Lincoln-Way girls co-op dominates at Lakes
By Gary Larsen for the IWCOA
Mike Gussarson wrestled for Antioch coach Wilbur Borrero a decade ago, finishing fifth in Illinois at 132 in 2013. Gussarson also won an individual tournament title that year, at Antioch’s inaugural Ted DeRousse Invitational.
After girls wrestling became an IHSA sport in 2021, Antioch soon began hosting a girls tournament and two years ago, Borrero gave that tournament a name. The Sandy Gussarson Girls Invitational was thus born, named after Mike’s mother, who passed away in 2021.
“She was just such an avid supporter of wrestling and of our program,” Borrero said.
On Saturday at Lakes, Mike was present to honor his mother, handing out place-medals to girls on the awards stand at what is certainly one of the few wrestling tournaments- if not the only one – named so deservedly in tribute of a wrestling mom.
Mike Gussarson was fairly stunned when Borrero told him that he wanted to name the girls tournament after his mother.
“It definitely brought a tear to your eye, and it felt great,” Gussarson said. “It means she left her mark on the community.
“She was caring, hard-working — she was just a great person. She was always (Borrero’s) right-hand man, always helping out with fundraising and anything she could.”
More than 200 girls from 26 teams competed this year, with 12 wrestling mats set up in Lakes’ spacious fieldhouse.
Six mats were in use for the Gussarson tournament while six were in use for this year’s DeRousse. Combined, more than 500 wrestlers participated from 50 teams.
“Girls wrestling is huge. It’s blown up and it just keeps growing,” Gussarson said. “And these girls are tough.”
When the dust settled on the girls’ side, Lincoln-Way Central stood as this year’s Sandy Gussarson team champion. One year after placing second, the Knights out-pointed Oswego 457-355. Oak Forest finished third with 337 points.
The team from Lincoln-Way Central includes girls from Lincoln-Way East and West, and coach Josh Napier has seen his program follow a growth curve that mirrors the rise of girls high school wrestling in Illinois.
“We grew from three (girls) to eight to fifteen to now thirty-five girls this season,” Napier said. “So the message since June has been that we’re a wrestling program now and we’re taking it serious. We want to gain respect.”
“I felt pretty good about where we were going to be but I had no idea how we’d do here today. I knew we’d field a full lineup this year and we’re young, but we also have some experience – it’s about half and half. They’re hungry, and that’s what’s cool about them.”
Knights senior Monica Alvarez won a Gussarson title at 100 pounds Saturday and she likes the way this season has kicked off for her squad.
“I hoped that we’d have a lot of (wrestlers) and I like that it’s one big family,” Alvarez said. “And like they say ‘iron sharpens iron’, and we’re all beating each other up in practice.”
Also winning titles for Lincoln-Way Central were Zoe Dempsey (110) and Riley DePolo (235). Napier also got seconds from Emily Peyton (105) and Ella Giertuga (145), a third from Aubrey Barnes (120), and fourths from Abby Lizak (125) and Liv Clumpner (140). Lizak also scored the most points in a single match the entire tournament with 26.
Sierra Heatherly (115), Riley Cooney (130), Claire Bray (135), Kate Bohms (155), Jenna Lee (170), and Liana Zimmer (190) all scored team points in the Knights’ victory.
“This was the expectation coming into the tournament, to do this well, but we want a regional championship and a sectional championship, and a state trophy at some point,” Napier said.
Individual champion DePolo is in her first year of wrestling so she wasn’t sure what to expect from her team entering Saturday’s 26-team tournament.
“I was nervous but we all did really good. Everyone was amazing,” DePolo said. “The program is still very new and it’s been so much fun.”
Second-place Oswego sent four runners-up to the awards stand in Harmony Evans (130), Ameera Murphy (140), Kiyah Chavez (155), and Rikka Ludvigson (170) among coach Greg Scott’s 11 girls scoring team points for the Panthers.
Marjorie Rodriguez (115) and Iyobosa Odiase (145) won individual titles for third-place Oak Forest, and Isabel Peralta (190) placed second for the Bengals and coach Jamie Hubbard.
Other individual Gussarson champions were Dundee-Crown’s Diamond Rodriguez (105), Central’s Tori Macias (120) and Soraya Walikonis (135), Woodstock’s Hannah Olsen (125), Shepard’s Mila Rocush (130), Prospect’s Viola Pianetto (140), Hinsdale South’s Callie Carr (155), Palatine’s Sabrina Cargill (170), and Lakes’ Josie Larson (190).
Dundee-Crown’s Rodriguez, Oak Forest’s Odiase, Hinsdale South’s Carr, and Lakes’ Larson all became two-time Gussarson champs Saturday. The tournament’s outstanding wrestler award for the lower weights went to Rodriguez, and the upper-weight outstanding wrestler award went to Carr (155).
Palatine’s Cargill (170) had the most pins (5) in the least time (4:36) of all wrestlers present, while Antioch’s Londyn Lloyd (110) had the most tech fall wins (3) in the least time (13:30). Lloyd’s 63 total match points were also the most scored by any wrestler. Six girls tied for the most team points scored (52) in Macias, Walkinos, Rocush, Cargill, Carr, and Odiase. In placing sixth at 155, 22nd-seeded Brianna Crown of Woodstock provided the largest seed-place difference in the tournament.
Team scoring: 1. Lincoln-Way Central 457 2. Oswego 355 3. Oak Forest 337 4. Marist 306.5 5. Lakes 291 6. Dundee-Crown 213 7. Grant 211 8. Harvard 203 9. Woodstock 193.5 10. Shepard 174.5 11. Central 162 12. Grayslake North 161.5 13. Wilmont-Union WI 139 14. Freeport 133 15. Palatine 124.5 16. Peotone 121 17. Lake Park 114 18. Hinsdale South 94 19. Prospect 93.5 19. Rolling Meadows 93.5 21. Deerfield 93 22. Antioch 87 23. Guilford 79.5 24. Genoa Kingston 37 25. Carmel 8 26. Ken. St. Joseph Cath Ac. WI 0
Individual Sandy Gussarson Girls Invitational champions:
100 – Monica Alvarez, Lincoln-Way Central
The senior Alvarez went into the tournament as the third seed at 100, then went 5-0 including wins over Freeport’s second-seeded Aurielle Calmese (5-2) to capture the crown.
Alvarez (5-2) placed fifth in the tournament at 100 last season and she was on point at this year’s Gussarson.
“I’m really happy with today,” she said. “I teched my first (opponent), pinned my second, and won by points against my third one,” Alvarez said. “I was being aggressive and I know when they get tired — I see that and I know I’m not as tired as they are. I still have to work on my shots but I’m happy.”
Calmese placed second, Oak Forest’s Aliyah Blount was third, Palatine’s Kevelyn Price took fourth, Grayslake North’s Esther Migues-Gayton placed fifth, and Shepard’s Danielle Almaazan finished sixth at 100.
105 – Diamond Rodriguez, Dundee-Crown
Rodriguez was an IWCOA state champion at 100 pounds last season, and she won the last season’s Gussarson title at 100 pounds. The senior was slated to compete Saturday at 100 this year, but she made a tragic error in judgment on Thursday — she went to Texas Roadhouse with her family for Thanksgiving dinner.
“I should have never walked in there,” Rodriguez said. “Just smelling that place made me gain three pounds.”
Despite her best efforts since Thursday, Rodriguez couldn’t make weight to wrestle at 100 on Saturday. So instead, she wrestled up a weight at 105 as the No. 2 seed and won her second Gussarson title, with a tech fall win on the title mat against Lincoln-Way Central’s top-seeded Emily Peyton.
“I wanted the pin but she put up a hell of a fight,” Rodriguez said. “But I needed that workout, to be honest.”
Rodriguez won the Outstanding Wrestler Award for the lower weights Saturday, and she has her eyes squarely set on becoming a state qualifier this season.
“Last year I lost in the blood round at the sectional, then I was third at freestyle state. I love the sport. I started wrestling as a sophomore and I like the way it puts people on their feet, gets them thinking aggressively, thinking fast. And people might think girls are soft but it really brings it out and lets us be tough.”
Shepard’s Sophia Perez placed third, Central’s Allison Leffew was fourth, Marist’s Shae Halloran took fifth, and Central’s Malania Granda finished sixth at 105.
110 – Zoe Dempsey, Lincoln-Way Central
The Knights’ junior is a returning state qualifier and she posted a pair of tech fall wins and then a pin to reach the title match, where she won by fall over Harvard’s Alexa Herrera. Dempsey improved to 7-0 on the season with the win over Herrera (3-1), and she also won her second individual crown of the young season; Dempsey also won an individual title at Minooka’s 29-team tournament on Nov. 27.
Top-seeded Dempsey (7-0) won by first-period fall over third-seeded Herrera (3-1) for the title. Herrera reached the finals by upsetting second-seeded Haven Sylves by second-period fall. Dempsey won by fall in her semifinal against fourth-seeded Eva Hermansson of Woodstock.
Hermansson went on to place third, Sylves was fourth, Wilmont-Union’s Mya Rodriguez took fifth, and Dundee-Crown’s Melany Sanchez finished sixth at 110.
115 – Marjorie Rodriguez, Oak Forest
Bengals’ senior Rodriguez entered as the top seed at 115 pounds and won her first Gussarson title by fall against second-seeded Iris Torres of Dundee-Crown. Rodriguez is bringing a whole new mindset into her final high school season.
“Last year I had really low self-confidence but this year it’s really high. I’m not thinking negatively like last year, where I was always doubting myself. This summer I went to Fargo, which was a lot of fun and a big eye-opener for me, and since this is my last year I want to make it count.
“I was overall really happy with how I did. I fell in control most of the time and I was trying to be a little less aggressive and more smart. We’ve been doing boys practices, which are pretty intense, and that’s really helping all of us.”
There’s also no substitute for good coaching, and Rodriguez is grateful for hers.
“John Sebek has been with me all four years and he’s always pushing us to be the best,” Rodriguez said. “He’s like another father figure. He treats us like we’re his daughters, we’re all really close, and he’s always really honest about what we need to work on.”
Lakes’ Osmairi Medina placed third, Deerfield’s Belinda Esparza was fourth, Grant’s Kayden Manis took fifth, and Grant’s Jaiydyn Hoffman finished sixth at 115 pounds.
120 – Tori Macias, Central
The Rockets’ senior is a rare breed as one of the few three-time state medalists in girls wrestling in Illinois, having placed fourth once and fifth twice at the IHSA state finals.
She wants more and she’s pulling out all stops to get it.
“It’s my last season and I’m just trying to leave it all out there this year,” Macias said. “I’m putting everything on the mat and doing everything I can. I’m also a captain this year so I’m doing whatever I can to get girls to come out for wrestling at our school.
Top-seeded Macias (5-0) pinned her way to the title mat, where she won by fall over Marist’s Ava Enright (3-1).
“I feel stronger this year and as a veteran of the sport, I feel like I have the upper hand against the underclassmen. Today if I felt gassed or getting down, I just reminded myself that I’m a veteran at this and I know what to do.”
Marist’s Ava Enright (3-1) was seeded 11th at 120 but she won by fall against No. 2-seeded Marijose Avila of Freeport and No. 3 Ruby Vences of Central to reach the finals before losing to Macias. Lincoln-Way Central’s Aubrey Barnes placed third, Avila took fourth, Vences was fifth, and Grant’s Evelyn Gonzalez finished sixth at 120.
125 – Hannah Olsen, Woodstock
After placing 10th at 125 at the tournament last year as a sophomore, fifth-seeded Woodstock junior Olsen (4-0) went unbeaten on the day and claimed her first Gussarson title with two falls, one tech fall, and a 9-2 decision win over second-seeded runnerup Myla Reyes (4-1) of Grant.
Lake Park’s Elida Garcia placed third, Lincoln-Way Central’s Abby Lizak took fourth, Oswego’s Aaliyah Roldan was fifth, and Peotone’s Kaylee Boudreau finished sixth at 125.
130 – Mila Rocush, Shepard
One season after a 9th-place Gussarson finish as a freshman, the sophomore Rocush went 5-0 and took this year’s title at 130. Rocush won by fall over Oswego’s Harmony Evans (4-1) in the finals, and all five of Rocush’s wins came by fall. In placing second, 17th-seeded Evans provided the second-largest seed-place difference in the tournament.
Oak Forest’s Jordan Clyne took third, Lake Park’s Anna Guzman was fourth, Oak Forest’s Brooklyn Strelow placed fifth, and Lakes’ Makayla Williams finished sixth at 130 pounds.
135 – Soraya Walikonis, Central
Top-seeded senior Walikonis went 5-0 in pinning her way to the title at 135 for the Rockets, capped by a third-period pin on the title mat against seventh-seeded Morgan Rutherford (3-1) of Wilmont-Union, WI.
Walikonis pinned Lakes’ fourth-seeded Elise Kaylor to reach the title mat, while Rutherford won by fall in her semifinal match against sixth-seeded Annie Bergeron of Peotone.
Bergeron finished third, Kaylor placed fourth, Lincoln-Way Central’s Claire Bray took fifth, and Harvard’s Khloe Vest was sixth at 135 pounds.
140 – Viola Pianetto, Prospect
One year ago, Prospect senior Pianetto stood on a Gussarson title mat across from one of the best high school wrestlers in the country in Freeport’s Cadence Diduch, a multiple-time Illinois state champion now wrestling for the University of Iowa.
She only began wrestling last year, and when Pianetto lost by fall to Diduch it was a pivot point in her wrestling career.
“I didn’t know who she was going into that match and she was one of the best wrestlers I’ll ever see,” Pianetto said. “After that I knew that if I wanted to have a successful career in college, that match showed me that I had to get a lot stronger.”
Pianetto (7-0) has already committed to wrestle for Minot State in North Dakota. On Saturday she won her first Gussarson title as the tournament’s top seed, winning by fall over Oswego’s Ameera Murphy (3-1).
“It started off as a rough day. I was spitting on the bus, trying to make 135,” Pianetto said, “but I was two pounds over by the time we got here. So I just focused on what I can do and I prayed through every single match. I knew that no matter what happened, I just wanted to be proud of myself.”
Grant’s Annabelle Melton finished third at 140, Lincoln-Way Central’s Liv Clumpner was fourth, Marist’s Stella Harris took fifth, and Marley Gonzalez of Wilmont-Union, Wisconsin, finished sixth.
145 – Iyobosa Odiase, Oak Forest
The second of Oak Forest’s two individual champions on the day, returning state qualifier Odiase (5-0) pinned her way to her second Gussarson title at Lakes. The top-seeded junior ended her run with a title-mat pin against Lincoln-Way Central’s third-seeded sophomore Ella Giertuga (6-3), who was coming in off a fourth-place finish at Wednesday’s Minooka tournament.
Lakes’ Christina Hasner placed third at 145, Grayslake North’s Victoria Marquez took fourth, Marist’s Izzy Locascio was fifth, and Oswego’s Angeles Ponce finished sixth.
155 – Callie Carr, Hinsdale South
Top-seeded junior Carr is now a two-time Gussarson champion after winning by fall on the title mat against Oswego’s third-seeded Kiyah Chavez. She won the Outstanding Wrestler Award for the upper weights at Lakes and Carr is also a two-time state qualifier.
She’s itching to get to the state finals again and she wants nothing short of the top spot on the podium.
“That’s all I’m thinking about right now,” Carr said. “I want to be a state champ. I’ve been wrestling since eighth grade and now I feel like I can get through anything. It’s a great sport and mentally it will take a toll on you but like my pop always says it’s all about the six-inch space between your ears.”
Even if she wins a state title, Carr’s biggest contribution at Hinsdale South may have come off the mat.
“I was the only girl wrestling for a while,” Carr said. “I actually went to the (school) board and told them I didn’t have a coach or a team, while every team in our conference had a team and a coach. A lot of girls ended up joining and now there’s eight or nine of us in the program.”
Third-seeded Chavez won by fall in her semifinal match against second-seeded Makayla Hill of Oswego. Hill went on to place third, while 13th-seeded Joslyn Sheets of Oswego placed fourth. Rolling Meadows’ Janet Brindis placed fifth and Woodstock’s Brianna Crown took sixth at 155.
170 – Sabrina Cargill, Palatine
Pirates senior and 2024 IWCOA state champion Cargill (5-0) was seeded 11th but she burned her way through the girls seeded ahead of her with five pins, capped by a fall on the title mat at 170 against Oswego’s eighth-seeded Rikka Ludvigson (4-1). Ludvigson upset top-seeded Riley O’Grady of Grant to reach the title mat.
Marist’s Samantha Fontaine placed third, Palatine’s Angela Escalera was fourth, O’Grady placed fifth, and Rolling Meadows’ Leilani Brindis finished sixth at 170.
190 – Josie Larson, Lakes
Larson placed second in state at 190 last year and in her senior year for the Eagles, she’s bent on scaling to the top of the podium in every tournament she enters this season.
And she feels more ready than ever before to bring home an individual state title to Lakes.
“I’ve improved a lot. I wrestled a lot in the offseason, went to a lot of different tournaments, and that all helped,” Larson said. “I feel like I’ve refined my style. Last year I really only had one good move and this year I have three or four.”
Top-seeded Larson (5-0) became a two-time Gussarson champion with a fall on the title mat against Oak Forest’s second-seeded Isabel Peralta (4-1).
Last year, Larson and Zion-Benton’s Ileen Castrejon squared off six times, with Castrejon winning over Larson on the state title mat by 2-1 decision.
“I benefited from those matches. They were all close and we pushed each other to work harder and get better,” Larson said. “I’m competitive and I want to push myself to do better no matter what.”
Harvard’s Jarithsie Mercado placed third, Guilford’s Anjanne Haywood was fourth, Marist’s Sarah Parker took fifth, and Lincoln-Way Central’s Maryanna Quezada was sixth at 190.
235 – Riley DePolo, Lincoln-Way Central
Third-seeded sophomore DePolo beat top-seeded sophomore Alison Poole of Grayslake North by first-period fall to win her first Gussarson title. Not bad for a kid who wore a different high school uniform at this time last season.
“Riley was a basketball player at this time last year,” Lincoln-Way Central coach Josh Napier said. “We thought this was a better choice and I think today just solidified that for her.”
DePolo topped Dundee-Crown’s second-seeded Caroline Haiges in their semifinal match before winning by fall for the title against Woodstock’s top-seeded Allison Hill.
Beating two higher seeds en route to a tournament championship always makes for a good day.
“I was good on top today and I broke down a lot of people, so that was good,” DePolo said. “But I’ve got to work on bottom, and I want to keep working on breaking people down.”
Haiges went on to place third, Hill was fourth, Shepard’s Karrine Jenkins took fifth, and Oswego’s Helena Torres finished fifth at 235.
2024 Sandy Gussarson Girls Invitational medalists:
100:
Championship Round 1
Aliyah Blount (Oak Forest) 3-2, So. over Kevelyn Price (Palatine ) 2-3, Sr. (Dec 11-4)
Monica Alvarez (LW Central) 5-2, Sr. over Aurielle Calmese (Freeport) 5-2, Sr. (MD 9-0)
Round 2
Monica Alvarez (LW Central) 5-2, Sr. over Kevelyn Price (Palatine ) 2-3, Sr. (Fall 3:15)
Aurielle Calmese (Freeport) 5-2, Sr. over Aliyah Blount (Oak Forest) 3-2, So. (Fall 3:38)
Round 3
Aurielle Calmese (Freeport) 5-2, Sr. over Kevelyn Price (Palatine ) 2-3, Sr. (Fall 3:39)
Monica Alvarez (LW Central) 5-2, Sr. over Aliyah Blount (Oak Forest) 3-2, So. (MD 12-1)
105:
Championship Round 1
Emily Peyton (LW Central) 6-3, Sr. over Allison Leffew (Central) 2-3, So. (Fall 0:55)
Diamond Rodriguez (Dundee-Crown) 7-0, Sr. over Sophia Perez (Shepard) 3-2, Jr. (Fall 0:51)
Round 2
Emily Peyton (LW Central) 6-3, Sr. over Sophia Perez (Shepard) 3-2, Jr. (Fall 0:44)
Diamond Rodriguez (Dundee-Crown) 7-0, Sr. over Allison Leffew (Central) 2-3, So. (Fall 0:28)
Round 3
Diamond Rodriguez (Dundee-Crown) 7-0, Sr. over Emily Peyton (LW Central) 6-3, Sr. (TF-1.5 4:40 (17-2))
Sophia Perez (Shepard) 3-2, Jr. over Allison Leffew (Central) 2-3, So. (Fall 2:22)
110:
1st Place Match
Zoe Dempsey (LW Central) 7-0, Jr. over Alexa Herrera (Harvard) 3-1, Jr. (Fall 1:25)
3rd Place Match
Eva Hermansson (Woodstock) 4-1, Jr. over Haven Sylves(Lakes) 2-2, Sr. (Dec 10-6)
5th Place Match
Mya Rodriguez (Wilmont-Union) 3-1, . over Melany Sanchez (Dundee-Crown) 2-2, Jr. (Fall 1:25)
115:
1st Place Match
Marjorie Rodriguez (Oak Forest) 5-0, Sr. over Iris Torres (Dundee-Crown) 5-2, Sr. (Fall 1:35)
3rd Place Match
Osmairi Medina(Lakes) 4-1, So. over Belinda Esparza (Deerfield) 2-3, Jr. (Dec 10-3)
5th Place Match
Kayden Manis(Grant) 4-1, So. over Jaiydyn Hoffman(Grant) 3-2, So. (Dec 5-0)
120:
1st Place Match
Victoria Macias (Central) 5-0, Sr. over Ava Enright (Marist) 3-1, So. (Fall 1:52)
3rd Place Match
Aubrey Barnes (LW Central) 5-3, Fr. over Marijose Avila (Freeport) 6-4, Jr. (TF-1.5 4:16 (16-0))
5th Place Match
Ruby Vences (Central) 4-1, Sr. over Evelyn Gonzalez(Grant) 2-2, Sr. (Fall 1:46)
125:
Championship Round 1
Hannah Olsen (Woodstock) 4-0, Jr. over Elida Garcia Torres(Lake Park) 3-2, So. (TF-1.5 4:54 (18-0))
Myla Reyes(Grant) 4-1, So. over Abby Lizak (LW Central) 2-3, Fr. (Fall 1:29)
Round 2
Elida Garcia Torres(Lake Park) 3-2, So. over Abby Lizak (LW Central) 2-3, Fr. (Dec 7-3)
Hannah Olsen (Woodstock) 4-0, Jr. over Myla Reyes(Grant) 4-1, So. (Dec 9-2)
Round 3
Myla Reyes(Grant) 4-1, So. over Elida Garcia Torres(Lake Park) 3-2, So. (Fall 5:17)
Hannah Olsen (Woodstock) 4-0, Jr. over Abby Lizak (LW Central) 2-3, Fr. (Fall 1:05)
130:
1st Place Match
Mila Rocush (Shepard) 5-0, So. over Harmony Evans (Oswego) 4-1, Sr. (Fall 5:29)
3rd Place Match
Jordan Clyne (Oak Forest) 3-1, Jr. over Anna Guzman(Lake Park) 2-2, Sr. (Fall 3:17)
5th Place Match
Brooklyn Strelow (Oak Forest) 3-1, Fr. over Makayla Williams(Lakes) 2-2, Jr. (Fall 1:49)
135:
1st Place Match
Soraya Walikonis (Central) 5-0, Sr. over Morgan Rutherford (Wilmont-Union) 3-1, . (Fall 4:27)
3rd Place Match
Annie Bergeron (Peotone) 3-1, . over Elise Kaylor(Lakes) 2-2, So. (Fall 1:26)
5th Place Match
Claire Bray (LW Central) 3-3, So. over Khloe Vest (Harvard) 2-2, Fr. (Fall 1:09)
140:
1st Place Match
Viola Pianetto (Mt. Prospect (Prospect)) 7-0, Sr. over Ameera Murphy (Oswego) 3-1, Sr. (Fall 1:30)
3rd Place Match
Annabelle Melton(Grant) 4-1, Jr. over Liv Clumpner (LW Central) 2-2, Fr. (Fall 2:36)
5th Place Match
Stella Harris (Marist) 3-1, Jr. over Marley Gonzalez (Wilmont-Union) 2-2, . (Fall 0:40)
145:
1st Place Match
Iyobosa Odiase (Oak Forest) 5-0, Jr. over Ella Giertuga (LW Central) 6-3, So. (Fall 0:44)
3rd Place Match
Christina Hasner(Lakes) 4-1, Jr. over Victoria Marquez (Grayslake North) 5-2, So. (Fall 1:30)
5th Place Match
Izzy Locascio (Marist) 3-1, Jr. over Angeles Ponce (Oswego) 2-2, Fr. (Fall 1:30)
155:
1st Place Match
Callie Carr (Hinsdale S) 5-0, Jr. over Kiyah Chavez (Oswego) 4-1, Sr. (Fall 2:15)
3rd Place Match
Makayla Hill (Oswego) 4-1, So. over Joslyn Sheets (Oswego) 3-2, . (Fall 0:48)
5th Place Match
Janet Brindis (Rolling Meadows) 3-1, Jr. over Brianna Crown (Woodstock) 3-2, Jr. (Fall 4:16)
170:
1st Place Match
Sabrina Cargill (Palatine ) 5-0, Sr. over Rikka Ludvigson (Oswego) 4-1, Sr. (Fall 0:36)
3rd Place Match
Samantha Fontaine (Marist) 4-1, Jr. over Angela Escalera (Palatine ) 3-2, Sr. (MFFL)
5th Place Match
Riley O`Grady(Grant) 4-1, . over Leilani Brindis (Rolling Meadows) 3-2, . (Dec 7-3)
190:
1st Place Match
Josephine Larson(Lakes) 5-0, Sr. over Isabel Peralta (Oak Forest) 4-1, Sr. (Fall 4:29)
3rd Place Match
Jarithsie Mercado (Harvard) 4-1, Jr. over Anjanne Haywood (Guilford)3-2, Jr. (Dec 3-1)
5th Place Match
Sarah Parker (Marist) 4-1, Jr. over Maryanna Quezada (LW Central) 3-2, Jr. (Fall 1:29)
235:
1st Place Match
Riley DePolo (LW Central) 5-2, So. over Alison Poole (Grayslake North) 3-1, So. (Fall 1:47)
3rd Place Match
Caroline Haiges (Dundee-Crown) 4-2, Fr. over Allison Hill (Woodstock) 3-2, So. (Fall 3:03)
5th Place Match
Karrine Jenkins (Shepard) 3-1, So. over Helena Torres (Oswego) 2-2, So. (Fall 0:25)