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STATE FINALS: Class-by-class results

Posted On: Sunday, February 18, 2007
By: alexanderscot
By E. Shawn Aylsworth
Managing Editor
 

pic
Eric Galka (top) of Hobart
defeats Chesterton’s Andy
St. Germain in the 
130-pound final.
Photo by Natalie Evans

INDIANAPOLIS ââ?¬â?? The 69th
Annual IHSAA Individual Wrestling State Finals are in the books, with
all four returning state champions successfully defending their titles
Feb. 17 at Conseco Fieldhouse and another former titleist getting back
to the top of the winners� podium.

 
Using my
based-on-the-rankings preview below, I will update over the course of
the weekend the significant tournament happenings that entertained a
crowd of 25,648 in three sessions over two days. (Click here for all the completed brackets.)
 
There were no
true opening-round shockers Friday night, though the 119-pound class
carried over its antics from last year with four upsets in eight
matches, while three upsets occurred at both 125 and 130.
 
(A breakdown of Saturday�s quarterfinals, semis, and finals are forthcoming � I swear!)
 
The results:
 
103 lbs.

pic
Anderson Highland’s top-
ranked sophomore Camden
Eppert raises his arms
after
his 103-pound championship
victory over Brandon
Wright of Indianapolis
Cathedral.
Photo by Natalie Evans

A year ago, Mishawaka�s Josh Harper completed a perfect freshman season by defeating Edgewood junior Chris Lindauer,
6-3, for the 103 state title. With Harper moving up to 112, that leaves
the door open for No. 1-ranked sophomore Camden Eppert (32-1 and fourth
a year ago at 103) to fulfill his destiny. Only trouble there is Eppert
was upset for the New Castle Semistate crown by No. 17 freshman Brandon Wright of Indianapolis Cathedral, meaning Eppert theoretically got a worse draw at Conseco.

 
Not
so. Eppert has only three other ranked opponents in the top half of the
16-team bracket, and none of them are higher than sixth (Merrillville�s
35-3 senior Wilson Williams, whom Eppert could get in the
quarterfinals). Wright�s bracket, meanwhile, has five other ranked
foes, including No. 3 Evansville Reitz sophomore Alex Johns (47-2) in a
potential semifinal. That�s if Wright (41-5) can get past either No. 7
Crown Point freshman Anthony Hopkins (36-3) or ninth-ranked Columbus
North sophomore Francisco Colon (47-6) in the lower bracket quarters.
 
Session I: Everything goes according to plan except for the slightest upset, a 5-3 win by Colon over Hawkins. The top-ranked Eppert has no trouble in his opener with a 22-7 technical fall victory.
 
112 lbs.
Last yearââ?¬â?¢s champion, Danny Coyne of Beech Grove, was a senior, but his 112 finals victim by a score of 3-1 ââ?¬â?? East Nobleââ?¬â?¢s Taylor
March ââ?¬â?? was just a freshman. March has moved up to 119, making
Evansville Mater Dei�s No. 1 senior Sean Herron (43-2 and fourth last
year at 112) the favorite, right?
 
Wrong.
That�s because the lower bracket is a meat grinder and defending 103
champ Josh Harper (35-0 and ranked No. 2 at 119) waits as a possible
quarterfinals opponent ââ?¬â?? and heââ?¬â?¢s yet to lose in two years. The winner
of that showdown could get second-ranked Homestead junior Justin Wight (30-0) in the semis.
 
The top half survivor figures to be either third-ranked Warsaw sophomore Justin Brooks (40-2) or No. 4 Cashe� Quiroga of Lawrence North (44-1). Harper just beat Brooks, 9-5, for the Merrillville Semistate title.

Session I:
OK, I was lying about the no-shocker thing. Wight loses his first match
of the year to No. 21 Chesterton junior Ben Williams (41-7) ââ?¬â?? get this,
the fourth-place finisher last week at Merrillville ââ?¬â?? and itââ?¬â?¢s not even
close (8-2). All else follows from, meaning Saturday morning fans can
start drooling over the showdown between No. 1 Herron and No. 2 Harper,
who took drastically different routes in advancing. Herron was forced
to work in a 3-1 decision over fifth-ranked Franklin Central junior
D.J. Rackley, while Harper stuck No. 10 Yorktown freshman Derek Bevans
in just 38 seconds.
 
119 lbs.

pic
Matthew Fields of
Whiteland hugs his
coach after winning
the 119-pound
championship.
Photo by Natalie Evans
 

Taylor
March, the defending 112 runner-up from East Noble, has to be
considered one of the state finals� heaviest favorites at 119. Ranked
No. 1 and 39-0, the sophomore would face at most only one upper bracket
opponent with less than five losses by the time he reached the
championship round. His biggest pre-finals hiccups figure to be either
third-ranked Perry Meridian junior Brian Vest (48-1) in the quarters or
No. 3 (at 125) Mishawaka senior Nick Wiesjahn (37-5 and third at 112
last year) in the semis.

 
On the bottom, Columbia City
seventh-ranked senior Eli Michel (29-3 and eighth here a year ago)
figures to battle either No. 6 Bellmont senior Derek Nelson (37-7) or
ninth-ranked Whiteland senior Matthew Fields (37-1 and eighth a year
ago at 112) for a shot at March. March beat Nelson, 8-0, then pinned
Michel at 5:31 for the Woodlan Semistate title.
 
Session I:
Remember last year, when three returning state champions had been
ousted before the finals? Well, it wasn�t that bad, but still there
were four upsets out of the eight matches. Vest was felled 7-4 by No.
10 Evansville Mater Dei junior Alex Weinzapfel, Nelson lost a 3-2
squeaker to unranked sophomore Trace Hall of South Bend Riley, No. 11
Evansville Memorial junior Conner Zuber got pinned by unranked junior
Jeremiah Edwards of Lawrence North, and 12th-ranked
Westfield senior Steven Lange dropped a 2-1 decision to No. 25
Southwestern (Hanover) junior Michael Bartlett. March must be hatin�
it, no?
 
125 lbs.
With
Munster senior Eric McGill ââ?¬â?? the defending state champ here and a
HoosierAuthority.com contributing blogger ââ?¬â?? having grazed on up to 140,
that leaves the door open for this year�s only undefeated 125-pounder
in the field, Bloomington South�s No. 1-ranked Reece Freeman (40-0).
Freeman finished fifth at 119 last year and figures to roll through the
lower bracket this weekend, with his stiffest test probably coming in a
semifinal bout with East Central No. 4 senior Joseph Hollstegge (38-1).
 
Up top, Valparaiso
second-ranked junior Thomas Churchard (43-1) figures to have it almost
as easy, though a quarterfinal joust with the 2005 112-pound state
champion, Beech Grove fifth-ranked senior Ethan Harris (35-4), could
surprise.
 
Session I:
125 did not escape the weirdness, either, as two of the three upsets
came from unranked competitors. Most eye popping was No. 10 Adams
Central senior Tyson Bercot�s 8-7 heartbreaker to Portage junior Chad Allen, but Prairie Heights
senior Travis Smoker also drew notice with his 4-3 upset of No. 19
Hobart sophomore Johnny Dillon. The other surprise was No. 18 Griffith
senior Steve Siokos� 10-4 victory over No. 12 Western senior David
Shepherd. Saturday morning�s quarter between easy winners Churchard and
Harris should be a war, with the survivor figuring to meet Freeman (a
9-4 winner over Carmel sophomore Will Mascaro) in the finals.
 
130 lbs.
Bloomington Northââ?¬â?¢s Dustin Bruce ââ?¬â?? the 130 runner-up a year ago to Mooresvilleââ?¬â?¢s Alexander Warren ââ?¬â?? has moved up to 135, as have last yearââ?¬â?¢s fifth- (Angolaââ?¬â?¢s
David Zimmer) and eighth-place (Warren Central�s Josh Norris)
finishers. That sets the stage for a battle of East Central senior No.
1 Jacob Fleckenstein (fifth last year at 125) vs. Hobart junior No. 2 Eric Galka (the 103 state champion in 2005).
 
However,
that matchup of 46-and-ohs would occur in the upper bracket semifinals,
making for one whale of an anti-climax. The lower half, on the other
hand, appears to be wide open. Six of the eight wrestlers are ranked,
led by No. 3 Warren Central senior Chris Conte (40-6), No. 6 Tipton
sophomore Levi Rutledge (44-2), and undefeated No. 21 Brandon Brown of
Carroll (Fort Wayne).
 
Session I:
A pair of Top 10 wrestlers went down at 130, with Rutledge losing 10-5
to No. 15 Chesterton senior Andy St. Germain and No. 7 West Noble
junior Kyle Marsh falling ââ?¬â?? literally, in 64 seconds ââ?¬â?? to Southwestern
(Hanover) No. 22 junior Michael Harmon. Center Grove senior No. 19
Blake Harvey also was shocked by an 18-3 technical fall at the hands of
Brown. So it appears easy advancers Galka and Fleckenstein will meet in
the semis, with Conte now an overwhelming favorite to come out of the
bottom.
 
135 lbs.
Last year�s runner-up, Hobart�s Brennan Cosgrove, has moved up to 140. But the defending eighth-place 135-pounder is Warsaw junior Matt Elvidge (40-2), and he�s ranked No. 1 here. However, Elvidge was upset at last week�s Merrillville Semistate
in the semifinals and finished third to unranked Glenn senior Asa Ennis
(31-1). That monkey wrench means that 135 may be one of the most open
classes this weekend.
 
Opposite
Elvidge in the upper bracket is Castle senior No. 4 Caleb Schmitt, a
potential semifinal opponent should he get past Zionsville senior No. 9
Graham Youngs (43-1) in a possible quarterfinal. Angola�s 42-0 senior
David Zimmer ââ?¬â?? ranked fourth at 130 ââ?¬â?? faces a potential lower bracket
quarterfinal bout with Floyd Central senior No. 3 Jake Missi (41-2),
with the survivor likely challenging Bloomington North senior No. 7
Dustin Bruce (14-3), the defending state runner-up at 130, in the semis.
 
Toldja this was wide open.
 
Session I:
The action at 135 saw the night�s only slaying of a No. 1 as Elvidge
dropped a 10-4 decision to unranked Fort Wayne Snider senior Jordan
Quinn. (That semistate upset obviously did not bring good karma for
Elvidge.) And No. 20 Mishawaka sophomore Steven Sandefer sprang a mild
upset with his 5-4 decision over No. 14 Maconaquah senior Seth
Verbosky. That makes for a hellacious bottom foursome of Zimmer vs.
Missi and Bruce vs. Ennis, the unsung standout to this point of the
postseason. With no No. 1 or No. 2 left at 135, it would make perfect
sense for the unranked Ennis to roll all the way to a title.
 
140 lbs.
Defending state champ Andrew Howe of Hanover Central moves up to 152, making Fairfield
senior No. 3 Rhys Canaday (43-0) ââ?¬â?? seventh here last year ââ?¬â?? the top
returner. Canaday should cruise into the upper bracket semifinals,
where either Hobart
junior No. 2 Brennan Cosgrove (42-3 and the defending 135 state
runner-up) or fifth-ranked Indianapolis Cathedral sophomore Gavin
McGinley (39-1) figure to await.
 
But lurking on the bottom half of the 140 draw is top-ranked Munster
senior Eric McGill (39-3), the defending 125 state champ. McGill
appears to have one of the easiest first three rounds of any highly
ranked competitor this weekend ââ?¬â?? he faces No. 7 nine-loss New Albany
senior Martin Woodrome in the first round and possibly No. 8 Jennings
County senior Bobby Willis (49-2) in the semis.
 
Session I:
140 brought a return to normalcy as nobody in the next three weight
classes got upset. The top three experienced varied results in moving
on as McGill earned a 9-1 major decision, Cosgrove beat No. 11
Evansville Mater Dei senior Andy Siebert 5-2, and Canaday pinned
unranked Anderson Highland freshman Sammy Bennett in 1:21. Could
HoosierAuthority.com blogger McGillââ?¬â?¢s dream of a No. 1 vs. No. 2 ââ?¬Å?Game
7� with Cosgrove become reality Saturday night?
 
145 lbs.
Last
year�s runner-up, Cooper Samuels of Floyd Central, has moved up to 160,
making last year�s fourth-place finisher, Merrillville senior No. 1
Jamal Lawrence (the only Hoosier ranked nationally ââ?¬â?? 11th at 152 by Wrestling 411), the favorite. But Lawrence has plenty of competition, not the least of which is a probable lower bracket quarterfinals date with Plainfield senior No. 2 Collin Carlucci.
 
But
Carlucci (34-1) ââ?¬â?? one of four wrestlers at this weight with only one
loss ââ?¬â?? is still smarting from a 13-5 whupping he took for the 145 Evansville Reitz Semistate
title from Evansville Mater Dei senior No. 4 Nick Dewig (44-0). Dewig
should make it to the upper bracket finale, where he could face either
one-loss Culver Academies senior No. 3 Garrett James (46-1 and a
disappointing third at the Merrillville Semistate) or one-loss
Greensburg senior No. 5 Michael Pittman (38-1).
 
In other words, 145 is loaded.
 
Session I:
No surprises here as the loaded class went as planned, with six of the
eight survivors boasting records of one loss or less. This is one of
only two weights (the other being 112) where the top four ranked
wrestlers all remain, and things will get crazy early as No. 1 Lawrence
and No. 2 Carlucci duke it out in the quarterfinals. A James-Dewig
semifinal would be equally juicy. No matter what goes down, whoever
wins this thang will have earned it big time.
 
152 lbs.
Last
year�s fourth-place finisher, Ben Davis senior No. 2 Cahmelan Porter,
returns again and should have little trouble reaching the upper bracket
semifinal � where he should run into virtually unbeatable Andrew Howe
of Hanover Central. Howe (44-0) is ranked No. 1 and has lost only once
in his three-year high school career ââ?¬â?? in the 130 championship two
years ago to three-time state champion Reece Humphrey of Lawrence
North. That�s 142-1 if you are counting.
 
The bottom half features perhaps the weakest bracket of the tournament. A pair of one-loss seniors ââ?¬â?? No. 6 Eric Henning of Carmel
(44-1) and eighth-ranked Chris Dean (42-1) of Northview ââ?¬â?? should meet
in the quarterfinals, with the survivor facing no higher than a 12th-ranked opponent for the right to try to become Howe�s second victim in 147 matches.
 
Session I:
Again, no damage done here to the tops as only two matches were
relatively close. A pair of hot quarterfinals awaits as Howe faces No.
3 Evansville Mater Dei senior Chris Dewitt while Henning and Dean
square off, with that survivor likely facing Porter in the semis.
 
160 lbs.

pic
Floyd Central’s Cooper
Samuels (35-1) celebrates
his 160-pound state title
with his coach.
Photo by Natalie Evans
 

Last year�s fourth-place finisher, Joe Wing of Merrillville,
has moved up to 171, but returning sixth-place 160-pounder Indianapolis
Cathedral senior John Schmaltz returns with a perfect record and the
No. 1 ranking. The 37-0 Schmaltz should cruise into the upper bracket
semifinal, where Floyd Central junior Cooper Samuels (unranked despite
a stellar 45-1 record and a runner-up finish at 145 a year ago) or
Greenfield-Central No. 7 junior Caleb Freeman should await.

 
The lower bracket finds five Top 12 wrestlers, including one undefeated (28-0 Peru
senior No. 8 Derrick Duke) and three ââ?¬â?? Perry Meridian senior No. 2 Kyle
Adams (48-1), New Prairie senior No. 5 Philip Oudhuis (38-1), and
Greencastle senior No. 12 Chris Pingleton (43-1) ââ?¬â?? with one loss. Adams
opens with Pingleton (only third at the Evansville Reitz Semistate), while Duke starts off with fourth-ranked Culver Academies junior Branden James (44-4), a disappointing fourth at the Merrillville Semistate.
 
Should
we see a 1 versus 2 Schmaltz-Adams championship duel, the former has
the upper hand by virtue of his finals victory at the New Castle Semistate.
 
Session I:
Ding-ding-ding! A pair of upsets rocked the crowd back to life at 160,
where Samuels thumped Freeman 10-3 (though it should be noted that
Freeman was basically wrestling from his knees due to a leg injury) and
Pingleton downed Adams 9-5. That sets
the table for Schmaltz ââ?¬â?? a 17-1 tech fall winner over unranked
Scottsburg senior Scott Hughes ââ?¬â?? to waltz into the finals as he needs
only to beat No. 23 Bellmont junior Ryan Baker and then an unranked
semifinal opponent. But then that�s why they put on the headgear, isn�t
it?
 
171 lbs.
Mishawaka�s
Ian Hinton has moved up to 189, leaving a pretty clear-cut road for
last year�s sixth-place finisher, Evansville Memorial senior No. 1 Matt
Powless (47-0), to face Merrillville
senior No. 2 Joe Wing (43-1) in the finals. Wing took fourth at 160
last year and has a relatively easy path to the championship, with No.
17 Frank Troiano of Indianapolis Cathedral (45-1) possibly his biggest
obstacle in the lower bracket semis.
 
Up
top, Powless has a tougher draw, with a potential battle with fellow
undefeated No. 4 Ryan Konrath of Jimtown (40-0) looming in the
semifinals. Also of note for Powless is a probable quarterfinals date
with Crown Point junior No. 8 Andrew Szymborski (35-4), whom Wing beat
for the Merrillville Semistate title and whose mom has written a
journal for HoosierAuthority.com (thanks, Diana!).
 
Session I:
No shockers here as only two of the matches ââ?¬â?? Wingââ?¬â?¢s 5-4 decision over
No. 16 Rushville senior Robert Beeler and Szymborski�s 3-2 win over
unranked Noblesville senior John Tchoula ââ?¬â?? were especially close.
Powless won by fall at 3:00 over No. 19 Garrett senior Beau Schendel
and appears destined for that semifinal hookup with Konrath, an
impressive 12-3 winner over No. 5 Greencastle senior Robert Bittles.
 
189 lbs.
Northridge
senior No. 3 Joe Gibson (33-5) and fourth-ranked Leo senior Chad Friend
(37-0) finished sixth and seventh, respectively, at 189 a year ago and
are in opposite brackets this year. Friend looks to have the better
matchups in the lower half (just three other ranked foes), with
Evansville Mater Dei junior No. 5 Jake Schneider (39-1) appearing to be
his only threat in a possible semifinal battle.
 
Gibson,
meanwhile, finds five other ranked foes in the top half, including a
probable quarterfinals match with top-ranked Ian Hinton of Mishawaka.
Yikes. The 171 state champ last year and 171 runner-up in 2005, Hinton
(44-0) moves up one class and has lost just once in his last 130
matches.
 
If March is one prohibitive favorite at 119, then Hinton is the other at 189.
 
Session I:
Zero upsets at 189, where only three of the matches ââ?¬â?? Schneiderââ?¬â?¢s 3-2
decision over unranked Whitko senior Bryan Boggs, No. 16 Valparaiso
senior Brandon Tritle�s 6-3 win over unranked Indianapolis Chatard
junior Michael Dum, and No. 17 Crown Point sophomore Marcus
Shrewsburyââ?¬â?¢s 1-0 eclipse of unranked Carmel senior Josh Sturek ââ?¬â?? were
close. Making matters worse for future Hinton foes is not only a
lackluster 9-2 victory over unranked and 11-loss Crawfordsville
sophomore Chaz Brock, but also that a typo in the official program says
Ian ââ?¬Å?Hinderââ?¬Â is the defending champion (dââ?¬â?¢oh!).
 
215 lbs.
The
eight placewinners from a year ago were all seniors, meaning somebody
new will take home the 215 title this year. (Carlos Mencia alert:
DEE-dee-DEE!!). North Central (Indianapolis)
senior No. 21 Luke Watkins (13-0) and Penn senior No. 3 Jeremiah
Maggart (38-8) ââ?¬â?? both moved up after placing fifth and eighth,
respectively, at 189 last year.
 
Unluckily
for Maggart ââ?¬â?? who barely qualified after finishing fourth at the
Merrillville Semistate ââ?¬â?? the 215 lower bracket is the only one out of
28 in the entire state finals where every wrestler is ranked. And it
includes top-ranked South Bend Riley junior George Malone (42-0).
 
Watkins
hardly catches a break with five ranked opponents on top where,
strangely, the two wrestlers with the best records (Watkins and 37-1
Norwell junior No. 23 Hunter Harper) have the worst rankings. Thus, it
seems pretty wide open for who gets to tackle Malone in the finals.
 
Session I:
The final upset of the evening came at 215, where Harper beat No. 14
Greensburg senior Bobby Scudder 10-3. Malone, meanwhile, got past a
tough first-round opponent in sixth-ranked Brown County
junior Chandler Coffey 6-2 and figures to easily make the finals as the
three remaining foes in his bracket have a combined 18 losses.
 
Heavyweight
Benton
Central senior Bryan Benner finished fifth here a year ago and comes to
Conseco with a No. 1 ranking and a 46-1 record. That one loss, however,
came in the Merrillville Semistate semis to Mishawaka
junior No. 11 Randy Morin (42-3), who then lost in the finals to Glenn
senior No. 20 Derek Traversa. Benner could get another shot at Morin in
the lower half semifinal, but he will have to first get past
second-ranked Perry Meridian junior Chico Adams (49-0) in the quarters.
 
Despite
that low ranking, Traversa (34-1) has by far the best record of the
upper bracket eight ââ?¬â?? and he doesnââ?¬â?¢t have to wade through Adams,
Benner, or Morin to get to the finals. Assuming he stays hot, Traversa
would probably face Martinsville senior No. 4 Dustin Beliles in the semis. The prize? Wading boots.
 
Session I:
Ixnay on the ockers-shay at heavyweight, where the third No. 1 vs. No.
2 quarterfinal of Saturday morning is set. While Benner certainly had
no breather in a 3-0 win over unranked Evansville Reitz junior Zachary
Campbell, Adams scored a first-period
pin of the wrestler with the most defeats in the state finals: 16-loss
unranked Fort Wayne Luers senior Aaron Myers. We�ll see if all that
extra rest pays off and Chico can be the man.
 
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