The Mighty Few

Ellenville Holds Sway Over Undermanned Burke and Liberty As All Three Teams Evince Some Fine Performances; A Few Aspiring Sectional Contenders Loom Large From Each Program

Ellenville 39, John S. Burke Catholic 23

John S. Burke Catholic 30, Liberty 16

Ellenville 48, Liberty 12

By RICHARD A. ROSS

rross@sportsinsightsny.com

Photos at: www.sportsinsights.smugmug.com

Scenes from a night of compelling wrestling (clockwise) Burke senior Brian Leahey (138) continues his undefeated dominance with a pin of Ellenville's Kyle Conner. Defending Section Nine champion Andy Martinez (182) of Liberty pins Ellenville's Javier Cortez. Liberty's Luis Rivera (113) pins Burke's Martin Nowak. Liberty's Matt Rourke (152) puts up a tough battle before being pinned by Ellenville's Ethan Lonstein. Ellenville Coach Merrill Conner counsels his son Kyle after a losing match. Conner went on to win the nightcap. Burke's wrestling motto is "Non Vox, sed votum" which means, not the words but the deeds. Liberty and Ellenville show their colors as well. Liberty's Vinny Webbe(132) pins Ellenville's Willie Bruce

LIBERTY, NY—“These are the times that try men’s souls,” noted founding father Thomas Paine and indeed those words aptly describe the realm of small school wrestling. To be sure, each match is a trying affair as athletes are often pitted against adversaries who are strong, skilled and well-coached.

But the most trying aspect may well be the insufficient numbers of wrestlers that coaches have to go to war with.

With the preponderance of athletes in the already limited talented pool heading off in winter to play basketball or join the indoor track leagions, high school wrestling coaches like Ellenville’s Merrill Conner, Burke’s Dave Predmore and Liberty’s John Lennon are hard-pressed to find a sufficient number of wrestlers to fill out all of the weight classes.

With Ellenville’s illustrious record in indoor track and Liberty’s annual battle therein that usually places them second to the Blue Devils, a lot of potential wrestlers are making their presence felt as runners, jumpers and particularly as throwers. Football players often move on to track in winter.

The rigorous nature of the sport warrants toughness, intense focus and arduous training and it comes with its requisite collateral effects including cuts, bumps and bruises and occasionally even broken bones.

If you don’t put in the work in sports like indoor track, the worst thing that can happens is that you will lose in your event, whereas in wrestling, you can get brutalized or overmatched in a New York Minute. With parents and friends looking on, sometimes that’s even worse than leaving the mat battered and bruised.

Lennon has been coaching  at Liberty for 31 years continuing his relationship with the program which he began as a wrestler for the Tribe. Lennon was second in Section Nine when he weighed in at 138 back in those days when it was far tougher. There weren’t two divisions then. You literally had to beat everybody.

Lennon has only six wrestlers in the fold this year. He had seven but one of his young wrestlers, a promising  170 pound contender, quit due to parental concerns about potential injury in the sport. Truth be told, kids are far more resilient than one might imagine and the rigors of the sport not only make them tougher, they are apt to build character, perseverance and fortitude for life’s coming challenges.

Still, out of Lennon’s six, three made it to the finals at the Walton tournament including Luis Rivera (120), Vinny Webbe (132) and defending Section Nine champion Andy Martinez (182).  Martinez is a heavy favorite to successfully defend his title. He is currently 14-3 and undefeated against Section Nine opponents. He lost a pair of matches at Eastern States and another in an earlier tournament.

Lennon figures Rivera and Webbe will make it to sectionals too, and if he maintains his focus, Dylan Blackwell (113) could join them there. Also showing great toughness on this night was Matt Rourke (152) in an epic battle he staged against Ellenville’s Ethan Lonstein. The latter won by a pin in 5:32.

Small numbers are also a problem for Burke. Predmore has seven wrestlers in the fold that includes undefeated senior Brian Leahey (138) and Daniel Martin (113), two wrestlers Predmore feels can make some serious inroads in sectionals.

Leahey did a fine job of controlling Ellenville’s Kyle Conner, eventually pinning him in 5:50, while Martin pinned Joe Smith in 2:53.

According to Predmore, viewing the season in terms of head to head performance, the Eagles have only been vanquished once and that was against powerful Rondout Valley. They bested Ellenville 4-3 in this tilt in head-to-head matches. Still, with only seven wrestlers ready to battle, Burke has to yield 42 points and can only hope that some of those will be subtracted as no contests when the opposing team also has no one to go in those classes.

Conner counseled his son Kyle after the match, offering suggestions and strategy as well as pointing out the places where Leahey evinced the upper hand. He lauded the work of Luis Arango (152) in his pin of Burke’s John Longo in 3:30. “He’s starting to come around. It’s a good time as sections are coming up,” he noted.”

With so many forfeits by Burke and Liberty, Conner noted that “It’s tough to get your guys up for a match when you’re only wrestling five or six guys. At 10-7 overall, the Blue Devils are faring well given the fact that they have new wrestlers in the fold. That said, Ellenville which is in Division II-A is winless in that realm.

Conner expects Kenny Krygier (160) to make sectionals and eventually have to duke it out with Austin Weigel from Red Hook. “Sectionals will be tough and even now you an almost set the sectional line up.”

“Right now our biggest problem is having more competition in practice as far as my lighter weights are concerned.” Conner, who wrestled for Ellenville up until his graduation in 1984, has been coaching the sport for the past seven or eight years as part of his 12 years coaching tenure that includes football and baseball.

Predmore’s take on the match was “We did pretty well but some of our kids are still making the same mistakes they’ve made since the beginning of the year. There are definitely matches we should have won. Getting pinned in a match when you’re up by three or four points is inexcusable,” he noted.

“We hope to make a bit of a name for ourselves this year,” concluded Predmore. That aspiration is emblazoned on Burke’s warm up shirts in the latin words, Non vox, sed votum, which means not the words, but the deeds.

Here are the results of two of the matches. I am awaiting the results of the Liberty-Burke match won by the Eagles 30-16. I’ll add them to this story later.

Non-league: Ellenville 39, Burke Catholic 23

99 pounds: no contest; 106: Jon Candelaria (E) won by forfeit; 113: Daniel Martin (BC) pin Joe Smith 2:53; 120: Miguel Candelaria (E) d. Martin Nowak 10-6; 126: Greg Avery (E) pin Bert Cohan 3:48; 132: Kurt Hefner (BC) pin Dylan Bonitz 2:26; 138: Brian Leahey (BC) pin Kyle Conner 5:50; 145: Jack Ehret (BC) won by forfeit; 152: Luis Arango (E) pin John Longo 3:30; 160: Chris Maerling (E) won by forfeit; 170: Javier Cortes (E) won by forfeit; 182: no contest; 195: no contest; 220: no contest; 285: Kyle Cox (E) won by forfeit.

Ellenville 48, Liberty 12

99 pounds: no contest; 106: Jon Candelaria (E) won by forfeit; 113: Joe Smith (E) pin Dylan Blackwell 2:17; 120: Miguel Candelaria (E) pin Luis Rivera 3:48; 126: David Lonstein (E) won by forfeit; 132: Vincent Webbe (L) pin Willie Bruce 1:44; 138: Kyle Conner (E) pin Ethan Porter :48; 145: no contest; 152: Ethan Lonstein (E) pin Matt Rourke 5:32; 160: Ken Krygier (E) won by forfeit; 170: no contest; 182: Andrew Martinez (L) pin Javier Cortez 3:15; 195: no contest; 220: no contest; 285: Kyle Cox (E) won by forfeit.

For an album of photos, visit www.sportsinsights.smugmug.com

 

 

Double Barrel Firepower

Eldred-Fallsburg Records Wins Against Tuxedo and Burke, Two Division II Rivals They Lost To A Year Ago; In Its Second Year, Program Advances Dramatically As Combined Team Is Now A Division II B Contender

Tuxedo 45, John S. Burke Catholic 14

Eldred-Fallsburg 36, John S. Burke Catholic 22

Eldred-Fallsburg 48, Tuxedo 36

By RICHARD A. ROSS

rross@sportsinsightsny.com

Scenes from an uplifting senior night for the Eldred-Fallsburg wrestling team which defeated both Tuxedo and Burke in a league dual meet. (clockwise): Co-head coaches Tim Bult and Jim Corcoran, Eldred's Jesse Corcoran (220) pins Tuxedo's Eddie Anderson in 3;03. Seniors: John Mejia, Marie Countryman, Roosevelt Payton, Dominique Veles, Fallsburg's Carl Peterson-Langdon wins a 7-6 decision over Burke's John Langdo. Eldred senior Tony Moriggia and Fallsburg Superintendent Dr. Ivan Katz, a former great collegiate, Olympic and world wrestler who is an ardent supporter of the program.

FALLSBURG, NY—The old adage maintains that two heads are better than one and the question surrounding the combined wrestling effort of Eldred and Fallsburg a year ago was whether two schools would be better than one.

Given the fact that Eldred had only a few wrestlers and Fallsburg lacked the experience of the Eldred grapplers who would add their skills and leadership to a combined venture, the answer was a resounding yes.

Now, in the second year of the merged squad, dividends are starting to pay off under the savvy watch of coaches Tim Bult of Fallsburg and Jim Corcoran of Eldred. What better proof of that fact could there be than wins over Tuxedo and Burke, two teams that bested them a year ago.

And it was just such victories posted by ECS-FHS that has coaches and wrestlers dreaming of vying for a Division II-B title, while fully understanding that the season is yet young and that teams such as Red Hook, Onteora, Rondout Vallley, which dropped down to II-B, Chester and Tri-Valley have something  to say about the matter, not to mention Burke and Tuxedo.

Eldred-Fallsburg's Adam Hurwitz (138) pins Tuxedo's A.J. Chimento in 5;41.

But on this January 11 senior night, it was all about Eldred-Fallsburg.

Five seniors were honored from the combined squad including Eldred six-year veteran Tony Moriggia, Fallsburg first  year wrestler John Mejia, second year veteran Marie Countryman who is recovering from appendicitis surgery and is still accruing the required practices to compete.Countryman won an upstate tournament last season.

Roosevelt Payton is in his second year and recovering from a broken ankle. Finally, Dominique Veles was honored. He is now in his third year.

Veles was disappointed that he did not get to wrestle in these matches as he had no competition in his 195 weight class and won by forfeits.

Tuxedo wrestled against Burke first and improved its dual meet record to 2-1 (1-0 Division II-B) with the win. The results were as follows:

 Tuxedo 45, John S. Burke Catholic 14

99 pounds: Dean Stanton (T) win by forfeit; 106: no contest; 113: Danny Martin (BC) dec. Dylan Lynn 8-2; 120: Julian Gonzalez (T) pin Martin Nowak 0:46; 126: Eli Villapiano (T) pin Bert Cohen 1:01; 132: A.J. Chimento (BC) inj. dec. Kurt Hefner; 138: Brian Leahey (BC) tech. fall Justin Martinez 19-2; 145: Austin Bermudez (T) dec. Jack Etner 7-6; 152: John Longo (BC) pin Peter Anderson 5:06; 160: Christian Maldonado (T) win by forfeit; 170: Zach Williams (T) win by forfeit; 182: no contest; 195: no contest; 220: Eddie Anderson (T) win by forfeit; 285: no contest.

Next up was Eldred-Fallsburg against Tuxedo. E-F wrestlers Adam Hurwitz (138), Shane Martin (132), Carl Peterson-Langdon (160), Anthony Moriggia (170) and Jesse Corcoran (220) all won by pins. Eldred’s Corcoran, son of co-head coach Jim Corcoran lost to New Paltz’s Kyle Roberts in last year’s Section Nine Division II tournament in a very close match. Roberts went on to win the state championship. Corcoran  and Moriggia looked dominant in their matches. Peterson-Langdon is in his first year of varsity competiton as is Nick Brown (145) who lost a tough match to Tuxedo senior Austin Bermudez before coming back to defeat Burke’s Jack Etner in a 10-7 decision.

Tuxedo Coach John Landrau talked about his young team. “We’re doing pretty well (now 2-2 after this loss and 1-1 in Division II-B). This was our first dual league meet and we’re looking forward to a good season. We have three seniors in Peter Anderson (152), Eli Villapiano (126) and Austin Bermudez (145).”

Landrau has been coaching for the past 15 years. He started the modified program at Greenwood Lake and then the junior varsity program at Tuxedo. They became a varsity squad when Division II was formed.  Here are the results from the match.

Eldred-Fallsburg 48, Tuxedo 36

99 pounds: Dean Stanton (T) win by forfeit; 106: no contest; 113: Dylan Lynn (T) pin Nick Perrello 3:12; 120: Julian Gonzalez (T) pin Allenson Flores 3:02; 126: Chris Bermudez (T) win by forfeit; 132: Shane Martin (E-F) pin Eli Villapiano 1:50; 138: Adam Hurwitz (E-F) pin A.J. Chimento 5:41; 145: Justin Martinez (T) pin Rafael Olan 3:10; 152: Austin Bermudez (T) pin Nick Brown 2:20; 160: Carl Peterson-Landgon (E-F) pin Peter Anderson 1:06; 170: Anthony Moriggia (E-F) pin Zach Williams 2:28; 182: Tadeusz Loarca (E-F) win by forfeit; 195: Dominique Vales (E-F) win by forfeit; 220: Jesse Corcoran (E-F) pin Eddie Anderson 3:03; 285: John Mejia (E-F) win by forfeit.

The final match of the night featured E-F taking on short-handed Burke. Burke wrestled well considering the large number of forfeits, something coach Dave Predmore had referenced earlier in the evening in a pre-match interview. “Our numbers are down this year. We usually have at least 14 but this year I’ve only got seven. We have three seniors in Brian Leahy (138), Kurt Hefner (132) and Danny Martin (113). In dual meets we only beat Millbrook. But head to head we do really well. We lost to Division I Goshen 54-24 but beat them 24-12 head to head.

I think we wrestled pretty well overall tonight,” said Predmore following his team’s loss to E-F. I was a bit disappointed with my 152 result. I think we’re doing the best we can with what we have. I have a few experienced guys along with some who lack that experience. Hopefully we can build our numbers and do better in dual meet situations in years to come.”

Here are the results of the final match:

Eldred-Fallsburg 36, John S. Burke Catholic 22

99 pounds: no contest; 106: no contest; 113: Danny Martin (BC) dec. Nick Peirello 8-4; 120: Martin Nowak (BC) pin Allenson Flores 2:57; 126: no contest; 132: Curt Hefner (BC) pin Shane Martin 1:43; 138: Brian Leahey (BC) pin Adam Hurwitz 2:49; 145: Nick Brown (E-F) dec. Jack Etner 10-7; 152: no contest; 160: Carl Peterson-Landgon (E-F) dec. John Lango 7-6; 170: Anthony Moriggia (E-F) win by forfeit; 182: Tadeusz Loarca (E-F) win by forfeit; 195: Dominique Vales (E-F) win by forfeit; 220: Jesse Corcoran (E-F) win by forfeit; 285: John Mejia (E-F) win by forfeit.

Bult had the following comments after the momentous wins: “These were both league wins against two teams that beat us last year. He gave props to the matches fought by first year wrestlers Peterson-Langdon and Brown. Our program is on an upward swing. I think we’re in the mix. We have at least four more league matches including next week at Tri-Valley which will also feature Chester. Our kids have come a long way since last year.

Bult gave great praise to  the assistant coaches, scorers and to the great support offered by Fallsburg superintendent Dr. Ivan Katz, a former standout wrestler who parlayed an outstanding collegiate career to go on to Olympic and world competition.

Corcoran added his take on things. “That was the best match Carl wrestled all year. We have the ability. I think we just have to put it together in time for sectionals. We have some good competition,” he observed.

For an album of photos from the night’s matches, visit www.sportsinsights.smugmug.com