Gonzaga College High School | Archive | February, 2009

Boys Basketball: Gonzaga 49, Paul VI 44

By Joe Kvartunas
Paul VI Student

Gonzaga beat Paul VI in a thrilling come from behind victory Tuesday night, 49-44.

Led by junior guard Cedrick Lindsay, who scored 15 points, the Eagles were able to come back from eight points down late in the third quarter.

“This was a tough competitive battle,” Gonzaga Coach Steve Turner said. “This is how it’s going to be for the rest of the season.”

The victory boosts the first place Eagles to 22-3 overall and 13-2 in the competitive WCAC. And perhaps more importantly, it comes on the heels of a second loss to O’Connell this season, which broke up a 13-game win streak.

It was defensively-controlled game with Paul VI staying in control most of the way. The closest point in the game before the comeback by Gonzaga was the end of the first quarter when the game was tied 13-13.

It was back in forth for most of the second quarter with Paul VI taking control half way through the quarter. Gonzaga was able to stay in the game, though by being physical in the post and getting the Panthers’ Raven Barber into foul trouble early.

“That was huge to us.” Paul VI Coach Glen Farello said. “Raven is a big part of this team and a great rebounder and they were able to get him to foul out early.”

Barber would foul out midway through the third quarter with only 4 points.  

Another major aspect of the game was the inability of PVI’s usually rowdy student section, the sixth man, to become a factor in the game. They were uncharacteristically out represented and out cheered by the Gonzaga fans that traveled to Fairfax for the game.

In the second half, the Panthers came out firing and were able to push the their lead up to eight points with two and a half minutes left in the third quarter. Then, just when it seemed like Paul VI, was going to close it out and pull off the upset, Gonzaga went on a run at the end of the quarter and was able to cut the lead in half by the end of the quarter.  

Gonzaga took control in the fourth, tying the score at 40 three minutes into the quarter. Overall the Eagles outscored the Panthers 17-8 in the fourth quarter.

Ian Hummer chipped in 10 points for the Eagles while Erick Green led Paul VI with 14 points.

“We’ve got a group of guys who have been here and done this before,” Turner said, specifically referring to the Eagles’ comeback against Good Counsel earlier this year.

“Our guys just battled,” he continued. “And when you’re playing the best teams in the country night in and night out you learn to be that way. We told our guys to not worry about the score and take it one possession at a time, and we were able to get back in it.”

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Boys’ Basketball: O’Connell 46, No. 2 Gonzaga 44

By Phil Murphy
Senior Multimedia/Content Manager
Washington D.C. Metropolitan Area

Students and parents turned into amateur scalpers on the blacktop surrounding the arena.

The vast numbers inside O’Connell’s gym forced a ticket outage in its rematch against No. 2 Gonzaga over 45 minutes before tip-off.

Inside, the Knights proved — thus far — they are the only WCAC team with the Purple Eagles’ number on the hardwood.

O’Connell earned its second close win over Gonzaga this season — the Purple Eagles’ only two league losses — surviving a late surge, 46-44, in a matinee on Sunday.

“We are playing hard, we match up well against them and we know where they’re dangerous,” said Knight senior David Eismeier, who had a team-high 11 points. “We really focus on that in practice. I think what we’re doing is playing harder and doing what we do best.

“They beat us four times last year, so we had to come out here and sweep them this year, get a little payback. They won 12 or 13 games in a row and we wanted to end that.”

Added junior Kendall Marshall, whose team won the early-season match-up, 65-60: “They’re first in the league. For us to come out — being fourth in the league — and get two big wins and get the tie-breaker over them is huge.”

The turning point on Sunday came in the third quarter.

After Marshall ended the half on a 3-pointer with :02 seconds left to cut Gonzaga’s lead to one, O’Connell maintained momentum through the intermission.

Eismeier’s veins were pumping ice water early as he connected on back-to-back third-quarter 3-pointers.

The quarter — in which the Knights outscored the Purple Eagles, 16-8 – was punctuated by an emphatic block by O’Connell sophomore Jason Burgess.

“We know this team has had some close games going into the second half,” said Eismeier of Gonzaga (20-3, 11-2), who is ranked No. 12 nationally by ESPN Rise. “And we know they come out and turn that intensity up. We really wanted to come out and turn it up even more than they did.

“It was close game — I think one point … We came out hot, our shots were going in. They were falling, it was great. Things took care of themselves.”

The lead, though, almost unraveled as quickly as it was built up.

The Knights led, 42-33, with 2:55 left in the fourth quarter. But two consecutive Purple Eagle steals-become-baskets sparked an 8-0 Gonzaga run to cut the lead to a single point by the 47-second mark.

But 4-for-4 shooting at the free-throw line in the final minute and sure defensive rebounding for O’Connell (17-6, 10-3) quelled any continued comeback.

“It was the same exact thing that happened at Gonzaga when we played them,” said Marshall, whose team held the Purple Eagles to their lowest point total this year. “We just had to keep our composure and realize teams are going to make runs.

“We just had to take care of the ball and we came out with the win.”

Email: pmurphy@digitalsports.com

PHOTOS             VIDEOS

Gonzaga      12   9  8  15  —  44
O’Connell      7  13 16 10  —  46

Gonzaga – Hummer 7 1-4 15, Lindsay 5 3-5 13, Lemmons 3 0-0 6, Thornton 1 1-6 3, Thomas 1 1-2 3, Ford 1 0-0 2, Hogan 1 0-0 2. Team Totals – 19 6-17 44.
O’Connell – Eismeier 4 0-0 11, Burgess 3 3-6 9, Marshall 2 3-4 8, Savage 3 0-0 6, Jones 3 0-2 6, Cole 2 0-0 4, Williams 1 0-0 2. Team Totals – 18 6-12 46.
Three-Pointers – Gonzaga 0. O’Connell 4 (Eismeier 3, Marshall).

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Beltway Ballers: Boys Basketball Top 10

Boys Beltway Basketball

Top-10 Rankings

Gonzaga, last week’s No. 2 team out of the WCAC, was taken down this past week and drops a few spots in this week’s DigitalSports Beltway Ballers poll; two new teams enter the respective bottom half of this week’s poll as well.

*Records as of Monday, Feb. 9*

1. Montrose Christian (Ind.) 17-1;   LW: 1
Defeated Jeb Stuart (Va.), 60-47, 2/3

2. Springbrook (Montgomery County) 17-0;   LW: 3
Defeated Richard Montgomery, 55-39, 2/3; Magruder, 69-55, 2/6

3. Friendly (Prince George’s County) 16-1;   LW: 4
Defeated Surrattsville, 61-50, 2/3; Fairmont Heights, 79-68, 2/6

4. Chantilly (Northern Region) 18-1;   LW: 5
Defeated Robinson, 67-49, 2/3; Herndon 60-58, 2/6

5. Gonzaga (WCAC) 20-3;   LW: 2
Defeated Carroll, 92-76, 2/3; St. Mary’s Ryken, 75-57, 2/6, lost to O’Connell, 46-44, 2/8

6. Lackey (SMAC) 16-2;   LW: 7
Defeated Patuxent, 84-62, 2/2; Chopticon, 57-56, 2/4; Thomas Stone, 48-44, 2/6

7. DeMatha (WCAC) 19-3;   LW: 9
Defeated St. Mary’s Ryken, 63-49, 2/3; Paul VI, 68-63, 2/6; St. John’s, 45-42, 2/8

8. T.C. Williams (Northern Region) 18-2;   LW: N/R
Defeated West Springfield, 67-35, 2/3; South County, 82-49, 2/7; Veritas Christian Academy, 58-48, 2/8

9. Mount Vernon (Northern Region) 16-4;   LW: N/R
Defeated Wakefield, 78-69, 2/3; Stuart, 63-62, 2/6

10. Bowie (Prince George’s County) 14-2;   LW: 6
Lost to Laurel, 76-57, 2/3; defeated Henry Wise, 73-70, 2/6

Others receiving votes:

Bishop McNamara
(WCAC)

Westfield (Northern Region)

Laurel (Prince George’s County)

Gar-Field (Prince William County)

Thomas Stone (SMAC)

Click HERE to view the Washington, D.C. Area page of DigitalSports.com.

*Teams considered for the Beltway Ballers poll include those in the DCIAA, Loudoun County, Montgomery County, Northern Region, Prince George’s County, Prince William County, Southern Maryland Athletic Conference, and WCAC, as well as other independent private schools.*

Wish to chime in on the Beltway Ballers Poll? E-mail James A. McCray III

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Wrestling: Georgetown Prep is 2nd at St. Albans

By Ryan Mink
rmink@digitalsports.com

A few years ago, a blizzard swept through Washington DC, locking out several top-notch out-of-state teams from participating in the St. Albans wrestling tournament.

It was then that Georgetown Prep finished third, its highest placing up to that point in the prestigious local tournament.

But on a warm Saturday with a handful of major Pennsylvania and Virginia wrestling teams beating up on the rest of the local competition, Georgetown Prep held its own, finishing second behind nationally-ranked Wyoming Seminary for its highest ever finish at St. Albans.

The Little Hoyas had three individual champions and scored 217.5 points, 88.5 less than Wyoming Seminary (Pa.), but seven more than St. Benedicts (N.J.) and 41.5 more than the next closest local team, fourth-place finisher and WCAC champion Bishop O’Connell.

“I think we wrestled about how I expected,” Coach Mike Kubik said. “We’re a solid team.”

Georgetown Prep (16-3) was coming off an IAC championship and first-place finish at Capital Duals. The Little Hoyas avenged duals losses to St. Benedicts and O’Connell in the process.

“We’re starting to build the tradition,” Kubik said. “The kids come in the room and they know if they listen and work hard they’re going to win.”

Georgetown Prep sophomore Bobby Gribbon started the Little Hoyas’ finals momentum with an 11-5 decision over Woodberry Forest’s Chris Cirenza at 152 pounds. Gribbon placed fifth at St. Albans last year.

Following him was senior Giancarlo Zerega at 171 pounds. Zerega was matched up against St. Benedict’s Jeff Johnson, who had pinned Zerega earlier this year after the Georgetown Prep wrestler had an 8-1 lead.

This time, Johnson racked up a 10-0 lead heading into the period, twice turning Zerega on his back. But about a minute into the third period, Zerega used what he calls “dirty kids,” a moved named by former Georgetown Prep wrestler Michael Esposito in which you get a half nelson and grab somewhere the other wrestler really doesn’t want to be grabbed.

“I was thinking, ‘This kid’s pretty good and I don’t really have a chance,’” Zerega said. “’I can at least try to make him hurt, try to make him remember me.’”

With that, Johnson went on his back. Johnson almost fought out of the move for a reverse, but Zerega tipped him back over for the pin at 4:42. It’s the first tournament win of the season for Zerega, who has several times placed second this year.

Lastly, 189-pounder Junior Monzey took down Wyoming Seminary’s Donald McNeil, 6-4. McNeil was just two of nine Wyoming Seminary finalists to be defeated. It’s Monzey’s third tournament win of the season, adding to his Damascus Holiday Tournament and Big 20 titles.

MASON FINALLY GETS HIS JACKET

O’Connell’s Kyle Mason ranks the St. Albans tournament right up there among the highest the Knights wrestle in all season.

But for as important as it is to him, Mason had never won it. He had never even reached the finals.

Finally, on Saturday, the senior 119-pounder got his St. Albans title with a 9-5 decision against Georgetown Prep’s Parke Overmiller.

“I always wanted this jacket,” Mason. “That was always my motivation. I finally got it and I’m happy.”

Mason (37-5) felt the urgency of winning this tournament in his senior year. He was dominant throughout, notching an 18-3 technical fall in the first round, then two pins in a combined two minutes, three seconds heading into the finals.

“I was in a groove today,” Mason said. “This year I knew I had a pretty good chance of winning. Other years they’ve just been a lot better than me. I just didn’t have that next step.”

O’Connell, who was still relishing it’s WCAC win over DeMatha a week later, also put James Young in the 125-pound finals and notched with two third-place finishers – Nam Dunbar and Jonathan Carpenter.

ARECHIGA GETS REVENGE

Good Counsel 112-pounder Shane Arechiga had faced Gonzaga’s Paul O’Neill three previous times this season and lost all three. He pinned himself after leading 11-0, lost in a dual meet and then again in the WCAC finals.

But this time around, Arechiga for some reason felt more confident than ever. That paid off as Arechiga notched a 4-3 decision over O’Neill behind a third-period takedown to finish in third place in the ultra-challenging 112-pound weight class.

“WCACs and the dual meet I was really nervous,” Arechiga said. “Today I felt real confident because I think I was wrestling a lot better today than in my previous matches.”

SEMINARY TAKES OVER

Wyoming Seminary was absolutely dominant throughout the tournament. It notched seven champions, including 135-pounder Nicky Gordon, who became just the third wrestler to ever become a four-time St. Albans champion.

“It feels great, “ Gordon said. “It’s a great tournament, it’s good competition and we really like this tournament.”

It’s the third tournament Gordon has become a four-time champion at this year. He also became a four-time Mount Mat Madness champion and four-time Tunkhannock title winner.

But despite his milestone, Gordon wasn’t even named the tournament’s Outstanding Wrestler. That honor went to 130-pounder Devon Brown, who handled three-time Maryland State private schools champion Andrew Bannister with a 6-2 decision.

“They’re tough and they’ve got motors,” Prep’s Kubik said of Wyoming Seminary’s wrestlers. “They never stop.”

CHAMPIONSHIP RESULTS

103: Malone (WYO) tech Jackson (McN), 18-2
112: Johnson (WYO) majdec Prada (DeM), 11-3
119: Mason (DJO) dec Overmiller (GP), 9-5
125: Kitzis (WYO) dec Young (DJO), 7-1
130: Brown (WYO) dec Bannister (McN), 6-2
135: Gordon (WYO) fall Boucher (St.B), 1:35
140: Burg (WFS) dec. Wesley (St.C), 8-3
145: Martinez (WYO) dec. Phillips (St.C), 8-2
152: Gribbon (GP) dec. Cirenza (WFS), 11-5
160: Luvsandorj (St.B) maj. Caiazzo (WYO), 15-6
171: Zerega (GP) fall Johnson (St.B), 4:42
189: Monzey (GP) dec. McNeil (WYO), 6-4
215: McMullen (WYO) fall Vassos (LAN), 2:33
HVY: Freeman (St.C) fall Henry (EHS), 1:15

TEAM SCORES

1. Wyoming Seminary – 306
2. Georgetown Prep – 217.5
3. St. Benedicts – 210.5
4. O’Connell – 176
5. St. Christopher’s – 143.5
6. Woodberry Forest – 142
7. Episcopal – 129
8. DeMatha – 100.5
9. Sidwell Friends – 92.5
10. Good Counsel – 91
11. McNamara – 81
12. Gonzaga – 79
13. Paul VI – 77.5
14. St. Stephen’s/St. Agnes – 69
15. Western Reserve Academy – 60
16. Bullis – 57
17. Landon – 55
18. Bishop Ireton – 47.5
19. St. Mary’s Ryken – 46
20. St. Anselm’s – 30
21. Randolph Macon – 27.5
22. St. Albans – 27
23. Georgetown Day – 26
24. McLean School – 25
25. Progressive Christian Academy – 18
26. St. John’s – 14
27. Princeton Claremont – 13
28. Potomac – 12
29. Heights – 7
30. Maret – 7
31. Edmund Burke – 6

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Beltway Ballers: Boys Basketball Top 10

Boys Beltway Basketball

Top-10 Rankings

The DigitalSports Beltway Ballers basketball top-10 teams had a strong showing this past week winning a combined 14 of 15 games played; the top three teams remain in place and the one loss that did occur shakes up this week’s poll

*Records as of Monday, Feb. 2*

1. Montrose Christian (Ind.) 16-1     LW: 1
Defeated Paul VI, 52-50, 1/31

2. Gonzaga (WCAC) 18-2     LW: 2
Defeated St. John’s (D.C.), 66-52, 1/30

3. Springbrook (Montgomery County) 15-0     LW: 3
Defeated Sherwood, 71-43, 1/29; Blake, 53-52, 1/30

4. Friendly (Prince George’s County) 13-1     LW: 5
Defeated Frederick Douglass (P.G.), 71-59, 1/29

5. Chantilly (Northern Region) 16-1     LW: 6
Defeated Fairfax, 61-57, 1/29; Oakton, 53-32, 1/30

6. Bowie (Prince George’s County) 13-1     LW: 7
Defeated Northwestern (P.G.), 60-55, 1/29; Parkdale, 94-27, 1/30

7. Lackey (SMAC) 13-2     LW: 8
Defeated La Plata, 80-48, 1/30

8. Thomas Stone (SMAC) 12-2     LW: 9
Defeated Northern, 55-48, 1/30

9. DeMatha (WCAC) 16-3    LW: 4
Lost to Good Counsel, 55-54, 1/30; Defeated John Marshall, 69-65, 1/31

10. Bishop McNamara (WCAC)     LW: 10
Defeated Acad. New Church, 55-50, 1/30

Others receiving votes:

T.C. Williams (Northern Region)

Mt. Vernon (Northern Region)


Click
HERE to view the Washington, D.C. Area page of DigitalSports.com.

*Teams considers for the Beltway Ballers Poll include those in the DCIAA, Loudoun County, Montgomery County, Northern Region, Prince George’s County, Prince William County, Southern Maryland Athletic Conference, and WCAC, as well as other independent private schools*


Wish to chime in on the Beltway Ballers Poll? E-mail James A. McCray III

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Wrestling: O’Connell ends DeMatha’s 23-year title run

By Ryan Mink
rmink@digitalsports.com

O’Connell wrestling Coach Bill Carpenter won a WCAC championship his first year of coaching.

“I figured, ‘Well, this is going to be a piece of cake,’” Carpenter said.

After 28 years and 23 straight WCAC DeMatha conference tournament championships, Carpenter has certainly come to realize that it’s no piece of cake.

“And today, true to form, it was not a piece of cake,” Carpenter said Saturday.

O’Connell ended DeMatha’s domination of the WCAC conference that lasted nearly a quarter-century Saturday evening behind four individual champions and a 180.5 team score, just 4.5 points more than the Stags.

The Knights led by 18 points before the Stags stormed back. The tournament came down to the final bout at heavyweight between Paul VI’s Dan McGroarty and DeMatha’s Miguel Azucena, with the entire O’Connell squad relegated to cheering from the sideline.

“It’s the first time we cheered for PVI, cause …” Knights 130-pounder Nam Dunbar said, alluding to O’Connell’s rivalry with its Virginia conference foe.

The Stags needed a major decision in the bout to win, but McGroarty – a first-year wrestler – pulled out a 5-2 decision to seal O’Connell’s tournament title.

Paul VI fans, O’Connell fans and otherwise exploded in cheers, as if nearly the entire gym was ready to see somebody else take the crown this season. The O’Connell wrestlers flocked to McGroarty and Carpenter came to him, shook his hand and said he will be his favorite Paul VI student athlete for all time.

“I think everybody in the whole school was cheering for me,” McGroarty said. “They’ve had it 23 years. I think it’s time to change it a little bit.”

O’Connell had finished second to DeMatha too many times for Carpenter to count. But O’Connell is laden with senior experience, motivated to win in its coaches final season and was convinced that it could pull off the upset after beating the Stags in a dual meet.

“I’ve been looking forward to this since freshmen year when I found out how many times they had won it,” Dunbar said. “Ever since, I wanted to win this so bad. Everybody has.”

“I’ve been wanting to win this since I was born,” 135-pounder Jonathan Carpenter added. “My dad’s the coach. I’ve been watching DeMatha win every year and it’s nice to know we’re the best team.”

O’Connell entered the finals with a 6 ½ point lead and had eight wrestlers in the finals compared to DeMatha’s seven. The two teams had head-to-head matchups in five matches.

The Knights got their first big win at 119-pounds from Kyle Mason, who took down DeMatha’s Pat Prada, who bumped up a weight class despite feeling sick all week. Mason pulled out a 9-5 victory.

O’Connell 125-pounder James Young then eeked out a 7-5 win over Jonathan Simmons, then Carpenter beat the Stags’ Kyle Hayden at 135 pounds to give the Knights an 18-point lead.

But then, with DeMatha’s Chris Miller losing 8-3 to O’Connell’s Chris Curtin, the Stag senior tossed Curtin on his bag and pinned him. It was Miller’s first-ever finals appearance in any tournament.

“I wanted to do a leaping hug but I didn’t know if that was too cliché,” Miller said. “I went from winning my match, feeling great and everyone congratulating me to now just feeling terrible.”

Miller’s win electrified the Stags, who then cheered Paul VI’s Ben Pfotenhauer to a 3-2 decision over O’Connell’s Conor Furey, then got a huge pin from Daniel Singh at 189 pounds.

Ben Hatef pinned O’Connell’s Christian Straubs at 215 pounds in just 1 minute, 28 seconds, setting up the Stags for a chance to win.

“Let’s go Dan!” Young said of O’Connell’s feelings at the time.

Besides the Knights’ individual champions, O’Connell got big third-place finishes from 152-pounder Andrew Nguyen, who had never placed before at a tournament, and first-year wrestler Luke Milligan at 189.

“It’s the way to go out,” said Carpenter, who confirmed he plans to hang up his coaching shoes after this season. “For us, this is as sweet as it gets.”

McNAMARA’S BANNISTER IS OUTSTANDING

Bishop McNamara senior 130-pounder Andrew Bannister has won numerous tournament titles. He’s a three-time Maryland private schools champion and can’t even recall all of his other tournament bracket sheets.

It’s the level of competition that Bannister sees that makes a tournament memorable. Bannister faced off against his rival, Bishop O’Connell’s Nam Dunbar, in Saturday’s finals and won 11-6. He was later named the tournament’s Outstanding Wrestler.

It’s vindication for Bannister, who lost in the semifinals of last year’s WCAC tournament after bumping up a weight class. Then, there were some who thought Bannister was trying to avoid Dunbar.

But after beating Dunbar for the third time in his career, Bannister has further proven that he is the victor of the match-up between two of the area’s most talented wrestlers.

“It kind of solidified my accomplishments,” Bannister said. “I was feeling real nervous going in and I’m pretty sure he was feeling the same way. With me and him it can go either way.”

Just as in their last match-up, Dunbar went up 4-1 early in the match. After an escape, Bannister got a takedown with eight seconds left in the second period. The pair then knotted the score at 6 with 50 seconds left before Bannister got a takedown with 23 seconds left and rolled Dunbar to his back.

McNamara also had the 103-pound champion in Aaron Jackson, who like Bannister has suffered just two losses this season.

“It’s a lot of hard work, wrestling with Andrew every day,” Jackson said. “I’m trying to come behind Andrew Bannister, a three-time state champ and all that. I’ll try something.”

O’NEILL GETS HIS SECOND TITLE

Gonzaga sophomore Paul O’Neill notched his second WCAC title with a 7-3 win over Good Counsel’s Shane Arechiga at 112 pounds. The match was one of the elite match-ups of the tournament.

“It’s no different from the first, but it feels good to get the win,” O’Neill said. “I knew I was going to have to wrestle hard. Shane’s a real good wrestler. I’ll celebrate after the season but right now I’m just trying to stay focused.”

Gonzaga also got third-place finishes from Zak Thompson at 119 pounds and Stephane Guilou at 125.

WENZLAFF BOOSTS CADETS

St. John’s 160-pounder James Wenzlaff had beaten Paul VI’s Matt Carlstrom already this season but he couldn’t help but be a little nervous taking the mat Saturday. That’s because Wenzlaff knew that St. John’s wrestling really wanted his win.

Wenzlaff defeated Carlstrom, 9-2, becoming the first Cadet to win a WCAC championship in the past four years.

“I was a little shaky,” Wenzlaff said, admitting the history at first made him nervous but then boosted him later. “Towards the end when I started wrestling it helped me.”

PAUL VI IS ALSO STRONG

The Panthers did more than just help O’Connell win the title. Paul VI had quite a strong showing with three champions out of four finalists.

Ben Pfotenhauer won a 3-2 decision over O’Connell’s Conor Furey, Charles Bull beat Ireton’s TJ McLaughlin, 8-0, and McGroarty notched perhaps the most dramatic win of all.

McGroarty found his chances at winning a title because Good Counsel heavyweight Devin Gordon-Hamm was still on a football recruiting trip at Pittsburgh and St. John’s heavyweight Kevin McReynolds was also not participating Saturday.

TEAM STANDINGS

1. O’Connell – 180.5
2. DeMatha – 176
3. Paul VI – 130
4. Good Counsel – 87
5. McNamara – 84.5
6. Ireton – 76.5
7. Gonzaga – 59
8. St. Mary’s Ryken – 55
9. St. John’s – 24

CHAMPIONSHIP RESULTS

103- Aaron Jackson (MCN) maj.dec, 13-4 over Elliot Mondragon (BI)
112- Paul O’Neill (ZAG) dec, 7-3 over Shane Arechiga (GC)
119- Kyle Mason (DJO) dec, 9-5 over Pat Prada (DEM)
125- James Young (DJO) dec, 7-5 over Jonathan Simmons (DEM)
130- Andrew Bannister (MCN) dec, 11-6 over Nam Dunbar
135- Jonathan Carpenter (DJO) dec, 10-4 over Kyle Hayden (DEM)
140- Christopher Miller (DEM) pin, 3:20 over Chris Curtin (DJO)
145- Ben Pfotenhauer (PVI) dec, 3-2 over Conor Furey (DJO)
152- Charles Bull (PVI) dec, 8-0 over TJ McLaughlin (BI)
160- James Wenzlaff (SJC) dec, 9-2 over Matt Carlstrom (PVI)
171- Mitch Brown (DJO) dec, 4-41 over Mark Rodriguez (BI)
189- Daniel Singh (DEM) pin, 2:21 over Andrew Lutterloh (BI)
215- Ben Hatef (DEM) pin, 1:28 over Christian Straubs (DJO)
275- Dan McGroarty (PVI) dec, 5-2 over Miguel Azucena (DEM)

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