Hofstra Posts Four Majors in Win over American

–Courtesy of Hofstra Athletic Communications
Washington, D.C. — Four Hofstra wrestlers recorded major decisions as the 25th-ranked Pride defeated American University, 22-18 at Bender Arena Thursday night. Hofstra improved to 5-0 on the season while the Eagles of American slipped to 4-5.

Seniors P.J. Gillespie at 165 and Ben Clymer at 184, junior Steve Bonanno at 125 and freshman Jermaine John at 174 each posted major decision wins and the Pride grabbed two more decisions by sophomore Jamie Franco at 133 and junior Justin Accordino at 149.

The match opened at 165 pounds with 19th-ranked senior P.J. Gillespie giving the Pride a 4-0 lead in the contest with an 11-2 major decision over American junior Tanner Shaffer. Gillespie improved to a team-best 17-4 on the season. Freshman Jermaine John made it two straight major wins for Hofstra with a 14-5 win over junior Phillip Barreiro at 174 pounds, John tallied an escape and two takedowns in the third period to record his second major of the season and his third straight win. He is now 6-8 on the season. Senior Ben Clymer, ranked 11th this week, made it three in a row with an 11-3 major decision over junior Thomas Barreiro at 184 to boost the Pride lead to 12-0. Clymer posted his third straight win to improve to 17-5 on the year.

But The Eagles of American erased the deficit in the next two matches on wins by fall. At 197 pounds, 19th-ranked Daniel Mitchell (12-6) pinned Pride sophomore Tim Murphy in the second period at the 4:11 mark. Murphy slips to 9-12. Pride junior Paul Snyder had the task of facing the undefeated, number one ranked wrestler at 285 pounds in American senior Ryan Flores (7-0). Flores jumped on Snyder early and posted the pin at the 43 second mark to tie the match at 12-12. Snyder fell to 11-7.

Hofstra rebounded with back-to-back wins at 125 and 133. Junior Steve Bonanno tallied his third consecutive victory and the Pride’s fourth major win of the match with a 12-0 win over senior Thomas Williams at 125. It was Bonnano’s third shutout of the season and improved the 13th-ranked wrestler’s record to 16-5 this year. Hofstra sophomore Jamie Franco boosted the Pride lead to 19-12 with a 6-1 decision over Corey Borshoff at 133 pounds. Franco allowed a first period escape to record his third straight victory and improve to 12-7 this season.

The Eagles closed the gap to 19-15 with a win at 141 pounds as 12th-ranked Matt Mariacher (16-5) defeated Pride sophomore Luke Vaith, 6-4. Vaith was only able to must a first period takedown and escapes in the second and third to slip to 10-7.

But Hofstra junior Justin Accordino sealed the victory for Hofstra with a 9-5 victory at 149 pounds over junior Kevin Tao behind a big second period, Accordino posted a reversal, a takedown and a two-point nearfall in the second to improve to 13-8 on the season.

Fourth-ranked American senior Ganbayar Sanjaa closed the match with a 5-1 decision over Pride junior Tyler Banks at 157 pounds. Ganjaa wouldn’t let Banks to go on the offensive as he improved to 13-1 on the year. Banks is now 6-7.

The Pride now travel to Fairfax, Virginia to compete in the CAA Duals at the George Mason Field House on Saturday, January 21. Hofstra will face Old Dominion at noon, George Mason at 2 p.m. and Boston University at 4 p.m.

Results:
165- #19 P.J. Gillespie (HU) major dec. Tanner Shaffer (AU), 11-2
174- Jermaine John (HU major dec. Phillip Barreiro (AU), 14-5
184- #11 Ben Clymer (HU) major dec. Thomas Barreiro (AU), 11-3
197- #19 Daniel Mitchell (AU) WBF Tim Murphy (HU), 4:11
285- #1 Ryan Flores (AU) WBF Paul Snyder (HU), 0:43
125- #13 Steve Bonnano (HU) major dec. Thomas Williams (AU), 12-0
133- Jamie Franco (HU) dec. Corey Borshoff (AU), 6-1
141- #12 Matt Mariacher (AU) dec. Luke Vaith (HU), 6-4
149- Justin Accordino (HU) dec. Kevin Tao (AU), 9-5
157- #4 Ganbayar Sanjaa (AU) dec. Tyler Banks (HU), 5-1

Join the Live Chat with Kyle Dake, Monday January 23 at 7 p.m. Eastern

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Have a question for “Kid Dynamite”?  Curious about what’s happening on the Cornell wrestling team?

Two-time NCAA champion Kyle Dake of the Big Red will join New York Wrestling News for a live chat on Monday, January 23 at 7 p.m. Eastern time.

Dake, currently the #1 ranked 157-pound wrestler in the country, is 22-0 this season with titles at the Body Bar Invitational, Cliff Keen Las Vegas Invitational and the Southern Scuffle.  Even up a weight at 165, he got a clutch pin for the Big Red last week in a close win over Binghamton.

To join the online chat, click here and register.  (It’s free!)

You can also add your email for a reminder here!

“The Kid” is ready for your questions!

Heavyweight Nick Gwiazdowski Makes an Immediate Impact for the Bearcats

By Betsy Veysman

Nick Gwiazdowski picked right up where he left off.  The Binghamton freshman went undefeated as a high senior, winning all of his contested matched by pin.  So it wasn’t too surprising when his first college bout ended in a fall over Adam Barnett of George Mason.  For good measure, Gwiazdowski pinned his next opponent, Princeton’s Charles Fox, in the first round of the Binghamton Open the following day.  The heavyweight then went on to take the tournament title with a 4-0 performance, including, fittingly, a fall in the finals.

“Honestly, we expected success from Nick right away,” said Bearcats head coach Pat Popolizio. “I’ve known him for a long time and knew his personality and attitude. He’s a true competitor who loves the sport and puts the necessary time and hard work into it.”

Gwiazdowski, on the other hand, was a little surprised by the smooth transition.

“Before my first competition, I wasn’t sure what to expect,” he said. “The coaches were pretty confident in what I could do, but I wasn’t as confident.  But then after the Binghamton Open, I felt like it wasn’t such a big jump from high school.  I felt like I could do really well.”

The Duanesburg High product has continued his successful rookie campaign, amassing a 17-4 record, including nine bonus point victories (with six pins).   He upset Mike McClure of Michigan State, who was the fifth seed, in the opening round of the Reno Tournament of Champions and has registered other quality wins over Purdue’s Roger Vukobratovich and Eastern Michigan’s Wes Schroeder.   He also took advantage of the opportunity to avenge his last high school loss by defeating Oklahoma’s Kyle Colling in a January dual meet and he nearly led his team to an upset of Cornell on Sunday when his major decision over the Big Red’s Maciej Jochym tied the dual score.  (Cornell won on criteria).

But the focus for Gwiazdowski, currently ranked 12th nationally by theopenmat.com, is not on his wins.  Three of his four losses this year have come to All-Americans, Levi Cooper of Arizona State (twice) and Alan Gelogaev of Oklahoma State.  His other setback was against Drexel’s Kyle Frey.  The two-time New York state champion is quick to recall his mistakes in those defeats, including some positioning errors and getting extended on shots. But he believes there is one thing he really needs to do to step up his game as the campaign progresses.

“The biggest thing for me right now is to ignore the name of the other guy and what singlet he’s wearing,” he said.  “It’s just wrestling.  There are no secret moves out there.  I made the mistake of thinking about whether I could beat the guy in front of me in the middle of those matches.  I know I just need to forget about who the opponent is and wrestle my match.“

Popolizio agreed. “Nick wrestled differently against those guys.  He was a little hesitant on his shots.  He gave them too much respect. If he doesn’t question his ability, but just goes out there and is aggressive and puts it on the line, he can make a lot of noise this year.”

Gwiazdowski, who weighs between 235 and 240 pounds, began the season with goals he now thinks were too conservative.  At this stage, he and his coach firmly believe he can be an All-American in St. Louis in March.

“A good thing about Nick is that he soaks everything up, comes back and works on any mistakes he makes,” Popolizio said. “He has a lot of hidden strength.  He’s not the biggest heavyweight, but he has great speed and conditioning.   It’s also very important that he wrestles harder as the match goes along.  All of those things combined make him a real candidate to make the podium.”

Ultimately, Popolizio believes the 2011 Junior Wade Schalles Award Winner as the nation’s best high school pinner can not only make the podium, but stand on top of it as an NCAA champion.  In fact, discussions about a national title factored heavily during the recruiting process.

Gwiazdowski admitted that the proximity to home and his familiarity with the coaching staff played key roles in his decision to join the Bearcats. But there was also something else that drew him to Binghamton.

“We’re looking for our first national champion here,” Popolizio said. “Nick could have gone to almost any program he wanted to, but he was excited about the prospect of being our first national champion.”

“That definitely was important in my decision,” Gwiazdowski agreed, adding he was also looking at Penn State and Lehigh. “Being an All-American or a national champion at a lot of other schools isn’t such a big deal; it’s been done so many times before.  But doing those things here on a team that is doing the right things and moving up the ladder was a really exciting opportunity.”

Gwiazdowski is hoping there’s more excitement to come in March.

 

 

Army Slips Past Columbia, 19-15

NEW YORK – Six Army wrestlers won bouts to lead the Black Knights to a 19-15 victory over EIWA rival Columbia on Saturday evening at University Gymnasium.

Freshman Scott Filbert posted a major decision and five other Black Knights recorded wins by decision to lead Army (4-5, 2-1 EIWA) to its first dual match win since late November. Kevin Lester picked up a win by fall in the heavyweight bout to pace Columbia (3-2, 0-1 EIWA).

Filbert got Army off to a fast start by blanking Robert Dyar, 11-0, in the 125-pound matchup. The bonus-point victory gave the Black Knights an early 4-0 advantage.

Junior Jordan Thome followed Filbert’s dominating performance by securing a 6-2 verdict versus Kyle Gilchrist at 133 pounds, extending Army’s lead to 7-0.

Consecutive wins by Columbia trimmed Army’s advantage to 7-6, but senior Jimmy Rafferty and freshman Cole Gracey responded with victories to make it 13-6 in favor of the Black Knights with four bouts remaining. Rafferty scored a 4-1 decision versus Jake O’Hara in the 157-pound bout, while Gracey posted a 10-8 triumph opposite Eren Civan at 165 pounds.

Columbia’s Stephen West edged Ryan Tompkins, 3-2, in the 174-pound matchup to pull the Lions to within 13-9, but Army clinched the contest with wins in the next two bouts.

Senior Michael Gorman outlasted Shane Hughes, 14-11, at 184 pounds, and fellow senior Derek Stanley doubled up Nick Mills, 4-2, at 197 pounds to give Army an insurmountable 19-9 cushion.

Lester rounded out the scoring by pinning Army freshman heavyweight Stephen Snyder in 49 seconds.

Army resumes its tournament slate next weekend (Jan. 21-22) when the Black Knights travel to Ithaca, N.Y., to compete at the 43rd annual New York State Championships.

Match Notes: Army’s all-time record versus Columbia improves to 51-7-1 … Jimmy Rafferty leads the Black Knights with 18 victories this season … he also tops the team with seven dual match wins … Rafferty has won six of his last seven bouts … Scott Filbert’s major decision was the first of his career … Derek Stanley picked up his first dual match win of the season.

Army 19, Columbia 15
125: Scott Filbert (A) maj. dec. Robert Dyar, 11-0
133: Jordan Thome (A) dec. Kyle Gilchrist, 6-2
141: Elijah Sullivan (C) dec. Casey Smith, 8-5
149: Steve Santos (C) dec. Ryan Bilyeu, 6-5
157: Jimmy Rafferty (A) dec. Jake O’Hara, 4-1
165: Cole Gracey (A) dec. Eren Civan, 10-8
174: Stephen West (C) dec. Ryan Tompkins, 3-2
184: Michael Gorman (A) dec. Shane Hughes, 14-11
197: Derek Stanley (A) dec. Nick Mills, 4-2
285: Kevin Lester (C) pinned Stephen Snyder, 0:49

-goarmysports.com

 

Bulls Finish Seventh at Virginia Duals

HAMPTON, VA – Thanks to a 2-1 record on the day, the Buffalo wrestling team placed seventh at the Virginia Duals, held Friday and Saturday in Hampton. The Bulls finished the tournament 3-2 and earned wins over Bucknell, Rider and The Citadel.

In the opening round, Buffalo drew a scrappy Bucknell team in the opening round and fought through to a 19-13 win thanks to six wins. Just Farmer and Kevin Smith earned clutch wins of 3-2 and 3-1, respectively, but the Bisons held a 7-6 lead after the first four bouts of the match. The Bulls responded in a big way and streaked to four straight wins and a 19-7 lead that would be too much to handle, starting with a dominating 13-2 major decision from Wally Maziarz in his 157-pound match. Mark Lewandowski (5-0), Jake Waste(2-0) and Zach Ward (4-0) then followed suit with impressive shutouts.

Next up was a familiar opponent, as UB took on Mid-American Conference rival Kent State in the ensuing round. The Golden Flashes punched its ticket to the second round thanks to a win over The Citadel and quickly built an 11-3 lead through the first four matches, with Farmer providing the only early win. The Bulls charged back thanks again to Maziarz, who won 9-7 to spark another win streak. Mark Lewandowski got a 1-0 win at 165 and Jake Waste followed with a 5-1 win to put the Bulls ahead 12-11, a lead it would let slip away in the final three bouts to drop the dual 21-12.

Now having to fight to stay alive in the double-elimination tournament, the Bulls drew Rider, a team it beat at the very same tournament 30-9 last season. Sean Waltonstarted the match off on the highest of notes, pinning his opponent in the waning seconds of the first period after working to turn him for most of the three-minute opening period. Farmer followed and earned a early 4-1 lead, but his aggressive mentality got the best of him as his opponent got a quick pin that knotted the match back up at 6-6. Kevin Smith almost got a pin of his own, but instead had to settle for a 7-4 decision. Blake Roulo followed and earned his first win of the tournament, 4-3 thanks to solid defense in the final seconds of the match to hold off his opponent’s flurry. Wrestling just under two hours from his home in Petersburg, Roulo pulled out the crucial win in front of family and friends.

With the match sitting at 12-6 in Buffalo’s favor, Maziarz came to the mat hoping to again earn the big decision, but could not hold on to a late lead and lost in sudden-death overtime 10-8 to bring Rider within three. Needing to pad the lead heading into the final half of the match, the Bulls got just that in the 165- and 174-pound matches. Lewandowski earned his third tech fall of the duals season with a 15-0 shutout, buoyed by 12 first-period points. Lewandowski now has six tech falls and a pin in his last 12 overall matches. Waste looked to also get a tech but had to settle instead for an 18-5 major decision that gave Buffalo a 21-8 lead. Rider won the next two matches, but trailing by seven points heading into the heavyweight bout it forfeited to Jedd Mason to give UB a 27-14 win and secured at least a top-eight finish.

The Bulls had its hands full in the next match, facing Rutgers. Mark Lewandowski’s 17-4 major decision and Jedd Mason’s dominant pin in the first period were the team’s only win. Adding in a late forfeit from the Scarlet Knights, the Bulls fell 22-16. Despite the setback, UB responded in a big way to secure a seventh-place finish, improving on last season’s slot in eighth.

The Citadel had lost to Kent State in the first round but put together impressive wins over Bucknell and North Carolina before losing on criteria to North Dakota State and drawing the Bulls in the seventh-place match. Max Soria started the match with a 2-0 win, but the Bulldogs answered back to tie the match at 3-3 early on. Kevin Smith proved to be the one who would spark UB this time around, getting a pin just before the end of the period that started a five-match streak that brought the lead all the way to 20-3 before Citadel could get another win. Lewandowski got yet another tech fall win while Blake Roulo got another win and Clay Reeb made his Virginia Duals debut with a 3-1 win at 157 pounds. The Bulls capped the win with a major decision from Jake Waste and it cruised to a 24-15 win.

The busy weekend moves the team’s overall dual record to 5-11. Next will be the New York State Collegiate Championships, to be held January 21 and 22.

-Buffalobulls.com

 

Cornell Edges Binghamton on Tiebreakers in New York State Battle

By Betsy Veysman

Binghamton came within one second of beating #9 Oklahoma earlier this week when 197-pounder Cody Reed couldn’t quite secure the winning takedown as time expired against Keldrick Hall in a 20-15 dual loss.  The Bearcats came even closer on Sunday night to defeating a highly ranked opponent when they lost a 22-21 decision to #4 Cornell on tiebreakers in a televised meet at the Events Center in Vestal, New York.

When Binghamton heavyweight Nick Gwiazdowski earned a 15-3 major over Big Red senior Maciej Jochym in the final bout of the evening, the dual score stood at 21-21.  The two squads were even on bouts won (5) and total combined falls and technical falls (2), so the deadlock was broken on the third tiebreaker, total match points.  Cornell tallied 80 points to Binghamton’s 71.

“That was more stressful than we hoped,” said Cornell head coach Rob Koll a few hours after the event ended. “We didn’t think we matched up particularly well with them and they’re a good team, so we knew it would be close.”

The squads traded decisions in the first three bouts of the evening, with Frank Perrelli and Mike Nevinger notching seven-point wins for the Big Red and Bearcat Patrick Hunter picking up a 10-7 victory over Cornell freshman Nik Pena at 133.

“We thought we gave up some points at the first few weights that we were counting on,” Koll said. ”We gave away the major at 125 with no time on the clock when they were credited with an escape and then couldn’t quite get the major at 141. Nik got headlocked in his match early on and had a deep hole to climb out of at 133. He gave everything he had to come back but he couldn’t quite pull it off.”

The home team then captured momentum in front of a crowd of over 1,000 with a pair of bonus point wins.  Fourth ranked Donnie Vinson earned a technical fall over Chris Villalonga at 149 before eighth ranked Justin Lister beat Craig Eifert by fall at 157 for a 14-6 Bearcat lead at the intermission.

“Chris gave up the tech at the buzzer.  We can’t give up those types of points,” Koll said. “After that tech and pin, we thought we were in trouble.”

So it was time to turn to two-time national champion Kyle Dake, who sat out of the Big Red’s two victories on Saturday due to an injury.  With his team needing a big victory, he came off the bench at 165 to pin Joe Chamish in the third period to cut the deficit to 14-12.

“We didn’t really want to wrestle Kyle,” Koll said. “But we didn’t want to lose either.”

At 174, in a matchup of two bumped up 165 pounders, Matt Kaylor downed Marshall Peppelman 8-4 to extend the Binghamton lead to 17-12.  With Binghamton favored at heavyweight, the Big Red needed #3 Steve Bosak and #1 Cam Simaz to win with bonus points.

They delivered.  Bosak put four on the board for the Big Red with an 8-0 major decision over Nate Schiedel and Simaz followed with a 22-6 technical fall over Reed to give the visitors a 21-17 advantage.   The Big Red 197 pounder secured back points with just seconds left in the match to turn a four-point technical fall into a five pointer.

“Once we lost at 74, holy cow,” Koll said.  “Now we have to major a very good kid at 184 and get a tech or a pin at 197 to be comfortable.  But our leaders came through for us today.  Frank [Perrelli] gave up a silly escape at the end to take away a major but he wrestled really well otherwise.  Kyle [Dake] and Cam [Simaz] overcame guys who were stalling so badly to not give up backs or a pin.  Steve [Bosak] majored a good wrestler. What our leaders did was enormous.”

“There were also some other things that were positive, like Pena fighting hard off his back for two minutes. Maciej kept us in the dual although, frankly, he caused me a great deal of angst.  I might have been happier if he just stayed on his belly,” Koll continued with a laugh.

The Big Red lineup had a different look this weekend in the three dual wins over Pennsylvania, Princeton and Binghamton.  Koll expects that to change.

“We need to get everyone back to the right weights and we’ll be a much stronger team,” Koll said. “We also will be adding Nick Arujau to the mix soon. We also expect more from some guys who are too talented to lose the way they did.  They’re great kids off the mat, but they need to be a little greater on the mat.”

Meanwhile, despite their first two dual losses of the year in the matches assistant coach Frank Beasley dubbed “The Clash of the Titans”, the Bearcats showed over the past seven days that they are without a doubt on the rise.  After all, the Big Red beat Binghamton 35-3 in Ithaca a year ago.

“They have some real horses on that team,” Koll said. “They have a really nice team that matched up with us today just right.  It seemed like the perfect storm was there for the upset, but we had just enough to win.”

Wyoming Seminary Dominates Eastern States Classic, Palacio Repeats as Champion

By Betsy Veysman

Five 2011 Eastern States champions took the mat this weekend in Loch Sheldrake, New York looking to repeat their title runs.  Only Dylan Palacio did.

The Long Beach senior, who won in the 145 pound class a year ago, stood on top of the podium at 152 on Saturday night.  He did it in impressive fashion, cruising to the finals, which he won in a hard fought 8-5 battle with one of the top seniors in the country, Cornell recruit Brian Realbuto.

“Winning Eastern States means a lot to me,” Palacio said. “I went in with the mentality that I was going to win it.  Brian [Realbuto] is a great wrestler and I have a lot of respect for him.  It was a really great match, a really exciting match and I was happy to be able to put it all out there on the mat.”

The match was tied after two periods, with Realbuto registering an early takedown in the first and Palacio earning two escapes.  The third period, however, featured back and forth action and a flurry of points.  With less than 20 seconds left and Palacio holding a 6-5 lead, Realbuto got in on a shot that Palacio fought off before notching a takedown of his own at the buzzer.

“My strategy was to not stop wrestling because Brian scores from anywhere,” Palacio said.  “I knew I had to hand fight heavy with him.  At the end, when I got called for stalling, it took everything I had in my body to kick out of his shot.  I knew I didn’t need to score again but when the opportunity was there, I had to take it.”

Palacio said that winning the tournament was one of his goals for the season, but the most important goal is one that has eluded him in his high school career to date.  He has yet to win a New York state title in Albany after placing third in 2011 and fourth in 2010.

“I can sum up this season for me easily — one dream, one chance.  I have only one chance left to win a state title.  Last year I lost to a wrestler I beat easily earlier in the season. I was a little sloppy at times last year, a little wild. Now, I feel like I’m wrestling with controlled aggression.  I don’t feel like anyone can match my pace.”

Palacio, who has gone 24-0 this season at 152 and 160 pounds, hasn’t yet settled on a weight class for the remainder of the campaign.

“It’s still up in the air,” he said. “But for Eastern States, I looked at the wrestlers who were coming and I knew if I wanted to be the best, I had to beat the best.  I saw that the 152 class was loaded and I knew that was where I wanted to be.”

Palacio, who was a Greco Roman All-American at Junior Nationals in Fargo, North Dakota, is also a standout soccer player.  He has not decided on his future college yet, but he said he knows he wants to wrestle at the next level.

With Palacio’s title as well as a championship from 113-pounder Mark Raghunandan, Long Beach took third in the team race with 111.5 points.  Wyoming Seminary was the runaway winner with 248 points, 89 more than runner up Shenendehowa.  The Plainsmen had a pair of first place finishers in Nick Kelley at 132 and Tony Fusco at 195 as well as three additional placewinners.

Five of Seminary’s wrestlers earned top seeds in the event and all five –Evan Botwin (120), Dom Malone (126), Eric Morris (170), AJ Vizcarrondo (220) and Michael Johnson (285) — captured individual crowns.   The Pennsylvania school had six additional medalists, including fifth place finishers Ty White at 138 and Connor Wasson at 182.  Jack Walsh was seventh at 145 and three grapplers grabbed eighth for the Knights – Cohl Fulk (152), Ryan McMullan (160) and Matt Doggett (195).

Overall, Wyoming Seminary head coach Scott Green was pleased with his squad’s showing.

“I thought we wrestled well,” he said.  “Having five champions at a tournament of this magnitude is certainly gratifying for our program.  It was also great to have a lot of our other guys place, especially since it was the first time placing for a few of our guys this year.”

In particular, Green singled out the performance of 220-pound winner Vizcarrondo who earned bonus points in all five of his bouts, including a 14-4 major decision over Greene’s Kyle Stanton in the title match.

“AJ wrestled really well,” he said.  “He beat Stanton 1-0 earlier and then won big this time.  I feel like he made the adjustments he needed to make to widen the gap and improve.”

Green, who coached in the Empire State at Binghamton University, Oxford High School and the Shamrock Wrestling Club, was excited about bringing his team to the Eastern States Classic for the first time.

“I was at the first Eastern States as a coach and there were teams from New Jersey and Pennsylvania,” he said. “I think the tournament got away from that a little bit, but we were happy to put it on our schedule this year.  It’s only a two hour trip for us and it’s an opportunity for us to see some tough kids we wouldn’t see anywhere else.”

With over 100 teams in attendance, there were plenty of tough kids.  In fact, of the 11 returning New York state champions who competed, only four made the finals (three won) and one other finished third.

“I’m really looking forward to seeing this tournament get even stronger,” Green said.  “If our presence can help it grow, that’s a good thing for New York wrestling.”

Championship Results:

99 pounds: Jose Rodriguez (Wantagh) major dec Nick Barbaria (New Rochelle), 9-0

106 pounds: Kevin Jack (Danbury) decision Justin Cooksey (MacArthur), 7-4

113 pounds: Mark Raghunandan (Long Beach) won by disqualification over Dylan Realbuto (Somers)

120 pounds: Evan Botwin (Wyoming Seminary) major dec Sam Recco (Lyndonville), 9-0

126 pounds: Dom Malone (Wyoming Seminary) major dec Maverick Passaro (Eastport-South Manor), 8-0

132 pounds: Nick Kelley (Shenendehowa) dec Nick Mauriello (Hauppauge), 10-4

138 pounds: Quinton Murphy (Holley Central) dec James Dekrone (John Glenn), 6-2

145 pounds: Jim Kloc (Iroquois) dec Dale White (John Jay), 7-6

152 pounds: Dylan Palacio (Long Beach) dec Brian Realbuto (Somers), 8-5

160 pounds: Frank Affronti (Wayne) dec Aaron Dudley (Hudson Falls), 4-3

170 pounds: Eric Morris (Wyoming Seminary) dec Zach Zupan (Canastota), 4-0

182 pounds: Tony Lock (Pioneer) tech fall McZiggy Richards (Wingate), 15-0

195 pounds: Tony Fusco (Shenendehowa) dec Austyn Hayes (Phoenix), 8-2

220 pounds: AJ Vizcarrondo (Wyoming Seminary) major dec Kyle Stanton (Greene), 14-4

285 pounds: Michael Johnson (Wyoming Seminary) fall Cole Lampman (Shenendehowa), 1:40

For full results, please follow the link:

 http://gimp.escapesports.on-rev.com/Results/2012/2012%20Eastern%20States.pdf

The 10th Annual Eastern States Classic Boasts Over 100 Teams, Top Competition

By Betsy Veysman

Some have said that the Eastern States Classic serves as a preview of the New York State Championships.  Certainly, the tournament features some of the Empire State’s best talent.

The numbers speak for themselves. 12 of the top 20 Division I teams in the state will be at the event along with 7 of the top 20 Division II schools.  More than half of the state semifinalists in Albany last year competed in the event.  Twelve defending state champions will wrestle this weekend along with 17 state silver medalists.

“There are so many great wrestlers at Eastern States,” said Binghamton University head coach Pat Popolizio.  “With so many teams competing, when you win you know you’re at a level where you can compete in college.  Our roster at Binghamton is mostly made up of New York wrestlers and most of the recruits we’ve had have won or placed high at Eastern States.”

This year’s 10th annual edition, which will take place on January 13 and 14 at Sullivan Community College in Loch Sheldrake, New York should again display top-notch wrestling. Over 100 squads will compete, including representatives from Connecticut, Pennsylvania and Virginia.  With 580 wrestlers in the field, the action will begin at 10:40 a.m. on the 13th and will run through approximately 10 p.m. on Friday night.  Wrestling will resume on Saturday morning around 9:15 with medal round bouts scheduled to commence at 4:15 p.m.

With eight placers, Longwood won the team title by 36 points over runner up Shenendehowa in last year’s event, with Fox Lane, Long Beach and Hauppauge rounding out the top five.  Those teams are all back to contend, along with Intermat’s #42 team, Wantagh, which has eight grapplers seeded in the top 16, including #1 at 99 pounds Jose Rodriguez.  Shenendehowa offers seven seeded wrestlers, including two top seeds, Nick Kelley at 132 and Tony Fusco at 195.

The addition of prep power Wyoming Seminary should have an impact on the team race as well.  The Knights won the Bethlehem Holiday Classic and placed fourth and second, respectively, at the very tough Ironman and Beast of the East tournaments.  The Pennsylvania school has four nationally ranked wrestlers in the starting lineup: Dominick Malone (126), Eric Morris (170), AJ Vizzcarando (220) and Michael Johnson (285).  All four are top seeded this weekend, as is Evan Botwin at 120.  Seminary has 13 participants seeded in the top 16 in all.

“We feel adding Wyoming Seminary is a great plus because we get to see how our New York kids stand up against nationally ranked kids,” said Tournament Director Jeff Cuilty. “It’s a chance for some of the New York wrestlers to prove themselves.”

Five wrestlers who proved themselves last January as 2011 Eastern States individual champions return to defend their crowns:

  • Travis Passaro stood on top of the podium at 103 a year ago after edging state runner up Mark Raghunandan of Long Beach as the sixth seed. He will have perhaps an even tougher challenge this season as the 11th seed at 120 pounds, a weight filled with accomplished grapplers, including Jeff O’Lena of East Rochester, Matt Leshinger of Sayville, TJ Fabian of Shoreham Wading River, Justin Corradino of Warwick Valley, Mark West of Hauppauge (the 2010 Easterns States champion at 96 pounds), and Seminary’s Botwin.
  • On the other end of the scale, Kacee Saure of Holley, the 285-pound victor, will be back at the same weight.  His challengers will include two of the Empire State’s top heavyweights, Cole Lampman of Shenendehowa and Ethan Stanley of Saugerties as well the top seed, Wyoming Seminary’s Johnson, currently ranked #16 in the country by Intermat.
  • The Realbuto family from Somers boasted a pair of Eastern States trophies a year ago, with Dylan Realbuto the winner at 96 pounds and Brian the champion at 135.  After a state runner up finish as a sophomore, Dylan has moved up to the 113 pound class where some of the top opponents will include Raghunandan, Edgemont’s John Aslanian and Amsterdam’s Brandon Lapi.
  • Intermat’s #9 overall recruit Brian Realbuto outpointed Holley’s Quinton Murphy in a high scoring 17-12 bout in last season’s finals in a matchup of state champions.  This time, the Cornell-bound Realbuto will have another Eastern States winner in the bracket – Long Beach’s Dylan Palacio.
  • Palacio, who took third in New York in 2011 and is ranked in the Top 20 nationally, defeated Wayne’s Tory Cain 2-1 at 145 in the Eastern States title bout.  Besides the two defending champions, the 152-pound weight has some other firepower, including Seminary’s Cohl Fulk, Westfield’s Beau Donahue, Longwood’s Nick Hall, South Lakes’ Ryan Forrest and Super 32 placer John Keck from Shoreham Wading River.

Murphy became the winningest wrester in New York high school history last weekend when he captured the Niagara Frontier Officials Wrestling Tournament to earn his 276th career triumph.  He has earned many titles during his career, including three state championships, but has taken third and second the last two years at Eastern States.

The Indiana recruit will look to add another crown to his resume at a loaded 138-pound class which includes another second place finisher from the 2011 Eastern States, John Glenn’s James Dekrone as well as former state placers Malik Rasheed of Longwood, Brendan Goldup of LaSalle and Anthony Finocchiaro of Canastota.  Ty White of Wyoming Seminary will also take the mat at the Paul Gerry Fieldhouse, as will a long list of other top Empire State wrestlers including Shenendehowa’s David Almaviva, Westfield’s Derek Arnold, CBA/Jamesville Dewitt’s Aaron Benedict, Hauppauge’s Sam Schwartzapfel, Wantagh’s Dan McDevitt and Fox Lane’s Tom Grippi.

“138 is definitely a class that jumps out as really strong and deep,” Cuilty said. “There will be some great wrestling there.”

The same can be said of the tournament as a whole.

For a full listing of the seeds for the 2011 Eastern States, please follow the link:

http://sectionixwrestling.com/

Cam Simaz Overcomes Injury, Looks Forward to Title Run

BY JEFF CHANEY

Cam Simaz’s decision was made when he stepped on the mat on January 8.

The Cornell University senior 197-pounder suffered a severe left hamstring pull during the Body Bar Invitational in November, and spent the next month rehabbing the injury.

Simaz could have shut down his season, (medical) redshirted, and come back next year healthy to try and win an elusive national championship, both for himself and his team.

That decision needed to be made before Cornell and Lehigh wrestled January 8 at Newman Arena.

“I talked to the coaches, my family and our trainer, and he (Cornell trainer Chris Scarlata) was straightforward with me,” said Simaz, a three-time state champion for Allegan High School in Michigan. “He said how I recover will tell us a lot. If I get back and feel great then I would be good to go. I trained as hard as I could with Chris, he told me to go as hard as I could, and if I tweaked it we would call it a year. I made it through without tweaking it too bad.”

So Simaz stepped on the mat against Lehigh’s Kadeem Samuels, and he beat him 10-2 to improve his record to 13-1 this year.

Simaz, a three-time All American for the Big Red, including a pair of third-place finishes the past two seasons, is still the top-ranked wrestler in his weight class, even with the injury.

“Honestly, the hamstring felt fine [against Lehigh],” Simaz said. “He wrestled me well, but I wasn’t satisfied with the way I wrestled, 10 points wasn’t enough. But the hamstring was fine.”

Now Simaz, who does not have the opportunity for another year, looks forward to winning that national championship in March in St. Louis.

“I’m going for it now,” Simaz said. “My opportunity is now gone to redshirt, so we’re going to go for it and hope to win a national title.”

And if the hamstring acts up and prevents that?

“In this sport you don’t have a lot room to worry about that,” Simaz said. “If you do that, you are not doing what you should, going hard. I don’t want to worry about this being my last year and getting hurt because there is life after wrestling.”

“At this point, more than anything in the world I want to win that title,” he added. “But I need to keep that in perspective.”

Young Stars Look to the Future at NYWAY Big Red Kickoff

By Betsy Veysman

“There was so much great wrestling, it was non-stop,” said Izaak Olenjik, a youth wrestler from California.  “It was such a great experience.”

Olenjik, who won his 78-83 pound bracket, was one of 200 youth grapplers who were treated to a day full of high level wrestling on January 8 at Newman Arena on the campus of Cornell University.

The action began with the NYWAY Big Red Kickoff, a tournament for wrestlers ranging from 5 to 14 years old.  Competitors included Olenick’s group of more than 20 from the Golden State as well as wrestlers from Michigan, Maryland, Pennsylvania, New Jersey and New York.

“We’re really happy we came out here,” said Zander Silva, a Californian who competed in the 67-82 pound class. “The competition has been very good.  It’s great to get tough matches in against guys you don’t usually wrestle.”

Silva, a Reno Worlds placewinner and Southwest Kickoff Classic champ, was one of the many highly acclaimed youth grapplers on the mats.  Looking around the room, a wrestling fan could see YouTube sensation Stevo Poulin showing his array of moves in the 50-53 pound class for 9/10 year olds along with champion Joseph Manno of New Jersey.  Or a fan could witness Michigan star Devin Schroder, a Super 32 and Grappler Fall Classic Middle School champion, in a triple overtime battle with Durbin Lloren, a Reno Worlds title winner from California, among many other bouts filled with future stars.

“The quality of wrestling was definitely high,” said State NYWAY President Clint Wattenberg, adding that he was hoping for a slightly larger turnout. “The representation from different parts of the country was great.  I saw some of the California kids and some of the best kids in New York take some losses.  These are kids who rarely lose.  Exposing our local wrestlers to wrestlers of this caliber is a really big part of our mission at NYWAY.”

NYWAY is just over six months old, according to Wattenberg, and is now over 2240 members strong.  He believes that the tournament showed glimpses of what the organization will be able to provide.

“The event wasn’t as seamless as we would have hoped,” he said. “But we gave people an understanding of what we’re trying to do to support folkstyle development in the state. We also were able to engage representatives from some of the areas in New York we hadn’t reached yet.”

The highlight of the day for many of the Big Red Kickoff participants was watching #4 Cornell defeat #12 Lehigh 24-12 in a clash of the EIWA’s top two teams in between the morning and afternoon sessions of the tournament.

“Having the Cornell dual was important,” Wattenberg said. “There was a high level of energy and I think it got the kids excited.  They saw that they could be in the shoes of the college wrestlers and that the sport can be a part of their lives in the future.”

The enthusiasm was apparent as the Cornell wrestlers signed autographs and posed for pictures with the youth wrestlers, as well as other fans, for nearly an hour after the dual with the Mountain Hawks ended.

“The scrambles the college guys get into are really cool,” Silva said. “The matches are so intense the whole time.  It was great to watch.“

“I thought it was so much fun to watch Cornell because they are my favorite team and it is amazing to watch college wrestlers,” added 10-year old Matthew LaPorte of New York.  “I can learn from how good Steve Bosak was in all positions and from how Kyle Dake wrestled.”

Big Red Kickoff Classic Champions:

 

5/6 Year Old Division

Ashton Seymour                    37-44

Julien Griffith                         50-55

Nicholas Caiati                       65-72

 

7/8 Year Old Division

Graham Rowland                  49-53

Alex Ramirez                          58-64

Cooper Kropman                  65-72

Cuinn Burlingham                77-92

Charlie Tibbitts                     93-103

 

9/10 Year Old Division

Joseph Manno                       50-53

Will Grater                             58-60

Chad Sakamoto                     62-64

Max Kropman                       66-69

Dean Shambo                         70-75

Zachary Williams                   77-79

Benny Baker                          80-84

Nicholas Noel                         84-94

Guillermo Escobedo              99-108

 

11/12 Year Old Division

Jesse Vasquez                       62-70

Kevin Spann                          70-75

Nate Nordin                           75-78

Izzak Olenjik                          78-83

Ethan Leake                           85-88

Nico Mattia                             93-98

Ryan Reyes                            99-105

Patrick Ramirez                     106-112

Frankie Gissendanner          120-133

Dominic Nassivera                142-148

 

13/15 Year Old Division

Dane Heberlein                     67-82

Alexander Hrisopoulos         84-90

Kai Kramer                            88-94

Evan Wick                              95-99

Zander Wick                          100-105

Devin Schroder                     105-110

Joel Rees                                 114-121

Jake Ryan                               124-133

Devon Pingel                         138-155

Max Dean                               164-176