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PIAA State Wrestling Tournament

Brad Wilson also wrote this gem about Jody this morning - which I'm going to post in full (sorry Brad, I'll double my subscription).
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Drama has always followed Jody Karam.

“I like life at 200 miles an hour,” said the departing Easton head wrestling coach after he coached the final bout of his career Saturday evening at the Giant Center in Hershey.

For better or worse, from Delaware Valley to Liberty to Easton, the veteran wrestling coach has always attracted attention, always had a certain style, a certain intensity, a certain – at times, overwhelming – passion that makes him one of the most distinctive, and occasionally divisive, and even dramatic, figures in Lehigh Valley wrestling.

The term “larger than life” is overused, we think, but one of the reasons Lehigh Valley wrestling has been such a successful, and colorful, affair for decades and enjoys a unique niche in regional culture is the presence of people like Karam, like Steve Powell, like Rick Thompson, like Dave Crowell, like Don Rohn and Vince Fitz and Ray Nunamaker and a hundred others, from broadcasters to officials to reporters, whose mere presence commanded attention.

Such figures rarely leave the stage quietly – and Karam surely didn’t leave his alma mater quietly.

The final bout of Karam’s career, his last time in his well-coiffed corner – Karam’s elegant sense of fashion is one of his more striking aspects – turned out to be a PIAA 3A championship final.

Of course it did.

And it ended with Easton junior Nick Salamone winning a tense, dramatic bout, 4-3, over Cedar Cliff sophomore Kavin Mulyeart, snapping a 14-year drought of state champs for the Red Rovers.

Of course it did.

And the exuberant celebration reached its high point when Karam picked up Salamone and tossed him over the hockey boards into a mosh pit of roaring Red Rovers supporters.

Of course he did.

And then Karam walked away.

“When you can quit your job on your best day, it’s the right decision,” Karam said.

Salamone was the right instrument, too. The Rovers junior’s physicality and intensity reminded longtime observers of great wrestlers Karam had coached before, from Mario Stuart to Luke Werner to the Gunning brothers, Jake and Andrew. Only Andrew of those won a state championship – it’s a very hard thing to do, and the slightest factor can turn champs into runner-ups – but in a lot of ways, Salamone was Karam’s perfect pupil.

“Nick’s as wholesome as it gets, but he’s a fierce competitor,” Karam said. “That’s one of the many things I love about him, the fierceness he has, the intensity, As weird as it gets, if you were making a kid out of a catalog and picking parts, you pretty much nailed it with this one. Nick fits the mold of the kind of kids I want to work with.”

Salamone was critical to Karam’s success on his return to his alma mater in another way. It was no secret that Easton, one of the state’s, if not the nation’s, premier scholastic wrestling programs, was a mess. The Easton-area youth programs, always productive, were still productive – producing wrestlers for other schools, that is.

If Karam was to have a chance to restore the Red Rovers to glory, that had to stop.

“When I walked into the program, there were seven or eight kids wrestling for teams that should have been wrestling for Easton,” Karam said. “Nick was the first one that stayed at Easton when I got the job. That commitment said a lot. When his father called me and said, ‘We’re staying at Easton,’ that stopped the bleeding. And that was an important step in the right direction because I knew the potential of this kid. So, when we kept him, that was inspiring and encouraging.”

For both sides.

“Words can’t explain,” Salamone said of what it meant to wrestle for Karam. “I’m glad I chose Easton, that’s all I’ve got to say.”

Karam also took steps in a different direction to help Salamone. He recognized top wrestlers need top competition to reach the top, and Easton’s milquetoast schedule wasn’t getting it done.

“We changed our schedule drastically,” Karam said. “When we left this tournament one year ago, I felt like a total loser and that I had failed my team, because we had one medal (Salamone’s eighth place). So, we made some serious changes, and I don’t think there’s anyone in (PIAA) 3A that can rival the schedule we put together. It was brutal, and the evidence was that we had four or five kids injured – and we never have kids injured – because of the grind and schedule we put together with the intent of winning at Hershey.”

As Karam noted, the success of the strategy of adding tough tournaments such as Beast of the East and Escape the Rock was limited – the Rovers’ seven qualifiers netted one medal, but then, what a medal.

“Our goal was to come here and go home with a bunch of medals,” Karam said. “Unfortunately, we’re not leaving with a bunch of medals, but fortunately, we’re leaving with the right medal.”

Championships have a way of putting everything else in the shade. Easton may yet need more refinement and improvement to become a Hershey medal machine such as Nazareth, which won four this weekend including a championship, and has won 50 medals since 2016, but that will up to the next head coach, not Karam.

“People are like, ‘Oh, you’re leaving your job now’ (after winning a state title), and, I say ‘Yeah,’” Karam said, “Because when you can quit your job on your best day, it’s the right decision. So, Nick made that decision easy for me. He really did.”

It also reinforced that Karam’s decision not to quit in March 2024 was the correct one.

“I resigned last year, and (Easton athletic director) Matt Baltz called me in and said, ‘This is not the year to resign,” Karam said. “I said, ‘I think in the best interest of Easton wrestling, I am done.’ And Matt said, “If you really have the best interest in Easton wrestling, you’ll stay one more year.’ And I did, and there were times this year where I was saying I stayed one year too long. Because what’s going to be better than taking your team to the state (duals) finals, so many kids felt that success and enjoyed it.

“But I tell you what – today surpassed (going) to the team state final. I never talked about winning an individual state championship because I didn’t know if it was obtainable or not. But when I picked up Nick and threw him into the bunch of Easton kids who were there supporting him, every one of those kids was just as happy as Nick was for that championship. That says a lot right there.”

When Karam, who retires with a 440-166-1 record, took the job at Easton five years ago, he promised five things: that the Red Rovers would end long losing streaks to rivals Bethlehem Catholic, Nazareth, Northampton and Phillipsburg and that the Rovers would be back in the team state finals.

Promises made, promises kept.

The last Rovers finalist before Salamone was Matt Cruise in 2022 and he ran into Nazareth’s three-time champion Sean Kinney in the final. The Rovers finalist before Cruise, Andrew Balukas in 2019, ran into Nate Schon of Selinsgrove, one of the three PIAA wrestlers to ever beat Kinney.

You get the idea. But Karam never gave up hope.

“I kept (winning an individual champion) in my back pocket,” Karam said. “I definitely wanted this so badly, The way it happened, I couldn’t be more happy.”

One might the same about Karam’s entire spell at Easton.

“I am definitely leaving the program a whole lot better than when I took it over,” Karam said. “There’s talent in the pipeline coming through and it’s going to stay. The future looks bright. It’s a great time to be a part of Easton wrestling right now. Today’s a great day, but tomorrow’s going to be even better.”

It will be for Jody Karam as well. Karam has, unusually so for a high-level wrestling figure, never completely defined himself by the sport in his 34 years as a head coach. He has a lot going on.

For one, he’s a grandfather.

“Jettson, Sage’s son,” Karam said. “He was born at the end of May, and has the same initials I do, JFK, you have to love my marketing thing. And we have an Easton singlet for him.”

But wait, there’s more.

“The plan now is try and find sponsorship for Sage, keep him racing a couple of more years in NASCAR, try and find the best steak in Pennsylvania, and I really want to sell a whole bunch of more houses. I really enjoy that, I really do. And see how life goes.”

Life – and Easton wrestling – goes very well for Jody Karam right now. And we couldn’t be happier for it.
 
Any info on what would be the FCA wrestlers home school districts?
I put this together when they dualed Sem. Based on PJW states entries/TrackWrestling profiles.

Faith Christian Academy
107: Shane Young - North Penn
114: Freddy Bachmann - North Penn
121: Gauge Botero - North Penn
127: Joey Bachmann - North Penn
133: Henry Racich - Plymouth-Whitemarsh
139: Jake Stein - New Hope-Solebury
145: Mason Wagner - Souderton
152: Max Stein - New Hope-Solebury
160: Cael Wiedemoyer - Pennridge
160: Chase Hontz - Spring-Ford
172: Nick Singer - Boyertown
189: Adam Waters - Pottsgrove
215: Jason Singer - Boyertown
285: Mark Effendian- Neshaminy

I put Wiedemoyer there because even though he didn’t make the lineup, he’s a state medalist and a Lehigh commit.

Interestingly, Brayden Wenrich, who was in state finals in 3A for Northampton, entered a bunch of events in junior high as affiliated with FCA, but ultimately stayed at Northampton. They’ll have Riley Crandall from Emmaus as their 107 next year, so starting to sneak into D11.

The Bachmann brothers grew up in the city - their dad was the coach at Edison and they trained at the Philly PAL club that is now part of the Beat the Streets network. Same as the O’Neills from Malvern Prep.
 
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The other big private powers

Bethlehem Catholic
107: Nico Emili - Easton
114: Louden Hower - Quakertown (FCA)
121: Reef Dillard - Nazareth
127; Keanu Dillard - Nazareth
133: Andre Cerrato - Nazareth
139: Ryder Campbell - Palisades
145: Marco Frinzi - Quakertown
152: Mason Thomas - Whitehall
160: Charlie Scanlan - Freedom
172: Shane McFillin - Northampton
189: James DeLuise - Bangor
215: Connor Gillahan - Upper Perkiomen (FCA)

Bishop McCort
107: Avery Bassett - Forest Hills
114: Eli Herring - Tennessee
121: Jack Silfes - Dallas Area (?)
127: Austin Carfley - Windber
133: Jax Forest - North Carolins
139: Sam Herring - Tennessee
145: Bo Bassett - Forest Hills
152: Devon Margo - Forest Hills
160: Melvin Miller - Forest Hills
172:Jayden O’Ferrill - Johnstown
189: CJ Pensiero - Somerset
215: Marquez Gordon - Laurel Highland (?)
285: Caleb Rodriguez - Florida
152: Owen McMullen - United
145: Jackson Butler - Windber

This one was a little harder, a lot of kids entered PJW and other events for McCort. A lot of kids then have their track profile as Johnstown, where McCort is located. Silfes was at Wyoming Seminary, which might be why track says Dallas. One google result had him on team New Hampshire for an event, so he may have been up there before boarding school. Mccort has really juiced the Johnstown real estate market.
 
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Was hoping to see Mutarelli at 133. Sement will be facing a future Big 10 opponent.


 
Mutarelli has the unfortunate luck of being in the same weight as Aaron Seidel, who won three state titles and set the state wins record by going 206-4. Lost in finals to Jax Forest, but they were 1 and 2 in the country.

Here are some preliminary thoughts on Dapper Dan (I still call it that)

121: #17 Ethan Timar, St. Edward (OH) (Virginia) vs #5 Gauge Botero, Faith Christian (Michigan)
Timar is a good wrestler from maybe the best high school program of the last 50 years. He lost pretty handily to 3A state champ Nick Salamone (Easton) who Botero beat during the season.

127: #3 Ronnie Ramirez, Walnut (CA) (Oklahoma State) vs #4 Nate Desmond, Wyoming Seminary/Bethlehem Catholic (Penn State)
These two have split matches over the last year and are two of the best lightweights in America. Fun to get Desmond back for a Pennsylvania event, he won two state titles at Becahi before transferring to Wyoming Seminary (after his dad didn’t get the Becahi head coaching job).

133: #5 Matt Botello, Wyoming Seminary (MA) (North Carolina) vs #2 Aaron Seidel, Northern Lebanon (Virginia Tech)
Botello is a nice wrestler, but Seidel should roll. He’s a solid bet to be an All American for the Hokies.

139: #3 Sergio Vega, Sunmyside (AZ) (Oklahoma State) vs #4 (at 145) Tahir Parkins, Nazareth (Rutgers)
Vega is an absolute monster. One of the best pound-for-pound kids in America, and somebody who I think David Taylor expects will come in and compete for national titles. Parkins is very good, he’ll have his hands full.

145: #2 Nikade Zinkin, Clovis (CA) (Nebraska) vs #5 Eren Sement, Council Rock North (Michigan)
Zinkin is obviously really good, but this is one where Sement can hang and possibly knock him off.

152: #1 Daniel Zepeda, Gilroy (CA) (NC State) vs #5 Maddox Shaw, Thomas Jefferson (Ohio State)
Zepeda has had a fabulous rivalry with Bo Bassett. I think, as good as Shaw is, Zepeda is a step above.

160: #1 Landon Robineau, St. Michael Albertville (MN) (Oklahoma State) vs #3 Collin Gaj, Quakertown (Virginia Tech OR Kollin Rath, Bethlehem Catholic (Missouri)
He’s won 188 matches in a row. One of the best pound-for-pound kids in the country and another massive recruit for David Taylor. I don’t know if he’s wrestling Gaj or Rath, who I both think will be elite college wrestlers, but Robineau is the favorite.

160: #3 (at 165) Alessio Peretin, (NJ) (Cornell) vs Gaj/Rath
Peretin is really good, I like Gaj or Rath here. Also, great to get Kollin Rath back at Dapper Dan after spending the year at the OTC. One of my favorite PA high school kids to watch, even if he went to Becahi.

172: #1 LD Lockett, Stillwater (OK) (Oklahoma State) vs #5 Asher Cunningham, State College (Penn State)
Asher has been juuuust short of the big top national tier with Ryan Burton (NJ) and Will Henckel (Blair) beating him in big tournament finals. Lockett is a step above those two. Will be a good measuring stick before he joins the Penn State room that is insane 149 through 285.

189: #3 Lane Foard, (VA) (Wyoming) vs #18 Ty Morrison, West Perry (Pitt-Johnstown)
Probably PA’s weakest weight, which is too bad, because I think it’s the second weakest after 121 for Team USA. 2A state champ Adam Waters tech’d Foard this year.

215: #3 Angelo Parada, Poway (CA) (Stanford) vs #6 Austin Johnson, Munch (Oklahoma State)
Fourth future Cowboy of the evening and first for Team PA, Johnson can absolutely win this match. Fun set of big guys.

285: #2 Rocco Dellagatta, St. John Vianny (NJ) (Cornell) vs Rowan Holmes, Somerset (Lehigh)
Dellagatta is probably the best heavyweight in the country. Holmes upset a big favorite at PA states, why not do the same thing here. Holmes beat #7 Mark Effendian in state finals.
 
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Here’s how Willie Saylor has these guys in his recruiting rankings for the senior class for the Team USA guys:

#2 LD Lockett
#5 Landon Robineau
#6 Daniel Zepeda
#7 Sergio Vega
#12 Alessio Peretin
#22 Angelo Posada
#29 Ronnie Ramirez
#39 Nikade Zinkin
#40 Rocco Dellagatta
#41 Matt Botello
#44 Lane Foard
#204 Ethan Timar
 
I kind of can’t believe Flo put the whole thing on YouTube. That is not how things have operated in Flo 2.0, since all the VC money came in and they want to paywall everything. Tells me their views are good enough on Youtube that they want the revenue stream.

It was fun to have Easton legend Steve Powell doing color. I think I’ve made apparent he’s one of my favorites. Always think he’s insightful. They kept his stories in check though, he’s got a million.
 
I’ve got thoughts. Pennsylvania kids went something like 3-12 in the All American round, that didn’t help. But it was the lowest number of qualifiers (41) in years too.
Pennsylvania had it’s most disappointing tournament in years, with just six All Americans from it’s 41 qualifiers, both the lowest numbers in years. I took a look at the recruiting rankings for the classes that were eligible to wrestle at the NCAA tournament this year and came up with some overarching patterns. In short, I think this is a blip, but it is something to monitor going forward, particularly with the very highly rated classes that are currently in high school.

The Forever In College COVID Kids Are Few
One of the striking graphics of the NCAA tournament was the number of All Americans who were in the high school class of 2019. These are wrestlers in their sixth year of college, so they could be as old as 25 wrestling 19 year old freshmen. This would be wrestlers who took a redshirt year other than 2021 (most of them in 2020), then had a free year in 2021, then could start their four year eligibility clock when in their third year of college. The most notable of these is a Pennsylvania kid, Carter Starocci, who won his fifth NCAA title, a record that will likely never be matched and certainly not broken. But beyond Starocci, the only 2019 kids I could find that were top recruits were Jared McGill (NCAA qualifier, but never a factor) and Edmond Ruth, who lost in the All American round. This is also a class of busts – Ryan Anderson was an academic non-qualifier and never got it together to have a career, Julian Chlebove was a massive disappointment at the NCAA level, and the rest of the top ten were never really factors in college.

The 2020 and 2021 Graduating Classes Were Massive Disappointments
The class of 2020 is a lot of “oh yeah, I remember that guy, whatever happened to him?” Gerrit Nijenhuis was the top guy in his class, and while he qualified for the tournament multiple times, he never jumped levels to being an AA threat. Thayne Lawrence, Gaige Garcia, Colby Whitehill, Sam Hillegan, Kenny Hermann, Cole Handlovic were all national caliber recruits who were never consistent starters. Ed Scott was an All American in the past, but injuries have slowed his career. The 2021 class is even more of a minefield. Lenny Pinto lost in the All American round for the second straight year, he’s the top recruit from PA in that group. Nobody else in the top ten is close to a threat, and I think you could put the “bust” label on seven of the top 11 recruits in the class. Even Paniro Johnson, who was the four seed this year, lost a lot of his eligibility to the huge gambling scandal at Iowa State. It’s a rough group in hindsight.

Lots of Stars in Redshirt
The biggest story of PA kids in college might be who wasn’t in Philly this weekend. Ryan Crookham would have been the favorite at 133 after finishing 3rd as a redshirt freshman (with two wins over the NCAA champ), but an elbow injury cost him his season. Ty Watters (West Virginia) was an All American as a true freshman but also had to take a medical year this season. Bret Unger (Cornell), Jackson Arrington (NC State), and Sonny Sasso (Virginia Tech) are all guys who could make the All American leap but took developmental redshirt years for lineup reasons. You also had returning NCAA finalist Rocco Welsh (Ohio State) take the year off while fifth year senior Carson Kharchla finished his eligibility, he’ll be a title contender next season. And most of the top true freshmen from PA sat out the year, with just #2 Conner Harer (Rutgers) and #10 Dillon Bechtold (Bucknell) wrestling – Bechtold was an NCAA qualifier and Harer didn’t quite make it through the meat grinder that is the Big Ten.

Ivy League Disappointment?
Looking at these rankings, one thing I notice is the amount of high level PA kids who went to Ivy League schools and did not have the careers their recruiting rankings would indicate. One thing that I don’t think kids realize about the Ivy League schools is that they do not give athletic scholarships, but in turn, they have tons of aid money that they very generously provide to wrestlers and in turn bring in massive recruiting classes, where they just have kids duke it out once they get to the room. It’s kind of like an unlimited scholarship model (which I know coaches complain about) but also lets really talented kids kind of get stuck where they’re not going to wrestle, but they’re not going to leave because they’re at Cornell, Princeton, Harvard or Columbia. Lehigh to an extent also gets away with this despite giving true scholarships, but they split money and find aid money about as well as their Ivy League counterparts.

Going Forward
For next season, I think the 2022 group needs to be well represented on the podium. So far, Crookham, Levi Haines, Mac Stout, and Jacob Van Dee have AA’d. Nick Feldman not being part of that group is a disappointment so far and I think Ohio State is depending on him getting on the podium next year. Jackson Arrington should be ready to make that leap too, and somebody like Jude Swisher was an unexpected blood round finisher this year, can he improve on that? Then the 2023 gropu could have breakouts – Welsh and Watters are NCAA finalist talents who redshirted, Tyler Kasak has taken third twice and is a bona fide star. Who else is going to do that? Mac Church had big recruiting hype, but he’s also gained 25 pounds in college and isn’t as dynamic at 165 as he was at 141. Vinny Kilkeary hasn’t made the Ohio State lineup yet, nor has Sonny Sasso at Virginia Tech. Dylan Evans was a qualifier, but went 0-2. This group is going to be what improves Pennsylvania’s performance. I don’t think the 2024 class has a ton of stars – I like Rune Lawrence, but am skepitcal of West Virginia’s development. Harer had a promising freshman year, Pierson Manville has had some freestyle success in redshirt. The guy I have my eye on is Tucker Hogan at Lock Haven, who I thought was really well prepped for college as a high school kid and I’d like to see how he blossoms. Then the senior class is on paper loaded – do guys like Maddox Shaw, Aaron Seidel, Asher Cunningham, Collin Gaj, Tahir Parkins, etc. wrestle right away and how quickly are they in an AA conversation?
 
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For comparison, Willie Saylor released his early "Crystal Ball" for 2026, and here are his predicted Pennsylvania All American:
125: #6 Sheldon Seymour, Troy (Lehigh)
133: #1 Ryan Crookham, Saucon Valley/Notre Dame (Lehigh)
149: #3 Ty Watters, West Allegheny (West Virginia)
157: #1 Tyler Kasak, Bethlehem Catholic (Penn State)
157: #6 Jackson Arrington, Forest Hills (NC State)
174: #1 Levi Haines, Biglerville (Penn State)
184: #3 Rocco Welsh, Waynesburg (Ohio State)
197: #8 Mac Stout, Mount Lebanon (Pittsburgh)
285: #4 Nathan Taylor, Brookville (Lehigh)
285: #7 Nick Feldman, Malvern Prep (Ohio State)

Ten All Americans is back to a normal Pennsylvania output (though slightly lower than we'd like) and would have been the most of any state this year.

And he's got a big set predicted to make the All American round, so very much in the hunt. The AA number really swells of two or three of these guys can get on the podium. Van Dee has already been there. I would be crushed if Lenny Pinto loses in the blood round three years in a row - great kid, incredibly talented and fun to watch.
133: R12 Jacob Van Dee, Erie Cathedral Prep (Nebraska)
149: R12 Paniro Johnson, Erie Cathedral Prep (Iowa State)
157: R12 Jude Swisher, State College (Penn)
174: R12 Luca Augustine, Waynesburg (Pittsburgh)
184: R12 Lenny Pinto, Stroudsburg (Nebraska)
197: R12 Sonny Sasso, Nazareth (Virginia Tech)
197: R12 Luke Stout, Mount Lebanon (Princeton)
197: R12 Dillon Bechtold, Owen J Roberts (Bucknell)
285: BR Dayton Pitzer, Mount Pleasant (Pittsburgh)
 
Mutarelli has the unfortunate luck of being in the same weight as Aaron Seidel, who won three state titles and set the state wins record by going 206-4. Lost in finals to Jax Forest, but they were 1 and 2 in the country.

Here are some preliminary thoughts on Dapper Dan (I still call it that)

121: #17 Ethan Timar, St. Edward (OH) (Virginia) vs #5 Gauge Botero, Faith Christian (Michigan)
Timar is a good wrestler from maybe the best high school program of the last 50 years. He lost pretty handily to 3A state champ Nick Salamone (Easton) who Botero beat during the season.

127: #3 Ronnie Ramirez, Walnut (CA) (Oklahoma State) vs #4 Nate Desmond, Wyoming Seminary/Bethlehem Catholic (Penn State)
These two have split matches over the last year and are two of the best lightweights in America. Fun to get Desmond back for a Pennsylvania event, he won two state titles at Becahi before transferring to Wyoming Seminary (after his dad didn’t get the Becahi head coaching job).

133: #5 Matt Botello, Wyoming Seminary (MA) (North Carolina) vs #2 Aaron Seidel, Northern Lebanon (Virginia Tech)
Botello is a nice wrestler, but Seidel should roll. He’s a solid bet to be an All American for the Hokies.

139: #3 Sergio Vega, Sunmyside (AZ) (Oklahoma State) vs #4 (at 145) Tahir Parkins, Nazareth (Rutgers)
Vega is an absolute monster. One of the best pound-for-pound kids in America, and somebody who I think David Taylor expects will come in and compete for national titles. Parkins is very good, he’ll have his hands full.

145: #2 Nikade Zinkin, Clovis (CA) (Nebraska) vs #5 Eren Sement, Council Rock North (Michigan)
Zinkin is obviously really good, but this is one where Sement can hang and possibly knock him off.

152: #1 Daniel Zepeda, Gilroy (CA) (NC State) vs #5 Maddox Shaw, Thomas Jefferson (Ohio State)
Zepeda has had a fabulous rivalry with Bo Bassett. I think, as good as Shaw is, Zepeda is a step above.

160: #1 Landon Robineau, St. Michael Albertville (MN) (Oklahoma State) vs #3 Collin Gaj, Quakertown (Virginia Tech OR Kollin Rath, Bethlehem Catholic (Missouri)
He’s won 188 matches in a row. One of the best pound-for-pound kids in the country and another massive recruit for David Taylor. I don’t know if he’s wrestling Gaj or Rath, who I both think will be elite college wrestlers, but Robineau is the favorite.

160: #3 (at 165) Alessio Peretin, (NJ) (Cornell) vs Gaj/Rath
Peretin is really good, I like Gaj or Rath here. Also, great to get Kollin Rath back at Dapper Dan after spending the year at the OTC. One of my favorite PA high school kids to watch, even if he went to Becahi.

172: #1 LD Lockett, Stillwater (OK) (Oklahoma State) vs #5 Asher Cunningham, State College (Penn State)
Asher has been juuuust short of the big top national tier with Ryan Burton (NJ) and Will Henckel (Blair) beating him in big tournament finals. Lockett is a step above those two. Will be a good measuring stick before he joins the Penn State room that is insane 149 through 285.

189: #3 Lane Foard, (VA) (Wyoming) vs #18 Ty Morrison, West Perry (Pitt-Johnstown)
Probably PA’s weakest weight, which is too bad, because I think it’s the second weakest after 121 for Team USA. 2A state champ Adam Waters tech’d Foard this year.

215: #3 Angelo Parada, Poway (CA) (Stanford) vs #6 Austin Johnson, Munch (Oklahoma State)
Fourth future Cowboy of the evening and first for Team PA, Johnson can absolutely win this match. Fun set of big guys.

285: #2 Rocco Dellagatta, St. John Vianny (NJ) (Cornell) vs Rowan Holmes, Somerset (Lehigh)
Dellagatta is probably the best heavyweight in the country. Holmes upset a big favorite at PA states, why not do the same thing here. Holmes beat #7 Mark Effendian in state finals.
Collin Gaj opens Dapper Dan with a nice 7-1 win over Alessio Peretin. Dee Lockett tech’d Bode Marlow, who was the sub for Asher Cunningham. Foarde and Ty Morrison on now.
 
You don’t see a lot of crab rides at 215, this Possda kid is fun.

Really well wrestled match - Posada won a scramble with Johnson with 7 seconds left to win 4-1. Both guys really good athletes. They also both definitely look like they’ll have to go down to 197 in college.
 
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