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    #MondayMatness with Steve Krah: Jimtown’s Buchanan focuses on mental game, stays positive for teammates

    By STEVE KRAH
    stvkrh905@gmail.com

    Landon Buchanan landed back on top at the Elkhart Sectional after being forced to injury default in the finals in 2021.
    Buchanan, a Jimtown High School senior, moved to 33-2 on the 2021-22 season with a second-period pin victory in Saturday’s finals.
    A sectional runner-up at 160 a year ago, he was first at 145 in 2020 and second at 145 in 2019.
    A Fort Wayne Semistate champion and eighth-place finisher at the State Finals in 2021, he lost in the second round at semistate in 2020 and the first round at semistate in 2019.
    Buchanan talks about his senior season.
    “I haven’t worked too much on technique,” says Buchanan. “I think I have the technique. It’s just more mental for me. It’s knowing what I need to get to and pushing myself.”
    Like many successful grapplers, Buchanan started focusing on the sport before high school.
    “It all kind of changed in middle school,” says Buchanan. “I started coming in with the high school (team) and see how they practice. I really made a jump there. I learned how to practice with (Martin Moyer).”
    Buchanan was a standout for Jimtown’s 9-3 football team in the fall.
    “It took awhile to get into the rhythm of things,” says Buchanan of the transition from gridiron to mat in the fall. “The conditioning is a lot different.”
    While he is not sure where, Buchanan does plan to wrestle in college and will likely study business.
    “I’m trying to find the best fit for me,” said Buchanan. “
    While he likes to do well as an individual, he also cares about being part of a team which had six weight class winners (himself plus  junior Alex Moyer at 106, senior Aaron DeLaLuz at 120, junior Mikey Kallimani at 126, senior Noah Eberhart at 138 and junior Conner Watts at 145) and lost to Elkhart by a whisker (223.5 to 223) for the 2022 sectional team championship.
    “We have guys with so many different wrestling styles — we’ve got strong guys, fast guys, funky guys,” says Buchanan, who moves on to the Feb. 5 Goshen Regional. “We’ve got everything you need.”
    Jimmies head coach Jerimiah Maggart encourages Buchanan to be a team leader.
    “I just encourage my teammates,” says Buchanan. “They all know what they need to do. I’m yelling for them and getting excited.
    “When I’m not in matches I’m on the sideline just like my coaches.”
    Maggart appreciates the example Buchanan sets.
    “He’s not loud, but he’ll do anything to help his teammates, which is awesome” says Maggart. “He leads by example. He never misses practice and he works. He stays after practice and helps the little kids every time.”
    Maggart also sees an athlete that is focused on his goals.
    “He’s got the determination and drive and he’s very level-headed,” says Maggart. “You know that when some kids lose you can’t talk two them for a few minutes. I could walk right up to him and talk to him.
    “He gets it. He’s easy to coach and break things down. That’s really one of the coolest things.”
    Landon is the third of Eric and Judy Buchanan’s four children. His older siblings are Mitchell Smith and Cheyenne Smith. His younger brother is Hayden Buchanan.
    “He’s 10 and he’s a pretty tough wrestler,” says Landon.

    High School News

    2022 Regional Wrestling Brackets

    1. Hobart | 9 am CT
    Feeder Sectionals: East Chicago Central, Portage.
    Hobart-1.pdf
     
    2. Crown Point | 8 am CT
    Feeder Sectionals: Crown Point, LaPorte.
    Crown Point-1.pdf
     
    3. Penn | 8 am ET
    Feeder Sectionals: Mishawaka, Plymouth.
    Penn-1.pdf
     
    4. Logansport | 8 am ET
    Feeder Sectionals: Lafayette Jefferson, Twin Lakes.
    Logansport-1.pdf
     
    5. Goshen | 8 am ET
    Feeder Sectionals: Elkhart, West Noble.
    Goshen-1.pdf
     
    6. Carroll (Fort Wayne) | 8 am ET
    Feeder Sectionals: Carroll (Fort Wayne), New Haven.
    Carroll-2.pdf
     
    7. Maconaquah | 9:30 am ET
    Feeder Sectionals: Peru, Oak Hill.
    Maconaquah-1.pdf
     
    8. Jay County | 8:30 am ET
    Feeder Sectionals: Delta, Jay County.
    Jay County-1.pdf
     
    9. North Montgomery | 9 am ET
    Feeder Sectionals: Crawfordsville, Frankfort.
    North Montgomery-1.pdf
     
    10. Pendleton Heights | 8 am ET
    Feeder Sectionals: Elwood, Indianapolis Arsenal Technical.
    Pendleton Heights-1.pdf
     
    11. Perry Meridian | 8 am ET
    Feeder Sectionals: Shelbyville, Southport.
    Perry Meridian-1.pdf
     
    12. Richmond | 8 am ET
    Feeder Sectionals: South Dearborn, Tri.
    Richmond-1.pdf
     
    13. Mooresville | 8 am ET
    Feeder Sectionals: Avon, Mooresville.
    Mooresville-1.pdf
     
    14. Bloomington South | 8 am ET
    Feeder Sectionals: Bloomington North, Southridge.
    Bloomington South-1.pdf
     
    15. Jeffersonville | 9 am ET
    Feeder Sectionals: Jeffersonville, Jennings County.
    Jeffersonville-1.pdf
     
    16. Castle | 8 am CT
    Feeder Sectionals: Castle, Evansville Central.
    Castle-1.pdf
     
     
    Pendleton Heights.pdf Penn.pdf Perry Meridian.pdf Richmond.pdf Bloomington South.pdf Carroll.pdf Castle.pdf Crown Point.pdf Goshen.pdf Hobart.pdf Jay County.pdf Jeffersonville.pdf Logansport.pdf Maconaquah.pdf Mooresville.pdf North Montgomery.pdf Maconaquah-1.pdf

    Gorilla Radio
    507

    IndianaMat Gorilla Radio Episode 124

    Mike and Joe recap the Mount Carmel vs. Crown Point dual to start the show. After that they talk about upcoming sectional wrestling and the big storylines to watch. Lastly, they go into some youth wrestling discussion.
     
     

    Gorilla Radio
    603 1

    High School Wrestling Weekly Season 3 Episode 12

    Rex Brewer and Dane Fuelling get us all caught up on the week of wrestling, and are joined by several guests, to include Muncie Central Coach AJ Bradley and Dwenger Coach John Tone, along with a couple surprise guests as well.

    Feature Articles
    1648

    #MondayMatness with Steve Krah: Lakeland record setter Miller hoping to break through in state tournament

    Photo by Nathaniel Labhart
     
    By STEVE KRAH
    stvkrh905@gmail.com

    Lakeland High School senior Ben Miller won his third Northeast Corner Conference wrestling title Saturday, Jan. 22 at Lakeland.
    Miller, who has a single-season school record 74 takedowns to go with 118 career victories — 26 as a freshman, 28 as a sophomore, 27 as a junior and 37 as a senior — took his late NECC championship at 145 pounds. Ehren Misner, a 1991 graduate, leads the Laker win list with 136. Miller was previously thought to have gone to No. 1 using win-percentage projections from missed matches during the 2020-21 season.
    After a 10-6 loss to Prairie Heights senior Sam Levitz in the Dec. 4 NECC Super Dual, Miller came back Saturday for a pin in 1:32 that secured Miller’s latest NECC crown.
    “(Levitz) is very strong and he likes to get me out of my position so I just had to hold it,” said Miller. “I made up that loss and I want to keep continuing from this and go for that (State Finals) podium.
    “It’ll be important that I don’t take short cuts.”
    Said Lakeland head coach Kevin Watkins of the Miller-Levitz rematch, “Those are two high-profile wrestlers. Ben’s been thinking about redemption all season.”
    The state tournament series opens for Miller and his teammates Saturday, Jan. 29 at the West Noble Sectional. The Feb. 5 Goshen Regional and Feb. 12 Fort Wayne Semistate follow that.
    Miller, who competed at 113 as a freshman, 120 as a sophomore and 138 as a junior and put on more muscle as a senior, has competed at the Fort Wayne Semistate three times, but has not yet broken through to the State Finals (this year’s event is Feb. 18-19 at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis).
    As a junior, Miller pinned his way to the title at the Westview Sectional. He was a runner-up with two pins at the Goshen Regional.
    It was as a Lakeland seventh grader Miller became focused the mat sport.
    “I went to one outside tournament and I got beat,” said Miller, who moved from LaGrange to Fort Wayne and back before starting his wrestling career. “That’s when I said if I want to be good I have to go to all of these different things.
    “That’s when I really took it serious.”
    Miller tends to grapple with three Lakers in the practice room with junior Gabe Miller (138), Brady Schiffli (152) and Keagan Schlabach (126). All three placed in the NECC meet, brother Gabe Miller and Schlabach placing second and Schiffli fourth.
    “I’ll roll around with Keegan to get my speed up.” said Miller. “(My brother) is really good at holding his position. I have to fight really hard to get my takedowns and everything. (Schiffli) is strong and relentless so I have to be on my game every practice. I can’t just be sloppy in my practice moves.”
    There’s an intensity between the Miller brothers on the mat. But that goes away off it.
    “It gets kind of heated in the practice room,” said Ben Miller. “But when we get out of practice we’re friends. We’re cool and everything.”
    After the NECC meet, Schlabach is 33-6 and Ben Miller 29-3.
    Ben and Gabe’s father is Wayne Miller. Mother Kathy Miller lives in Fort Wayne. There two older sisters —  Hadassah and Audrey— and an older brother, Jaden Miller, who introduced Ben to wrestling. The Longs — including former Lakeland head coach Charlie — got Jaden into the sport.
    Watkin was a four-time Michigan high school state finalist and won a 152-pound state title for the Dale Wentela-led Constantine Falcons in 2000.
    What has made Miller a better wrestler this year than last in the coach’s eyes?
    “He learns,” said Watkins. “He’s a student of wrestling. He breaks down his own matches. I’ll build my report and he’ll built his and they’re usually pretty much the same.
    “He’s a very easy kid to coach. Even in matches he loses he never hangs his head. He goes to the drawing board, figures out what he did wrong and he fixes that. He’s just that type of kid.”
    Watkins, who was on the U.S. Marine wrestling team and served in the Corps for a decade, admires Miller’s drive and work ethic.
    “I don’t know that I’ve ever yelled at him,” said Watkins. “He’s a great kid.”
    After high school, Ben Miller sees himself flipping houses.
    “I’ve been in construction trades for two years now,” said Miller. “That gives me experience and my dad has experience so he’ll teach me.”
    The house built by Lakeland students goes to the non-profit organization — Agape Missions of LaGrange County.
    “They have really cheap rent for people who are struggling,” said Miller. “They can stay there for three months until they’re back on their feet.”

    High School News
    2988 5

    #WrestleLikeAGirl with Jeremy Hines: O'neill family grows from wrestling

    By JEREMY HINES
    Thehines7@gmail.com
     
    Warren Central senior Kiersten O’Neill has had quite an illustrious wrestling career. She recently won her third Indiana High School Girls Wrestling state title and did so in dominating fashion. Not bad for a girl that doesn’t like to wrestle, really doesn’t enjoy practicing and sometimes doesn’t even get along with her coach.
     
    “Yeah, I don’t really like wrestling, per se,” O’Neill said. “But I love the environment of the sport and the energy it holds. That’s what keeps me attached to it.”
     
    O’Neill’s coach is her own father, Jake.
     
    “It doesn’t surprise me that she says that,” Jake said. “If you ask most coaches/ dads, it’s tough coaching your own kids. As a coach you hold your athletes to high expectations and not that I don’t do that as a dad, but when they fall short of those expectations it can bleed into home. It’s tough to draw those lines and keep those frustrations in the room and on the mat and not let it affect what’s going on at home.”
     
    Jake has always pushed Kiersten to be her best in the sport – and, although at times she’s gotten frustrated with her dad as a coach, she sees it has been in her best interest.
     
    “My dad and I would get into it a lot,” Kiersten said. “Coach and wrestler, father and daughter is a very different dynamic. There have been points where I was like, this is too hard, I can’t do that. I wanted to stop, but I kept going. I think if he wasn’t as present as he is though, it wouldn’t be the same and I wouldn’t have the successes I’ve had.”
     
    Kiersten’s brother started wrestling when he was 4 years old. He ultimately decided that wasn’t the sport for him.
     
    “I made my son wrestle when he was four,” Jake said. “By the time he was a freshman he ended up playing basketball and that’s about the same time Kiersten was like, dad, I’ll wrestle. I was like, oh, yeah, you’re probably going to be pretty good, too. I think she was six at the time.
     
    “Her journey in wrestling gave me a perspective on women’s wrestling that I never had before and I wouldn’t have had if she didn’t wrestle.”
     
    Kiersten won the state meet as a freshman, then placed second as a sophomore. She won as a junior and last weekend she beat her opponent 17-3 in the championship.
     
    She would like to wrestle in college and eventually she would like to follow in her father’s footsteps and coach wrestling.
     
    For Kiersten, and for many of the female wrestlers we write about in these articles, there becomes an unusually strong bond between opponents. Kiersten’s best friends are wrestlers on rival schools.
     
    “Cailin and Catie (Campbell) are my best friends since I started wrestling,” Kiersten said. “We live far apart but we always make sure we see each other. I talk to them every day. It’s been great to experience that with other people that share your same interests. I think if you watch the finals you can see my reaction after Caty won her state title. I was screaming ‘That’s my best friend’.”
     
    Kiersten also plays soccer. She admits that her wrestling aggression sometimes gets her in trouble on the soccer field.
     
    “Yeah, I’ve had quite a few yellow and red cards,” she said. “Soccer, to me, is a lot of running. But the aggression I get from being a wrestler definitely helps me. I’m not exactly proud of my yellow and red cards, I just think I underestimate my strength some against girls that don’t wrestle.”
     
    Jake really enjoys watching Kiersten on the soccer field, where he can relax and be a dad and not a coach.
     
    “Her wrestling absolutely comes out in soccer,” Jake said. “She’s very competitive, aggressive and physical. She is fearless. It all spills out on the soccer field and it’s fun to watch. The other girls aren’t nearly as aggressive as her. Our athletic director was a professional soccer player. When he saw her play he was like ‘woah’. He was blown out of the water with the competitive edge she plays with. I enjoy every minute of watching her play.”

    In wrestling, Kiersten is excited for what the future for girls is like in the state. Every year the numbers increase. If she had one piece of advise for girls just starting out in the sport it would be to stick to it.
     
    “You just have to stick to it,” she said. “You can’t give up, even when it’s hard. I know it gets hard and I’ve not enjoyed that time. But stick it out. Push through. It will be worth it in the end.”
     

    Gorilla Radio
    433

    IndianaMat Gorilla Radio Episode 123

    Mike and Joe recap the first weekend of conference match-ups, preview the week ahead. They go into a deep dive into the big Crown Point vs. Mount Carmel dual on Friday.
     
     
     

    Gorilla Radio
    679

    High School Wrestling Weekly Season 3 Episode 11

    Rex, Dane, and AJ talk a look back at the Girls state finals along with other wrestling, and are joined this week by guests Blaine Culp and Andy Oberlin.

    Feature Articles
    1493

    #WrestlingWednesday with Jeremy Hines: Ruhlman motivated to be under the lights again

    By JEREMY HINES
    Thehines7@gmail.com
     
    Delaney Ruhlman doesn’t let things get to him. That’s part of who he is. So, last year when he lost to Indiana legend-in-the-making, Jesse Mendez in the state championship match, Ruhlman didn’t sulk.
     
    Sure, the loss hurt. It hurt badly. He could have been the first state champion his coach, Mike Runyon had ever had in his 15 years at Bloomington South. But Ruhlman knew he had to pick himself up and go support his older brother, Tristan who was wrestling for the title at 220 pounds.
     
    “I needed to be completely there for him even after I lost,” Delaney said. “I was so excited to watch him wrestle.”
     
    As it turns out, the older Ruhlman dominated the finals. He won the championship in convincing fashion, 10-2. He became Runyon’s first champion. He finished the season 27-0, and his biggest supporter couldn’t have been happier.
     
    “Just knowing my brother and I were going to the finals together was one of the best feelings I’ve ever felt,” Delaney said.
     
    This season Delaney is ranked No. 3 at 152 pounds, behind Crown Point’s Sam Goin and Zionsville freshman Anthony Rinehart.
     
    “At any given day it could be a different result with any of those top four or five guys in the weight class,” Runyon said. “It is a matter of who is on their game coming up through the tournament series. It depends a lot on the draw and that sort of thing. It’s going to be a really interesting year at that weight class.”
     
    Delaney says he is more motivated than ever to get back under the lights.
     
    “Last year, I feel that just motivated me more,” Delaney said. “It made me push myself more. I want to become a state champ this year. I have to keep putting gin the work and my chances will be pretty good as long as I stick to what I need to improve on.”
     
    Runyon describes Delaney as an explosive wrestler, but slightly different than Tristan on the mat.
     
    “Delaney will wait to strike, and when he goes, he goes hard,” Runyon said. “Delaney is explosive, but he picks his spots to be. Tristan was just explosive all the time.”
     
    Delaney is uncertain what he wants to do after high school, but he did go on an official visit to Purdue recently. Tristan wrestles for Purdue. Delaney wants to go into the medical field.
     
    “Delaney is just very laid back,” Runyon said. “he’s a great kid. He handles adversity like nobody’s business. If there is anything that comes up out of the ordinary, he just brushes it off. He does that with losses too. I think he’s upset with himself, but it’s like, hey, let’s just go to the next step and get over this.”
     
    When he’s not wrestling, Delaney enjoys hunting and fishing and working out.

    Feature Articles
    1862 1

    #MondayMatness with Steve Krah: Peru’s May hopes to reap dividends of varied mat experience

    By STEVE KRAH
    stvkrh905@gmail.com

    An increase in aggressiveness and confidence has Peru High School’s Jalen May shooting for high achievement in his second high school wrestling season.
    The son three-time IHSAA State Finals Placer Nic May (sixth in 2000-2001 at 103 pounds; third at 112 in 2001-02 and second at 112 in 2002-03, losing in the finals to Lawrence North’s Reece Humphries), Tigers sophomore Jalen May gets plenty of encouragement and pointers from his father.
    “He always tells me to work hard,” says Jalen of his father who is No. 2 on the all-time Peru win list at 159-5 (2005 graduate Daric Fuller is tops at 168-16). “He would do anything to wrestle again. He tells me all the work will be worth it. Only I know how hard I can push myself.
    “We have a mat in our basement and try to wrestle around four times a week and focus on one move.”
    Jalen May went 25-6 at 106 as a freshman in 2020-21. Along the way he topped eventual state champion Ashton Jackson 7-4 at the Western Triple Dual.
    “That shows Jalen can wrestle at that level,” says Andy Hobbs, Peru’s head coach since 1996.
    May lost in the “ticket” round at the 2020-21 Fort Wayne Semistate.
    “My freshman year I was a little naive,” says May, who is currently 25-3 as a sophomore 106-pounder. “That semistate opened my eyes.
    “I’m a lot more aggressive (since last high school season) and my confidence has gone up. I used to be scared to wrestle certain people and now I’m always ready to go.
    “I always try to stay positive in the practice room, on meet days or while I’m working out to lose a little bit of weight.”
    In 2021-22, May lost in the 106 semifinals of Mishawaka’s Al Smith Classic to Crown Point freshman Gavin Jendreas (May beat Jendreas 1-0 at the 2021 IndianaMat Hoosier Preseason Open aka IHPO) and placed third.
    “It went alright,” says May. “I expected to do better. I know I’ll see (Jendreas) again this year.”
    Hobbs and his staff want to keep May challenged.
    “I’m getting ready for the state tournament,” says May. (Coaches) like me to have good matches. They’d rather me have a good match and lose than pin the kid in 30 seconds.”
    Hobbs, a 1986 Tipton High School graduate, coached Nic May and saw him go to Ken Chertow camps in the off-season.
    Jalen May, who says he really increased his drive for wrestling in the seventh grade, has gone to Chertow and Jay Robinson camps, travel team practices, club practices in Kokomo and with Central Indiana Academy in Indianapolis.
    “Jalen has had a lot more experiences (than his father),” says Hobbs. “He’s doing all the right things. He’s getting all the experience it takes to make a run at it.
    “He’s well-rounded wrestler and just a very fluid athlete. He’s wide open. We’re trying to get him to expand the playbook. He can do so many things. It’s a simple sport, but it’s really difficult.”
    May says his go-to takedown move is a high-crotch.
    His regular workout partner this season has been junior Cooper Baldwin (138).
    “It helps you a lot (to drill with a bigger athlete),” says May. “When I do wrestle somebody my size it’s a lot easier.”
    How does May benefit Baldwin?
    “Cooper is hard-working,” says May. “I have really good technique. I help him with that. He’ll feel my aggressive side.”
    Like the Indiana High School Wrestling Coaches Association State Duals, May has bumped up in weight to try to help the Tigers and challenge himself.
    “It got me a little better wrestling bigger kids in six-minute matches,” says May.
    Jalen is the oldest of Nic and Ashley May’s four children ahead of brother Josh, sister Mischalay and brother Nicholas Jr. The family resides in Peru.
    Post-high school plans for Jalen currently call for wrestling and studying law in college.
    “My grandma (Jodi May) works at a law firm in Kokomo and one of our assistants Dustin Kern is a city attorney in Peru,” says May. “I’ve always thought it’s cool. It’s a very interesting job.”
    Peru’s remaining schedule includes the Three Rivers Conference meet Saturday, Jan. 22 at Maconaquah. The Tigers’ IHSAA state tournament series path goes through the Jan. 29 Maconaquah Sectional, Feb. 5 Maconaquah Regional, Feb. 12 Fort Wayne Semistate and Feb. 18-19 State Finals at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis.  

    Gorilla Radio
    554

    IndianaMat Gorilla Radio Episode 122

    A little late, but Mike and Joe recap team state and all the great action that went on. They also talk about upcoming conference matches and propose the super wrestling conference!
     
     

    Feature Articles
    1755

    #WrestlingWednesday with Jeremy Hines: Watson and Buchanan lead a young Trojan squad

    By JEREMY HINES
    Thehines7@gmail.com
     
    The key to good leadership is making everyone around you better. Center Grove seniors Hayden Watson and Drake Buchanan do just that.
     
    Both Watson and Buchanan seniors. Both are ranked No. 1 in their weight classes. Both finished runner-up last year in the state finals. They also both have worked extremely hard to not only make themselves better, but to make their team one of the elite ones in the state.
     
    Center Grove has a ranked wrestler in all 14 weight classes.
     
    “They have been captains since their sophomore year,” Center Grove coach Maurice Swain said. “They lead by example. They lead by poise. They do everything right on and off the mat. The younger guys really look up to them.”
     
    They are also great listeners.
     
    Buchanan was upset that he didn’t make it to state as a freshman, wrestling 138 pounds. So, he went to his coaches and asked what he needed to do. He was given a bit of unusual advice.
     
    “I think a lot of people expected me to go to state as a freshman, and I did too,” Buchanan said. “I knew I could get down in the dumps and pout that I didn’t make it, or I could figure out how to get better and improve. I asked coach how I could get better. He suggested I make the jump to 182 pounds.”
     
    So, Buchanan started working out. He also ate “a lot”. He wasn’t sure how moving up five weight classes was going to help him, but he trusted his coaches.
     
    “It was kind of fun, actually,” Buchanan said. “I was eating burgers while others were cutting weight. It was a cool thing, and, I had a lot more energy and I was a lot more motivated.”
     
    Swain also wasn’t sure what to think of his advice on the weight gain. Just a couple of matches into Buchanan’s sophomore season, he knew he made the right call.
     
    “We could tell that Drake had a long frame and with his body type he had the potential to be big,” Swain said. “In just a few months after the season he was at 160. He went to Fargo and placed at Cadet 160. Then, after football he was in his mid-170s. We thought, why cut weight when he can lift and get bigger and stronger. We felt that 182 was a weight he could be at for a few years. We were looking at the future and we didn’t think we needed to add extra stress of weight cutting on him.
     
    “I’d say when we saw him in the first few meets at 182 his sophomore year it was a surprise. We didn’t know before that how he would look. When we saw him compete, we were like, yeah, this is going to work.”
     
    Buchanan placed sixth in state as a sophomore and last year was a state runner-up.
     
    “I feel like I’ve really improved my cardio and my hand-fighting,” Buchanan said. “I’ve been able to already wrestle the No. 2 and No. 3 ranked guys in my weight class this year and was able to win. My goal is absolutely to win a state title and I want our team to win a title as well.”
     
    Buchanan defeated No. 2-ranked Orlando Cruz 13-5 and pinned No. 3-ranked De’Alcapon Veazy.
     
    Watson wanted to use the heartache of losing a close match in the state championship to drive him to improve in the offseason. However, a knee injury took away his summer training opportunities. He returned to wrestling one week before the Indiana Hoosier Preseason Open. He still managed to place third in that tournament.
     
    His goal is also to win a state title and he knows to do that he has to become more of an offensive wrestler.
      
    “There is a picture that someone has of me after losing in the spotlight where I’m down on my knees,” Watson said. “That picture means a lot to me. Knowing how I felt in that moment, and how devastated I was after having the lead and losing. I never want to feel that way again.”
     
    Buchanan said Watson is a very technical wrestler.
     
    “Hayden is such a great leader,” Buchanan said. “He’s so technical. If you have any questions about anything technique-wise, he’s got it. Even if he can’t explain it in words, he can show you. He’s been at a high level for longer than I have. We wrestle together a lot in practice and it really helps both of us.”
     
    Watson also takes his leadership role very personal.
     
    “With the team so young, the big thing is the seniors have to be role models,” Watson said. “I feel like I’m responsible for the whole team. I make sure they aren’t doing anything stupid at meets and at practice. I make sure they show up, and if they don’t, I’m calling them to find out where they are. Our younger guys are really good and once Drake and I leave, I can already tell who will be the next leaders. The team is in good hands.”
     
    In addition to Watson and Buchanan, seniors Michael Thorpe and Bryce Crump are also ranked for the Trojans. There are two ranked juniors on the team in Royce Deckard III and Andre Merritt. Center Grove has six ranked sophomores in Charlie Larocca, Noah Clouser, Reese Courtney, Wyatt Kresja, Drew Mills and Nate Johnson.  Freshmen Eddie Goss and Julian Weens are also ranked.
     
    “We have a big sophomore, freshman and junior class,” Swain said. “Our future can be bright if we continue to do the things we've been doing. But we also want to enjoy this season and this group. We don’t want to work ahead of ourselves. We want to enjoy the time we have with these seniors. They are a special group.”
     
    Buchanan will wrestle with the Air Force Academy next season and Watson will wrestle for Citadel.

    Gorilla Radio
    769 2

    High School Wrestling Weekly Season 3 Episode 10

    Rex Brewer, Dane Fuelling, and AJ Kalver take a look back at the week in high school wrestling, including a recap of the Wrestling Team State, and are joined this week by special guests:  IHSAA Assistant Commissioner Robert Faulkens, Paul Radenmacher, Jason DeLois, and Amy Hildebrandt.
     

    Feature Articles
    1679

    #MondayMatness with Steve Krah: A champ at the national level, New Prairie’s Carroll finally competes in high school

    (Photo/Sam Janicki; SJanickiPhoto.com)
    By STEVE KRAH
    stvkrh905@gmail.com

    Christian Carroll took care of business in the first three bouts of his high school career, earning pins in 13, 14 and 10 seconds against Wawasee, Peru and Hamilton Heights.
     
    The New Prairie High School junior 220-pounder made his debut as a Cougar at the Jan. 8 Class 2A Indiana High School Wrestling Coaches Association State Duals at Martinsville.
     
    A knee injury kept Carroll out of action during his freshman year at Penn (2019-20). When he transferred to New Prairie after the first semester of his sophomore year (2020-21), he was required to sit out for a year. That made him eligible at the end of this past week.
     
    Not that Carroll is a newbie on the mat scene. With two Super 32 titles and a Junior Freestyle Nationals crown to his credit, he is among the top-ranked grapplers at his weight in the country.
     
    He has committed to the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia to wrestle and study Finance in the Wharton School of Business.
     
    “Instead of thinking about my next four years, I’m thinking about my next 40,” says Carroll, 18. Each Quaker grappler in the Wharton School is assigned an alumni mentor and his is David Pottruck. “I’ve always been curious about stocks and how to use money. I have an entrepreneur mindset.”
     
    Christian is the youngest of Tony and Erin Carroll’s five children behind John, Jill, Ben, Cassidy and Katie. Tony Carroll works in finance with Aldi Foods. Erin Carroll is employed as a nursing home activity director at West Woods of Niles (Mich.).
     
    Christian grew up in the Jimtown area of Elkhart and started wrestling at age 5. He began to really take the sport seriously as an eighth grader in the Penn system at Schmucker Middle School.
     
    Over the years, Carroll has developed a mentality that is apparent to New Prairie head coach Bobby Whitenack.
     
    “He has a passion for the sport,” says Whitenack. “He has an intensity at practice and goes hard all the time.
     
    “He’s truly engaged every minute.”
     
    The athlete expects extra effort out of himself.
     
    “What you work for is what you get,” says Carroll. “There are no free lunches in this world.
     
    “That’s why I love wrestling. There’s no politics. It’s just you and the other guy battling on the mat.”
     
    Since joining the New Prairie program, Carroll has taken to the Whitenacks, especially Bobby and son/senior heavyweight Hunter.
     
    “(Coach Whitenack’s) a great role model,” says Carroll. “For him, it’s more about life (than wrestling). He cares about our well-being. He preaches so much about life.
     
    “How are you not excited to wrestle for a guy like that? He creates a family culture. That’s not a cliche.’ It’s real.”
     
    Hunter Whitenack, who is committed to study and play football at the University of Illinois, is a workout partner for Carroll and a team leader.
     
    “What’s awesome about Hunter is he’s in that big brother role,” says Carroll. “He’s always motivating, always positive and let’s get this job done. He guided me through the system being a new kid.
     
    “It’s about brotherhood. He doesn’t have to risk an injury for football. He puts his team and his community above himself.”
     
    Bobby Whitenack is a special education teacher and a 1999 New Prairie graduate. He came back from Manchester University, where he played football, to assistant Cougars head coach Wes Hobart then took over the program in 2010-11 and surpassed the 300-win plateau this season.
     
    “I reflect on how many people who made that happen — all the adults and wrestlers,” says Whitenack of the milestone.
     
    The coach has two sons in his lineup with freshman Hayden Whitenack at 132.
     
    What Carroll enjoys most about New Prairie is being part of a team in wrestling and an active student.
     
    “I release my knowledge and disperse as much as I can,” says Carroll of his relationship with wrestling mates. “We have a lot of sponges in the room. It’s a good atmosphere. There’s a certain standard in the room — leaving it all out on the mat.
     
    “I don’t think there’s a point in holding back (in class). I have a Type A personality. Communication flows and that is a good way to learn. Fear is False Evidence That Appears Real. I’m not afraid to fail (in wrestling or life). My aspirations are so much higher.”
     
    Whitenack appreciates Carroll’s willingness to give.
     
    “He’s really good at helping others,” says the coach. “He can work with any kid in the room and give them pointers. It’s a peer review. It’s different from hearing from a coach. He leads by example. You can’t say it if you’re not doing it yourself.”
     
    Away from New Prairie, Carroll works out with Chris Fleeger at Midwest RTC in New Carlisle.
     
    “He’s a technician,” says Carroll of Fleeger, who was a three-time All-American at Purdue University, Big Ten champion and trained at the U.S. Olympic Center. “He’s instilled a lot of morals in my brain and life perspective.”
     
    In the past year, Carroll is placed second at the World Trials. At the nationals, he won every bout by pin or technical fall except for one. In September, he competed in the Flo Wrestling Who’s No. 1 and lost a 3-2 nail-biter super match to heavyweight Nick Feldman, an Ohio State University commit from Malvern Prep in Pennsylvania.
    Carroll’s Super 32 titles have come at 195 (2020) and 220 (2021).
     
    Christian stands 5-foot-11 now, but he anticipates a growth spurt since his father and uncles are in 6-2 to 6-3 range and big guys.
     
    Whitenack, who has about 50 on his roster, has his wrestlers attack the season in two portions.
     
    “The beginning of season gets you ready,” says Whitenack. “We want to peak at sectional.”
     
    New Prairie once competed in Mishawaka’s Al Smith Classic, but opted for super duals like the one at Lafayette Jeff.
     
    “Our average kids got better and that set us up to have more success in the postseason,” says Whitenack. “We want to go into sectional with the right mindset. We want everybody moving in the right direction.”
     
    Chris Carroll is now a part of that mix.

    Feature Articles
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    #WrestlingWednesday with Jeremy Hines: Leighton Jones wrestling with diabetes

    By JEREMY HINES
    Thehines7@gmail.com
     
    “This will only make the ride harder, but don’t let it stop you from reaching your goals.”
     
    Those words have been etched into the mind of Brownsburg junior Leighton Jones since his life took an unexpected twist at a doctor’s office around midnight his sixth-grade year.
     
    That night, as he was coming home from a spring break vacation, he just didn’t feel right. He had spent the whole day sleeping. He felt dehydrated. He went to the bathroom five times in an hour. He knew something was wrong.
     
    His dad, Marshall Jones, had a suspicion what might be going on. He checked his young son’s blood pressure and immediately called his doctor. The doctor met with Leighton at 11 p.m. that same night. He was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes.
     
    “I was scared to death,” Leighton said. “I hated needles. I didn’t know what was going to happen. That’s when mom told me that this will only make the ride harder, but don’t let it stop you from reaching your goals. That meant a lot. That has helped me move on and still reach for what I want to accomplish.”
     
    Those words came back to Jones after a devastating defeat in the state meet last year. He had been rolling in the tournament. He pinned his way through sectional, regional and semistate before losing in overtime, one win from the championship match in the state meet.
     
    “I was as down as you could be after that loss,” Jones said. “I went up the huge elevator and coach (Darrick) Snyder was waiting for me. He hugged me and I cried on his shoulders. I never wanted to feel like that again.”
     
    So, like his mom told him – when things get difficult  he can’t let that stop him. Jones went out and won the third-place match by an impressive margin, 14-1. And from there he decided he was going to do everything in his power to claim the state title this year for himself, and to help Brownsburg win the team title.
     
    “He’s a one-of-a-kind heavyweight wrestler,” Brownsburg assistant coach Eric Lynn said. “He moves like a little guy. He doesn’t move like a heavyweight. And he’s really motivated right now. From his freshman year until now he’s improved in all aspects of wrestling. He’s well rounded. He wants to learn. He asks questions and he’s always ready to do whatever we ask.”
     
    Jones is a good student, an outstanding football player and a top-tier wrestler. That combination has led him to be one of the most highly recruited athletes in the state. He has already made visits to most of the schools in the Big Ten conference. He is keeping his options open at this point as to where he wants to go and what sport he wants to compete in.
     
    “I joke around about how great it would be to be in Leighton’s shoes,” Snyder said. “He has so much interest from Division 1 football and wrestling schools. It would be cool to be sitting in his shoes with all that interest he’s getting. There aren’t many days that go by that some college coach isn’t wanting to watch him work out or wanting to talk about him.”
     
    Although Jones has had an excellent wrestling career so far, the diabetes has certainly made it a bit more of a challenge. He must constantly monitor his blood sugar levels. He gives himself insulin injections five to six times a day. His coaches help monitor him and his parents are alerted when his levels are off as well.
     
    “If you’re stressed or if you get anxiety, your levels raise,” Jones said. “You go through practice, and you start feeling nauseous and get dizzy. You have to eat a really clean diet. You eat a lot of protein. You have to stay between the numbers, and often times that’s not likely. You take medicine if you get too low and feel light-headed. The medicine has side effects, too.”
     
    This year Jones has learned to keep his diabetes in a more controllable state – which has helped him in practice and in matches.
     
    “He has had to fight through some really tough times with diabetes,” Lynn said. “He does really well with it now.”
     
    Brownsburg is an absolutely loaded team this year. The Bulldogs have 12 wrestlers ranked in the top 20 of the state, 11 in the top 10 and eight in the top five. Freshman Jake Hockaday, senior Logan Miller and Jones are ranked No. 1 in their respective weight classes. Sophomore Brady Ison is ranked No. 2 at 132 with classmates Preston Haines ranked No. 3 at 113 and Gavin Garcia No. 4 at 138.
     
    “This is a fun year for Indiana wrestling,” Snyder said. “We have three teams ranked in the top 25 in the country – and then you throw in Center Grove, who should be ranked. Our goal is to win a dual state title and an IHSAA state title.”
     
    Jones has taken on a leadership role on the team and hopes his influence can be beneficial toward the lofty team goals.
     
    “Leighton is definitely one of my more special heavyweights I’ve ever coached,” Lynn said. “He’s a motivated kid. He is really driven this year and it’s helping everyone in the program.”

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