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

Binghamton Wrestling Set to Host "The Clash of the Titans"

By Betsy Veysman

The Binghamton University wrestling team, currently ranked #23 in the NWCA/USA Today Division I Coaches poll, will put its undefeated record on the line this week against top 10 opponents Oklahoma and Cornell in a pair of duals assistant coach Frank Beasley titled “The Clash of the Titans.”

According to head coach Pat Popolizio, the term is appropriate, given the significance for the Bearcats.

“These are by far the two biggest duals for Binghamton since we’ve been a Division I program,” he said. “We’ve wrestled great teams before but we’ve had holes in our lineup in the past.  We know beating those teams is a tall order and everything has to go right, but we believe we have the momentum, mindset and talent.”

The #9 Sooners, led by Binghamton native Mark Cody, are set to take on the Bearcats at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, January 10 at the West Gym.  The event will feature matchups between top 25 wrestlers at four weights, according to the January 3 Wrestlingreport.com rankings:

  • 149 Pounds #6 Donnie Vinson (BU) vs. #10 Nick Lester (OU)
  • 157 Pounds #6 Justin Lister (BU) vs. #11 Matt Lester (OU)
  • 165 Pounds #23 Matt Kaylor (BU) vs. #14 Bubby Graham (OU)
  • 184 Pounds #19 Nate Scheidel (BU) vs. #18 Erich Schmidtke (OU)

“I think there are a lot of matches that can go either way,” Popolizio said.  “We’ve wrestled some of their guys in tournaments and we know there will be a lot of close ones. We’ll need to win those kinds of matches if we’re going to win the dual.”

The heavyweight tilt between Binghamton freshman Nick Gwiazdowski, currently ranked #18, and Sooner Kyle Colling will be one of interest for New York wrestling followers.   According to Popolizio, Colling (Pioneer High) handed Gwiazdowski (Duanesburg) his last loss in high school, a 1-0 defeat in the finals of Eastern States when Gwiazdowski was a junior.

“Nick hasn’t forgotten about that match,” Popolizio said. “He’s quite a competitor and that one stuck with him for a while.  He’s looking forward to the chance to wrestle Colling again.”

On Sunday January 15th, the two highest ranked programs in New York State will do battle as Cornell travels down I-81 to meet the Bearcats in a meet that will be part of a basketball-wrestling combination event called “Ball and Brawl”.

“It will be our first ever dual in the Events Center,” Popolizio said. “We’re excited about basketball and wrestling together. The basketball game will be at 2 and then we’ll put the mat onto the court.  It’s an opportunity for people to watch really high level wrestling, so we’re hoping for a great turnout.”

The match will begin at 5 p.m. at the Events Center and will be carried live on Time Warner Cable.  Admission is free.

Last season when the two teams met in Ithaca, the home team captured a 35-3 victory.  While there were some dominant matches for the Big Red, Popolizio noted that Cornell also won the tight bouts.

“We know we have our work cut out for us because Cornell is tough across the board,” Popolizio said. “We may be favored at only three weights on paper – 149, 165 and heavyweight.  Last year they won the close matches.  They did it again against Lehigh this past weekend.  We know we’ll have to win those close ones to close the gap and be successful.”

Binghamton has been quite successful to this point in the season.  The Bearcats have been a perfect 8-0 in duals and had a fourth place showing at the Reno Tournament of Champions in December.

“We feel that the season is going very well,” Popolizio said. “We set our schedule to be very challenging this year and we feel that our team has responded quite well so far.  When the year started, we wanted to beat teams in the top 25 and become a top 25 team.  We’ve done that.”

Binghamton’s ranked wrestlers, Vinson, Lister, Kaylor, Schiedel and Gwiazdowski, have led the charge.  In addition, the Bearcats have received strong contributions from others, including 197-pounder Cody Reed.

“Coming out of high school, Cody wasn’t really highly recruited for Division I,” Popolizio said. “He placed once at small school states.  But he has done really well and is right on the cusp of being a top 20 kid.”

There are more goals to be achieved, according to Popolizio.  Among them are winning the CAA conference, although that isn’t the focus.

“The end of the year is most important,” he said. “We felt that we focused a little too much on the conference tournament last year and fell short at nationals. There’s no reason this team can’t have three All-Americans and finish in the top 15 at nationals.  We have the capability to do those things as we continue our growth as a program.”

The “Clash of the Titans” is the next big step.

 

For more information on Binghamton wrestling, see bubearcats.com and http://bearcatwrestling.blogspot.com/

Holley Wrestler Quinton Murphy Sets State Record For Wins

Section V teams and wrestlers led the way in the Niagara Frontier Wrestling Officials Association meet which wrapped up Saturday at Niagara County Community College in Sanborn.

Quinton Murphy of Holley set a New York State record for wins when he scored a technical fall, 18-2 in 5:56, over Dan Reagan of Lewiston-Porter at 138 pounds. He broke the mark of 275 wins by Cody Ruggirello of IX-Valley Central.

Webster Schroeder took the team title with 183.5 points. Warsaw was second at 138 and Lew-Port led the Western New York schools, finishing third with 138 points. Niagara Falls was fourth with 136.

Dylan Caruana of Kenmore West won the Ilio DiPaolo Memorial Outstanding Wrestler award. Caruana defeated Alec Dierna of Webster Schroeder via pinfall in 3:54 to win at 126 pounds.

Donny McCoy of Niagara Falls (99 pounds), Anthony Orefice of Lockport (106), Rocco Russo of Frontier (120), Tom Page of Eden (132), Drew Hull of Roy-Hart (145), Tristan Hamner of Medina (152), Nick Mitchell of Frewsburg (170), Niagara-Wheatfield’s Jake Kelly (195) and Max Antone (220), and Brandon Lathrop of Kenmore West (285) were other weight class winners from Section VI schools.

The Jeff Bloom Aggregate Pin Award went to Frank Shomers of Niagara Falls. He had five pins in 14:24. The Tom Broad Overachiever Award went to Brandon Dallavia of Lew-Port.

Arujau Returns to New York to Wrestle for the Big Red

By Betsy Veysman

Nick Arujau is back to the state where he made a name for himself on the wrestling mat.   After also considering Penn, the Syosset native will join the Cornell squad on Jan 23, as second semester classes begin.

The three-time state champion registered a 23-8 record as a true freshman at American University during the 2010-11 campaign at 125 pounds, but decided to make a move from the Washington, DC based school.

“I didn’t really fit in there very well,” he said.  “I thought it was time for a change.  I really wanted an Ivy League education along with a great wrestling program.  After my official visit, I knew Cornell was where I wanted to be.”

Although his debut in a Big Red singlet won’t be for a few weeks, he has been preparing for quite some time.  He moved to Ithaca in August and has trained with the Finger Lakes Wrestling Club while taking classes at a local college.  He has spent considerable time working out with 2009 NCAA champion Troy Nickerson and four-year Big Red starter Corey Manson while also being coached by three-time All-American Mack Lewnes.

“They have really been helping me out, fixing my mistakes,” Arujau said.  “One of the big differences between last year and this year is the one-on-one attention I’ve been getting.“

According to Arujau, this attention has helped him improve in other ways as well.

“I think the biggest thing I’ve picked up this year is discipline,” he said.  “I follow my diet better and I’m just more disciplined in general.  I also lift hard, which isn’t something I did a lot of in the past.“

Torn ligaments in his fingers kept him out of the first few tournaments of the season, but he made a strong debut at the Nittany Lion Open in December, taking second place at 133 pounds behind Virginia Tech’s Devin Carter, the nation’s 3rd ranked grappler.  During his run in State College, Arujau went 4-1.

“It was good to get on the mat again,” he said. “I was kind of nervous wrestling at 133 for the first time because I wasn’t sure if I was big enough for the weight.  But I went out hard and it worked out in the end.”

This past weekend, Arujau earned fifth place at one of college wrestling’s most challenging in-season events, the Southern Scuffle.   After pinning #19 Garrett Drucker in the second round, Arujua lost a 12-10 battle to eventual champion Chris Dardanes of Minnesota in a match he led early.

“I was upset at myself for losing the big lead I had going into the second period in the semifinals,” he said.  “But it’s a plus in a way because I now know that I need to work more on my conditioning.  I gave up a bunch of stalling points. I’m hoping to learn from it and move on to improve.”

Arujau finished the tournament strong in the fifth place bout with a decision over #20 Aaron Kalil of Navy.

“Overall I thought it was a great experience for me,” he said.  “I felt great at 133.  I was actually under weight on both days.”

Now, Arujau must wait for the start of the second semester to get his opportunity to join the five-time defending EIWA champions.   Joe Stanzione manned the 133 spot for the Big Red in the opening season dual against Minnesota but has since moved up to 141 pounds.  Freshman Nik Pena has taken the starting role and has recorded a 9-7 mark in his rookie year.   Arujau is excited for his opportunity, at whatever weight is needed.

“I can’t wait,” he said.  “I’m really excited for a chance to wrestle for Cornell.  I think I made the perfect decision. I’ve already made vast improvements in my wrestling and I’m going to get an Ivy education.  In my eyes, there’s nothing better.”

Youth and College Stars Take the Mat January 8 at Cornell

By Betsy Veysman

Wrestling fans will get a unique opportunity to see top-notch talent ranging from elementary school through college on January 8 at Cornell University as both the NYWAY Big Red Kickoff Tournament and a dual meet between two top 15 NCAA programs, Cornell and Lehigh, will take place at Bartels Hall in Newman Arena.

“I’m not sure where else you would get a chance to see future greats and current greats wrestle on the same day at the same place,” said Cornell head coach Rob Koll.  “It’s a great way for people to see great wrestling and it’s also a great way for us to continue to build our Cornell fan base.”

The action will begin at 9 a.m. with Session I of the NYWAY Big Red Kickoff Tournament.  The event will feature star youth grapplers from New York, California, Michigan, Maryland, and Pennsylvania, among others, in five age groups ranging from 6 and under to the highest group, the 13/14-year old bracket.

In order to compete, wrestlers must preregister by January 6 at 5 p.m. at www.nyway.org.  The registration fee includes a ticket to the Big Red-Lehigh dual. All participants must have a paid NYWAY membership.

NYWAY State President Clint Wattenberg is excited about the event, which serves as the official NYWAY kickoff.  The organization has already amassed over 1450 members in just six months of operation.

“It’s going to be amazing,” Wattenberg said. “We will be able to bring a great product to kids from around the state and the country.  It allows the kids to also be involved in an incredible Cornell dual.  It will bring youth and college wrestling together to support both levels of the sport.”

The college competition will begin at 1 p.m., after the first session of the youth tournament has been completed.  The center mat will be set up for the battle between fourth-ranked Cornell and 12th ranked Lehigh.  The East Coast rivals have had close matchups the past two campaigns, while the Big Red has captured the past five EIWA titles, with the Mountain Hawks placing second in two of those years.

Eleven ranked wrestlers will compete, with three bouts pitting nationally ranked grapplers against each other.  At 141, a pair of multi-time New York state champions, #8 Stephen Dutton and #15 Mike Nevinger, will face off.  At 184, two All-Americans, #1 Robert Hamlin and #4 Steve Bosak, will compete and at 197, #1 Cam Simaz will take on #8 Joe Kennedy.  Spectators will also get a chance to watch two 2011 NCAA Champions, 157-pounder Kyle Dake of Cornell and heavyweight Zach Rey of Lehigh. (Intermat rankings as of December 29)

“It’s a great opportunity to see two of the top teams on the East Coast,” Koll said. “With the fans from the youth tournament and the local fans, we expect a sellout. A big turnout would be great, especially with the college students out of town on break.”

As is customary, the Cornell wrestling team will conduct an autograph session following the dual meet, after which the Big Red Kickoff tournament will run to its conclusion. (Session II is slated to start at approximately 4 p.m.).  First through fourth place finishers will earn awards.

“We’re really excited to package great wrestling for fans of the sport,” Koll said. “We are trying to introduce young wrestlers to Cornell wrestling and cultivate future Cornell wrestlers.  Years ago we ran an AAU tournament here and I think even 10 or 15 years later, people came up to me saying that they were there when they were in elementary school and it introduced them to Cornell wrestling.   That’s what we’re hoping for.”

As for NYWAY, Wattenberg is hoping the tournament will allow the organization to continue its growth and its mission of supporting youth folkstyle development.

“We’ve had a great start, especially since we haven’t had a tournament yet, which is what typically drives membership,” he said.  “We’ve had motivated individuals around the state get things off the ground.   We’re pleased about what has happened so far, but we’re missing some downstate representation and are looking to improve that.”

Wattenberg concluded by encouraging anyone with input or interest in getting involved to contact him through the www.nyway.org website or at clintwattenberg@nyway.org.

For more information on the January 8 events, see http://www.nyway.org.