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JORVILLE

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Posts posted by JORVILLE

  1. 2 hours ago, TripleB said:

    Yeah early rumblings are Shep will be up around 138. Will still be interesting to see how that line up shakes out, lots of dudes in the same 2-3 weight range. 

     

     

    Shep is a big strong growing kid who will be successful at wherever he ends up . I think him a little higher helps the line up. Not a bad problem to have and one most teams wish they could have . Team should be young with limited seniors this season in the line up 

  2. 50 minutes ago, TysonNisley said:

    DID Y’ALL MISS ME?!

     

    If not, then hopefully you’ll at least like me enough to listen to what I’ve got to say. Because if there’s anyone in the state of Indiana with the best mind for predictions, it’s me (please don’t verify that). IHPO has already been one of my favorite tournaments to cover, especially as a 3x former competitor of the tournament, and there are always some HOT matchups that are really essential to figuring out who put in the work this summer. There’s everything from nationally ranked matchups, clashes of state champions, unlikely rivalries due to weight changes, and breakout performances at this absolutely brutal single day tournament, and I’m here to analyze it all, and try to not only improve my credibility as a writer and predictor through thorough research and unrivaled intuition, but also to give you all the right information going into the tournament, for both those from Indiana, and the hundreds of out-of-state invaders looking to capture the illustrious title of IHPO Champion.

     

    For this write-up, I’m going to follow a similar structure to how Flowrestling formats their World Championships previews, where I outline a couple title contenders, those who have a strong chance to win the tournament; placement contenders, those who aren’t quite at that level, but still very tough and capable of placing top 4; and a sleeper pick in each weight, chosen from the list of wrestlers not in the Stud List, that I think could make big things happen, and possibly claim that breakout performance that I mentioned happens so often in this tournament. I won’t ramble on anymore, here’s what’s going down this Sunday:

     

    -quick note that I do not have access to the seeds at this tournament, so my predictions will be made regardless of seed-

     

    109:

     

    Title Contenders:

    Caleb Noble

    Mason Jones

    Brady Byrd

     

    A pair of Fargo All-Americans headline this weight, with 16U Fargo Runner-Up Caleb Noble and Junior Fargo 3rd Brady Byrd likely to hit in the finals. While Byrd did place in the junior division, which is typically a lot more difficult than 16U, it is important to note that Byrd competed at 100 pounds, while Noble wrestled at 106, meaning that Byrd is likely undersized going into this match. As much as I’d like to pick Indiana to win this match, Noble looked far too impressive during his Fargo run, and I think he is definitely the favorite to win this match, although a win from Byrd would not surprise me in the slightest. But that’s if he even makes it to the finals. 5th placer Mason Jones also strikes me as a title contender, which some really impressive results this off season validating his status as one of the best 106 pounders in the state, including a razor thin match with Delta’s Ayden Bollinger at Folkstyle State this year, in which he lost 8-7. I hate to define a guy by his losses (which you will see a lot in this write-up), but Bollinger was a bad dude going into last year’s state tournament, and was the man to beat in a lot of peoples’ eyes. Jones has proven that he’s now in that conversation too, so I’m excited to see him make his way through this bracket. 

     

    Placement Contenders:

    Braeydn Tammarine

    Matthew Baylor

    Jullianna O’Campo

    Heather Crull

    Lincoln Rohr

     

    The 4th place spot seems up for grabs here, but Ohio 4th placer and Fargo bloodrounder Braedyn Tammarine seems to be the favorite, although there are a number of Indiana wrestlers that could possibly steal that spot from him. Indiana female superstars Julianna O’Campo and Heather Crull are looking to spoil a number of runs in this bracket, and have previously beaten many of the boys in this bracket. O’Campo specifically owns a win against Mason Jones in the finals of last year’s Al Smith, so it would not be surprising to see her best Jones again for a place on the podium. Has a girl ever placed at IHPO? I’m not sure, but if not, O’Campo is the one to do it. Indiana 8th placer Matthew Baylor also has a solid shot of making the podium, making it quite far in last year’s IHPO, even beating Michigan state champ Brady Baker along the way. Also don’t forget about Lincoln Rohr, a Super 32 MS 5th placer, and brother of Mason Rohr, who won at IHPO title just last year. He’ll be a threat to anyone in this bracket, and should be considered a dark horse here. 

     

    Sleeper Pick: Jensen Boyd

     

    Speaking of dark horses, Jensen Boyd is my sleeper pick for this bracket, solidifying his status as a dangerous man with a fall over Matthew Baylor at Folkstyle State this year, paired with a really solid run at Fargo this year that put him a round away from the bloodround.

     

    Top 4:

    Caleb Noble

    Brady Byrd

    Mason Jones

    Braedyn Tammarine

     

    116:

     

    Title Contenders:

    Revin Dickman

    Nathan Rioux

     

    This match intrigues me so much, and if you’ve seen only the previous results between these two, you might not understand why. State champion Revin Dickman had Rioux’s number last year, beating him a staggering SIX times in the past year, but since Rioux’s loss in the state finals last year, he’s been hard at work, building up quite the resume, one that has landed him in the #8 spot in the Flowrestling National Rankings, an honor that Dickman does not currently have. It should be noted that Rioux has remained at 106 for most of the off season, while Dickman has enjoyed most of his off season up at 113. Still, though, it’s hard to deny that Rioux has been impressive these past couple months, earning a 4th place finish at Fargo this year. I think that it’s too hard to blow off Dickman here, given their history, but I think this will be their closest meeting yet.

     

    Placement Contenders:

    Sammy Stewart

    Co’ji Campbell

    Brady Baker

    Conor Mc Alary

    Brice La Fleur

    Ayden Bollinger

    Jalen May

     

    Did you know that there are FIVE state champions in this weight class. A trio of champs from Michigan headline the list of placement contenders here, with Brady Baker, Sammy Stewart, and Conor Mc Alary trying to place at IHPO for the first time. Now, with no disrespect to Michigan, and respect only to the strength of this tournament, I don’t think any of these guys place. Co’ji Campbell is a two-time state champion from Wisconsin, and won his last state title with ease, and that’s saying something, given the strength of Wisconsin’s wrestling as of recently. He doesn’t have any results that I can effectively compare to other wrestlers, but I think he is a very solid third place pick. In addition to all of these state champs, there are a number of placers here that I think could also do well. Brice La Fleur has had success at IHPO before, beating O’Campo 7-3 last year, and losing only 3-0 to Rochester’s Layne Horn, who had the best tournament run of his career up to that point. Ayden Bollinger, as previously mentioned, is a bad dude, and he could very easily beat any of the wrestlers in this weight class. I have him taking 4th, likely beating one of Michigan’s invaders along the way, but ultimately struggling to get past Campbell. Jalen May is a multiple time state placer that has some really great wins in his career, such as a win over Purdue freshman and La Porte superstar Ashton Jackson, along with some other notable wins that could make him a threat, although his 7th place finish at last year’s state tournament means he’ll have to turn some things around in order to be a podium threat.

     

    Sleeper Pick: Gavin Ash

     

    One of two twins from Monrovia, Gavin Ash is looking to make some moves after a solid postseason run last year that unfortunately ended in the ticket round. His twin brother, Isaac Ash, made it out of semi-state last year en route to a 4th place finish, and although I don’t necessarily believe that being the twin of a state placer makes you a state placer caliber wrestler, Ash’s results make me believe that he can have a breakout performance of his own.

     

    Top 4:

    Revin Dickman

    Nate Rioux

    Co’ji Campbell

    Ayden Bollinger

     

    123:

     

    Title Contenders:

    Charlie Larocca

    Mason Rohr

    Gavin Jendreas

    Preston Haines

    Joseph Curry

     

    This weight is arguably the deepest weight in the tournament. A couple state champs, along with a number of wrestlers that are as good, make this weight wildly unpredictable, which is why there are five wrestlers that I believe could win this bracket. Ohio 3rd placer Mason Rohr is the returning champ here, but he’s going to have a HARD time reproducing these results. Charlie Larocca was a quite unexpected state champ last year, making his way through a brutal bracket that included Gavin Jendreas and Preston Haines, both of who are also in this bracket. I’m not so quick to think that Larocca should be considered the favorite against these two however, as Jendreas owns multiple wins over Larocca, including an impressive 11-0 at last year’s IHPO, and a much closer 5-3 win at last year’s Al Smith. Haines has beaten Jendreas in their last two meetings as well, both of which were quite close, but still demonstrating a dominance over Jendreas. And to make things even more complicated, Larocca has beaten Haines in their last two meetings, one in overtime at Team State, and a 3-1 win at the Mooresville Regional, so we have a little circle here that makes it a little difficult for me. I want to say that Jendreas is the strongest out of these three as of now, with a really impressive Fargo run that ended in the bloodround to Hockaday, and might have gone further had the Indiana teamkill not happened. One more name I want to point out in this list is Ohio state champ Joseph Curry. Curry was a runner-up last year, taking out Jendreas in an 8-3 match along the way. I think both wrestlers are much better now, but there will have to be a lot of improvement on Jendreas’s part in order for him to take out Curry

     

    Placement Contenders:

    Michael Kapenga

    George Dennis

    Jaxson Rosselli

    Jack Guerrero

    Luke Rioux

    Layne Horn

     

    I had to leave out a lot of very talented wrestlers from this list, only because there are so many studs at this weight class. Michigan state champ Michael Kapenga headlines this group, but I’m not very confident that he’s the strongest one out of this group. A particular wrestler I have my eye on is Michigan 3rd placer Jack Guerrero, who defeated Kapenga 5-1 during their state series, and snagged a 7-5 win over Preston Haines at the Rumble HS Duals this year. In possibly my most ambitious pick of this whole write-up, I think Guerrero navigates through this loaded field of state champs and runner-ups to find his way on the podium. Looking to do the same will be George Dennis, a Kentucky state runner-up; Jaxson Rosselli, an Ohio 3rd placer that also owns a win over Preston Haines in the past year; Luke Rioux, who placed 4th at last year’s IHPO and defeated Larocca during his IHPO run; and Layne Horn, who went on an absolute tear at last year’s IHPO with a 1-0 win against Revin Dickman and a 3-0 win against #17 Javaan Harbrough en route to a 3rd place finish. Unfortunately, with the sheer depth of this weight class, I think it will be very hard for any of them to recreate their past success at this tournament.

     

    Sleeper Pick: Walter Hagedorn

     

    Despite falling in the ticket round last year to eventual 4th placer Isaac Ash 4-2, Hagedorn is a state caliber athlete, and has defeated multiple podium level wrestlers this off season, including Jalen May and 6th placer Aiden Dallinger. I don’t foresee that Hagedorn will place at this weight class, but he will definitely pick off a major name.

     

    Top 4:

    Joseph Curry

    Gavin Jendreas

    Charlie Larocca

    Jack Guerrero

     

    129:

     

    Title Contenders:

    Landon Evans

    TJ Meyers

    LT Hawkins

     

    There’s a big question mark in this bracket that I’m very excited to see. That question mark is the return of IHPO 2022 3rd placer and Crown Point stud LT Hawkins. Hawkins beat multiple state placers and even a Michigan state champ en route to 3rd last year, losing only a 4-0 match to fellow teammate and Virginia Tech freshman Logan Frazier. Hawkins should be a heavy favorite to make the finals, but a pair of Kentucky hammers stand in the way of his first IHPO title. The first of these wrestlers, Landon Evans, took home a Kentucky state title last year, and is one of two state champions in this bracket. I don’t believe, however, that this will be the big test of the bracket for Hawkins. Instead, I think that Kentucky state runner-up TJ Meyers will be the one to bring Hawkins to deep waters here. Picking the runner-up over the champ here might seem odd, but Meyers had to take on #7 (at 120) Jayden Raney in the finals of the Kentucky state tournament, and he only lost 3-2. That, in my opinion, is much more impressive than a state title against a lesser opponent. This isn’t said to diminish Evans as a wrestler, but Meyers has proven to not only compete well against the highest level wrestlers, but I should add that is also a returning IHPO placer, taking 3rd last year, so I think it is much more likely that Meyers battles Hawkins in the finals. I know that I’m gonna hear it from Coach Hawkins for writing this, but I think that Meyers is probably the favorite here. I’m always gonna root for an Indiana guy over a non-Indiana guy, but Meyers is going to be a seriously tough opponent for Hawkins, but nevertheless, I can’t wait to see this match happen.

     

    Placement Contenders:

    Colton Bendure

    Eddie Goss

    Aiden Allen

    Tanner Tishner

     

    I want to preface this segment by saying that Tanner Tishner can absolutely win a title at this tournament. His peaks are very high, and he has a long list of very good wins. However, he has been a little bit inconsistent as of recently, and it’s hard for me to label him as a title contender based on this information. He’s very good though, so don’t overlook him against anyone in this bracket. Virginia state champ Colton Bendure leads this list of placement contenders, and I could have very reasonably put him in the title contenders section. He doesn’t have a lot of results I can very accurately make predictions off of though, and he’s a state champ from a state that isn’t particularly known for their wrestling, which doesn’t always mean that he’s not an Indiana state champion level wrestler, but I think it’s safer for the sake of predicting that he is not at that level just yet. Aiden Allen is an Ohio 3rd placer with some solid results all around, and I expect him to give a lot of guys in this bracket some fits. Eddie Goss placed 3rd last year at state, which included a 6-4 win over Tanner Tishner. He also claimed a big win last year against Michigan state champ Kade Kluce at the Detroit Central Catholic Super Duals, so he is capable of some big wins. Lastly, Braylon Reynolds is a young stud that already has multiple state placers under his belt of wins, and has a lot of potential to do well here.

     

    Sleeper Pick: Quinten Schoeff

     

    Quinten Schoeff had a quite successful freshman year, making it to the ticket round and beating multiple state qualifiers, despite missing out on the state tournament himself. Schoeff will very easily be a title contender in the next couple years, and could be a candidate for a breakout performer at this tournament.

     

    Top 4:

    TJ Meyers

    LT Hawkins

    Landon Evans

    Eddie Goss

     

    135:

     

    Title Contenders:

    Leland Reeves

    Damian Resendez

    Evan Stanley

     

    I’m gonna show you all some prediction magic. This weight won’t be particularly interesting to most of you, as the top wrestlers in this field, aside from Evan Stanley, are from other states. Additionally, most of these guys have little to no experience against other Indiana wrestlers, so I can’t really make the comparisons there. So instead, I’m going to opt for some educational guessing, and I’ll bring you all along for the process. First, we have Kentucky state champ Leland Reeves. What do we know about Kentucky? Well, we know that they are not as strong as Illinois or Indiana. Sorry Kentucky fans, but it’s true. This doesn’t mean that he is not a strong wrestler, right? Imagine if I applied the same logic to the Raney brothers without additional information? I would be wildly incorrect. I also know that somewhere in his state series, he lost a match. This means that he’s not an outlier; he’s a champ, but he’s not a Raney, or a wrestler near that caliber. Next, we have Illinois state runner-up Damian Resendez. I don’t see any matches against Indiana guys, but I do see he has a win against Marmion Academy’s Zach Stewart. Marmion Academy was at Carnahan this year. So we go to see how he did, and incredibly enough, Stewart beat #6 Jake Hockaday at that tournament. So that’s a big win for Resendez. Combine that with the fact that he’s a Mt. Carmel wrestler, and we know that he’s pretty good. Now, the tricky part is that we are going to have to weave Evan Stanley through this fabric of “what ifs” and “maybes.” I know that Stanley is going to be competing at Mt. Carmel, so Resendez and Stanley are likely familiar with each other. Stanley hasn’t competed against a high caliber high school opponent in a while, so there’s not much to work with there, also he does have a win over 126 state champ Tylin Thrine, so that’s impressive enough. So, what’s the verdict here? The answer is that I’m not sure, but given the familiarity that these two likely have, and the difference in competition against high school opponents, I think I’ll take Resendez in a very close match.

     

    Placement Contenders:

    Sebastian Vega

    Connor Younts

    Dallas Korponic

    Vernon Riggins

    Adam Heckman

    Maksim Mukhamedaliyev

    Michael Esteban

     

    So now it gets trickier. Sebastian Vega was a state runner-up in 2022 at 113, and now at 135, he has been unable to recreate that success. Can’t exactly count them out, but with the information I have, he’s not in my top 4. Connor Younts and Dallas Korponic are both 3rd placers from Michigan. However, all of my Michigan wrestling friends tell me that D1 is much harder than D3, so while they are both 3rd placers, Korponic’s D1 3rd place finish is a lot more impressive to me. Combine that with a 6-5 loss in season to state champion Kade Kluce, and I think we have a winner here. Vernon Riggins is D4, which is the least strong division in Michigan (or so I hear), so he’s out as well. Adam Heckman placed 4th in Ohio, but hasn’t wrestled any Indiana guys recently. He did wrestle Collin Twigg though, and lost 11-2 in Ohio state. Who’s Collin Twigg? Well, he went 6-2 last year at IHPO, but did not place. If Twigg didn’t place, it’s likely Heckman is not either. There’s some magic for ya. Lastly, we have a pair of Illinois 6th placers in Maksim Mukhamedaliyev and Michael Esteban. However, Esteban’s placement was in 2022, where in 2023, he DNP’ed, while Mukhamedaliyev played this year. Now we fill in our checkmarks. Did he place in a tough division? D3 is the toughest in Illinois, so yes. Does he have any big wins? Let’s see. Freestyle win against Maximus Riggins of Iowa? Why is that important? Because Riggins was the ONE seed at Fargo this year in the 16U 126 division (he ended up going 0-2 though, but the one seed still says something. So, it seems that the 4th place spot is between Korponic and Mukhamedaliyev. I think Korponic is just a little stronger here, with a close match with not only a tough opponent, but an opponent that has been extremely successful in the past at IHPO. So, Korponic gets that fourth spot.

     

    Sleeper Pick: none

     

    No sleeper pick for this weight, since there is already so much information missing from this weight to make an accurate sleeper pick.

     

    Top 4:

    Damian Resendez

    Evan Stanley

    Leland Reeves

    Dallas Korponic

     

    141:

     

    Title Contenders:

    Kyrell Leavell

    Brady Ison

     

    I think that state champ Kyrel Leavell and Brady Ison are a step above the field, and this Indiana matchup will headline the weight class. I will say, however, that Leavell has lost to quite a bit of the field here, with both Ison and Tony Wood beating him in the past year. Leavell’s resume makes him too strong to not pick here, especially with his quality of wins this off season, which includes a fall at the MCWC Duals over Jake Hockaday, and a 14-12 freestyle win at Central Regionals over #11 and Pittburgh commit Kade Brown. Having notched two nationally ranked wins this off season, I feel comfortable placing him as the top guy in this weight class.

     

    Placement Contenders:

    Cole Evans

    Holden Huhn

    Evan Gosz

    Tony Wood

     

    There are a number of state placers in this weight class, but I’ve narrowed down the field to just these four as potential podium candidates. Cole Evans is an Ohio state champion, which is quite impressive already, and could even qualify him as a title contender, however, his title was won in 2022, and at the 106 pound weight class, and at state this year, he did not place, making me believe that he still has some adjusting to do for this weight class, and won’t bring a huge threat to the top two guys in this weight. Holden Huhn took 2nd place in Ohio in 2022, but also regressed in placement in 2023 with a 7th place finish. This state run did include a fall over Cole Evans though, further validating my previous point about Evans and his influence in this bracket as a former state champion. Evan Gosz is an Illinois 3rd placer, losing only 2-1 to current Harvard freshman Jameson Garcia, so this kid is definitely a guy to watch out for in this bracket.

    Lastly, Tony Wood is in here with his win over Leavell, but he will have to pull off another win like that in order to make the podium.

     

    Sleeper Pick: Matthew Staples

     

    I can’t even call this a sleeper pick. I think Staples has been well awake at his past couple events, beating multiple state placers and wrestling overall quite impressively. Dare I say that this is the first sleeper pick of mine to reach the podium? I’m certainly predicting so.

     

    Top 4:

    Kyrel Leavell

    Brady Ison

    Evan Gosz

    Matthew Staples

     

    147:

     

    Title Contenders:

    Wyatt Krejsa

    Brayden Brown

    Jeffrey Huyvaert

     

    Wyatt Krejsa turned himself into a title contender last IHPO, somewhat unexpectedly beating Cheaney Schoeff in the quarterfinals of this tournament. Now, he opens this year’s IHPO as the favorite to win, but there are a couple names in this bracket I think could give him fits. Firstly, Ohio 3rd placer Brayden Brown returns to this weight as the highest returning IHPO placer, taking 2nd last year. He will be a strong contender to make the finals. Also a strong contender to make the finals, Jeffrey Huyvaert is coming off of an extremely strong freshman campaign that included a 4th place finish and a win in the regional finals over eventual champ and Purdue freshman Cole Solomey. It is easy to assume that this kid is getting better at a very rapid pace, and we should definitely watch out for him in this tournament.

     

    Placement Contenders:

     

    Hayden Hughes

    Coltyn Reedy

    Aidan Rush

    Londen Murphy

    Dillon Graham

    Christian Arberry

     

    Ohio sends a strong group of state placers to this weight, and I could see them causing problems for our Indiana studs. State runner-up Hayden Hughes is probably the favorite over the rest of the field, aside from the title contenders, but a random loss by fall against Londen Murphy concerns me a bit. Coltyn Reedy is a 4th placer in Ohio, but likewise, I’m not too confident about his performance compared to the last Ohio placer in this field, who I think will be the most lethal. Ohio 5th placer Aidan Rush has a couple of really solid wins in the past year, including a 12-10 OT win over Dillon Graham at last year’s IHPO, and a win over #20 Grayson Woodcock 4-2 at the Brecksville Holiday Tournament. Speaking of Dillon Graham, I think that he is still a very solid wrestler that could beat any of Ohio’s invaders at this weight. Lastly, Christian Arberry placed 8th this past year, but has claimed some wins this off season that suggest he is at a much higher level than he was at the state tournament, beating both Matthew Staples and Jeffrey Huyvaert.

     

    Sleeper Pick: Tommy Gibbs

     

    Tommy Gibbs was not able to secure a starting spot this year in Brownsburg’s ridiculously stacked lineup, but with his recent improvement, that’s not likely to be the case anymore. His off season is highlighted by a 7-3 win at Folkstyle State over LT Hawkins, and had a 6-3 match at Freestyle State to Jeffrey Huyvaert, losing the match, but ultimately showing that he can hang with the better guys at this weight.

     

    Top 4:

    Wyatt Krejsa

    Jeffrey Huyvaert

    Brayden Brown

    Aidan Rush

     

    153:

     

    Title Contenders:

    Jimmy Mastny

    Reese Stephen

    This is another weight class that includes mostly studs from other states, so I’ll try to breeze through it relatively quickly. Jimmy Mastny and Reese Stephen both stand out from this field, and should be considered the favorites to make the finals. Jimmy Mastny is going into his freshman year, but has already built up a very impressive resume, earning double All-American honors at Fargo this year with a 5th place finish in freestyle and a runner-up finish in Greco. He also has two nationally ranked wins this off season against #20 Grayson Woodock in freestyle and #12 Tyler Knaack in Greco. Reese Stephen is no stranger to battling high level guys either, having a solid Ironman run that included respectable losses to #14 Kael Voinovich (5-3) and #19 Jayden Robinson (7-2). I hate to define a guy by his losses, but these results do show that he can very easily take on Mastny. Oh, and he won a state title in Ohio this past year. That should help too.

     

    Placement Contenders:

    Jeremy Ginter

    Cooper Rathburn

    William Denny

    Layne Knisely

    Michael Major

     

    Several state placers look to fill out the 3rd and 4th place spots on the podium, and for Indiana fans, the hope is that 5th placer Michael Major claims that spot. However, it certainly won’t be easy for him. Jeremy Ginter is an Ohio state runner-up, losing only to Ohio State freshman Brock Herman 14-4. Cooper Rathburn took 3rd this past year in Ohio, and is also a threatening opponent here. William Denny is a 4th placer from Illinois, and owns a win over Brownsburg stud Parker Reynolds at the Walsh Ironman this past year. Finally, Layne Knisely is a Michigan 5th placer, and almost has a really cool last name. He rounds out the strong group of state placers in this weight class.

     

    Sleeper Pick: Silas Foster

     

    For most weight classes here, the sleeper pick is super easy to make, and it’s no exception in this weight class. Foster is very easily a state placer caliber wrestler, although he has not yet gotten the opportunity to prove it. His highlight wins this past year include a very impressive Greco win over Wyatt Krejsa by fall, and another win by fall over Tommy Gibbs at last year’s IHPO.

     

    Top 4:

    Jimmy Mastny

    Reese Stephen

    Jeremy Ginter

    Cooper Rathburn

     

    160:

     

    Title Contenders:

    Tristin Greene

    Eddie Enright

    Bryce Griffin

     

    Indiana will have a hard time making the podium at this weight class, with three very good wrestlers almost indisputably taking the top three spots. Tristin Greene is an Ohio state champ and 16U Fargo Champ in Greco, making him the most credentialed wrestler by far in this weight class. He also has a Greco win this off season against #8 Latrell Shaffer, demonstrating just how dangerous he can be. Don’t go upper body with this guy. Next, we have Mt. Carmel’s Eddie Enright, who took 2nd this past year. He is one of two Illinois state runner-ups at this weight, although Bryce Griffin might be my pick to take second over Enright. Griffin’s run at state this year was stopped only by Illinois superfreshman Kannon Webster, and he has not bled against an Illinois wrestler yet this off season, taking first in both Freestyle and Greco state in Illinois. I think Enright can keep it close, but if this battle ends up happening, I expect Griffin to win.

     

    Placement Contenders:

    Lucas Boe

    Waylon Cressell

    Malachia Harris

    Beau Brabender

    Silas Stits

     

    There is another state champ among this group, being North Dakota state champ Waylon Cressell. Like I have said previously, just because someone wins a title in a “less talented” wrestling state, it does not necessarily mean they are not as good or better than someone that won in Illinois, or Indiana, for example. However, Cressell has not had any big tournament placements outside of the state tournament, and did relatively poorly at the Northern Plains regional, only winning 2 or 3 matches in each style. For this reason, I’m knocking him down a little bit, but the truth is that he is still a state champion, and a competitor to be feared for that reason. Lucas Boe has a big question mark over his head right now, destroying everyone at the middle school level and earning a #47 ranking on MatScouts. However, he has very limited results at the high school level, so we will have to see how that transition goes this weekend. Malachia Harris is a Kentucky state runner-up, but only went 2-2 at IHPO last year, losing to Greyson Gard in OT and to Hunter May by major decision, meaning he will need to have improved a lot in order for him to have a podium worthy tournament run. Lastly, Indiana studs Beau Brabender and Silas Stits are Indiana’s best chance to get somebody on the podium at this weight. Brabender made it all the way to the bloodround last year, demonstrating that he has had success on this very stage before, but Stits has a lot of potential here too, and even has a win over Brabender this past year at Al Smith, with a 5-2 win in the consolation semifinals of the tournament. I personally believe that Stits might be a bit underrated as of now, and he is capable of pulling off big upsets this weekend.

     

    Sleeper Pick: Zymarion Hollyfield

     

    Hollyfield had an unfortunate end to this state tournament last year, underperforming at regionals to get a brutal draw against Aidan Costello in the ticket round. But it should be noted that he is a state quality wrestler with lots of speed and athleticism, and it would shock me if he didn’t take out at least one person that he’s not supposed to on paper.

     

    Top 4:

    Tristin Greene

    Bryce Griffin

    Eddie Enright

    Waylon Cressell

     

    168:

     

    Title Contenders:

    Benjamin Smith

    Brenton Russell

    Anthony Cashman

    Chase Leech

     

    I debated just putting the entire stud list in title contenders, but I decided not to, although I’m not going to be too confident with any pick in this weight class. Benjamin Smith is a transfer from Maryland, where he won a state title this past year. There’s not much information on him otherwise, which might lead me to underrate him a little bit, but there are a couple people at this weight that I think could potentially upset Smith. The first one of these challengers is Brenton Russell, who took 4th this past year, who has kept the ball rolling since then with a 14-14 criteria win at Freestyle State over Anthony Rinehart, and not one, not two, but THREE wins over Mitchell Betz. Anthony Cashman also took 4th last year, at a weight above Russell, and made it all the way to the bloodround at last year’s IHPO. Despite these two looking like Indiana’s strongest on paper, I think that another guy in this weight, one that has not placed yet in his high school career, is the best pick for tournament champion, and that is Chase Leech. Leech was upset in the ticket round last year in OT to Brant Beck, but has recorded some insanely impressive wins since then, including a 12-2 TF over state runner-up Luke Kemper, and not one, not two, not three, not four, but FIVE wins in the past year against Brenton Russell. That’s a history that’s hard to ignore, and if they meet up at any point in this tournament, it would be unwise to pick against Leech.

     

    Placement Contenders:

    Zachary Lopez

    Jack Hoffman

    Levi Abbott

    Brant Beck

     

    Like I said before, I could have put a number of these guys in the title contenders tier, but I ultimately decided to put them down here, although they should be considered title contenders anyways. Zachary Lopez took 5th last year in Ohio, and is another state placer in a field full of them. Jack Hoffman took 8th in Ohio last year, but I think that he will perform way above that standard, owning two very important Indiana wins over Anthony Cashman and Isaac Valdez in 7-3 and 4-3 victories, respectively. Brant Beck automatically becomes a title contender with a win over the guy that I am predicting to win the bracket, so he can certainly do some damage. If I apply that same logic, then Levi Abbott could also make a very deep win, with a win over the guy that has a win over the guy that I think is going to win, beating Beck 7-3 in the third place match at semi-state last year. Abbott is a bit more of a stretch to reach the finals, but it is certainly not impossible.

     

    Sleeper Pick: Jesse Derringer

     

    Jesse Derringer went out early in last year’s state series, losing in the regional bloodround, but his quality of wins relative to that, compared with his affiliation with Brownsburg, means that he should be considered a game opponent this weekend, and we should expect a fireworks match with any state caliber wrestler.

     

    Top 4:

    Chase Leech

    Brenton Russell

    Benjamin Smith

    Jack Hoffman

     

    178:

     

    Title Contenders:

    Carson Thomas

    Collin Kelly

    Anthony Rinehart

     

    This weight class is super deep, with the top 3 in this weight class being absolutely lethal opponents with some very respectable credentials to their names. #20 Carson Thomas leads the field in this event, as a state runner-up from Ohio, losing only to Purdue freshman Joey Blaze 9-3. Here to challenge him is Colin Kelly, a state runner-up from Illinois, and Crown Point’s Anthony Rinehart. Colin Kelly has no results that I can effectively use to make comparisons, but he does own a GFC title in the Elite division, which is already a strong enough result to catapult him into the title contenders category. Anthony Rinehart is perhaps the most credentialed wrestler in this weight, even without a high state placement to his name, with a 6th place finish at the Walsh Ironman that included a win over Blair Academy’s and Penn commit #16 (at 152) Paul Ognissanti. He also placed 3rd at last year’s IHPO, which makes him the highest returning placer here.

     

    Placement Contenders:

    Eddie Neitenbach

    Matthew Kubas

    Aidan Costello

     

    These three wrestlers, although placed in a lower tier than the title contenders, are not very far off from the level of the three aforementioned wrestlers at this weight. Eddie Neitenbach is an Ohio 3rd placer, and had a very solid IHPO run two years ago in 2021, losing in overtime to The Citadel’s Hayden Watson. Matthew Kubas is an Illinois 4th placer, with two results that stand out to me, although losses, as indicators of his potential success here, losing 13-4 to Purdue freshman Orlando Cruz, and much more impressively, 6-3 to #6 Wyatt Ingham. I’m not sure what to make of these results, but I think that he can make a deep run in this weight and battle against the more prestigious opponents. Lastly, Aidan Costello made it known that he was a lot closer to the top level of the state this past year with a quarterfinal battle against Purdue’s Delaney Ruhlman that ended in a 7-5 loss. He also owns an impressive 8-2 win over Chase Leech at Folkstyle State, a result that gets amplified by Leech’s recent success. I think Costello will be the one to earn that last spot on the podium, but he is dangerous enough to go even further.

     

    Sleeper Pick: Ethan Farnell

    Ethan Farnell has a lot to prove, with his brother, Logan Farnell, showing incredible success at last year’s state tournament and paving the way for his brother to do the same. Ethan almost joined his brother at state last year, losing in the ticket round only 5-3 to Bellmont stud Duke Myers. I think that, like Logan, Ethan will improve greatly from last year and cause some problems for the state qualifiers in this weight.

     

    Top 4:

    Anthony Rinehart

    Carson Thomas

    Colin Kelly

    Aidan Costello

     

    193:

     

    Title Contenders:

    Lane Kiser

     

    I’ve got to be honest, this might be the only lock in the tournament. Kiser placed 2nd this past year in Kentucky, and has been very impressive for years now. He doesn’t have a lot of results for me to give validation to my claim, but I really feel like he’s a step ahead of the field.

     

    Placement Contenders:

    Ronnie Thomas

    Rylan Breen

    Laish Detweiler

    Noah Weaver

    Noah Clouser

     

    Indiana has three wrestlers in this weight class that I think that potentially push Kiser. Laish Detwiler is the only state placer in this group, with an 8th place finish that included a win over Brownsburg’s Caden Brewer. Noah Weaver has also been very solid this past year, ending his state run last year with a Friday night appearance. I also think he was my sleeper pick last year, so it’s good to see my sleeper picks have success when I predict it so. I think the Indiana wrestler here with the most potential, however, is Center Grove’s Noah Clouser, who is all the way up at 193 now, which is pretty funny. Fun little fact: when I wrestled at Disney Duals during the summer before my senior year, Clouser was our 106 pounder. He reminds me of Jack Heldt, our 2023 NCAA Champion, who in his freshman year of high school, was a 113 pounder. You wouldn’t believe it if you saw him now. Anyways, Clouser had an unfortunate postseason run last year that was plagued by injuries, but anyone would agree that Clouser is one of the best in the state now, and I think that he will be the man to challenge Kiser in the finals. There are also a couple of non-Indiana state placers in this weight class, those being Ohio 4th placer Ronnie Thomas and Illinois 5th placer Rylan Breen. I don’t have a lot of information about these guys otherwise, but I think that Breen will likely best Thomas based on my intuition and nothing more than that.

     

    Sleeper Pick: Clay Guenin

    Clay Guenin is another wrestler in this group that is not technically a state placer, but is absolutely at that level. Guenin was ranked as high as 5th this past year, and was on the unfortunate end of a brutal ticket round matchup that ended in a 4-3 loss to eventual 6th placer Kyle Harden. He is ready to contend with some of these higher level guys, and I would go so far as to say that Guenin can find himself on the podium, although I’m not confident enough to predict him to do so.

     

    Top 4:

    Lane Kiser

    Noah Clouser

    Rylan Breen

    Ronnie Thomas

     

    218:

     

    Title Contenders:

    Devin Kendrex

    Caden Brewer

     

    This should be an amazing finals match between 5th placer and Super 32 All-American Devin Kendrex and state qualifier and rapidly improving Caden Brewer. I don’t think that Brewer’s results have been consistent enough to predict an upset here, but I think that this match will be a lot closer than the stats might suggest.

     

    Placement Contenders:

    Brandon Johnson

    Keegan Martin

    Danny Zmorowski

     

    Brandon Johnson might have won the most improved award last year, going from a negative record in 2022 to a 6th place finish in 2023 that included a win over Kendrex at semi-state, and a fall over Julante Hinton. He should be considered a dark horse in this sense, and could potentially spoil some brackets. Keegan Martin is a state qualifier, but has claimed the names of a few state placers, including Kendrex at this last year’s Al Smith. Lastly, Danny Zmorowski is ranked #98 on MatScouts, but is a younger kid in a group of much older ones. This is an instance, similar to Lucas Boe, where I could put him on the podium, but we just don’t know enough yet to do so. This is easily another dark horse, however.

     

    Sleeper Pick: Ceasar Salas

    I’m incredibly biased here, because I spent a lot of Friday’s wrestling at Crown Point High School with all of Crown Point’s studs and anyone else from other schools who would come. Caesar Salas was a young kid that I would wrestle quite a bit, and this kid is insanely athletic. As a college senior, I would expect to just blast through a middle school kid, but I found myself often underneath him after taking shots, and I eventually resorted to not shooting on him at all. This kid has a lot of potential, and I wonder if this could be his breakout performance.

     

    Top 4:

    Devin Kendrex

    Caden Brewer

    Brandon Johnson

    Keegan Martin

     

    288:

     

    Title Contenders:

    James Hartleroad

    Marko Ivanisevic

    Jeffrey Blair

    Brady Beck

     

    So, there’s an important question that has to be decided here in order for me to predict this weight class accurately: how important are Greco-Roman results to Folkstyle success? Because, if we want to talk about results in Greco, James Hartleroad most certainly has them, with an extremely impressive 16U Greco Fargo championship this summer. This comes after a state series run that ended in the ticket round, so he has most definitely improved since then, and is very easily a state caliber wrestler. However, there are some very good heavyweights in this field that will test just how good Hartleroad has gotten. Illinois’s Marko Ivanisevic took 5th this past year, going 44-3 for a quite impressive season. He also has Central Regional title this year, indicating that he is talented with the Olympic styles as well, which could spell trouble for Hartleroad. Jeffrey Blair is another out-of-state invader that has found previous success at this tournament, taking 3rd in 2022 with wins over state qualifiers Peyton Kendall and Hunter Brahnam. Lastly, Brady Beck was the #2 ranked wrestler last year on the bad side of one of the most ridiculous IHSAA State brackets that I have ever seen, and he unfortunately ended his tournament run at 7th. I expect that he will have a much stronger showing at IHPO this year than his state placement might indicate.

     

    Placement Contenders:

    Anthony Popi

    Gideon Castro

    Richard Thorton

     

    Anthony Popi ran into Brownsburg’s nationally ranked Leighton Jones in the Friday night match to dip out of the tournament far earlier than he was ranked to, but he should certainly be considered a threat for any wrestler in this bracket. Gideon Castro, although not a state qualifier, has had past success in this tournament, finishing two matches from the placement rounds in 2022, losing to the last contender in this bracket, Ohio state qualifier Richard Thorton. I don’t think that any of these three will make their way into the top 4 (unless the bracket path wills it so), but they are still dangerous opponents that are capable of such upsets.

     

    Sleeper Pick: Triston Meschede

     

    Although only a regional qualifier, Triston Meschede owns a very important win in this weight class that nobody else at this weight does: a win over Hartleroad. Immediately, this result catapults Meschede into placement contender status, and although Hartleroad’s off season has been much more successful, I don’t think a second win over Hartleroad is crazy.

     

    Top 4:

    Brady Beck

    Mario Ivanisevic

    James Hartleroad

    Jeffrey Blair






     

    Nice write up as I know this took some time . A little information is Evan has wrestled plenty of high school kids. At Cadet Duals this summer he beat 2  different high school state Champs from Oklahoma and Utah followed with wins over state runner ups from Washington and Wisconsin . And wins over 3rd place finishers from Minnesota and Missouri. At Fargo finished 6-2 with loss to the 1 seed from California twice. He beat an Iowa High School State Champ there as well. This will be our 3rd IHPO also. Excited for the chance to compete tomorrow with strong competition. 

  3. 5 minutes ago, TrueRegionFan said:

    If Bishop McCort really is coming to the Carnahan as was mentioned in a different thread, then 126 will sort itself out and give Shepherd an opportunity to show/prove where he ranks. 

     

    #1 Jax Forrest (Bishop McCort), #6 Jake Hockaday (Brownsburg) and #19 Clinton Shepherd (Crown Point) is worth the price of admission.  

     

    Here are the two unknowns.

    • Does Bishop McCort attend the Carnahan?
    • Is Shepherd going 126 for CP or is Hawkins?  Either way, a CP wrestler will be ranked nationally at 126, and quite possibly 132 as well.....

    I don’t think you will see CS at 126 ever again. Also Seth Mendoza will at 126 this season but could be 120 for some bigger tournaments .Most of the Ranked  kids get ranked at much lighter weights than they wrestled for the big off season tournaments such as Fargo and Super 32.  The season is still months away and some kids are growing so will be interesting to see how the weights play out. 

  4. 8 minutes ago, Clint Gard said:

    #1 Criteria per Robert Faulkens - Seeds are based on how many wins you have against the kids in your bracket, if you don't wrestle any of them then your chances of getting a good seed are pretty low.  Why would I not want to put my kids in the best position I can to move on in the state series?  

     

    Now, I also understand we can't see everyone in our sectional and that's ok, but we need to see some of them.  Some coaches don't do it that way and that's ok.  Just not the way I think.  

    Ya I agree with that some as last year year it really mattered to one of our kids from Sectional on but I’m not sure if mattered much to most the other kids. In my opinion with a strong team like yours don’t think I would want to wrestle the smaller programs and just take our chances. But ultimately you have to do what you feel sets them up the best .

  5. 3 hours ago, Clint Gard said:

    I contacted Coach Sandefer about 11 days ago when I started hearing rumors.  We are on the wait list and we'd have to get out of a contract we are locked in to...not as easy as people think it is.  But yes, that is on our list.  We still need to change many dates in our schedule to see sectional opponents.

    Just curious why you want to see Sectional opponents during the season? I believe we only had two in ours and that was because both in our conference 

  6. 38 minutes ago, Keepitlegal said:

    Looks like Johansen was named the new HC for Hobart.  He was the obvious choice.  
     

    Wonder if we can expect a coaching change at Lowell now that Stanley has announced his plan to attend Mt. Carmel.  

    I have officially resigned from Lowell and they will be looking for a new coach. I know as of now the other coaches are staying on staff running open room. 

  7. 2 hours ago, BrodyHardcastle said:

    Some of these brackets are wild. No way Kyrell should be wrestling Drew Gorman first round. Gorman owns two wins over Logan Frazier. Hockaday gets number 11 ranked cali kid in round two and if he wins he’s gets #12 from Florida who I’m pretty sure beat Jake at Super 32. Just a brutal tournament. 

     

    The criteria here doesn’t use common sense. If you are a returning Fargo Placer, US Open Placer, Regional Placer  and some other things that is all that is used. If So and So just beat a US Open Placer at Cadet or Junior Duals or somewhere else it plays no part unfortunately. Death Draws all over at this tournament. 

  8. 1 hour ago, Silence Dogood said:

    I never noticed that they've had to hold things up for a 45 minute wait time at Al Smith. Does it happen often? 

     

    Or is it being able to have 6 matches in a day instead of 5?

     

    1 hour ago, Silence Dogood said:

    I never noticed that they've had to hold things up for a 45 minute wait time at Al Smith. Does it happen often? 

     

    Or is it being able to have 6 matches in a day instead of 5?

    In consolations we have had kids have to wait before. Winners side and they get plenty of down time 

  9. 1 hour ago, TysonNisley said:

    Not a lot of talk about this event, which is interesting because there are a ton of results here that I think are super interesting. Obviously, this is freestyle, so some of these results won't exactly translate to folkstyle results, but it's still interesting to see what potential matchups could happen next year, and what wrestlers seem to be on the rise this off season:

     

    113: Ty Henderson over Ayden Bollinger Fall 5:19

    126: Braylon Reynolds over Carter Fielden TF 15-4

    126: Terry Easley over Carter Fielden Dec 20-17

    138: Tony Wood over Kyrel Leavell Dec 7-6

    138: Kyrel Leavell over Jake Hockaday Fall 4:30

    145: Alex Smith over Silas Foster TF 10-0

    152: Silas Foster over Jeffrey Huyvaert TF 14-4

    152: Christian Arberry over Jeffrey Huyvaert Dec 5-5

    152: Alex Smith over Jeffrey Huyvaert Fall 2:27

    152: Christian Arberry over Silas Foster Dec 5-3

    152: Christian Arberry over Alex Smith Fall 1:39

    160: Gavin Davis over Jeb Prechtel Dec 13-8

    160: Chase Leech over Luke Kemper TF 12-2

    195: Luke Penola over Reid Schroeder Fall 4:44

    285: Hosia Smith over Dom Burgett Dec 7-5

     

    Biggest surprises were probably Hockaday losing to Leavell (and Leavell won quite dominantly) and Arberry popping off with a win over Huyvaert, Foster, and Smith (which I've never heard of Alex Smith before, but he had himself a nice day, beating both Foster 10-0 and Huyvaert by fall, is he an out of state guy that got picked up or is he going to make waves next year?) Also, Penola will probably win a title next year.

    Smith is a Heritage Hills kid. His sister was a Fargo Champ. I believe they are a family of 8/9. Younger brothers are going to be good also. 

  10. 50 minutes ago, Coach Brobst said:

     

    All three of those guys, Leighton, Luke, and John are freak athletes. We coaches all know that football and wrestling cross over a ton!

     

    I'd love to see the statistics on how many 138-160 pounders that qualified for state played football or another sport this year though.

     

    Even better, would love to know how many 106-132 pounders did another sport.

     

    The further down the weight goes, the less options kids have to be involved in sports and find success. What other sports is a 105 pound kid at HSE or Brownsburg going to do and be a contributor? The options are limited, you could even argue wrestling is the ONLY one. These kids can choose to just wrestle at our schools. They usually have run CC or play tennis and baseball or track at a really small school.

     

    My hypothesis is that in the light weights, it's less than 10% of state qualifiers that do another sport, in the middle weights, you may bump to 25%-35%, with the heavier weights being over 50% for certain, maybe even more than 75%.

     

    Thrine plays football and also runs track I believe 

  11. 11 hours ago, TeamGarcia said:

    PA has been cracking down on their HS and as far down as Middle Schools for past 2 years . Transfers, move ins and outs even outta of State  . Not surprised, Illinois just passed that HS kids can’t practice with College athletes anymore all year. All a matter of time other States do the same . We’ll see ? Idk. 

    That was false information 

  12. 36 minutes ago, ReformedPoster said:

    Has to be Mendez.  Majoring the defending champ is a statement.  None of the others listed in this thread have done that.

    Didn’t Jason Tsirtsis beat Cash Quiroga who was returning state champ and 3 time placer who also was All American the following year at Purdue? And I’m not saying Mendez freshman campaign can’t be in the running for best freshman season. I believe case can be made for multiple reasons for different ones.

  13. 1 hour ago, formercollegekid said:

     

     

    The 5th semistate showed out under the lights last night.

     

    106 champ and runner-up 

    113 champ and 3rd and 4th

    120 champ and 3rd and state qualifier

    126 runner-up and 6th

    132 champ and runner-up

    138 runner-up and 3rd

    145 runner-up and state qualifier 

    152 state qualifier, state qualifier

    160 5th and state qualifier

    170 state qualifier

    182 5th and state qualifier 

    195 runner-up and 3rd

    220 state qualifier,  state qualifier 

    285 champ and state qualifier 

     

    5 Champs

    5 runner-ups

    8 placers

    9 state qualifiers

     

    Not a bad day, I would love to see the final numbers on the crown point regional (aka semistate #6 lol) 

    6 champs 

    1 runner up

     

  14. 33 minutes ago, TeamGarcia said:

    Maybe … Puberty hits and he gains 35-40 pounds like my son did ? 
     

    Daily … 6.5oz Steaks & Potato a week will cure that problem if I say myself . Buy a Half a cow like I did to feed that weight gains . 
     

    @Mattyb will vouch, it works .

    I’m not saying it’s not possible but I believe you will see him a year later IMO. I have seen some huge weight gains once they hit puberty 

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