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aoberlin

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  1. By Andrew Oberlin It’s that time of year again here in Indiana, February Madness, and I’m not talking about basketball. There is a very strong community of diehard wrestlers, fans, and coaches in Indiana for whom late January and early February is a time of excitement, anxiety, and sleepless nights. Those involved know what is at stake this time of year and for many it has been a 13 year journey . I’m going to attempt to give you some insight. In my humble opinion, Indiana’s state wrestling tournament is the toughest in the nation for a wrestler to punch a ticket through to the Indiana high school state because of the number of wrestlers in the state, the single class system for wrestling, and the lack of wrestlebacks. Indiana competes well at the national level and is one of only 5 states that has a single class for their state tournament. Furthermore, Indiana is the only state that doesn’t have wrestlebacks in their State High School Tournament. There are a lot of wrestlers in Indiana. This year, Indiana has nearly 10,000 USA Wrestling (USAW) cardholders, which earns us the rank of 5th in the nation for the number of USAW participants. USAW is the largest national organization that governs folkstyle, freestyle, and Greco-Roman wrestling in the United States; it is a separate entity from the Indiana High School Athletic Association (IHSAA). This figure doesn’t include the middle school and high school wrestlers who do not compete in USAW events. In addition, the number of wrestlers in Indiana continues to grow as girls wrestling gains popularity. Seedings and Wrestlebacks At most top-level tournaments, wrestlers are seeded so that the best wrestlers don’t face each other early in the tournament. Seeding is not an exact science, and many times decisions are based on opinions. Whoever is seeding the tournament can use things such as results of past head-to-head matches, common opponents, or individual win-loss records to determine placement. Head-to-head is the best way to seed a tournament but many times head-to-head matches haven’t taken place, so organizers look for a common opponent and how each wrestler did against that opponent. This can be a valid way to seed, but does not always take body type and wrestling styles into account. Individual win-loss records are generally given the least consideration when seeding wrestlers because schedules and levels of competition vary greatly. There is no perfect way to seed wrestlers. Wrestlebacks allow a wrestler to prove a seeding wrong or provide a second chance to overcome a mistake. Wrestlebacks are done at almost every tournament wrestlers will participate in from the time they are 5 all the way through college; however, because of Gene Hackman and the movie Hoosiers, Indiana is only concerned with crowning the state champion and our state wrestling tournament does accomplish that. I kid about the movie Hoosiers... kind of. To be clear, my point is not to go on a rant about why Indiana needs to have wrestlebacks (which I strongly believe we do). That is a battle the coaches association and wrestling community has fought ad nauseam for decades and at this point it just doesn’t look like it is going to happen. I am explaining the factors that go into the emotions our wrestlers, coaches, and fans experience every year at this time. Indiana High School State Wrestling Tournament Format To understand the passion that goes on at the state tournament, one must understand what it took to get there. Many wrestlers in Indiana start their wrestling journeys between the ages of 5 and 8. They likely had thousands of hours of year-round training and more than 500 youth matches. High school wrestlers survived the gauntlet of youth wrestling and continued intense training into high school... This requires a lot of blood (literally), sweat, and tears on the part of the wrestlers, their families, and their coaches. By the time a wrestler is in high school, there is an entire support system that is emotionally invested in that wrestler’s career. There are only 14 state champions out of thousands of high school wrestlers, so the majority of wrestlers will not end their careers reaching their ultimate goal. If you understand how our Indiana state wrestling tournament is run, you can skip this part. There are 315 schools in the state that participate in wrestling. The state tournament is 4 weeks long. Competitions take place each Saturday during the first 3 weeks and on Friday and Saturday during the 4th week. Week 1 is sectionals which consists of 8 to 10 teams with 14 weight classes. Week 2 is regionals which combine the top wrestlers from 2 sectionals. Week 3 is a semi-state which combines the top wrestlers from 4 regionals. Week 4 is a state which combines the top wrestlers from 4 semi-states. Sectionals is the only part of the tournament that uses the seeding process. After sectionals everything else is based on how the wrestler placed the week before. For regionals the first place sectional winners wrestle the 4th place winners from the opposite sectional. Second place sectional winners wrestle 3rd place sectional winners. Since there are no wrestle backs if a wrestler loses the first round of regionals they are done for the season. If a wrestler wins at regionals they advance to semi-state. Things start to get tricky at semi-state.. With 4 regionals feeding into semi-state there are a total of 16 wrestlers in each weight class and 4 different regional champs for each weight class. It’s the same formula as regionals with 1st place wrestling 4th and 2nd place wrestling third but since the pool of wrestlers has expanded match-ups are drawn at random every year. To advance from semi-state to state a wrestler must win their first two matches. For every semi-state mini bracket of 1st through 4th place regional placers only one wrestler will continue to state by winning their first two matches. The state finals are Friday and Saturday of week 4. The same type of formula used for semi-state is applied to state. At state Friday night the walk of champions takes place where they announce all the schools that have a wrestler represented at the meet. Wrestlers all wrestle once on Friday; if they don’t win that match they are done and do not advance to wrestle on Saturday. Here is an example random Semi-State bracket that could be used: February I hear the term March Madness all the time when they talk about the NCAA basketball tournament. For me it pales in comparison to the February Madness that happens right here in Indiana during our high school wrestling state tournament. If you have the opportunity to watch any part of the 4 week state tournament know that with every win and loss, especially when the wrestler is a senior, you are seeing the hopes and dreams of a small community either being fulfilled or coming to end after thousands of hours of hard work. In the end winning doesn’t care about you and neither does wrestling, but those that have been part of a wrestler’s journey do and that is what matters. If you truly know what wrestling is about you know the wrestler has become a better person because of it and that is something to be proud of. I wish you all the best during this post season and know that wrestling is training for the life that follows. Indiana wrestling has been a part of my life for over 35 years. I had my high school dreams come to end without reaching my ultimate goal. I have now coached for 27 years and I have been a part of this walk and moment more times than I can remember. The photo below captures it all, a wrestler and part of his support system walking off the mat for the last time while coming to terms with the finality of it. Austin Farris, the wrestler in this photo, first stepped on a wrestling mat at 4 years old with his father by his side. This is a picture of Austin walking back to the bleachers for the last time in his high school career after losing a close match. Dee Farris, his father and coach, has his hand on Austin’s back; following behind the father and son are coaches that have been with Austin on his journey since he was young.
  2. It’s that time of year again here in Indiana, February Madness, and I’m not talking about basketball. There is a very strong community of diehard wrestlers, fans, and coaches in Indiana for whom late January and early February is a time of excitement, anxiety, and sleepless nights. Those involved know what is at stake this time of year and for many it has been a 13 year journey . I’m going to attempt to give you some insight. In my humble opinion, Indiana’s state wrestling tournament is the toughest in the nation for a wrestler to punch a ticket through to the Indiana high school state because of the number of wrestlers in the state, the single class system for wrestling, and the lack of wrestlebacks. Indiana competes well at the national level and is one of only 5 states that has a single class for their state tournament. Furthermore, Indiana is the only state that doesn’t have wrestlebacks in their State High School Tournament. View full article
  3. Yeah well I remember finding out on the bus ride home from Regionals that I drew Myers for the 2nd year in a row in the ticket round after getting caught in the finals. Some things you can't forget.
  4. Years back coaches got the draws right after their Regional was done. You do the math on what happened when one Regional finishes before the other Regional.
  5. As my old coach use to say. Sometimes it's not about the points you score it's about the points you don't give up.
  6. We can take Warsaw and Wawasee back for sure.
  7. The Coliseum also hosted IHPO this year and it was great!
  8. I would be way willing to help out in anyway possible.
  9. Get Faulkens to commit to Fort Wayne. We need to get Komet's Hockey to blank that date out.
  10. My family is praying for the Eastside/Butler community as a whole.
  11. So the Nortside of downtown? The downtown part is what she hammers me on.
  12. Quick question. I consider North Side High School downtown and my wife says no way. Is that a deciding factor if I qualify as a Fort Waynian? Honest question we debate it all the time. I truly believe that is something people that grew up outside of Fort Wayne see differently.
  13. I don't have time to look it up right now. But I know for sure I have come to your defense multiple times on this forum. But that doesn't matter. Know that I have 0 ill will towards you and my intent wasn't to provoke but to give some insight on what I see as someone trying to do their best in a situation that is just tough. Judge my character on not caring if someone said something to me that I should take offense to, that is fine. If I got in a fight or defriended someone over a disagreement that could have been handled better I would be in jail or have no friends. I wish I was from Fort Wayne but I am from the rough streets of Butler where railroad tracks are king.
  14. I'm no stranger. I have lived in Fort Wayne for 25 years. I have lived in West Central Fort Wayne for 10 of those years while I put myself through college bartending then in Northrop's school district for another 8 years. My wife and her family went to North Side and grew up in the 08 while her dad pastored and still does down the street from The Fort. My wife has taught in FWCS for around 23 years. First at North Side then Ward then Elmhurst and now New Tech which part of Wayne. We moved Southwest because grandma works at Woodside and that worked best for our family with childcare. I get that you would still consider me an outsider. If you call having a passion to grow the sport and help young adults become better people through the sport of wrestling me wanting to be a hero so be it. Yes I have a passion and addictive personality. I put my time and money where mouth is always and I will always put the kids first. It wasn't the first or the last time I will be cussed at and it didn't offend me. All I was doing was giving facts on what I have personally see Ethan try to do and what I personally see would benefit the whole area the best. Coming at me sideways all the time isn't productive. I say the same thing about you. You have passion for the sport so we have something in common. Also please elaborate on what you mean by gatekeepers? Do you mean coaches? Because this year alone I know of at least 4 coaching openings that were very hard to be filled in Northeast Indiana. Not just the SAC.
  15. I will stand up for Ethan here. Ethan's 145 is very solid and has proven himself by winning the SAC. The sectional seeds did not play out in his favor because of a loss he had against us early in the season but we then lost to Snider. He has passion for his wrestler which is what a coach should have. So much so he gave me and my coach the what for at the seeding meeting and I totally understood. I will say this. In the offseason Ethan has constantly contacted me and recommend his wrestlers to go do offseason training. His youth club has about 40 in it this year and last year I believe around the same. He had a little beginner tournament last year for all FWCS schools and local clubs and it went well. Coaching at North Side, Wayne, and Northrop are very tough to get the numbers and keep them and it will need to be from the ground up. We came close to getting middle school wrestling going this year but logistically it just doesn't seem to work. I don't think we have a wrestler shortage all the time we have a huge coaching shortage. Not just at the high school level but also in at the youth and middle school level. Look at what Blackhawk middle school ran into this year. Snider has an established culture that is back on the rise with a very good full coaching staff and support from the top down. I think a possible answer can be recruiting local college grads from Manchester, Indiana Tech, Wabash, and Trine to come back and be willing to sacrifice their time to invest in the youth and middle school. A single High School coach can't do it by themselves. I personally have 2 coaches on my staff that are young and graduated from Indiana Tech. Lost a great one last year to a job change. It's awesome to see them out on the mat wrestling the kids and doing what they love. Let's bring those graduated college wrestlers into our rooms and mentor them for a year or 2 and get them involved in the youth and middle school side of things. I know I am not saying anything you don't know General. Just wanted to give a shout out to Ethan because coaching can be a thankless job especially in some of the schools that just aren't quite there yet. Ethan is passionate about his wrestler and that I totally understand. I am pretty upset at my 138 pounders seed but we lost a close match at the end that cost us. Tis wrestling.
  16. I will take it as a compliment that 2 out of 3 wrestlers you picked outside of the SAC are Homestead wrestlers. It's going to be fun day.
  17. The email said 7:00pm. I see what you are doing!
  18. Are you saying my old coach is wrong!!!! How dare you.
  19. AKA cement job, kindergartener killer, cowboy, and my old coach called it a ball and chain.
  20. A ton of those freshman put a bunch of work in during the off-season. If I wasn't seeing them training I was at least seeing them out and about competing. Another good freshman not quite on the radar yet is Wyatt Hoppes of Eastern. We are a couple years from seeing all the local opportunities really start to shine at the State level. From there in my opinion it starts rolling.
  21. I have corrected this on my end. Tis my fault. I was tired.
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