Lincoln-Way co-op wins title at Hampshire Whip-Pur Women’s Classic
By Chris Walker – for the IWCOA
The Lincoln-Way co-op, featuring individuals from Lincoln-Way Central, Lincoln-Way East and Lincoln-Way West, shared something in common with 13 other teams on Saturday at Hampshire’s 2nd Whip-Pur Women’s Classic.
All 14 of them had a single champion.
What set Lincoln-Way apart was the success of its numbers. While Zoe Dempsey (110) won a title, Aubrey Barnes (115) took second and Monica Alvarez (100), Emily Peyton (105), Jenna Lee (170) and Riley DePolo (235) all won third-place matches.
Also for the team champions, Liv Clumpner (135) and Maryanna Quezada (190) finished fourth, Sadie Sparks (120) and Claire Bray (130) took fifth place and Ella Giertuga (140) was sixth while Bailey Mitchell (145) and Kate Bohms (155) both added valuable team points.
It was the second tournament win this season for Lincoln-Way, who also won Antioch’s Sandy Gussarson Girls Invitational that was held at Lakes Community on November 30.
“That was more of a round robin and not a true bracket so this feels like a true tournament to win,” Lincoln-Way coach Josh Napier said. “We went to the (Dan Gable) Donnybrook tournament and did well there. We tied for the most match points with another team in Illinois (Kaneland) for eighth-most match points overall out of 44 teams and most teams were from out of state.”
As successful as Lincoln-Way was at Hampshire, Napier saw some missed opportunities.
“I would say I wasn’t satisfied with how we wrestled completely,” he said. “Yes we wrestled well, but we definitely lost some matches we should’ve won. So points aside, we want to see them improve. Sometimes we make the same mistakes. There are some things we can fix and the good thing about it is as much as we’ve competed this year, we keep seeing things we can fix and address and every week we’re getting better at it.”
“It’s happening at the right time,” he said. “The dual team state thing is coming up next weekend, which we’re really excited about and individual state is still six weeks away for the regional. There’s plenty of time to fix things. The goal would be to take home a trophy there, win the whole thing next week, and when that’s over, switch overall to the individual side for sure.”
While Lincoln-Way has some experience, six of its starters are new to this sport this year.
“We’re rolling right now and we’re young,” Napier said. “So overall I think we’re doing a good job of just developing. We have 35 kids. We’re like 30 active and about five out with injuries. And 14 of those girls are freshmen. So we’re young and it’s exciting because most of them are pretty new to it. Wrestling is wrestling and you love seeing the camaraderie among the girls, just like with the boys.”
Dempsey, a junior who took fifth place at 105 in the 2024 IHSA Finals, won by fall in 2:16 against Metea Valley’s Anusha Nagar in the quarters, picked top a 17-0 won by technical fall over Crystal Lake South’s Annalee Aarseth in the semis and won by fall in 1:59 over Woodstock junior Eva Hermansson in the 110 final to improve to 19-1 on the season.
Woodstock didn’t produce a champion but navigated through the diversity of the tournament with seven girls placing to take second as a team with 126 points, but it was well behind the 206.5 put up by Lincoln-Way.
Eva Hermansson (110) and Allison Hill (235) took second for coach Eric Hunt’s Blue Streaks. Danica LaTessa (120) and Hannah Olsen (125) placed third, Mila Masny (135) was fifth and Melanie Ziemann (100) and Brianna Crown (155) were sixth.
Wheeling was third with 121 points. The Wildcats had four wrestlers advance to the finals, easily the most among the field. The champions had two finalists as did the host Whip-Purs, Hononegah, Metea Valley, Woodstock and Zion-Benton.
Wheeling junior Elise Burkut pinned Zion-Benton junior Emily Ortiz in 5:37 to win the 130 title. It was the third time already this season that the two went head-to-head and Burkut won the rubber match, at least for now. Haydee Cruz (100), Krystal Diaz (145) and Nikol Orendarchuk (155) placed second for Wheeling and Layah Woods (135) took third.
“We had four in the finals and a couple of them are second-year wrestlers and the others have been here since day one (of the program),” Wheeling coach Tony Piltaver said. “We preach to them the same way as our boys coach does. We’re going to ask you to do a lot more than maybe you’d normally do just in training and preparation. (Diaz) She lost to (Zion-Benton’s) Naomi Foote in the final but she made it past the semis and she had come up short. That was really nice for her to get over the hump.”
Hampshire placed fourth with 101.5 points.
When senior Anneliese Tavira pinned Plainfield East senior Jennifer Paul in 1:37 in the 170 title match, expectations were met and history was made. Tavira became the first Whip-Pur to win in the tournament’s infancy.
“Entering the tournament I had high expectations for myself because last year I placed fourth, but worked really hard this summer to be a better wrestler,” she said. “Obviously I came in here with the expectation of winning and getting some takedowns and that’s what I did. Last match I think I got a little too excited and forced a double which didn’t go well, but I snapped right back and won my match.”
She got a quick 33-second pin in the quarterfinals over Dundee-Crown’s Joana Trujillo and an 18-3 win by technical fall against Hononegah’s Linda Villa Pioquinto in the semis to arrange for her bout with Paul.
“I have a lot of hopes for what I want to do, especially at Hampshire,” Tavira said. “I want to make some noise and going to state would be amazing. Winning this alone was a big jump. It’s surreal. I almost cried a bit. If you really put in the work you can really do it.”
Competing for something bigger than a waistline was never in her plans at the get-go. Now she’s not wasting any time in pursuit of victories.
“I think going into wrestling when I first started, I just wanted to lose weight,” Tavira said. “A month or two months into it, I was like way more into it than wanting to lose weight. I want to win and last season I went 4-6 and was like ‘I hate losing.’ It’s something I tell the JV kids and even myself. You have to hate losing more than you like winning. It’s just the mentality I’ve had. I need to go out there, I need to wrestle and I need to win. Wrestling has definitely built that, I would say.”
Hampshire coach Matt Todd recognized the historic moment for his wrestler.
“It’s not just another tournament win for Anneliese but a tournament win at home,” Todd said. “That got her really excited. It’s something that she is very happy about. Our girls were very happy they could wrestle in a tournament at home, at their school, representing their school and themselves. They were very happy about that.”
Tavira is adamant about finding success on the mat. So she welcomes all feedback. It helps her.
“I think some people wrestle for a really long time and build bad habits,” she said. “Lucky for me I just started so I can have so many people criticize me like this and that and I learn so much. I love watching film. I’m constantly watching film, especially with the sport growing.”
“I think our team is going to be great and keep growing,” Tavira said. “We’re doing really well at tournaments placing third to fourth and we don’t have a full lineup. It’s six to eight girls wrestling all the time. We really do get along and push each other. The girls are just great. They work hard, they ask questions. They do good.”
Todd and his staff recognized the need for a girls tournament of this magnitude and made it happen last year. The follow-up matched that success.
“We saw a need for it last year and when we saw it, I talked to my staff and a lot of them were on the same page,” he said. “And talking even to some of our conference coaches. ‘Hey, if we host, you want to come wrestle here?’ And they were 100 percent on board with it. We talked to our AD to make sure we were good there and then we started doing it.”
It takes a collective effort from many at a host school to put on a tournament of this size.
“It’s so worth it,” Todd said. “It’s for the girls. It’s to highlight girls wrestling and the growth of it. And having a daughter myself, she gets excited seeing all these girls wrestle and how awesome is it seeing it all here? Putting it together is stressful but it’s day like today and seeing all the champions and other placers that makes it worth it. Having schools from all over like Oak Forest, Zion-Benton, Rockton Hononegah and some Rockford schools wanting to come here and have their girls wrestle and for some competition, it’s a neat thing to see all these schools come together for one goal.”
Champions weren’t the only winners either.
“We had a coach come up today asking about medals for certain brackets because a girl was 0-4 (coming in) and today she won two matches and got a medal,” Todd said. “These girls were so excited and they’re getting better and loving the sport of wrestling and encouraging each other. Even just handing out some of the medals and seeing the smiles on their faces said it all. They were all very excited and just staring at their medals in awe.”
A lot of memories were created at the Whip-Pur Classic. They’ll be traced back to Hampshire, a village of about 8,000 residents in Kane and McHenry counties.
“We were very excited we were able to host this and it puts the Hampshire name out there,” Todd said. “No one really knows Hampshire or where it’s at. We’re a 3A school out in the middle of nowhere. So we were excited they could come here and see that this Hampshire school’s mascot is weird but it’s a cool place to wrestle.”
Dundee-Crown took fifth place with 89 points. Rounding out the top 10 were Hononegah (87.5), Oak Forest (85.5), Plainfield East (77.5), Metea Valley (74.5) and Lakes Community (69).
Rockford East freshman Saya Hongmoungkhoune, who won the title at 100, likes to tease her coach. That’s because she’s also her older sister, Madelynn Hongmoungkhoune, who also wrestled at Rockford East, graduating in 2020.
“She knows my limits, she knows what I can do, she just knows.” Saya Hongmoungkhoune said. “She basically just knows what I need to do and what I like to work on and all of that, and obviously I kind of mess with her a lot and she messes with me.”
“Every match, every practice is a learning curve for the both of us,” Madelynn Hongmoungkhoune said. “Separating myself from being her sister and then being her coach, and not bringing it home all the time. Knowing our limits at home as well. It’s a learning process but it’s a good process. I wouldn’t have it any other way.”
After a bye, Hongmoungkhoune, who’s 8-0, won 20-3 by technical fall over Hononegah’s Monika Jahn in the quarters to advance to the semis where she pinned Wheaton North’s Izzy Paz at 3:26. She defeated Wheeling junior Haydee Cruz in the 100 final, getting a pin in 1:02.
“It was a pretty good day,” Saya Hongmoungkhoune said. “I was at the bottom of the bracket and had a bye in the first round. My first match I came out and just tried to score as many points as I could and then my second match, it was pretty tough, I ended up pinning her in the second period and then my finals match she was pretty tough, too, and I just kind of (long pause) I just kind of pinned her.”
While the elder sister was involved in the martial arts before giving wrestling a try during her freshman year, Saya Hongmoungkhoune has now been wrestling for more than half of her life.
“I’ve been wrestling since I was seven so that’s eight years,” she said. “The biggest difference now is there are a lot more girls here. When I did club, the girls division was very rare and I would always have to wrestle with boys, and if there was a girls version there were only two or three girls. Most of who I was surrounded with, my whole team was basically boys. There were only one or two other girls. And it’s kind of the same now, but I have my sister as my coach who knows more about being a girl wrestler. I am hoping to wrestle in college and to win the national championship. I hope to better myself and to be able to make it to the Olympics and hopefully win gold there.”
About a year ago, Prospect senior Viola Pianetto was a triple jumper on the girls track and field team at her school, but was often sidelined with ankle injuries. Today, she’s committed to wrestle at Minot State University despite being still new to the sport.
“I’m hitting my one-year since I started wrestling during the preseason last year,” she said. “(Before wrestling) I was chronically injured with my ankles with the track and field team through my school. So all my friends wrestled so I was like why don’t I give it a try? I did triple jump so it was constant pounding and with the transition over to wrestling I don’t have any more ankle issues ever. It was the best decision I could’ve made.”
After starting her wrestling journey at Suplex Wrestling Club, Pianetto moved on to Built By Brunson Wrestling and then to Izzy Style Wrestling where she’s training these days.
“I’ve trained under Haley Augello and Izzy Martinez,” she said. “They are both great coaches, truly amazing coaches. And I was also being coached by Tommy Maddux, who is one of my off-season coaches as well.”
Triple jumpers are usually some of the strongest and most explosive athletes you will find. Possessing those traits undoubtedly has helped Pianetto’s transition from track and field to wrestling. It’s apparent she was already committed to being an athlete well before she became a wrestler. Her drive combined with hunger for a new sport is why she’s finding herself at the top of the award stand after high school tournaments.
After a bye and 22-6 win by technical fall over Woodstock’s Mila Masny, Pianetto won by fall in 1:09 over Lincoln-Way’s Liv Clumpner in the semifinals before outlasting Hononegah freshman Bella Castelli, 9-5, to win the 135 title and improve to 14-0.
“I’ve made a lot of sacrifices,” Pianetto said. “I didn’t spend Thanksgiving with my family, I don’t spend Christmas with my family. I’m constantly training.”
That included the night before this tournament.
“Last night my brother came home from college and they all decided to have family night and play games and watch movies and I was at the gym with my sauna suit like pouring out four pounds of sweat. People say things like ‘Wow you’ve only been doing this for a year, how do you get to this point?’ and it’s like at the end of the day, how bad do you want it? How bad are you willing to sacrifice everything you have? And you know people don’t understand that wrestling it’s like a lifestyle sport. You’re constantly on a diet.”
Pianetto is continuing to push herself.
“Training with the top girls in the nation like Harlee Hiller and Sydney Perry and these girls when they push me at Izzy (Style Wresting) it comes to show how much I’m not doing,” she said. “People are like ‘you’re doing so much, you’re doing everything you can,’ but in my head I’m not doing enough. These girls are next level and I need to sacrifice more to get where they’re at so they’re truly an inspiration to me and I respect them so much.”
Pianetto was joined by Mother McAuley senior Maggie Zuber, who took first at 140, at the 2024 Fargo Junior Women’s Freestyle National Championship earlier this year. In fact, the two roomed together.
Zuber improved to 10-0 picking up four victories in her run to take home the 140-pound crown.
She beat Mundelein’s Khloe Heerdegen by fall at 3:40 to start. She followed with a 12-4 major decision over Lincoln-Way’s Ella Giertuga, a 19-3 win by technical fall over Richmond-Burton’s Madelyn Peterie in her semifinal and then pinned Metea Valley sophomore Rosie Picari in 3:56 in the 140 title bout.
“I don’t get a lot of matches, to be honest, in my season,” Zuber said. “This is the first year where I’ve had the most matches I’ve ever gotten and it’s been two weeks. I realized I missed a lot of matches and some I really wish I could get some different points on the board faster. I think I did pretty well with takedowns, but really got to work on a lot of aspects of scrambling, and I feel like that’s important. I know of wrestlers who have said they don’t really know how to move in and out of positions so I’ve been working a lot on that.”
As the first girl to ever wrestle for Mother McAuley, Zuber’s been at it since eighth grade. It certainly helped that her brother Matt Zuber wrestled at Fenwick while she was younger and then competed at NIU while she was making history at McAuley.
“I never thought I was going to wrestle, ever,” she said. “But my brother wrestled at NIU which is DI and then with Covid my dad actually made me get out of the house so I knew I had to do something so I got out and started walking out to Vittum Park (in Chicago) for workouts and Beat the Streets.”
Meeting other wrestlers has enhanced her journey. She never would’ve met Pianetto. Now they’re friends pursuing similar dreams.
“I know she’s committed to wrestle in college and I and some of our other roommates at Fargo are all planning on wrestling at the next level,” Zuber said. “It’s funny. We’re all meeting each other last year and now we may see each other at college invites. You push yourself to the limit every time you go out there and if you don’t, you’ll lose. You have to put the pedal to the medal and work hard.”
Dundee-Crown senior Diamond Rodriguez, who took first at 105, was the lone champion who also won last year. Rodriguez, who was the 100-pound champion in 2023, improved to 15-0 after pinning Jacobs freshman Julia Felton in 0:39 in the 105 finals to cap a title run where she won her other two matches with first-period falls.
The other champions in the tournament all won by fall. Hononegah senior Angelina Cassioppi won the 120 title with a fall in 1:19 over Hampshire sophomore Amelia Nudeelea-Polanin. Cassioppi, who is 11-0, is one of four three-time IHSA champions and hopes to become the first four-time state champion this season. All of her four pins came during the first period.
Lakes Community senior Josephine Larson took first at 190 with a fall in 0:20 over Jefferson sophomore Kylie Eilken, the shortest amount of time. Larson is a two-time IHSA medalist at 190 who finished in second place last season as she helped her team to become the first IHSA team champion. She also got falls in her other three matches.
Zion-Benton senior Naomi Foote pinned Wheeling sophomore Krystal Diaz in 3:26 in the 145 title match after recording two first-period falls.Foote took sixth at 145 in the 2024 IHSA Finals.
Grayslake Central junior Gianna Arzer, who is 18-2, pinned Rock Falls junior Ryleigh Eriks in 1:17 in the 125 finals after getting wins by technical fall in her first two matches.
Metea Valley sophomore Janiya Moore beat Lincoln-Way Central freshman Aubrey Barnes with a pin in 3:05 for the 115 title to improve her record to 20-2. She followed a win by technical fall with a 6-1 decision.
Wheaton North senior Iana Victory claimed the 235 championship when she won by fall in 4:37 over Woodstock sophomore Allison Hill. She opened with two first-period pins.
Crystal Lake Central junior Cait Jones, the lone entrant for her school, beat Wheeling’s Nikol Orendarchuk with a fall in 5:43 in the 155 title match after collecting three first-period falls.
Other third-place finishers were Crystal Lake South’s Annalee Aarseth (110), Oak Forest’s Marjorie Rodriguez (115), Kaneland’s Brooklyn Sheaffer (130), Zion-Benton’s Grace Johnson (140), Lakes Community’s Christina Hasner (145), Dundee-Crown’s Mackenzie Lessner (155) and Hampshire’s Samantha Diehl (190).
Also finishing fourth were Richmond-Burton’s Isabella Nelson (125) and Madelyn Peterie (140), Sycamore’s Ema Durst (145) and Avelina McMurtry (155), Wheaton North’s Izzy Paz (100), Plainfield East’s Mahi Kansagara (105), Jacobs’ Aaliyah Guichon (110), Dundee-Crown’s Iris Torres (115), Belvidere North’s Rowan Cello (120), Lisle Senior’s Sophie Crescenzo (130), Hononegah’s Linda Villa Pioquinto (170) and McHenry’s Yummi Ramirez (235).
Cassioppi, Jones and Larson led all competitors with 30 team points while Zuber was next-best with 28.5 and Foote, Rodriguez and Victory had 28 team points. Dempsey, Hongmoungkhoune and Tavira were next in line with 27.5 points.
Hampshire Whip-Pur Women’s Classic place matches
100
1st Place Match
Saya Hongmoungkhoune (Rockford East) 8-0, Fr. over Haydee Cruz (Wheeling) 21-5, Jr. (Fall 1:02)
3rd Place Match
Monica Alvarez (Lincoln-Way co-op) 12-5, Sr. over Izzy Paz (Wheaton North) 3-2, Sr. (Dec 1-0)
5th Place Match
Linna Vo (Elk Grove) 9-3, So. over Melanie Ziemann (Woodstock) 2-3, So. (MD 12-3)
105
1st Place Match
Diamond Rodriguez (Dundee-Crown) 15-0, Sr. over Julia Felton (Jacobs) 3-1, Fr. (Fall 0:39)
3rd Place Match
Emily Peyton (Lincoln-Way co-op) 13-7, Sr. over Mahi Kansagara (Plainfield East) 9-6, Sr. (Fall 0:19)
5th Place Match
Elanie Taboada (Prospect) 4-1, Sr. over Ella Quigley (Mother McAuley) 5-8 (Fall 2:42)
110
1st Place Match
Zoe Dempsey (Lincoln-Way co-op) 19-1, Jr. over Eva Hermansson (Woodstock) 11-2, Jr. (Fall 1:59)
3rd Place Match
Annalee Aarseth (Crystal Lake South) 3-1, So. over Aaliyah Guichon (Jacobs) 2-2, So. (Fall 1:31)
5th Place Match
Lillian Davis (Belvidere North) 8-3, Jr. over Mireya Irazarry (Rockford East) 8-5, Jr. (Dec 11-9)
115
1st Place Match
Janiya Moore (Metea Valley) 20-2, So. over Aubrey Barnes (Lincoln-Way co-op) 15-9, Fr. (Fall 3:05)
3rd Place Match
Marjorie Rodriguez (Oak Forest) 3-1, Sr. over Iris Torres (Dundee-Crown) 11-6, Sr. (Dec 5-0)
5th Place Match
Angelina Nettey (Plainfield East) 18-4, So. over Breanne Warren (Richmond-Burton) 7-8, Fr. (Fall 0:50)
120
Guaranteed Places
1st Place Match
Angelina Cassioppi (Hononegah) 11-0, Sr. over Amelia Nidelea-Polanin (Hampshire) 13-1, So. (Fall 1:19)
3rd Place Match
Danica LaTessa (Woodstock) 13-3, Jr. over Rowan Cello (Belvidere North) 8-6, Fr. (Fall 3:58)
5th Place Match
Sadie Sparks (Lincoln-Way co-op) 4-1, Fr. over Vanessa Osorio (Mundelein) 3-2, Fr. (Fall 0:26)
125
Guaranteed Places
1st Place Match
Gianna Arzer (Grayslake Central) 18-2, Jr. over Ryleigh Eriks (Rock Falls) 3-1, Jr. (Fall 1:17)
3rd Place Match
Hannah Olsen (Woodstock) 11-3, Jr. over Isabella Nelson (Richmond-Burton) 6-5, Sr. (Fall 1:59)
5th Place Match
Jiana Forbes (Wheaton North) 6-1, So. over Lianny Guzman (Huntley) 3-2, Sr. (Fall 1:37)
130
1st Place Match
Elise Burkut (Wheeling) 17-3, Jr. over Emily Ortiz (Zion-Benton) 18-4, Jr. (Fall 5:37)
3rd Place Match
Brooklyn Sheaffer (Kaneland) 11-2, Sr. over Sophie Crescenzo (Lisle Senior) 8-3, Fr. (Fall 1:45)
5th Place Match
Claire Bray (Lincoln-Way co-op) 11-8, So. over Brooklyn Strelow (Oak Forest) 2-2, Fr. (Fall 5:10)
135
1st Place Match
Viola Pianetto (Prospect) 14-0, Sr. over Bella Castelli (Hononegah) 7-1, Fr. (Dec 9-5)
3rd Place Match
Layah Woods (Wheeling) 17-7, Jr. over Liv Clumpner (Lincoln-Way co-op) 8-5 (Fall 2:24)
5th Place Match
Mila Masny (Woodstock) 5-4, Fr. over Hala Elhelou (Metea Valley) 6-10, Fr. (Fall 0:39)
140
1st Place Match
Maggie Zuber (Mother McAuley) 10-0 over Rosie Picari (Metea Valley) 16-5, So. (Fall 3:56)
3rd Place Match
Grace Johnson (Zion-Benton) 20-3, Sr. over Madelyn Peterie (Richmond-Burton) 13-5, So. (Fall 3:53)
5th Place Match
Dyani Torres (Kaneland) 10-4, Sr. over Ella Giertuga (Lincoln-Way co-op) 16-9, So. (Fall 4:49)
145
1st Place Match
Naomi Foote (Zion-Benton) 19-0, Sr. over Krystal Diaz (Wheeling) 18-5, So. (Fall 3:26)
3rd Place Match
Christina Hasner (Lakes Community) 3-1, Jr. over Ema Durst (Sycamore) 12-3, So. (MD 18-5)
5th Place Match
Lyobosa Odiase (Oak Forest) 4-1, Jr. over Madison Minson (Hampshire) 10-4, So. (MD 15-4)
155
1st Place Match
Cait Jones (Crystal Lake Central) 4-0, Jr. over Nikol Orendarchuk (Wheeling) 3-1, So. (Fall 5:43)
3rd Place Match
Mackenzie Lessner (Dundee-Crown) 12-4, Sr. over Avelina McMurtry (Sycamore) 4-4, Fr. (Fall 1:03)
5th Place Match
Kaitlyn Bucholz (Plainfield East) 14-3, Jr. over Brianna Crown (Woodstock) 11-5, Jr. (Fall 2:26)
170
Guaranteed Places
1st Place Match
Anneliese Tavira (Hampshire) 16-0, Sr. over Jennifer Paul (Plainfield East) 12-1, Sr. (Fall 1:37)
3rd Place Match
Jenna Lee (Lincoln-Way co-op) 6-4 over Linda Villa Pioquinto (Hononegah) 3-4, So. (Fall 1:46)
5th Place Match
Adr Bille (Oak Forest) 3-1, Sr. over Allison Schultz (Richmond-Burton) 6-8, Fr. (Fall 3:54)
190
1st Place Match
Josephine Larson (Lakes Community) 4-0, Sr. over Kylie Eilken (Jefferson) 3-1, So. (Fall 0:20)
3rd Place Match
Samantha Diehl (Hampshire) 13-2, Fr. over Maryanna Quezada (Lincoln-Way co-op) 8-4, Jr. (Fall 3:11)
5th Place Match
Isabel Peralta (Oak Forest) 4-1, Sr. over Sadie Kinsella (Kaneland) 8-4, So. (Fall 3:29)
235
1st Place Match
Iana Victory (Wheaton North) 5-0, Sr. over Allison Hill (Woodstock) 10-5, So. (Fall 4:37)
3rd Place Match
Riley DePolo (Lincoln-Way co-op) 11-9, So. over Yummi Ramirez (McHenry) 2-2 (Fall 0:25)
5th Place Match
Savannah Trevino (Belvidere North) 5-5, Fr. over Lauren Ray (Hampshire) 2-6, Fr. (Fall 0:25)
Team scores
1. Lincoln-Way co-op (Lincoln-Way Central/Lincoln-Way East/Lincoln-Way West) 206.5, 2. Woodstock 126, 3. Wheeling 121, 4. Hampshire 101.5, 5. Dundee-Crown 89, 6. Hononegah 87.5, 7. Oak Forest 85.5, 8. Plainfield East 77.5, 9. Metea Valley 74.5, 10. Lake Community 69, 11. Zion-Benton 66.5, 12. Kaneland 63.5, 13. Wheaton North 58, 14. Richmond-Burton 55.5, 15. Grayslake Central 53, 16. Belvidere North 47, 16. Jefferson 47, 18. Prospect 46.5, 19. Rockford East 43, 20. Jacobs 42, 21. Mother McAuley 32.5, 22. Huntley 32, 23. Crystal Lake Central 30, 23. Neuqua Valley 30, 25. Sycamore 28, 26. Rock Falls 24, 27. Elk Grove 22, 27. McHenry 22, 29. Mundelein 21, 30. Crystal Lake South 18.5, 31. Lisle Senior 15, 32. Cary-Grove 14, 33, Marengo 8, 34. Genoa-Kingston 5, 35. Prairie Ridge 4, 36. Carmel Catholic 3.