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103#
Projected Champion: Ricky Deubel (Kenston)
Top Contenders
|
2 |
Smith (Olmsted Falls) |
15 |
Wertz (Springboro) |
|
3 |
Meinking (Purcell) |
16 |
Herasuta (NDCL) |
|
4 |
Laughlin (Canton South) |
17 |
Bowers (Dayton Christian) |
|
5 |
Compton (Willard) |
18 |
Sponseller (West Holmes) |
|
6 |
Kahn (Orange) |
19 |
Kline (Oak Harbor) |
|
7 |
Sandy Walsh Jesuit) |
20 |
Hoover (Beaver Local) |
|
8 |
McCarthy (Perkins) |
21 |
Cain (Meadowbrook) |
|
9 |
Pizzuro (Columbus DeSales) |
22 |
Ysguirre (Clyde) |
|
10 |
Franklin (Franklin) |
23 |
Riley (Milton Union) |
|
11 |
Reichman (Claymont) |
24 |
Valliant (Otsego) |
|
12 |
Bowers (Miami Trace) |
25 |
Lee (Hamilton Ross) |
|
13 |
Lindquist (Bexley) |
26 |
Mathey (Orrville) |
|
14 |
Rabung (North Ridgeville) |
|
|
I was wandering through Borders, the other day and I
started to page through one of those new dictionaries that have lots of
illustrations. Imagine my surprise
when I got to the definition of “wide open”
and saw next to it the 103# bracket sheet for Division II.
Actually I wasn’t all that shocked since this is by far the most
difficult weight to forecast. In
contrast to Division I, there is only one returning state qualifier at this
class and he went two and out last year. There
are some exceptional freshman, but their schedules have been such that they
have not met (or even had many common opponents).
It reminds me of the reply by the theater owner in “Shakespeare in
Love” when he asked how he knew everything would be okay.
His reply, “It’s a mystery” - - and so it is
There are so many possible choices at this class, but I’ve gone with the flashy freshman, Ricky Deubel. He is undefeated this year winning at Avon Lake, Kenston and the WRC - - and winning with real style as well. It is slightly unnerving to know that he finished behind Smith and Compton at the Junior High State Tourney, but I think at this age, things can rapidly change. Clearly with so many new faces almost anything could happen, but my view is that Deubel has a slight edge.
Part of the difficulty this year is the re-arrangement of the four districts. It makes past year comparisons difficult and creates a new set of rivalries. We now have the Northwest district tied in with one of the Northeast sectionals and the Central District placed with the Eastern teams. In a year or two we’ll appreciate even more, this new system.
The Firestone District has some excellent strength and some upset potential, too. Deubel heads my list here but the trio of Laughlin, Sandy and Kahn are all very good. Laughlin, now a sophomore, won at Wadsworth after a 4th place finish at North Canton, where he lost a one-point decision to McCarthy. The thing I see is good improvement and ascending results with Laughlin. Even more dramatic has been Sandy’s improvement. At the beginning I would have said no chance for state qualification, but that now seems very possible. He was 5th at the Top Gun splitting two bouts with Reichman and beat Ryan Smith at the CVCA duals while almost defeating Wornoff. He is on an upward spiral. Kahn crushed Monsman to win at Solon and has lost only to LaScala. He is very good on top - - and enormous advantage when you can score from that position. Albaugh and Herasuta are not far behind my top quartet at this district. Strange bracketing (which could easily happen with Deubel, Kahn, and Sandy exiting the same sectional) or a single upset puts them in Columbus the following week.
The Galion district is nearly as strong. Smith is a two-time junior high school champion. He won titles at both the Dies and Medina against excellent competition. He is very good at setting tempo and then grinding out victories, and does not seem nervous in close struggles. A big factor is that he can ride which makes him excellent with a lead. Compton is also excellent and has finalist potential. He exits from that very tough Oak Harbor sectional which also feature McCarthy, Kline Ysguirre, and Q. Smith (Bellevue). McCarthy and Rabung look next best, but as we discussed regarding the Firestone district there is lots of dept here. With the Oak Harbor Sectional strong, we could have bracket issues which might help propel Ysguirre, Valliant or Williams (St. Marys Memorial) to a state berth.
Meinking seems best at Wilmington, but a recent 7-2 upset loss to Franklin at least muddies the picture slightly. Meinking whipped Candy to take the SWOCA title, blasted Herasuta to win the CIT, and beat state qualifier Jed Smith to win at Carroll. It would be no surprise to see him as a finalist. Franklin, Wertz, and Ron Bowers are my choices for the other three spots, but the latter two are far from sure things. By the way that is Ron Bowers at this district and Ren Bowers at this weight class at the Buckeye Local district - - and you thought this was easy.
There are even more possibilities at Buckeye local than at the other three districts. I was impressed with Pizzurro at Mayfield and Brecksville, but not at the CIT. Still, he could be a critical component in DeSales hopes for a team title. Reichman should probably be rated higher, but where, exactly, I’m not sure. He went 11-10 with Smith and split with Sandy while being dominant in his own area. He has a chance to make me look bad here. Lindquist and Bowers are strong but Sponseller, if he can make the weight, could potentially defeat them both. Hoover and Cain both placed high at OVAC with the latter boy having an especially good district competition last year at this weight. This should be a real donnybrook.
112#
Projected Champion: Kyle Stoffer (Olmsted Falls)
Top Contenders
|
2 |
Kendjorsky (Buckeye Local) |
15 |
Morgan (Tri-Valley) |
|
3 |
Zupancic (Walsh Jesuit) |
16 |
J. Smith (Bellevue) |
|
4 |
Turchetta (Twinsburg) |
17 |
Midlam (Chaminade) |
|
5 |
Velez (Kings ) |
18 |
Conger (McClain) |
|
6 |
Hurley (Kenston) |
19 |
Naso (Canal Fulton NW) |
|
7 |
Schmidt (Perkins) |
20 |
Penny (Milton Union) |
|
8 |
Klofta (Indian Lake)) |
21 |
Hickman (Alter) |
|
9 |
Giambrone (Aurora) |
22 |
Wells (New Richmond) |
|
10 |
Browning (Bellbrook) |
23 |
Dailey (Miami Trace) |
|
11 |
Brown (Columbus DeSales) |
24 |
Bergman (Port Clinton) |
|
12 |
T. Shearer (Clyde) |
25 |
Co. Apperson (Morgan) |
|
13 |
French (Minerva) |
26 |
Perez (Vermillion) |
|
14 |
Bridenbaugh (Defiance) |
27 |
Inghram (Lake Catholic) |
|
|
|
|
|
Early each year the distribution of truly excellent wrestlers is uneven and shows a clumping pattern. Then as the season progresses little by little changes occur. Accommodations are made, and the distribution becomes far more uniform. Its never perfect and there will always be some weight classes more challenging and difficult than others. But kind of like Adam Smith’s “invisible hand” the distribution finds an equilibrium that overall, maximizes the probabilities of the best wrestlers becoming state champs. Only at the end-points (103# and heavyweight) does the logic of these changes fail because of physical factors.
And so it is that it seemed almost inevitable that defending state champion Kyle Stoffer would certify at 112#. As we will shortly see, 119# was truly loaded with more superior contestants than at any other class. At Medina he already seemed small at 119#, and while he didn’t exactly look “buttery” he certainly didn’t seem fully pared either. Thus the move to 112#, but that cut is no guarantee of a second state title as there area number of excellent contenders competing here, as well. Last year Stoffer had a fabulous season at 103# winning 39 straight bouts - -almost none of them close - - in cruising to his first state title. He defeated Zupancic in the finals 10-3. Since moving to 112# he won the Dies in a relatively close battle with my Division III choice Buzek and then nipped Zupancic 5-4 in a dual. Some (Bill Barger) have suggested that the field has finally chased down Stoffer and pulled even with him. Possibly, but there is an adjustment period especially on cuts relatively late in the season. I anticipate a far fiercer Stoffer in February and early March - - when it really counts.
I also reject the assumption that Zupancic, as good as he is will be the prime challenger. I felt last year and still do that West Virginia signee, Kendjorsky could be the real obstacle for Stoffer. Last year Zupancic defeated him by holding him in the 30-second tie-breaker. This year Kendjorsky has stomped the competition along the river, though, granted that is not the rigorous Walsh schedule. One advantage that Zupancic possesses is that he will be away from Stoffer should he win his district - - no easy task as we shall soon see. Zupancic was 2nd last year winning three bouts by a total of two points before running into Stoffer. He struggled early this year before finishing 3rd at the Top Gun and 2nd at Mayfield. Last year he went to the state meet with 13 losses and it sure didn’t seem to bother him.
Stoffer faces a very crowded district. Schmidt, a transfer from Sandusky St. Mary, was 4th in Division III last year, and has performed well in his new environs. He was particularly impressive in winning up a weight class at Tiffin. Shearer is a great freshman who beat out state qualifier Hoffman for the 112# position at Clyde. Smith is a typically tough Bellevue wrestler who just missed qualification last year. State qualifier Bridenbaugh should squeeze into that fourth state berth over Smith, but state qualifier Bergman will be a long-shot for a second trip. A wildcard is Perez who has a win over Smith and has won several tourneys. Lashaway (Eastwood), Joseph (Holland Springfield), Overholt (Elida) and D. Smith (Lexington) are also good. This will be a 16-man bracket with Nary a soft touch in it.
Kendjorsky, on the other hand, should defend his district with little trouble. State qualifier Brown should also qualify with relative ease, but after that it gets complicated. Morgan, a very accomplished youth wrestler, has had a great freshman year, and should be a major factor. Conger wrestles in a remote part of the state, but won two district matches last year, and has dominated his foes this year. He’s got the horsepower to grab a state berth. State qualifier Dailey and the young Cody Apperson will also play a role with the latter, in particular, a real threat that leaves Hundley (Hebron Lakewood), Albaugh (Buckeye Valley) and Thress (Watkins Memorial) as long-shots.
There are at least six state quality wrestlers at Kenston. The top quartet is headed by Zupancic, but also has included state qualifiers Hurley and Turchetta and state alternate Giambrone. Hurley is a dynamo who won at Medina and North Canton and was 2nd at the WRC and 3rd at Kenston. He can go with anyone here. Turchetta has improved over last year’s fine freshman season. He won at Hudson, Kenston and the WRC and has had a series of battles with Hurley. Giambrone almost qualified at 112# last year losing the 5th place battle to Constantino. He might be on the bubble here as the excellent French and tough Naso are breathing down his neck. Also watch for Inghram who has wrestled the tough Lake Catholic schedule with only a few nicks. He upset Hurley at Kenston, but was only 6th at the CIT.
State qualifier Velez is very strong at the Wilmington District and has excellent placement potential. He won two state bouts last year, but missed placement on a 6-3 loss to Russell. This year, as Dan Loy would say, he is totally undefeated with more than 50% falls. State qualifiers Browning, Hickman, Klofta, and Wells also return, so again we have a crowded and complex situation. Both Browning and Klofta had state wins last year, and have had strong 2001 seasons. Browning, for example, won at Eaton and Bellbrook and was 2nd at Carroll, Edgewood, and the GMVWA. Velez beat him by 5 points in their meeting. A dark-horse candidate is Midlam who pinned Browning at Carroll and was 3rd at the CIT. Also look for Steadman (Norwood), Jett (Little Miami), and Schlater (Graham).
119#
Projected Champion: Kyle Ott (St. Paris Graham)
Top Contenders
|
2 |
Protz (West Geauga) |
15 |
Gomez (Holland Springfield) |
|
3 |
Constantino (Lake Catholic) |
16 |
Henry (Claymont) |
|
4 |
Fowler (Buckeye) |
17 |
Maple (Edison Local) |
|
5 |
Russell (Van Wert) |
18 |
Kastens (Twinsburg) |
|
6 |
Dotson (Hamilton Twp) |
19 |
Budd (Orville) |
|
7 |
Gulosh (Walsh Jesuit) |
20 |
Ferri (Valley View) |
|
8 |
C. Pizzurro (Columbus DeSales) |
21 |
DiPietro (Watkins Memorial) |
|
9 |
N. Shearer (Clyde) |
22 |
Spurlock (Bellevue) |
|
10 |
King (Trenton Edgewood) |
23 |
Maston (Canfield) |
|
11 |
Kremer (Franklin) |
24 |
Giannola (Bellefontaine) |
|
12 |
Lochotzki (Oak Harbor) |
25 |
Begue (Louisville) |
|
13 |
Weeks (Watterson) |
26 |
Patton (Buckeye Local) |
|
14 |
Harrison (Chaminade) |
27 |
Wheatley (Cambridge) |
Over the past three years, Kyle Ott has established himself as one of the premier talents of the last half dozen years. As a freshman he lost a close state quarter -final bout to Sean Penn and it seemed he would never lose again. He compiled a consecutive win streak that had reached 85 by the end of his junior year. It included two state titles and two Reno titles, and he was beating the best with almost disdainful ease. Last year, for example, he ended every match in the state tournament process in less than five minutes except for the final against the extravagantly talented Mark Moos. A non-stop attacking genius he signed early with Illinois and his senior season seemed a certain triumphant encore.
Then over the summer, Ott underwent six knee surgeries, and the resultant fallout saw him leaving Wayne and transferring to St. Paris Graham. His first competition was in mid-January and it was no cakewalk. The Top Gun had many of the best 119’s in the state and while Ott defeated Fowler and Foster, he lost a 7-6 bout to Protz in the finale. I thought it was a auspicious beginning, and while 119# is an extremely rugged weight class an improving Ott will be very difficult to beat. Even in that loss he had 3 takedowns to one for Protz. Look for him by state tournament time to be five points better than anyone else.
The Wilmington District is strong at this weight class, but not to the level where they will severely challenge Ott. Defending district champion Harrison pinned Kremer and Wooten in the last two rounds in 2000, and was a state quarter-finalist. This year he has not reached that same level. He was 5th at the CIT losing to Weeks and Gross and was bombed by the freshman Franz at Carroll. I’ve moved Kremer and King (who have split close bouts) ahead of him. All three are returning state qualifiers. They’ll need to be sharp because Ferri has come on strong in the second half of the season winning at Valley View and Bellbrook.
If Ott is to be really challenged it’ll will come from the Cleveland area. Two of the favorites at Firestone have already matched up with Ott. Protz was 6th as a sophomore and 3rd last year losing only to Rooney in the semi-finals. This year he was 2nd at the Ironman and Kenston (at 125#) and, of course, had the big win at the Top Gun over Ott, 7-6. If he wins here at Firestone (no sure thing) than he and Ott would be in opposite half-brackets - - no small advantage. I almost rated Constantino as second best here, but I’m still giving Protz the slightest of edges. Constantino, 6th last year, has won at Coffman, Kenston, and the CIT and has run up big scores in the process. His only in-state loss was to Ott at the Ohio duals by a narrow 7-5 margin. If he wins at Firestone I think he’ll be a finalist the next week. I’ve voted Gulosh third best at this district with good placement potential. Like his brother he has suddenly blossomed toward the second half of his junior year. He won at Mayfield over a field that included Aggozino, Jaggers, and Pizzuro. He’s somebody the top boys cannot afford to overlook. The fourth spot is wide open with Kastens and Budd, perhaps, having the inside track. We might see Giambrone here as he must choose between 112# and 119# - - after all he did beat Kastens 7-3.
The other Cleveland area challenger will be Fowler, who has also shown huge improvement gains this year. He was the MVP at Medina after beating Stoffer and also won at the Buckeye and Chardon. He was 4th at the Top Gun after losing a 4-3 thriller to Ott. All at once he has gotten very tough. This is a crowded district - - as it seems to be at every weight class. Russell was a 5th at 112# with wins over Harrison and Constantino but, two thumpings from Protz. This year he was 3rd at GMVWA, but has won almost everything else. Shearer and Lochotzki are both state qualifiers with the latter boy finishing 5th at 103# last year. Shearer won their dual meet battle, and has a slight edge. State qualifier Gomez has moved down to Division II so he’s a bit of an unknown here. He was only 8th at GMVWA. Spurlock, Rowland (Upper Sandusky) and Gliatta (Edison) are also possibilities.
The Buckeye Local District should be wild. Dotson has been hot lately and supplanted Pizzurro as my top 119-pounder in the Central District. Both have placement possibilities, but it won’t be easy. Pizzurro was a state qualifier two years ago at 103#, but has found it somewhat tougher going at higher weights. He was 4th at Mayfield losing to Gulosh and Jaggers. Weeks and DiPietro are also strong in the Columbus area with the former defeating Harrison at the CIT. Henry and Maple are both returning state qualifiers with the latter finishing 6th last year. Both could well struggle at this district especially with so much firepower coming in from the Central District. Maple has been at 125 pounds much of the year, but did certify at 112#. I have not seen him perform at the weight so I’m guessing he’ll be at 119# - - where he was runner-up at the OVAC.
125#
Projected Champion: Josh Wooten (St. Paris Graham)
Top Contenders
|
2 |
Finn (Perkins) |
15 |
Reyna (Port Clinton) |
|
3 |
Bowersock (Beaver Local) |
16 |
Quevedo (Van Wert) |
|
4 |
King (Liberty) |
17 |
Rowe (Marysville) |
|
5 |
Messier (Coventry) |
18 |
Simon (Edison) |
|
6 |
Mulhall (Lake Catholic) |
19 |
Faist (Kenston) |
|
7 |
Burns (Columbus DeSales) |
20 |
Frazier (Bellefontaine) |
|
8 |
Minter (North Ridgeville) |
21 |
Taylor (Indian Lake) |
|
9 |
Nelson (Hoban) |
22 |
Deppe (Lima Bath) |
|
10 |
Williamson (Kings) |
23 |
Klingensmith (Licking Valley) |
|
11 |
R. Williams (Olmsted Falls) |
24 |
Kozusek (Valley View) |
|
12 |
T. Williams (Claymont) |
25 |
Fowler (Springfield NW) |
|
13 |
Beeson (Watkins Memorial) |
26 |
Schafer (Philo) |
|
14 |
Collier (Minerva) |
27 |
Wunderle (Ravenna) |
|
|
|
|
|
One of the reasons 119# remained so tough was that moving up to 125# offered very little in the way of relief. It features a wide array of outstanding wrestlers representing all four districts. I count five returning state placers and, at least, and equal number of other well-credentialed challengers. However, the favorite has to be former state champion Josh Wooten who after some difficulties last year has found his perfect niche. Two years ago, Wooten took the title at 103# which included wins over Stoffer in the first round and King in the final. Last year he opted to compete at 112# -- - a major help in the terms of the Graham line-up - - but he could not sustain either his performance or his weight at 112#. A late season move to 119# moved him back into the line-up, and he did qualify for the state meet. However, a first round loss to Finn dropped him immediately into the consolation bracket and he did not place.
This year he has been exceptional - - almost a replay of his sophomore year. . . At the Ironman he defeated State 3rd, Enright, and then crushed state champion, Lang, 14-3, before losing a tough battle to the nations top-rated Cory Cooperman. He crushed everybody at Graham, and then at Medina he again beat Enright before losing a last-second thriller to two-time champ Drew Opfer. Actually, I thought Wooten was the better boy that day - - sharper on his feet and in better condition - - but Opfer scored the big points. He humbled everyone at the Top Gun - - including a win over Bowersock by the shocking score of 16-3.. He is just so strong and so confident now that it will take a Herculean effort to upset. him
To make things even better, Wooten emerges from the easiest district. Williamson is my second choice, but he has never made it past a district quarter-final. Taylor did pin Minter at the Ohio Duals, but no one here except for Wooten has developed a state-wide reputation of any sort. You might see Ferri here instead of 119# with perhaps Kanta (Ross) and Binford (Purcell) in the hunt.
Finn, was 2nd at 119# last year, losing only to Schlatter (at both district and state), and capturing a place for the second year in a row. Incidentally his first three wins at Columbus were all by a 5-3 margin. This year he won at North Canton and Tiffin and has been very impressive. He moved up to challenge Schlatter at 130# but lost, and went down to defeat against Opfer at the SBC Duals. He beat Wooten in the first round last year, and must duplicate that feat to be a state champ this year. State qualifiers Minter and Reyna are also back. Minter was a quarter-finalist before losing twice - - once to Wooten, 11-2. He won at Avon Lake and is currently 22-2. Reyna has to choose between 119# and 125#, andI think he’ll wind up here. In either case a return trip will be iffy. Williams is an excellent sophomore with a great future while Quevedo and Simon have solid experience. If you factor in A. Gomez (Holland Springfield), Blackburn (Clyde), and Deppe it’s a deep field.
Bowersock was 3rd last year at the 119# including an 8-6 decision over Messler in the consolation finals. He was at 130# much of the year, but dropped for the OVAC which he won for the third time. He was 3rd at the Top Gun losing to Wooten by a score that seemed almost a misprint. He’ll hope Finn is in with Wooten giving him his best shot at the finals. Burns was 6th last year at 125#, but I’m not sure he can “hang “with the top quartet. He was 6th at Brecksville but didn’t wrestle recently at either the CIT or Mayfield. Tommy Williams was 4th two years ago, but various injuries have plagued him for almost two years now. Slated to return it will be interesting to see what he will be able to do after such a long layoff. The freshman, Spohn (New Lexington) may compete, and would be a possible factor in the final outcome.
Life will have come full circle if King were to meet Wooten in the finals. Two years ago the top-ranked Wooten met the little-known King in the state finals at 103# - - with Wooten winning a 10-7 decision.. Last year both had some issues. Wooten’s, I reviewed at the top of this essay, while King was injured after sectionals and did not compete after that. Now King and state placer Messier head up the Firestone District. Both should place and they are not that distant from Bowersock and Finn. Messier was 2nd at the Dies and won handily at Wadsworth. My big question is whether they have the horsepower to match up with the top three. Mulhall has had a great year with wins at Kenston and Coffman and a strong finish at the CIT. However, he may have a fractured leg, which would end his season. That would give state qualifier Nelson a little breathing room and, perhaps, open the door for a Collier, Faist, or Wunderle.
130#
Projected Champion:
C.P. Schlatter (Columbus DeSales)
Top Contenders
|
2 |
Evans (St. Paris Graham) |
15 |
McSorley (Trenton Edgewood) |
|
3 |
Schultz (North Ridgeville) |
16 |
Damanti (Springfield Shawnee) |
|
4 |
Hensley (Lemon Monroe) |
17 |
Vince (Upper Sandusky) |
|
5 |
K. Wilson (Carrollton) |
18 |
S. Schlegel (River View) |
|
6 |
SanFilippo (Lake Catholic |
19 |
Henry (Ravenna Southeast) |
|
7 |
Montgomery (Alliance) |
20 |
Shaw (Washington CH) |
|
8 |
Adams (Holland Springfield) |
21 |
Roland (Twinsburg) |
|
9 |
Manges (Aurora) |
22 |
Bolton (Bellbrook) |
|
10 |
Stephenson (Perkins) |
23 |
Hayden (Copley) |
|
11 |
Bennett (Fairfield Union) |
24 |
Roush (Van Wert) |
|
12 |
Teterich (Watterson) |
25 |
Conlisk (St. Charles) |
The hugely heralded C. P. Schlatter turned out to be everything he was touted to be - - and more. This fabulous freshman went, 44-0 against tough competition including a big win over three-time Ohio State Champ Mason Lenhard. His only challenge in the state tournament process came from Ryan Finn in the finals where a somewhat more conservative Schlatter won a 7-4 decision. He reminds me somehow of Jimmy Heffernan - - analytical, unflappable, and always in control of himself and his talent
Ohio has never had a wrestler go undefeated throughout a four-year career. Several had come close (Zimmer, Jordan, etc), but Schlatter seemed to be on track to accomplish that monumental task. However, DeSales wrestles a very strong schedule and Schlatter did lose earlier this year in the Beast of the East final round. Ahead 4-0, he ended up dropping a 7-5 overtime decision. He has beaten Pflug twice - - the last, a narrow 7-6 battle where both boys had two takedowns. There is no one in division II to challenge him, and the battle at Columbus will be for 2nd place. Think about the 130’s in Ohio this year.
The senior, Harry Lester, the junior, Joe Pflug, and the sophomore, C. P. Schlatter. It is indeed, a fortunate time to be alive. Schlatter exits from a crowded Buckeye Local District. State qualifier Wilson was 2nd at North Canton and 6th at the Top Gun where he lost 10-9 semi-final bout to Evans. I think there’s a drop-off down to state qualifier Bennett who won 33 bouts last year as a freshman. Schlegel and Teterich would then battle for a last state berth along with Shaw and Conlisk. After the top duo it really is pretty wide open. Barath (St. Clairsville) is a possibility here.
Evans got pushed out of the line-up last year when Wooten moved to 119th. He won at Graham, was 2nd at the Top Gun (to Lester) and 3rd at medina (losing to Lester). Well, at least he won’t have to face Lester anymore, but I’m thinking he won’t find Schlatter a treat either. State qualifier Hensley just won very big at Eaton and he could be a major factor. He won two state bouts last year losing only to the state second and third place wrestlers. McSorley moved ahead of Damanti with a win at Franklin but both can qualify. That would leave out Bolton, Rumpke (Preble Shawnee) and Hoppe (Dayton Christian).
Schultz will be interesting to watch. Last year he won his first two state bouts - - both in overtime - - to reach the semi-finals. Then in another bitter struggle he lost in overtime again to Hiles and then quickly fell to 6th. He’s the only wrestler who comes to mind who opened with three straight overtime bouts at Columbus. He has missed most of this year, but returns at 130#. How the long layoff will impact him is open to question. Assuming he can shake the rust off I believe it is an advantage. It is a long season and I, generally, l believe that such a lay-off keeps a wrestler fresher and less nicked up. However, it won’t be enough of an edge to dislodge Schlatter. Adams is a transfer from Toledo St. John who was 2nd at the GMVWA. He would seem to have placement potential. Stephenson and Young are both out of the SBC and have been sharpened by good competition. Vince has been outstanding. He won at Sylvania Southview and the Gorman. I may be under-valuing him here. The same might be said for Roush who placed at the GMVWA in a tough field.
In something of a rarity, the Firestone district is not particularly strong. I’ve identified seven wrestlers with good credentials, but none really stand out. San Fillippo has probably had the steadiest season while Montgomery and Wiles have shown flashes of brilliance. Both have generally done well in major tourneys - - most recently Wiles was 2nd at Waite and Montgomery, 5th at the Top Gun. The redheaded Manges looked like a terrific sophomore prospect last year - - making the sectional finals and district semi-finals. However, I have not seen him in many bouts this year leaving his final rating based primarily on last year.
135#
Projected Champion: Jason Barnett (Columbus DeSales)
Top Contenders
|
2 |
Romano (Walsh Jesuit) |
14 |
Fee (Defiance) |
|
3 |
Ashton (Perry) |
15 |
Blair (Valley View) |
|
4 |
Roff (Kenston) |
16 |
Walton (Chaminade) |
|
5 |
Knull (St. Paris Graham) |
17 |
Nicholas (Holland Springfield) |
|
6 |
C.. Henn (Bexley) |
18 |
Peterson (Marlington) |
|
7 |
Daugherty (Bethel Tate) |
19 |
Seeley (Benjamin Logan) |
|
8 |
Furbee (Cambridge) |
20 |
Brandenburg (Chagrin Falls) |
|
9 |
Gomoll (Bay) |
21 |
Neville (West Holmes) |
|
10 |
Munyan (New Lexington) |
22 |
Snapp (Urbana) |
|
11 |
Ferris (Jackson) |
23 |
Shriner (Sheridan) |
|
12 |
T. Simpson (Eastwood) |
24 |
Preseren (Lake Catholic) |
|
13 |
Rudy (North Ridgeville) |
25 |
Meyers (Buckeye) |
There is a certain pride of authorship with these reports and it generally manifests itself either in terms of comprehensiveness or accuracy. That is why this weight class is so very aggravating. In 41 of the 42 weight classes my longest streak of non-winners is two years. At 135#, however, I haven’t got it right since 1994 (extra credit for knowing it was Brian Singleton) - - six consecutive years of failure. Something always seems to happen. Last year Dunfee couldn’t even wrestle in the finals after being slammed by Romano, and in 1997 Ty Morgan lost his bid for four state titles at this weight class.
This year, however, I feel very confident that I can turn this around - - or rather that Jason Barnett can do so. He has had a fantastic high school career. He was 5th as a freshman and 2nd his sophomore year losing both times to Jesse Leng. Then last year he went 45-0 winning his first state title in the quiet, methodical, manner he appears to favor. Not at all flashy, he parlays strength, quickness and great defensive ability to grind out win after win - - and he should end up with close to 170 in his high school career. Very, short, he is almost impossible to score on, and we’ll see him in four more years at Ohio State. Through he has lost three times this year (West, McIntyre, and Staylor) there is no one in Division II who can touch him. Let me amend that. A completely healthy Romano might make it a real bout, but that situation seems problematical at best.
By the time you read this you’ll probably know whether Romano will compete. Coach Bill Barger, always the smiling optimist, guessed it was 50-50 which means its probably much less than that. Romano was 4th last year in a strange turn of events. He beat Hussein to win his sectional, but then lost to him in the district finals after Hussein had upset top –choice Dunfee, 7-6. At the state meet, Romano met Dunfee in the semi-finals and was comfortably ahead, 10-5, in the third period when he was disqualified for an illegal slam injuring an already hurt Dunfee. Dunfee could not wrestle on Saturday so Hussein took the title by forfeit. Romano, even if he returns at this late date, may not have time to prepare for the likes of Barnett and Ashton.
Absent Romano the Firestone District would look somewhat easier. Ashton was a district champ at 130# last year and made it to the semis before losing 7-4 to Barnett and finishing 5th. He won handily at Waite. Roff has had a great season winning at Avon Lake, Kenston, placing 2nd at the WRC, and 4th at Medina (losing to state champ Smith and West). He seems very ready. There is a sharp drop-off in performance after this top trio If Romano wrestles that leaves one spot open - - if not, two will qualify one of whom, will almost, assuredly be someone I failed to mention in this report
It is a pretty pedestrian group at Galion. Gomoll might be the best of the group with a 19-1 record - - his only loss a 5-3 decision to Roff. Rudy is really an excellent 130-pounder who moves up a weight now that Schultz has returned. Simpson, Nicholas, and Asbury (Wauseon) are all solid in the Northwest District. However, the one to watch may be the sophomore, Jameson Fee. He has the potential to be a big winner, but only if he becomes consistent from bout to bout. This is not a strong district and qualification this year will set him up for the next two.
Barnett will dominate at Buckeye Valley. Henn was a state alternate last year and is the linchpin of some excellent Bexley middleweights. Furbee, also a state alternate, has had an excellent season along the river. He won at Union Local, Barnesville, and John Glenn and was 2nd to West Virginia state champ Eric Noel at St. Clairsville and the OVAC. Munyan defeated state qualifier Ferris at New Lexington and may have to do so again to qualify.
The sophomore Knull keeps getting better and should place this year after qualifying in 2000. I think Daugherty is next best at Wilmington, but after that everything is a little hazy. The excellent freshman Walton certified at 130#, but we may find him here. He is someone to watch in the future.
140#
Projected Champion: Trever Hiles (Licking Valley)
Top Contenders
|
2 |
Wood (Preble Shawnee) |
15 |
Pfeil (Perkins) |
|
3 |
Markley (St. Paris Graham) |
16 |
Harmon (Clermont NE) |
|
4 |
M. Henn (Bexley) |
17 |
Petro (Tipp City) |
|
5 |
B. Shriner (Sheridan) |
18 |
Tuttle (Copley) |
|
6 |
Davids (Port Clinton) |
19 |
Razzano (Columbus DeSales) |
|
7 |
Radkowsky (Kenston) |
20 |
Vreeland (Oak Harbor) |
|
8 |
Runyon (Lake Catholic) |
21 |
Garvey (Roger Bacon) |
|
9 |
Garner (Walsh Jesuit) |
22 |
Thurston (St. Charles) |
|
10 |
Squire (Buckeye) |
23 |
Cooper (Trenton Edgewood) |
|
11 |
Harris (Holland Springfield) |
24 |
Bartley (Ravenna Southeast) |
|
12 |
Shannon (Washington CH) |
25 |
Adkins (Olmsted Falls) |
|
13 |
Berquist (Twinsburg) |
26 |
Steffel (Defiance) |
|
14 |
Jarrett (Bellevue) |
27 |
Smith (Beaver Local) |
Very surprisingly all of the weight classes from 130# through 171# in Division II seem to lack any depth. That’s not to say that there aren’t one or two superior performers, but there just doesn’t seem to be much after that. That’s very unusual in Division II and my hunch was that, perhaps, last year was a senior-oriented year that graduated the vast bulk of usual contenders. As this chart shows:
125-POUNDERS & ABOVE
|
|
2000 STATE QUALIFIER |
#THAT WERE SENIORS |
% |
2000 STATE QUALIFIERS |
#THAT WERE SENIORS |
% |
|
DIV.1 |
224 |
132 |
58.9 |
176 |
113 |
64.2 |
|
DIV 11 |
224 |
126 |
56.3 |
176 |
111 |
63.1 |
|
DIV. III |
224 |
125 |
55.8 |
176 |
111 |
63.1 |
That just isn’t true. In fact, its amazing how close the percentage of seniors was for all three classes. Even factoring out the three lightest weight classes there is no real difference. So at least for now, that difference in depth remains to be explained.
This is a weight class where opportunity beckons. There are no unbeatable superstars, no real depth, and a lot of wrestlers still waiting to make their mark. It is a golden opportunity for someone who gets a hot hand to do very well. The person most likely to fill that bill is 130-pound state runner-up Trever Hiles. Last year he took a tight one-point decision and an overtime semi-final win and earned at 2nd place medal. This year he comes in as the favorite after being rated 1# in the Central District all season.
The Buckeye Valley district is probably the strongest of the four. Hiles is the principal player, but state qualifier Henn has looked very good wrestling up a weight at 145#. He won at Hamilton Twp. and was a semi-finalist at Medina before being injured on a slam. State qualifier Shriner was a quarter-finalist last year before losing two bouts - - the second by only a point to the excellent Woodruff. This year he beat Shanon 7-0 at Miami Trace and beat Goad at Sheridan. With Redmond nursing a broken arm, Razzano has moved down to challenge for a qualification berth here. Thurston, Smith, Yudaz (St. Clairsville and Shearer (Watkins Memorial) are other possibilities.
Wood just missed state placement last year at this weight class after taking the district title. However, Markley, a state 4th at 125#, may be closing to passing him. Wood has pretty much dominated except for a match-up with Ryan West at the GMVWA. Markley started a bit slow failing to place at the Ironman or Medina, but looked very good at the Top Gun losing a one-point shootout to the excellent Galchick in the finals. After the top duo, Harmon and Petro are probably next, but there will be plenty of challengers.
The Galion District could be topsy-turvy. State qualifier Davids has had some uneven performances, but he can be very good. He was a state quarter-finalist last year. At the SBC Duals he pinned Vreeland and hammered Pfeil, 12-1, while dominating that weight class. Squire has been an impressive surprise performing well week after week. He might be able to grab a low place. Harris is also good while Jarrett should do well at this weight class. I am curious to see how the sophomore Adkins places here. He looked good at last year’s district, but I’m not sure he has built on that success
Radkowsky and Runyan are very close as we saw in their exciting 8-7 semi-final bout at Kenston. Radkowsky has won at Avon Lake, was 2nd at Kenston (to state champ Linsker), and 4th at the WRC. Neither he nor Markley placed Medina, but their consolation bout was a 12-10 thriller won by Markley. The real question at Firestone is Dave Garner. He was at 145# last year and entered the district with 15 losses. Still he won three bouts there including a big upset of Joe Hada and came close to qualifying. He has missed most of this year, but I was impressed by his toughness last year. Berquist was a state alternate last season, and I always thought he was talented. Still, he seems to find ways to lose bouts when I’m around. Tuttle and Bartley would be reasonable state qualifiers and they along with Bartley have the best chance here.
145#
Projected Champion: Aaron Woodruff (Walsh Jesuit)
Top Contenders
|
2 |
Busnick (Canton south) |
15 |
Lyons (Tipp City) |
|
3 |
Black (Defiance) |
16 |
Bowers (Elida) |
|
4 |
Zadzi (Bexley) |
17 |
Dean (Clermont NE) |
|
5 |
Deering (Perkins) |
18 |
Brenner (Canfield) |
|
6 |
Sutcliffe (Ravenna Southeast) |
19 |
Coate (Milton Union) |
|
7 |
Glorioso (Lexington) |
20 |
Bertolino (Buckeye Local) |
|
8 |
Underation(Norton) |
21 |
Long (Copley) |
|
9 |
Smith (Urbana) |
22 |
Ames (Willard) |
|
10 |
Lovell (Columbus DeSales) |
23 |
Hipp (Kenton Ridge) |
|
11 |
Slattery (Lake Catholic) |
24 |
Westhoven (Holy Name) |
|
12 |
Goad (Hebron Lakewood) |
25 |
Nolan (Coshocton) |
|
13 |
Diefenthaler (Oak Harbor) |
26 |
Ging (Kenston) |
|
14 |
Goodfellow (Sheridan) |
27 |
Dennison (Fairfield Union) |
|
|
|
28 |
Schlater (St. Paris Graham) |
|
|
|
|
|
Bill Barger has been and continues to be one of the most successful coaches in Ohio high school history. A tremendous motivator and a master strategist he, has an uncanny sense of how to put media pressure on himself leaving his team free to perform at peak efficiency. As a Vietnam veteran, I was reminded of him while reading Tacitus not so long ago. “On the field of battle it is a disgrace to the chief to be surpassed in valor by his companions. A disgrace to the companions not to come up to the valor of their chief”. To defend him and to put down one’s acts of heroism to his credit that is really what they mean by allegiance. The chief fights for victory, the companions for their chief”. Somehow he has translated that philosophy into the development of wrestlers who peak at the critical moment, and who win when it counts most.
My choice at this weight class, Aaron Woodruff, is a typical Walsh product. He refuses to concede anything to an opponent. Anything you get in a match with him must be completely earned. Last year he was a district 4th and caught eventual champ Frisch in the first round - - losing 7-6. He then won five consolation bouts to finish 3rd. It was an eerie parallel to his district results where he lost an overtime tiebreaker I the first round and then won four bouts to qualify. This year he won the Top Gun, Powerade, and Mayfield Super 8, while finishing 3rd at the Ironman. He’s like wrestling barbed wire. Every time he touches you it hurts.
While this is not a particularly strong weight class anywhere, the most depth clearly resides at Firestone. Busnick was a state qualifier as a freshman, but got a horrendous district draw last year losing to state runner-up Durkin and then by two points to Woodruff. He was 2nd at North Canton to the excellent Parsons and was a dominating champ at Wadsworth crushing Ames is the finals. At the Top Gun he was a very solid 3rd losing only to Paterniti of Pennsylvania in overtime. He’ll be away from Woodruff and should be a finalist. Sutcliffe, Underation and Slattery, are all on the periphery of possible placement and will be a tough match-up for almost everyone. I like the sophomore Brenner, but he might still be a year away. Long, could be someone that could ride a hot weekend to Columbus, while Ging is likely to be disappointed.
Black is a Van Wert transfer who has sparkled at Defiance. A state alternate last year he has racked up an impressive number of falls while winning at Sylvania, Southview and Perrysburg. He’s the kind of wrestler you’ll want to draw away from, and then hope someone else upsets him. Very strong placement potential for Black. Deering was a state qualifier at 130# last year, and has moved up three weight classes. He was 3rd at Tiffin and 5th at North Canton wrestling a tough schedule. One worrisome loss was a 15-3 bombing by Bowers Glorioso won handily at Tiffin and was 2nd at 152# at the Gorman. He could easily move ahead of Deering. Diefenthaler is a solid SBC wrestler at this weight class while Ames was runner-up at Wadsworth. A dark-horse candidate might be Westhoven Hay(Bellevue)
State qualifier Zadzi, heads a rather ill defined Buckeye Local District field. He missed much of the year recently won in impressive fashion at New Lexington. He beat Black, 7-4, last year in their go-to-state bout, but I think Black is much better this year. Lovell did not impress me much at Brecksville at 152# losing
10-0 in the first round and failing to place. However, he was 3rd at the CIT and 2nd at Mayfield losing only to Woodruff. Goad might be at 140# although he has spent most of the year at this weight. Goodfellow has dropped from 152# and could be a major factor at this district.
There is not a lot of placement potential at Wilmington. Only Smith makes the left column in my grid, and that in the ninth spot. I’m expecting very close competition at that district, but that is unlikely to translate into very may wins at Columbus.
152#
Projected Champion: Keith Cupp (Hamilton Twp.)
Top Contenders
|
2 |
Kearney (Triway) |
14 |
Gibbs (Fairview) |
|
3 |
Galvan (Benedictine) |
15 |
Wilson (Maysville) |
|
4 |
Wickert (St. Charles) |
16 |
Hasting (Kenston) |
|
5 |
Rush (St. Paris Graham) |
17 |
Heston (Fairfield Union) |
|
6 |
Incorvaia (Medina Highland) |
18 |
Walters (Preble Shawnee) |
|
7 |
Hahn (Minerva) |
19 |
Bishop (Lexington) |
|
8 |
Asmus (Otsego) |
20 |
Sammons (Marlington) |
|
9 |
Quillen (Edison) |
21 |
Leonette (West Geauga) |
|
10 |
Gilkey (Perry) |
22 |
Massey (Kenton Ridge) |
|
11 |