Connor Moynihan (Notre Dame) 1-4, (F 4:44)
5th: Reece Parinello (Central) 3-10, d. Justin Lopez (Highland Park) 7-8, (F 0:52)
Boys tournament roundup: Glenbard West, Grant, Sullivan, Geneva

By Gary Larsen for the IWCOA
Glenbard West Chris Chappell Invitational
The host Hilltoppers took the team title at this year’s Chappell Invite, posting a 246.5-175.5 edge over second-place Libertyville. Lockport (173) was third, Cary-Grove (121.5) placed fourth, and Bartlett (106) rounded out the top five team finishes.
Glenbard West coach Pat McCluskey got four individual titles, four runners-up finishes, two thirds, one fourth and one sixth-place finish among its 13 medalists.
Libertyville had 10 medalists and two additional place-wins from non-scoring wrestlers. Lockport also had 10 medalists, while Cary-Grove and Bartlett each sent eight wrestlers to the podium.
“We wrestled tough as a team today,” McCluskey said. “I was proud of our third-period effort, mental game, and conditioning. It’s always nice for our seniors to win the Chappell, a memory they will not forget.”
The Chappell Invitational is named for Chris Chappell, who wrestled at Glenbard West for long-time coach Bernie Botheroyd, graduating in 1986. Chappell passed away in 2002 at the age of 35 and Botheroyd re-named the Glenbard West Invitational after Chappell in 2006.
1st place: Glenbard West (246.5)
The Hilltoppers got individual titles from Aidan Ortega (106), Carson Prunty (126), Alejandro Aranda (138), and Vince Tortoriello (150), and another title from Jondelle Malunay (144) wrestling for the Glenbard West JV team, which finished sixth in the team standings.
Prunty trailed Lockport’s Isaac Zimmerman 7-0 in their title match at 126 before winning by fall at 5:56. “(Prunty) showed great toughness and poise,” McCluskey said. “(Ortega) works his tail off day in and day out…(Aranda) has been a hammer all year and continues to get better every week…(Tortoriello) is a great technician and loves to compete.
“Jondelle Malunay has been fighting and working hard all year to crack the lineup and today his skills and toughness really showed by winning the tournament with a last second takedown.
Glenbard West also got four second-place finishes, from Christian Lopez (113), Ulises Rosas (132), Brandon Watson (157), and Phin Codinha (215), thirds from Brennen Myra (144) and Tallis Taylor (165), a fourth from Andrew Bargiel (190), and a sixth from Advin Murtic (120).
“I could not be prouder of our team and program this year,” McCluskey said. “Day-in and day-out they come to practice to work hard and get better. We still have three weeks to improve before the regionals so I’m looking forward to seeing their progress.”
2nd place: Libertyville (175.5)
Coach Dale Eggert got individual titles from James Scanio (175) and Caleb Baczek (215), seconds from Tyler Wuh (120) and Jack Treutelaar (190), thirds from Jake Shafer (126), Pierce Adams (157) and Steve Strelow (190), and fifths from Liam Huizenga (106), Elliott Hibbard (138), Ruben Quintero (150), and Ethan Trowbridge (165). Callum O’Connell (157) also placed fifth as a non-scoring wrestler for the Wildcats.
3rd: Lockport (173)
Liam Zimmerman (132) and Jaedon Calderon (157) won titles for the Porters, who also got seconds from Isaac Zimmerman (126) and Chris Miller (165), thirds from Caleb Russell (106), Naseem Jaber (138) and Hunter Rahn (175), fifths from Timmy O’Connor (120) and Ethan Robledo (285), and a sixth from Kyle Holland (215).
Other individual champions at Glenbard West were Elk Grove’s Zander Spatafore (113) and Mikey Milovich (285), Cary-Grove’s Hunter Lenz (120) and Noah Pechotta (165), and Waukegan’s Lamero Ceaser (190).
Team scores:
Glenbard West 246.5, Libertyville 175.5, Lockport 173, Cary-Grove 121.5, Bartlett 106, Glenbard West JV 102, Glenbard South 100, Waukegan 92.5, Elk Grove 72, Thornton 47.5, Proviso East 41.5, Larkin 35
The day’s best:
Glenbard West’s Jondelle Murray won an 11-9 decision for the title at 144 on a last-second takedown, and Elk Grove heavyweight Mikey Milovich gutted out a 1-0 win for the title against Cary-Grove’s Lucas Burton.
Individual statistics:
Cary-Grove’s Landon Locker had the most pins (4) in the least time (13:25) and Libertyville’s Tyler Wuh had the most tech falls (2) in the least time (5:40). Proviso East’s Jaedon Otero had the most combined pins and tech falls (4) in the least time (12:05), and Libertyville’s Steve Strelow had the fastest pin, in 11 seconds. Wuh had the fastest tech fall posted, in 1:40.
Waukegan’s Lamero Ceaser and Libertyville’s Caleb Baczek tied for the most team points scored with 30 apiece, Thornton’s Christian Cossia’s 24 match points were the most of any wrestler, and Otero scored the most total match points with 56.
The largest seed-place difference went to Cary-Grove’s Hunter Lenz, as the No. 8 seed won the title at 120 pounds.
Glenbard West Chappell Invite results:
106
1st: Aidan Ortega (Glenbard W) 24-3, D. Adrian Valadez (Thornton) 8-2, (F 1:05)
3rd: Caleb Russell (Lockport) 5-16, d. Martrel Davis (Proviso E) 12-7, (Inj. 2:00)
5th: Liam Huizenga (Libertyville) 3-10, D. () , . (Bye)
113
1st: Zander Spatafore (Elk Grove) 20-5, d. Cristian Lopez (Glenbard W) 11-10, (F 5:00)
3rd: Jorge Lopez (Larkin) 9-5, d. Gunner Cotte (C.-Grove) 3-15, (F 1:27)
5th: Gio Ambris (Glenbard W JV) 2-5, D. Arthur Schweitzer (Thornton) 3-2, (F 0:16)
120
1st: Hunter Lenz (C.-Grove) 5-1, d. Tyler Wuh (Libertyville) 7-4, (MD 10-0)
3rd: Manny Rodriguez (GW JV) 7-3, .d. Chase Murrell (Proviso E) 10-7 (MD 11-2)
5th: Timmy O’Connor (Lockport) 13-5, d. Advin Murtic (Glenbard W) 12-13, (F 1:05)
126
1st: Carson Prunty (Glenbard W) 19-3, d. Isaac Zimmerman (Lockport) 21-9, (F 5:56)
3rd: Jake Shafer (Libertyville) 16-11, D. Jordan Quaid Bowman (Glenbard S) 16-6, (MD 15-3)
5th: William Miller (C.-Grove) 3-3, D. Salvador Garcia (Larkin) 8-5, (F 4:29)
132
1st: Liam Zimmerman (Lockport) 27-6, d. Ulises Rosas (Glenbard W) 24-3, (TF-1.5 3:01 (15-0)
3rd: Nick Barton (Bartlett) 19-5, d. Nicasio Acino (Elk Grove) 6-2, (F 3:23)
5th: Jaedon Otero (Proviso E) 8-1, .d. Ignacio Santander (C.-Grove) 10-8, (F 3:52)
138
1st: Alejandro Aranda (Glenbard W) 25-4, d. Cam Engels (Bartlett) 19-5, (F 0:41)
3rd: Naseem Jaber (Lockport) 10-6, d. Emmanuel Adedeji (Thornton) 5-3, (TF-1.5 3:58 (18-3)
5th: Elliott Hibbard (Libertyville) 12-6, d. Jaime Iman (Glenbard W JV) 2-2, (D 7-1)
144
1st: Jondelle Malunay (Glenbard W JV) 3-2, d. Jin Tai (Glenbard S) 22-5, (D 11-9)
3rd: Brennen Myra (Glenbard W) 23-5, d. Damari Miller (Larkin) 15-7, (D 12-8)
5th: David Brown (Waukegan) 11-5, d. Gus Saletta (Bartlett) 3-5, (TF-1.5 2:42 (16-1)
150
1st: Vince Tortoriello (Glenbard W) 22-7, d. Ben Schoettle (GW JV) 2-1 (MD 18-5)
3rd: Joey Caputo (Bartlett) 17-10, d. Truth Thurman (Waukegan) 7-9, (MD 14-5)
5th: Ruben Quintero (Libertyville) 3-7, D. Ezekiel Carillo (Bartlett) 3-7, (F 1:34)
157
1st: Jaedon Calderon (Lockport) 21-9, D. Brandon Watson (Glenbard W) 22-7(MD 13-2)
3rd: Pierce Adams (Libertyville) 11-11 d. Anthony Kinney (Glenbard S) 12-12 (TF-1.5 4:11 (17-1)
5th: Callum O`Connell (Libertyville) 4-1, d. Lawerence Marcelo (Bartlett) 12-12, (TF-1.5 3:06 (17-0)
165
1st: Noah Pechotta (C.-Grove) 24-1, d. Chris Miller (Lockport) 22-12, (D 7-2)
3rd: Tallis Taylor (Glenbard W) 10-4, D. Soren Myra (Glenbard W JV) 5-6, (Inj. 0:00)
5th: Ethan Trowbridge (Libertyville) 14-14, d. Eric Bello (Bartlett) 10-7, (F 0:46)
175
1st: James Scanio (Libertyville) 19-9, D. Reid Sebahar (Glenbard S) 21-11, (F 0:58)
3rd: Hunter Rahn (Lockport) 9-7, D. Dom Thorson (Bartlett) 9-11, (MD 11-1)
5th: Josh Humphrey (C.-Grove) 2-6, d. Marco Gomez (Waukegan) 3-5, (F 1:15)
190
1st: Lamero Ceaser (Waukegan) 13-4, d. Jack Treutelaar (Libertyville) 18-11, (Inj. 4:00)
3rd: Steve Strelow (Libertyville) 8-2, d. Andrew Bargiel (Glenbard W) 11-16, (F 3:37)
5th: Landon Locker (C.-Grove) 6-7, D. Donald Hubbard (Bartlett) 10-10, (F 4:24)
215
1st: Caleb Baczek (Libertyville) 19-1, d. Phin Codinha (Glenbard W) 21-5, (F 1:27)
3rd: Danny Langner (Glenbard S) 25-5, d. James Smrha (Bartlett) 17-6, (F 3:00)
5th: Diego Cano (Glenbard W JV) 2-1, d. Kyle Holland (Lockport) 6-4, (D 5-2)
285
1st: Mikey Milovich (Elk Grove) 21-5, d. Lucas Burton (C.-Grove)) 13-2, Sr. (Dec 1-0)
3rd: Ivan Martinez (Waukegan) 9-2, d. Ambrose Davis (Glenbard S) 7-6, (F 4:00)
5th: Ethan Robledo (Lockport) 9-5, d. Al Kouakou (Proviso E) 7-6, . (F 2:44)

Grant’s Loffredo Duals
Marmion Academy topped St. Charles East 40-30 to win the team title at this year’s 8-team Loffredo Duals, hosted by Grant.
Marmion beat Crystal Lake South 53-21 and Grant 64-12 to reach the 1st-place dual against St. Charles East. The Saints won 67-8 over South Elgin and 52-17 over DeKalb before taking on Marmion.
Marmion’s Colton Wyller(106), Aidan McClure(113), Preston Morrison(113), Demetrios Carrera(132), Zach Stewart(138), Ashton Hobson(150), Luke Boersma(190), and Joey Favia (215) all went undefeated on the day.
“We wrestled well this weekend,” Marmion coach Anthony Cirrincione said. “Standouts were Preston Morrison and Aidan McClure, who bumped up weight classes and still performed very well. The big standout was Luke Boersma, who has pinned his last four opponents and seems to be figuring out his style and what is going to lead him to reaching his goals. He is on a tear right now.
“It was nice to have (returning state champion) Zach Stewart back in the line-up and he looked good. Wyller, Carrera, Hobson, and Favia all dominated as they have the majority of the season in dual meets. We’re still working towards having everyone compete in a competition at the same time. It has not happened yet, but we are closing in on that first for the season and are excited to see what this group of young men do when finally at full strength.”
St. Charles East got unbeaten performances on the day from Dom Munaretto (120/126), Liam Aye (126), Gavin Woodmancy (138), Ryan McGovern (157), Anthony Gutierrez (165), and Abraham Leidig (175).
In one of the day’s marquee match-ups, a pair of state champions squared off at 126 in St. Charles East’s Dom Munaretto and Marmion’s Nicholas Garcia when the Saints and Cadets competed in the title dual.
Munaretto won 10-9 in an ultimate tie-break decision, exacting a bit of revenge for Garcia’s 4-2 decision over Munaretto in last year’s state title match at 113. Munaretto is currently ranked No. 1 at 120 pounds in Illinois in Class 3A and Garcia is ranked No. 1 at 126 pounds.
DeKalb placed third, first winning 39-34 over Lincoln-Way Central in the day’s closest finish of any dual. DeKalb followed its ensuing loss to St. Charles East with a 42-29 win over host Grant in the 3rd-place dual.
Warren began the day with a 36-28 loss to Grant but then won 56-16 over Crystal Lake South before placing fifth with a 44-24 win over sixth-place Lincoln-Way Central. Lincoln-Way Central topped South Elgin 45-20 to reach the 5th-place dual. South Elgin won 48-31 to place 7th over 8th-place Crystal Lake South.
DeKalb’s 3-0 wrestlers were Jayden Bradley (106), Mike Hodge (144), Hudson Ikens (150) and Jeremiah Piniera (285). Warren got 3-0 days from Caleb Noble (113/120), Royce Lopez (165/175), Aaron Stewart (190) and Anthony Soto (285), while Lincoln-Way Central’s Jadon Zimmer (138/144), South Elgin’s Nicholas Dilallo (113), and Crystal Lake South’s Christopher Talbert (106) and Nathan Randle (132/138) also each went 3-0 in Fox Lake.
Final team standings:
1st: Aurora (Marmion Academy); 2nd: St. Charles (East); 3rd: DeKalb; 4th: Fox Lake (Grant); 5th: Warren; 6th: Lincoln-Way Central; 7th: South Elgin; 8th: Crystal Lake South
Individual statistics:
Among all wrestlers present, St. Charles East’s Abraham Leidig finished with the most pins (3) in the least time (6:56), and Marmion’s Zach Stewart had the most tech falls (3) in the least time (11:22). DeKalb’s Jayden Bradley had to most combined pins and tech falls (3) in the least time (2:51). St. Charles East’s Leidig and Marmion’s Luke Boersma tied for the most team points scored by an individual with 18, and South Elgin’s Evan Hamilton scored the most single-match points with 26. Marmion’s Stewart posted the most total match points with 55.
Dual results:
1st place dual: Marmion 40, St. Charles East 30
120 – James Morrison (Marmion) d. Jayden Hernandez (SC East) D 11-9
126 – Dom Munaretto (SC East) d. Nicholas Garcia (Marmion) UTB 10-9
132 – Demetrios Carrera (Marmion) d. Payton Lee (SC East) TF 17-2
138 – Gavin Woodmancy (SC East) d. Grayson Garcia (Marmion) Maj 13-0
144 – Zach Stewart (Marmion) d. Logan Tatar (SC East) TF 19-3
150 – Ashton Hobson (Marmion) d. Isaac Lenard (SC East) F 1:32
157 – Ryan McGd.n (SC East) d. Andrew Haritos (Marmion) TF 21-6
165 – Anthony Gutierrez (SC East) d. Jack Young (Marmion) F 0:48
175 – Abraham Leidig (SC East) d. Anthony Haddad (Marmion) F 3:19
190 – Luke Boersma (Marmion) d. Rocco Lobrillo (SC East) F 1:10
215 – Joseph Favia (Marmion) d. Cooper Murray (SC East) D 5-2
285 – Matt Medina (SC East) d. Unknown (Unattached) Forf
106 – Colton Wyller (Marmion) d. Nate Butcher (SC East) F 0:38
113 – Aidan McClure (Marmion) d. Dlan Sons (SC East) F 1:56
3rd place dual: DeKalb 42, Grant 29
120 – Owen Burgess (DeKalb) d. Breiydyn Hoffman (Grant) F 1:10
126 – Vince Jasinski (Grant) d. Tyler Daub (DeKalb) TF 18-1
132 – Ayden Shuey (DeKalb) d. Sammy Mendez (Grant) D 10-7
138 – Erik Rodriguez (Grant) d. Alan Izaguirre (DeKalb) F 3:47
144 – Mike Hodge (DeKalb) d. Adrian Khi (Grant) F 3:33
150 – Hudson Ikens (DeKalb) d. Nathan Flores (Grant) Maj 11-3
157 – Grayson Lennon (Grant) d. Preston Kjell (DeKalb) F 1:56
165 – Sean Kolkebeck (DeKalb) d. Aaden Arroyo (Grant) F 3:03
175 – Christian Wittkamp (Grant) d. Hussul Greer (DeKalb) F 1:19
190 – Casey Gipson (Grant) d. Elvis Mora (DeKalb) F 3:30
215 – Nick Waddle (DeKalb) d. Tyler Zdon (Grant) F 2:28
285 – Jeremiah Piniera (DeKalb) d. Ian Hernandez (Grant) D 7-1
106 – Jayden Bradley (DeKalb) d. Brady Myatt (Grant) TF 17-1
113 – Julian Hartwig (DeKalb) d. Larry Quirk (Grant) D 7-1
5th place dual: Warren 44, Lincoln-Way Central 24
120 – Jonathan Marquez (Warren) d. Eric Hoselton (LW Central) TF 21-4
126 – Brooks Mcray (LW Central) d. Luis Calderon (Warren) D 9-4
132 – Evan Glowinski (Warren) d. Michael Heimberg (LW Central) Maj 9-1
138 – Jadon Zimmer (LW Central) d. Unknown (Unattached) Forf
144 – Jadon Zimmer (LW Central) d. Kyle Miron (Warren) F 1:40
150 – Simon Castillo (Warren) d. Zander Zilewicz (LW Central) Maj 12-4
157 – Jalen Byrd (LW Central) d. Justice Humphreys (Warren) D 1-0
165 – Royce Lopez (Warren) d. Caden Harvey (LW Central) Maj 10-0
175 – Aaron Stewart (Warren) d. Will Mohney (LW Central) TF 19-2
190 – Caleb Vanleer (Warren) d. Justin Langford (LW Central) F 2:40
215 – Aiden Hennings (LW Central) d. Don Powyer (Warren) F 1:50
285 – Anthony Soto (Warren) d. Ethan Toosley (LW Central) Maj 10-1
106 – Walter Thomas (Warren) d. Finn Fifer (LW Central) F 5:16
113 – Caleb Noble (Warren) d. Devin De La Vega (LW Central) F 1:24
7th place dual: South Elgin 48, Crystal Lake South 31
120 – Drew Raval (S Elgin) d. Logan Eugenio (CL South) F 3:35
126 – Vaughn Tiria (CL South) d. Unknown (Unattached) Forf
132 – Devin Carillo (CL South) d. Jameson Rybacki (S Elgin) F 1:44
138 – Nathan Randle (CL South) d. Aamir Nieves Allen (S Elgin) D 7-1
144 – Aiden Marrello (CL South) d. Amaan Khan (S Elgin) TF 21-4
150 – Dane Henson (S Elgin) d. Unknown (Unattached) Forf
157 – Nathan Jung (S Elgin) d. Ethan Egge (CL South) F 1:27
165 – Zachary Stinson (CL South) d. Deelan Zamora-Alomar (S Elgin) TF 18-0
175 – Connor DeMoulin (S Elgin) d. Gabriel Randle (CL South) F 4:34
190 – Karl Pretzer (S Elgin) d. Unknown (Unattached) Forf
215 – Deremit Zamora (S Elgin) d. Unknown (Unattached) Forf
285 – Alejandro Facio (S Elgin) d. Unknown (Unattached) Forf
106 – Christopher Talbert (CL South) d. Evan Hamilton (S Elgin) F 0:56
113 – Nicholas Dilallo (S Elgin) d. Annalee Aarseth (CL South) F 0:22

Sullivan Slam
St. Rita snared the Sullivan Slam team title at this year’s 20-team tournament, with 10 of the 11 Mustangs entered finishing in the top six of their weight divisions, including five individual champions, three second-place finishers, one fourth- and one fifth-place medalist.
St. Rita coach Ryan Klinger’s squad outpointed second-place Johnsburg 241.5-191.5, followed by Bradley-Bourbonnais (156.5), Northridge Prep (133) and Perspectives (124) to round out the top five team finishes.
“The boys are really starting to turn a corner and fire on all cylinders,” Klinger said. “We’re a little banged up and have a lot of sickness running through the lineup but all our back ups are chomping at the bit to compete and wrestling hard whenever they get the opportunity.
“We’re very focused on fundamentals, staying in good position, capitalizing on our opponent’s mistakes, and letting our conditioning take over in the third period.”
1st place: St. Rita (241.5)
Last year’s Class 2A third-place medalist at 106 pounds, junior Jack Hogan (120) kicked off the parade of eight Mustangs who reached the title mat at Sullivan. Hogan used three falls to reach the finals, where he won by tech fall for the title. Hogan is currently ranked No. 7 at 120 in 2A.
“All our kids wrestled great on Saturday,” Klinger said. “Jack Hogan received the outstanding wrestler award for the lower weights and Nolan Keenan received the outstanding wrestler award for the upper weights. Both guys are very focused and determined. We work a lot on mindset and still being able to wrestle hard and pull out victories when you’re in deep waters.”
The Mustangs’ Luke Pappalas (132) won St. Rita’s next title, followed by Nino Protti (138), a two-time state qualifier currently ranked No. 7 at 132 pounds. Nolan Keenan (150) and James Bansley (190) also won Sullivan Slam titles for St. Rita, which got seconds from Cleto Protti (126), Micah Spinazzola (165) and James Kevin (175), a fourth from Joe Franklin (144), and a fifth from Mitch Street (215). Eli Erkapc also contributed team points for St. Rita at 285.
“This tournament really helped build confidence in all our wrestlers,” Klinger said. “Our staff is noticing a big shift in the way everyone is wrestling in our program. Rita wrestling is getting better and better every time we step in the circle. It’s all about building momentum as we go into February. We have a great team of hardworking young men who built a great bond together going into the end of the season.”
2nd place: Johnsburg (191.5)
Johnsburg coach James Sylvanus got a pair of individual titles from Chase Vogel (113) and Duke Mays (175), and seconds from Kai Surdick (106) and Landon Johnson (24-4). The Skyhawks also got a third from Tanner Hansen (126), a fourth from Jackson Hjorth (165), fifths from Chase Vogel (120) and Kainoa Ancog (150), and a sixth from Micah Klos (132).
3rd place: Bradley-Bourbonnais (156.5)
The Boilermakers took third led by an individual champion in Cullen Parks (106), a third from Kayden Roach (175), a fourth from Coen McGill (157), fifths from Jason Smith (113) and Raziel Perez (126), and sixths from Zach Hoffner (120) and Max Fischer (138) for coach Mike Spiwak.
The other individual Sullivan Slam champions were Northridge Prep’s Joe Kopecky (126) and Adam Haddad (165), Hubbard’s Fabian Salazar (144), Sullivan’s Abobaker Stanikzai (157), Amundsen’s James Reshoft (215), and Leo’s Nicholas Armour (285).
Team scores:
St. Rita 241.5, Johnsburg 191.5, Bradley-Bourbonnais 156.5, Northridge Prep 133, Perspectives 124, Maine West 118, Taft 94.5, Niles West 88, Senn 76, Sullivan 69.5, Mather 68, Rickover Naval Academy 64.5, Lane 59, Amundsen 56.5, Phillips 56, Noble/UIC 50, Hubbard 49.5, Leo 44.5, Intrinsic 30, Ridgewood 22
Individual statistics:
Niles West’s Jacob Collings had the most pins (4) in the least time (5:44), and Johnsburg’s Chase Vogel had the most tech falls (3) in the least time (6:06). Bradley-Bourbonnais’ Cameron Borneman had the fastest tech fall win, in 48 seconds.
Leo’s Nicholas Armour scored the most team points with 30, Lane’s Adgate VanderBrug scored the most single-match points with 23, and Senn’s Lennon Ojeda scored the most total match points with 69. St. Rita’s Joe Franklin provided the largest seed-place difference of the tournament, when the No. 15 seed placed fourth at 144 pounds.
Sullivan Slam results:
106
1st: Cullen Parks (B-Bourbonnais) 9-6, d. Kai Surdick (Johnsburg) 19-10, (D 14-7)
3rd: Mohammed Zia Nadre (Sullivan) 13-4, d. Kenye Flanigan (Perspectives) 12-5, (F 0:00)
5th: Justin Chogllo (Rickover) 3-1, d. Leonardo Rodriquez (Taft) 2-2, (F 0:00)
113
1st: Chase Vogel (Johnsburg) 23-5, d. Daveon Farmer (Perspectives) 14-6, (TF-1.5 2:00 (15-0)
3rd: Leo Zapien (UIC Noble) 3-1, .d. Jonathan Pawlowski (Rickover) 10-2, (D 14-10)
5th: Jason Smith (B-Bourbonnais) 5-6, d. Vito Capili (Taft) 3-2, (F 3:40)
120
1st: Jack Hogan (St. Rita) 22-4, d. Donald Bunton (Perspectives) 16-4, (TF-1.5 3:07 (15-0)
3rd: Logan Battersby (Maine W) 25-6, d. Daniel Garcia (Hubbard) 25-3, (F 2:57)
5th: Chase Davis (Johnsburg) 26-7, d. Zach Hoffner (B-Bourbonnais) 22-8, (MD 16-3)
126
1st: Joe Kopecky (Northridge) 17-4, d. Cleto Protti (St. Rita) 18-5, (D 13-9)
3rd: Tanner Hansen (Johnsburg) 20-8, d. Jayden Perez (Taft) 2-1, (M. For.)
5th: Raziel Perez (B-Bourbonnais) 9-3, d. Santy Cruz (Senn) 3-2, . (F 0:45)
132
1st: Luke Pappalas (St. Rita) 12-10, d. Justin Hernandez (Rickover) 14-2, (D 8-3)
3rd: Mohamad Khater (Ridgewood) 17-6, d. Jeremy Catchings (Phillips) 2-2, (F 1:53)
5th: Jacob Collings (Niles W) 13-8, d. Micah Klos (Johnsburg) 11-6, (F 1:12)
138
1st: Nino Protti (St. Rita) 21-5, d. Landon Johnson (Johnsburg) 24-4, (D 7-4)
3rd: Benjamin Malmberg (Maine W) 18-15, d. Mohsen Maliky (Sullivan) 14-5, (F 4:22)
5th: James Hill (Phillips) 4-1, d. Max Fischer (B-Bourbonnais) 9-15, (F 4:46)
144
1st: Fabian Salazar (Hubbard) 27-1, d. Lennon Ojeda (Senn) 3-1, . (F 5:36)
3rd: Javi Rodriguez (Northridge) 8-4, d. Joe Franklin (St. Rita) 2-2, (F 1:25)
5th: Qaisar Sadat (Niles W) 19-7, d. Ben Kubal (B-Bourbonnais) 9-11, (F 2:00)
150
1st: Nolan Keenan (St. Rita) 21-7, d. George McShane (Northridge) 16-6, (F 5:21)
3rd: Dylan Kroschel (Maine W) 20-8, d. Sebastian Gordon (Niles W) 16-9, (D 9-4)
5th: Kainoa Ancog (Johnsburg) 20-11, d. Noah Fields (Intrinsic) 11-6, (F 2:58)
157
1st: Abobaker Stanikzai (Sullivan) 16-4, d. Fenton Pratt (Chicago Lane) 3-1, N/A. (F 0:32)
3rd: Louis Avalos (Maine W) 15-9, d. Coen McGill (B-Bourbonnais) 4-9, (F 1:54)
5th: Joshua Mreana (Niles W) 11-17, d. Omobobola Bankole (Mather) 16-7, (TF-1.5 5:07 (18-3)
165
1st: Adam Haddad (Northridge) 19-2, d. Micah Spinazzola (St. Rita) 11-2, (D 7-1)
3rd: Peter Greco (Maine W) 24-5, d. Jackson Hjorth (Johnsburg) 12-5, (F 2:47)
5th: Noah Sherrod (Intrinsic) 4-1, d. Willem Johnston (Mather) 2-3, (F 3:27)
175
1st: Duke Mays (Johnsburg) 17-5, d. James Kevin (St. Rita) 13-7, (F 2:25)
3rd: Kayden Roach (B-Bourbonnais) 21-10, d. Zomire Dilworth (Mather) 18-4, (TF-1.5 2:41 (17-1)
5th: Ricky Moore (Taft) 4-1, d. Zbigniew Kordalewski (Maine W) 18-11, (D 9-8)
190
1st: James Bansley (St. Rita) 14-14, d. Mivontae Russell (Perspectives) 18-1, (TF-1.5 4:47 (18-3)
3rd: Josh Taylor (Taft) 3-1, d. Brayden O`Connor (B-Bourbonnais) 14-13, (D 4-1)
5th: Adrian Zepeda (Amundsen) 14-1, d. Malik Allen (UIC Noble) 3-2, . (F 3:18)
215
1st: James Reshoft (Amundsen) 12-2, d. Elijah Jamison (Perspectives) 14-4, (F 3:36)
3rd: Charleston Rice (Phillips) 3-1, d. Julian Rios (Mather) 16-6, (D 12-5)
5th: Mitch Street (St. Rita) 12-5, .d. Jamonte Jones (Senn) 3-2, . (F 1:07)
285
1st: Nicholas Armour (Chicago Leo) 4-0, d. Thomas Suter (Northridge) 13-8, (F 2:00)
3rd: Manny Olojo (Niles W) 14-4, d. Eligiah Pagan (Taft) 2-2, (F 0:18)
5th: Dontrelle Anderson (Perspectives) 12-3, d. Denzel Lockhart (Mather) 15-10, (F 0:50)
Geneva’s Newbill Wrestling Invitational
West Aurora had three individual champions, one second-place finisher, two thirds, three fourths, and two fifth-place finishers among its 11 medalists, as the Blackhawks won the Newbill team title 227.5-193 over second-place Downers Grove North.
Brother Rice placed third with 189.5 points, followed by Naperville North (179.5) and Joliet Central (141) to round out the top five team finishes in the 18-team field.
1st place: West Aurora (227.5)
The Blackhawks got individual titles from Evan Matkovich (138), Marcus Quintana (144) and Dayne Serio (165), seconds from Dominic Serio (150), thirds from Peter Kabene (126) and Alfonso Aguilar (285), fourths from Joseph Huicochea (120), Malan Hatfield (157) and Manny Chavez (175), and fifths from Aidan Ambre (106) and Jack Platt (132).
Kabene (126) won the closest medal-round match with an 11-10 decision for third against Brother Rice’s Jimmy Lotito.
2nd place: Downers Grove North (193)
Four second-placers led the Trojans to a second-place team finish, in Tyler Tiancgo (120), Alex Hengles (126), Caden Chiarelli (144) and Peter Rodriguez (285). Coach Chris McGrath also got thirds from Liam O’Sullivan (157) and Jack Lasota (175), a fourth from Christian Chiarelli (132), fifths from Aidan Cummings (138) and Owen Kelly (150), and sixths from Jack Helsdon (190) and Nate Olona (215).
3rd place: Brother Rice (189.5)
A trio of individual champions led the way for coach Jan Murzyn, in Bobby Conway (132), Frank Mitchell (157) and James Crane (190). The Crusaders also got a second-place finish from Dan Costello (175), thirds from Oliver Davis (138) and Jack O’Conner (150), a fourth from Jimmy Lotito (126), and a fifth from Colin Goggin (215).
Team scores:
West Aurora 227.5, Downers Grove North 193, Brother Rice 189.5, Naperville North 179.5, Joliet Central 141, Dundee-Crown 114, Glenbard East 107.5, Lane Tech 97.5, Geneva 93.5, Stillman Valley 87.5, Glenbrook North 72.5, Wheaton Warrenville South 63, Lake Zurich 59, Addison Trail 55, Plainfield Central 46, Shepard 33.5, Metea Valley 23, Boylan 0, Oak Lawn 0
The day’s best:
The closest decision win of the finals went to Geneva heavyweight Joseph Petit in a 1-0 decision win over Downers Grove North’s Peter Rodriguez.
The title match at 157 went to overtime, with Brother Rice’s Frank Micelli winning 7-4 on a takedown in overtime against Lane Tech’s Nasser Hammouche.
Individual statistics:
Glenbrook North’s Shane Onixt had the most pins (4) in the least time (5:04) of all wrestlers present, while Geneva’s Sam Sikorsy had the most tech falls (4) in the least time (18:03). Stillman Valley’s Xander Bell had the fastest pin in 15 seconds, while West Aurora’s Marcus Quintana, Glenbrook North’s Onixt, and Naperville North’s Tyler Sternstein tied for the most team points scored, with 30 apiece. Stillman Valley’s Bell scored the most single-match points with 28 and Geneva’s Sikorsky scored the most total-match points with 69. West Aurora’s Peter Kabene provided the largest seed-place difference in the tournament, as the No. 14 seed placed third at 126.
Geneva Newbill Invitational results:
106
1st: Aiden Healey (Dundee Crown) 27-6, d. Michael Pannarale (Stillman Valley) 21-4, (F 5:54)
3rd: Lorenz Rios Loud (Glenbard E) 21-5, d. Rocco Valvano ( WW South) 17-8, (D 7-1)
5th: Aidan Ambre (W Aurora) 13-5, d. Jeremiah Arroyo-McMullan (Lane) 15-4, (F 2:17)
113
1st: Sam Sikorsky (Geneva) 4-0, d. Liam Walsh (Joliet C) 20-13, (TF-1.5 2:45 (16-0)
3rd: Adam Beedon (Naperville N) 18-3, d. Cole Forsyth (Glenbard E) 16-5, (D 7-1)
5th: Santiago Trejo-Huerigo (Addison Trail) 19-5, d. Xander Bell (Stillman Valley) 14-7, (TF-1.5 2:43 (16-0)
120
1st: Ismael Chaidez (Glenbard E) 24-2, d. Tyler Tiancgo (DG North) 25-6, (D 7-2)
3rd: Aleck Allende (Joliet C) 23-10, d. Joseph Huicochea (W Aurora) 19-11, (D 4-3)
5th: Ryan Beedon (Naperville N) 21-7, d. George Driesbach (Geneva) 3-2, (F 4:56)
126
1st: Connor McDonald (Naperville N) 23-3, d. Alex Hengles (DG North) 8-6, (D 8-3)
3rd: Peter Kabene (W Aurora) 16-13, d. Jimmy Lotito (Brother Rice) 16-8, (D 11-10)
5th: Jowel Maldonado (Joliet C) 18-14, d. Kellen Oxborrow (Lake Zurich) 16-10, (D 3-1)
132
1st: Bobby Conway (Brother Rice) 13-3, d. Alex Valentin (Lane) 26-6, (F 0:52)
3rd: Chris Gerardo (Dundee Crown) 27-8, d. Christian Chiarelli (DG North) 19-7, (F 4:39)
5th: Jack Platt (W Aurora) 22-13, d. Andrew Wendt (Geneva) 3-2, (F 4:47)
138
1st: Evan Matkovich (W Aurora) 28-5, d. Ben Messier (Naperville N) 23-2, (MD 13-1)
3rd: Oliver Davis (Brother Rice) 23-3, d. Jack Bowen (Plainfield C) 19-7, (MD 14-3)
5th: Aidan Cummings (DG North) 22-9, d. Isaiah Kan (Joliet C) 23-12, (D 9-4)
144
1st: Marcus Quintana (W Aurora) 29-3, d. Caden Chiarelli (DG North) 24-6, (F 1:30)
3rd: Matthias Hautzinger (Addison Trail) 14-5, d. Vermaat VanderBrug (Lane) 24-8, (F 2:36)
5th: Zachary Mally (Naperville N) 20-7, d. Shane Salerno (Glenbard E) 14-11, (TF-1.5 2:46 (17-0)
150
1st: Tyler Sternstein (Naperville N) 22-4, d. Dominic Serio (W Aurora) 27-3, (Inj. 0:00)
3rd: Jack O`Conner (Brother Rice) 20-8, d. Henry Hildreth (Stillman Valley) 21-4, (F 1:55)
5th: Owen Kelly (DG North) 14-9, d. Jadon Wheatley (Dundee Crown) 15-13, (TF-1.5 3:51 (16-0)
157
1st: Frank Micelli (Brother Rice) 25-3, d. Nasser Hammouche (Lane) 26-8, (OT 7-4)
3rd: Liam O`Sullivan (DG North) 25-7, d. Malan Hatfield (W Aurora) 13-7, (D 10-6)
5th: Mark Bew (Joliet C) 9-3, d. Lucas Marcoux (Metea) 3-2, (TF-1.5 3:58 (17-1)
165
1st: Dayne Serio (W Aurora) 31-1, d. Ethan Waugh (Stillman Valley) 20-6, (TF-1.5 4:00 (15-0)
3rd: Henry Hafner (Glenbrook North) 16-6, d. Alen Bautista (Addison Trail) 8-11, (Inj. 0:00)
5th: Leo Mundinger (Glenbard E) 12-12, d. JT Hill (Naperville N) 12-10, (D 12-5)
175
1st: Shane Onixt (Glenbrook North) 21-3, d. dan costello (Brother Rice) 17-6, (F 0:46)
3rd: Jack Lasota (DG North) 22-7, d. Manny Chavez (W Aurora) 24-8, (F 1:45)
5th: Xavier Eggert (Joliet C) 17-15, d. Aidan Hill (Shepard) 12-5, (F 2:00)
190
1st: James Crane (Brother Rice) 24-3, d. Zach Anderson (Dundee Crown) 19-8, (F 1:35)
3rd: Orlando Hoye (Glenbard E) 17-9, d. Rocco DiCanio (Lake Zurich) 24-8, (M. For.)
5th: Brady Valle (Naperville N) 12-16, d. Jack Helsdon (DG North) 16-11, (MD 13-0)
215
1st: Charles Walker (Joliet C) 27-1, d. Teigen Moreno (Dundee Crown) 28-4, (MD 12-3)
3rd: Tavfik Ibragimov (Naperville N) 20-4, d. Anthony Minnito (Plainfield C) 20-4, (F 1:46)
5th: Colin Goggin (Brother Rice) 21-6, d. Nate Olona (DG North) 18-9, (MD 12-1)
285
1st: Joseph Pettit (Geneva) 4-0, d. Peter Rodriguez (DG North) 21-9, (D 1-0)
3rd: Alfonso Aguilar (W Aurora) 24-8, d. Ashton Kibbe ( WW South) 18-7, (Inj. 0:00)
5th: Roy Ramirez (Dundee Crown) 24-13, d. Jacob Zdanowicz (Lake Zurich) 8-18, (D 7-1)
Naperville Central wins Sarah E. Goode STEM Academy Knights Invitational

By Curt Herron – for the IWCOA
Naperville Central enjoyed its best season in over a decade in 2023-2024 when it followed up on a DuPage Valley Conference championship with a title at the Class 3A East Aurora Regional and then defeated the hosts 40-21 in the Downers Grove South Class 3A Dual Team Sectional to earn its first appearance in the IHSA Dual Team Finals since 2012.
Although coach Noah Fitzenreider’s Redhawks graduated several key members from the school’s third-ever team to earn a trip to dual team state, it returns a significant number of individuals that helped them to get to Bloomington, where they put up a good fight before falling 36-29 to eventual runner-up Yorkville in the quarterfinals to conclude a 20-7 season.
While Naperville Central aspires to make a return trip to state, all involved realize that it will be a challenge considering the regional and dual team sectional that they will participate in.
The Redhawks, ranked 14th in the latest polls, are one of four ranked teams in the Class 3A Naperville North Regional, with the others being Carl Sandburg (4th), Downers Grove North (17th) and Glenbard West (25th), making that the only one in 3A with four top-25 teams.
The other three regionals feature three of the top 10 teams in the class with top-ranked Marist at Downers Grove South, second-ranked Marmion Academy at its own regional and 10th-ranked and defending state champions Mount Carmel at Morton.
Boosted by a second-place finish behind third-ranked Joliet Catholic Academy at Prospect’s Mudge-McMorrow Invite on December 14, the Redhawks wanted to keep busy after competing in DeKalb’s Flavin dual meet tournament on December 27-28.
They got the chance to do that in the only boys tournament in the Chicago-area and one of the few in Illinois on Saturday, Sarah E. Goode STEM Academy’s Knights Invitational in Chicago.
Naperville Central had seven champions and 13 in the top three to help it score 311.5 points, which was 68.5 ahead of runner-up Buffalo Grove, who had 243 points while Zion-Benton took third place with 161 points. Chicago Agricultural Sciences (110), Sarah E. Goode STEM Academy (110), Northridge Prep (100) and Crete-Monee (98) rounded out the top half of the 14-team field.
Winning championships for the Redhawks were Jacob Cochran (132), Vince Bern (138), CJ Bierman (150), Justin Skryd (157), Henry Rydwelski (175), Paul Peradotti (190) and William Erbeck (285) while Dalton Meluch (106), Jake Moore (120) and Nicolas Olvera (165) took second place. Finishing third were Jack Schwartz (113), James Ball (126) and Stavros Gerousis (144) while Jayden Davis (215) placed sixth.
The runner-up Bison, coached by George Beres, had three title winners, Oleksandr Havrylkiv (113), Mykola Shamray (120) and Bohdan Malaksianov (144) while Stone McKone (106), Anthony Laguna (132), Khurshedov Jahongir (157), Sonny Tugs (175) and Christiano Marogy (215) took third place. Anthoni Valladares (126) and Chris Chi (165) finished fourth, Aleksander Krotosyznski (190) took fifth place and David Karapetyan (138) placed sixth.
The third-place Zee-Bees, coached by Hal Lunsford, were led by five second-place finishers, Luis Medina (138), Demar Dixon (157), Francisco Yilmaz (175), Tyson Poyer (190) and Isaiah Tellado (285) while Brayden Sroka (106) claimed fourth place, Said Vazquez (126) finished fifth and Davin Esparagoza (144), Ian Serkanic (150) and Anthony Malone (165) took sixth place. Medina and Yilmaz won titles in last year’s tournament.
Other champions were Northridge Prep’s Joe Kopecky (126) and Adam Haddad (165), Chicago Agricultural Sciences’ Jeremy Powell, Jr. (106) and Crete-Monee’s Malakai Scott (215). This was the third year in a row that Haddad won a championship in the competition while Scott was a runner-up in last year’s tournament.
Skryd led all competitors with 29.5 team points while Erbeck, Kopecky and Shamray tied for second with 28 points and Scott was next with 27.5 points. Bern and Haddad both had 27 points, Malaksianov and Rydwelski tied with 26 points and Peradotti scored 25.5 team points.
Also finishing in second place were Chicago Agricultural Sciences’ Elijah Sawyer (113) and Maurice Bush (144), Little Village’s Jovanni Harris (126), Ridgewood’s Mohamad Khater (132), Kelly’s Leovardo Juarez (150) and Eisenhower’s Rayshawn Doles (215). Sawyer and Harris were champions in the tournament last season.
Additional third-place finishers were Crete-Monee’s Jaylene Johnson (165) and Kijuan Springfield (190), Chicago Agricultural Sciences’ Kingston Sawyer (120), Kelly’s Cliffon Johnson (138), Northridge Prep’s George McShane (150) and Lindblom’s Josue Olivo (285).
Other fourth-place finishers were Westinghouse’s Jamari Starr (113), Eric Magana (215) and Tyler Brooks (285), Little Village’s Benito Chavez (120), Anthony Suarez (138) and Felipe Juan Aguilar Urbina (157), Sarah E. Goode STEM Academy’s Isaah Poole (132), Xavier Woods (150) and Dylan Wilborn (190), Kelly’s Awwal Ogunsolu (144) and Chicago Military Academy-Bronzeville’s Caleb Gordon (175). Woods was a champion in last year’s tournament.
Also claiming fifth-place finishes were Sarah E. Goode STEM Academy’s Keandre Beal (106), Isaiah Diaz (138), Jayden Veal (144), Trevor Williams (157) and Thomas Davis (215), Chicago Military Academy-Bronzeville’s Gustavo Benitez-Mendez (120), Ryan Singleton (150) and Kendall Taylor (165), Eisenhower’s Logan Esparza (113), Kelly’s Isaah Montes (132), Lindblom’s Erick Arroyo (175) and Northridge Prep’s Thomas Suter (285).
Additional sixth-place finishers were Eisenhower’s Santiago Daviila (132), Khalid Watson (157) and Marvelous Akhalu (190), Crete-Monee’s Aiden Roop (106) and Jordan Kirkpatrick (126), Little Village’s Ricardo Dominguez (113), Sarah E. Goode STEM Academy’s Braylen Chavez-Rangel (120) and Chicago Agricultural Sciences’ Marquel Wilson (175)
Buffalo Grove’s Sonny Tugs easily had the most total match points with 77 while Northridge Prep’s George McShane ranked second with 60 points. Agricultural Sciences’ Kingston Sawyer was the only individual in the tournament to record five falls.
Here are the champions and their weight classes from Sarah E. Goode STEM Academy’s Knights Invitational:
106 – Jeremy Powell, Jr., Chicago Agricultural Sciences
Jeremy Powell, Jr. was one of three finalists and the lone champion for coach Ronald Wilson’s Cyclones after capturing the title at 106 at the Knights Invitational with a 10-7 decision over Naperville Central junior Dalton Meluch. The freshman, who competed for the Harvey Twisters, is dedicating his season to his father, Jeremy Powell, Sr., who is dealing with health issues.
Powell, Jr. opened with a win by fall before recording a pin in 3:46 over Buffalo Grove’s Stone McKone in the semifinals. He was the first of four straight freshmen that won titles and the only one of five CPS athletes who advanced to the finals to win a championship in the competition.
“I feel like this is a great opportunity for me,” Powell, Jr. said. “Since eighth grade, I’ve been thinking about going to this school, it’s not a well known school, so I just came here to make them known, put them on the map. Me and a couple of my guys have been working really hard. I’m doing this all for my dad. This season is dedicated to my dad since he’s fighting cancer.”
Meluch (18-10), one of 10 finalists for the coach Noah Fitzenreider’s champion Redhawks, followed a quick pin with a win by technical fall in 4:28 over Zion-Benton freshman Brayden Sroka in the semifinals. In the third-place match, McKone, a sophomore, won a 13-5 major decision over Sroka (17-7). And for fifth place, Sarah E. Goode STEM Academy senior Keandre Beal (11-5) was a winner by fall in 1:28 over Crete-Monee sophomore Aiden Roop.
113 – Oleksandr Havrylkiv, Buffalo Grove
Oleksandr Havrylkiv is a recent arrival to the United States from Ukraine, thus he’s trying to improve his English so that he can say more things about his experiences as a Buffalo Grove freshman. After taking first at 113 for ninth and tenth grade boys at the Brian Keck Memorial Preseason Nationals in October, second at his own Rex Lewis Invite and first at Palatine’s Al Berman, it’s pretty clear that he just needs to let his wrestling do his talking for the time being.
Havrylkiv (16-1) was one of the three finalists and champions for coach George Beres’ Bison, who took second place in the Knights Invitational. He earned his second high school title with a win by fall in 3:49 over Chicago Agricultural Sciences’ Elijah Sawyer in the 113 finals. He joined his freshman teammate and training partner Mykola Shamray and senior Bohdan Malaksianov as Bison champs. He only had to compete in one match to reach the title mat and in it he won by technical fall in 43 seconds over Naperville Central senior Jack Schwartz in the semifinals.
“They’re both just phenomenal kids,” Beres said of his two freshmen champions. “They’ve dedicated themselves in the offseason through Built by Brunson. And in the room, both of them are actually leaders for us. It’s different that you’d have freshmen as your leaders. But those two kids work their butt off and it’s nice that they’re so close in weight, so they actually are practice partners every single day. Sasha actually teched the number-six kid in the state last week at Palatine. Across the board, all of the kids have bought into what we’re trying to tell them to do. It’s just a great feeling to watch.”
Sawyer, a sophomore who was one of three finalists for coach Ronald Wilson’s Cyclones, went 30-5 last season and fell one victory shy of a trip to state from the Class 2A Hinsdale South Sectional. A champion at this invitational last season, he got a win by technical fall in his first match and then recorded a pin in 11 seconds over Westinghouse senior Jamari Starr in the semifinals. Schwartz (16-10) claimed third place with a win by fall in 1:24 over Starr (10-6). And for fifth place, Eisenhower freshman Logan Esparza (10-9) captured a 10-8 decision over Little Village senior Ricardo Dominguez (6-4).
120 – Mykola Shamray, Buffalo Grove
Mykola Shamray clearly demonstrated that Buffalo Grove potentially has a dangerous one-two punch at the lower weights after the freshman followed a title won by classmate and training partner Oleksandr Havrylkiv with one of his own at the Knights Invitational when he recorded a fall in 5:32 over Naperville Central junior Jake Moore in the 120 championship match to become one of three champions for coach George Beres’ Bison, who finished second in the competition.
Shamray (21-4) opened with a fall and then needed only 44 seconds to pin Sarah E. Goode STEM Academy senior Braylen Chavez-Rangel in the semifinals to earn his spot on the 120 title mat. After taking third at his school’s Rex Lewis Tourney and fourth at Glenbrook South’s Rus Erb, he recently won his first high school tournament at Palatine’s Al Berman Holiday Classic. He finished in a three-way tie for most team points with 28.
“They like each other and they’re very coachable, and that’s the biggest thing,” Beres said of his two freshmen champions. “Neither of them are thinking, ‘Oh, I’m this, this and this.’ They’re just able to just practice and learn to be better. Mykola placed second at state the last two years at IESA and I don’t think he’s ranked yet, but he’ll be on that board pretty soon. All of the credit goes to these kids. They’ve listened to what we’ve said as coaches and they’ve bought in, and I think that’s the biggest thing that I’m proud of them. We can only do so much as coaches but they’ve bought into everything that we’ve asked them to do.”
Moore (16-8), one of 10 finalists for coach Noah Fitzenreider’s champion Redhawks, was a sectional qualifier last season who only had a 7-4 record but still fell just one victory shy of a trip to state from the Class 3A Hinsdale Central Sectional. He opened with a win by technical fall before getting a pin in 2:51 in the semifinals over Chicago Military Academy-Bronzeville sophomore Gustavo Benitez-Mendez. For third place, Chicago Agricultural Sciences junior Kingston Sawyer (5-1) got a pin in 2:31 over Little Village freshman Benito Chavez (11-6). And for fifth place, Benitez-Mendez (6-2) won by medical forfeit over Chavez-Rangel (9-5).
126 – Joe Kopecky, Northridge Prep
Joe Kopecky is understandably a big fan of Northridge Prep since his grandmother works there, he’s had two brothers who competed there and his uncle coaches h[m there. The freshman is hopeful that he can make a name for himself at the Niles school and after having a rough introduction at Rockford East and Glenbrook South, he’s feeling much better following titles at Walther Christian and Glenbard South and a first at 126 in the Knights Invitational, following in the footsteps of his brothers Michael and Steven, who were champions at the invite in 2023.
Kopecky (12-4) was one of two finalists and the first of two champions for coach Joseph Rhee’s Knights after he recorded a fall in 3:56 over Little Village junior Jovanni Harris in the finals to join senior teammate Adam Haddad at 165 as title winners. He followed a first-period fall with a pin in 5:53 over Naperville Central freshman James Ball in the semifinals to reach the title mat. He recorded 28 team points, which tied him for second place.
“My grandmother works there in the front office,” Kopecky said of Northridge Prep. “I had a couple of tough tournaments at Rockford (East) and Glenbrook South but I took first at Glenbard South and at Walther Christian. (Competing in high school) This is a lot tougher. Last year I wrestled IESA and took second at state for this school. I had two older brothers who qualified for state two years ago and I have a lot of family here and my uncle, Bill Kopecky, coaches me.”
Harris (14-5), the lone finalist for coach Michael Zagorski’s Phoenix, went 31-12 last season and fell a bit short of a state trip from the Class 2A Hinsdale South Sectional. A 2024 champion at the Knights Invite, he followed a win by technical fall with a pin in 40 seconds over Crete-Monee senior Jordan Kirkpatrick in the semifinals to earn his spot on the title mat. Ball (8-5) claimed third place by recording a fall in 3:47 over Buffalo Grove junior Anthoni Valladares and in the fifth-place match, Zion-Benton sophomore Said Vazquez got a pin in 0:39 over Kirkpatrick.
132 – Jacob Cochran, Naperville Central
Jacob Cochran got the ball rolling for Naperville Central in its quest for champions at the Knights Invitational as he became the first of seven first-place finishers for the Redhawks when the junior recorded a fall in 1:17 over Ridgewood junior Mohamad Khater in the 132 title match.
Cochran (23-5), one of 10 finalists for coach Noah Fitzenreider’s first-place Redhawks, got a bye into the semifinals, where he won with a pin in 1:06 over Eisenhower sophomore Santiago Daviilla to start a run where his team won seven of the last 10 titles. Also a finalist at Prospect, where he took second, he won 27 matches last season and qualified for the Hinsdale Central Sectional and helped his team reach the IHSA Dual Team Finals for the first time since 2012.
Khater (13-7), who was the lone finalist for coach Jared McCabe’s Rebels, won 14 matches and fell one win shy of advancing to the sectional last season. He opened with a pin in the opening minute and then claimed a victory by technical fall in the semifinals over Buffalo Grove junior Anthony Laguna (4-4), who went on to claim third place with a fall over Sarah E. Goode STEM Academy junior Isaiah Poole (10-9). In the fifth-place match, Kelly sophomore Isaah Montes captured an 18-4 major decision over Davilla.
138 – Vince Bern, Naperville Central
Vince Bern became his team’s second of seven champs at the Knights Invitational after getting a fall in 5:59 over Zion-Benton’s Luis Medina in the 138 title match. The junior opened with two wins by technical fall, needing just 1:44 in the semifinals to win over Little Village junior Anthony Suarez to become one of the 10 finalists for coach Noah Fitzenreider’s champion Redhawks.
Bern (19-4) won 20 matches last season and qualified for the Hinsdale Central Sectional while also helping his team earn its first trip to the IHSA Dual Team Finals in 12 years. He’d not only like to help them get back to state for the second year in a row, something the program’s never done, but also do what his brother Chris achieved in 2024 as a senior, which is qualifying individually for state. This was his second title of the season with the other one at Prospect.
“We took the offseason pretty personal,” Bern said. “We go into practice working hard every day and we have a really good bond as a team, I feel. One of the qualities that helps us a lot is the closeness of our team. How we can always bond together and just talk to each other about stuff. We can joke around at practice and then get serious, too.”
Medina (17-7), a senior who was one of five finalists who all took second place for coach Hal Lunsford’s third-place Zee-Bees, opened with two falls, with the second one coming in 3:43 in the semifinals over Kelly senior Cliffon Johnson. Last season, Medina went 17-9 and fell one win shy of advancing to state from the Class 3A Barrington Sectional and he also won a title at the Knights Invitational. For third place, Johnson (10-3) was a winner by technical fall in 2:55 over Suarez (11-6). In the fifth-place match, Sarah E. Goode STEM Academy senior Isaiah Diaz (13-9) recorded a pin in 1:19 over Buffalo Grove freshman David Karapetyan.
144 – Bohdan Malaksianov, Buffalo Grove
Bohdan Malaksianov made it three-for-three for Buffalo Grove on the title mat at the Knights Invitational when he won by fall in 1:11 over Chicago Agricultural Sciences’ Maurice Bush in the 144 championship match. The senior along with freshmen Oleksandr Havrylkiv and Mykola Shamray won titles for coach George Beres’ Bison and helped their team finish in second place.
Malaksianov (18-6), a senior who won 16 matches last year and fell one win shy of advancing from the Class 3A Stevenson Regional, opened with two first-period falls, getting a pin in 1:30 over Sarah E. Goode STEM Academy’s Jayden Veal in the semifinals to reach the title mat. This was his first title of the season and he also was a finalist at Palatine, where he placed second.
“I love wrestling, it’s my passion, something that I want to keep doing in my future,” Malaksianov said. “I’ve wrestled varsity for two years and I really appreciate the program that they have for us there, coach Beres, all of the coaches at BG, and I’m thankful for them and for what they’ve taught me. And I also used to train in judo for a while, so I did upper body throwing and tossing. Our two freshmen are really good, they’re amazing wrestlers and both have a really bright future ahead of them. I love Buffalo Grove High School, I love the wrestling program and I love my team. I like the consistency of practices and also staying as a team and supporting each other,”
Bush, a junior who was one of three finalists for coach Ronald Wilson’s Cyclones, won his first two matches by fall, getting a pin in 2:36 in the semifinals over Naperville Central junior Stavros Gerousis (18-12), who went on to claim third place with a fall in 3:07 over Kelly senior Awwal Ogunsolu (13-4). And in the fifth-place match, Veal (12-4), a freshman for the host Knights, captured a 15-2 major decision over Zion-Benton sophomore Davin Esparagoza.
150 – CJ Bierman, Naperville Central
CJ Bierman won 17 matches last season and got the opportunity to be a member of Naperville Central’s first IHSA Dual Team Finals team in 12 years but was not in the mix for the East Aurora Regional, where his team qualified all 14 of its individuals for the Class 3A Hinsdale Central Sectional. So this season, the senior is hoping that he can conclude his Redhawks career not only on another state team but do so after competing in the individual state series.
Bierman (16-6) was one of 10 finalists and the third of seven champions for coach Noah Fitzenreider’s championship team at the Knights Invitational when he won by fall in 1:30 over Kelly junior Leovardo Juarez in the 150 title match. He advanced to the title mat with two decisions, claiming an 11-8 victory in his opener before getting a 12-7 win over Sarah E. Goode STEM Academy’s Xavier Woods in the semifinals, handing the Knights senior his initial defeat.
“Last year I went into the room undecided about how good our team was and we just kept on improving,” Bierman said. “As a junior, I wrestled 126 and I saw our team grow from a team that was not supposed to be good. And this year, we’re just trying to keep the momentum, and I believe that we have. We had a lot of seniors leave from last year, but I believe we’re up and coming and we’re getting better every single day and we’re working hard at practice. (Coach Fitzenreider) He cracks down on us when we get a little goofy, but he’s an amazing coach. The goal is individual state and team state. You’ve got to think and aim big. I like our grit.”
Juarez (12-4), the lone finalist for coach Stephen Kunca’s Trojans, won 15 matches last season but fell a bit short of advancing from the Class 3A Downers Grove South Regional. After opening with a first-period fall, he earned his spot in the finals with a wild 14-13 decision over Chicago Military Academy-Bronzeville senior Ryan Singleton in the semifinals. In the third-place match, Northridge Prep junior George McShane (11-5) won a 9-6 decision over Woods (20-2). And for fifth, Singleton (6-2) won by fall in 4:00 over Zion-Benton sophomore Ian Serkanic (9-9).
157 – Justin Skryd, Naperville Central
Justin Skryd got the great opportunity for a freshman to be on the state roster for Naperville Central as it advanced to the IHSA Dual Team Finals for the first time since 2012. After only getting in four matches on the varsity last season, the sophomore is beginning to make his mark after becoming one of seven champions and 10 finalists for the Redhawks at the Knights Invitational when he won by fall in 3:28 over Zion-Benton’s Demar Dixon in the 157 finals.
Skryd (8-5) not only turned in a team-high 29.5 team points for coach Noah Fitzenreider’s champion Redhawks but that point total also was 1.5 points higher than anyone else in the competition. After opening with a first-minute fall, he got a win by technical fall in 3:10 and then recorded a pin in 2:36 over Buffalo Grove sophomore Khurshedov Jahongir in the semifinals.
“We’ve done really well,” Skryd said. “A lot of young guys have stepped up for the seniors who left last year. Last year, I was only wrestling on the varsity for a little bit and this year I’m wrestling a lot more and I’ve done a lot better. My teammates definitely make me a lot better just because of their experience and the skill that they have. I like the work ethic in practice and the resilience on the mat, we always fight to stay off our backs and we never give up. Our leaders are very strong on this team and they really lead us and help us to perform as hard as we can.”
Dixon (12-11), a senior who was one of five finalists and second-place finishers for coach Hal Lunsford’s third-place Zee-Bees, won 14 matches last season and fell a bit short of advancing from the Class 3A Libertyville Regional. He opened with a pin in 26 seconds and followed up on that with a 9-1 major decision over Little Village junior Felipe Juan Aguilar Urbina in the semifinals. In the third-place match, Jahongir won by fall in 4:42 over Aguilar Urbina (16-5) and for fifth place, Sarah E. Goode STEM Academy senior Trevor Williams (13-10) captured a 14-8 decision over Eisenhower junior Khalid Watson (13-11).
165 – Adam Haddad, Northridge Prep
Adam Haddad suffered two defeats at Rockford East’s Giardini Invitational a month ago to drop to 4-2 after finishing fourth at 165. Since then, he’s been on a roll, capturing championships at Glenbrook South’s Rus Erb and Glenbard South in December and now the Northridge Prep senior has captured a third title, claiming the 165 championship at Sarah E. Goode STEM Academy’s Knights Invitational with a win by technical fall in 5:25 over Naperville Central’s Nicolas Olvera to join freshman Joe Kopecky as a title winner for coach Joseph Rhee’s Knights.
Haddad (15-2) opened with a first-period fall and then earned his spot as one of his team’s two finalists when he claimed another win by technical fall, this one in 5:58, over Buffalo Grove senior Chris Chi in the semifinals. Last season, Haddad went 28-6 and qualified for the IHSA Finals. A three-time champion at the Knights Invite, he hopes to do something that no one has achieved yet, which is to become Northridge Prep’s first state medalist.
“In the offseason I just put in the work every single day,” Haddad said. “And working with intent every single day when I practice, I’m practicing for tournaments, I’m practicing for matches, I’m practicing for live wrestling and I’m practicing for the state tournament. (Northridge Prep) It’s just really high-level people, really all-around good Catholic people and we go to Mass pretty much every day. We’re all like a family, and it’s all-boys school, so there’s no distractions. As team captain, I’m trying to push all of these guys to their limits and get them to work as hard as I can.”
Olvera (17-9) followed a fall with a win by technical fall before becoming one of the 10 finalists for coach Noah Fitzenreider’s champion Redhawks when the sophomore won a 14-2 major decision in the semifinals over Chicago Military Academy-Bronzeville senior Kendall Taylor. Last season, Olvera was able to be a member of the school’s first Dual Team state appearance since 2012. In the third-place match, Crete-Monee senior Jaylene Johnson (12-5) won an 11-4 decision over Chi (13-5). And for fifth place, Taylor (5-2) prevailed in a high-scoring 22-18 decision over Zion-Benton sophomore Anthony Malone (18-15).
175 – Henry Rydwelski, Naperville Central
Henry Rydwelski captured his third tournament championship of the season, adding to firsts at Marmion Academy and Prospect, when the senior won a 15-5 major decision over Zion-Benton senior Francisco Yilmaz in the 175 title match at the Knights Invitational to become one of the seven champions for coach Noah Fitzenreider’s Redhawks, who took top honors in the 14-team tournament by a 311.5-243 margin over runner-up Buffalo Grove.
Rydwelski (26-1), a senior who went 26-14 last season and fell a bit short of qualifying from the Hinsdale Central Sectional but closed on a high note by getting to compete in his team’s 36-29 loss to eventual runner-up Yorkville in the IHSA Class 3A Dual Team quarterfinals in their first visit to that competition since 2012. He opened with a fall and then captured a 19-11 major decision over Buffalo Grove junior Sonny Tugs to become one of the Redhawks’ 10 finalists.
“We’re doing great,” Rydwelski said. “We’re ready to get some more competition and we’re ready to beat these teams that are ranked highly. We think we’re better, we don’t care about rankings. I think we’re really the toughest team in the state. We can go out there and out-tough anybody. Even if we don’t win, we’ll be tougher than every other team. We pushed pretty well at the Flavin and I was proud of our performance there. And I definitely what we did at Prospect, we really put on a good showing.”
Yilmaz (12-7), who went 24-14 last season and competed in the Class 3A Barrington Sectional, was one of five second-place finishers for coach Hal Lunsford’s third-place Zee-Bees. A title winner in 2024 at the Knights Invitational, he advanced to the 175 title mat following two pins, needing 5:37 in his opener and just 1:12 in the semifinals to defeat Chicago Military Academy-Bronzeville senior Caleb Gordon. Tugs (13-11), who took third place, had the most total match points with 77, which was 17 ahead of the next-best in that category. He got a win by technical fall in 4:16 over Gordon (5-2) in the third-place match. And for fifth, Lindblom senior Erick Arroyo (7-6) won by fall in 0:56 over Chicago Agricultural Sciences senior Marquel Wilson.
190 – Paul Peradotti, Naperville Central
Paul Peradotti went 17-0 last season as a sophomore and got the opportunity to be on the first Naperville Central team to qualify for the IHSA Dual Team Finals since 2012. He’s off to another good start this season after appearing in his second tournament finals and capturing his first championship by winning at 190 in the Knights Invitational to join six other teammates as title winners and help coach Noah Fitzenreider’s Redhawks claim top honors by 68.5 points.
Peradotti (20-2) secured the title with a 7-2 decision over Zion-Benton’s Tyson Poyer. He opened with a win by technical fall before earning his spot as one of the Redhawks’ 10 finalists with a fall in 4:00 over Sarah E. Goode STEM Academy senior Dylan Wilborn in the semifinals. He also advanced to the finals at Prospect’s Mudge-McMorrow Invite, where he placed second.
“I’m super excited,” Peradotti said. “Losing a couple of really good seniors from last year, it was like ‘okay, what is our team going to look like?’ And I feel like just a lot of people have stepped it up. In practice, you can’t go far without finding a good partner. My partner, Henry, and I go at it every day. We have so much fun. This whole group, we’re brothers. It’s so nice to see in a group of guys, especially for wrestlers, who are generally solitary, it’s definitely great to see. It’s really just my practice partner. Just getting to work with him, it’s iron sharpening iron. He makes me better and I make him better, and I feel like it’s that way throughout every weight.”
Poyer (24-7) was one of five members of coach Hal Lunsford’s Zee-Bees who claimed second-place finishes. He advanced to the 190 title mat with two pins, winning in 1:41 in the semifinals over Crete-Monee senior Kijuan Springfield (10-9), who went to claim third place with a pin in 3:45 over Wilborn (12-9). In the fifth-place match, Buffalo Grove junior Aleksander Krotosyznski (5-4) recorded a fall in 3:07 over Eisenhower senior Marvelous Akhalu.
215 – Malakai Scott, Crete-Monee
Malakai Scott is up several weight classes from where he was at last season when he competed at 165 in the state series and finished 23-8 after advancing to the Class 2A Hinsdale South Sectional. The Crete-Monee senior hopes that he can advance a bit further this season and no doubt received a big boost to do just that following his title at 215 in the Knights Invitational that he secured with a fall in 2:44 over Eisenhower junior Rayshawn Doles.
Scott (12-4), one of three individuals to place third or better and the lone finalist for coach Jonathan Hernandez’s Warriors, he opened with a first-period fall and then was a winner by technical fall in 4:44 over Naperville Central senior Jayden Davis in the semifinals. He finished with 27.5 team points, which was the fifth-best total in the competition. A runner-up in the Knights Invite in 2024, Scott also reached the finals last month at Unity, where he took second.
“My coaches said that they really wanted me to win and that I should be able to get some competition with all of the kids today were very good,” Scott said. “I try hard in practice and I try to push my peers, so that they practice hard as well. And I show up to practice every day, that’s really one of the main points. From last year, I’ve just really been trying harder. I’ve been pushing myself to do my best and I want to win and make it down to state. I really like it, it’s a lot of fun (competing for the program). You meet a lot of good people, like teammates, and they’re all good, even the opponents. Everybody in wrestling is really nice.”
Doles (9-5) was the only finalist for coach Joe Ambrosino’s Cardinals. He advanced to the 215 title mat after recording two falls with the first in 5:47 and the second in 1:25 in the semifinals over Buffalo Grove junior Christiano Marogy, who went on to capture third place with a win by technical fall in 4:00 over Westinghouse senior Eric Magana (12-6). For fifth place, Sarah E. Goode STEM Academy sophomore Thomas Davis (15-11) won by fall in 2:29 over Davis.
285 – William Erbeck, Naperville Central
William Erbeck capped a successful day for Naperville Central when he the senior won the 285 title at the Knights Invitational with a fall in 1:50 over Zion-Benton senior Isaiah Tellado to become one of seven champions for coach Noah Fitzenreider’s Redhawks, who scored 311.5 points to easily claim the team championship over Buffalo Grove, who finished with 243 points.
Erbeck (21-1), the lone returning state qualifier for Naperville Central, went 38-5 last season and got a pin to help his team grab an early 13-0 lead over Yorkville in last year’s IHSA Class 3A Dual Team Finals, which the Redhawks lost 36-29 to the eventual runner-up Foxes as they made an appearance at dual team state for the first time since 2012. Erbeck, whose only loss was a 5-3 decision to Round Lake’s William Cole in the 285 championship match at Prospect’s Mudge-McMorrow Invite, opened with a first-period fall and then got another one, in 0:52, over Lindblom senior Josue Olivo in the semifinals to become one of his team’s 10 finalists. He had 28 team points, which ranked him second with two others behind Justin Skryd’s 29.5 points.
“I like how we all have a competitive edge,” Erbeck said. “You see our guys and even though they’re down, they keep moving and trying to get into the next best position and even if you can’t win the match, you still want to finish on top. I’ve been practicing all offseason trying to get better and the goal is to win state and place at state, that’s the main goal for the season for me, and that’s what I’m trying to do.”
Tellado (20-8), who won 19 matches last season but was unable to advance from the Class 3A Libertyville Regional, was one of five finalists, who all placed second, for coach Hal Lunsford’s Zee-Bees, who wound up finishing third in the team standings. He opened with two falls, with his second one coming in 5:03 over Westinghouse sophomore Tyler Brooks in the semifinals. In the third-place match, Olivo (8-3) won by fall in 3:37 over Brooks (12-5). For fifth, Northridge Prep junior Thomas Suter (9-7) got a pin in 3:18 over Buffalo Grove junior Jenrry Aguirre.
Sarah E. Goode STEM Academy Knights Invitational place matches
106
1st Place Match
Jeremy Powell (Chicago Agricultural Sciences) 3-0, Fr. over Dalton Meluch (Naperville Central) 18-10, Jr. (Dec 10-7)
3rd Place Match
Stone McKone (Buffalo Grove) 3-1, So. over Brayden Sroka (Zion-Benton) 17-7, Fr. (MD 13-5)
5th Place Match
Keandre Beal (Sarah E. Goode STEM Academy) 11-5, Sr. over Aiden Roop (Crete-Monee) 3-7, So. (Fall 1:28)
113
1st Place Match
Oleksandr Havrylkiv (Buffalo Grove) 16-1, Fr. over Elijah Sawyer (Chicago Agricultural Sciences) 2-1, So. (Fall 3:49)
3rd Place Match
Jack Schwartz (Naperville Central) 16-10, Sr. over Jamari Starr (Westinghouse) 10-6, Sr. (Fall 1:24)
5th Place Match
Logan Esparza (Eisenhower) 10-9, Fr. over Ricardo Dominguez (Little Village) 6-4, Sr. (Dec 10-8)
120
1st Place Match
Mykola Shamray (Buffalo Grove) 21-4, Fr. over Jake Moore (Naperville Central) 16-8, Jr. (Fall 5:32)
3rd Place Match
Kingston Sawyer (Chicago Agricultural Sciences) 5-1, Jr. over Benito Chavez (Little Village) 11-6, Fr. (Fall 2:31)
5th Place Match
Gustavo Benitez-Mendez (Chicago Military Academy-Bronzeville) 6-2, So. over Braylen Chavez-Rangel (Sarah E. Goode STEM Academy) 9-5, Sr. (M. For.)
126
Guaranteed Places
1st Place Match
Joe Kopecky (Northridge Prep) 12-4, Fr. over Jovanni Harris (Little Village) 14-5, Jr. (Fall 3:56)
3rd Place Match
James Ball (Naperville Central) 8-5, Fr. over Anthoni Valladares (Buffalo Grove) 5-13, Jr. (Fall 3:47)
5th Place Match
Said Vazquez (Zion-Benton) 8-12, So. over Jordan Kirkpatrick (Crete-Monee) 4-8, Sr. (Fall 0:39)
132
1st Place Match
Jacob Cochran (Naperville Central) 23-5, Jr. over Mohamad Khater (Ridgewood) 13-7, Jr. (Fall 1:17)
3rd Place Match
Anthony Laguna (Buffalo Grove) 4-4, Jr. over Isaiah Poole (Sarah E. Goode STEM Academy) 10-9, Jr. (Fall 0:00)
5th Place Match
Isaah Montes (Kelly) 7-9, So. over Santiago Daviilla (Eisenhower) 3-5, So. (MD 18-4)
138
1st Place Match
Vince Bern (Naperville Central) 19-4, Jr. over Luis Medina (Zion-Benton) 17-7, Sr. (Fall 5:59)
3rd Place Match
Cliffon Johnson (Kelly) 10-3, Sr. over Anthony Suarez (Little Village) 11-6, Jr. (TF-1.5 2:55 (17-2))
5th Place Match
Isaiah Diaz (Sarah E. Goode STEM Academy) 13-9, Sr. over David Karapetyan (Buffalo Grove) 4-13, Fr. (Fall 1:19)
144
1st Place Match
Bohdan Malaksianov (Buffalo Grove) 18-6, Sr. over Maurice Bush (Chicago Agricultural Sciences) 2-1, Jr. (Fall 1:11)
3rd Place Match
Stavros Gerousis (Naperville Central) 18-12, Jr. over Awwal Ogunsolu (Kelly) 13-4, Sr. (Fall 3:07)
5th Place Match
Jayden Veal (Sarah E. Goode STEM Academy) 12-4, Fr. over Davin Esparagoza (Zion-Benton) 10-15, So. (MD 15-2)
150
1st Place Match
Cj Bierman (Naperville Central) 16-6, Sr. over Leovardo Juarez (Kelly) 12-4, Jr. (Fall 1:30)
3rd Place Match
George McShane (Northridge Prep) 11-5, Jr. over Xavier Woods (Sarah E. Goode STEM Academy) 20-2, Sr. (Dec 9-6)
5th Place Match
Ryan Singleton (Chicago Military Academy-Bronzeville) 6-2, Sr. over Ian Serkanic (Zion-Benton) 9-9, So. (Fall 4:00)
157
1st Place Match
Justin Skryd (Naperville Central) 8-5, So. over Demar Dixon (Zion-Benton) 12-11, Sr. (Fall 3:28)
3rd Place Match
Khurshedov Jahongir (Buffalo Grove) 4-1, So. over Felipe Juan Aguilar Urbina (Little Village) 16-5, Jr. (Fall 4:42)
5th Place Match
Trevor Williams (Sarah E. Goode STEM Academy) 13-10, Sr. over Khalid Watson (Eisenhower) 13-11, Jr. (Dec 14-8)
1st Place Match
Adam Haddad (Northridge Prep) 15-2, Sr. over Nicolas Olvera (Naperville Central) 17-9, So. (TF-1.5 5:25 (19-4))
3rd Place Match
Jaylene Johnson (Crete-Monee) 12-5, Sr. over Chris Chi (Buffalo Grove) 13-5, Sr. (Dec 11-4)
5th Place Match
Kendall Taylor (Chicago Military Academy-Bronzeville) 5-2, Sr. over Anthony Malone (Zion-Benton) 18-15, So. (Dec 22-18)
175
1st Place Match
Henry Rydwelski (Naperville Central) 26-1, Sr. over Francisco Yilmaz (Zion-Benton) 12-7, Sr. (MD 15-5)
3rd Place Match
Sonny Tugs (Buffalo Grove) 13-11, Jr. over Caleb Gordon (Chicago Military Academy-Bronzeville) 5-2, Sr. (TF-1.5 4:16 (20-5))
5th Place Match
Erick Arroyo (Lindblom) 7-6, Sr. over Marquel Wilson (Chicago Agricultural Sciences) 3-3, Sr. (Fall 0:56)
190
1st Place Match
Paul Peradotti (Naperville Central) 20-2, Jr. over Tyson Poyer (Zion-Benton) 24-7, Sr. (Dec 7-2)
3rd Place Match
Kijuan Springfield (Crete-Monee) 10-9, Sr. over Dylan Wilborn (Sarah E. Goode STEM Academy) 12-9, Sr. (Fall 3:45)
5th Place Match
Aleksander Krotosyznski (Buffalo Grove) 5-4, Jr. over Marvelous Akhalu (Eisenhower) 8-11, Sr. (Fall 3:07)
215
1st Place Match
Malakai Scott (Crete-Monee) 12-4, Sr. over Rayshawn Doles (Eisenhower) 9-5, Jr. (Fall 2:44)
3rd Place Match
Christiano Marogy (Buffalo Grove) 9-13, Jr. over Eric Magana (Westinghouse) 12-6, Sr. (TF-1.5 4:00 (19-4))
5th Place Match
Thomas Davis (Sarah E. Goode STEM Academy) 15-11, So. over Jayden Davis (Naperville Central) 2-3, Sr. (Fall 2:29)
285
1st Place Match
William Erbeck (Naperville Central) 21-1, Sr. over Isaiah Tellado (Zion-Benton) 20-8, Sr. (Fall 1:50)
3rd Place Match
Josue Olivo (Lindblom) 8-3, Sr. over Tyler Brooks (Westinghouse) 12-5, So. (Fall 3:37)
5th Place Match
Jenrry Aguirre (Buffalo Grove) 3-2, Jr. over Thomas Suter (Northridge Prep) 8-8, Jr. (Fall 3:18)
Team scores
1. Naperville Central 311.5, 2. Buffalo Grove 247, 3. Zion-Benton 161, 4. Chicago Agricultural Sciences 110, 4. Sarah E. Goode STEM Academy 110, 6. Crete-Monee 98, 7. Northridge Prep 96, 8. Little Village 76, 9. Kelly 72.5, 10. Chicago Military Academy-Bronzeville 61.5, 11. Eisenhower 51, 12. Lindblom 46.5, 13. Westinghouse 44, 14. Ridgewood 23.5.
Roundup of Bolingbrook, Rickover Naval Academy and Naperville Central girls tournaments

By Mike Garofola – for the IWCOA
Glenbard West captures Bolingbrook Girls Invitational title
Glenbard West lifted its first major title of the season when it won the 15-team Bolingbrook Girls Invitational with 178 points while Joliet Central took second place with 150.5 points and Warren Township amassed 139 points to claim third place. Other finishers in the top eight were Palatine (125), Bolingbrook (123), Seneca (103.5), Hillcrest (95.5) and Bartlett (84).
The Hilltoppers, who finished second to Batavia at the Larkin Royal Rumble last month, will now turn their attention to competing in four dual meets before taking part in next weekend’s Hoffman Estate Invite.
Wrestling fans would have the pleasure of watching two nationally-ranked stars in Glenbrook North’s Ariella Dobin (120) and Prairie Central’s Chloe Hoselton (235), who both won titles.
Hoselton was a 2024 state champion and a two-time Illinois state freestyle champion while Dobin, who took fourth at state last season, won 9-6 over Bartlett’s Emma Engels, an IHSA champion in 2023 and two-time state medalist, in the 120 finals.
1 – Glenbard West
The tourney champs from Glenbard West, who are coached by Alberto Guevara, saw two of its own climb atop the podium when the action was over.
Khloe Perez pinned her way to the 110-pound title while teammate Miyalinna DeJesus did the same at 155 pounds. Both Hilltoppers also garnered first place medals at the 16-team Larkin Royal Rumble in early December.
Thanh Dinh was runner-up at 235-pounds while the quartet of Shayne Dietzen (105), Karolina Konopka (120), Valentina Fantoni (125) and Nydia Jotzat (135) were all third. Giovanna Cozzani (140) took fourth place, Lillyana Iman (100) finished fifth and Daniyah Nixon (190) placed sixth while Rubi Guadarrama (115) and Lillyanna Ngo (190) also helped the cause for the Hilltoppers.
“Our girls have been wrestling some really strong programs all season and the level of competition at Bolingbrook was intense,” Guevara said. “I’m proud of the way our girls wrestled and to come away with our first invite win was pretty special. We’re going to see these teams again and some will be in our regional and sectional, so we have to make sure we keep working hard and getting better each day.”
2 – Joliet Central
Alisa Carter (105) and Izabel Barrera (135) led the way for coach Marcus McCullum’s runner-up Steelwomen with their individual titles.
Kassandra Ruiz (100) and Jewel Mister (235) were both third while April Ortiz (130) and Gianna Guerrero (170) were fourth. Shaila Aguirre (115) and Evelyne Perez-Bedolla (190) finished fifth while Ariadna Arciniega (100), Paiton Pilgrim (130) and Nadya McCottrell (140) claimed sixth place. Joliet Central had the most match points on the day with 314.
3 – Warren Township
The third-place Blue Devils, who are coached by Nick Grujanac, didn’t claim any championships but they did have more top-four medals than the two teams that were ahead of them.
Aaliyah Vazquez (115) and Tyanna Jackson (145) were both second with the trio of Jane Kelly (130), Ashley Fugelseth (155) and Erin Bush (170) each taking home third place medals. Emma Silvetti (115), Alyssa Bentley (120), Haley Fugelseth (135) and Ellery Brown (145) were fourth while Katherine Mertz (135) and Addison Shay (170) finished in fifth place.
Others earning championship medals were Palatine’s Karimot Lawal (145) and Sabrina Cargill (170), Glenbrook North’s Leah Stringfellow (100), Bolingbrook’s Alejandra Flores (115), Grayslake Central’s Gianna Arzer (125), Seneca’s Catalina Pacheco (130), Hillcrest’s Christiara Finley (140) and Clifton Central’s Payton Temple (190).
Also claiming second-place finishes were Palatine’s Kevelyn Price (100), Evelyn Castro Juarez (155) and Irma Villa (190), Hillcrest’s Taniya Moss (110) and Sydney West (170), Seneca’s Sammie Greisen (135) and Haiden Lavarier (140), Bolingbrook’s Mikaela Najera (105), Bartlett’s Lilly White (125) and Lisle’s Sophie Crescenzo (130).
Flores and Perez tied for the most team points with 28 while Pacheco and Temple were next with 27.5 points, Finley had 26.5 team points and Arzer, Barrera and Dobin scored 26 points. Bolingbrook’s Nyima Outlaw had the most total match points with 48 while her teammate Flores was next with 37 and Finley finished with 36 points.
Bolingbrook Girls Invitational place matches
100
1st Place Match
Leah Stringfellow (Glenbrook North) won by tech fall over Kevelyn Price (Palatine) (TF 16-1)
3rd Place Match
Kassandra Ruiz (Joliet Central) won by fall over Kahlynn Spurgeon (Bartlett) (Fall 4:50)
5th Place Match
Lillyana Iman (Glenbard West) won by medical forfeit over Ariadna Arciniega (Joliet Central) (MFF)
105
1st Place Match
Alisa Carter (Joliet Central) won by decision over Mikaela Najera (Bolingbrook) (Dec 10-4)
3rd Place Match
Shayne Dietzen (Glenbard West) won by major decision over Ivette Quintana (Bolingbrook) (Maj 12-4)
5th Place Match
Sharleen Barrera (Bolingbrook) received a bye
110
1st Place Match
Khloe Perez (Glenbard West) won by fall over Taniya Moss (Hillcrest) (Fall 2:22)
3rd Place Match
Cadence DuBois (Lisle) won by fall over Jordan Rodriguez (Bolingbrook) (Fall 3:29)
5th Place Match
Taylor Wells (Oakwood/Salt Fork) won by fall over Norah Cwik (Bartlett) (Fall 5:31)
115
1st Place Match
Alejandra Flores (Bolingbrook) won by fall over Aaliyah Vazquez (Warren Township) (Fall 2:38)
3rd Place Match
Haven Nicolaides (Seneca) won by fall over Emma Silvetti (Warren Township) (Fall 0:36)
5th Place Match
Shaila Aguirre (Joliet Central) won by decision over Ella Graham (Clifton Central) (Dec 14-13)
120
1st Place Match
Ariella Dobin (Glenbrook North) won by decision over Emma Engels (Bartlett) (Dec 9-6)
3rd Place Match
Karolina Konopka (Glenbard West) won by decision over Alyssa Bentley (Warren Township) (Dec 3-2)
5th Place Match
Yurithdzy Vilchis (Prairie Central) won by fall over Lilly Plumlee (Clifton Central) (Fall 1:31)
125
1st Place Match
Gianna Arzer (Grayslake Central) won by decision over Lilly White (Bartlett) (Dec 5-2)
3rd Place Match
Valentina Fantoni (Glenbard West) won by fall over Juliana Adamski (Tinley Park) (Fall 1:31)
5th Place Match
Makiya Baker (Prairie Central) won by fall over Nayeli Nieto (Bolingbrook) (Fall 4:59)
130
1st Place Match
Catalina Pacheco (Seneca) won by fall over Sophie Crescenzo (Lisle) (Fall 1:30)
3rd Place Match
Jane Kelly (Warren Township) won by fall over April Ortiz (Joliet Central) (Fall 3:25)
5th Place Match
Nyima Outlaw (Bolingbrook) won by fall over Paiton Pilgrim (Joliet Central) (Fall 1:44)
135
1st Place Match
Izabel Barrera (Joliet Central) won by decision over Sammie Greisen (Seneca) (Dec 6-3)
3rd Place Match
Nydia Jotzat (Glenbard West) won by fall over Haley Fugelseth (Warren Township) (Fall 0:30)
5th Place Match
Katherine Mertz (Warren Township) won by medical forfeit over Madison Monreal (Tinley Park) (MFF)
140
1st Place Match
Christiara Finley (Hillcrest) won by major decision over Haiden Lavarier (Seneca) (Maj 16-4)
3rd Place Match
Miranda Tellez (Grayslake Central) won by fall over Giovanna Cozzani (Glenbard West) (Fall 3:09)
5th Place Match
Abbie Harris (Tinley Park) won by fall over Nadya McCottrell (Joliet Central) (Fall 1:00)
145
1st Place Match
Karimot Lawal (Palatine) won by decision over Tyanna Jackson (Warren Township) (Dec 10-4)
3rd Place Match
Savannah Burns (Bolingbrook) won by fall over Ellery Brown (Warren Township) (Fall 3:18)
5th Place Match
Rylee Hernandez (Tinley Park) won by fall over Tristine Briscoe (Grayslake Central) (Fall 0:31)
155
1st Place Match
Miyalinna DeJesus (Glenbard West) won by fall over Evelyn Castro Juarez (Palatine) (Fall 1:06)
3rd Place Match
Ashley Fugelseth (Warren Township) won by fall over Natalie Komprowski (Bartlett) (Fall 0:43)
5th Place Match
Melissa Nance (Hillcrest) won by fall over Brisa Perez (Palatine) (Fall 2:55)
170
1st Place Match
Sabrina Cagill (Palatine) won by fall over Sydney West (Hillcrest) (Fall 0:36)
3rd Place Match
Erin Bush (Warren Township) won by fall over Gianna Guerrero (Joliet Central) (Fall 1:11)
5th Place Match
Addison Shay (Warren Township) won by fall over Monique Mesina (Bolingbrook) (Fall 2:28)
190
1st Place Match
Payton Temple (Clifton Central) won by fall over Irma Villa (Palatine) (Fall 0:58)
3rd Place Match
Aiva Wikar (Palatine) won by fall over Jordyn Coleman-Harrison (Hillcrest) (Fall 1:23)
5th Place Match
Evelyne Perez-Bedolla (Joliet Central) won by fall over Daniyah Nixon (Glenbard West) (Fall 5:27)
235
1st Place Match
Chloe Hoselton (Prairie Central) won by fall over Thanh Dinh (Glenbard West) (Fall 0:58)
3rd Place Match
Jewel Mister (Joliet Central) won by fall over Aniaah Garcia (Palatine) (Fall 4:41)
5th Place Match
Cynthia Rios (Bolingbrook) won by fall over Tamera Gibbs (Hillcrest) (Fall 2:00)
Team scores
1. Glenbard West 178, 2. Joliet Central 150.5, 3. Warren Township 139, 4. Palatine 125, 5. Bolingbrook 123, 6. Seneca 103.5, 7. Hillcrest 95.5, 8. Bartlett 84, 9. Tinley Park 68, 10. Grayslake Central 54.5, 11. Prairie Central 54, 12. Glenbrook North 49.5, 13. Clifton Central 44.5, 14. Lisle 41.5, 15. Oakwood/Salt Fork 17.

Rickover Naval Academy wins title at own Rickover Girls Rumble
Rickover Naval Academy scored 167 points to claim top honors at its own 14-team Rickover Girls Rumble while two other Chicago Public Schools claimed the next two spots as Kelly finished in second place with 138 points and Lane Tech took third place with 95.5 points.
Highland Park (94), Maine East (94), Niles West (88.5) and Wheaton Warrenville South (75.5) rounded out the top half of the field.
1 – Rickover Naval Academy
The tourney champion Lady Sea Dragons collected 10 overall medals, led by individual champions Isabelle Mejia (145, 13-4) and Jasmine Mejia (235, 13-1), who together pinned their way to the top of the podium in stealth fashion, needing a combined 3:23 to claim the top prizes.
“Jasmine is our rock,” Lady Sea Dragons coach Brian Augello said. “She is a three-time state qualifier (fifth in 2022) and our captain, and great leader, not only for our girls program, but the boys also. It’s like having another coach out there with Jasmine, she is just a positive influence on our entire program.
“It has been a pleasure to watch her development this season,” Augello said of Isabelle Mejia. “As a freshman, we really did not know what to expect. She had a choice between Lane or Rickover, but she has seen the development of Jasmine and being in a smaller atmosphere would be better for her. She is just a sponge with the instruction we give her, and you can see it in her performance on the mat, and we feel the sky’s the limit for her from here on out.”
The quartet of Dakota Perez (100, 13-2), Paige Finnegan (110, 10-3), Litzy Estrada (115, 14-6) and Camila Martinez-Gonzalez (155, 14-1) each provided second place medals. Mia Castillo (105), Jimena Romero-Chaga (135) and Jocelyn Quillay (140) were all third and Alisa Burk (145) took fourth.
“Litzy’s second place finish came in probably the toughest weight division here, and both her and Paige (Finnegan) stepped up last week at IWCOA dual team state and wrestled where we needed them and did really well,” said Augello, whose team took second in their tourney last season to the eventual City champion, Phoenix Military Academy, who edged the tourney hosts 109.5-105.
“(Reflecting) on the IWCOA dual team state tournament as an athletic director, it’s remarkable to see how much the sport has evolved from what started with modest participation to a level where our top 16 teams boast more wrestlers than entire sectionals once did,” Rickover Naval Academy athletic director Guillermo ‘Will’ Mejia said.
“Our program here at Rickover continues to transform young lives through the sport, with athletes becoming city champions, state placers and even an All-American,” Augello said. “The atmosphere at dual team state was electric and it was a great opportunity for our program, and even though we were missing five starters, the experience they all received from being there was invaluable.”
2 – Kelly
Kelly, which took third place in CPS in 2024, ran a strong second to eventual champion Rickover Naval Academy, collecting eight top-four medals which included dominating efforts from its upper weight stars, Sara Martinez Lopera (170, 13-0) and N’ Dyia Mahon-Godfrey (190, 17-1), who together needed just over two minutes on the day to collect their championship medals. Martinez Lopera was a 2024 CPS champion while Mahon-Godrey was a sectional qualifier.
Finishing in second place for coach Jazzmine Seely’s Lady Trojans were Irayde Sanchez Cruz (105), Liliana Monserrat Dimas (145, 8-4) and Laura Sofia Martinez Lopera (235). Yazmine Garcia (115) and Leylani Bahena (130) were third while Olivia Reyes (135) claimed fourth place.
3 – Lane Tech
Sofia Guerrero (105, 21-5), Nyah Lovis (130, 25-4) and Zabby Badru (135, 24-5) led the way with championships for third-place Lane Tech, who thanks in part to this trio, would hold off both Highland Park and Maine East by a 95.5-94.0 margin for a top-three finish on the day.
Lovis, reigning CPS champion, now a two-time champion in the event, lost at the Evanston Sectional a year ago in the blood round to end her terrific season at 32-6. Also placing in the top-four for coach Liam Cummins’ Champions were runner-up Imyjah Jackson (140) and Lauren Guerrero (115), who claimed fourth place.
Others earning championship medals were Niles West’s Nour Al Radi (110, 3-0) and Zoe Pomeranets (120, 10-2), Mundelein’s Vanessa Osorio (115, 17-7) and Khloe Heerdegen (140, 13-5), Highland Park’s Riley Moore (125, 8-5) and Dana Holt (155, 12-1) and Wheaton Warrenville South’s Andrea Jaimes-Alvarez (100, 11-1).
Also finishing in second place were Maine East’s Heba Kiloul (120, 12-2) and Daniela Velaquez (170, 4-3), Mundelein’s Stefany Rodriguez-Betanco (125), Durand/Pecatonica’s Evie Anderson (130), Wheaton Warrenville South’s Heidi Bourne (135, 6-5) and Highland Park’s Elsa Flory (190, 8-8).
There was a four-way tie for the most team points with 26 between Isabelle Mejia, Holt, Moore and Osorio while Jaimes-Alvarez scored 25.5 points and Al Radi had 23.5 team points. Moore easily had the most total match points with 60 while Lovis was next-best with 39 points.
Rickover Girls Rumble place matches
100
1st Place Match
Andrea Jaimes-Alvarez (Wheaton Warrenville South) 11-1, Jr. over Dakota Perez (Rickover Naval Academy) 13-2, Jr. (Fall 0:55)
3rd Place Match
Evelyn Torres (Maine East) 13-6, Fr. over Paola Ocampo (Maine East) 7-9, Fr. (Fall 1:06)
105
1st Place Match
Sofia Guerrero (Lane Tech) 21-5, Jr. over Irayde Sánchez Cruz (Kelly) 2-3, Jr. (Fall 1:37)
3rd Place Match
Mia Castillo (Rickover Naval Academy) 2-3, Fr. over Alanna Mechling (Durand/Pecatonica) 3-5, So. (Dec 8-7)
110
1st Place Match
Nour AL Radi (Niles West) 3-0 over Paige Finnegan (Rickover Naval Academy) 10-3, Fr. (Fall 1:39)
3rd Place Match
Chinyari Parrish (Niles West) 5-3, Fr. over Liza Sarkees (Maine East) 2-10, So. (Fall 1:02)
115
1st Place Match
Vanessa Osorio (Mundelein) 17-7, Fr. over Litzy Estrada-A. (Rickover Naval Academy) 14-6, So. (Fall 3:14)
3rd Place Match
Yazmine Garcia (Kelly) 12-4, Fr. over Lauren Guerrero (Lane Tech) 16-12, So. (Fall 3:31)
120
1st Place Match
Zoe Pomeranets (Niles West) 10-2 over Heba Kiloul (Maine East) 12-10, Sr. (Fall 3:15)
3rd Place Match
Miriam Orduno (Mather) 2-1, Jr. over Jimena Cisneros (Maine East) 7-10, So. (Fall 2:36)
125
1st Place Match
Riley Moore (Highland Park) 8-5, So. over Stefany Rodriguez-Betanco (Mundelein) 2-1, So. (TF-1.5 2:15 (15-0))
3rd Place Match
Sommer Kibbe (Wheaton Warrenville South) 9-3, Jr. over Sienna Rauzi (Niles West) 2-3 (Fall 1:21)
130
1st Place Match
Nyah Lovis (Lane Tech) 25-4, Sr. over Evie Anderson (Durand/Pecatonica) 2-1 (MD 12-1)
3rd Place Match
Leylani Bahena (Kelly) 13-3, So. over Jeamilla Segovia (Maine East) 6-11, Sr. (Fall 1:33)
135
1st Place Match
Zabby Badru (Lane Tech) 24-5, So. over Heidi Bourne (Wheaton Warrenville South) 6-5, Jr. (Fall 3:02)
3rd Place Match
Jimena Romero-Chaga (Rickover Naval Academy) 6-2, Jr. over Olivia Reyes (Kelly) 4-6, Jr. (Fall 0:45)
140
1st Place Match
Khloe Heerdegen (Mundelein) 13-5, Jr. over Imyjah Jackson (Lane Tech) 4-18, So. (Fall 1:47)
3rd Place Match
Joceyln Quillay (Rickover Naval Academy) 3-3, Jr. over Lisbeth Tenorio (Mather) 1-2, So. (Fall 2:00)
145
1st Place Match
Isabelle Mejia (Rickover Naval Academy) 13-4, Fr. over Liliana Monserrat Dimas (Kelly) 8-4, So. (Fall 0:33)
3rd Place Match
Aaizah Khan (Niles West) 9-6 over Alisa Burk (Rickover Naval Academy) 5-5, Sr. (Fall 1:21)
155
1st Place Match
Dana Holt (Highland Park) 12-1, Sr. over Camila Martinez-Gonzalez (Rickover Naval Academy) 14-1, Sr. (Fall 1:46)
3rd Place Match
Esther Gouegnon (Mather) 3-1, Jr. over Juliamay Teston (Intrinsic) 7-4, So. (Fall 0:21)
170
1st Place Match
Sara Martinez Lopera (Kelly) 13-0, So. over Daniela Velazquez (Maine East) 4-3, Fr. (Fall 0:20)
3rd Place Match
Dorothy Perez (Highland Park) 7-4, Jr. over Danika Samson (Highland Park) 5-4, Fr. (Fall 0:42)
190
1st Place Match
N`Dyia Mahon-Godfrey (Kelly) 17-1, Sr. over Elsa Flory (Highland Park) 8-8, So. (Fall 0:14)
3rd Place Match
Julissa Az (Mather) 3-1, Jr. over Izabella Aquino (Wheaton Warrenville South) 3-3, So. (Fall 2:35)
235
1st Place Match
Jasmine Mejia (Rickover Naval Academy) 13-1, Sr. over Laura Sofia Martinez Lopera (Kelly) 2-2, So. (Fall 0:50)
3rd Place Match
Svenja Dealmonte (Mundelein) 2-1, Jr. over Areli Santamaria (Horizon Science Academy-Southwest Chicago) 1-2 (Fall 0:29)
Team scores
1. Rickover Naval Academy 167, 2. Kelly 138, 3. Lane Tech 95.5, 4. Highland Park 94, 4. Maine East 94, 6. Niles West 88.5, 7. Wheaton Warrenville South 75.5, 8. Mundelein 62, 9. Mather 60, 10. Durand/Pecatonica 22, 11. Intrinsic 13, 12. Kenwood 10. 13. Horizon Science Academy – Southwest Chicago 5, 14. Niles North 4.
Kaneland has four champions at Naperville Central Girls Invitational
The first-ever Naperville Central Girls Invitational featured quite an impressive array of quality Individuals in a 17-team field that featured over 100 competitors.
That included Kaneland sophomore Angelina Gochis, who won the 2024 IHSA championship at 105 pounds to cap a 47-5 season. She improved to 22-0 after winning the title at 110 and was one of four champions for coach Josh West’s Knights, with the others being Dyani Torres (135, 18-5), Carly Duffing (170, 15-4) and Sadie Kinsella (190, 12-5).
The host Redhawks and Addison Trail also had two champions. Winning titles for Naperville Central were Dezi Azar (125, 19-3) and Arianna Rico (140, 15-6) while the Blazers received championships from Brithany Mondragon (120, 14-1) and Madeline Beltran (145, 14-5).
Montini Catholic’s Katelyn Bell (100, 22-3), who placed sixth at 100 last year at the IHSA Finals, also won a title. Other champions were Leyden’s Zoey Dodgers (105, 11-0), Willowbrook’s Daisy Trujillo (115, 11-5), Joliet Catholic Academy’s Grace Laird (130, 8-2), Downers Grove North’s Jahdi’yah Hibbler (155, 14-3) and Normal West’s Cadence Duvall (235, 17-3). Dodgers was the first sectional qualifier for her program last season and Trujillo became the first individual in her program to win a weight bracket when she captured this tournament title.
Second-place finishers were Naperville Central’s Annika Hull (100, 14-6) and Ellen Purl (120, 15-7), Lyons Township’s Avi Gonzalez (105, 10-3) and Mariah Zalapa (110), Willowbrook’s Angelia Manlapaz (115, 8-8) and Isabela Barajas (155, 11-2), Downers Grove North’s Natalia Cruz (130, 15-4) and Kaitlyn Kapral (135, 9-6), Maine South’s Lotus Alhyasat (145, 11-8) and Sophia Fortis (235, 7-6), Pontiac’s Jocelyn Cobix (125, 16-5), Kaneland’s Chloe Cervantes (140, 6-6), Naperville North’s Vilte Petreikyte-Zemaitaitis (170) and Hinsdale Central’s Chloe Black (190, 11-3).
And finishing in third place were Lyons Township’s Jhania Wickert-Harris (100, 7-4), Sofia Turek (135, 10-3) and Shannon Sullivan (140), Naperville Central’s Melva Gallego-Sugar (115, 10-6) and Bianca Arredondo (125, 17-6), Kaneland’s Bella Gruber (120, 5-4) and Caitlyn Manier (155, 11-5), Leyden’s Julie Ramirez (145) and Andrea Aguilera (235), Willowbrook’s Jazilah Gatlin (170, 12-6) and Jimena Saenz (190, 6-5), Naperville North’s Keyi Wang (105), Proviso East’s Regina Jones (110) and Addison Trail’s Evolet Mata (130).
There was a four-way tie for the most team points with 22 between champions Azar, Kinsella, Laird and Mondragon while second-place finishers Black, Cobix, Cruz and Purl all had 18 team points. Gochis had the most total match points with 61 while Bell was next-best with 59 points. Maine South’s Crystalia Psyhogios and Proviso East’s Mila Tellado both recorded four falls.
“This tournament was all really about getting three to four matches for girls during the winter break, most teams did not have full rosters, but there were some very talented wrestlers on hand that made for some good matches on the day,” said Rob Porter, Naperville Central’s coach and the tournament director.
He pointed out that the non-team scoring event was in place in order to give the 17 teams featuring 100-plus athletes important time on the mat in advance of the start of the second half of the season.
Porter, the President of the IWCOA and a 2011 IWCOA Hall of Fame inductee, starred at Mahomet-Seymour and Edinboro University in Pennsylvania. He took over the Redhawks girls program after serving both as the head coach and assistant for Naperville Central’s boys program, where he led two teams to the IHSA Dual Team Finals. Prior to that, he led Mahomet-Seymour to 252 victories in 12 seasons, and he had seven teams that qualified for the IHSA Dual Team Finals and four of them won trophies.
Naperville Central Girls Invitational place matches
100
1st Place Match
Katelyn Bell (Montini Catholic) 22-3, Sr. over Annika Hull (Naperville Central) 14-6, Sr. (TF-1.5 3:06 (19-4))
3rd Place Match
Jhania Wickert-Harris (Lyons Township) 7-4, Fr. over Alejandra Perez Delgado (Naperville Central) 6-12, So. (Fall 2:27)
5th Place Match
Melina Valdez (Addison Trail) 11-8, Fr. over Kayla Vasquez (Leyden) 3-7, Fr. (Fall 3:26)
7th Place Match
Paola Lopez (Proviso East) 1-2 over Asa Cedeno (Normal West) 2-11 (TF-1.5 4:50 (24-7))
105
1st Place Match
Zoey Dodgers (Leyden) 11-0, So. over Avi Gonzalez (Lyons Township) 10-3, Sr. (Fall 0:59)
3rd Place Match
Keyi Wang (Naperville North) 2-1, So. over Bella Lopez (Naperville Central) 4-5, Sr. (Fall 1:13)
5th Place Match
Nayeli Salgado (Willowbrook) 8-6, So. over Tia Edwards (Proviso West) 1-2 (Fall 3:58)
7th Place Match
Jaszmyn Dotson (Downers Grove North) 1-2, Fr. over Valeria Reyes (Proviso East) 0-3 (Fall 0:35)
110
1st Place Match – round robin
Angelina Gochis (Kaneland) 22-0, So. over Mariah Zalapa (Lyons Township) 2-1 (TF-1.5 1:21 (21-5))
3rd Place Match – round robin
Regina Jones (Proviso East) 1-2 over Aphrotie Gineris (Maine South) 0-3 (Fall 0:58)
115
1st Place Match
Daisy Trujillo (Willowbrook) 11-5, Sr. over Angelina Manlapaz (Willowbrook) 8-8, Fr. (Fall 1:32)
3rd Place Match
Melva Gallego-Sugar (Naperville Central) 10-6, So. over Thalia Paton (Kaneland) 8-4, So. (Fall 5:46)
5th Place Match
Kateryna Petriuk (Naperville North) 2-1, Jr. over Rosario Gaeta (Normal West) 0-8, Fr. (Fall 0:47)
7th Place Match
Brianna Martinez (Lyons Township) 0-2 received a bye
120
1st Place Match
Brithany Mondragon (Addison Trail) 14-1, Jr. over Ellen Purl (Naperville Central) 15-7, Sr. (MD 14-2)
3rd Place Match
Bella Gruber (Kaneland) 5-4, Fr. over Grace Migasi (Maine South) 5-8, So. (Fall 1:20)
5th Place Match
Crystalia Psyhogios (Maine South) 9-9, Fr. over Lorelai Brown (Lyons Township) 6-7, So. (Fall 2:00)
125
1st Place Match
Dezi Azar (Naperville Central) 19-3, So. over Jocelyn Cobix (Pontiac) 16-5, Fr. (Dec 3-1)
3rd Place Match
Bianca Arredondo (Naperville Central) 17-6, Sr. over Drea Lazzara (Addison Trail) 16-7, Fr. (Fall 1:59)
5th Place Match
Mia Telledo (Proviso East) 4-1 over Marija Neskovic (Hinsdale Central) 9-7, Jr. (Fall 5:55)
130
1st Place Match
Grace Laird (Joliet Catholic Academy) 8-2, Sr. over Natalia Cruz (Downers Grove North) 15-4, Sr. (TF-1.5 2:27 (19-4))
3rd Place Match
Evolet Mata (Addison Trail) 4-8, Fr. over Jasmine Dutt (Maine South) 2-12, So. (Fall 3:51)
5th Place Match
Anika Gonzalez (Proviso West) 3-1 over Brenna Berkowitz (Naperville Central) 5-12, Sr. (Fall 0:45)
135
1st Place Match – round robin
Dyani Torres (Kaneland) 18-5, Sr. over Kaitlyn Kapral (Downers Grove North) 9-6, Jr. (TF-1.5 2:59 (17-1))
3rd Place Match – round robin
Sofia Turek (Lyons Township) 10-3, Jr. over Allison Flores-Morales (Willowbrook) 8-8, So.
5th Place Match
Audrey Tromp (Lyons Township) 0-4 received a bye
140
1st Place Match – round robin
Arianna Rico (Naperville Central) 15-6, So. over Chloe Cervantes (Kaneland) 6-6, Jr. (MD 10-2)
3rd Place Match – round robin
Shannon Sullivan (Lyons Township) 3-8, Sr. over Areniz Vasquez (Willowbrook) 1-8, Fr. (Fall 1:32)
145
1st Place Match
Madeline Beltran (Addison Trail) 14-5, Jr. over Lotus Alhyasat (Maine South) 11-8, Sr. (Fall 2:24)
3rd Place Match
Julie Ramirez (Leyden) 3-4, Jr. over Reygan Behrends (Kaneland) 6-6, Fr. (Fall 2:31)
5th Place Match
Emily Hanson (Willowbrook) 4-6, Jr. over Alena Mossman (Downers Grove North) 1-2, So. (Fall 1:10)
7th Place Match
Madilyn Hunt (Proviso East) 0-2 received a bye
155
1st Place Match
Jahdi`yah Hibbler (Downers Grove North) 14-3, So. over Isabela Barajas (Willowbrook) 11-2, Jr. (Fall 1:54)
3rd Place Match
Caitlyn Manier (Kaneland) 11-5, Fr. over Camila Sanmartin (Leyden) 2-5 (Fall 1:11)
5th Place Match
Libby Greenblatt (Lyons Township) 1-1 over Yara Salazar (Hinsdale Central) 1-8 (Fall 5:15)
170
1st Place Match
Carly Duffing (Kaneland) 15-4, Sr. over Vilte Petreikyte-Zemaitaitis (Naperville North) 2-1, So. (Fall 0:40)
3rd Place Match
Jazilah Gatlin (Willowbrook) 12-6, Jr. over Alyssa Andreen (Downers Grove North) 7-11, So. (MD 11-1)
5th Place Match
Olivia Miller (Pontiac) 7-6, Fr. over Sanaa Hudgins (Maine South) 7-10, So. (Fall 3:30)
7th Place Match
Amala Agwuncha (Proviso West) 0-2 received a bye
190
1st Place Match
Sadie Kinsella (Kaneland) 12-5, So. over Chloe Black (Hinsdale Central) 11-3, Sr. (Fall 2:36)
3rd Place Match
Jimena Saenz (Willowbrook) 6-5, Fr. over Danai Kostarelou (Maine South) 9-5, Fr. (Fall 3:36)
5th Place Match
Jayde Keaty (Willowbrook) 7-5, Sr. over Amber Dix (Proviso West) 2-2 (Fall 3:44)
235
1st Place Match – round robin
Cadence Duvall (Normal West) 17-3, Sr. over Sophia Fortis (Maine South) 7-6, So. (Dec 2-0)
3rd Place Match – round robin
Andrea Aguilera (Leyden) 2-5, Jr. over Kara Colles (Kaneland) 3-7, Jr. (Fall 0:25)
Roundup of Carbondale Murdale boys and girls and Unity Christian tournaments

By Curt Herron – for the IWCOA
Althoff Catholic claims title at Carbondale’s Murdale Invitational
Althoff Catholic closed in a strong fashion with three champions to help it capture top honors at Carbondale’s 63rd annual Murdale Wrestling Invitational with 193 points, which was 12 better than runner-up Marion, who scored 181 points while Murphysboro took third with 176 points.
The rest of the top 10 in the 31-team competition featured Mascoutah (168.5), Granite City (145), Carterville (136.5), Highland (128.5), Frankfort/Christopher (121), Benton/Sesser-Valier (119) and the host Terriers (114.5).
1 – Althoff Catholic
Leading the way for coach Emanuel Brooks’ champion Crusaders were title winners Dawson Hawthorne (11-0 at 126), Brenden Rayl (19-0 at 132) and Jason Dowell (16-0 at 285). Jacobi Cobbs (17-2 at 106) placed second, Robbie Schallert (11-3 at 138) and Enrique Morales (3-2 at 285) were fourth and Ryan Hogue (11-5 at 144) and Stephen Ache (10-4 at 215) took seventh.
Others who scored points for Althoff Catholic, who didn’t enter individuals at three weights, were Austin Wilkinson (14-9 at 165, 12th), Alex Schallert (9-5 at 150, 13th), Matthew Marshall (190, 13th).and Grayson Peak (175, 27th). Others who placed in the top 16 were John Taylor (11-3 at 132, 11th), Braden Bush (8-7 at 215, 15th) and Karson Fowler (10-7 at 106, 16th).
“I tell my team like my high school coach told me,’The harder I work, the luckier I get’,” Brooks said. “We got a little lucky this weekend bringing home the Tournament title, but we wouldn’t have been in position to get lucky if we hadn’t been putting the work in! I’m happy my boys got the win, but it’s already time to focus on the next challenge.”
2 – Marion
Top performers for coach Darren Lindsey’s second place Wildcats were runners-up Caden Frey (18-5 at 150) and Tate Miller (23-6 at 165), third-place finishers Nate Page (19-8 at 144) and Evan Francis (18-8 at 190) and Riddick Cook (15-5 at 126), who finished fourth. Grayson Sanders (18-10 at 175) took seventh, Justin Murphy (16-10 at 157) was eighth, Bryan Madinger (19-7 at 215) placed ninth and Rigdon Meacham (14-11 at 113) claimed tenth place.
3 – Murphysboro
Turning in the best performances for coach Shea Baker’s third-place Red Devils were champion Paxton Pyatt (30-1 at 113), runners-up Kaiden Richards (23-5 at 120) and Bryce Edwards (24-4 at 144) and third-place finisher Sergio Garcia (21-10 at 126). Maxon Stearns (22-8 at 165) finished fifth, Caybren Hubbard (22-11 at 215) took sixth, Aiston Holt (14-10 at 132) and Lemar Treshansky (18-12 at 138) placed seventh while Logan Tanner (21-10 at 175) and Julien Tanner (11-3 at 285) claimed ninth place.
Other Murdaugh champions were Mascoutah’s Xavier Sonon-Hale (23-4 at 106) and Brock Ross (30-1 at 150), Highland’s Tyson Rakers (18-1 at 157) and Ashton Zobrist (18-4 at 215), Glenwood’s Tyler Clarke (26-6 at 120), McCracken County, KY’s Camryn Freiberg (26-3 at 138), Mt. Vernon’s Dillon White (15-0 at 144), East St. Louis’ Pierre Walton (19-1 at 165), Granite City’s Eli Miller (20-9 at 175) and Frankfort/Christopher’s Conner Henson (30-0 at 190).
Also claiming second-place finishers were Benton/Sesser-Valier’s Cohen Sweely (32-1 at 113), Anna-Jonesboro’s Drew Sadler (22-5 at 126), Freeburg’s Lukas Quartz (12-5 at 132), Mt. Vernon’s Gavin Pedigo (11-6 at 138), Breese Central’s Matthew Walsh (21-5 at 157), Carterville’s Carter Jones (15-4 at 175), Red Bud/Valmeyer’s Danny Jackson (26-2 at 190), East Alton-Wood River’s Drake Champlin (16-1 at 215) and Cahokia’s Demarco Clark (12-3 at 285).
Miller, who was the only individual in the tournament who recorded five falls, had the most team points with 43. White and Freiberg tied for second place with 41 points while Rayl and Walton each collected 40 team points. Rakers got 39.5 points, Hawthorne scored 39 points, Pedigo and Zobrist both finished with 36 points and Jones had 35 team points.
Additional third-place finishers were Glenwood’s Cooper Clarke (23-9 at 106) and Jaxon Ferguson (11-3 at 113), Granite City’s Adrian Mendez (17-10 at 132) and Braxton Tolley (21-9 at 138), Fairfield’s Talan Keoughan (19-4 at 175) and Bentley Rogers (18-5 at 285), Effingham’s Kaiden Stewart (23-4 at 120), Salem’s Keyton King (30-2 at 150), Mascoutah’s Jordan Sonon-Hale (23-6 at 157),Carbondale’s Thomas Imboden (18-6 at 165) and Frankfort/Christopher’s Brandon Turner (25-3 at 215).
Others who finished fourth were Cahokia’s Nathan Fisher (8-4 at 106), Frankfort/Christopher’s Hudson Anderton (26-4 at 113), Salem’s Rylan Moore (26-7 at 120), Anna-Jonesboro’s Jase Holshouser (14-7 at 132), Carbondale’s Joe Prideaux (20-10 at 144), McCracken County, KY’s James Barragan (21-3 at 150), East St. Louis’ Lonnez Smith (18-8 at 157), Herrin’s Kolby Coffey (15-4 at 165), Mascoutah’s Truett Blount (10-9 at 175) Trico/Elverado’s Johnny Ramaker (15-4 at 190) and Richland County’s Zander Schrader (22-7 at 215).
Also taking fifth place were Benton/Sesser-Valier’s Zane Stanley (26-6 at 106), Derek Wilkey (25-6 at 144) and Tiffin Kouzoukas (27-4 at 157), Carterville’s Ramiro Sebastian (17-7 at 113), Landyn Flood (22-4 at 126) and Terry Mick (22-7 at 190), Highland’s Gavin Merkle (15-5 at 120), McCracken County, KY’s Benjamin Kale (22-6 at 132), Mascoutah’s Desi Wade (24-7 at 138), Carbondale’s Jon Martin (18-7 at 150), Trico/Elverado’s Colin Hughey (20-3 at 175), Harrisburg’s Braxton Welge (17-4 at 215) and Freeburg’s Jack Amann (12-6 at 285).
Sixth-place finishes were also turned in by Johnston City’s Jace Weaver (13-7 at 138) and Benjamin Harris (14-7 at 144), Benton/Sesser-Valier’s Braxton Tittle (27-4 at 106), Mt. Vernon’s Jack Clark (11-6 at 113), Carbondale’s Bradley O’dell (16-6 at 120), Goreville/Dongola.Vienna’s Matt Crim (3-2 at 126), Centralia’s Cameron Haake (5-5 at 132), Fairfield’s Nic Masterson (14-8 at 150), Red Bud/Valmeyer’s Alex Wolter (21-8 at 157), Salem’s Granger Motch (26-8 at 165), Frankfort/Christopher’s Clayton Dent (21-6 at 175), Highland’s Ethan Greenwald (6-4 at 190) and Effingham’s Jeremiah Lorton (19-5 at 285).
Carbondale’s Jon Martin had the most total match points with 84 while Anna-Jonesboro’s Dawson Brunner was second with 69 points. Goreville/Dongola/Vienna’s Matt Crim was seeded 26th and took sixth while Centralia’s Cameron Haake got a 25th seed and also placed sixth.
Carbondale Murdale Boys Wrestling Tournament place matches
106
1st Place Match
Xavier Sonon-Hale (Mascoutah) 23-4, Fr. over Jacobi Cobbs (Althoff Catholic) 17-2, So. (MD 11-0)
3rd Place Match
Cooper Clarke (Glenwood) 23-9, Fr. over Nathan Fisher (Cahokia) 8-4, So. (For.)
5th Place Match
Zane Stanley (Benton/Sesser-Valier) 26-6, Jr. over Braxton Tittle (Benton/Sesser-Valier) 27-4, So. (Dec 14-10)
7th Place Match
Ethan Clark (East St. Louis) 3-6, Fr. over Aden Doolen (Salem) 21-12, Jr. (Fall 3:14)
9th Place Match
Isaac Wood (Carterville) 22-8, Fr. over Jayden Long (Highland) 8-10, Fr. (Dec 9-4)
11th Place Match
Zander Johnson (Granite City) 9-16, Fr. over Jerry Moreno (Murphysboro) 8-11, Jr. (Dec 3-2)
13th Place Match
Hayden Hazel (Richland County) 18-8, Fr. over Cray Harris (McCracken County, KY) 5-4, 7th. (Fall 0:47)
15th Place Match
David Hooper (Frankfort/Christopher) 14-8, Fr. over Karson Fowler (Althoff Catholic) 10-7, Fr. (Fall 1:05)
17th Place Match
Brendan Stewart (Effingham) 18-9, Fr. over Jonah Cox (Highland) 5-8, Fr. (Fall 1:59)
19th Place Match
Conner Crowder (Harrisburg) 11-13, Fr. over Paxton Overturf (Johnston City) 5-11, Fr. (Fall 0:32)
21st Place Match
Carter Poole (Fairfield) 9-12, So. over DaShonn Howard (Carbondale) 0-4, So. (For.)
23rd Place Match
Jack Smith (Anna-Jonesboro) 11-10, Jr. Bye
113
1st Place Match
Paxton Pyatt (Murphysboro) 30-1, So. over Cohen Sweely (Benton/Sesser-Valier) 32-1, So. (M. For.)
3rd Place Match
Jaxon Ferguson (Glenwood) 11-3, Jr. over Hudson Anderton (Frankfort/Christopher) 26-4, Fr. (Dec 11-4)
5th Place Match
Ramiro Sebastian (Carterville) 17-7, Jr. over Jack Clark (Mt. Vernon) 11-6, So. (Dec 5-3)
7th Place Match
Brennan Jeralds (Herrin) 9-10, So. over Jamarcus Agnew (Cahokia) 2-3, Jr. (For.)
9th Place Match
Dashun Caldwell (Granite City) 9-10, Jr. over Rigdon Meacham (Marion) 14-11, Fr. (MD 11-2)
11th Place Match
Anthony Granfeldt (Fairfield) 11-7, Jr. over Billy Green (Granite City) 8-13, Fr. (Fall 2:47)
13th Place Match
Zoee Sadler (Anna-Jonesboro) 23-7, Sr. over Cole Dulumback (Effingham) 16-10, Fr. (TF-1.5 4:29 (16-0))
15th Place Match
James Epplin (Pinckneyville) 8-6, Fr. over Kris Schicker (Salem) 12-16, Fr. (Dec 8-7)
17th Place Match
Nash Harris (McCracken County, KY) 11-10, 7th. over Ian Holzmueller (Carbondale) 10-13, Fr. (MD 12-2)
19th Place Match
Deston Hill (East St. Louis) 5-10, So. over Brody Frey (Highland) 1-11, Fr. (Fall 1:21)
120
1st Place Match
Tyler Clarke (Glenwood) 26-6, Sr. over Kaiden Richards (Murphysboro) 23-5, Sr. (DQ)
3rd Place Match
Kaiden Stewart (Effingham) 23-4, Sr. over Rylan Moore (Salem) 26-7, Fr. (Dec 7-4)
5th Place Match
Gavin Merkle (Highland) 15-5, Sr. over Bradley O`dell (Carbondale) 16-6, Fr. (Dec 6-0)
7th Place Match
Brawnsen Bloodworth (Carterville) 17-8, Sr. over Landon Fausz (Red Bud/Valmeyer) 12-6, Fr. (Fall 5:26)
9th Place Match
Jace Brown (Granite City) 18-9, So. over Antonio Clark (East St. Louis) 13-10, Jr. (Fall 1:01)
11th Place Match
Kenny Novy (Harrisburg) 11-10, So. over Taylor Stroud (McCracken County, KY) 15-10, Fr. (For.)
13th Place Match
Juelz Elliott (Marion) 11-10, So. over Devon Jensen (Freeburg) 13-5, Fr. (Dec 16-13)
15th Place Match
J. R. Wright (Anna-Jonesboro) 15-13, So. over Bryson Schram (Benton/Sesser-Valier) 10-10, Fr. (M. For.)
17th Place Match
Mason Smith-Marcum (Centralia) 7-8, So. over Draven VanAvery (Mt. Vernon) 8-8, So. (Dec 8-2)
19th Place Match
Abraham Jerrells (Frankfort/Christopher) 11-17, So. over Preston Newell (Mascoutah) 5-16, So. (Dec 6-3)
21st Place Match
Max Etherton (Johnston City) 4-14, Fr. over Bentley Stucker (Herrin) 5-12, Fr. (Dec 7-1)
126
1st Place Match
Dawson Hawthorne (Althoff Catholic) 11-0, So. over Drew Sadler (Anna-Jonesboro) 22-5, Sr. (Fall 2:58)
3rd Place Match
Sergio Garcia (Murphysboro) 21-10, Jr. over Riddick Cook (Marion) 15-5, Sr. (TF-1.5 5:34 (18-2))
5th Place Match
Landyn Flood (Carterville) 22-4, Sr. over Matt Crim (Goreville/Dongola/Vienna) 3-2, Jr. (TF-1.5 5:54 (16-1))
7th Place Match
Maguire Leck (Mascoutah) 22-7, Jr. over Kaeden Davis (Richland County) 21-8, So. (For.)
9th Place Match
AJ Williams (Glenwood) 22-13, Jr. over Jedd Wellen (Fairfield) 12-11, Jr. (Fall 3:36)
11th Place Match
Zaven Branch (McCracken County, KY) 17-6, Fr. over Ayden Swan (Carbondale) 13-10, Jr. (M. For.)
13th Place Match
Caleb Osborne (Salem) 21-10, Fr. over Luke Schwarz (Highland) 10-11, Jr. (Fall 0:50)
15th Place Match
Brock Becker (Freeburg) 10-7, So. over Hagle Williams (Frankfort/Christopher) 14-11, Jr. (For.)
17th Place Match
Gabe Eldridge (Herrin) 14-2, Fr. over Lane Deaton (Harrisburg) 8-15, So. (Fall 0:26)
19th Place Match
Hunter Detrick (Marion) 8-5, Fr. over Parker Allison (Granite City) 4-10, Fr. (Fall 2:42)
21st Place Match
Lucas Ashlock (Centralia) 9-9, Fr. over Xzavier Woodside (Pinckneyville) 10-14, Fr. (Fall 1:28)
23rd Place Match
Promise Houston (East St. Louis) 7-10, Jr. over Anthony Garza (Johnston City) 1-13, Fr. (Dec 10-9)
25th Place Match
Brendon Jones (Benton/Sesser-Valier) 5-13, Fr. over Mitchel Toennies (Breese Central) 2-17, Fr. (Fall 0:46)
132
1st Place Match
Brenden Rayl (Althoff Catholic) 19-0, Sr. over Lukas Quartz (Freeburg) 12-5, Fr. (Fall 0:46)
3rd Place Match
Adrian Mendez (Granite City) 17-10, Fr. over Jase Holshouser (Anna-Jonesboro) 14-7, Fr. (Fall 3:20)
5th Place Match
Benjamin Kale (McCracken County, KY) 22-6, Jr. over Cameron Haake (Centralia) 5-5, Sr. (Dec 7-5)
7th Place Match
Aiston Holt (Murphysboro) 14-10, Sr. over Jon Oliver (Carbondale) 7-6, Fr. (Dec 8-1)
9th Place Match
Isiah Findley (Salem) 26-7, So. over Marcus Nobles (Mascoutah) 15-14, Jr. (MD 10-2)
11th Place Match
John Taylor (Althoff Catholic) 11-3, So. over Gabe Lively (Johnston City) 11-7, Sr. (For.)
13th Place Match
J.Q. Mezo (Harrisburg) 10-4, Jr. over Jeret Edwards (Murphysboro) 21-7, Fr. (Fall 2:36)
15th Place Match
Weston Brockmeyer (Red Bud/Valmeyer) 17-12, Fr. over Kingston Palmer (Benton/Sesser-Valier) 13-13, Jr. (M. For.)
17th Place Match
Max Wade (Marion) 18-10, Jr. over Drew Moffit (Glenwood) 9-10, Sr. (Fall 0:42)
19th Place Match
Braxton Gardner (Frankfort/Christopher) 13-16, Jr. over Addison Mann (Carterville) 7-8, So. (Fall 1:26)
21st Place Match
Lane Witucki (Fairfield) 8-14 over Will Hagerstrom (Effingham) 8-17, So. (Fall 2:00)
23rd Place Match
Gavin Maroon (Highland) 5-12, Fr. over Braden Berndt (Herrin) 10-11, Jr. (For.)
25th Place Match
Mason Riggs (Richland County) 2-2, Jr. over Brody Peavler (Richland County) 1-3, Fr. (Dec 12-6)
27th Place Match
Trevor White (Breese Central) 3-20, Fr. over Levi Knapp (Pinckneyville) 4-20, Fr. (M. For.)
138
1st Place Match
Camryn Freiberg (McCracken County, KY) 26-3, Sr. over Gavin Pedigo (Mt. Vernon) 11-6, Jr. (Fall 1:19)
3rd Place Match
Braxton Tolley (Granite City) 21-9, So. over Robbie Schallert (Althoff Catholic) 11-3, Jr. (Fall 0:34)
5th Place Match
Desi Wade (Mascoutah) 24-7, So. over Jace Weaver (Johnston City) 13-7, Jr. (Fall 3:48)
7th Place Match
Lemar Treshansky (Murphysboro) 18-12, Fr. over Xavier Toliver-Cook (Carbondale) 12-12, Jr. (Fall 1:32)
9th Place Match
Gavin Slack (Carterville) 17-11, Jr. over Kevan Moore (Salem) 22-6, So. (Dec 9-4)
11th Place Match
Zane Bartz (East Alton-Wood River) 8-6, Fr. over Broden Becker (Freeburg) 9-8, So. (Fall 3:00)
13th Place Match
Zach Manning (Red Bud/Valmeyer) 19-10, Sr. over Wyatt Wright (Anna-Jonesboro) 13-13, Sr. (Fall 2:03)
15th Place Match
Eli Britton (Glenwood) 6-6, Fr. over Jaycen McBride (Marion) 8-10, Sr. (For.)
17th Place Match
Kaden Blades (Benton/Sesser-Valier) 9-4, Jr. over Mason Bushue (Effingham) 10-10, So. (Fall 1:29)
19th Place Match
Omar Mendez (Granite City) 7-13, Fr. over Mark Norris (Cahokia) 2-3, Jr. (For.)
21st Place Match
Logan Hoppes (Highland) 6-11, Sr. over Matix Martinez (Centralia) 5-11, So. (Fall 1:29)
23rd Place Match
Harley Coram (Fairfield) 2-3, Sr. over Josh Gale (Pinckneyville) 6-13, Fr. (Fall 1:07)
25th Place Match
Rocko Neal (Harrisburg) 11-10, Jr. over Elliot Imboden (Carbondale) 2-3, Fr. (Fall 1:45)
27th Place Match
Landyn Jones (Richland County) 1-3, Jr. over Chase Heimann (Breese Central) 3-15, So. (Fall 0:23)
144
1st Place Match
Dillon White (Mt. Vernon) 15-0, Sr. over Bryce Edwards (Murphysboro) 24-4, Sr. (Fall 1:51)
3rd Place Match
Nate Page (Marion) 19-8, Fr. over Joe Prideaux (Carbondale) 20-10, Jr. (Fall 3:26)
5th Place Match
Derek Wilkey (Benton/Sesser-Valier) 25-6, So. over Benjamin Harris (Johnston City) 14-7, Sr. (Fall 1:23)
7th Place Match
ryan Hogue (Althoff Catholic) 11-5, Jr. over Jayden Wilkinson (Mascoutah) 14-15, Jr. (Fall 5:45)
9th Place Match
Jay Klemish (Breese Central) 18-12, Jr. over Andrew McElroy (Granite City) 10-17, So. (Dec 4-3)
11th Place Match
Tyler Nolan (Granite City) 9-17, Fr. over Royce Conn (McCracken County, KY) 15-12, Jr. (Fall 3:54)
13th Place Match
Kade Orrell (Salem) 25-8, Fr. over Tyler Adams (East Alton-Wood River) 7-8, Sr. (TF-1.5 3:10 (16-0))
15th Place Match
Nick Bisching (Carterville) 7-9, Sr. over Joshua White (East St. Louis) 11-14, So. (Dec 8-7)
17th Place Match
Tristan Tapp (Trico) 12-8, So. over Dawson Brunner (Anna-Jonesboro) 14-10, Jr. (Fall 3:31)
19th Place Match
Tyler Russell (Herrin) 5-7, Jr. over Brayden Setzer (Red Bud/Valmeyer) 13-16, Fr. (MD 8-0)
21st Place Match
Brayden Pate (Centralia) 7-9, Jr. over Levi Paddock (Richland County) 6-10, So. (Fall 1:06)
23rd Place Match
Gavin Phillips (Salem) 5-3 over Keaton Lambert (Harrisburg) 3-11, So. (Fall 2:19)
25th Place Match
Ean Kreher (Freeburg) 5-9, So. over Jayden Johnson (Goreville) 2-3, Jr. (MD 9-0)
27th Place Match
Vance Vanway (Fairfield) 5-14, So. over Gabe Raddatz (Effingham) 4-20, So. (Dec 21-15)
29th Place Match
Jeremiah McCaskill (Cahokia) 0-3, Fr. Bye
150
1st Place Match
Brock Ross (Mascoutah) 30-1, Jr. over Caden Frey (Marion) 18-5, Jr. (TF-1.5 3:52 (16-0))
3rd Place Match
Keyton King (Salem) 30-2, Sr. over James Barragan (McCracken County, KY) 21-3, Sr. (Dec 6-0)
5th Place Match
Jon Martin (Carbondale) 18-7, Jr. over Nic Masterson (Fairfield) 14-8, Sr. (TF-1.5 3:03 (20-2))
7th Place Match
Lucas Parker (Frankfort/Christopher) 16-10, So. over Baker Moon (Effingham) 15-6, Jr. (Fall 3:08)
9th Place Match
Max Wolter (Red Bud) 20-6, Jr. over Jerry Tate (Johnston City) 11-5, Sr. (Fall 0:53)
11th Place Match
Brock Felty (Harrisburg) 13-11, Sr. over Anthony Miller (Carbondale) 10-4, Jr. (Fall 4:05)
13th Place Match
Alex Schallert (Althoff Catholic) 9-5, Jr. over Landon Johnson (East Alton-Wood River) 9-10, Jr. (MD 12-3)
15th Place Match
Nicholas Supancic (Benton/Sesser-Valier) 8-16, Sr. over Aidan Bramlett (Carterville) 9-13, Jr. (MD 16-8)
17th Place Match
Colsen Wagoner (Breese Central) 12-11, Jr. over Jarred Evans (Centralia) 7-14, So. (TF-1.5 3:00 (20-4))
19th Place Match
Zachary Earney (Granite City) 4-8, So. over Cameron Golladay (Anna-Jonesboro) 4-9, Sr. (For.)
21st Place Match
Patrick Dover (Murphysboro) 7-18, Jr. over Brady Woodsworth (Goreville/Dongola/Vienna) 0-4, Sr. (Fall 2:47)
23rd Place Match
Miles Tompson (Richland County) 0-4, So. Bye
157
1st Place Match
Tyson Rakers (Highland) 18-1, Sr. over Matthew Walsh (Breese Central) 21-5, Jr. (TF-1.5 4:46 (20-4))
3rd Place Match
Jordan Sonon-Hale (Mascoutah) 23-6, Jr. over Lonnez Smith (East St. Louis) 18-8, Jr. (Dec 9-3)
5th Place Match
Tiffin Kouzoukas (Benton/Sesser-Valier) 27-4, Sr. over Alex Wolter (Red Bud/Valmeyer) 21-8, Sr. (Fall 3:36)
7th Place Match
Cooper Lobek (Salem) 22-10, Sr. over Justin Murphy (Marion) 16-10, Sr. (For.)
9th Place Match
Tyshawn Welch (Carbondale) 13-9, Jr. over Micheal Minor (Frankfort/Christopher) 19-9, Jr. (Dec 9-8)
11th Place Match
Peyton Robinson (Benton/Sesser-Valier) 20-12, Jr. over Jeremiah Musgrave (Fairfield) 10-7, Sr. (Dec 5-0)
13th Place Match
John Walters (Marion) 10-6, Jr. over Haegan Hughes (Murphysboro) 16-11, So. (Fall 2:15)
15th Place Match
Lucas Salazar (Anna-Jonesboro) 11-16, Sr. over Ben McDowell (Effingham) 10-17, Fr. (MD 10-0)
17th Place Match
Garrett Ray (Herrin) 7-5, So. over Karson Lukancic (Harrisburg) 6-13, So. (Fall 0:46)
19th Place Match
Jose Silva (Carterville) 6-8, Jr. over William Ellis (Trico/Elverado) 6-12, So. (Fall 1:18)
21st Place Match
Jaydeb Emery (East Alton-Wood River) 6-9, Fr. over Braden McGee (Johnston City) 4-13, So. (Fall 1:57)
23rd Place Match
Konner Mayoral (Centralia) 3-13, So. over Logan Harrelson (Goreville/Dongola/Vienna) 1-4, Fr. (Fall 0:50)
25th Place Match
Markus Dunn (Cahokia) 1-2, So. over Bowen Weesner (Richland County) 0-3, Fr. (TF-1.5 3:16 (19-3))
165
1st Place Match
Pierre Walton (East St. Louis) 19-1, Jr. over Tate Miller (Marion) 23-6, Sr. (Fall 1:32)
3rd Place Match
Thomas Imboden (Carbondale) 18-6, Sr. over Kolby Coffey (Herrin) 15-4, Sr. (Dec 6-5)
5th Place Match
Maxon Stearns (Murphysboro) 22-8, So. over Granger Motch (Salem) 26-8, Jr. (MD 12-0)
7th Place Match
Briar Butler (Harrisburg) 18-5, Sr. over Trevor Fath (Pinckneyville) 17-8, Jr. (Fall 5:07)
9th Place Match
Sean Murphy (Mascoutah) 22-8, Jr. over Maizon Milestone (Glenwood) 20-13, Sr. (Fall 3:51)
11th Place Match
Kobe Cali (Benton/Sesser-Valier) 8-3, Jr. over Austin Wilkinson (Althoff Catholic) 14-9, Fr. (SV-1 6-3)
13th Place Match
Elijah Kolb (Granite City) 12-16, Sr. over Gavin Langley (Highland) 9-11, Jr. (Fall 4:14)
15th Place Match
Bryson Aaron (Frankfort/Christopher) 13-14, Fr. over Gavin Baldwin (Red Bud/Valmeyer) 9-13, Sr. (TF-1.5 1:42 (15-0))
17th Place Match
Kindall Williams (Cahokia) 4-1, Sr. over Gage Emmerich (Effingham) 7-6, Jr. (Dec 9-2)
19th Place Match
Geremia Lodi (Richland County) 8-12, Sr. over Preston Camp (Salem) 8-5, So. (For.)
21st Place Match
Spencer Crotser (Carterville) 14-11, Jr. over Aiden Dunn (Fairfield) 5-5, Jr. (Fall 1:50)
23rd Place Match
Jeramiah Walden (Carbondale) 7-12, Jr. over Joseph Hutton (Centralia) 10-9, Sr. (For.)
25th Place Match
Myan Carter (Anna-Jonesboro) 3-3, Jr. over Drake Hilliard (Goreville/Dongola/Vienna) 2-3, Jr. (Fall 2:26)
27th Place Match
Landen Ricklefs (Breese Central) 5-14, Jr. over Travis Dugge (East Alton-Wood River) 3-10, So. (Fall 0:44)
29th Place Match
Antoine Georis (Richland County) 1-3, Sr. over Landon Kreher (Freeburg) 4-9, Jr. (Fall 2:10)
175
1st Place Match
Eli Miller (Granite City) 20-9, Fr. over Carter Jones (Carterville) 15-4, So. (Fall 3:08)
3rd Place Match
Talan Keoughan (Fairfield) 19-4, Sr. over Truett Blount (Mascoutah) 10-9, Sr. (Fall 0:42)
5th Place Match
Colin Hughey (Trico/Elverado) 20-3, Sr. over Clayton Dent (Frankfort/Christopher) 21-6, Sr. (MD 12-1)
7th Place Match
Grayson Sanders (Marion) 18-10, Sr. over Izaiah Dalton (Benton/Sesser-Valier) 20-8, Sr. (M. For.)
9th Place Match
Logan Tanner (Murphysboro) 21-10, So. over Caleb Williford (Harrisburg) 13-6, Sr. (Dec 5-4)
11th Place Match
Corey Robinson (East St. Louis) 17-9, So. over Killian Merrill (Salem) 23-8, Jr. (Dec 7-6)
13th Place Match
Liam Kobbeman (Highland) 13-10, Sr. over Juan Salazar (Johnston City) 13-7, So. (MD 8-0)
15th Place Match
Cody Trowbridge (Highland) 7-3, Sr. over Dakari Westley (Carbondale) 9-6, Fr. (Fall 2:27)
17th Place Match
Logan McDonald (Richland County) 8-7, Sr. over Kaylin Riley (Freeburg) 11-7, Jr. (Fall 2:41)
19th Place Match
Titus Dover (Anna-Jonesboro) 10-8, Fr. over Dominick Khoshaba (Herrin) 4-8 (Fall 2:38)
21st Place Match
Wyatt Rau (Salem) 7-2 over Brayden Hicks (Red Bud/Valmeyer) 8-13, Sr. (Fall 3:43)
23rd Place Match
Chevelle Isom (Marion) 10-5, Jr. over Anakin Ricklefs (Breese Central) 6-18, Jr. (Fall 3:51)
25th Place Match
Reed Nichols (Centralia) 7-12, So. over Trent Reardon (Effingham) 4-13, Jr. (Fall 1:03)
27th Place Match
Grayson Peak (Althoff Catholic) 5-6, So. over Pierre Taylor (Cahokia) 1-4, So. (For.)
29th Place Match
Steven Scroggins (East Alton-Wood River) 0-3, So. Bye
190
1st Place Match
Conner Henson (Frankfort/Christopher) 30-0, Sr. over Danny Jackson (Red Bud/Valmeyer) 26-2, Fr. (Fall 2:42)
3rd Place Match
Evan Francis (Marion) 18-8, Jr. over Johnny Ramaker (Trico/Elverado) 15-4, Jr. (Dec 3-2)
5th Place Match
Terry Mick (Carterville) 22-7, So. over Ethan Greenwald (Highland) 6-4, Sr. (Fall 3:06)
7th Place Match
Jacob Miller Green (Freeburg) 10-7, Fr. over Isaiah Harris (McCracken County, KY) 8-5, Jr. (DFF)
9th Place Match
Carson Osborne (Salem) 27-4, Sr. over Martez Williams (Cahokia) 3-2, So. (TF-1.5 3:00 (20-2))
11th Place Match
Nick Christopher (Murphysboro) 10-12, Jr. over James Flores (Benton/Sesser-Valier) 10-10, Jr. (Dec 6-3)
13th Place Match
Matthew Marshall (Althoff Catholic) 7-8, So. over Harrison Redinous (Mascoutah) 2-3, Fr. (Fall 3:35)
15th Place Match
Canaan Cook (East Alton-Wood River) 5-4, Jr. over Layne Flach (Effingham) 5-15, Jr. (Fall 3:44)
17th Place Match
Brendan Hicks (Harrisburg) 11-5, Sr. over Alex Palmer (Anna-Jonesboro) 11-11, Sr. (TF-1.5 2:39 (18-1))
19th Place Match
Jonathan Moss (Breese Central) 6-14, Jr. over Delton Morgan (Richland County) 1-4, So. (Fall 1:57)
21st Place Match
Evan Musgrave (Fairfield) 2-7, Jr. over Hunter Nichols (Centralia) 4-17, So. (Fall 1:04)
23rd Place Match
Noah Drummond (Herrin) 5-14, Sr. over Kolton Hildebrand (Granite City) 1-12, So. (M. For.)
215
Guaranteed Places
1st Place Match
Ashton Zobrist (Highland) 18-4, Sr. over Drake Champlin (East Alton-Wood River) 16-1, Sr. (UTB 4-3)
3rd Place Match
Brandon Turner (Frankfort/Christopher) 25-3, Sr. over Zander Schrader (Richland County) 22-7, Jr. (Fall 1:17)
5th Place Match
Braxton Welge (Harrisburg) 17-4, Jr. over Caybren Hubbard (Murphysboro) 22-11, So. (MD 12-4)
7th Place Match
Stephen Ache (Althoff Catholic) 10-4, Jr. over Brody Beckmann (Breese Central) 13-8, Jr. (Fall 1:02)
9th Place Match
Bryan Madinger (Marion) 19-7, Sr. over Carl Watkins (Carterville) 19-9, So. (TF-1.5 2:32 (17-2))
11th Place Match
Abel Faircloth (Mascoutah) 8-17, So. over Joeseph Hercules (Johnston City) 9-7, Jr. (Fall 2:59)
13th Place Match
Logan Dirden (Herrin) 5-3, Sr. over Reid Dillow (Trico/Elverado) 7-10, So. (MD 11-2)
15th Place Match
Braden Bush (Althoff Catholic) 8-7, Jr. over Tristan Burnett (Granite City) 9-14, So. (Fall 0:23)
17th Place Match
Keegan Bare (Fairfield) 4-1, Sr. over Connor Daly (Carbondale) 19-13, Jr. (Dec 6-0)
19th Place Match
Femi Balugun (Glenwood) 3-2 over Domonique Bryant (McCracken County, KY) 4-7, Sr. (Fall 3:45)
21st Place Match
Kevin Haywood (East St. Louis) 8-8, So. over Payton Fruits (Pinckneyville) 6-11, So. (Fall 0:48)
23rd Place Match
Leo Pilcher (Salem) 5-11, So. over Keegan Woodall (Effingham) 4-15, So. (Fall 4:21)
25th Place Match
Tristin Vail (Marion) 8-3, Fr. over M`lyk Berry (Cahokia) 1-3, Fr. (Fall 3:10)
27th Place Match
Braxton Lingle-Hurt (Goreville/Dongola/Vienna) 1-3, So. over Michael Lukesh (Goreville/Dongola/Vienna) 0-4, Fr. (Dec 3-2)
29th Place Match
Luke McNiel (Effingham) 0-3 Bye
285
1st Place Match
Jason Dowell (Althoff Catholic) 16-0, Sr. over Demarco Clark (Cahokia) 12-3, Sr. (Fall 1:28)
3rd Place Match
Bentley Rogers (Fairfield) 18-5, Sr. over Enrique Morales (Althoff Catholic) 3-2 (Fall 5:05)
5th Place Match
Jack Amann (Freeburg) 12-6, So. over Jeremiah Lorton (Effingham) 19-5, Jr. (Dec 4-1)
7th Place Match
Matt Brown (Harrisburg) 20-5, Jr. over Jordyn Lomax-Brown (Carbondale) 15-6, Sr. (For.)
9th Place Match
Julien Tanner (Murphysboro) 11-3, Jr. over Michael Soto (East Alton-Wood River) 10-6, Jr. (Fall 1:54)
11th Place Match
Jeremiah Bouchard (Carterville) 17-10, So. over Gentry Michels (Richland County) 16-14, Fr. (Fall 1:19)
13th Place Match
Logan Black (Marion) 10-16, So. over Bradey Starr (Centralia) 9-13, So. (TF-1.5 2:51 (17-2))
15th Place Match
Tyson Wilson (Benton/Sesser-Valier) 2-3, Jr. over Max Watson (McCracken County, KY) 10-10, So. (For.)
17th Place Match
Levi Jones (Anna-Jonesboro) 14-5, Sr. over Ethyn Bradley (Goreville/Dongola/Vienna) 2-3, Sr. (DQ)
19th Place Match
Luke Pruett (Breese Central) 10-12, So. over Marcus Smith (Johnston City) 5-12, Sr. (Fall 1:21)
21st Place Match
Alex Crites (Mascoutah) 1-11, Jr. over Dennis Rottmann (Highland) 3-17, Fr. (Dec 3-1)
23rd Place Match
Westin Riley (Frankfort/Christopher) 0-4, So. Bye
Team Scores
1. Althoff Catholic 192, 2. Marion 181, 3. Murphysboro 176, 4. Mascoutah 168.5, 5. Granite City 145, 6. Carterville 136.5, 7. Highland 128.5, 8. Frankfort/Christopher 121, 9. Benton/Sesser-Valier 119, 10. Carbondale 114.5, 11. McCracken County, KY 109, 12. Anna-Jonesboro 107, 13. Salem 104.5, 14. Fairfield 99, 15. Glenwood 98.5, 16. Harrisburg 98.5, 17. East St. Louis 89.5, 18. Mt. Vernon 87.5, 19. Cahokia 72.5, 20. Breese Central 70.5, 21. Freeburg 70, 21. Red Bud/Valmeyer 70, 23. East Alton-Wood River 66, 24. Richland County 64.5, 25. Effingham 63.5, 26. Herrin 63, 27. Johnston City 62.5, 28. Trico/Elverado 52, 29. Centralia 49, 30. Goreville/Dongola/Vienna 25, 31. Pinckneyville 11.

Marion edges Glenwood for Carbondale Murdale Girls title
The outcome of Carbondale’s Murdale Girls Wrestling Tournament came down to the very last match and Marion got a pin from Olivia McDermott over Cahokia’s Kamryn Brown in 1:41 in the third-place match at 285 to give the Wildcats 105 points, which was four more than runner-up Glenwood, who owned a 101-100 advantage heading into the final match of the event.
McCracken County, Kentucky took third place with 92 points while Cahokia (82), Freeburg (79), Vandalia (66.5), Frankfort/Christopher (66), Unity (55), Granite City (53) and Murphysboro (47) rounded out the top 10 teams in the competition which featured athletes from 24 schools.
1 – Marion
Leading the way for coach Darren Lindsey’s champion Wildcats were title winner Alauni Muex (18-2 at 120), third-place finishers Melissa Comerford (12-5 at 145) and Olivia McDermott (13-4 at 235) and fourth-place medalists Nevaeh Duey (120), DJ Tucker-Lester (130) and Joelene Nappier-Feth (9-4 at 135).
Others who were part of the dramatic title win were Alexis Shepard (100), Carley Williams (125), Addison Arnold (12-9 at 130), Brooklyn Phemister (12-5 at 140), Riki Herman (155), Daisjha Cooper (11-6 at 155), Mykenzie Reams (8-7 at 170) and Sofia Hernandez-Pina (190).
The Wildcats had a busy stretch as they also took part in Caldwell County’s Richey Rumble on Thursday in Princeton, Kentucky where they scored 89 points and placed seventh out of 18 teams and were the lone school from north of the Ohio River to take part in the competition. Top finishers in the Rumble were Muex (second at 120), Comerford (second at 145), Shepard (fifth at 100), Nappier-Feth (fifth at 138), McDermott (fifth at 285) and Williams (sixth at 126).
“She’s one of the hardest working wrestlers on the team,” Lindsey said of Muex. “Marion has wrestled in four tournaments and she has been in the finals of all of them racking up three second-place finishes to go with her Murdale championship. She is only a second-year wrestler but she works hard and is hungry to get better. Marion has good numbers on the girls team, filling 12 of the 14 weight classes, and that really helps with the team’s success. Our other top wrestlers have been senior Olivia McDermott, sophomore Mellissa Comerford and junior Brooklyn Phemister.”
2 – Glenwood
Coach Garrad Straube’s Titans came up just a bit short of winning the championship with only six entrants after also finishing six points behind champion North Callaway, Missouri at the Orchard Farm Invitational in Saint Charles, Missouri on December 13 with just five individuals competing and placing third at Jacksonville’s Crimson Ladies Holiday Invite on December 30, again with just six competitors.
Top performers for the Titans were champions Kadi Wilbern (22-1 at 105) and Jenna Tuxhorn (22-1 at 145), runners-up Olivia Jarrett (115) and Isabella Resendez (19-7 at 135) as well as third-place finisher Kenzi Milestone (21-8 at 130) while Elsie Dozier (12-12 at 155) also added points as the team with only six entrants came up just short of capturing the championship.
“We had a good tournament,” Straube said. “We’re a young team. We were close to winning the Murdale Tournament, but that’s not necessarily our goal as a team right now. We’re taking huge strides, but I’d rather take six girls who work really hard and want to make a real impact than a bunch of people who you can’t count on. We’re developing and moving towards the postseason really well. I was impressed we were that close to the top, but I want to be right there in a few weeks.”
3 – McCracken County, Kentucky
Turning in the best finishes for coach Steven Spadafino’s Mustangs from Paducah, Kentucky were runners-up Emmery Evans (16-7 at 100) and Hermayoni Gembe (130) and third-place finisher Lakelynn Janssen (16-6 at 125) while Jillian Conn (6-4 at 100), Eelynn Hayden (11-4 at 125) and Lillian Harned (13-7 at 190) all finished in fourth place.
Murdale Invitational championships were also won by Granite City’s Audrey Barnes (18-3 at 135) and Demi Barnes (15-3 at 170), Mt. Vernon’s Lily Davis (7-3 at 100), Anna-Joneboro’s Haydyn Williamson (10-4 at 110), Carbondale’s Delaney Measimer (13-0 at 115). Vandalia’s Sophie Bowers (17-0 at 125), Cahokia’s Te’Aja Young (4-0 at 130), Carterville’s Jacee Mardirosian (9-4 at 140), Freeburg’s Grace Stratton (10-4 at 155), Goreville/Dongola/Vienna’s Krista McBride (13-1 at 190) and Unity’s Phoenix Molina (18-3 at 235).
Stratton and Young tied for the lead in most team points with 28 while Mardirosian, Muex and Tuxhorn all ranked third with 26 points. Bowers scored 25 team points while Demi Barnes, McBride and Measimer all collected 24 points and Williamson had 23.5 team points.
Others who claimed second-place finishes were Freeburg’s Brielle Becker (12-3 at 105) and Aubrey Raban (3-1 at 140), Vandalia’s Brynn Swyers (12-5 at 170) and Gracey Simmons (7-3 at 235), Red Bud/Valmeyer’s Emma Smith (10-8 at 110), Frankfort/Christopher’s Sophia Bechelli (7-2 at 120), Murphysboro’s Gabby Mason (11-2 at 125), Mascoutah’s Rylee Mathews (8-4 at 145), Unity’s Anna Vasey (20-3 at 155) and Highland’s Sophia Elkins (8-4 at 190).
Additional third-place finishers were Frankfort/Christopher’s Nikolette Ronketto (12-2 at 100), Granite City’s Briana Ramirez (14-6 at 105), Johnston City’s Kenni Lafollete (110), Breese Central’s Abigayle Haller (5-2 at 115), Mascoutah’s Zoe Nelson (12-4 at 120), East St. Louis’ Jariyah Powell (9-4 at 135), Mt. Vernon’s Daniya Musgrave (9-4 at 140), Murphysboro’s Nahima Mateo (11-2 at 155), Cahokia’s Janylah Holman (3-1 at 170) and Trico/Elverado’s Maddie Ramaker (3-1 at 190).
And fourth-place efforts were also turned in by Cahokia’s Simia Brown (3-2 at 140) and Kamryn Brown (6-4 at 235), Mascoutah’s Jhayla Lawson (105), Unity’s Elizabeth Farney (110), Freeburg’s Aubrey Rutmanis (10-8 at 115), Murphysboro’s Roxie Royster (145), Salem’s Sierra Malone (5-2 at 155) and Frankfort/Christopher’s Lily Browning (7-4 at 170).
Murphysboro’s Nahima Mateo, Freeburg’s Grace Stratton and Cahokia’s Te’Aja Young all had the most falls with four. Vandalia’s Sophie Bowers led all competitors with 45 total match points while Mt. Vernon’s Lily Davis was next-best with 42 points. Young won the championship at 130 despite being seeded ninth, the largest seed to place difference in the tournament.
Carbondale Murdale Girls Wrestling Tournament place matches
100
1st Place Match
Lily Davis (Mt. Vernon) 7-3, So. over Emmery Evans (McCracken County, KY) 16-7, 7th. (MD 13-4)
3rd Place Match
Nikolette Ronketto (Frankfort/Christopher) 12-2, Sr. over Jillian Conn (McCracken County, KY) 6-4, Fr. (MD 14-2)
105
1st Place Match
Kadi Wilbern (Glenwood) 22-1, So. over Brielle Becker (Freeburg) 12-3, Fr. (Fall 3:29) – round robin
3rd Place Match
Briana Ramirez (Granite City) 14-6, Jr. over Jhayla Lawson (Mascoutah) 0-3, Fr. (MD 12-2)
110
1st Place Match
Haydyn Williamson (Anna-Jonesboro) 10-4, So. over Emma Smith (Red Bud/Valmeyer) 10-8, So. (TF-1.5 4:33 (19-3))
3rd Place Match
Kenni Lafollete (Johnston City) 7-10, Fr. over Elizabeth Farney (Unity) 9-12, So. (Fall 1:55)
115
1st Place Match
Delaney Measimer (Carbondale) 13-0, So. over Olivia Jarrett (Glenwood) 7-8, Fr. (Fall 1:51)
3rd Place Match
Abigayle Haller (Breese Central) 5-2, So. over Aubrey Rutmanis (Freeburg) 10-8, Fr. (Fall 0:22)
120
1st Place Match
Alauni Muex (Marion) 18-2, Jr. over Sophia Bechelli (Frankfort/Christopher) 7-2, Jr. (Fall 3:14)
3rd Place Match
Zoe Nelson (Mascoutah) 12-4 over Nevaeh Duey (Marion) 4-5, So. (Fall 1:20)
125
1st Place Match
Sophie Bowers (Vandalia) 17-0, Sr. over Gabby Mason (Murphysboro) 11-2, Jr. (TF-1.5 2:22 (19-2))
3rd Place Match
Lakelynn Janssen (McCracken County, KY) 16-6, Sr. over Eelynn Hayden (McCracken County, KY) 11-4, Fr. (For.)
130
1st Place Match
Te`Aja Young (Cahokia) 4-0, Fr. over Hermayoni Gembe (McCracken County, KY) 10-10, Jr. (Fall 0:33)
3rd Place Match
Kenzi Milestone (Glenwood) 21-8, Fr. over DJ Tucker-Lester (Marion) 8-9, Jr. (Fall 2:32)
135
1st Place Match
Audrey Barnes (Granite City) 18-3, So. over Isabella Resendez (Glenwood) 19-7, So. (Dec 5-0)
3rd Place Match
Jariyah Powell (East St. Louis) 9-4, Fr. over Joelene Nappier-Feth (Marion) 9-4, So. (TF-1.5 4:29 (15-0))
140
1st Place Match
Jacee Mardirosian (Carterville) 9-4, So. over Aubrey Raban (Freeburg) 3-1, Sr. (Fall 4:00)
3rd Place Match
Daniya Musgrave (Mt. Vernon) 9-4, Fr. over Simia Brown (Cahokia) 3-2, Sr. (Fall 3:02)
145
1st Place Match
Jenna Tuxhorn (Glenwood) 22-1, Jr. over Rylee Mathews (Mascoutah) 8-4, Fr. (Fall 1:30)
3rd Place Match
Melissa Comerford (Marion) 12-5, So. over Roxie Royster (Murphysboro) 4-5, Jr. (Fall 5:58)
155
1st Place Match
Grace Stratton (Freeburg) 10-4, Jr. over Anna Vasey (Unity) 20-3, Jr. (Fall 2:38)
3rd Place Match
Nahima Mateo (Murphysboro) 11-2, Jr. over Sierra Malone (Salem) 5-2, Jr. (Fall 1:04)
170
1st Place Match
Demi Barnes (Granite City) 15-3, Fr. over Brynn Swyers (Vandalia) 12-5, Jr. (Fall 2:53)
3rd Place Match
Janylah Holman (Cahokia) 3-1, Fr. over Lily Browning (Frankfort/Christopher) 7-4, So. (Fall 0:49)
190
1st Place Match
Krista McBride (Goreville/Dongola/Vienna) 13-1, Jr. over Sophia Elkins (Highland) 8-4, So. (Fall 5:03)
3rd Place Match
Maddie Ramaker (Trico/Elverado) 3-1, Sr. over Lillian Harned (McCracken County, KY) 13-7, So. (Fall 5:52)
235
1st Place Match
Phoenix Molina (Unity) 18-3, Jr. over Gracey Simmons (Vandalia) 7-3, So. (Fall 3:04)
3rd Place Match
Olivia McDermott (Marion) 13-4, Sr. over Kamryn Brown (Cahokia) 6-4, Fr. (Fall 1:41)
Team scores
1. Marion 105, 2. Glenwood 101, 3. McCracken County, KY 92, 4. Cahokia 82, 5. Freeburg 79, 6. Vandalia 66.5, 7. Frankfort/Christopher 66, 8. Unity 55, 9. Granite City 53, 10. Murphysboro 47, 11. Mascoutah 45, 12. Mt. Vernon 36.5, 13. Carbondale 30, 14. Carterville 29, 15. Anna-Jonesboro
27.5, 16. Salem 26.5, 17. Goreville/Dongola/Vienna 24, 18. Red Bud/Valmeyer 21, 19. Breese Central 20. Johnston City 19, 21. Highland 18, 22. East St. Louis 16.5, 23. Trico/Elverado 16, 24. Benton/Sesser-Valier 10.

Yorkville Christian wins title at Unity Christian New Years Duals
Yorkville Christian added to titles that it won last month at Joliet Central’s McLaughlin and at Plano’s Reaper when it claimed top honors at Unity Christian’s New Years Duals in Decatur by claiming a 63-12 victory over Mattoon in the first-place meet of the championship division.
Clinton edged Heyworth 41-40 to claim third place while Tremont beat Illinois Valley Central 51-18 for fifth place and the host Unity Christian/Argenta-Oreana co-op won 41-29 over Mahomet-Seymour to finish in seventh place.
In the challenge division, Pittsfield took first with a 33-30 win over Centennial, Rantoul beat University High 54-30 for third place and Alleman won 51-12 over Ridgeview/Lexington for fifth.
Coach Mike Vester’s champion Mustangs advanced to the title meet with a 60-0 victory over Heyworth in the semifinals after beating Mahomet-Seymour 72-0 in the quarterfinals.
Top performers for the first-place Mustangs were Ryan Festerling, Jr. (106/113), 7-0; Aiden Larsen (120/126), 7-0; Austin Wadas-Luis (144/150), 7-0; Hayden Wheeler (190), 7-0; Robby Nelson (157), 6-0; Garrett Tunnell (285), 6-0; Isaac Gray (165), 5-0; Tyler Gleason (175), 4-0; Adrian Wadas-Luis (138), 6-1; Xander Oliver (215), 5-1; Owen Curran (144/150), 5-2; Christian Sandoval (113/120), 5-2; and Ryan Alaimo (126/132), 4-2.
“It was a good weekend to get some matches for a lot of our kids, including many of our JV and backups,” Vester said. “We had three starters out as well so this gave them a chance to get well and heal up for our January push.
“The kids wrestled really loose and it was a great team bonding weekend staying overnight on Friday and spending two days together growing as a team. We have a tourney this week at Morton where there will be some great wrestling with teams like Geneseo, Normal Community, Morton, etc. And next week we have a home tri meet with Morris and Ottawa Marquette and then travel on Saturday to take on number four Brother Rice.”
The runner-up Mattoon Greenwave, who are coached by Brett Porter, won 49-26 over Clinton in the semifinals after beating Illinois Valley Central 53-24 in the quarterfinals.
Leading the way for Mattoon were Ben Capitosti (144/150), 7-0; Tristan Porter (126/132), 7-0; Brody Goonan (138/144), 6-1; Mitchell Clapp (215), 5-1; Ean Freeman (165/175), 5-1; Vincent Gibson (120), 5-1; Creed Cole (106), 5-2; and Blaine Howell (175/190), 4-2.
In the championship dual, Larsen opened with a fall over Gibson at 120, Porter won a 13-6 decision over Alaimo and then Jackson Witt pinned Aceson Lee and Adrian Wadas-Luis won by fall over Goonan to give the Mustangs an 18-3 lead. After Capitosti recorded a fall over Curran, Austin Wadas-Luis pinned Brayden Dailey and Nelson won by fall over Josh Dubson.
Yorkville Christian continued its run as Gray won a major decision over Freeman, Gleason pinned Daijuan Hester and Wheeler picked up a forfeit win. After Clapp won a 6-2 decision over Oliver, Tunnell won by forfeit, Festerling was a winner by technical fall over Cole and Sandoval picked up a forfeit win to conclude the title meet and cap a 7-0 weekend for the Mustangs.
The third-place Clinton Maroons moved to the semifinals with a 42-38 over Unity Christian/Argenta-Oreana while fourth place Heyworth beat Tremont 43-36 to reach the semifinals. Clinton, which is coached by Matt Cooper, claimed third after getting two pins and two forfeit wins in the late going to rally from a 34-17 deficit with five matches left to win by one point over coach Andrew Sims’ Hornets.
Turning in the best showings for Clinton were Cayden Bostic (106), 7-0; Dawson Thayer (285), 7-0; Kristan Hibbard (190), 5-0; Dave Advincula (215), 5-1; Briley Carter (120), 4-1; Ariana Humes (113), 4-1; Brayden Dalton (126/132), 5-2; and Gabe Walker (138), 4-2.
Posting the best records for Heyworth were Tristan Stamp (165), 4-0; Trevor Soice (144), 6-1; Landon Nieslawski (106/113), 5-2; Carter Brooks (157), 3-1; and Brody Simons (175), 3-1.
Tremont bounced back from its loss to Heyworth with a 42-33 win over Mahomet-Seymour while IVC followed its loss to Mattoon with a 34-25 victory over Unity Christian/Argenta-Oreana.
Leading the way for Tremont were Bowden Delaney (175/190), 6-0; Chase Stedman (138/144), 5-1; Will Vicary (157/165), 4-1; Levi Horton (144), 3-1; Nicky Weber (113/120), 5-2; Blaine Williams (175/190), 5-2; Gavin Stoker (120/126), 4-2; and Owen Weiss (150/157), 4-2.
Illinois Valley Central was led by Owen Moser (175), 6-1; and Antonio Toliver (150/157), 3-1.
Turning in the top records for host Unity Christian/Argenta-Oreana were Clinton VerHeecke (138/144), 7-0; Garrett VerHeecke (132), 7-0; Everett Roughton (157), 4-0; Thomas Kralik (138/144), 3-0; and Gavin George (144), 3-1.
The best efforts for Mahomet-Seymour were turned in by Myles Hartzler (106), 5-1; Nino Caballero (157), 3-1; Mason Corray (285), 3-1; and Liam Noonan (126), 4-2.
Pittsfield beat Saint Thomas More 42-16 and University High 47-18 to reach the challenge division first-place match where it met up with Centennial, who beat Rantoul 41-36 to advance.
Leading the way for Pittsfield were Jake Oitker (157), 7-0; Elijah Terpstra (285), 4-0; Tucker Pines (132/138), 6-1; Fisher McEuen (175), 4-1; Waylon White (165), 4-1; Bodine Marable (215), 3-1; Joel Noble (132/138), 5-2;and Tucker Cook (190), 4-2.
Posting the top records for Centennial were Moses Kim (215), 6-0; Sergio Baity (190), 5-1; Lazerrick Zander (144), 5-1; and Mosiah Rosas (120), 4-2.
The best showing for Rantoul was turned in by Darius Williams (165), 5-2. University High received its top efforts from Joshua Butler (120), 4-0; Joshua Caraballo (150), 3-0; Charlie Karun (190); 3-0; and Mahasvin Vinothasha (144), 3-1.
Leading performers for Alleman were Tennyson Hampton (113/120), 5-1; and Jordan Thompson (190/215), 4-2. Ridgeview/Lexington’s top individuals were Judson Stover (150/157), 7-0; and Landon Christner (132/138/144), 5-2. And turning in the best effort for Saint Thomas More was Philip Christhilf (165), 5-0.
Yorkville Christian took first place in pool one while Illinois Valley Central was second. Mattoon won pool two with Tremont taking second. And Clinton was the top team in pool three while Heyworth placed second.
There was a four-way tie for the most team points with 42 between Ben Capitosti, Dawson Thayer, Garrett VerHeecke and Hayden Wheeler while Ryan Festerling, Jr. and Aiden Larsen both had 41 points. Clinton VerHeecke and Judson Stover both scored 40 points, Cayden Bostic had 39 points and Jake Oitker, Tristan Porter and Austin Wadas-Luis tied with 37 team points.
Garrett VerHeecke, Larsen and Capitosti all recorded six falls while Larsen had the most total match points with 71 and Bowden Delaney ranked second with 69 match points.
Lockport captures Oswego East crown

Aha moments don’t occur unless you’re paying attention like the Lockport Township girls wrestling team.
For 105-pounder Averi Colella it began with her school’s student splash page.
Recently the senior made a splash by becoming the first girls’ wrestler at Lockport to reach 100 wins. On Saturday, she was one of five Porters to win during the Aaron Dudley Memorial Girls Invite at Oswego East.
Lockport Township won the tournament with 208 points and East Aurora took second place with 173.5. Other teams among the 23-team field to finish in the Top 5 included Woodstock (164), Oswego (127.5) and the host Wolves (112.5).
“When I started as a sophomore I had no idea that I would have any success,” she said. “I found (wrestling) on the student splash page and thought, ‘What if I join this?’ I joined it and started going to open mats and really fell in love with the sport. It was instantly addicting. The adrenalin rush you get, everything about it and you continue to put in more work and more work and all-year round. You work in the off-season and everything so just to see how far I’ve come in general, I was kind of astonished at myself. Like I had no idea seeing a link on the splash page would bring me here.”
After a pair of byes to begin her day, Colella advanced to the quarterfinals where she won by fall over Woodstock’s Kailey Wasberg in 1:08. After defeating St. Charles East’s Sydney Stieb by fall in 5:04 in the semifinals, Colella outlasted Romeoville’s Daniela Santander, 9-3, in the finals.
Colella’s practice partner, 110-pounder Veronica Skibicki, pinned a pair of opponents and earned decisions in her other two matches, to also earn a tourney title.
“I know we work so hard in that wrestling room,” Colella said. “Just to see everyone have so much success in the sport is really fulfilling.”
Skibicki got past Woodstock’s Eva Hermansson in her final bout, 4-3.
“I didn’t sneak past her, I kind of just was ready to take her,” Skibicki said. “I was like, ‘I’m not going to lose.’ So that was the mindset and I went out with it and that’s what I did.”
Claudia Heeney, last year’s 130-pound state champion, was a one-girl wrecking crew at 135 for the Porters. She won all of her bouts with pins, including in the final where she needed just 16 seconds to defeat East Aurora’s Brenda Escobedo.
“Honestly, it’s an amazing team we got here and I think it could really be something someday,” she said. “I mean we’re growing it right now, but in the future I think it could be really something bigger. It’s amazing. They put in the work in the room so I expect nothing less of them.”
Heeney’s aha moment arrived when she was an eighth grader.
“I didn’t really get interested in the sport until eighth grade and that’s when I really thought I could do something with it,” she said. “I’ve spent a lot of time in the room. I’ve cut out all the other things in my life. I’ve quit every other sport. It’s a lot, but I think if you really work hard at it and dedicate to it, you can do something with it. I’d say my dream is kind of slow and now that I’m getting here and it seems it’s all success and stuff, there was a lot of failure before that.”
Her teammate Sophie Kelner can most definitely relate.
Kelner acknowledged that she was not a very good wrestler during her freshman year. Now a junior, Kelner won the 190-pound title on Saturday.
“I had a very bad, losing record (as a freshman) and I was always wrestling up to 235 because a lot of teams didn’t have 190 so I was getting beat by these girls who were a lot bigger and stronger than me,” she said. “It was a pushback for me at first. I was like, ‘This is real tough,’ and it was different than anything I’d done before and I did a lot of sports in middle school. So then sophomore year I came back and realized how much better I’d gotten over a span of a few months and now it’s junior year and I see myself winning tournaments and I see I really can do something with this if I put in the work.”
Another aha moment for a Porter tied into hard work.
“Even those past two years when it felt really long going through so many losses and hard days of practices,” Kelner said. “And even at tournaments where it’s really hard and you see your teammates win and you don’t. But you realize if you work hard enough then you’ll get there. It’s really cool.”
Kelner had three straight pins after an opening bye which put her into the championship bout where familiarity awaited in the form of teammate Myra Vicencio, who is also one of Kelner’s training partners. Kelner defeated Vincencio by a 12-3 major decision.
“That was a really cool experience,” Kelner said. “I never thought I’d have to wrestle one of my teammates, let alone in the finals.”
Kelner also works in the room with Rebekah Ramirez, who won the Porters fifth title in the tournament, taking home the 235-pound crown after pinning Wheaton North’s Iana Victory in 1:23.
“I’ve been practice partners with Becca (Ramirez) since last year so it’s really cool to see both of us succeed even though we’re both in different weight classes,” Kelner said. “We’ve been able to grow our circle of practice partners so we have more to help each other.”
Ramirez had pinned East Aurora’s Lilli Ortiz in 40 seconds in the semifinal after receiving a bye in the quarterfinal. In her first match of the tournament, Ramirez took down Rich Township’s Amaya McClain in 3:55.
In addition to Lockport’s five tourney champs, they had two additional placers as Bella Romando (115) placed fourth and Kyleigh Green (130) was fifth.
“All these girls that won a medal today definitely deserved it,” Ramirez said, “We’ve got a really hardworking room and I think everyone went out there and gave it their best.”
East Aurora had 28 girls in action and 11 who placed to take second place as a team.
Joselyn Llanos (100) Ruby Becerra (130) and Brenda Escobedo (135) led the Tomcats by getting to the finals, but came up short. Llanos came closest to winning but lost by a 6-5 decision to Wheaton North’s Izzy Paz.
Also placing for the Tomcats were Lupita Garcia (130) and Lilli Ortiz (235) who were third.
Itzel Villa (105), Ayelen Higuera (125) and Alyssa Galarza (140) were fourth, Britany Chavarria (125) and Noreidy Ruiz (155) took fifth and Jazmin Vera (135) was sixth.
Third-place Woodstock also didn’t produce a champion, but the Blue Streaks were active deep into the tournament with seven girls placing.
Eva Hermansson (110), Hannah Olsen (125) and Brianna Crown (155) led the way, each taking second place. Ava Kok (140) was third, Allison Hills (235) took fourth, Aubree Hansen (115) and Kiara Manning (135) were fifth and Hunter Goucher (190) took sixth.
Plainfield Central’s Alicia Tucker was one of just two Wildcats to compete on Saturday. While her teammate Aaliyah Banda split two bouts at 140 pounds after receiving a pair of byes, Tucker pinned four straight opponents after opening with a bye to take home the title at 170.
It’s the kind of results Tucker expects as someone who won a state title at 155 pounds in 2023 and finished as the state runner-up at 170 pounds last year.
“I kind of came here today with a goal,” she said. “It was to be dominant in all my matches, hard hand-fight and stay off my knees. Those were my three objectives today and think I did pretty well for all of them.”
She won by fall over Plainfield East’s Jennifer Paul to get her day started.
“My first match was a little rocky,” she said. “I wasn’t awake yet and then my second match (1:26 fall over Rich Township’s Laila Carpenter) was when I started to turn it up a notch and get in my groove.”
A familiar foe in Waubonsie Valley’s Imani McIntosh was next up in the semifinal before she finished with Oswego East’s Jessica Stover in the title bout.
“I’ve wrestled (McIntosh) many times throughout my high school career so I kind of knew what she was coming in to try to do and was going to throw everything at me because I don’t think she’s beaten me yet,” Tucker said. “My final match was my best one, having good mat control, knowing where I’m at and my shots were pretty good. I stayed calm in that split situation that we were kind of in. I knew I was in good position so just working through that was great.”
Tucker’s dad wrestled in high school and then he coached her brother. The sport was always around her and she finally made the leap into it during middle school.
“(Wrestling has) kind of always been around since I was a little kid,” she said. “I joined in sixth grade and instantly loved it. I won my first match which was amazing. I was ecstatic and it blossomed from there.”
As she’s continued to grow into an athlete that hopes to compete in college, she’s seen the sport grow into something she couldn’t even imagine.
“My freshman year I was the very first girl on the team and practicing with the boys and going to all their tournaments,” she said. “Then sophomore year we grew a little bit more with two or three of us on the team in total. But being around all these guys competing in a class I’m not built to compete in has been a great experience. The coaches are amazing. I don’t know where I’d be without them, honestly.”
Oswego East’s Mia Nevarez (125) and Quinn Janssens (140) won titles in their respective weight classes to lead the Wolves on their home turf.
Nevarez won two of her matches by technical fall and the other three by fall, including pinning Woodstock’s Hannah Olsen in 2:32 in the final.
“Today I feel like I wrestled how I used to wrestle in IKWF,” she said. “I’ve always been a bit of a scrambler and not too good at taking shots. Today I at least tried some shots. I feel like not so much now or because I used to look for opportunities to sprawl that I always have fear of shooting. Kind of like today where I hit half on a girl because she went up for her wrist like how I did, but because I’ve been repeatedly lectured on it I know what to look for in myself, but I saw what she was doing.”
Having gotten her start in wrestling in the sixth grade, Nevarez possesses experience which has certainly boded well as she’s prospering today.
“I wrestled in the IWKF Club in seventh and eighth grade after middle school ended and started working with other clubs,” she said. “The West Suburban (Girls Wrestling) club, Oswego (Wrestling Club) and Fox Valley (Wrestling Club) helped a lot. I really appreciate those coaches.”
Janssens rolled over her five opponents. Kok from Woodstock gave her the biggest amount of difficulty as she lasted 3:16 before Janssens put her away by fall. Janssens other four pins were all under a minute with the first two taking less than 10 seconds each.
“I was wrestling for the boys last year so this year it feels pretty good to have this kind of competition,” Janssens said. “I’m going to probably see these girls later on this season so I was able to get a feel for what I’m going to be going against.”
She certainly took what her opponents gave her to attack.
“I kind of have to just go off what I’m given or what she tries to do on me,” she said. “I don’t really try to set up different moves. I kind of go with the flow.”
Jessica Stover ran into Tucker from Plainfield Central in the 170 final for the Wolves. She joined Nevarez and Janssens as the team’s three placers among their eight wrestlers in action.
“I know outside of school after duals or tournaments, my team will hang out and eat at the same place, too,” Nevarez said. “It’s helped us bond too and I know as girls we have plenty to talk about, but I feel half of what we talk about is our passion for the sport, especially like feeling frustrated after a loss or with partners who don’t feel that same passion. You feel frustrated because of that.
“But they’ve helped me grow a lot too and I feel I like seeing them grow. I like watching other matches, even younger kids from IKWF at my brother’s tournaments. I will like, in my head, coach them and then coach myself because I’ll see what they’re doing and think how it can help me in a match. It’s almost like watching film. I like taking those opportunities.”
All in all, it was a solid performance from the Wolves who also received points from Ella Worlds (115), Payton Lustrup (120) and Ella Cooper (145).
“I’m very proud of the program,” Janssens said. “We’re all doing pretty good. I like how our team has bonded. I think it’s nice to have girls who love the sport and we can all bond over that.”
When they first became teammates it was pretty inevitable that Oswego’s Makayla Hill (145) and Kiyah Chavez (155) would get to know a little bit about each other. As Panthers around the same weight class, they became training partners, which has resulted with them getting to know each other extremely well. On Saturday, they celebrated championship days together.
“I joined the team halfway into the season last year and our coach (Greg Scott) told us to be together probably about a month in, so it’s been a while now,” Chavez said. “For a lack of a better term, like, it’s pretty intimate because you get really close literally physically and also like because it’s so mentally challenging. You have to get to a point where you guys just end up being so close you have to push each other and if you can’t get past that point you can’t be great. It’s just really challenging and a really special relationship, at least for me.”
Hill agrees.
“It’s a special relationship as soon as you build that bond,” she said. “You’re pushing each other knowing we can, and pushing each other to the limits so that obviously good things happen.”
Chavez and Hill each pinned four opponents en route to their respective titles.
Hill took down Lake Park’s Joscelin Ritthamel by fall in 3:18 in her title bout, while Chavez required just 44 seconds to pin Woodstock’s Brianna Crown.
“It went very well and most of my matches were short,” Chavez said. “Wrestling is hard and very tiring so I want to get it done as fast as I can. I think I cradled three of the four girls.”
Last year Chavez recalled only having six girls in her bracket. This time she had 19.
“It’s crazy how much it’s growing,” she said. “With girls wrestling being so new it kind of feels like as though we’re a part of something really big that’s just starting, so in a sense it’s being a part of history because girls wrestling is growing like crazy but it’s in only like the second or third year where the IHSA has taken it seriously. So that’s pretty cool, and representing your school is fun. I love Oswego. I personally really love Oswego. I’m a big fan of the staff and students. I think it’s a great opportunity.”
The Panthers had 18 girls wrestle and eight of them placed.
After losing to Heeney from Lockport – who would win the 135 title – Oswego Ameera Murphy rebounded to pin back-to-back opponents to capture third place.
The senior has proven herself on the softball field as a ballplayer, but after seeing a flyer a year ago, she now finds herself also as a wrestler.
“It was a little fun thing we got into junior year from a flyer and (teammate) Aaliyah (Roldan) sent it to me and we went to open mats,” Murphy said. “We just kept going with it. Today went pretty well. I faced a lot of great competition. I’m proud that I was able to push through and get third place and we all did pretty well.”
Roldan took fourth place after wrestling six bouts, going 4-2.
“I kind of wanted to do a winter sport because I wasn’t going to do basketball anymore so that was the only other sport that I could imagine doing,” she said. “Today went pretty well. I faced two really good people and the rest were kind of ugh, but the two matches that I didn’t win were two really hard matches. Hard competition.”
Harmony Evans (130) is among those wrestlers at Oswego who saw the flyer a year ago and acted on it.
“We were all in the same gym period and saw the flyer on the door and decided to go just for fun to see what it would be like,” she said. “We realized we liked it and joined the team.”
Evans got pinned by Neuqua Valley’s Zuzanna Wegiera in her first match of the day but responded with three straight victories to finish her day while Wegiera proceeded to win the 130 title.
“I brought myself back after that first match,” he said. “I proved myself in the next couple matches and ended up getting first in the consolation round.”
Tennille Johnson lost her two matches at 135.
“It will always be fun and an amazing experience,” she said. “And being a team sport not only do you learn team qualities and capabilities, but also have an individual-like mentality where you have to work on yourself and have to find your own way in things you do. You are constantly developing and that’s what I love about the sport.”
With a background in jiu-jitsu and mixed martial arts (MMA), Johnson considered wrestling when she was in middle school but didn’t make the transition until junior year.
“I’d always been involved in MMA and fighting sports like jiu-jitsu and my mom wanted me to do wrestling but I refused,” she said. “It wasn’t until junior year when I saw some girls in line talking about a flyer for wrestling. I was like, ‘I’ll try it out,’ and did other extra curricular so I missed it my junior year so when it came to my senior year I still wanted to try it so I joined wrestling. I love the environment. I love the girls on the team and everything. It’s such an exhilarating feeling (to wrestle) that I forgot that I got from MMA previously.”
St. Charles East took sixth place with an even 100. The Saints had 10 girls in action with Bailynn Dunham (100) and Sydney Stieb (105) leading the team with third-place finishes. Olivia Pearson (130) was fourth and Addison Wolf (145) was fifth.
“Everyone is like family,” Wolf said. “I don’t want to be corny, but we’ve all adapted to each other really well. No drama. It’s an amazing group of girls.”
After two byes, Stieb won by fall in 1:56 over East Aurora’s Itzel Villa in the quarterfinals. After losing by fall in 5:04 to Colella from Lockport who would ultimately win at 105, Stieb rebounded by pinning Glenbard South’s Valerie Aligia before pinning Villa again, but this time in 1:03.
“I think today I did pretty good, I guess,” Stieb said. “My second match didn’t go as well as I wanted it to, but still put up a good fight. She (Colella) was a really good wrestler. I’m just hoping to match up with her again and see what I can do, see what I could change. My first girl (Villa), she’s a good wrestler. I pinned her pretty quick and I wrestled her twice today, actually, but overall today I did pretty good.”
Stieb had high praise for the tournament.
“It was our hardest tournament yet,” she said. “Some people had full brackets, some didn’t. I didn’t have a full bracket but after the holidays it’s hard to cut weight. I struggled cutting weight this weekend and it’s hard to just come back from not wrestling for a while.”
Holding ice to her nose late Saturday afternoon, Pearson was still feeling the repercussions of pinning Rich Township’s Cheyenne Haire to get her day rolling.
She lost a major decision to Wegiera from Neuqua Valley in her semifinal but battled back to win a major decision over Plainfield North’s Isabella Chavez before falling to East Aurora’s Lupita Garcia in a third-place match.
“I think I did okay, but didn’t do as best as I wanted to,” Pearson said. “I could’ve maybe not have given up as quick as I did. I was really tired my last two matches though and busted my nose in my first match.”
Wegiera was one of five girls who wrestled from Neuqua Valley. The senior pinned East Aurora’s Ruby Becerra in 5:04 for the title at 130.
Ashley Basmajian (115) and Janiya Moore (120) were two of Metea Valley’s eight wrestlers who competed. They were also tournament champions.
Basmajian had five straight pins, including in 3:12 over Plainfield North’s Meryn Finnegan in the final.
Moore (120) had a major decision over Lockport’s Natalie Dodo in her quarterfinal before back-to-back pins, including in 4:49 over Romeoville’s Jesslynne Ochoa.
Those two titles helped the Mustangs take seventh place with 90.
Other scores included Wheaton North 84, Romeoville 82, Lincoln-Way co-op 81, Plainfield East 74, Rich Township 60, Plainfield North 58.5, Oak Lawn 51.5, Glenbard South 49.5, Homewood-Flossmoor 47, Neuqua Valley 47, York 38.5, Plainfield Central 32, Lake Park 25.5, Jacobs 23.5, Waubonsie Valley 23, Bloomington 19.
The tournament honors the adventurous spirit, loving heart and courageous tenacity of Aaron Dudley who died of cancer in September. Dudley served as an assistant principal at Lakewood Creek Elementary School in Oswego and was a physical education teacher at Plano Junior High School in Oswego and Murphy Junior High School in Plainfield. He coached wrestling and football at Oswego East, wrestling and soccer at Plano and track at Murphy.
Oswego East results:
100
1st: Izzy Paz (Wheaton N) d.Joselyn Llanos (E Aurora) (D 6-5)
3rd: Bailynn Dunham (SC East) d.LaMya Love (Rich Township) (F 0:57)
5th: Savannah Martell-Quinones (Oswego) d.Felix Alessi-Morales (Oak Lawn) (F 2:17)
105
1st: Averi Colella (Lockport) d.Daniela Santander (Romeoville ) (D 9-3)
3rd: Sydney Stieb (SC East) d.Itzel Villa (E Aurora) (F 1:03)
5th: Valerie Aligia (Glenbard S) d.Mahi Kansagara (Plainfield E) (TF 17-1)
Consolation 1st
Maya Phillips (Rich Township)
110
1st: Veronica Skibicki (Lockport) d.Eva Hermansson (Woodstock ) (D 4-3)
3rd: London Gandy (Homewood-F.) d.Zoe Zerial (LW Central) (D 7-3)
5th: Julia Felton (Algonquin (Jacobs) d.Anusha Nagar (Metea) (F 2:00)
Consolation 1st
Aleta Weigandt (Neuqua) d.Mikaela Busse (Oswego) (F 1:33)
115
1st: Ashley Basmajian (Metea) d.Meryn Finnegan (Plainfield N) (F 3:12)
3rd: Angelina Nettey (Plainfield E) d.Bella Romando (Lockport) (D 6-0)
5th: Aubree Hansen (Woodstock ) d.Jayden Kurowski (Romeoville ) (F 0:54)
Consolation 1st
Allison Nava (Oak Lawn) d.Kendra Padilla (Oswego) (F 2:21)
120
1st: Janiya Moore (Metea) d.Jesslynne Ochoa (Romeoville ) (F 4:49)
3rd: Charlie Dolan (Elmhurst (York) d.Aaliyah Roldan (Oswego) (F 1:54)
5th: Sadie Sparks (LW Central) d.Alexandra Aguilera (Neuqua) (F 0:47)
Consolation 1st
Payton Lustrup (OswegoE) d.Charlotte Ries (Wheaton N) (F 1:10)
125
1st: Mia Nevarez (OswegoE) d.Hannah Olsen (Woodstock ) (F 2:32)
3rd: Journey Jackson (Oak Lawn) d. Ayelen Higuera (E Aurora) (Maj 8-0)
5th: Britany Chavarria (E Aurora) d.Taniyah Bradley (Homewood-F.) (F 3:53)
Consolation 1st
Jiana Forbes (Wheaton N) d.Miranda Powley (Lockport) (F 0:12)
130
1st: Zuzanna Wegiera (Neuqua) d.Ruby Becerra (E Aurora) (F 5:04)
3rd: Lupita Garcia (E Aurora) d. Olivia Pearson (SC East) (Maj 13-1)
5th: Kyleigh Green (Lockport) d.Isabella Chavez (Plainfield N) (F 1:33)
Consolation 1st
Harmony Evans (Oswego) d.Ava Holzhauser (Lockport) (D 1-0)
135
1st: Claudia Heeney (Lockport) d.Brenda Escobedo (E Aurora) (F 0:16)
3rd: Ameera Murphy (Oswego) d.Hannah Galvan (Glenbard S) (F 1:49)
5th: Kiara Manning (Woodstock ) d.Jazmin Vera (E Aurora) (F 1:00)
Consolation 1st
Brianna Garcia (Romeoville ) d.Sophie Contreras (Waubonsie) (F 0:41)
140
1st: Quinn Janssens (OswegoE) d.Ava Burns (Lake Park) (F 0:30)
3rd: Ava Kok (Woodstock ) d.Alyssa Galarza (E Aurora) (F 1:00)
5th: Rachel Griggs (Homewood-F.) d.Joslynn Sheets (Oswego) (D 7-1)
Consolation 1st
Dariia Dzhumasheva (Metea) d. Elin Ludvigson (Oswego) (Maj 13-3)
145
1st: Makayla Hill (Oswego) d.Joscelin Ritthamel (Lake Park) (F 3:18)
3rd: Viktoria Rodnikova (Plainfield N) d.Alex Arquilla (Glenbard S) (F 2:35)
5th: Addison Wolf (SC East) d.Leilani Greening (Rich Township) (TF 21-5)
Consolation 1st
Charvelle Mclain (Oak Lawn) d.Denise Brown (Homewood-F.) (D 9-7)
155
1st: Kiyah Chavez (Oswego) d.Brianna Crown (Woodstock ) (F 0:44)
3rd: Alicia Swank (Bloomington ) d.Kaitlyn Bucholz (Plainfield E) (D 1-0)
5th: Noreidy Ruiz (E Aurora) d.Julia Romero (Plainfield E) (F 1:15)
Consolation 1st
Dakota Obbish (Lockport) d.Jackie Pina Chavez (Wheaton N) (F 1:33)
170
1st: Alicia Tucker (Plainfield C) d.Jessica Stover (OswegoE) (F 3:11)
3rd: Imani McIntosh (Waubonsie) d.Laila Carpenter (Rich Township) (D 5-4)
5th: Rikka Ludvigson (Oswego) d. Jenna Lee (LW Central) (Maj 12-3)
Consolation 1st
Mariyah Mani (Romeoville ) d.Yesenia Palma (Wheaton N) (F 0:30)
190
1st: Sophie Kelner (Lockport) d. Myra Vicencio (Lockport) (Maj 12-3)
3rd: Liana Zimmer (LW Central) d.Jen Serna (Plainfield E) (D 7-2)
5th: Helena Torres (Oswego) d. over Hunter Goucher (Woodstock ) (SV-1 3-0)
Consolation 1st
TeeyaMarie Bacigalupo (Elmhurst (York) d.Cai Triplett (Homewood-F.) (D 7-5)
235
1st: Rebekah Ramirez (Lockport) d.Iana Victory (Wheaton N) (F 1:23)
3rd: Lilli Ortiz (E Aurora) d.Allison Hill (Woodstock ) (F 1:55)
5th: Amaya McClain (Rich Township) d.Kyleigh Allen (Rich Township) (F 2:33)
Consolation 1st
Amaya McClain (Rich Township)
Schaumburg tops the field at Dundee-Crown

By Gary Larsen
One week after placing second at the IWCOA dual state finals tournament, and after a whole lot of wrestling during winter break, Schaumburg might well have entered Saturday’s 24-team Dundee-Crown Invitational slightly fatigued.
After all, it’s tough for athletes to maintain high intensity every time out, especially in a sport as physically and mentally grueling as wrestling.“I was a little worried that there would be a letdown after the team state last week,”
Schaumburg coach Matt Gruszka said. We’ve wrestled a lot over break and I was worried that our momentum would come down a little bit.”Gruszka’s Saxons erased any and all such concern.
Schaumburg dominated the day in Carpentersville, posting a 206-110 edge over second-place host Dundee-Crown. Grant (107.5) placed third, followed by Central (100) and Stevenson (88) to round out the top five team finishes.
“They find ways and they help each other,” Gruszka said of his girls. “There was no letdown today and that’s what I’m excited about.”
“I was really proud of the girls today,” said senior Madyson Meyer, one of three individual champions for Schaumburg. “Gruszka is like our second dads. He keeps it fun but he’s stern when he needs to be, and I think that’s really why we do so well as a team.”
Senior Hope Zerafa-Lazarevic liked her girls’ ability to adjust on the fly.
“What’s impressive to me is it that a lot of our girls improved within the tournament, from match one to match three or four that they got to they were applying the things we’ve been talking about,” she said.
Schaumburg sophomore Justice Girod sees her team’s all-for-one, one-for-all approach as a key this season.
“Whenever we have a letdown, we always work harder and use that as momentum,”Girod said.
Meyer (115), Girod (110), and Zerafa-Lazarevic (145) won individual titles for Schaumburg to lead the way. Gruszka also got seconds from Alya Razzak (170) and non-scoring Reagan Paulson (115), thirds from Anna Villareal (120), Isabella Rivas (125), and Nadia Razzak (190), and a fourth from Mia Phelps (105).
Second-place Dundee-Crown got individual titles from Mackenzie Lessner (155) and Gladys Reyes (235), seconds from Iris Torres (110), Ruby Gavina (135), and non-scoring Caroline Haiges (235), and a third from Diamond Rodriguez (105).
Third-place Grant got a second-place finish from Myla Reyes (125), a third from Annabelle Melton (140), and fourths from America Camacho (120) and Veronica Vera (135).
Dundee-Crown’s Individual champions:
100 – Ariel Woodfin, Thornton
Thornton junior Ariel Woodfin left no doubt who the top 100-pounder was in Carpentersville. Woodfin (12-1) posted three pins to win the title — all over wrestlers with records well above .500.
In order, Woodfin topped Sunny Altzemko (15-7), Glenbard East’s Andrea Jones (14-3) and Freeport’s Aurielle Calmese (19-6) to win her title. Calmese also reached the finals with three pins.
Woodfin placed second at Curie’s Queens of Mayhem tournament this year, and Calmese also finished second in tournaments at Lakes and Princeton.
Jones won a 13-7 decision for third place over Altzemko.
“Ariel Woodfin put in a lot of work this summer and fall. That work is paying off,” Thornton coach Phillip Rembert said. “She really has improved a lot, matured, and I think she can go a long way in the state tournament.”
105 – Nadia Shymkiv, Glenbard East
With a blind draw in place at Dundee-Crown, two unbeaten wrestlers squared off in the semifinals at 105, in Glenbard East’s Nadia Shymkiv and Dundee-Crown’s Diamond Rodriguez.
Prior to Saturday, Shymkiv (17-0) had won individual titles at Waukegan and Glenbard South; Rodriguez (22-1) had won titles at Palatine, Lakes, and Hampshire. The showdown was hard-fought from start to finish. Shymkiv also placed third in Illinois last year at 105 pounds.
“That was the best match I’ve been in this year,” Shymkiv said after her 5-3 decision over Rodriguez. Shymkiv went on to handle teammate Karla Sarabia (8-3) by major decision in the finals.
“Nadia wrestled great and really showed her experience as she made her way through the bracket,” Glenbard East coach Matt Nelson said. “Karla, our freshman, came through the other side of the bracket showing what she does in the practice room every day. We were excited to see them both reach the finals.”
But Shymkiv’s shining moments came in her semifinal match, and her ability to fight back from Rodriguez’s early takedown by earning a reversal by the end of the first period, then earning near-fall points in the second period to secure the win.
“I just listened to my coaches and started pushing her,” Shymkiv said. “Coach just told me to keep pushing, be careful, and be smart. I feel great. Now I want to get the state and I want to be state champion.”
Rodriguez went on to place third with a first-period fall over Schaumburg’s Mia Phelps (16-9).
“We’re excited to see how Diamond finishes out her senior year,” Dundee-Crown assistant coach Rick Moreno said. “She never quits and wrestles hard for all six minutes no matter who her opponent is.”
110 – Justice Girod, Schaumburg
The closest finals match of the day went to an ultimate tie-break, between Schaumburg’s Justice Girod (24-7) and Dundee-Crown’s Iris Torres (17-8).
Tied 1-1 after three periods, neither scored in the first overtime, and then the two took turns riding each other out for 30 seconds.
Girod rode Torres out for 30 seconds to get the job done in the deciding overtime period.
“I was a little tired, but I really felt the energy,” Girod said. “As I got closer to the end of that match I just thought I had to hold out. I had to win. I just had to keep her down.
I’ve been getting better with my top work and on my feet.”
Schaumburg coach Matt Gruszka likes the evolution he’s seeing from the sophomore Girod.
“She’s just gritty and she has come a long way,” Gruszka said. “She’s really starting to become a student of the sport and learning when she needs to be calm and simply win a particular position. She did that today. And she has a motor, which definitely helps.”
Central’s Ruby Vences (21-7) placed third with a fall over Harvard’s Alexa Herrera (13-8).
115 – Madyson Meyer, Schaumburg
A state qualifier last year, Schaumburg senior Madyson Meyer won in individual tournament title at Normal to start the current season, and then placed third at a tournament in Morris.
Meyer reached the mountain top again Saturday, winning a Dundee-Crown title and improving to 28-1 in the process.
“She’s having a heck of a season and it’s a culmination of the last four years,” Schaumburg coach Matt Gruszka said. “It’s all starting to come together for her and that’s exciting to see.”
Meyer opened with a bye before doing something she had never done in her high school career — win a match by technical fall, which she did in her quarterfinal match against Freeport’s Kaiya Galindo (19-13).
“She just didn’t want to get turned and she was fighting really hard,” Meyer said of Galindo.
Meyer won by fall in her semifinal against Harvard’s Giada Reising (15-12), and then the senior had to square off against a teammate with a tournament title on the line: Schaumburg freshman Reagan Paulson.
Paulson (13-7) posted three falls to reach the finals, where Meyer pinned her late in the first period.
“We wrestle each other a lot, every day in practice, so we just went out and wrestled like we normally do,” Meyer said. “She’s a freshman and she has so much ahead of her.”
120 – Amelia Nidelea-Polanin, Hampshire
Two weeks ago, Hampshire sophomore Amelia Nidelea-Polanin lost her first match of the season, to Hononegah’s multiple-time state champion Angelina Cassioppi.
After that loss, Nidelea-Polanin did exactly what she needed to do.
“She took her loss to Cassioppi and used it as motivation to get better. She is constantly looking for improvement,” Hampshire coach Matthew Todd said. “And she had a good tournament today.”
Nidelea-Polanin (23-1) won the Dundee-Crown title at 120 pounds Saturday, winning by major decision over Central’s Tori Macias (18-6). Nidelea-Polanin used two falls and a tech fall win to reach the title mat, while Macias had a decision and two falls to get there.
Schaumburg’s Anna Villareal (26-6) placed third with a fall against Grant’s America Camacho (25-8).
“Amelia had a good tournament today,” Todd said.“Amelia and Sam (Diehl) have both been very hard workers in the wrestling room this year. They, along with their teammates, have taken coaching this year very well.”
125 – Karina Lojowski, Stevenson
Stevenson junior Karina Lojowski has come a long was in a short amount of time.
Since finishing one match away from state qualifying last year as a sophomore, then placing 7th at the IWCOA girls state tournament, Lojowski has found another gear.
“She dedicated her entire summer to training at Built by Brunson Wrestling Club,” Stevenson coach Jonathan Leibovitz said. “She has since developed a style and poise far beyond what I could expect from a second-year wrestler.”
Lojowski (14-2) continued her fine junior campaign, winning the title at 125 via first-period fall against a tough wrestler in Grant’s Myla Reyes (22-8). Lojowski also won by fall in her quarterfinal match against another tough wrestler in Schaumburg’s Isabella Rivas (25-4), before topping Richmond-Burton’s Isabella Nelson (9-7) by fall in their semifinal match.
Reyes won her semifinal by fall against Ridgewood’s Gianna Mezzano (18-4).
Lojowski won Midwest Nationals in the preseason, and also won a tournament title at Fremd this season. Her day at Dundee-Crown was a doozy.
“(Lojowski) showcased her dominance by giving up no offensive points and winning all her matches by fall, with only one match extending into the second period,” Leibovitz said. “Her continued improvement and dominant performances have her well-positioned as we head toward the state series.”
Rivas won by fall for third place over Nelson at 125.
130 – Emily Ortiz, Zion-Benton
In tournament action this year, Zion-Benton junior Emily Ortiz (25-4) placed fifth at Niles West, first at Palatine, and first at Waukegan. She upped her string of individual title wins to three Saturday with her 8-3 decision in the finals over Thornton’s Jalah Wilson (12-1), handing Wilson her first loss of the year.
Zion-Benton coach Hal Lunsford coached the programs first wrestling state champion last season when ILeen Castrejon won an IHSA state title at 190 pounds. With returning state qualifiers Ortiz, Grace Johnson (27-5) at 140, and Naomi Foote (26-1) at 145 in the fold this year, Lunsford has a trio of top-shelf upperclassmen.
“I’m truly blessed to have these three amazing young women on the Zee-Bee wrestling team,” he said. “They are the hardest workers in the room and are always striving to improve their wrestling skills. I’m so proud of their performances so far. The last part of the season should be fun.”
Ortiz posted three pins to reach the finals at Dundee-Crown. Wilson won a 9-3 decision in her opening match against Main West’s Jessica Perez (16-8), then a 16-3 major in her quarterfinal over Central’s Soraya Walikonis (21-8).
“Jalah Wilson can go a long way in the state tournament,” Thornton coach Phillip Rembert said. “That loss (vs. Ortiz) was not a disappointment. It was just a little wake up call. She will rebound from that loss and be much better next tournament.
A tech fall win over Schaumburg’s Sky Bonilla sent Wilson to the title mat. Walikonis went on win by fall over Perez for third place.
135 – Maria Green, Glenbard East
Glenbard East sophomore Maria Green is having a whale of a season.
Green improved to 14-0 at Dundee-Crown, winning the tournament title at 135 with a 10-5 decision over the host Chargers’ Ruby Gavina (12-3).
Green has also won individual tournament titles at Waukegan and Glenbard South this year.
“Maria had an outstanding day beating a state qualifier and showing her maturity by staying disciplined all six minutes of her matches,” Glenbard East coach Matt Nelson said.
Green opened with a win by fall in her quarterfinal match and then gutted out an 8-7 decision over Thornton-Fractional South’s Quincy Onyiaorah (4-1) in their semifinal. Onyiaorah won by fall in her quarterfinal match over Schaumburg’s Sharon Olorunfemi (27-6). Onyiaorah was a state qualifier at 130 last season.
Gavina posted a trio of pins to reach the finals, capped by a semifinal round pin against Plano’s April Martinez (5-3). Onyiaorah topped Olorunfemi in a consolation semifinal before winning by fall for third place against Grant’s Veronica Vera (17-7).
140 – Jillian Giller, New Trier
New Trier senior Jillian Giller (26-1) added a Dundee-Crown title to go with titles won this year at Niles West, Maine East, and Palatine.
In her final season of high school wrestling, Giller has embraced the advice of her father.
“My dad tells me ‘this is it, Jillian — your age, your weight, your year.’ There are no excuses anymore,” Giller said.
Giller went 33-6 last year as a state qualifier but she wants to scale the podium this year when the state finals arrive. She feels ready, with more tools in her kit this season.
“Last year I had my front headlock, I had my top game, but that was pretty much where my skill ended,” Giller said. “This year we have a new coach and he’s worked with me a lot on my bottom game. And now I’m ten times better on my feet.”
Giller pinned her way to the title at Dundee-Crown, capped by a fall at 2:48 on the title mat against a tough wrestler in Zion-Benton’s Grace Johnson (27-5). Giller also beat Grant’s Annabelle Melton (21-9) and Maine West’s Soila Orozco (12-6) along the way.
Johnson used a trio of pins to reach the finals. Melton went on the place third, with a fall at 2:56 over Orozco.
Giller’s work on bottom has taken a leap forward this year.
“This is the first year I’ve been comfortable with it,” she said. “Now I feel like nobody is going to hold me down. And I’m not worried on my feet anymore, which used to hold me back. I did a lot of takedown work over the summer.”
145 – Hope Zerafa-Lazarevic, Schaumburg
As last year’s state runner-up at 140, Schaumburg’s Hope Zerafa-Lazarevic is no stranger to wrestling in big matches.
Schaumburg’s third individual champ participated in one of the day’s most-anticipated matches at Dundee-Crown. Both Zerafa-Lazarevic (28-0) and Zion-Benton’s Naomi Foote (26-1) entered their finals match with unbeaten season’s records.
The match was a thriller for 88 seconds.
Foote posted an early takedown and was in the process of attempting a cross-face cradle when Zerafa-Lazarevic turned the tide. The Schaumburg senior reversed Foote and stuck her at the edge at the 1:28 mark.
“She’s a really really good wrestler and I knew it would be hard,” Zerafa-Lazarevic said of Foote. “I was a little nervous before that match. (Gruszka) just told me not to freak out after I got taken down, and I didn’t. I just stayed calm and looked for what I needed. She was hitting a mean cradle.”
Schaumburg coach Matt Gruszka knows Zerafa-Lazarevic is perfectly comfortable on a roller coaster.
“Hope has this weird wrestling sense. Sometimes she’s not the most technical, but she’s such a high competitor,” Gruszka said. “She wants to win every position and even if she loses a position, she never gets down on herself. In the state semi last year, she was down 11-1 and she came back to win by a point. It causes us heart attacks a lot, but I love watching her compete.”
Foote had already won individual tournament titles at Niles West, Palatine, and Waukegan. Zerafa-Lazarevic has individual titles from Normal and Morris under her belt.
After her pin at the edge on Saturday, Zerafa-Lazarevic got up off the mat, turned to the bleachers and locked in on someone near and dear to her heart.
“I didn’t have my parents here today, but I had my brother here, who just got home from the Navy,” she said. “It’s the first time I’ve seen him in three years. He came home last night and this was the first time he saw me wrestle, so I knew I had to show up.”
155 – Mackenzie Lessner, Dundee-Crown
After wrestling in middle school, Dundee-Crown senior Mackenzie Lessner initially gave up the sport in high school, before returning to it after a little pleading with her parents.
“I had to stop because my parents didn’t like it,” Lessner said. “But they allowed me to come back. One of my older brothers wrestled so I was like ‘why can’t I’?”
The first of host Dundee-Crown’s two individual champions on the day, Lessner improved to 14-3 with her finals win by fall against Thornton-Fractional South’s Jermia Moore (3-1).
“It was a good day,” Lessner said. “I was confident in my matches and I knew I had to come out and just wrestle my way. Since the start of the year, I’m realizing what I can do in a match and what moves I’m able to do.
“A lot of it is mental and you just have to show up to those hard practices —the repetition, the fight, and you have to have good practice partners, and teammates, who are always there supporting you.”
Moore reached the title match with a fall at 1:05 over Grant’s Amaryllis Ramos (12-3), while Lessner also posted two falls to reach the finals.
Ramos went on to placed third with a fall at 4:38 over Harvard’s April Cardenas (16-17).
“Sophomore Ruby Gavina and senior Mackenzie Lessner have improved this year and are placing in all of the tournaments they’ve wrestled in so far,” D-C assistant coach Rick Mareno said. “I would not be surprised if any of our wrestlers made it to state with the hard work and dedication they’re putting in the wrestling room.”
170 – Ryann Miller, Central
Central sophomore Ryann Miller (20-0) placed fifth in state last year at 170, and has won individual titles at Maine East, Palatine, and Morris this season.
She has been dominant during her sophomore campaign and that dominance was on display at Dundee-Crown. Miller won by fall at 0:28 in her title match against Schaumburg’s Alya Razzak (25-5).
Her growth in the sport in a short amount of time is undeniable.
“The goal coming into the season was to continue to build on the success from last year and I think she has done that really well to this point, especially today,” Central coach Andrew Brown said. “She did a great job creating offense on her feet and when she had the opportunity to score the fall, she did so, and has continued to do so through her matches this season.”
In four matches, no one survived the first period against Miller. Razzak opened with a pair of pins before gutting out a 1-0 semifinal decision over Hampshire’s Annelise Tavira (22-2).
After losing to Tavira by major decision in their quarterfinal match, Main West’s Lillian Garrett (20-4) exacted some revenge in the consolation round: Garrett won a 4-2 decision over Tavira on the third-place mat.
190 – Josie Larson, Lakes
Josie Larson’s rampage through the 190-pound division continued on Saturday, as she remained an unbeaten 19-0 with her pin on the title mat against Hampshire’s Samantha Diehl.
The Lakes senior continues to exhibit elevated levels of hunger and experience in her senior year, after placing second in Illinois at 190 last year.
“I’m just working hard at practice, hitting the gym and I keep wrestling my style,” Larson said. “At this point it’s focusing on all the little things, like putting the shoulder down, taking it in. Those little things all add up.”
Larson posted three falls, capped by a fall for the title against Hampshire’s tough freshman, Sam Diehl (17-3). Larson has won tournament titles at Lakes and Waukegan this year, and she is responsible for two of Diehl’s three losses this year.
Now a seasoned veteran of high school wrestling, Larson’s journey might be something Diehl is currently going through.
“When I started out, I was nervous before every match — not scared but right on the cusp,” Larson said. “It was really nerve-racking. I always felt like I was going to throw up. But as I progressed it got easier and easier until I started hitting my moves way more confidently than I did before. I’m calmer now before my matches.”
Diehl pinned two juniors and a sophomore to reach the finals against Larson. Hampshire coach Matthew Todd sees big things for his freshman as she evolves in the sport.
“Sam has run into (Larson) a couple of times this year. She is understanding the high school level and is improving ,” Todd said. “And she worked very hard today.”
Larson pinned Schaumburg’s Nadia Razzak (29-3) at 3:48 in their semifinal match, while Diehl won by fall at 2:42 in her semifinal against Freeport’s Lily Wurster (7-8).
Razzak went on to win by 7-0 decision against Jefferson’s Kylie Eilken (4-2) on the third-place mat.
235 – Gladys Reyes, Dundee-Crown
With only four wrestlers entered at 235, all four moved directly into the championship semifinal round in Carpentersville. Reyes (9-2) followed her two byes with a pin in her semifinal match against Thornton’s Sionna Stampley (8-3).
Waiting for Reyes on the title mat was teammate Caroline Haiges (12-6), who won her semifinal by fall against Marengo’s Madalynn Woodcock.
Reyes topped her practice partner at 235 by fall for the title, at the 1:11 mark of the finals match.
“Gladys is a senior and placed in all three tournaments she’s been in, and freshman Caroline has also placed in the four tournaments she’s wrestled in,” Dundee-Crown assistant coach Rick Moreno said. “Every week they’ve shown improvement and continue to push each other. Unfortunately we’re only able to have one in the weight class but either one will make us proud to represent Dundee-Crown.”
Stampley won by fall at 1:05 against Woodcock in the third-place match.
Individual statistics:
Among all wrestlers present, Schaumburg’s Isabella Rivas had the most pins (5) in the fastest time (10:09), and Hampshire’s Amelia Nidelea-Polanin had the fastest tech fall, in 2:19. Three wrestlers tied for the lead for most team points scored with 28, in Stevenson’s Karina Lojowski, Central’s Ryann Miller, and New Trier’s Jillian Giller. Glenbard East’s Nadia Shymkiv scored the most single match points (37), Nidelea- Polanin scored the most total match points (62), and Dundee-Crown’s Iris Torres provided the largest seed-place difference when the No. 15 seed placed second at 110 pounds.
Team scores:
Schaumburg 206, Dundee-Crown 110, Grant 107.5, Central 100, Stevenson 88, Glenbard East 86.5, Zion-Benton 74, Thornton 71.5, Hampshire 69.5, Harvard 58, Thornton Fractional South 57, Lakes 55, New Trier 52, Freeport 51, Maine West 49, Plano 36, Richmond-Burton 35, Antioch 27, Jefferson 23.5, Ridgewood 17, Carmel 12, Genoa-Kingston 11, Marengo 10.5, Geneva 0
Dundee-Crown Girls Invitational results:
100
1st: Ariel Woodfin (Thornton) 12-1, d. Aurielle Calmese (Freeport) 19-6, (F 1:07)
3rd: Andrea Jones (Glenbard E) 14-3, d. Sunny Aitzemko (New Trier) 15-7, (D 13-7)
105
1st: Nadiia Shymkiv (Glenbard E) 17-0, d. Karla Sarabia (Glenbard E) 8-3, (MD 37-25)
3rd: Diamond Rodriguez (Dundee-Crown) 22-1, d. Mia Phelps (Schaumburg ) 16-9, (F 1:18)
110
1st: Justice Girod (Schaumburg ) 24-7, d. Iris Torres (Dundee-Crown) 17-8, (UTB 1-1)
3rd: Ruby Vences (Central) 21-7, d. Alexa Herrera (Harvard) 13-8, (F 1:04)
115
1st: Madyson Meyer (Schaumburg ) 28-1, d. Reagan Paulson (Schaumburg ) 13-7, (F 1:50)
3rd: Giulia Gheciu (Lincolnshire (Stevenson) 9-5, d. Giada Reising (Harvard) 15-12, (F 3:04)
120
1st: Amelia Nidelea-Polanin (Hampshire) 23-1, d. Victoria Macias (Central) 18-6, (MD 15-3)
3rd: Anna Villarreal (Schaumburg ) 26-6, d. America Camacho (Grant) 25-8, (F 1:45)
125
1st: Karina Lojowski (Lincolnshire (Stevenson) 14-2, d. Myla Reyes (Grant) 22-8, (F 1:31)
3rd: Isabella Rivas (Schaumburg ) 25-4, d. Isabella Nelson (R.-Burton) 9-7, (F 2:49)
130
1st: Emily Ortiz (Z.-Benton) 25-4, d. Jalah Wilson (Thornton) 12-1, (D 8-3)
3rd: Soraya Walikonis (Central) 21-8, d. Jessica Perez (Des Plaines (Maine West) 16-8, (F 4:24)
135
1st: Maria Green (Glenbard E) 14-0, d. Ruby Gavina (Dundee-Crown) 12-3, (D 10-5)
3rd: Quincy Onyiaorah (T-F South) 4-1, d. Veronica Vera (Grant) 17-7, (F 0:26)
140
1st: Jillian Giller (New Trier) 26-1, d. Grace Johnson (Z.-Benton) 27-5, (F 2:48)
3rd: Annabelle Melton (Grant) 21-9, d. Soila Orozco (Des Plaines (Maine West) 12-6, (F 2:56)
145
1st: Madeline Zerafa-Lazarevic (Schaumburg ) 28-0, d. Naomi Foote (Z.-Benton) 26-1, (F 1:28)
3rd: Jacqueline Diaz (Plano) 8-1, .d. Tina Hasner (Lake Villa (Lakes) 23-8, . (F 0:29)
155
1st: Mackenzie Lessner (Dundee-Crown) 14-3, d. Jermia Moore (T-F South) 3-1, . (F 3:58)
3rd: Amaryllis Ramos (Grant) 12-3, d. April Cardenas (Harvard) 16-17, (F 4:38)
170
1st: Ryann Miller (Central) 20-0, d. Alya Razzak (Schaumburg ) 25-5, (F 0:28)
3rd: Lillian Garrett (Des Plaines (Maine West) 20-4, d. Anneliese Tavira (Hampshire) 22-2, (D 4-2)
190
1st: Josie Larson (Lake Villa (Lakes) 19-0, .d. Samantha Diehl (Hampshire) 17-3, (F 1:46)
3rd: Nadia Razzak (Schaumburg ) 29-3, d. Kylie Eilken (Rockford (Jefferson) 4-2, (D 7-0)
235
1st: Gladys Reyes (Dundee-Crown) 9-2, d. Caroline Haiges (Dundee-Crown) 12-6, . (F 1:11)
3rd: Sionna Stampley (Thornton) 8-3, d. Madalynn Woodcock (Marengo) 3-10, (F 1:05)
Out-of-state tournament roundup

By Gary Larsen for the IWCOA
Cheesehead Invitational
Fourteen Illinois teams competed in this year’s annually formidable 44-team Cheesehead Invitational, hosted by Kaukauna High School in Wisconsin.
The team from Southeast Polk, Iowa won the team title by a wide margin over the second-place team from Jesuit, Louisiana, 663.5-457. Lowell, Michigan placed third with 451.5 team points, followed by host Kaukauna with 435 and fifth-place Montini Catholic with 410.5 points.
Illinois had five teams finish in the top 10: St. Charles East (369) was sixth, Yorkville (312.5) placed eighth; Joliet Catholic Academy (307.5) was ninth; and Warren (295) finished 10th.
Other Illinois teams competing were Lockport (257.5), Edwardsville (236), Providence Catholic (158), Grant (155.5), Barrington (132.5), DeKalb (117.5), Plainfield North (109), Prospect (46.5) and Neuqua Valley (8).
Illinois had three individual champions in Wisconsin, in St. Charles East’s Dom Munaretto (120), Montini’s Josh Vazquez (126), and Lockport’s Justin Wardlow (150). Reaching the title mat and placing second were Warren’s Caleb Noble (113), Providence Catholic’s Justus Heeg (150), Yorkville’s Luke Zook (175), and Joliet Catholic’s Nico Ronchetti (190).
Illinois wrestlers finishing in the top 10 of their weight divisions:
106 – 3rd: Maddox Garbis (Plainfield N); 5th: Kane Robles (Joliet Catholic); 7th: Michael McNamara (Edwardsville); 8th: Erik Klichurov (Montini); 10th: Christian Corcoran (Providence)
113 – 2nd: Caleb Noble (Warren); 4th: Allen Woo (Montini); 8th: Anthony Sutton (Lockport)
120 – 1st: Dom Munaretto (SC East); 4th: Mike Malizzio (Montini); 5th: Ryan Dorn (Barrington); 7th: Jonathan Marquez (Warren); 9th: Maddux Tindal (Joliet Catholic)
126 – 1st: Josh Vazquez (Montini); 4th: Jason Hampton (Joliet Catholic); 7th: Vince Jasinski (Grant); 9th: Liam Aye (SC East)
132 – 7th: Liam Zimmerman (Lockport)
138 – 4th: Kam Luif (Montini); 9th: Erik Rodriguez (Grant)
150 – 1st: Justin Wardlow (Lockport); 2nd: Justus Heeg (Providence); 7th: Van Rosauer (Yorkville); Daniel Blanke (Barrington)
157 – 4th: Jack Ferguson (Yorkville); 7th: Ryan McGovern (SC East); 8th: Jaedon Calderon (Lockport)
165 – 4th: Anthony Gutierrez (SC East); 8th: Santino Tenuta (Montini); 9th: Sean Kolkebeck (DeKalb); 10th: Chris Miller (Lockport)
175 – 2nd: Luke Zook (Yorkville); 7th: Isaac Clausen (Joliet Catholic); 8th: Abe Leidig (SC East); 9th: AJ Tack (Montini)
190 – 2nd: Nico Ronchetti (Joliet Catholic); 7th: Casey Gipson (Grant); 8th: Ryder Janeczko (Yorkville)
215 – 4th: Luke Chrisse (Yorkville); 8th: Roman Janek (Edwardsville); 9th: Cooper Murray (SC East)
285 – 5th: Anthony Soto (Warren)

The Wonder Women
An 83-team girls tournament took place Jan. 3-4 at Battle High School in Columbia, Missouri, with seven Illinois teams present in the field.
Collinsville, Edwardsville, Roxana, Canton, Loyola Academy, Highland and Civic Memorial all took part in the tournament, which included teams from nine different states including Kentucky, Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma, Wisconsin, Tennessee, and Nebraska.
Among Illinois teams, Collinsville placed 33rd, Edwardsville took 41st, Roxana was 43rd, Canton placed 45th, Loyola Academy was 53rd, Highland finished 57th, and Civic Memorial was 81st.
Five Illinois girls finished in the top eight of their weight classes, and four of those reached the championship mat in Missouri. Roxana’s Chloe Skiles (105) and Loyola Academy’s Harlee Hiller (115) won individual titles, while Collinsville’s Taylor Dawson (140) and Highland’s August Rottmann (170) placed second in their divisions. Canton’s Kinnley Smith (130) also placed fifth.
Hiller participated as the lone representative from Loyola Academy, as did Rottman from Highland. Kendall Moss-Smith (115) went 3-2 as the lone representative from Civic Memorial.
Finishing outside the top eight but also scoring team points for Collinsville were Claire Dudley (105), Londyn Long (125), Addyson Bailey (130), and Tashieya Taylor (145).
Edwardsville got team points from Emma Rogers (100), Maddy Allen (105), Genevieve Dykstra (110), Gianna Linhorst (115), Allie Chong (120), Holli Zugmaier (135), Abigail Hayes (170) and Victoria White (190).
In addition to Skiles’ title, other Roxana wrestlers earning team points were Madelyn Murphy (100) and Emma Gischer (155).
In addition to Smith’s fifth-place finish, Canton received team points from LT Diephuis (100), Shayla Schielein (105), Chloe Hedges (115), Kennedy Smith (140) and Katelyn Marvel (145).
Detroit Catholic Central Invitational
Marian Central Catholic placed fifth at this year’s 27-team Detroit Catholic Central Invitational in Novi, Michigan, as the lone non-Michigan team participating in the tournament.
The Hurricanes got an individual title from Jimmy Mastny (190), who improved to 31-1 with his 4-0 decision on the title mat against Detroit Catholic’s Lee Krueger (20-5).
Coaches Jordan Blanton and Ryan Prater also got a second-place finish from Brayden Teunissen (17-2) at 120, a third from Vance Williams (21-3) at 150, fourths from Cam Spiniolas (21-11) at 106 and Austin Hagevold (23-5) at 113, and a sixth from Dan French (19-7) at 215. Also scoring team points for Marian Central was Nick Marchese (126).
Dundee won the tournament with 190.5 points, followed by Detroit Catholic (184.5), Clarkston (125), Davison (116.5), and Marian Central (105) to round out the top 5 team finishes.
Keokuk Girls Invite
Six Illinois teams competed at this year’s 15-team Keokuk Girls Invite in Iowa, and Galesburg had 11 medalists to place second overall. Team champion Burlington, IA posted a 187-115 edge over Galesburg.
The Silver Streaks got a pair of second-place finishes from Eliana Juarez (15-3) at 115 and Amyah Pruitt (14-6) at 135. Galesburg also got thirds from Kinsley Furnald (7-7) at 100 and Dai Driana Willford (13-6) at 130, fourths from Hannah Barton (7-8) at 145 and Macie Taylor (190), fifths from Addie Boyd (120) and Victoria Smith (135), sixths from Kelsie Wooldridge (120) and Lydia Aldus (125), a seventh from Vivian Aldus (155).
Among Illinois teams, Rock Island placed eighth, Quincy was 10th, Illini West took 12th, Warsaw placed 13th, and Payson-Seymour took 14th.
Illinois’ lone individual champion at Keokuk was Quincy’s Maggie Quinn (155), with a 7-5 decision on the title mat against Fort Madison’s Tatum Peters.
Placing fourth among Illinois wrestlers were Rock Island’s Mikayla Combs-Gibson (120), Quincy’s Zoe Bloyd (135).
Placing fifth in Iowa were Rock Island’s Rayna Skelton (125) and Izabel Vega (130); placing sixth were Warsaw’s Oriana Casey (145) and Illini West’s Trinity Abers (235).
Taking seventh were Rock Island’s Lucy Mass (115), Illini West’s Cora Hanks (125), and Payson-Seymour’s Bailey Davis (135), and finishing eighth were Illini West’s October Hendricks (135).
Zimmerman Invitational
The 15-team Zimmerman Invitational took place in Maquoketa, Iowa, with Fulton finishing eighth as the lone non-Iowa team participating in the tournament.
Steamers coach Shawn Price got third-place finishes from Skylier Crooks (165), Mason Kuebel (175) and Daniel Holman (215), a fourth from Easton Spooner (126), and a fifth from Teague Bray (144).
City High (234.5) won the team title, followed by Liberty (172.5), Waukon (160.5), Davenport Central (152), Tipton (132), Dubuque Hempstead (129.5), Clinton (116.5), Fulton (100), Maquoketa (73.5) and Center Point-Urbana (64) to round out the top 10 finishes.
57th Kinloch Classic
As the lone non-Missouri team participating in the tournament, Quincy placed fourth in the 26-team Kinloch Classic, hosted by Parkview High School in Springfield, Missouri.
Heavyweight King Johnson’s third-place finish led the way for coach Phil Neally’s Blue Devils, who got fourth-place finishes from Wyatt Boeing (126), Cooper Kamm (138), Brody Baker (157), Gunnar Derhake (165), and Alex Wells (190), fifths from Clayton McClelland (113) and Derik Lohmeyer (120), and a sixth from Cale Mixer (150).
Ozark won the team title with 390.5 points, followed by Rolla (290), Carl Junction (265), Quincy (258.5) and Nixa (219.5) to round out the top five team finishes.
Doc Buchanan Invitational
120 teams from 15 states competed at the formidable Doc Buchanan Invitational, hosted by Clovis High School in Clovis, California on Jan. 3-4.
IC Catholic Prep and Oak Park and River Forest were the lone Illinois teams participating at this year’s Doc Buchanan, and IC Prep’s Brody Kelly had the highest finish between the two teams, placing fourth at 178 pounds. OPRF’s MJ Rundell took fifth at 109, while IC Prep’s Deven Casey (135) and Foley Calcagno (218) placed sixth in their divisions.
Vandalia gets past Marian Central Catholic, Coal City to win ABE’s Rumble title

By Curt Herron – for the IWCOA
Building up a significant lead and then holding off a spirited challenge down the stretch from the last two schools that have won IHSA Class 1A titles proved to be a very successful approach for Vandalia in its quest to claim the championship at ABE’s Rumble in Springfield.
With seven of the eight IHSA Class 1A Dual Team Finals teams in attendance, including all of the four that placed, and 19 of the 25 teams ranked in Class 1A participating at the Bank of Springfield Center, it wasn’t a reach that three of the teams that won trophies last season, champion Marian Central Catholic, runner-up Coal City and fourth-place finisher Vandalia, would be the ones to beat.
As it turned out, in order for coach Jason Clay’s Vandals to capture the championship, they would need to defeat the program that won the 2023 IHSA title and the 2022 ABE’s Rumble, the Coalers, in the semifinals and then beat the 2024 IHSA 1A champions and 2023 Rumble title winners, the Hurricanes, in the finals.
And that’s just what Vandalia went out and did as it jumped out to a 21-0 lead over coach Mark Masters’ Coalers after five matches and had to win the finale to capture a 30-28 victory. In the championship dual meet, it built up a 31-15 advantage over coach Ryan Prater’s Hurricanes with four matches left and again needed to claim a victory in the final match to secure a 35-27 win and with it the title of the 60-team event, which is Illinois’ biggest in-season tournament.
Vandalia sealed the deal in its last match of the competition when freshman Aiden Evans jumped out to an early advantage over Cam Spiniolas at 106 and built on it and eventually captured a 10-0 major decision, denying Marian Central Catholic of repeating as champions in the tournament.
“It feels good to be this young and performing with all of these older guys, and keeping up with them,” Evans said. “Every day in the room, we’re always pushing each other to get better and we’re learning from the older guys and the state champs and just getting better every single day. (The semifinal win) Everybody was super hyped-up and having a good time, it was awesome. We started off in our youth group and we’ve grown up together practically and just become closer every single year.”
In the semifinals, Vandalia led 27-8 with five matches remaining, but the Coalers won the next four to gain their first lead of the meet when John Keigher captured a 3-1 decision over Kaden Tidwell at 215. But in the last match at 285, Dominic Swyers got a takedown at the end of the first period and then made that stand as he captured a 4-1 decision over Alec Waliczek to wrap up an exciting victory for his team.
Marian Central Catholic, Vandalia, Coal City and Unity were the top-four ranked teams in Class 1A, in that order, and those four wound up advancing to the semifinals, where the Hurricanes led 31-27 with three matches left against coach Logan Patton’s Rockets before getting decisive wins in each to claim a 48-27 victory.
Vandalia’s Max Philpot, a state runner-up last season, kicked off the championship dual meet at 113 with an 8-5 decision over Austin Hagevold, who took fourth in 2024. After Brayden Teunissen responded with an 8-3 decision at 120 over Preston Waughtel in a matchup of returning IHSA champions, the Vandals moved back in front at 9-3 at 126 when two-time IHSA champion and three-time finalist Tyson Waughtel recorded a fall in 1:04 over Zane Mochocki.
Marian Central Catholic answered with two narrow decisions to tie things as Nick Marchese won 9-8 over Brody Matthews at 132 and Andrew Alvarado added an 11-9 victory over Cole Yarbrough. Keagan Turner put the Vandals back up at 15-9 with a fall in 3:24 over Noah Cerny at 144 but Vance Williams, a state runner-up the last two seasons, evened things at 15-15 with a pin in 1:44 over Dade Kleinik.
That’s when Vandalia made its move as Dillon Hinton, a state runner-up in 2024, won by fall in 2:36 over Connor Cassels, Parker Ray followed with a pin in 1:28 over Sam Sarfo at 165 and Artan Mustafa capped the three-victory run with a 15-5 major decision over Josh Gawronski to make it 31-15 with four matches remaining.
Dan French started the late comeback for the Hurricanes with a 15-6 major decision over Ross Miller. Jimmy Mastny, a 2024 state champion, followed with a win by technical fall at 215 over Kaden Tidwell, who placed fourth last season, and Kaleb Eckman claimed a 5-1 decision over Swyers to pull Marian Central Catholic to within four points at 31-27 but that’s when freshman Evans ended the hopes of a repeat by the Hurricanes by performing well under pressure to wrap up the team title.
“I think it’s one of the best feelings ever,” Philpot said. “We did good not getting pinned when we were on our backs and you really realize how much the little points matter at the very end. We have the confidence and we knew that we had it in us. We just have to work harder and get better for dual team state. One of the main parts that makes us tough is that we’re all really good and we’re all technical and strong. And iron sharpens iron. Just drilling each other in the room makes us better all around.”
“We knew going into it that we had a shot at winning it again,” Teunissen said. “They won here right here, but I guarantee at team state that we’re going to win. This really doesn’t matter in the big picture. It’s good to see where you’re at early in the year and we know what we have to work on and adjust in the lineup to get to state. This is going to be our state finals match ideally so it’s good to wrestle him now and see where you’re at and feel each other out.”
Leading the way for the champion Vandals were Max Philpot (113), 9-0; Tyson Waughtel (126), 9-0; Aiden Evans (106), 8-1; Dillon Hinton (150/157), 8-1; Brody Matthews (132), 7-1; Artan Mustafa (165/175), 7-1; Preston Waughtel (120), 7-1; Parker Ray (157/165), 6-1; Keagan Turner (144), 6-1; Dominic Swyers (215/285), 7-2; Kaden Tidwell (190/215), 6-2; and Cole Yarbrough (138/144), 6-2.
Vandalia has advanced to the IHSA Dual Team Finals 22 times, which is one behind the leader in that category, Montini Catholic. The program has won 10 trophies while competing in that competition with its lone championship being won in 1996 in Class A when they were coached by Glenn Exton, who took nine teams to state.
With the championship in ABE’s Rumble, things are off to a great start for the Vandals, who received additional good news recently with the announcement that coach Jason Clay will be one of the inductees into this year’s Illinois Wrestling Coaches and Officials Association Hall of Fame. Clay has taken 13 teams to the Dual Team Finals and placed five times with his best finishes being second place in Class A in 2007, which was his first season, and second place in Class 1A in 2018.
“Vandalia has an awesome program,” Tyson Waughtel said. “I’m excited about what we’re going to do in the postseason and I’m ready for state championships. It’s a new experience definitely and it’s awesome seeing your teammates win. It’s what we’ve been working for. In the practice room we always talk about being state champs and I think this is our year to make it happen. I really like how everyone is disciplined, everyone comes to practice on time and wrestles with each other. And we have a close bond, definitely, it’s like family.”
Individuals with the best records for the runner-up Hurricanes were Kaleb Eckman (285), 9-0; Jimmy Mastny (190/215), 9-0; Vance Williams (150), 8-0; Nick Marchese (126/132), 7-0; Brayden Teunissen (120/126), 7-0; Dan French (190/215), 8-1; Austin Hagevold (113/120), 7-1; Andrew Alvarado (138/144), 7-2; Josh Gawronski (165/175), 7-2 and Cam Spiniolas (106/113), 6-2.
“It was good to find out where we’re at as a team and in individual matches like at 20 and 13 where the top two kids in the state wrestle,” Mastny said. “Getting new freshmen and transfers is fun and just building on what we had last year. I feel real good with where most of us are at.”
In the third-place dual, the Coalers opened the meet at 113 with a fall in 0:10 from Owen Petersen, who took sixth last season, over Ian Skibbe and then Culan Lindemuth pinned Zayden Mansfield in 1:39 and and Cooper Morris, who placed fifth in 2024, won by fall over Bryce Martin in 2:34 to grab an early 18-0 advantage.
After Hunter Shike edged Luke Munsterman 1-0 at 132 for the Rockets’ first victory, 2024 runner-up Brody Widlowski responded with a 2-0 victory over Taylor Finley to make it 21-3 before Unity made its move with wins in the next four matches.
Kaden Inman, a state runner-up last season, got things started in the four-win run for the Rockets with a victory by technical fall over Aidan Kenney before Holden Brazelton followed with a pin in 1:32 over Noah Houston at 150 to pull their team to within 21-14. Keegan Germano added an 11-6 decision over Mason Garner and Abram Davidson claimed a win by technical fall over Brock Finch at 165 and Unity was in front for the first time at 22-21.
After 2024 champion Landin Benson won by technical fall over Ryan Rink, who took fifth at state last season, and defending IHSA champion Hunter Eastin recorded a fall at 1:51 over Brody D’Orazio, Unity was up 28-26.
But the Coalers responded with a fall in 0:50 by Cade Poyner over Chason Daly in 0:50 and after John Keigher wrapped up the victory with a 3-0 decision over Jaden Dene at 285, Jason Piatek collected a forfeit win to conclude the meet.
“It was an exciting one for sure,” Widlowski said of the Vandalia meet. “After losing that, we can see what we need to improve on. We just have to take those little things and get better and see where we need to improve and come back stronger in the postseason. We’ve all wrestled for the same programs since we were four or five years old. It’s like a family here and it makes you want to wrestle even more for them.”
“We wrestled well,” Inman said. I think that our team is growing, for sure. We started off a little rough and we have some holes in our team, but I think we’re making it work out, and that’s good. I think that we have pretty good chemistry and we’re all getting along and making it pretty fun for everybody. We definitely want to make it to team state and get a medal out of it.”
Turning in the best efforts for the third-place Coalers were Landin Benson (175), 8-0; Brody Widlowski (138/144), 8-0; John Keigher (215/285), 6-0; Trace Wilson (157/165), 4-0; Cooper Morris (126), 8-1; Owen Petersen (113/120), 8-1; Brock Finch (165/175), 6-1; Alec Waliczek (215/285), 5-1; Brody D’Orazio (190), 4-1; Cade Poyner (190/215), 4-1; Payton Vigna (285), 4-1; Mason Garner (157/165), 6-2; Aidan Kenney (144), 6-2; Noah Houston (150), 5-2; and Jason Piatak (106/113), 5-2.
“We strive for the competition,” Lindemuth said. “It was a setback, but I think if we just get back in the practice room and get better with our technique and work on our mental game, too, we’ll get it. Our coaches strive for us to get bonus points and we try to beat them by as much as we can. We’re all friends and we hang out at school and at each others’ houses. We’re all one big family.”
“I like that we’re all together,” Keigher said. “And everyone is just really dedicated to it and really passionate. I think that we can get it done this year.”
Top performers for the fourth-place Rockets were Kaden Inman (144), 7-0; Abram Davidson (165), 6-0; Nathaniel DeNeal (138/144), 3-0; Hunter Eastin (190/215), 8-1; Holden Brazelton (150), 6-1; Taylor Finley (138), 6-1; Ryan Rink (175), 6-1; Josh Heath (165/175), 3-1; Hunter Shike (132), 6-2; Keegan Germano (157), 6-3; and Zayden Mansfield (120/126), 6-3.
“This year is going to be a lot different than last year and we’re going to get that medal,” Davidson said. “We’re really competing with these top teams and we’re definitely one of them. We definitely have some hammers, especially in our middleweight classes. We’re all working toward a common goal. I like the fact that we’re a family. We’re a really close-knit group, so when we’re wrestling, we’re not just wrestling for ourselves but we’re wrestling for each other, for the whole group.”
The semifinal between Vandalia and Coal City was a rematch of the 2024 IHSA Class 1A Dual Team semifinals meet in Bloomington, where the Coalers won 42-22 over the Vandals, who went on to fall 44-27 to Roxana in the third place meet while Marian Central Catholic won 34-27 over Coal City for the championship.
In this semifinal meet, the Vandals got a win by technical fall from Evans in the opener, Philpot followed with a major decision and Preston Waughtel added another victory by technical fall. Tyson Waughtel won a 16-4 major decision and Matthews edged Munsterman 1-0 to result in the early 21-0 advantage.
The Coalers closed to within 21-8 as Widlowski got a win by technical fall and Aidan Kenney followed with an 8-2 decision over Yarbrough. But Vandalia responded with two decisions as Hinton won 7-1 over Houston at 150 and Ray edged Garner 6-4 to make it 27-8.
Coal City moved in front for the first time at 28-27 following four-straight victories. Finch got a win by technical fall, Benson and Poyner followed with pins and John Keigher won a 3-1 decision over Tidwell. But the Coalers were unable to get one final win as Swyers secured a 4-1 decision over Waliczek to give the Vandals a dramatic 30-28 triumph.
In the other semifinal, there was another big early lead as the Hurricanes won the first five matches to move in front by a 27-0 margin. Spiniolas, Hagevold and Teunissen recorded falls, Zach Wheadon got a forfeit win and Marchese edged Shike 3-2 to build up the early advantage.
But the Rockets won five of the next six matches as Inman and Davidson got pins, Finley, Germano and Rink all got wins by technical fall while Williams won a 10-0 major decision over Brazelton to make it 31-27 in the Hurricanes’ favor with three matches left. That’s when Mastny got a win by technical fall over Eastin in a clash of defending state champions, French followed with a pin and Eckman got a forfeit win to make the final 48-27.
Winners of the various pools were: Unity in A; Marian Central Catholic in B; Oakwood/Salt Fork in C; Reed-Custer in D; Roxana in E; Vandalia in F; Olympia in G; Murphysboro in H; LeRoy/Tri-Valley in I; Oregon in J; Coal City in K; and Lena-Winslow/Stockton in L.
In the round that got the tournament from 32 to the 16 teams in the Gold Division, Vandalia beat El Paso-Gridley 72-3, Marian Central Catholic won 62-14 over Mt. Zion, Coal City claimed a 66-6 victory over Hoopeston Area/Milford and Unity was a 63-15 winner over Sherrard.
Oregon won 42-33 over Benton/Sesser-Valier, Murphysboro captured a 44-30 victory over Morrison, LeRoy/Tri-Valley beat Clifton Central/Iroquois West 48-15 and Oakwood/Salt Fork was a 44-28 victor over Monticello.
Chicago Hope Academy defeated Canton 50-24, Lena-Winslow/Stockton won 58-21 over St. Joseph-Ogden, Roxana claimed a 47-29 victory over Anna-Jonesboro and Olympia beat Frankfort Community 56-24.
PORTA edged Princeton 36-33, Newman Central Catholic got past Seneca 41-37, Reed-Custer won 45-33 over Beardstown and Auburn prevailed 39-38 over Riverdale.
Once the field of 16 was determined for the Gold Division, Vandalia advanced with wins of 61-13 over Chicago Hope Academy and 62-9 over LeRoy/Tri-Valley while Marian Central Catholic won 64-18 over Auburn and 50-17 over Oakwood/Salt Fork.
Coal City captured a 62-10 victory over PORTA and a 61-12 win over Oregon to earn its spot in the semifinals while Unity moved to the final four with triumphs of 46-32 over Newman Central Catholic and 43-27 over Murphysboro.
There was a six-way tie for the most teams points with 54 between Beardstown’s Chunk Dailey, Reed-Custer’s Jeremy Eggleston, Seneca’s Jeremy Gagnon, Newman Central Catholic’s Zhyler Hansen, Lawrence County’s Delaney Ledbetter and Monticello’s Hunter Romano.
Three individuals tied for seventh place with 53 team points, Princeton’s Casey Etheridge, Lena-Winslow/Stockton’s Oliver McPeek and Riverdale’s Dean Wainwright. And four tied for tenth with 52 points, Riverdale’s Kolton Kruse, Princeton’s Ian Morris, Mt. Zion’s Carson Thornton and Vandalia’s Tyson Waughtel.
Eggleston led all competitors with nine falls while Vandalia’s Tyson Waughtel, Unity’s Hunter Eastin and Hansen all finished with eight pins.
Newman Central Catholic’s Briar Ivey led all competitors with 147 total match points while Olympia’s Dylan Eimer ranked second with 132 match points. The two also led in wins by technical fall with Ivey getting seven tech falls while Eimer had six.
Other Gold Division results
The four quarterfinal losers went to the fifth-place bracket and Murphysboro advanced with a 44-24 win over Oakwood/Salt Fork while Oregon claimed a 46-31 victory over LeRoy/Tri-Valley.
In two of the other place matches in the Gold Division, Oregon won 34-31 over Murphysboro for fifth place and LeRoy/Tri-Valley beat Oakwood/Salt Fork 35-31 for seventh place.
The fifth-place meet was decided in the finale at 106 when Jordan Lowe won by technical fall over Mason Hartung to turn a 31-29 Red Devils advantage into a 34-31 triumph for the Hawks.
Coach Justin Lahman’s fifth-place Hawks were led by Nelson Benesh (132/138), 9-0; Preston LaBay (126/132), 7-0; Andrew Young (175), 5-1; Boone Alderks (120/126), 4-1; Jakobi Donegan (165), 4-1; Ethan Mowry (157), 7-2; Jackson Messenger (138/144), 6-3; Josiah Perez (113), 6-3; and Seth Rote (190), 4-2.
“It was a battle both of the two days,” Oregon’s Briggs Sellers said. “Coach talked about the whole just battle, battle, battle, and that’s all we did and we took care of business. We’ve just been grinding away in the room and getting one percent better every day and it’s been showing up on the mat. The deeper in the season we get, the better results we’ve been seeing. In our part of the state, regionals are tough and sectionals are tough and there’s never a light part of the season, so it’s a constant grind all year. It was really valuable for us to be able to see different teams from different areas. And it’s a great tournament for the team to come together and really helps us for the end of the year. We’re just a real tight-knit group and we’re all buddies with each other. But when it gets to practice, we like to beat up on each other which gets us all better.”
Top performers for coach Shea Baker’s sixth-place Red Devils were Paxton Pyatt (113), 9-0; Sayvair Williams (150/157), 8-0; Bryce Edwards (144/150), 5-1; Maxon Stearns (165/175), 5-1; Jeret Edwards (126/132), 7-2; Kaiden Richards (120), 7-2; Julien Tanner (285), 7-2; and Caybren Hubbard (215), 6-2. Murphysboro improved 19 spots from last year’s Rumble, when it finished ninth in the Silver Division.
“I’m proud of everyone,” Bryce Edwards said. “No one expected us to come here and do what we did. We came in here and put on a show and upset some people and we’re going to keep it rolling. We’re just a good group. We’ve got a new room and it’s almost like it’s changed the attitude of everybody in the room. We go in there and we practice hard and everybody has the same goal, and that’s to win. We just have to keep doing what we’re doing and take it one day at a time.”
In the seventh-place meet, the Comets won the first six matches to go up 26-0 but the Panthers responded with seven-consecutive victories to score 35-straight points, ending the drama with one match left when Tate Sigler captured a 7-2 decision over Kade Fleming at 285.
“There’s still work to be done since seventh place isn’t where you want to be,” LeRoy/Tri-Valley’s Brady Mouser said. “I think that we’re a really tight group. And I think that off the mat that have a really good relationship with one another. So when you go out on the mat, you’re fighting for your brothers. And I think that’s what drives us, that brotherhood. We’re down 26-0 to Oakwood and I dropped a match that I probably shouldn’t have and then we battled back and get the ‘W’. We have a big group of senior leaders and we’re leading and trying our best out there.”
Leading the way for coach Brady Sant Amour’s seventh-place Panthers were Tate Sigler (285), 9-0; Brock Owens (157/165), 6-0; Kobe Brent (150), 7-1; Brady Mouser (120), 7-2; Bo Zeleznik (175), 6-2; and Gannon Pinkerton (190), 6-3.
“Our program has had a lot of success,” Brent said. “We’ve all put in the work and we’re going to continue to do that in order to have a better outcome this year. I just like the bond that we really have as a team. We’ve got a big group of seniors and we’ve been wrestling for a very long time, since we were little kids. Our co-op with Tri-Valley and LeRoy has been really beneficial. If we weren’t together, I feel like we could probably both still have wrestling teams, but they wouldn’t really be competitive. We just have to get back in the room and keep working. to get better.”
Individuals who finished with the best records for coach Mike Glosser’s eighth-place Comets were Tyler Huchel (132), 9-0; Steven Uden (106), 7-0; Mason Swartz (120/126), 8-1; Thomas Wells (138/144), 8-1; Pedro Rangel (138/144), 7-2; Kade Fleming (285), 4-2; and Brayden Edwards (113), 6-3.
“This coaching staff is amazing and we have great partners all around the room,” Swartz said. “This team is awesome, everyone’s there for each other and we’re a team family. All of the hard work and coaching is paying off. It’s not even just the wrestling aspect, it’s fun being a part of this team and there’s really never a dull moment with this team.”
Chicago Hope Academy beat Reed-Custer 37-34 and Olympia 44-33 to advance to the ninth-place meet where they faced Lena-Winslow/Stockton, who moved on with a 43-33 win over Newman Central Catholic and a 37-30 triumph over Roxana.
Chicago Hope Academy defeated Lena-Winslow/Stockton 42-34 for ninth place and Roxana claimed a 48-24 win over Olympia/Delavan to finish in 11th place.
Coach Dan Willis’ ninth-place Eagles were led by Arkail Griffin (165/175), 9-0; Roy Phelps (285), 8-1; Nolan Callahan (113/120), 7-1; Josiah Willis (132), 6-1; Santori Knight (150), 7-2; and Indigo Berg (106), 6-3.
Leading the way for Kevin Milder’s 10th-place PantherHawks were Eli Larson (175), 9-0; Oliver McPeek (190/215), 9-0; Mauricio Glass (138/144), 7-0; Arrison Bauer (144/150), 8-1; Jeremiah Luke (215/285), 7-1; John Mensendike (165), 6-2; Reece Demeter (144/150), 4-2; and Mark Detwiler (157), 6-3.
The ninth-place meet was a rematch from day one where the PantherHawks prevailed 41-39. In the teams’ second meeting, Roy Phelps won 11-5 over Jeremiah Luke at 285 to put the Eagles up 36-34 and Indigo Berg pinned Carson Hill in 1:31 to wrap up the victory.
“We came in knowing that we were the underdogs but we put in the work every day,” Phelps said. “We lost by two points the first day, but we opened up, it was amazing. We know that there’s guys that don’t respect the City teams and I tell our guys every day that we have to take that personally. We want to make statements with every single match. It’s not even about winning or losing, it’s about making a statement, and that’s what we’ve been doing so far and that’s what we’re going to continue to do.”
Competitors with the best showings for coach Rob Milazzo’s 11th-place Shells were Trevor Gihring (157), 8-0; Brandon Green, Jr. (138), 7-0; Robert Watt (190), 8-1; Madelyn Murphy (106/113), 6-1; Chloe Skiles (106/113), 5-1; Lyndon Thies (175), 5-1; Kaden Carilsle (144/150), 7-2; Lleyton Cobine (132), 7-2; and Logan Riggs (144/150), 5-2.
Top performers for Josh Collins’ 12th-place Spartans were Dylan Eimer (120/126), 7-0; Cooper Phillips (138/144), 7-0; Brandon Gaither (106), 6-0; Darian Holloway (285), 5-1; Carter Knobloch (120/126), 5-1; Mateo Martinez (126/132), 5-1; Kaden Collins (150/157), 7-2; Kaden Thomas (165/175), 6-2; Zach Fry (190), 5-2; and Tucker Garey (113), 6-3.
PORTA/A-C Central/Greenview/Havana won 48-29 over Newman Central Catholic to take 13th place and Reed-Custer edged Auburn/Franklin/New Berlin 41-39 to finish in 15th place.
Posting the best records for coach Jeff Hill’s PORTA/A-C Central/Greenview/Havana Bluejays were Jamarion Thomas (165/175), 4-1; Mike Minor (144), 7-2; Logan Baker (150/157), 6-2; Zach Bryant (132), 6-2; Kainin Fillbright (113), 6-2; and Hunter King (138/144), 5-2.
Coach Brian Bahrs’ Newman Central Catholic Comets were led by Zhyler Hansen (126), 9-0; Briar Ivey (157), 9-0; Landon Near (106/113), 8-0; Blair Grennan (106/113), 4-0; Landon Blanton (132), 8-1; Mathew Murray (215), 7-2; and Javen Reyes (113/120), 6-3.
Individuals with the best efforts for coach Yale Davis’ Reed-Custer Comets were Dominic Alaimo (215), 9-0; Colton Drinkwine (106), 9-0; Jeremy Eggleston (138), 9-0; Jayden Sanchez (126), 9-0; Reed Newbrough (165), 8-1; Nathan Vogler (190), 5-2; and Kaaden Wood (120), 5-2.
Leading the way for coach Matt Grimm’s Auburn/Franklin/New Berlin Trojans were Maliki Fitch (175/190), 7-1; Trey Boston (138), 6-1; Ayden Williams (285), 4-1; Owen Evans (175/190), 7-2; and Drayven Hamm (132/138), 6-3. Auburn improved 19 spots from last year’s Rumble when it was third in Bronze.
Silver Division results
Canton won 51-23 over Morrison to take first place in the Silver Division while Princeton was a 46-32 victor over Monticello for third place.
Individuals with the best records for the Canton Little Giants were led by Connor Williams (285), 9-0; Dyllan Steele (126/132), 7-0; Jacob Hardesty (120/126), 8-1; Jack Jochums (138), 7-1; Jaxsun Owens (106/113), 7-2; and Gus Lidwell (190/215), 6-3.
Posting the best finishes for the Morrison Mustangs were Cael Wright (106/113), 9-0; Caleb Modglin (144/150), 7-1; Brady Anderson (165/175), 6-1; Noah Stout (175/190), 7-2; Levi Milder (157), 5-2; and Kamden White (132/138), 6-3.
Top performers for the Princeton Tigers were Ace Christiansen (144/150), 9-0; Casey Etheridge (165), 9-0; Ian Morris (215/285), 9-0; Cade Odell (285), 4-0; Kane Dauber (132/138), 8-1; Augustus Swanson (120/126), 6-1; Kaydin Gibson (126/132), 5-1; Jaydon Cooke (126/132), 4-1; and Jacob Paull (113), 6-3.
Leading the way for the Monticello Sages were Hunter Romano (190/215), 9-0; Russ Brown (190/215), 8-1; Ezekiel Young (120), 8-1; Max Sinkosky (175), 4-1; and Nick Litchfield (126), 6-3.
Seneca captured a 42-29 win over Benton/Sesser-Valier for fifth place in Silver while Riverdale claimed a 40-36 victory over Clifton Central/Iroquois West to take seventh place.
Top performers for the Seneca Fighting Irish were Jeremy Gagnon (285), 9-0; Raiden Terry (113/120), 8-1; Avery Phillips (138/144), 7-2; Nick Grant (165), 6-2; Gunner Varland (157/165), 5-2; Alex Gagnon (175), 6-3; Ryker Terry (132), 6-3; and Landen Venecia (190/215), 6-3.
Individuals who turned in the best records for the Benton/Sesser-Valier Rangers were Cohen Sweely (113/120), 8-0; Izaiah Dalton (190), 7-0; Tiffin Kouzoukas (157/165), 7-1; Braxton Tittle (106), 6-1; Kobe Cali (165/175), 5-1; Derek Wilkey (144/150), 5-1; Bryson Schram (120/126), 4-1; and Zane Stanley (106/113), 6-2.
Leading the way for the Riverdale Rams were Kolton Kruse (150), 9-0; Blake Smith (157/165), 9-0; Dean Wainwright (132/138), 9-0; Jacob Baustian (285), 8-1; Finley Sullivan (106), 7-2; and Cadem Chenoweth (126/132), 4-2.
Turning in the best showings for the Clifton Central/Iroquois West Comets were Gianni Panozzo (157), 6-1; Evan Cox (144), 7-2; Brody O’Connor (215), 6-2; and Giona Panozzo (150/157), 5-2.
Sherrard finished in ninth place in the Silver Division after winning 41-37 over Mt. Zion and Frankfort Community/Christopher beat Beardstown 45-33 to take 11th place.
Individuals with the best records for the Sherrard Tigers were Jonathan Weakley (215/285), 7-2; Andrew Knox (150), 6-2; Jacob Fratzke (138), 6-3; and Cooper Thomas (190/215), 6-3.
Leading the way for the Mt. Zion Braves were Carson Thornton (175), 9-0; Keller Stocks (215), 8-1; Drayden Smith (144), 7-2; Sammy Toth (126/132), 7-2; and Vincent Baker (113), 6-3.
Posting the best records for the Frankfort Community/Christopher Redbirds were Conner Henson (190), 9-0; Hudson Anderton (106/113), 7-2; Brandon Turner (215), 7-2; and Clayton Dent (175), 6-3.
Top performances for the Beardstown Tigers were Chunk Dailey (285), 9-0; Gunner Looker (175/190), 9-0; Kellen Brown (126/132), 7-1; and Luis De La Cruz (144), 6-2.
Hoopeston Area/Milford defeated St. Joseph-Ogden 49-26 for 13th place while El Paso-Gridley won 57-24 over Anna-Jonesboro to finish in 15th place.
Leading the way for the Hoopeston Area/Milford Cornjerkers were Aiden Bell (120/126), 9-0; Charlie Flores (106/113), 8-1; Angel Zamora (175/190), 8-1; Ayden Larkin (165), 7-2; and Earl Kelnhofer (175/190), 6-3.
Turning in the best showings for the St. Joseph-Ogden Spartans were Landen Butts (144), 8-1; Thomas Ware (150), 4-1; Jackson Walsh (113/120), 7-2; Nathan Daly (150), 3-1; and Camden Getty (120/126), 6-3.
Top performers for the El Paso-Gridley Titans were Ryden Barker (215), 7-2; Tom Erwin (113/120), 6-2; and Dominic Ricconi (190), 6-3.
Individuals with the best records for the Anna-Jonesboro Wildcats were Drew Sadler (126), 7-2; Zoee Sadler (106/113), 7-2; and Levi Jones (215/285), 5-2.
Bronze Division results
Orion took first place in the Bronze Division with a 42-39 victory over Warrensburg-Latham/Maroa-Forsyth while Ottawa Marquette took third place after getting a 47-36 win over Rockridge.
Leading the way for the Orion Chargers were Maddux Anderson (190/215), 6-1; Carson Peck (165/175), 6-1; Roman Schmieder (106), 5-1; Aiden Fisher (215/285), 6-2; Dayne Gibbons (175/190), 6-2; Tyler Olson (120), 6-2; and Anthony Dochterman (157/165), 5-2.
Top performers for the Warrensburg-Latham/Maroa-Forsyth Cardinals were Kaden Roberts (126.132), 8-0; Charlie Wittmer (144/150), 8-0; Logan Roberts (120/126), 7-0; Jack Kerley (285), 4-1; and Taygan Gossard (113), 6-2.
Posting the best records for the Ottawa Marquette Crusaders were Reily Leifheit (165), 8-0; Koby Clark (120/126), 7-1; Landyn Mcemery (175), 6-1; Brysen Manly (150), 6-2; Alex Schaefer (215), 6-2; and Beau Thompson (132), 6-2.
Individuals with the best showings for the Rockridge Rockets were Jude Finch (138), 7-0; Clayton Blumenstein (126), 7-1; Nate Lower (106), 7-1; Thomas Sowards (144), 6-1; and Landon Ortery (165), 3-1.
Westville/Georgetown-Ridge Farm claimed fifth place with a 47-27 triumph over Cumberland while Lawrence County took seventh place after it won 43-36 over Hillsboro.
Top performers for Westville/Georgetown-Ridge Farm Tigers were Logan Mahaffey (157), 4-1; Liam Hughes (138), 6-2; Vance Johnson (132), 6-2; Ethan Miller (190), 6-2; and Josiah Sedlacek (285), 6-2.
Turning in the best records for the Cumberland Pirates were Peyton Groves (113), 7-1; Owen McGinnis (157/165), 7-1; Harley Pierce (138), 6-2; and Sawyer Welbaum (126), 6-2.
Individuals with the top finishes for Lawrence County were Delaney Ledbetter (113/120), 9-0; Dylan Camden (285), 5-1; Dayton Ledbetter (106), 3-1; Hudson Meek (144), 6-2; and Drew Seitzinger (120/126), 6-2.
Leading the way for the Hillsboro Hilltoppers were Kohl Fuller (106), 6-2; and Seth Hubbart (175), 5-2.
Litchfield defeated Deer Creek-Mackinaw 53-30 to finish in ninth place and Stillman Valley captured a 47-30 victory over Erie/Prophetstown to claim 11th place.
Individuals with the best records for the Litchfield/Mt. Olive Purple Panthers were Vinny Moore (120), 8-0; Tristan Staggs (215), 6-1; Braxton Kieffer (157), 6-2; Rilynn Younker (113), 6-2; Jayden Ellinger (175), 5-2; and Clayton Hauter (144), 5-2.
Top performers for the Deer Creek-Mackinaw Chiefs were Ryker Gembering (190/215), 8-0; and Ashten Finch (144), 5-2.
Leading the way for the Stillman Valley Cardinals were Henry Hildreth (150), 8-0; Brock Needs (215), 7-1; Michael Pannarale (106), 7-1; and Ethan Waugh (165), 6-2.
Posting the best records for the Erie/Prophetstown Panthers were Tristan Hovey (144), 7-0; Jordae Crow (175), 6-0; Aidan Jepson (138), 4-0; Wyatt Goossens (157), 5-1; and Caleb Reymer (285), 4-1.
Macomb captured a 48-33 victory over Mercer County to finish in 13th place and Quincy Notre Dame was a 42-30 winner over Shelbyville to claim 15th place.
Turning in the best record for the Macomb Bombers was Kelly Ladd (138/144), 5-0.
Leading the Mercer County Golden Eagles was Evan Clark (144), 6-2.
Individuals with the best records for the Quincy Notre Dame Raiders were Bradi Lahr (157/165), 8-0; Ryan Darnell (190), 7-1; and Taylin Scott (215), 7-1.
Top performers for the Shelbyville Rams were Hayden Mudgette (190/215), 3-0; Andre Townsend (285), 7-1; Colin Wells (120), 7-1; Johnathan Kirkbride (126/132), 6-2; Ryne Peavler (165), 6-2; and Tucker Kull (175), 6-2.
Copper Division results
Tremont claimed first place in the Copper Division with a 47-23 victory over Pontiac and Prairie Central finished third following a 40-30 triumph over Farmington/Cuba.
Individuals with the best records for the Tremont Turks were led Nicky Weber (113/120), 7-0; Bowden Delaney (175/190), 6-0; Gavin Stoker (126/132), 6-1; Will Vicary (157/165), 6-1; Chase Stedman (138/144), 4-1; and Blaine Williams (175/190), 5-2.
Top performers for the Pontiac Indians were Noah Davis (132), 7-1; Brayden Quas (150), 7-1; Hunter Christenson (157/165), 6-1; Hunter McCullough (285), 6-2; and Jocelyn Cobix (126), 5-2.
Posting the best records for the Prairie Central Hawks were Jaxson Martin (165/175), 5-2; and John Traub (132), 4-2.
Leading the way for the Farmington/Cuba Farmers were Chase Frye (138-144), 7-1; Bradlee Ellis (144/150), 5-1; Gage Williamson (150), 4-1; and Austin Brewer (138/144), 3-1.
Sacred Heart-Griffin took fifth place after beating Mt. Carmel 30-30 by criteria and Wilmington placed seventh following its 29-12 victory over Walther Christian Academy.
Leading the way for the Sacred Heart-Griffin Cyclones was Casen Lyons (190), 6-1.
Individuals with the best records for the Mt. Carmel Golden Aces were Johnny Askren (165), 8-0; and Lukas Madlem (215), 3-1.
Turning in the best records for the Wilmington Wildcats were Logan VanDuyne (190), 7-0; Will Wilson (215/285), 6-1; Memphis Iwen (215/285), 5-2; and Oakley Rivera (132), 5-2.
Top performers for the Walther Christian Academy Broncos were Caleb Peterson (144/150), 6-2; and Brian Gutierrez (285), 4-2.
Knoxville won 52-12 over Camp Point Central/Southeastern/Brown County to take ninth place while Robinson finished in 11th place after it claimed a 30-24 triumph over Illini Bluffs.
Individuals with the best records for the Knoxville Blue Bullets were Gavyn Stevens (132/138), 6-1; Gage Fox (144/150), 6-1; and Ethan Bailey (190), 3-1.
Turning in the best records for the Camp Point Central/Southeastern/Brown County Panthers were Jackson Buehler (113), 5-1; Paxton Buehler (106), 4-1; and Amber Louderback (138), 3-1.
Leading the way for the Robinson Maroons were Jacob Booher (126), 5-2; Gracen Elliott (106), 5-2; and Will Mullins (175), 5-2.
Top performers for the Illini Bluffs Tigers were Jackson Carroll (150/157), 7-0; and Barret Speck (120/126), 6-1.