Why Do You Wrestle? The Inspirational Story of Nishan Patel (by John Passaro)

 
 
For more information on the subject of this story, Nishan Patel or the author, John Passaro, see the end of the article.

BY JOHN PASSARO

While I was on the side of the mat next to some wrestlers who were warming up for their next match, I found myself standing side by side next to an extraordinary wrestler.

He was warming up and he had that look of desperation on his face that wrestlers get when their match is about to start and their coach is across the gym coaching on another mat in a match that is already in progress.

“Hey do you have a coach?” I asked him.

“He’s not here right now.” He quietly answered me ready to take on the task of wrestling his opponent alone.

“Would you mind if I coached you?”

His face tilted up at me with a slight smile and said, “That would be great.”

Through the sounds of whistles and yelling fans I heard him ask me what my name was.

“My name is John,” I replied.

“Hi John, I am Nishan,” he said while extending his hand for a handshake.

He paused for a second and then he said to me, “John, I am going to lose this match.”

He said that as if he was preparing me so I wouldn’t get hurt when my coaching skills didn’t work magic with him today.

I just said, “Nishan – no score of a match will ever make you a winner.  You are already a winner by stepping onto that mat.”

With that he just smiled and slowly ran on to the mat, ready for battle, but half knowing what the probable outcome would be.

When you first see Nishan you will notice that his legs are frail – very frail.  So frail that they have to be supported by custom made, form fitted braces to help support and straighten his limbs.

Braces that I recognize all too well.

Some would say Nishan has a handicap.  I say that he has a gift.

To me the word handicap is a word that describes what one “can’t do.”  That doesn’t describe Nishan. Nishan is doing.

The word “gift” is a word that describes something of value that you give to others.

And without knowing it, Nishan is giving us all a gift. I believe Nishan’s gift is inspiration. The ability to look the odds in the eye and say “You don’t pertain to me.”  The ability to keep moving forward. Perseverance. A “whatever it takes” attitude.

As he predicted, the outcome of his match wasn’t great.  That is, if the only thing you judge a wrestling match by is the actual score. Nishan tried as hard as he could, but he couldn’t overcome the twenty-six pound weight difference that he was giving up to his opponent on this day in order to compete.  You see, Nishan weighs only 80 pounds and the lowest weight class in this tournament was 106.  Nishan knew he was spotting his opponent 26 pounds going into every match on this day.  He wrestled anyway.

I never did get the chance to ask him why he wrestles, but if I had to guess I would say, after watching him all day long, that Nishan wrestles for the same reasons that we all wrestle for. We wrestle to feel alive, to push ourselves to our mental, physical and emotional limits – levels we never knew we could reach. We wrestle to learn to use 100% of what we have today in hopes that our maximum today will be our minimum tomorrow.  We wrestle to measure where we started from, to know where we are now, and to plan on getting where we want to be in the future.  We wrestle to look the seemingly insurmountable opponent right in the eye and say, “Bring it on – I can take whatever you can dish out.”

Sometimes life is your opponent and just showing up is a victory.

You don’t need to score more points than your opponent in order to accomplish that.

No, Nishan didn’t score more points than any of his opponents on this day, that would have been nice, but I don’t believe that was the most important thing to Nishan.  Without knowing for sure – the most important thing to him on this day was to walk with pride like a wrestler up to a thirty two foot circle, have all eyes from the crowd on him, to watch him compete one on one against his opponent – giving it all that he had.  That is what competition is all about.  Most of the times in wrestling you are competing against yourself. Nishan is no different.

They say 80% of life is just showing up.  Nishan showed up today.  He showed up when most others would have stayed in the stands.  Today all of Nishan’s opponents may have scored more points than him, but he competed. He competed against his opponents, he competed against himself and he competed against life. And no matter what the score may have said in any one of his matches – he won in every case.

You later learn in life how important the disciplines of wrestling are to you in handling real life problems, especially when facing a seemingly insurmountable opponent in a disease or illness.

If you live long enough, life will throw you to your back.

And when it does – you are much better off if you have wrestled. You will know how to fight like hell to get off of your back, to get back on your feet and to move forward.

Chances are that I probably will never see Nishan again. That is just how life works.

“Wrestling brother” – keep moving forward.

And thank you for the gift.

You are an inspiration.

—— Nishan Patel is looking to represent the USA later this year at the Paralympic Games.  For more on him and how to help make his dreams a reality, see here.

For more on John Passaro, author of the book “6 Minutes Wrestling With Life”, see here.

CAA Awards: Vinson Earns Wrestler of the Year; Bonanno Named Top Scholar-Athlete and Anspach Receives Coaching Honors

 

Vinson, Photo by BV

The CAA recently announced its end-of-year accolades and New York was well represented.  Binghamton 149-pounder Donnie Vinson captured Wrestler of the Year honors for the second straight year.  He also was the conference tournament’s Most Outstanding Wrestler as both a junior and senior, making him the first wrestler in CAA history to win those two prestigious awards in consecutive campaigns.

Also earning an impressive achievement for the second straight season was Hofstra’s Steve Bonanno, currently a graduate student working toward his MBA.  Bonanno was named the CAA Scholar-Athlete of the Year, as he was in 2012.

Bonanno wasn’t the only member of the Pride to be honored as Rob Anspach collected the conference’s Coach of the Year award after leading his team to the CAA crown for the second time in a row.

For more on Vinson from the Binghamton Athletics site, see here.

For more on Bonanno from the Hofstra site, see here.

For more on Anspach from the Hofstra site, see here.

 

 

Aerial Conquest: Rodriguez-Spencer Uses the Flying Squirrel to Win National Championship

 
 
For Renaldo Rodriguez-Spencer, it was time to take flight.

Trailing by a point with under 15 seconds to go in the NHSCA 138-pound Junior Nationals title bout on Saturday, the Cheektowoga junior knew he’d have to try something different as his previous offensive attempts had been thwarted by his opponent, Maryland’s Alfred Bannister.

“He was pretty low and I couldn’t get to a shot,” Rodriguez-Spencer said. “The obvious option was to go over the top. Once I decided to do it, I knew I had to hit it hard and do it strong.”

That’s what he did, using the “Flying Squirrel” to earn the winning takedown and a 4-3 victory over Bannister, a champion at this event the past two years and Intermat’s #14 ranked recruit in the Class of 2014. See it here.

The triumph made him a national champion at an event he hadn’t attended in the past. In fact, Rodriguez-Spencer, who enjoys wrestling the international styles in the offseason, wasn’t really considering attending the NHSCA event until his high school coaches persuaded him to do so.

Photo by BV

“I initially wasn’t planning to go,” he said. “I was going to get ready for the freestyle season, but my coach thought I could be a national champion and talked me into it. I’m glad I went, it was a good tournament overall and a good time.”

He certainly made the most of the trip, even playing some golf at a driving range in Virginia Beach.

But when it came time for competition, Rodriguez-Spencer was all business at 138 pounds (up from 132, where he was the 2013 Division II New York State Champion).

He majored his first two opponents and then doubled up fellow New Yorker Matt Caputo, 6-3. The Section 6 wrestler then showed his offensive explosiveness again in a 11-3 quarterfinal victory and in his 13-8 semis win over Brock Wingbermuehle, leading him to the title bout where he would win in dramatic fashion with the Flying Squirrel.

It wasn’t the first time he used the maneuver famously utilized by Greco star Ellis Coleman.

“I sometimes do it in practice and I think it did it twice during the year,” he said. “I know it’s there if I need it. It’s one of those moves that no one expects and I know it works.”

Those in attendance certainly appreciated it.

“I normally don’t hear much when I wrestle,” he said. “But I heard the crowd a little bit when I hit the move. And then once I got my hand raised, it was pretty loud.”

Beating an accomplished foe like Bannister and adding a new trophy to his collection made it a great weekend for Rodriguez-Spencer, but he said on Sunday that he already moved on.

“It’s nice to beat good opponents, but it doesn’t change much for me,” he said. “I went there to win and now it’s time to get back to practice to win more national tournaments.”

Photo by BV

Next on the schedule: the FILA Juniors, a freestyle and Greco event in which Rodriguez-Spencer has been successful in the past.

“My goals now are of course to win FILA Juniors in Las Vegas, make a World Team and finally win a Fargo national championship this summer,” he said.

He has placed at Fargo before, including a bronze showing in Greco in 2012.

But he emphasized that it’s time for him to take gold in North Dakota. Who knows, he could get to the top of the podium by going over the top of his opponents again, Flying Squirrel style.

Fabian and Burgos Capture Championships, Many Others Make the Podium as NHSCAs and FloNationals Come to an End

 
 
A weekend full of national-level competition came to an end on Sunday, with many more trips to the podium for New York wrestlers.

Fabian, Photo by BV

TJ Fabian capped off his spectacular senior year by adding a national title to the state gold medal he earned in Feburary. The Shoreham Wading River wrestler won six matches in Virginia Beach, including a 10-4 decision over Pennyslvania’s Kyle Krasavage in the 126-pound championship bout at the NHSCA Senior Nationals.

He was joined on the medal stand by a number of other Empire State grapplers on Sunday, including fellow Long Islander Michael Hughes of Smithtown West, who was the runner up at heavyweight. For a full list of New York All-Americans at the Senior NHSCA competition, see below.

In addition, a number of Middle School and Elementary wrestlers put their talent on display at the FloNationals in Pennsylvania, with G2 World Wrestling Academy’s Ryan Burgos winning a national crown of his own at 75 pounds. Burgos pinned his way to the finals, where he captured an 8-4 decision over Jimmy Carmany of Ohio.

See below for more information on additional New Yorkers who placed at the event.

For the NHSCA Middle School, Freshman, Sophomore and Junior medalists as well as the FloNationals High School All-Americans, see this link.

NHSCA SENIOR NATIONALS

Champion:

126: TJ Fabian (Shoreham Wading River)

Second Place:

285: Michael Hughes (Smithtown West)

Fourth Place:

106: Steven Lee (West Babylon)

Fifth Place

106: Jake Yankloski (Wayne)
138: Nick Tighe (Phoenix)
170: Carlos Toribio (Brentwood)

Sixth Place

113: Mat Bradice (William Floyd)
126: Chris Araoz (Wantagh)
160: Troy Seymour (Peru)
170: Dan McDevitt (Wantagh)

Seventh Place:

113: Dillon Stowell (Gouverneur)
132: Matt Leshinger (Sayville)
152: Chris Koo (Great Neck South)

Eighth Place:
113: Steven Sewkumar (Long Beach)
126: Dylan Realbuto (Somers)
170: Johnny Vrasidas (St. Anthony’s)

FLONATIONALS – MIDDLE SCHOOL AND ELEMENTARY

Champion:

Middle School (MS) 75: Ryan Burgos

Third Place:

MS 126: Louie DePrez
Elementary 68: Greg Diakomihalis

Fourth Place:

MS 119: Matt Grippi
MS 135: Conor Melbourne
MS 145: Andrew Passaro
MS 157: Mike Spallina
Elementary 105: Hunter John

Fifth Place:

MS 145: Ray Cotto
MS 157: Jason Hoffman
Elementary 78: Ethan Ferro

Seventh Place:

MS 95: Sammy DePrez
MS 135: Josh Shamp

Mauriello, Torbitt, Rodriguez-Spencer, Rasheed Earn High School National Titles; Numerous Others Become All-Americans at NHSCAs and FloNationals

 
 
There’s going to be a lot of hardware headed back to New York. On Saturday, numerous Empire State wrestlers earned All-American status, including several who went all the way to the top.

At the NHSCAs in Virginia Beach, two ninth graders earned crowns as Hauppauge’s Chris Mauriello captured the 132 pound title and Whitney Point’s Jordan Torbitt joined him as a gold medalist at 152.

Later in the day, a pair of 2013 state champions – Renaldo Rodriguez-Spencer (138) and Corey Rasheed (152) added national titles to their resumes when they were victorious in the NHSCA Junior event. Also making it all the way to the finals were Reggie Williams (195) and James O’Hagan (285) in the 11th grade tournament and as well as a trio of freshmen – Kellen Devlin (120), Christian Araneo (182) and Edwin Rubio (285).

But that wasn’t all. The Empire State boasted some gold medalists in the Middle School competition as well – Mack Berkowitz at 127 and Travis Race at 165. (New York grabbed first in the team standings in both the Junior and Middle School competitions).

Tomorrow, two grapplers who stood atop the podium at the Times Union Center – TJ Fabian (126) and Mike Hughes (285) – will try to add their names to the list of champions when they take the mat in the finals of the Senior tournament.

Meanwhile, Virginia wasn’t the only place Empire Staters were showing off their skills. A number of New York wrestlers made the medal stand at the FloNationals, including runner up Nick Piccininni (113) and bronze medalist Tyler Grimaldi (160).

For more information on the placers at all of those events, see below.

FLONATIONALS

Second Place:
113: Nick Piccininni (Ward Melville)

Third Place:
160: Tyler Grimaldi (Hills West)

Fourth Place:
132: Nick Kelley (Shenendehowa)
170: Christian Dietrich (Greene)

Seventh Place:
152: Joe Mastro (Yorktown)

Eighth Place:
120: Travis Passaro (Eastport South Manor)

NHSCA NATIONALS

NHSCA JUNIORS

National Champions
138: Renaldo Rodriguez-Spencer (Cheektowoga)
152: Corey Rasheed (Longwood)

Second Place:
195: Reggie Williams (Johnson City)
285: James O’Hagan (Seaford)

Fourth Place:
220: Ryan Wolcott (Waverly)

Fifth Place
170: Adis Radoncic (RKA)

Seventh Place
106: Danny Murray (Brentwood)
120: Sean Peacock (Midlakes)
152: Derek Holcomb (Newark Valley)

Eighth Place
113: Bryan Lantry (Wayne)

NHSCA SOPHOMORES

Third Place
106: Kyle Quinn (Wantagh)

Fifth Place
106: Jesse Dellavecchia (East Islip)

Sixth Place
113: Nick Casella (Locust Valley)
138: Jakob Restrepo (Sachem East)
145: Brandon Aviles (Newfield)
160: Richie Jones (St. Joseph’s)

Seventh Place
113: Ben Lamantia (St. Anthony’s)
160: Trevor Allard (Mexico)

Eighth Place
132: Sam Ward (Locust Valley)
220: Vincent Feola (Whitman)

NHSCA FRESHMEN

National Champions
132: Chris Mauriello (Hauppauge)
152: Jordan Torbitt (Whitney Point)

Second Place
120: Kellen Devlin (Amherst)
182: Christian Araneo (Ward Melville)
285: Edwin Rubio (John Glenn)

Fourth Place
220: Owen Albanese (Canastota)

Fifth Place
170: Wil Hilliard (Phoenix)
182: Ricardo Dawkins (General Brown)

Sixth Place
106: Anthony Argentieri (Kenmore West)

Seventh Place
113: Andrew McFarland (Carthage)
132: Freddy Eckles (Lake Shore)
170: Sonny McPherson (Indian River)

NHSCA MIDDLE SCHOOL

Champions:
127: Mack Berkowitz
165: Travis Race

Second Place:
100: Hector Colom

Third Place:
85: John DeRidder
90: Dane Heberlein
100: Anthony Cirillo
154: Jeffrey Browne

Fourth Place
75: James Langan
85: Mitch Seaver
100: Benjamin Tepperman

Fifth Place

230: Larry Baker

Sixth Place
75: Riley Retell
105: Zachary Ancewicz
112: Hunter Dusold
180: Dominic Pistone

Seventh Place:
95: William Sims
142: Nick Bushey

Eighth Place
80: Christopher Rivera
90: James Trezza
100: Jacori Teemer
135: Nick Coppola
142: Richard Dawkins

NHSCA SENIORS – WRESTLING TO BE COMPLETED ON SUNDAY

Finalists:
126: TJ Fabian
285: Mike Hughes

Others All-Americans:
106: Steven Lee, Jacob Yankloski
113: Mat Bradice, Dillon Stowell, Steven Sewkumar
126: Dylan Realbuto, Chris Araoz
132: Matt Leshinger
138: Nick Tighe
152: Chris Koo
160: Troy Seymour
170: Johnny Vrasidas, Dan McDevitt, Carlos Toribio

In Contention: See the New York Wrestlers Still Battling at NHSCAs and FloNationals

 
 
On Friday, FloNationals began in Indiana, Pennsylvania while the second day of the NHSCA Freshman, Sophomore and Junior events took place. Many New York wrestlers stayed in contention for national championships in both tournaments. All the remaining grapplers at the Freshman, Sophomore and Junior NHSCAs have clinched All-American honors.
Continue below to see who will be wrestling on Saturday both in Virginia Beach and at Flo. (We will update Senior NHSCAs on Saturday as well). Please provide comments below with any additions.

NHSCA Semifinalists

JUNIORS

138 Pounds: Renaldo Rodriguez-Spencer (Cheektowoga)
152 Pounds: Corey Rasheed (Longwood)
195 Pounds: Reggie Williams (Johnson City)
220 Pounds: Ryan Wolcott (Waverly)
285 Pounds: James O’Hagan (Seaford)

SOPHOMORES

106 Pounds: Kyle Quinn (Wantagh)
113 Pounds: Nick Casella (Locust Valley)
138 Pounds: Jakob Restrepo (Sachem East)
160 Pounds: Richie Jones (St. Joseph’s)

FRESHMEN 
106 Pounds: Anthony Argentieri (Kenmore West)
120 Pounds: Kellen Devlin (Amherst)
132 Pounds: Chris Mauriello (Hauppauge)
152 Pounds: Jordan Torbitt (Whitney Point)
170 Pounds: Wil Hilliard (Phoenix)
182 Pounds: Christian Araneo (Ward Melville), Ricardo Dawkins (General Brown)
220 Pounds: Owen Albanese (Canastota)
285 Pounds: Edwin Rubio (John Glenn)

NHSCA Wrestlebacks (Wrestling for 3rd-8th)

JUNIORS 
106 Pounds:
 Danny Murray (Brentwood)
113 Pounds:
 Bryan Lantry (Wayne)
120 Pounds:
 Sean Peacock (Midlakes)
152 Pounds: 
Derek Holcomb (Newark Valley)
170 Pounds: 
Adis Radoncic (RKA)

SOPHOMORES

106 Pounds: Jesse Dellavecchia (East Islip)
113 Pounds: Ben Lamantia (St. Anthony’s)
132 Pounds: Sam Ward (Locust Valley)
145: Brandon Aviles (Newfield)
160: Trevor Allard (Mexico)
220: Vincent Feola (Whitman)

FRESHMEN 

113 Pounds: Andrew McFarland (Carthage)
132 Pounds: Freddy Eckles (Lake Shore)
170 Pounds: Sonny McPherson (Indian River)

 

FLONATIONALS

Champions Bracket – Quarterfinalists

106 Pounds: Yianni Diakomihalis (Hilton)

113 Pounds: Nick Piccininni (Ward Melville)

120 Pounds: Travis Passaro (Eastport South Manor)

132 Pounds: Nick Kelley (Shenendehowa)

160 Pounds: Tyler Grimaldi (Hills West) and Andrew Psomas (Monsignor Farrell)

170: Christian Dietrich (Greene)

In the Consolations

138: Vincent DePrez (Hilton) will meet David Almaviva (Shenendehowa) Saturday morning

145: Zach Joseph (Shenendehowa), Mitchell Klein (Horace Greeley) will meet Anthony DePrez (Hilton) on Saturday morning

152: Joe Mastro (Yorktown)

170: Michael Green and Joe Piccolo (Hills West)

182: Daniel Norris (Hilton)

195: Collin Pittman (Spencerport)

220: Joe Sprung (Berne-Knox)

285: Alex Soutiere (Ravena CS)

Logan Barcomb (Hudson Falls)

NHSCA Nationals Underway: Who From NY Advanced to the Round of 16?

 
 
On Thursday, the NHSCA Freshman, Sophomore and Junior National tournaments got underway in Virginia Beach.  Championship action ran through the Round of 16, with many New Yorkers making the cut.  The Empire State is well represented throughout, but has four or more representatives alive in the winners bracket to this point in:

  • Juniors 170 (Franky Nassivera of Queensbury, Ronnie King of Islip, Jake Weber of Clarence and state champion Adis Radoncic of RKA)
  • Sophomores 113 (Donny McCoy of Niagara Falls, James Szymanski of Shoreham Wading River, Chris Donnelly of Island Trees and Nick Casella of Locust Valley.  (Donnelly and Casella meet next).
  • Sophomores 160 (Ryan Marszal of Unatego, Richie Jones, Trevor Allard of Mexico, Nick Wentland of Minisink Valley and Anthony Ottaviano of Hauppauge)
  • Freshmen 132 (Connor Remy of Patchogue-Medford, Freddy Eckles of Lake Shore, Nathaniel Grubham of Whitney Point, Chris Mauriello of Hauppague and Holden Pelton of South Jefferson)

Radoncic, Photo by BV

Below is a list of wrestlers who advanced to the Round of 16 as well as those who are in the consolation bracket (as of Thursday evening on the official brackets).  With any additions, or changes, please comment below.

JUNIORS – In the Championship Round of 16:

106 Pounds:

Danny Murray

113 Pounds:

Johnny Stramiello and Paul Capobianco

120 Pounds:

Joseph Russ and Sean Peacock

126 Pounds:

Blake Retell

138 Pounds:

Renaldo Rodriguez-Spencer and Matt Caputo (Will meet each other in the Round of 16)

145 Pounds:

Dennis Ferro

152 Pounds:

Corey Rasheed

160 Pounds:

Burke Paddock

170 Pounds:

Franky Nassivera, Ronnie King, Jake Weber and Adis Radoncic

182 Pounds:

Connor Watson

195 Pounds:

Reggie Williams

220 Pounds:

Ryan Wolcott and Matt Kaminer

285 Pounds:

James O’Hagan

 

JUNIORS – Consolations

106 Pounds:
David Yablans

113 Pounds:
Matt Boyle
Joseph Hill
Timothy Johnson
Bryan Lantry

120 Pounds:
Joshua Straub
Thomas Hill
Abdul Fatah Alshawai
Nathan Gilligan and Danny Amancio

126 Pounds:
Jake Lerner
Ryan Snow
Marshall Winston
Paddy Quinlan
Anthony Messina
Tom Reina
Carter Merecki

132 Pounds:
Brandon Hill
Jack Reina
Said Kahramonov
Ralph Cazzetta
JP Ascolese
Mat Lauro
Oran Revivo
Zach Ayen
Eric St. John
Adrian Berry

138 Pounds:
Nick Forget
Matt Langan
Ryan Kromer
Jon Silveri
Anthony Feola
Warren Oderkirk
Daniel Lucey
Corey Ashe

145 Pounds:
Eduardo Ramirez
Marc DChutiis
Zachery Lugo
Raymond Prouty
James Farrell
Trevor Hoffmier
Nate Martin
Vinny Romeo
Jimmy Devine
Frankie Hernandez
Nigel Williams

152 Pounds:
Michael Pistone
Angelo Kress
Cory Kostrzycki
Derek Holcomb
Daniel Jones
Vincent Drago
Alex Smythe
Will Jacobs

160 Pounds:
Michael Peterson
Daniel Kerr
Konstantin Parfiryev
Tyler Silverthorn
Erik Adon
Jaison White

170 Pounds:
Isaiah Zimmer
Mark Tracy
Joseph Russo
Jordan Formicola

182 Pounds:
Jake Horton
Dominic Pirraglia
Dominic Holder

195 Pounds:
Nick Weber

220 Pounds:
Bryan Tenny
Luke McKee
Charles Pederson
Sean Ferguson
Caden Watson

 

SOPHOMORES – In the Round of 16

106 Pounds:

Kyle Quinn and Jack Scurti

113 Pounds:

Donny McCoy, James Szymanski, Chris Donnelly and Nick Casella (Donnelly and Casella meet next)

120 Pounds:

Dandre Norman and Mike D’Angelo

126 Pounds:

Nick Toutant, Blaise Benderoth and Mike Raccioppi

132 Pounds:

Tyler Gross, Chris Truglio and Sam Ward

138 Pounds:

Donny Donnelly and Jakob Restrepo

145 Pounds:

Brandon Aviles

152 Pounds:

Vincent Darpino and Nathan Schwab

160 Pounds:

Ryan Marszal, Richie Jones, Trevor Allard, Nick Wentland and Anthony Ottaviano

195 Pounds:
Andrew Rakitzis and Nathaneal Rose

220 Pounds:

Brad Cunningham and Vincent Feola

285 Pounds:

Garrett Rath

 

SOPHOMORES – Consolations

106 Pounds:
Joe Abelgore
Dominick Mazzella
Joe Barber
Lucas Yankloski
Jesse Dellavecchia

113 Pounds:
Hector Guerrero
Joseph Rorick
Logan Robinson
Ben Lamantia
Christian Briody

120 Pounds:
Andrew Taber
Mitchell Shambo
Chris Meloni

126 Pounds:
Dashea Edwards
Austin Whitney
Alan White
Joseph Loconte
Cody McGregor

132 Pounds:

Hunter Hulse
Christian Hollister
Andrew Shomers
Zack Bendick
Nick Nieves
Matt Gund
Naquan Warren

138 Pounds:
Francisco Bisono
Peter Pasqualino
Sheldan Clute
Joseph Demasi
Kevin Jackson
Jordan Bushey
Danny Murphy
Kyle Greene

145 Pounds:
John Donohue
Elias Kokalis
Bailey Phelps

152 Pounds:
Nick Wyckoff
Ricky Panciroli

160 Pounds:
Greg Kleinsmith

170 Pounds:

Brett Lewis
Marcello Gennaro

182 Pounds:
David Hamil

 

FRESHMEN – In the Round of 16:

106 Pounds:

Anthony Argentieri and John Arceri

113 Pounds:

Ryan O’Rourke

120 Pounds:

Kellen Devlin

126 Pounds:

Jack Taddeo and Nick Garone

132 Pounds:

Connor Remy, Freddy Eckles, Nathaniel Grubham, Chris Mauriello and Holden Pelton

138 Pounds:

Joshua Farrar

152 Pounds:

Nick Saporito, Jordan Torbitt and Jack Freischlag

160 Pounds:

Timothy Heitmann and Luke MacIntosh

170 Pounds:

Sonny McPherson, Aaron Paddock and Wil Hilliard

182 Pounds:

Christian Araneo, Ricardo Dawkins and Nick McShea

195 Pounds:

Ryan Gray

220 Pounds:

Owen Albanese

285 Pounds:

Edwin Rubio

 

FRESHMEN – Consolations:

106 Pounds:
Brandon Gould
Derek Spann
Theo Powers
John Kalinoglu
Hunter Olena
Bobby Pease
Dominic Poggoli
Shawn Bourne
Tyler Ayers
Kelan McKenna
Thomas Michel

113 Pounds:
Ramel McIntosh
CJ Archer
Chris Pereira
Zachary Burke
Andrew McFarland
Dakota White
Andrew Hollister
Hunter Owen
Tito Colom
Dylan Wood
Jack Gold

120 Pounds:
Nick Shenck
Michael Berkowitz
Josh Bressette

126 Pounds:
Andrew Garcia
Devin Wrieth
Jeremy Boyle
Zach Bierfeldt
Owen Bachelder
Marc Paez

138 Pounds:

Jordan Kayes

145 Pounds:
Bryce Dusold
Dylan Studer

 

'Pack' Mentality: Yorktown's Joe Mastro Commits to North Carolina State

 
 
Joe Mastro went to the ACC wrestling tournament in March as a fan. He plans on attending in the future as well – but as a competitor.  

The Yorktown senior, a third place finisher at the Times Union Center in February recently committed to North Carolina State.

“It’s a great environment and a great school,” Mastro said, adding that he chose the Wolfpack over Duke and Air Force. “I’ve known Coach [Pat] Popolizio for a while and I think with Coach Beasley and Coach Kelly, NC State is going to do great things.”

Photo by BV

Mastro sees his future team as a group on the rise. His Yorktown squad was the same way during his career, led by the Class of 2013, which boasted a quartet of state qualifiers, including Mastro, Steven Sabella, David Varian and Thomas Murray. The program achieved new heights, including a runner up showing at the Section 1 tournament this year with three champions and a top 15 finish in the team race in Albany.

“This senior class has been together since eighth grade and we’ve been progressing ever since and moving our way up,” Mastro said. “It’s been exciting. We all want to see continued success of the program. We want to see the guys there now break the records we set.”

One of those marks certainly won’t be broken. Mastro will always be the first-ever state placer from the school, albeit by a thin margin.

“It’s funny because right after I took third, I ran over and my teammate Thomas Murray was just starting his [182-pound] match for third,” Mastro said. “I was the first placer, but it was pretty close – I probably got it by about five minutes.”

Given his bronze medal performance, Mastro also currently owns the best-ever finish in Yorktown history (Murray earned fourth). But it wasn’t easy.

In his first trip to the state tournament, Mastro said the nerves got to him in his opening bout with Konstantin Parfiryev of the PSAL. Before he knew it, he was in a 5-0 hole and despite a furious comeback, he dropped into the consolation bracket with a 7-5 loss.

But it didn’t take him long to turn things around.

“I had to regroup,” he said. “I loosened up and told my coach it was time to come back and take third. It was long and grueling, but I was able to get it done. I really turned it up and felt like I wrestled the way I should have in my first match. It was a total 180 from how I started. I had a short term memory about it and put a lot of points on the board.”

He definitely did.

First, a 17-1 technical fall, then a pair of major decisions over the number two and three seeds, Angelo Kress of Columbia and Zach Joseph of Shenendehowa.

Then, in the consolation semifinals, he met Dan DeCarlo of Port Jervis, a grappler who had beaten him at SUNY Sullivan in January in a close decision.

“I felt like I had controlled that whole match at the Eastern States,” Mastro said. “I had a 1-0 lead with about 10 seconds left and gave up a reversal. I really screwed up. I wanted to go out and prove that I was better than him and the first match was a fluke. I was excited to wrestle him again.”

His excitement showed as he blanked DeCarlo 5-0 to advance to the third place bout, where he captured his fifth straight contest with an 8-4 triumph over Johnson City’s Zach Colgan.

So he’ll enter NC State having finished his high school career on a high note. And he’ll join a growing number of New York grapplers heading to Raleigh.

“I’m definitely looking forward to the warm weather,” Mastro said. “But I think what’s really exciting is that I already know people down there. I’ve known [former Section 1 star and 2013 NCAA qualifier] Sam Speno for a long time and it will be fun to compete with him and some other guys from New York. It’s great that it will be a familiar environment even though it’s pretty far away.”

Kyle Dake's Journey to History: A Year-By-Year Look at His Championship Career

 
 

BY BETSY VEYSMAN, http://www.newyorkwrestlingnews.com

During the early stages of his first season as an assistant at Cornell, Jeremy Spates expected to handle the rookies in the room with ease.  But one first-year wrestler refused to comply.  Spates knew immediately that Kyle Dake was something special.

“Normally I would dominate freshmen, especially 141-pound freshmen,” he said. “But Kyle was different from the beginning.  He was already good in every position. If you had asked me then if he would be a four-time national champ, I probably would have said no because it had only been done twice.  But I knew immediately that he would be very, very good.”

With some perspective from Spates, we took a look back at the “very, very good” four-year journey the Lansing native took to his unprecedented four NCAA championships at four different weights.

2010, The Rookie:  Yes, he was a true freshman, but Kyle Dake expected to do damage at his first NCAA tournament.  The seeding committee did as well, as he earned the #1 spot in the bracket after numerous impressive victories in his first year, including over two of the wrestlers placed close behind him: Minnesota’s Mike Thorn (#2) and Ohio State’s returning NCAA finalist Reece Humphrey (#4).

Dake as a freshman, by Lindsey Mechalik

Still, there were plenty of doubters.  None of the six expert previews we tracked down on Intermat picked Dake to win the 141-pound crown.  Only one writer – Josh Lowe – thought he’d even make the title bout.  Another called it a “deep weight class with few real standouts.”

The prevailing opinion seemed to be that Humphrey’s big match experience the previous year would allow him to win the grudge match with Dake (the Buckeye topped Dake in December in sudden victory before the Big Red grappler returned the favor at the National Duals). Others wondered if the freshman would let the enormity of the situation get to him. “Dake might not be ready for the stress,” one of the previewers opined.

On top of that, there was the question of health.  Dake appeared to sustain a reasonably serious injury in the EIWA tournament finals.   While the coaching staff said it wasn’t significant enough to impact him, another fluke accident would have an effect. During the warmups in Omaha, Dake suffered another setback.

“I was doing a little live wrestling with him the day before the tournament started,” Spates said.  “He rolled his ankle pretty badly and he screamed out.  I was thinking, what did I do?  Being the day before, it was worrisome.  I was just hoping we could get him in there ready to go.  I guess the good thing is that he had rolled it earlier in the year, so he was used to wrestling on the injury.”

A little adversity?  The expectations of being on the top line of the bracket? Freshman jitters? A weight cut that had become increasingly difficult as he grew during the season? According to Spates, Dake still believed that he would win.

In the semifinals, Dake and Humphrey faced off as expected, and many viewers were introduced to Dake’s magic for the first time. Humphrey threw the freshman to his back, but he somehow responded before near fall could be awarded.  The bout went to overtime and in the tiebreakers, Dake prevailed 3-2 to move on to the finals.

“I still have no idea how Kyle bridged off his back against Humphrey,” Spates said. “He got body locked and in that situation most guys get pinned.  It was unbelievable that he didn’t get pinned and even more unbelievable that he didn’t even give up backs.”

It was on to the title bout where the opponent was Iowa’s Montell Marion.

Once again, spectators were treated to a seemingly impossible getaway.  In the first period, it looked like Marion had executed a big move, but Dake not only avoided giving up any points, he instead grabbed a 2-0 lead for himself.  He never looked back, demonstrating the top skills he is now well known for in a 7-3 victory that made him the first Big Red rookie to win a national championship.

“That was just crazy,” Spates said. “Marion locked up the throw and in the corner, Rob [Koll] and I are just like, oh no, oh no, oh no.  And then instead of the takedown and three back points for Marion, Kyle winds up with the takedown.  It was a huge swing in the match and something I’ll always remember.  We had high expectations for him, but it’s tough to win it as a true freshman.  I don’t blame people for doubting it would happen.  People just didn’t know that while most guys would get afraid in that situation, Kyle just got excited.  He loves to be in the spotlight.”

2011, “The Underdog”:  In the summer of 2010, I remember talking to the Cornell coaches about Dake’s move up to 149 pounds.  They laughed as they mentioned people talking about how difficult the higher weight would be for him and how he might struggle there.

Dake vs. Molinaro

With entrance into a new class comes a different set of challengers to overcome.  At 149, there was a rather significant one – former NCAA champion Darion Caldwell of North Carolina State.  The Wolfpack wrestler had put together one of the more surprising and dominant performances in beating Iowa’s Brent Metcalf for the national title in 2009 and although he was coming off an injury, he was a certain title contender.

“Kyle was really excited for the opportunity to wrestle Caldwell,” Spates said. “He wanted to be the one to knock him down.  I would have loved to watch that match. There would have been fireworks for sure.”

A potential clash between Dake and Caldwell didn’t come to pass at the Southern Scuffle when Caldwell pulled out of the event shortly before it began, but the Lansing native did have a tough match for the crown in Greensboro anyway.

Dake edged Penn State’s Frank Molinaro, at the time a two-time All-American, on the strength of an escape.  The critics complained that he stalled through the win and calls that Molinaro would win a rematch were heard in the wrestling world.

“Kyle had been injured and hadn’t wrestled in a while before the Scuffle,” Spates said. “He came back pretty big and had to cut a lot of weight.  His lungs weren’t quite there yet either.  He was hurting in that match; had a tough time even finishing.  But the bottom line is, he still found a way to win.  He knew things would be different if they met again.”

After the tough victory over the Nittany Lion, Dake did suffer a pair of losses – the last two of his career.  In a January dual meet against Binghamton, he dropped a 5-3 decision to Donnie Vinson, a wrestler he grew up wrestling in Section 4.  And in the EIWA title bout, he fell in overtime to Bucknell’s Kevin LeValley.

Spates said an insight from then-volunteer assistant Matt Azevedo (now the head coach at Drexel) might have saved the season.

“Matt was the first one on the staff to see how much trouble Kyle was having with weight because he was growing again,” Spates said.  “As the season went on, he was having more and more trouble.  A little before Easterns, Kyle changed his diet and workouts. We took him off some lifting and upped his cardio – really changed his wrestling plan.  I really believe, had that not happened, Kyle would have had difficulty winning it that year.  I give Matt a lot of credit.”

When the NCAA brackets were released, Dake found himself as the #4 seed, with Caldwell, Molinaro and LeValley in front of him.  He was now the underdog, a role he wasn’t accustomed to, but one he relished.

“He lost some matches, but the #4 seed was surprising,” Spates said. “The crazy thing was that he was fourth while Molinaro was second. We thought he’d still be ahead of Molinaro.  But it set up a potential semifinal date with Caldwell and gave Kyle even more fire.”

Dake never faced Caldwell, as the ACC wrestler injury defaulted out of the event prior to the potential showdown.  Meanwhile, Dake cruised through his contests, outscoring his first four opponents 24-0 on his way to a Saturday night meeting with Molinaro.

Dake had heard all the talk about how he was “lucky” to win the first time and he didn’t waste time getting on the board, jumping out to an early 2-0 lead.

And from then on, it was a magnificent display of mat wrestling – over six minutes of riding time, near fall and a reversal on the way to an 8-1 triumph.  He might not have begun the year as everyone’s projected champion, but he earned his way to the top again.

“I think a lot of people expected a Molinaro win after their first match,” Spates said. “Kyle was a lot healthier and back in shape and he showed people what he could do.  He came out and dominated, one of the more dominant NCAA finals matches I remember.”

2012, The Favorite: In 2011-12, Dake again took a step up in weight.  This time, there were fewer voices saying he would have trouble with the adjustment.  With the top three NCAA finishers no longer in the class (Bubba Jenkins and Steve Fittery graduated while David Taylor went to 165), Dake was the clear choice as #1.

“Kyle may have been more of a favorite as a junior than in the years before, but I think in his mind, he was going to win it every year,” Spates said.  “I don’t think it was a very different mindset for him.  Not too much had changed.”

Dake, 2012 EIWAs, Photo by BV

He wrestled like the nation’s #1 all year long, with few close calls along the way.  He gave up just one takedown, registered 21 bonus victories and had just four matches within three points.  When it came time for the NCAA tournament, he returned to the top spot in the bracket.

And he turned it up a notch, besting his first three foes by fall in St. Louis.

“Kyle didn’t have a ton of pins that year, but every year he upped his game at Nationals,” Spates said. “As a junior, he really stepped it up.  I remember people saying John Nicholson from Old Dominion, his first round opponent, might upset him because he pushes the pace and wrestles hard and Kyle would be coming right in off weigh ins.  Then Kyle went out and pinned him in less than two minutes. People were like, wow.  I still don’t think everyone realized what a monster he was.”

He was never threatened in his semifinal and title matches, which were won 4-0 (over American’s Ganbayar Sanjaa) and 4-1 (against Iowa’s Derek St. John).

“In the finals, he did what he wanted to do – get the early takedown and the ride,” Spates said. “Once Kyle’s up two or three points, it’s game over. No one can score that many points on him.  He didn’t realize how tough St. John would be on bottom; he thought he’d turn him pretty easily.”

Although Dake had become the first wrestler in NCAA history to win three titles in three different classes, he heard a chorus of boos from some Iowa fans.  Of course, the remainder of the arena responded with loud applause to commemorate the achievement.

“I’ve been to Nationals since 1992 and I’ve never seen something like that,” Spates said. “The Iowa crowd booing and then the whole rest of the crowd standing up to cheer.  It was pretty special, actually.  It was like the rest of the wrestling nation took care of it and said – he just made history, what are you doing?  Kyle was exhausted at the end of that match, but those boos reenergized him.”

Still, he planned to take some time away from the sport before beginning preparations for his final season in a Big Red singlet.

“He told me he’d be off for at least a week,” Spates said. “Then on Wednesday, he was already on the mat.  I asked him what he was doing and he said he was bored and needed to get back to wrestling.”

2013, “The Match of the Century” Showdown:  Four titles in four years at four weights is a monumental achievement. But the truth is, neither Dake nor his coaches were sure he would take the step to 165 until late in the fall.  In fact, in the summer, the staff indicated he would return to 157, which was a reasonable cut for him.

“The decision came about when the people from the All-Star Dual called and asked him to wrestle David Taylor at 165,” Spates said. “I remember calling him on a Sunday in October and asking him about it, saying they wanted him in the All-Star, whether it was at 157 or against Taylor at 165.  He said he had been thinking about some things and wanted to talk about them, but needed a few more days.  I said we should just talk now.  He said he thought he wanted to go up to 165 – but only if it was best for the team. He said he wanted to spend a season concentrating on getting better and being able to wrestle as hard as he could for the entire seven minutes. He felt like he spent his other seasons focusing a lot on weight rather than improving as much as he could.”

And there were some other factors that played a role as well.

“I think the four titles in four different weights was somewhere in the back of his mind all along,” Spates continued. “The chance to wrestle Taylor, the conversation with Jordan Burroughs.  It all factored in.  He would have made weight at 157, but he would have spent a lot more time thinking about cutting.  He didn’t want that – he wanted to be dominant in his last season.”

So, 165 it was.  And when Dake and Taylor agreed to square off at the NWCA All-Star Classic to kick off the season in November, it looked like it would be the first of three meetings between the superpowers.   That turned out to the case.

Round 1, November 2012, Washington D.C.:  Dake 2, Taylor 1, TB

Taylor moved forward, but took few shots in this match.  The only time the Penn State wrestler came close to scoring was off a Dake shot.  However, in that scenario Dake used the scrambling ability fans saw so many times before to avoid what seemed like sure points for Taylor. In the end, it came down to the tiebreakers and Dake won that battle, getting the escape during his turn on bottom and riding Taylor out for 30 seconds when the roles were reversed.

Round 2, January 2013, Chattanooga, TN: Dake 3, Taylor 2

After hearing that he didn’t take the initiative on his feet in the initial meeting, Dake came out firing in the Southern Scuffle finals, nearly taking Taylor down off the opening whistle.  However, Taylor showed some strong defense of his own and there were few other scoring chances for either wrestler in neutral.  Most of the action came on the mat, where Taylor reversed Dake and then the Big Red grappler returned the favor, for the winning points.  The bout had plenty of controversy as some believed Dake hadn’t secured the reversal or that Taylor had escaped at the end.  The intrigue and the debates set up what would be an epic third battle – this time for the NCAA championship.

ESPN and the NCAA were counting on another meeting.  For the first time, the finals schedule was changed so that 165 pounds would be the last bout of the evening.  The wrestlers both complied, breezing through their first four tilts in Des Moines.  Taylor took all four by fall while Dake outpointed his foes 28-0.  And so on Saturday night, they would tangle again.

Dake had a prediction that he shared with his coach.

“After his semifinal match, Kyle told me it was going to be just like his sophomore year with Molinaro,” Spates said. “He said – close match at the Scuffle, domination in the finals.”

What was he going to do to accomplish that?

“It’s funny because Kyle’s mom asked me what the gameplan was,” Spates said.  “I told her there wasn’t a real gameplan because he adapts so well out there.  But we had been working on ‘Taylor things’ all year, starting before the All-Star.  At times, Kyle was annoyed at me because he thought we were training too much for David Taylor. But the fact is, we were doing things to beat the best guys anywhere.  We definitely made some adjustments after the Scuffle match that were important for the finals.”

Spates had a good feeling before the match started.

“Kyle slaps my hand before every match,” Spates said. “My college teammate Mark Bader [now at Flowrestling] did the same thing.  With Bader, I would give a little bit so it hurt less, but with Kyle, I just take it. When he slapped me before the finals match, it hurt really, really badly. I told Rob [Koll], ‘That one was big, we’re in good shape. This is going to be a great match.’”

Round 3, March 2013, Des Moines, IA: Dake 5, Taylor 4

1st Period: When Dake fell behind less than 20 seconds in on a beautiful ankle pick by Taylor, he didn’t panic.  He demonstrated his strength and athleticism while getting the escape, which was very close to being a reversal.  He then calmly picked up two more with a takedown of his own with around 30 seconds remaining in the first. 3-2 Dake.

“I thought it was a good gameplan for them early,” Spates said. “In the previous matches, Taylor allowed Kyle to control the action with the ties. Getting that quick takedown really got Taylor fired up.  But that might have backfired because when Kyle turned the tide, Taylor went from being in a great position to losing and getting ridden out.  That changed the tone completely.  It was huge.”

2nd Period: Taylor had been effective riding Dake, especially in their Scuffle bout.  But there was no hesitation for the Big Red senior in choosing down and little delay in getting out.  About 15 seconds into the middle stanza, Dake was up 4-2. That’s how the second would end.

“Kyle’s rarely been ridden in his career,” Spates said. “In the finals at Vegas this year, [North Dakota State’s Steven] Monk rode him for almost a whole period. Taylor used the same ride at the Scuffle. Riding hips, staying behind, trying to bump forward, not really trying to turn. We worked on countering that.”

3rd Period: Just two minutes left in Dake’s career.  4-2 advantage. Taylor took bottom.  Dake remembered Taylor’s reversal back in January.  This time, he broke his opponent’s spirit with a ride that lasted until just around 20 ticks remained on the clock.  Even a questionable stall warning on the Cornellian and a later point awarded to Taylor couldn’t change the outcome.

Photo by BV

“Taylor reversed him at the Scuffle,” Spates said. “He tried to roll through again but Kyle changed up his ride and made sure not to put himself in the same kind of danger.  We worked on forward pressure and switching up the ride a little bit.  He did it perfectly.”

Perfect execution led to a perfect four-for-four at the NCAA tournament.  It’s something that Dake had mentioned, all the way back in 2009.

Prior to the start of his freshman season, Dake told Mark Palmer of Intermat, “Right now, my goal would be to never lose a match, and win four NCAA titles. Is that doable? Given my coaches, with hard work and lots of luck, anything is possible.”

Perhaps anything is possible.  And now four years later, he’s a four-time champion at four different weights.  It had never been done before.  It may not be done again.  Each season presented different challenges and different viewpoints.  Through being the rookie, the “underdog”, the favorite and the member of an epic showdown, one thing stayed constant – Kyle Dake stood atop the podium as a true champion.

 

Going With the Flo: Many New York Wrestlers Prepare for 2013 FloNationals

 
 
According to organizers, it will have the “feel of an NCAA championship.” Riding time will be a factor, seasoned college referees will officiate, video review will be used for challenges and many of the nation’s top wrestlers will take the mat.

The scene won’t be Des Moines, Iowa but instead Indiana, Pennsylvania for the FloNationals, beginning on April 5.

Competition will start at 9 a.m. on Friday in the high school division on 12 mats and will continue through the finals on Saturday evening. The action doesn’t stop then, however, as the middle school and elementary tournaments take place on Sunday, beginning at 10.

Kelley, Photo by BV

A year ago, the Empire State featured eight All-Americans at FloNationals. This time, New York will once again be well represented, with over 85 entries as of press time, including state champions such as Yianni Diakomihalis (Hilton), Luis Weierbach (Hoosick Falls), Nick Piccininni (Ward Melville), Nick Kelley (Shenendehowa), Tyler Grimaldi (Half Hollow Hills West) and Rich Sisti (Monsignor Farrell).

In addition, a number of medalists, including 2013 top three finishers Vincent DePrez (Hilton), Christian Dietrich (Greene), David Almaviva (Shenendehowa), Joe Mastro (Yorktown), Alex Soutiere (Ravena), Travis Passaro (Eastport South Manor) and Sam Melikian (Fordham Prep) will look to add All-American honors to the All-State accolades they picked up in February.

Registration remains open until Wednesday at midnight here. But for those who won’t be present in person, there are still ways to keep tabs on the New Yorkers as they strive for national titles.

Each match will be streamed live on FloWrestling.org with a Tech Wave subscription, and according to organizers, viewers will be able to see the score and time on the screen to make the bouts easy to track. (In addition, results will be updated throughout the weekend on http://www.trackwrestling.com).

“I think it’s exciting that every match will be shown live on the internet so people back home can watch,” said two-time state champion Nick Piccininni. “It also lets college coaches watch.  I know some coaches will be there in person too and even though I can’t talk to them yet, I want to put myself on their radar for the future.”

Indeed, FloNationals is a place where coaches are on the lookout for potential recruits.  Just ask 2013 New York State bronze medalist Joe Mastro of Yorktown, who recently committed to become a part of Pat Popolizio’s Wolfpack.

“FloNationals was the place that first got the NC State coaches interested in me,” Mastro said. “I’ve been going since my sophomore year and the competition gets tougher each year.  I think it’s really become the premier postseason national tournament.”

Both Mastro (preseeded ninth at 152) and Piccininni (preseeded #1 at 113), fell just short of the podium a year ago.  Both expect better this time.

“Last year, I came within a round of placing,” Mastro said. “The goal is to definitely come home with All-American honors. It’s something I’ve been thinking about since last year.”

“I definitely wasn’t happy with the outcome last year,” Piccininni added. “It doesn’t really matter that I’m preseeded #1. I’m just trying to go out there, wrestle my toughest and dominate each match. It’s a really tough tournament, but my goal is to win the national championship.”