
![]()
Bombers most likely No. 1 seed
By Scott Wanish, sports editor
![]() Scott Parks Jr./The Sun |
The fourth-ranked Midwest City Bombers wrestling squad is slated to be
the No. 1 seed from the West at dual state next month to be held at Yukon High
School.
Midwest City (10-3) earned the honors by winning its district
duals with wins over Choctaw, Putnam North and Edmond Memorial.
On
Saturday, Jan. 20, the Bombers placed fourth at the Oklahoma City University
Duals held at Moore High School. It was a loss to Ponca City in the semifinals
that knocked Midwest City out of the running for the title.
Attempting to
go for third place, Marlow got the nod over the Bombers on the criteria of
possessing more six-point wins.
On Friday, Jan. 19, Midwest City clipped
Edmond Santa Fe, Lawton MacArthur and Claremore in order to make it to the semis
against the Wildcats. The Bombers also defeated El Reno for the second time this
season.
Midwest City won the Mid-State Conference Tournament held at
Moore High School as well, clearing Westmoore by a 224-155.5 margin. EastOC’s
DEL CITY came in fourth with 124.5 points as Kevin Harris at 135 pounds was the
lone Eagle to win an individual title.
The Eagles compete at Midwest City
in a dual on Thursday at 7 p.m.
The Bombers sported eight individual
winners at Mid-State in Ryan King (160), Mark Meyer (152), Jason Hartfield
(145), Trent Daniels (140), Ben Johnson (130), Seth Johnson (125), Willie Gunter
(119) and Shane Thomas (103).
“Ben Johnson is wrestling really well,”
Midwest City braintrust Jody Marple said of one of his seniors. “Now that he is
at the right weight, he is starting to gain confidence in his shots and he’s not
making the mistakes he was in the past.”
NOTE: Prior to the Bombers
hosting rival Del City Thursday night in a 7 p.m. dual, a baked potato dinner
will benefit the Midwest City wrestling program from 4-6 p.m. inside the Midwest
City High School cafeteria. Cost is $5 which includes a drink and a
dessert.
![]()
North back in familiar spot on mat
Scott Moore's Mat Matters column
By Scott Moore 1/30/08Jay Gibson was preparing for the worst.
At the beginning of the
season, the Norman North coach said the Timberwolves would be rebuilding.
Question marks were everywhere after nine starters graduated from a team that
qualified for Dual State.
But every week, Gibson’s squad has defied
expectations. North started by routing a Norman High squad that was ranked for
the first time in years. Then came a 13th place finish at the Cliff Keen
Nationals in Kansas City and a top 10 finish at the prestigious Geary
Tournament.
North then beat Edmond North last Thursday to wrap up the
district championship. Not even ranked to start begin season, the T-Wolves are
now projected No. 6 as a dual team and No. 7 as a tournament squad. The district
title also means that North will be back at Dual State Feb. 8 at
Yukon.
“Every week I’ve just kind of believed in this team more and
more,” Gibson said. “Losing nine starters, you’d think we’d have a lot of work
to do, but our big guns have come through and our younger guys have stepped
up.”
The big guns would be fourth-ranked (by OKWrestle.com) Matt Dragg at
140 pounds, No. 3 Josh Sublett at 152, No. 3 Chad Wright at 171 and No. 1 Colton
Cline at heavyweight. Skyler Hoss is ranked sixth at 215, but has not wrestled
since before Christmas due to a lingering hip injury. Gibson does not expect him
to return.
All of North’s ranked wrestlers are seniors but Kennedy, a
sophomore. North has six sophomores in the lineup and two freshmen. That’s eight
of 14 weights.
“They’ve done a really good job,” Gibson said. “They’ve
accepted their roles and we’ve become a really tough team.”
Gibson always
thought his younger wrestlers had talent, but didn’t want to throw them on the
mat too soon. But they’ve helped North get back to Dual State. Gibson said North
was one of only five schools to reach Dual State in back-to-back
seasons.
“That’s a pretty good accomplishment,” he said. “That lets us
know that maybe we aren’t the best, but we’re one of the elite
programs.”
And, barring injuries and defections, North should stay that
way for the forseeable future.
“We told our sophomores that they could be
the first group in school history to go to Dual State all four years,” Gibson
said.
North’s sophomores include Kennedy, Sterling Wright at 119, Kyle
Christian at 130, Aaron White at 135, Chase Webb at 160 and Spencer Bladow at
189.
Important dual
The dual season is almost over and
spots at Dual State have been decided. The only thing left is to determine the
seedings.
The west side will be determined this week. No. 4 Midwest City
wrestles No. 5 Del City and the outcome will determine the top two seeds.
Thursday, Norman North will host unranked Westmoore and that will determine the
three and four seeds.
The east side seeds have not been finalized,
either. The qualifying teams include No. 1 Broken Arrow, No. 2 Ponca City, No. 3
Union and No. 8 Sapulpa.
NHS falls
Norman High wrestled at
Yukon Monday and lost 57-13. The dual was originally scheduled for Dec. 13, but
was postponed due to weather.
It was a district dual, but the district
had already been decided. NHS took the dual lightly, resting several starters
and forfeiting six weights. Only Zach Russell at 103, Joe Springfield at 140,
Tony Stanfield at 171 and Jack Jewell at heavyweight won matches. The Tigers
will wrestle at Carl Albert Thursday and will host Piedmont next Tuesday to end
the dual season. Piedmont will also be Senior Night.
Norman North was
scheduled to wrestle Tuesday at Edmond Santa Fe, but the dual was canceled
because the Wolves were hosting rescheduled basketball
games.
Sooners move up
Oklahoma moved up one spot from
18th to 17th in Tuesday’s USA Today/Intermat top 25. Oklahoma is 11-3 (0-2 Big
12) and will host unranked Arizona State (9-5) at 7 p.m. Friday at Howard
McCasland Field House.
Iowa remained No. 1. while Nebraska was second and
Oklahoma State third. Iowa State is ninth and Missouri 11th.
Ranked OU
wrestlers include No. 13 Brian Shelton at 133, No. 15 Zach Bailey at 141, No. 13
Will Rowe at 149, No. 20 Chad Perry at 157, No. 7 Josh Weitzel at 184 and No. 5
Joel Flaggert at 197.
Scott Moore
366-3535
![]()
Bruin
grappling triplet wins gold at Pawhuska
By Mike
Tupa E-E Sports Editor
Monday, January 21, 2008 2:23 PM CST
Quality shone through this weekend for the few, but
proud, Bartlesville High varsity wrestling team.
Despite going to battle with just six grapplers, the Bruins muscled their way
into fourth place overall at the Pawhuska meet.
The lion’s share of the Bruin points were produced by their triple threat of
Taylor Woolman, Marvin Lewis and Ethan Evans.
Woolman fleeced his all his challengers en route to winning the 160-pound
division.
Oh yeah, the fire-headed freshman also was named Outstanding Wrestler of the
Tournament.
“It was cool that a freshman won it,” said Bruin coach Ottawa Cochran.
Woolman shut down a Vinita opponent in the championship
match, winning in overtime, 6-4.
Lewis dismantled a Woodward rival in the 171-pound title showdown, 8-1.
Evans dominated all his foes while claiming the 189-pound crown by a
second-period fall.
Matt Templemeyer also grabbed a fourth-place medal, in the 152-pound group, for
Bartlesville.
Rounding out the Bruins’ sextet of warriors were Christian Walsh at 112 and
John Hubler at 140.
“If there would have been a fifth and sixth place match, they both would have
wrestled for a medal,” said Cochran, adding “we brought a team trophy
home.”
That hardware is one of the tangible souvenirs in what already has been a season
of rejuvenation for the beleagured Bruin wrestling program.
After going 0-for-all last year in dual match competition, Bartlesville already
has beaten Enid and Tulsa Memorial in head-to-head battles this season.
“I’m proud of how everyone is wrestling,” said Cochran, the third Bruin
wrestling coach in three years. “They’re stepping it up.”
Cochran started preseason workouts with just 10 varsity grapplers. But,
defections, injuries and eligibility issues have depleted his numbers to a
half-dozen stalwarts.
“It’s hard to go to duals and hard to go to tournaments with very few
kids,” Cochran said. “That’s something I have to build up in the
off-season, to build the numbers up.”
The Bruins suffered a tough casualty last week when a key team member, Michael
Parrett, dislocated his shoulder.
“He’s helped us out and done what I asked him to do,” Cochran said about
the 160/171-pounder. “He just went out and wrestled his heart out, where-ever
I put him in.”
Cochran also praised the occasional contributions of some of the ninth-graders
who have made the jump to varsity for spot duty.
“It’s a tough road,” Cochran said about rebuilding the Bruin mat program.
“It’s baby steps. One of the goals we set for the season was winning a dual
and now we’ve won two. I’d like to have a high school state qualifier this
year.”
Meanwhile, the Bruin junior high team, on which the foundation of the varsity
success will be built, is putting together a strong season.
Woolman, for example, is the No. 1-rated 165-pound junior high wrestler in
Oklahoma.
The Bruins’ next home action will be Jan. 28 in a tri-meet against Stillwater
and Sapulpa.
Prior to that the Bruins will travel to Owasso on Thursday for a dual meet and
then compete Friday and Saturday in the Pryor meet.
![]()
![]()
Future looks bright for Ada wrestling
Bob Forrest Published: January 14, 2008 05:27 pm
![]() Jeanie Neal / Order photo reprints Jeanie Neal/ |
ADA — Any high school’s athletic future lies with the talent in its
junior high programs. And if the present is any indication, Ada High’s wrestling
future looks extremely bright.
The 2007-2008 junior Cougars have been
among the best junior high wrestling squads in Oklahoma since last fall,
compiling a sparkling 11-2 record while beating some of the state’s more
high-profile programs — schools with the wrestling tradition football-crazy Ada
has lacked in recent years.
“They have the rankings of the 15 best
junior high teams in the state on a Website — they don’t really mean anything,
it’s just for pride,” veteran Ada junior high coach Dan Pettigrew said Friday.
“I didn’t send anything in (on the Ada junior high wrestlers), because I’m not
good on the computer, but we beat (No. 7) Choctaw, (No. 8) Moore West and (No.
10) Catoosa at the Shawnee (Dual Team) Tournament, and we finished ahead of (No.
6) Broken Arrow and (No. 12 Shawnee).”
Ada’s only two losses all season
were to top-ranked Ponca City in the semifinals of the Shawnee tournament and to
fifth-ranked Lawton Central for third place, and Pettigrew said he gave five of
his ninth-grade wrestlers permission to go home before those matches because
they had “other things they needed to do”.
“Ponca City is really good,
but I think we would have beaten Lawton Central if we had had our whole team
there,” said Pettigrew, who became Ada’s junior high coach in 2001 after 10
seasons as the high school coach and who won a state championship at Madill High
School in 1991. Published: January 14, 2008 05:27 pm
Ada will host Harrah, Noble and Tecumseh in district
duals at the Cougar Activity Center Tuesday night, and the Cougars will be among
the favorites at the Midwestern Conference Tournament Friday at Plainview.
Junior High State (which is open to individuals from all classes but won’t
feature team competition) will be held on Feb. 1 and 2 at the state fairgrounds
in Oklahoma City.
“We wrestle the same teams in our junior high district
duals (the Ada varsity) will wrestle at their district tournament,” Pettigrew
said. “There is an individual state tournament at the end of the year, but
there’s no dual state tournament for junior high.”
Duals have been Ada’s
bread and butter this year, with the Cougars unbeaten in one-on-one competition
outside the Shawnee event. Pettigrew said the success of his team — which also
won its own tournament last month by a staggering 100 points — is due to solid
wrestlers in all classes rather than one or two dominant performers.
“We
are really good in eighth and ninth grades,” Pettigrew said. “We have some very
competitive kids, and the reason we’re so good in duals is we don’t have a weak
leg — all 13 of our kids are pretty competitive. In our duals around here, we’ve
been beating people pretty bad.”
Jamie Copeland, an eighth grader who
wrestles at 78 pounds, has the best overall record (14-1) on the Ada squad, with
his only loss coming in the finals of the Cougars’ own tournament, where
Pettigrew’s squad placed 10 wrestlers in the finals from 13 weight
classes.
“He’s just a real aggressive wrestler,” Pettigrew said of
Copeland.
Pettigrew has a logjam at 102 pounds, where five of his most
talented wrestlers — Drew Elliott and the twin brother combos of Jake and Jeff
Todd and Jordan and Jackson Boone — are most comfortable. Jake Todd (who has
been wrestling at 94 pounds) is 14-2; brother Jeff has won 10 of 15 matches
while competing at both 110 and 118; Elliott (second at 118 pounds at the Ada
tournament) is a ninth grader who has been splitting time between junior high
and varsity tournaments; Jackson Boone is 8-2 while wrestling mostly at 110; and
Jordan Boone is 9-6 while spending the season at his natural weight of
102.
“Jake (Todd) was 20-1 last year at 78 pounds ... he’s growing,”
Pettigrew said. “Jackson and Jeff switch back and forth between 110 and 118.
Jackson was out last year with a broken leg, and Jeff is usually giving weight
to the kids he’s wrestling.
“Jordan (Boone) doesn’t have a great record,
but he only lost two matches last year, and 102 is a real tough weight,”
Pettigrew said. “He’s one of my better wrestlers.”
Pettigrew said that
quintet needs to separate itself if this junior high squad is going to evolve
into the nucleus of a high school team capable of challenging for a state title
in two or three seasons.
“We have five really good kids who could
wrestle at 102,” Pettigrew explained. “For Ada to be good in the future, some of
them are going to have to grow and gain some weight.
“If they stay with
it and they can scatter to fill the weights, Ada can be as good as anybody in
our class within two years,” he predicted. “Next year they’re still going to be
freshman and sophomores, but they’ll still be pretty good. Starting the next
year, they should be very good for several years.”
Ada’s junior high
program has flourished in recent years, and it reached its pinnacle,
numbers-wise, last year under varsity coach Will Evans, who emphasized his
younger wrestlers during his only year as coach of the Cougars. As a result,
Pettigrew entered the 2007-2008 campaign with 46 wrestlers, including 29 at the
eighth and ninth-grade level.
Evans left last spring, and Kyle Bohannon
was hired to take over the high school program. Pettigrew said the change at the
varsity level hasn’t affected his coaching style, but he said there are basic
differences between Evans and Bohannon.
“Will was technique, technique,
technique, and Kyle is more conditioning,” Pettigrew noted. “I’ve been coaching
26 years. I coachPublished: January 14, 2008 05:27 pm the same way I always have.
“The program was a lot
better as far as participation and interest when Will left than whe he got
here,” he added. “Kyle’s going to be a very good coach. He’s still learning, but
he’s doing a good job. Will had coached 10 or 12 years, and Kyle is just a
second-year coach and a first-year head coach. That experience makes a lot of
difference.”
In addition to Copeland, Elliott, the Todds and the Boones,
Ada’s other junior high competitors are Cody Mankins (an eighth grader who is
6-7 this season wrestling at 86 pounds); Chase Cummings (another ninth-grader
splitting time between junior high and the varsity), who was second at 126
pounds at the Ada tournament; Conner Keith, an eighth grader who is 13-2 this
season at 134 pounds; Derek Brown, a ninth-grader who is 9-4 at 142 pounds since
moving in from Duncan; Chase Bowker, 7-4 while wrestling at both 142 and 152
pounds this season and now with the squad’s regular at 152; Jordan Saaty, 3-8 at
165 pounds in his first competitive season; Cale Russell, a ninth grader who has
compiled a 9-3 record at 185 pounds; and heavyweights Andrew Scribner (7-6) and
Cody Brimley, who was 6-1 before suffering a broken ankle that ended his season
in December.
“All of my kids are real aggressive and real motivated in
the sport,” Pettigrew said. “We have a lot of very good kids, and nobody really
stands out right now. They’re all competitive and winning and enjoying it right
now, and hopefully they will stay.”
Pettigrew said keeping his wrestlers
motivated enough to continue competing at the varsity level is as critical to
the continued success of the Ada program as preparing them mentally and
physically for high school wrestling.
“Right now, I’m trying to keep it
interesting for the kids and give them as much success as I can so they’ll stay
interested in wrestlinPublished: January 14, 2008 05:27 pmg in high school,” Pettigrew explained. “To me, winning is
fun, and so far this group has won a lot and really enjoyed it. I hope that
means they’re going to stay with it in high school.”
![]()
By
JOHNNY MCMAHAN MANAGING
EDITOR 1/10/08
The
Boomer wrestlers celebrated senior night with a 53-30 win over Enid at
Boomer Fieldhouse Tuesday night.
Both
teams had open spots in the lineup and the result was matches in only eight of
the 14 weight classes.
In
the contested matches, though, the Boomers came up big.
Jon
Rosborough gave up an early takedown to Michael Wilson, but went on to pin the
Enid wrestler in 5:20.
Joey Miller had a big night as well, scoring a technical fall over Ian Lane.
Other
Boomer pins came from Matt White in 1 :39, Zach White in 1
:43, Jesse Huff in 0:40 and Kevin Tapia in 1:47.
Miller
and Tapia are the Boomers two seniors.
Enid
got falls from Bryce Benge and Ky Castor.
Josh
Rosborough, Michael Hale and Stetson Tuck received forfeit wins.
EHS, Boomers both limited in wrestlers
By Bruce Campbell, Staff Writer 1/8/08Woodward hosts Enid at 6 p.m. tonight in a dual,
pitting two teams with similar problems.
The Plainsmen will be forfeiting at four weights — 112, 125,
135 and heavyweight. The Boomers will also forfeit multiple weight
classes.
“We’re in the same boat,’’ Kerr
said. “It’s going to be a battle. We have to make
sure that we don’t give up a lot of bonus
points.’’
Woodward has some strong individuals, including Zach White, the Class
4A state runner-up at 171 pounds and returning state qualifiers Matt
White at 125 and Derek Branson at 215.
The Whites are the nephews of Oklahoma State coach and two-time Olympic
champion John Smith.
Joey Miller, who has signed with Oklahoma City University’s
women’s wrestling team, has missed the early part of the
season because of a shoulder injury.
She became the first girl to place in a state tournament as a freshman
in 2005.
Kerr, though, is more concerned about his own team. The Plainsmen
placed only one wrestler — 160-pounder Tyler Barnes, who was
sixth — at last weekend’s Geary Tournament.
“I want everybody to wrestle smart and not beat
themselves,’’ Kerr said. “We may not be
the best team in the world but I want us to make it through a dual
where we don’t beat ourselves. We have been making silly
mistakes. If we get beat, I want to get beat by something the other guy
does.’’
The EHS lineup will have Michael Wilson (1-6) at 103, Clifton Barker
(0-7) at 130, Brice Benge (0-7) at 140, J.B. Stuart (15-4) at 145, Cyle
Abbott (0-5) or Kia Castor (6-6) at 152, Jake Keeling (2-3) or Barnes
(8-7) at 160, Kaleb Hulva (2-7) or Bryan Abbott (0-2) at 171, Joe
Stuart (6-7) at 189 and Dennis Smith (1-8) at 215.
Cook is in his first year at Woodward after replacing Greg Johnson this
summer. Enid beat a short-handed Boomer team 59-17 last season The
Plainsmen won 40-20 in 2006 while Woodward won 55-15 in 2005.
“It’s getting to be a good
rivalry,’’ Kerr said. “Coach Johnson and
I had a good rivalry. Coach Cook is a good, young guy who knows a lot
about wrestling.’’
![]()
Pryor faces tough Grove wrestling team
Kenny Howell 1/5/07PRYOR - Christmas break ended, and it was time to
get back to work for the Pryor wrestling team Thursday night.
The Tigers hit the mats with a talented Grove team, and fell 55-5.
Pryor had two wins on the night. Michael Fraley won
9-4 at 130 pounds and Daniel Hauenstein won 12-10 at 140 pounds.
The Junior High Tigers had a little more luck, as they won 46-27.
The Junior High Tigers got pins by Ramon Diaz, Boomer Sanders, Anthony
Taylor, Cody Estes, Austen Brooner and Jake Gipson. Jerry Campbell won
a major decision, 16-2, at 86 pounds.
Pryor will next compete in the Inola Tournament, which starts today.
Grove 55 Pryor 5
103 - Hopper (G) d. Wade 16-1. 112 - Armstrong (G) fft. 119 - Housley
(G) d. Baker 7-0. 125 - Daniel Kelly (G) p. Buff 3:44. 130 - Mi. Fraley
(P) d. Baker 9-4. 135 - Armstrong (G) p. Chandler 3:35. 140 -
Hauenstein (P) d. Sarwinski 12-10. 145 - Housley (G) p. Ma. Fraley
1:47. 152 - Gandy (G) d. Thompson 12-5. 160 - Gehrke (G) p. Blowers
:26. 171 - Hopper (G) p. Williams 3:38. 189 - Hale (G) d. Stanley 6-4.
215 - Calvan (G) p. Gipson 1:25. HWT - Bartley (G) d. Cole 1-0.
Pryor JH 46 Grove 27
78 - Joe Campbell (P) fft. 86 - Je. Campbell (P) md. Pack 16-2. 94 -
Diaz (P) p. Dempsey :49. 102 - Longan (G) p. Johnson 1:52. 110 -
Sanders (P) p. Tune 1:11. 118 - Boone (G) p. Rial 1:04. 126 -
Stephenson (G) p. Hill 1:45. 134 - Taylor (P) p. Kidd :15. 142 - Estes
(P) p. Grouse :47. 152 - Miller (G) d. Russell 14-10. 165 - Brooner (P)
p. Fitzsimmons :28. 185 - Finland (G) p. Deacan, :30. 205 - Gipson (P)
p. Johnson :44.
![]()
Freshman Ward gets chance at 125 pounds for Midwest City
Fri January 4, 2008 OKC News
Midwest City picked up a 31-20 dual wrestling win at El Reno, thanks in large part to a relatively unknown freshman.
James Ward pinned Brian Penick at 125 pounds to seal the victory. Ward’s fall came after Penick had Ward on his back at one point in the match. Ward has been an able fill-in for state champion Seth Johnson, who has been out with an elbow injury since late November.
“That was a big win for James,” Midwest City coach Jody Marple said. “We didn’t need the fall, but it was impressive he could get it.”
Ward has wrestled at 119 or 125. With 119 occupied by two-time champion Willie Gunter, Ward didn’t figure to get much time on the mat, but he’s made the most of it.
“It’s been pretty hard,” Ward said. “I just try to pull through the best I can and try not to get pinned. I was happy to get the chance, but it’s been kind of crazy. Freshmen don’t start here, but it doesn’t put a lot of pressure on me.”
Midwest City is in a similar position it was in last year with injuries before it won the Class 5A title. Johnson will be back in two weeks and several other wrestlers who have been dinged up are getting back into form.
“We have to build off it,” Marple said. “We’re not anywhere we need to be for regionals or state. But we’re showing signs of progression. Hopefully, by Feb- ruary we can get everyone back in the lineup and make a run at it.”
For El Reno, Hanna Martin (103), Ethan Martin (112), Cory Dauphin (140) and Cody Dauphin (215) won by decision.
Geary Tournament starts today: One of the state’s more prestigious wrestling tournaments gets underway at 11:30 a.m. today. The 64th annual Geary Tournament will feature 15 defending individual state champions and several top teams. Five ranked teams in Class 5A will attend — No. 1 Tulsa Union, No. 2 Broken Arrow, No. 3 Midwest City, No. 5 Del City, No. 8 Norman North and No. 10 Edmond North.
Class 4A powers Catoosa, Lawton MacArthur, Noble, Dun can and El Reno will compete. Some of the noted wrestlers competing include Kid Gomez of Noble (112 pounds), Austin Mogg of El Reno (112), Matt Bryan of Broken Arrow (135) and Dallas Bailey of Catoosa (152).
“It’s as tough as it’s ever been,” Marple said. “It’s one of the few tournaments where you can have two state champions on one side of the bracket. All the weights look stacked this year.”
The tournament runs throughout the day today. Action continues at 10 a.m. Saturday, and the championship round begins at 6 p.m.
Miller time: Yukon is off to a solid 4-0 start, including a win at the recent Putnam City Tournament. Yukon is led by Cameron Wells (119), a state placer a year ago. Wells is 12-1 with eight falls. Tyler Ramsey (160) and Kody Hopgood (215) also have double digit wins.
“We had a good year last season, and this is a contin- uation of that,” coach Joe Schneider said. “We had good practices over Christmas. The guys are eager to improve, and I think by the end the end of the month and into state we will be competitive.”
Santa Fe trounces Texans: Proving you can go home again, Edmond Santa Fe wrestling coach Greg George re- turned to his former stomping grounds and left with a victory as the Wolves defeated R.L. Turner (Carrollton, Texas) 48-27 on Thursday night.
In his second year with Edmond Santa Fe, this was Ge orge’s first trip back to R.L. Turner, where he used to coach.
After years of Tae Kwon Do training, this is McCourtie’s first year wrestling.
Before the season started, Edmond Santa Fe
wrestling coach Greg George said a key step to improving the
Wolves’ wrestling team would be their tough schedule.
“We’re a young program, but we’re going
to try and find the very best competition,” George said.
“We want to raise the level, gain confidence, and we know
we’re just as good as others but we need to step it up and do
the best we can.”
The Wolves have already squared off against some of the best during the
Mid America Nationals at Tulsa Union, but their next big challenge
starts today when they head to Dallas, Texas for a busy weekend.
Santa Fe starts their road trip tonight with a dual meet against R.L.
Turner (Dallas, Texas). The Wolves will then compete in the highly
competitive Lone Star Duals Friday and Saturday.
At the Lone Star Duals, they will face a number of talented teams from
around the country. The Wolves kick off the tournament with one of the
top wrestling teams in the country in Brother Martin High School (New
Orleans, La.)
Brother Martin won the Louisiana Division 1 state title last year with
14 state qualifiers and four state champions. The Crusaders have a pair
of talented wrestlers in defending 125-pound state champion Nick
Shields and 135-pounder Andy Casadaban.
Santa Fe also faces Katy High School (Texas), Martin (Arlington, Texas)
Arlington (Texas) and Caprock (Amarillo, Texas).
Katy is led by senior 125-pounder Matt Morgan, who is ranked No. 7 in
the state.
Martin has a pair of talented wrestlers in Jason Mozley, a 125-pound
sophomore, and 152-pound senior Taylor Clipper, who was a state
qualifier last year at 145-pounds.
The Wolves wrap up Friday’s competition with Caprock, which
has a pair of returning state qualifiers in 135-pounder Chris Contreras
and heavyweight J.J. Naranjo.
After battling some injuries, the Wolves will be in good shape this
weekend. The team, which has had to fill several holes in their lineup,
will be missing only one varsity wrestler, Nehemiah Emerson who was
injured at Three Dog Night.
George plans to have Seth Hebert fill in for Emerson at 189-pounds.