Five Cornell Wrestlers Make the Semi-Finals at the Southern Scuffle; Several Army and Big Red Grapplers Remain in Consis

 

Cornell will send five semifinalists to the mat on Wednesday at the Southern Scuffle in Chattanooga, Tennessee.  Nahshon Garrett and Mike Nevinger punched their tickets to the final four at 125 and 141, respectively, with major decisions.  Kyle Dake notched his second pin of the day to move closer to his fourth consecutive Scuffle finals, while Chris Villalonga and Steve Bosak joined him in the semis.

New York native Nick Gwiazdowski of Duanesburg High and North Carolina State will face defending NCAA champion Tony Nelson of Minnesota in the heavyweight semifinals.

A number of wrestlers from the Big Red and from Army remain alive in the consolations brackets and will continue to fight for third place when action resumes in the morning.

Here are the next matches for the New York-based competitors still in the tournament. For full results, see here.

Semifinals Involving NY Wrestlers

125 Pounds: Nahshon Garrett (Cornell) vs. Nico Megaludis (Penn State)

141 Pounds: Mike Nevinger (Cornell) vs. Nick Dardanes (Minnesota)

149 Pounds: Chris Villalonga (Cornell) vs. Jordan Oliver (Oklahoma State)

165 Pounds: Kyle Dake (Cornell) vs. Nick Sulzer (Virginia)

184 Pounds: Steve Bosak (Cornell) vs. Kevin Steinhaus (Minnesota)

285 Pounds: Nick Gwiazdowski (Duanesburg, North Carolina State) vs. Tony Nelson (Minnesota)

Wrestlebacks Involving NY Wrestlers

133 Pounds:

Jordan Thome (Army) vs. Joseph Martinez (Virginia)

Mark Grey (Finger Lakes Wrestling Club) vs. Colton Rasche (Navy)

141 Pounds:

Connor Hanafee (Army) vs. Tyler Rauenzahn (Army)

149 Pounds:

Ryan Dunphy (Cornell) vs. James English (Penn State)

John Belanger (Army) vs. Luke Frey (Penn State)

165 Pounds:

Paul Hancock (Army) vs. Harrison Hightower (Ohio)

174 Pounds:

Duke Pickett (Cornell) vs. Todd Porter (Missouri)

Marshall Peppelman (Cornell) vs. Mathew Miller (Navy)

197 Pounds:

Jace Bennett (Cornell) vs. Nik Brown (UTC)

Rob Koll's Cornell Update After the Grapple at the Garden

 

By Rob Koll

Happy holidays to all!  Here is my Grapple at the Apple update.

Nahshon Garrett deserves a great deal of credit for competing this weekend. Nahshon sprained his ankle on Thursday and I was informed by Chris Scarlata, our trainer, that there was virtually no way he would be capable of wrestling on Sunday. A day later he was hobbling around in a boot and on crutches. The following day he snuck into the Friedman Center at night so he could try to get used to the pain. By Sunday he was wrestling. The problem is he wasn’t able to work out, and thus he had to cut all his weight the morning of the match. He looked horrible in the Missouri match, not because of the injury, but because he had not recovered from the weight cut. By the time we wrestled Oklahoma State, he had recovered, and he looked more like himself. Nahshon is one tough customer. He is also the consummate team player. His only problem is he is chronically late for everything. Travis Lee had this same malaise so I can only assume these guys have their clocks set on West Coast time. He is going to be left at the hotel the next time he shows up late. Of course if he keeps winning I might hold the bus a couple extra minutes!

Nick Arujau finally got back into the lineup but was less than impressive. Nick was one dimensional on his feet, listless on bottom and desperate on top. His performance was particularly disappointing because he has such impressive moments in the practice room. The Southern Scuffle will give us an opportunity to see both Bricker Dixon and Nick in action at the same time. The tournament results will serve as a barometer for choosing our starter at this weight class.

Mike Nevinger did not have one of his finer performances against Missouri but bounced back against Oklahoma State. I am going to give Cornell Engineering finals the benefit of this defeat. Although this was not an ideal time for our guys to be competing, coming directly off finals, I believe it might have affected Mike the most. He did not have a great week of training and it showed. I am confident we will see a vastly improved Nevinger in Chattanooga.

Chris Villalonga went 1-1 on the day winning an overtime victory over #15 Drake Houdashelt of Missouri but was defeated by #1 Jordan Oliver of OSU.  Chris frustrates his coaches when he wrestles from the tie. He is not an overpowering wrestler so when he gets tied up, he is much less effective. It seems to be a sort of safety blanket for him. He is very tough on top so he doesn’t need to score a lot on his feet but he has to score more if he hopes to get to the NCAA podium.

Jesse Shanaman returned to the lineup after a five week layoff caused by an injury. Jesse defeated a very tough Missouri opponent. Unfortunately he pulled his hamstring in the first match. We knew he hurt his hamstring but he assured us it was nothing. When he could barely defend himself against OSU we knew the injury was more than “nothing”. Although I respect Jesse for his toughness, and desire to compete, he needs to do a better job of allowing us to protect him from himself. If we let him he would bring a sleeping bag into the Friedman Training Center. He is a tireless worker but we need to make sure he is healthy in March.

Kyle Dake was named the Outstanding Wrestler for the day going 2-0 with victories over two nationally ranked opponents.

Marshall Peppelman and Duke Pickett both wrestled hard, but neither was able to come up with a victory. I am interested to see both of these wrestlers compete at the Southern Scuffle if for no other reason than to see who takes control of this weight class.

Steve Bosak returned to the mats after a two month hiatus. Steve is not at his best but still came away with victories against two nationally ranked opponents. Steve will quickly work himself back into shape and should be close to 100% for the Southern Scuffle.

Sixteen of Jace Bennett‘s nineteen matches have ended by either fall or major decision. Although this is impressive, five of these matches have ended in a negative fashion. Jace has shown great potential but giving up pins is unacceptable. Jace is great on top but gets far too reckless with his legs. Billy George and Jace will be battling in Tennessee to see who will represent the Big Red going forward.

Stryker Lane faced the 2nd and 3rd ranked wrestlers and although he wrestled hard he was unable to pull off a victory. Stryker has made significant improvements from last year and is a consistent performer for the Big Red.  He is currently ranked #1 in the EIWA at 285.

Up Next: The Southern Scuffle @ Chattanooga, TN, 1/1- 1/2

All the best, Rob

From Redman to the Top 15: Cornell's Nahshon Garrett Making His Mark for the Big Red

 

By Betsy Veysman

From being Redman to being in the nation’s Top 15.

It’s certainly been an interesting month and a half for Cornell freshman 125-pounder Nahshon Garrett.

When it was time for the All-Star Dual on the opening weekend of the 2012-13 season in November, the Big Red wanted famous mascot Redman to attend the festivities in Washington D.C..

“We’d been struggling with a consistent Redman,” said head coach Rob Koll.  “Kids graduate and surprisingly don’t want being Redman to be their career.”

In stepped Garrett, who was a good candidate for a number of reasons.

“Nahshon is all about doing what’s best for the team,” Koll said. “But he’s also a dancer and pretty outgoing when it comes to those kinds of things.  He and his twin brother used to perform dances at rallies in high school.”

So the California native suited up and cheered on Kyle Dake in his dramatic 2-1 victory over David Taylor in the most anticipated match of the night.

Nahshon Garrett, Photo by BV

The experience was an eye opener for Garrett.

“It was a great time,” he said. “First of all going there and supporting Kyle — I think people take him for granted sometimes.  But seeing all those accomplished wrestlers; it was inspiring.  It pointed me to where I want to be and what I want to achieve in this sport.”

In fact, when it was over, Garrett vowed to return to the All-Star Dual in 2013 — but not in a costume.

“When it was over, Nahshon told me he wanted to be wrestling in the event next year,” Koll said.  “I have no doubt he can do it.  He’s the real deal. He’s taken people who didn’t know about him by surprise.”

That’s the truth.

Garrett earned the starting nod for the Big Red and immediately made an impact, going 5-0 at the Binghamton Open to capture the title in the opening action of his Cornell career.

The following weekend brought on more dominant performances as he cruised to a 14-1 victory in his first dual meet against Binghamton and the next day captured the New York State crown with a 13-9 win over returning All-American Steve Bonanno of Hofstra in the final.

For his efforts, especially in the title bout, he was named the tournament’s Most Outstanding Wrestler.  But that match also demonstrated the strides Garrett has made.  A year ago, Bonanno defeated Garrett 11-5 at the Binghamton Open.

“I remembered wrestling him before, and I knew I had gotten a lot better,” Garrett said. “I didn’t worry about the fact that I had lost to him before, or that he was an All-American.  I knew there were a lot of things I had to work on after we wrestled before and I know there are still a lot of things I need to work on now.”

Garrett is still relatively new to wrestling.  He officially began as an eighth grader, but had some (secret) experience prior to that.

“My mom wouldn’t let me wrestle for a while,” he said. “She was afraid about things she’d heard about germs and disease on the mats.  She thought I would get something.  But I went to some practices as a seventh grader without her knowing and I loved it.  Finally, in eighth grade I talked to her about it and she saw how passionate I was and let me wrestle.”

He was pretty successful right off the bat, but he marked that success with a bit of an asterisk.

“I was wrestling at 70 pounds,” he said. “I was a lot stronger than the people I was wrestling but I was also older. I mean, at that weight I was wrestling some fourth graders.”

While he enjoyed the sport, he was still heavily involved with a number of other activities.

“I was doing a lot of dancing and music (piano) and a lot of other things,” he said. “Wrestling wasn’t necessarily first on my list.  But my sophomore year, [at 103 pounds], I made it to the state tournament.  I went 1-2 and didn’t place after I lost to the fourth and fifth place guys.  I was really bummed out about that and I decided I wanted to focus on wrestling to see what I could accomplish.”

He accomplished quite a bit.  He won California state championships in his junior and senior years for Chico High at 103 and 112 pounds, respectively.  He credited Chico head coach Keith Rollins, who he called “pretty much my best friend” and assistant Jordan Mathews for his achievements.

And after he completed his high school career, he captured the NHSCA Senior Nationals crown as well, despite wrestling with a torn chest muscle.  Shortly afterwards, he made his college selection and readied for a transition from Northern California to upstate New York.

When he arrived in Ithaca, Garrett said he weighed around 120 pounds.  He spent a year with the Finger Lakes Wrestling Club (FLWC), putting on size and strength and training while taking some classes at a nearby school.   As he looked back on the year on the mat, Garrett said there weren’t any matches or wins that stood out to him, although he did place in multiple open tournaments (fifth at Buffalo, third at Edinboro).  He said the focus was on getting bigger and better and he thanked former Big Red wrestler Corey Manson, one of his FLWC coaches, for helping his development.

“There was a transition for me, getting accustomed to everything,” he said. “It was a little bit of a struggle, especially financially.  But there’s a big difference now. It’s amazing. I’m so happy just to be a part of everything here at Cornell.  Being here has helped me raise my level and my standards for myself.  I have a lot of good friends here now, like in California. Being in this environment has changed what I want and what I think I can achieve.”

He certainly has set his sights high.

“We have to write down goals before the season and I said I wanted to be an All-American, National Champion and win every tournament or at least place at every one,” he said. “I’ve always believed in myself but I wasn’t sure at the beginning of the year whether those things could be a reality.  Now I think they can be.”

Koll does as well.

Garrett and Burroughs, Photo by Lindsey Mechalik (http://zephyr.exposuremanager.com/)

“He gets better every single practice,” the coach said. “His learning curve is so much higher than everyone else’s, especially because he’s pretty new to the sport.  A number of people have said he wrestles like Jordan Burroughs, especially with that double leg of his and I think he does.”

The mention of the name “Jordan Burroughs” during the interview yielded a laugh from Garrett.

“I reacted that way because I get made fun of a lot because I’m so starstruck about Jordan Burroughs,” Garrett said. “I met him in Vegas and it was awesome.  I was really excited about that.  Getting compared to him is humbling.”

Humbling is a word Garrett used quite a few times.  He said he’s humbled by all the praise he has received from the coaches.  He’s humbled by being part of the academic and wrestling communities at Cornell.  And as someone who deeply values his religion, he said he’s “humbled by all that God has given me.”

That includes his wrestling talent.  So far on the mat, he’s compiled a 17-1 record with 11 bonus point wins.  His one loss was in the title bout at the Cliff Keen Invitational in Las Vegas when he dropped a 6-4 decision to #4 Alan Waters of Missouri, an opponent he will face again in New York City on Sunday.

“I think I’ve wrestled pretty well so far this year,” he said. “[Waters] wrestled a very smart match in the finals and is obviously very good on top.  I need to keep getting better in every position because I believe I can do more.  There were a few matches where I was frustrated that I didn’t get the pin or the tech.  I want to get those results.  I’m trying to push myself to the level of complete dominance like Kyle Dake. I watch how Kyle does things, how he’s preparing in the room, how he dominates all the time, even in practice.  I ask him a lot of questions and I’m trying to do the same things he does.”

Things like wrestling in the All-Star Dual, which Garrett hopes to do next year.

Someone else will have to be Redman.

 

Post Las Vegas Cornell Update With Rob Koll

 

By Rob Koll 

Finals started this week which means amazingly we are almost halfway through the season.  I am pleased with the team’s first semester performance but of course we still have dual meets against Missouri and Oklahoma State to change my mind. This past weekend we competed at the Las Vegas Invitational.  This is typically a brutal test for our guys and this year was no exception.  Although the travel and time change is tough on the team I enjoy the competition because we get to face many Western and Midwestern competitors. 

Vegas Recap

Photo by BV

125 Nahshon Garrett (2nd) is currently 17-1 and I believe he should be 18-0.  He lost a tight might to the #4 ranked wrestler from Missouri. Fortunately he will have an opportunity to avenge his only loss next weekend at the Grapple in the Apple.  Nahshon started wrestling in eighth grade so his learning curve is ridiculously high.  He gets better every practice.  I called this one early and I don’t mind saying I told you so!

133 Bricker Dixon (DNP) wrestled hard but got a little overpowered on the mat.  His losses were all to good wrestlers but there is no such thing as a good loss.  Bricker needs to add a few pounds over the break.

141 Mike Nevinger (4th) continues to improve after getting off to a painfully slow start.  He continues to be difficult to score upon on his feet and he is brutal on top.   Going forward Mike needs to get his offense back on track.  He has a history of finishing strong therefore I expect to see continued improvement over the next couple months.

149 Chris Villalonga (6th) came into the tournament’s deepest weight unseeded and came away with a 6th place finish.  I guess we should be pleased, but Chris is much better than his placement.  Chris has been banged up and he let his injury affect his performance.  We don’t expect the injury to bother him throughout the season, but if it does, he will learn to tolerate the pain by wrestling through it.  The good news is that Chris’s worst would be considered very good on most teams.  Of course we won’t accept his worst so you can be assured he will improve.

157 Chris Dowdy (DNP) won two matches and looked very good at times.  As I’ve said before, Chris needs to gain some power to go along with his speed and technique.  This will only come with time but Chris is only a freshman so we have high hopes for his future!

165 Kyle Dake (1st) was his normal dominant self.  Kyle dominated every opponent he faced. His closest match came in the finals where he won 6-0 against the country’s #7 ranked wrestler.

174 Duke Pickett (DNP) went 2-2 on the weekend. Duke is very good on his feet but is getting beat up on the mat. This is not atypical of freshman but is unacceptable for a Cornell freshman.  Duke knows this and is working intensely to fix this weakness.

184 Craig Scott (DNP) like fellow freshmen Dowdy and Pickett, also went 2-2.  Craig also struggled getting off bottom and I attribute a great deal of that to physical strength.  Craig is 6’3’’ so when he gets extended he does not have a great deal of power.  He needs to do a better job of keeping perfect position on bottom.  He also needs to do a better job of using his length in his attacks.  He permitted a couple of his opponents to tie him up and to wrestle from the inside.  This negates his length.

197 Jace Bennett (7th) came away with a 7th place finish.  Jace has the ability to beat just about anyone.  He has great offense and is brutal on top.  His weakness is an unattractive quality of getting reversed to his back.  This is a habit that needs to get kicked quickly.

285 Stryker Lane (6th) was our third unseeded wrestler to place. Stryker has made slow but consistent improvements over his career.  He is tough to take down, good on top and bottom. He struggles offensively but has been competitive in every bout this year.

For complete results go here.

Grapple at the Apple Important Information

Ticket Information (After Friday tickets will be returned to MSG)

To purchase tickets in the Cornell section please go to: http://cornellbigredtickets.universitytickets.com/user_pages/event.asp?id=780&cid=58

Bus Trip (Friday cutoff)

We have 16 fans signed up to travel to the city for on December 16th for the Grapple. We need a few more travelers to make this possible. The round trip from Ithaca to NYC is $40.00 – shopping for the day if they don’t want to do wrestling …

If interested e-mail Cathy Pace – cmp2@cornell.edu

Weekend Recap: From Cornell and Army in Vegas to the Nittany Lion to High School Action, Including the Andersen and the Return of Vespa and Paddock

For the second consecutive year, Kyle Dake was atop the podium at the prestigious Cliff Keen Invitational in Las Vegas.  The three-time NCAA champion eased his way through the tournament, pinning his first two opponents and then outscoring his foes 32-4 in his remaining three matches.

Kyle Dake, Photo by BV

Dake wasn’t the only finalist for the Big Red, which took third as a team behind Ohio State and Missouri with six total placers.  Also making the finals was freshman Nahshon Garrett, who continued his strong start in a Big Red singlet with a runner up finish to #4 Alan Waters of the Tigers.  The two will meet again in a few weeks in New York City at the “Grapple at the Garden” event.

All-American Mike Nevinger made the medal stand for the second year in a row in Vegas, as he took fourth at 141.  Chris Villalonga and Stryker Lane were both unseeded coming into the event, but both earned sixth place spots (at 149 and 285, respectively), while Jace Bennett took seventh at 197.

Joining the Cornell grapplers on the podium were a pair of Army wrestlers.  Nationally-ranked Daniel Young took eighth at 149 while Paul Hancock was seventh at 165.  The Black Knights stood 24th in the team standings.

Former Suffolk county standout Steven Keith of Harvard was fifth at 141 while Johnson City’s Pete Capone notched fourth at heavyweight for Ohio State.  For full brackets, see here

Cornell, Buffalo Each With Three Placers at the Nittany Lion Open

Photo by BV

The Cliff Keen Invitational wasn’t the only significant college tournament this weekend.  On the East Coast, Penn State hosted the Nittany Lion Open, an event with some brackets of more than 60 entrants.  A number of wrestlers representing Empire State teams impressed, with Mark Lewandowski of Buffalo taking second at 165 pounds behind last year’s NCAA champion, David Taylor.  Lewandowski’s teammates Max Soria (seventh at 125) and Wally Maziarz (eighth at 157) also placed.

For Cornell, Billy George and Joe Stanzione were both fourth, at 197 and 141, respectively while Ryan Dunphy took seventh at 149.

For the Finger Lakes Wrestling Club, Brian Realbuto continued his stellar year on the mat, making the semifinals before being disqualified. Mark Grey took sixth at 133, winning four straight after a second round loss in sudden victory to eventual runner up Jimmy Gulibon.  In the fifth place contest, Nassau’s Anthony Abidin, headed to Nebraska next year, defeated Grey, 9-3.

Former Duanesburg star Nick Gwiazdowski continued his successful redshirt campaign, taking first at heavyweight with a convincing major decision over Penn State’s Jimmy Lawson in the title bout.

For full results from the Nittany Lion Open, see here.

High School Weekend Watch – Andersen Tournament

In the high school ranks, there were a number of quality events throughout the state.  One was up North in Section 3, as the Bill Andersen Tournament was host to squads from Sections 2, 3, 4, 5 and 10.  When the brackets were released, fans were intrigued by the possibility of returning state champion Zack Zupan of Canastota meeting Christian Dietrich, an All-State wrestler from Greene who missed all of last season with injury.  The match came to fruition in the 182-pound finals, but there wasn’t much drama. Zupan notched a number of takedowns in a 13-5 victory.

Brandon Lapi, Photo by BV

Two-time state champion Kyle Kelly of Chenango Forks looked strong at his new weight, capturing the title at 113 pounds with two pins, followed by major decision in the finals.  Other New York state tournament veterans such as multi-time placer Brandon Lapi of Amsterdam and four-time qualifier Isaiah Perry of Massena earned gold at 132 and 138, respectively.

Section 4 power Greene showed that it will be very tough in the middle to upperweights with finalists in four straight weights, starting at 152. All-State wrestler Dan Dickman began the run with the title at 152, edging Tommy Quinlan of Fayetteville-Manlius in a 6-5 decision.  Mike Beckwith (160) didn’t have any close matches as he earned two pins and didn’t give up any points in his other contests while Joel Roselle (170) also had a pair of falls (and a technical fall) in addition to a 1-0 title bout victory over Daniel Smith of South Jefferson.

Smith and South Jefferson finished atop the team standings, led by a host of top three placers, including champions Jared Carroll (99) and Caleb Beach (106).  In addition, Jon Crast was second at 132 while Antonio Diaz was the runner up at 220.  In bronze position were Ryan Charlebois (195) and Trevor Cowles (160).

For full results see here.

Returns for Vespa and Paddock

Seeing the names Vinny Vespa and Aaron Paddock in the box scores from events this weekend was a welcome site.  Aaron Paddock recorded a fall at 170 in Warsaw’s meet with Campbell-Savona.

Meanwhile Vespa wrestled at 99 pounds for Monroe Woodbury, taking MOW honors at the Carlucci Duals at SUNY Purchase.  Monroe Woodbury won the title at the event with a finals victory over Section 1 power Fox Lane.  For a detailed account of that event, see here.

Battle at the Beach

In the weekend preview, we spoke about the Battle at the Beach taking place despite severe damage to host Long Beach High School.  (The event was moved to Lynbrook High).

Dan McDevitt, Photo by BV

Wantagh won the event convincingly, with an improved Hewlett squad taking second and Syosset grabbing third.  NHSCA Nationals All-American Kyle Quinn of the Warriors earned Most Outstanding Wrestler honors after defeating Long Beach’s Steven Sewkumar in an exciting 113-pound final.  Also capturing titles for the Warriors were Jonathan Loew at 99 pounds, Chris Araoz at 132, Vinny Turano at 138, Nick Vines at 145, returning All-Stater Dan McDevitt at 170 and James Corbett at 182.  Turano and McDevitt beat teammates in the finals –  Matthew Langan and Richard Grillo, respectively.

Several other wrestlers stood out.  Vito Arujau made a successful debut for Syosset at 106, dominating his way to the title.   According to NYWN contributor Irwin Loew, 160-pound winner Tim Davidson of Kellenberg had a stellar day on his way to the top of the podium.  Other champions were: Mike Petrone of South Side (120), Simon Greebel (Hewlett, 126), Konstantin Parfiyev (James Madison, 152), Dan Choi (Syosset, 195), Matt Mott (Lynbrook, 220) and Lester Enriquez (Hewlett, 285).  For more results from this event, see below.

Team Scores

1. Wantagh 357.5

2. Hewlett 210.5

3. Syosset 200

4. Clarke 150.5

5. Long Beach 133.5

Championship Finals

99 – Jonathan Loew (Wan) TF Alex Vargas (Syo) TF 18-2 3:46
106 – Vito Arujau (Syo) pinned Jack Nicholas (Syo) F 1:06
113 – Kyle Quinn (Wan) dec. Steven Sewkumar (LB) 6-4
120 – Michael Petrone (SS) md. Tyler Constantine (Clk) 12-1
126 – Simon Greebel (Hew) dec. Joe Hoffman (Clk) 4-1
132 – Chris Araoz (Wan) TF Charlie Curcio (Lyn) 16-0
138 – Vinny Turano (Wan) dec. Matt Langan (Wan) 7-3
145 – Nick Vines (Wan) dec. Rob Rosenberg (Hew) 3-2
152 – Konstantin Parfiryeva (Mad) def. Michael Tropiano (EM) by dflt
160 – Tim Davison (KM) pinned Joe Truono (Clk) F 0:48
170 – Dan McDevitt (Wan) TF Rich Grillo (Wan) 16-0
182 – James Corbett (Wan) TF Cedrick Stephens (Win) 15-0
195 – Dan Choi (Syo) pinned Zamarr Allen (LB) F 3:19
220 – Matt Mott (Lyn) pinned Enndy Nunez (Clk) F 0:35
285 – Lester Enriquez (Hew) dec. Mark Ifraimov (Mad) 7-0

Most Outstanding Wrestler: Kyle Quinn (Wantagh, 113)

Most Falls, Least Time: Matt Mott (Lynbrook, 220) – 4 in 7:19

 

For details on more of the high school action this weekend, see here.

To report results, please e-mail newyorkwrestlingnews@gmail.com

 

Weekend Recap: Garrett Earns MOW as Cornell Wins New York State Collegiate Title; Columbia Crowns Three Champions

 

This weekend, the focus of New York college wrestling was in Ithaca.

First, on Friday night, Cornell defeated Binghamton 30-7 in a rematch of the dual won on criteria by the Big Red a year ago in Vestal.  For full results of the meet between the Big Red and the Bearcats, see here.

On Saturday and Sunday, most of the Empire State’s squads across all divisions competed in the New York State Championships, with the varsity competition on the first day and the “B” event on Sunday.

For final brackets from Saturday’s event, see:

NYS Tournament Final Brackets

To watch a video replay of the championship matches, see here.

 

Here are a few quick observations from Saturday’s action:

Cornell Freshmen Didn’t Look Like Rookies

Craig Scott, Photo by BV

Without two defending NCAA champions (Kyle Dake and Steve Bosak) and a number of other starters, the Big Red won the team title on Saturday by more than 30 points.  Contributing significantly were freshmen such as Nahshon Garrett, Chris Dowdy and Craig Scott.  All three won their debuts in a Cornell singlet against the Bearcats on Friday night and they all followed up with strong showings in the tournament.

Nahshon Garrett, Photo by Boris V

Garrett earned Most Outstanding Wrestler honors after capturing the 125-pound title with a 13-9 victory over returning All-American Steve Bonanno of Hofstra.   It was the second week in a row on top of the podium for the California native, who won the Binghamton Open during the season’s opening weekend.

Scott beat NCAA qualifier Cody Reed of the Bearcats in the dual on Friday and then did it again, by a larger margin, on Saturday.  That victory put him in the finals, where he upended Tyler Beckwith to win the tournament a week after taking second at the Binghamton Open.

The finals of the Cornell wrestle-offs at 157 pounds featured Craig Eifert and Jesse Shanaman, but with both out due to injuries, Chris Dowdy made sure the Big Red remained strong at the weight class.  Dowdy notched a convincing 5-0 shutout in the meet against Binghamton and then fought his way to the finals on Saturday, where he took silver behind NCAA qualifier Jake O’Hara of Columbia.

The performances of the three first-year Cornell students bodes well for the future of the Ivy League squad, as does the work of 141-pounder Mike Nevinger who didn’t yield a point all day.  He recorded three pins and outscored his opponents 13-0 in his other two bouts to win the tournament.  Similarly dominant was 197-pounder Jace Bennett, who pinned his way to the championship match, where he notched a major decision.

 

Champions from Columbia

The Lions led the team race for portions of the day on Saturday and boasted three champions – Steve Santos (149), Jake O’Hara (157) and Stephen West (174).  There’s no question that the trio will make the Lions tough in the middleweights in 2012-13.  Santos and O’Hara both won multiple matches at the NCAA tournament last year and West was on the verge of receiving an at large bid. All three were in control throughout the day, but they weren’t alone in excelling for the Lions.  The New York City-based team also had other top four finishers — Penn Gottfried (fourth at 125), Joe Moita (fourth at 133), Josh Houldsworth (third at 165) and Nick Mills (second at 197).

 

Hofstra Takes Third

Luke Vaith, Photo by Boris V

Hofstra had one champion on the way to third place in the team competition, but it wasn’t one of the Pride’s returning 2012 NCAA qualifiers.  It was Paul Snyder, who breezed through the early rounds before a 3-1 decision over Buffalo’s Justin Heiserman in the title match.  Rob Anspach’s squad had five other representatives earn top four spots, with Steve Bonanno (125) and Jermaine John (174) taking second; Jamie Franco (133) and Luke Vaith (141) grabbing third; and Nick Terdick notching fourth.

 

Standout Performances for Cortland

Tyler Beckwith, Photo by Boris V

Only one non-Division I wrestler made the finals – Tyler Beckwith of Cortland at 184 pounds.  But Beckwith wasn’t the only grappler from the Red Dragons to impress.  Bobby Dierna took third at 149 with his only loss coming by a point to champion Steve Santos.  Jared Myhrberg  was fourth at 197 and Corey James rebounded from a first round loss to take fourth at 285.  Brad Bruhn’s squad finished sixth in the team standings, the highest finish for a non-Division I team.

Another DIII team, Ithaca, had some strong showings, including bronze finishes for both Jules Doliscar at 174 and Ricardo Gomez at 125.

 

Mark Lewandowski Knows How to Pile Up the Points

Photo by Boris V

You could say Lewandowski was dominant on his way to the crown at 165 pounds.  In his first four matches, he outscored his opponents by a combined 62-1 tally, winning each bout by technical fall.  Two of the matches ended in less than one period.  His prowess in winning by at least 15 points wasn’t surprising – he had the most technical falls in the nation last year.  But we saw first hand that if you look away for too long, you can miss a lot of points when the Buffalo senior is on the mat. (He won 12-6 in the finals).

Lewandowski’s teammates Andrew Schutt and Justin Heiserman also went to the championship bout before taking second.  None of Schutt’s matches went the distance.  He won his first three by fall and then was pinned in the finale by Cornell’s Mike Nevinger.

 

The “B” Tournament

Cornell had four champions on Saturday and another three on Sunday in the “B” tournament.  Ryan Dunphy (149), Michael Alexander (174) and Jacob Aiken-Phillips (285) all captured first place for the Big Red.

In addition, two more more Ithaca-based grapplers earned gold with Taylor Simaz (157) and Gabe Dean (184) winning for the Finger Lakes Wrestling Club.

Buffalo and Columbia each boasted a pair of victors. Sean Walton (133) and Dominic Montesanti (165) won for the Bulls while Robert Dyar (125) and Matt Idelson (197) were champions for the Lions.  Army’s Tyler Rauenzahn rounded out the champions as he stood on top of the medal stand at 141 pounds.

Final brackets for the “B” tournament are here.