Day one of the Maryland Independent Schools State Championships at Morgan State University showed No. 4 Gilman atop the team standings, three-points ahead of No. 1 Archbishop Spalding, who had just outpointed them, and the other MIAA teams a week ago to win that crown and take the state’s top ranking.
No. 3 Mt. St. Joseph was lingering in third with 111.5 points, but a weakened Gaels team that was without nationally ranked and top rated in Maryland, Corey Brown, would need some of that ‘Ole Barnabae Magic we’ve witnessed a number of times at the state tournament if they were going to overcome their current status.
Fast forward to Saturday morning’s semifinals at about the halfway point and you would see the Cavaliers sitting on a 48-point lead over the second place Gaels (202.5-154.5). The Dons were in third and four points behind them was the Greyhounds, in fourth, a whopping 64.5 points out of the top spot.
Gilman began climbing out of that hole in the back half of the semis and overtook St. Joe and No. 5 Loyola-Blakefield and were positioned in second at the end of the round, having more than halved their deficit to a possibly (?) more manageable 29-point gap.
By the time the final round rolled along, the Greyhounds had once again chopped the disadvantage in half and were sitting just 14.5 points out as Tyrant Wrestling’s Cory Frederick gave the green light to blow the starting whistle. St. Joe was in third but falling back from title contention with 191.5 points.
Spalding had wrestlers slated for the first-place match in five of the first six matches, which presented an opportunity for big points as a win in the finals is worth four in the team count and could come with up to two more additional points if bonus wins are achieved.
Unfortunately for the Cavaliers, they were the underdogs in the first three of those weights and the prognostications played out with the higher rated entry winning all three. On the flipside, the Greyhounds claimed victories in those first three weights with No. 1 Liam McGettigan (113) gaining one extra point with a 12-0 major decision of No. 3 Eli Chesla in the only head-to-head meeting the two teams were scheduled for. The title was the sophomore’s second MIS gold.
“Some of the other matches we’ve wrestled, this is our third time wrestling, it was a little close in these other matches,” McGettigan said. “(I) went back, got the review, wanted to have a better point differential than these other times, so if something bad happened I would still be able to win, come out on top. It's great (the second championship). I know I was capable of getting it. I just had to come back, do what I was supposed and wrestle hard in my match.”
At 106, No. 4 Charlie Mutschler dropped his finals match to No. 2 Tyler Verceles (Loyola-Blakefield) and No. 6 Quentin Bailey was also upended by a Don, No. 2 Jayden Jackson at 120.
No. 5 Christian Wirts (106) won his bronze bout over No. 6 Jacob Naylor (McDonogh), 8-4, but the biggest boost Gilman got in those first three bouts was an unexpected pin by No. 8 JD Vassar in the 120lb consolation final versus No. 7 Chad “CJ” Votta, who just pinned Vassar at the MIAA Tournament. When Vassar won their dual meeting, it was by a 7-5 decision.
So, after those first three matches, Spalding was holding serve with 216.5 points, but Gilman had narrowed the divide once more, this time down to 3.5 points, with them now at 213 on the count.
No. 1 Sean Garretson was next up for the Cavaliers and the senior was on a mission to claim his third state crown and was not going to be derailed, leaving little doubt as he posted a 14-6 major decision over No. 3 Jake Tamai (Mt. St. Joseph) at 126. Gilman did not have a rep on the placement mats at 126. Garretson’s five team points made it 221.5-213.
For Garretson it is his second state championship to go with the one he earned as a freshman. After being third and second as a sophomore and junior, he was back on top as a senior.
“It’s been a long ride,” Garretson paused. “In the room everyday just trying to get better. That junior year loss in the state finals really got to me and I thought about that every night coming into this tournament. I wanted to keep scoring points. Win every position. I got a little sloppy at the end, a little lazy, but a wins a win.”
The Greyhounds received another unexpected extra two on the team tally when No. 7 Zach Glory pinned No. 6 Ben Scheiner (Mt. St. Joe) in the 132lb third-place match. When Scheiner lost in the dual it was 8-6. When he beat Glory at MIAAs it was 4-2, so a pin was not on anyone’s list of expectations. No. 12 Rock Zang was expected to lose his fifth-place bout to No. 10 Henry Moltumyr and did. The race was tightening back up, 221.5-217.
The next three weights would allow Spalding to create some breathing room in the standings if their guys could come through for them as Gilman had no one in on the medal hunt from 138 to 150.
At 138, No. 1 Zane Leitzel knew he would be in a dogfight with No. 4 Tyler Stephens. The Gael gave him a run for his money in the MIAA final where he needed a late takedown to win. Stephens had just picked off No. 3 Rohan “RJ” Bucknor of Bullis in the semis, so his confidence was high. But so was Leitzel’s as he was determined to help his team and claim his first state crown and delivered a 4-2 victory.
“I’ve just been working away at it,” offered Leitzel. “Just been getting those summer workouts in. These school workouts in, after practice keeping my diet right, getting the extra lifts in. I mean it’s all paying off and you can see it. It was definitely (about) keeping my composure, knowing I have the gas, knowing I have the attacks to score on him. I knew that I needed to win, and my team needs those points if we want to succeed and win that state title.”
On paper and with the only eye test we had, No. 8 Henry Gessford was likely to gain some team points for the Cavaliers in the 144lb bronze medal match with No. 16 Soshiant Ahanj-Elias (Bullis). Gessford was third at War on the Shore in the same bracket where Ahanj-Elias did not place.
So, of course, because life gives you twists and turns you don’t see coming, the Bullis grappler found a way to come out ahead and leave Spalding without any additional points at 144. No. 13 Ryder Kolat electrified the Cavs when he decked Severn’s Tegan McCaw in 49 seconds at 150 to give his squad a boost.
When a Greyhound finally returned to the mats at 157lbs he did so as the favorite. No. 1 John Jurkovic was 2-0 versus No. 2 Cameron Canaday of Mt. St. Joe this season. Last year, Cannaday held a 2-1 edge in the rivalry. That past gave Cannaday the confidence that he could finally become a state champ.
The senior was more aggressive this time than his previous encounters with Jurkovic this season and it paid off with a 9-7 upset. Catching that break coupled with No. 18 Dylan Briles’ pin of McDonogh’s Caden Gardner in the seventh-place match pushed the Cavalier lead back to the 14.5-point edge the round began with, 231.5-217.
Unbeknownst to them at the time, those three points from Briles would be the last Spalding would add to their tally. Neither of them had anyone still alive at 285. In three of the other four remaining weights, they both would send someone out. 175lbs was the lone vacant spot for the Cavs.
For Spalding 165 lent itself to no surprises as No. 4 Rhonin Swenson (Bishop McNamara) was the heavy favorite in the bronze bout with No. 22 Josh Taylor and won that match, 12-3. Meanwhile, for Gilman, Sawyer Peck blew up for an 18-3 tech fall of Loyola’s Jimmy Lazzati, good for 2.5 on the team count, 231.5-219.5
No. 7 Arthur Konschak’s 175lb match with No. 18 Joseph Lagman (DeMatha) was quite an exciting endeavor with Lagman doing all he could to author an upset of Arthur. With the Spalding team cheering him on Lagman came close to getting it done but fell 9-7 to the Greyhound, who became a first-time state champion.
A Battle of Titans was on deck at 190 with two nationally ranked grapplers squaring off for state supremacy at 190lbs. No. 1 Emmitt Sherlock recently moved up from 175 and sits in the No. 3 position in Sports Illustrated’s latest national rankings at 190. Sherlock’s foe would be No. 2 Sepanta Ahanj-Elias (Bullis), who is an honorable mention entry at 190.
After a scoreless first, Sherlock started pushing the pace more in the second, which opened things up, a takedown midway through the period would lead to legs being thrown in and a pin being registered by the senior, 3:33.
“I have very good confidence that I’m a better wrestler than any kid in the 190lb weight class in the country,” Sherlock asserted. “You know, I’ve been a 120lber, a 138lber, 165lber, I’ve wrestled with the little guys you know. I wrestled Luke Lilledahl, I’ve wrestled Marc-Anthony McGowan, I’ve been wrestling these high-level little guys, so I know when I come to these big weights, I’m a lot better wrestler. I’m a lot faster; my technique is sound."
“When I have an opportunity to put someone away, I’m going to put them away, so I put those legs in, I stepped over it, got my grapevine in and I knew it was over. I’m just very confident in my training. I have Coach Holmes, the whole Gilman staff, Headhunters Wrestling Club, so many people supporting me. It’s good to end my last state championship like this.”
The back-to-back wins by Konschak and Sherlock along with Luke Winkler dropping his fifth-place match to No. 16 Bailen Boutz brought the Greyhounds within two points of the Cavaliers, 231.5-229.5
Prior to the MIAA Tournament, Calvert Hall’s Maxwell Garland (215) was in the state rankings and would have been considered likely to beat Spalding’s Luke Barulli. The Cavalier came through for third at the MIAAs, beating two guys that beat Garland, and the Cardinal did not place.
Given that information, it was understandable for Spalding to expect a “W” in the seventh-place match with Garland. So, you can imagine the dismay of the Spalding faithful as Garland motored to a 23-7 tech fall of Barulli.
All eyes now turned to the third-place match with No. 9 Douglas Johnson (Saint Frances Academy) and No. 11 Isaiah Trusty of Gilman. Trusty decked Johnson in their dual meet but lost to the Panther, 8-3, in last week’s MIAA final. This was a match where no one could confidently say who would win and how.
As time expired, the 8-5 score would not include bonus points, so the two team points the Greyhounds gained on Trusty’s win thrust them into a tie with the Cavs. An occurrence so rare, it is believed to have never happened at the MIS Tournament.
“What a great tournament,” reflected Gilman coach Bryn Holmes. “Morgan State is a great venue for this. You never know what’s going to happen at the end of the year. There were a lot of upsets for both teams. It took every single wrestler on each team, and it came all the way down to our last match. Trusty had a great wrestler from Saint Frances on his back, I thought we were gonna get the stick, and then we ended up with just a win. "
“That’s the difference right there, but there’s so many of those throughout the whole tournament that make a difference. And the same thing happened for Spalding. It’s pretty amazing, right, when you come down to 231 and a half each is crazy, right? It was awesome, a lot of fun. I guess I’m alright with tying with Spalding.”
In addition to Cannaday, Mt. St. Joe crowned one more champion in freshman Brooklyn Pickett. Pickett is rated third at 144lbs by Legacy Wrestling and pocketed his first state championship with an 11-4 decision of Severn’s No. 5 Nicky Melfi.
“(My thoughts were) just dominate honestly,” Pickett said. “I tell myself dominate and win in spectacular fashion. That’s the name of the game. Keep going forward and just keep scoring points. I’m coming off some sickness, a little bit winded but I stayed level headed and didn’t let it get to me. I’ve been in harder situations before, so I just kept scoring points, especially at the end there, trying to just go for more and more points, not even thinking about it.”
Loyola’s three champs were up there with Gilman in the title count. All three are first-time titlists. Verceles, a freshman, had pinned Mutschler at the War on the Shore, this meeting resulted in a 5-3 score.
“It’s what I strive to be, that was my goal for the season, win the state title” Verceles said. “I’m a freshman in high school and I came to Loyola to win it and, you know, I accomplished that goal. Me and my opponent were very well versed. We wrestled each other many times throughout junior league and this was our third time wrestling this season. We know each other’s styles. He was very prepared. It was a great, very hard fought, tough match.”
Jackson’s two prior matches with Bailey were won on regular decisions, this one for the state glory was executed with a 9-1 major decision.
“I’m just happy to finally get it (the state title), you know,” remarked Jackson. “I’ve been working hard for the last three years trying to get this. This was my goal, plus the National Prep Championship. I don’t think that I wrestled dominate enough, I mean I let him in on my legs too much. I did get three takedowns. But I should have kept the pace going and scored more takedowns.”
The big man, senior and No. 1 in Maryland, Luke Randazzo got it done in his final MIS excursion. Randazzo went the distance with Archbishop Curley’s No. 19 Kahlil Regan at 285 for a 9-1 major, a week after pinning him in the first period of the MIAA finals.
“It was a grind,” Randazzo said with relief. “The last four years, I’ve been busting my a$$. Coming up short to Delmar last year I was pissed off. And this shows the effort that I put in this year trying to get this state championship. I’m just thankful to my coaches, my family, and all my teammates for pushing me to make it to this point.”
Legacy Wrestling is incredibly impressed by Randazzo’s drive and determination to work through an injury riddled career and become a three-time state placer and now, state champion. These are the actions in which your legacies are built upon.
No. 1 Salah Tsarni from Bullis is the No. 1 165lber in Maryland and the No. 11 man in SI’s national rankings. Tasrni looked every bit of that in his 20-4 technical fall of St. Paul’s No. 14 Hayden Myers for his second consecutive championship, remaining on pace to become a four-time champ. Myers upset Swenson, 4-3, in the semis.
“It’s great to have (a second championship),” Tasrni said. “It’s good to stay on the journey for four times. That’s one of the goals I have for high school. I felt great during it. I was just working on what I know. Doing moves I do at practice, just trying to stay consistent with my system I’m trying to build. “
No. 1 Evan Boblits claimed title number two with a 15-0 tech of No. 4 Braxton McAvey (Saint Frances Academy). The senior who is in the honorable mention section of the SI national rankings is headed to the Naval Academy after graduation.
“It feels good (a second title),” Boblits added. "I’m always improving myself. I’m trying to get better. Working towards bigger goals, National Preps next weekend. I think I can go out there and win that, so that’s my next goal. He’s a good wrestler. I’ve talked to him before; he’s a nice kid. I think the experience of being out on this stage and all that helped me, and my years of wrestling helped me win.”
St. Mary’s Ryken’s second champion was certainly a surprise as No. 10 Evan Gavin had to slay No. 4 Tiller Smith of Landon, 4-1 in sudden victory overtime, for his state glory at 215. Gavin was seeded third and won his semifinal, 2-1, over Saint France’s Johnson, who he is now 3-2 against this year. Smith was a state runner-up at this weight last year and Gavin failed to reach the podium.
The final champ became Our Lady of Mt. Carmel’s first MIS finalist when No. 9 Christian Manley stuck St. Joe’s Scheiner in the semis. The transfer from Sparrows Point upped the firsts by becoming Mt. Carmel’s first state champion when he beat No. 8 Mason Comegys (McDonogh), 7-4. Comegys used a mild upset of Glory, 5-3, to advance to the final.
“It only takes one good day to do anything in the world,” remarked Manley. “I felt like I could have done better at the end of the period. I’m not gonna lie, I kinda just laid there, but that was part of the game plan. I’ve never placed at any state tournament in my life other than Greco States and Freestyle States. My cousin Josh (Laubach) had some bad years in college. He went to Division II and was an All-American one season and that just proves all it takes is one season.”
Mt. Carmel won the “B” team race ahead of St. James. Two more of their ranks earned state hardware, No. 24 Samora Wolokolie (6th at 106) and No. 25 Michael Banks (7th at 126).
Before the team standings were officially announced a few other awards were given out with Sherlock, who will wrestle at the University of Virginia, winning two of them for most career team points scored and this year’s Outstanding Wrestler trophy. Sherlock’s third state championship was won on the power of four pins.
“It’s awesome, right?” remarked Sherlock. “Winning OW is kinda cool. There’s a lot of great wrestlers here. But if they wanna give it to me, I’ll take it. I had a good tournament. I pinned my way through the tournament. You got Sepanta, who’s been in and out of the national rankings, I got a pin over him. I guess I think I deserved it a little bit.”
Both squads shared in a group team picture as well as their own separate team shots. Spalding coach Mike Laidley and Holmes even posed together to share the historical moment.
“Well, it could be worse, we could have lost at the end,” said Laidley. “When their 215lber won we weren’t sure how many points he gained. We thought we were going to be down by one. So, to be a tie was a surprise and we had our 215lber in a match that we thought he could pull out. So, it was exciting. A little disappointing.
“We would have loved to win it outright, but Gilman’s got a great squad, and their seniors stepped up. They had some big wins on the mat when they needed it. And we had a couple of holes where we didn’t score. So, at the end of the day, I’m happy with the way the kids competed. I’m excited that they won a state title, although, it’s co- with Gilman. But. Nah, we’re happy. The coaches and kids did a great job.”
Team Scores (top 15)
1-Archbishop Spalding 231.5
1-Gilman 231.5
3-Mt. St. Joseph 199.5
4-Loyola-Blakefield 195.5
5-McDonogh 139.5
6-Bullis 131.5
7-Saint Frances Academy 122.5
7-St. Mary’s Ryken 122.5
9-Calvert Hall 111
10-Archbishop Curley 106
11-Our Lady of Mt. Carmel 75.5
12-Good Counsel 73
13-St. James School 62
14-Landon 61.5
15-DeMatha 61
106
1st Place Match
Tyler Verceles (Loyola-Blakefield) 41-3, Fr. over Charlie Mutschler (Archbishop Spalding) 23-12, Fr. (Dec 5-3)
3rd Place Match
Christian Wirts (Gilman School) 33-10, Fr. over Jacob Naylor (McDonogh School) 37-14, Fr. (Dec 8-4)
5th Place Match
Zebulon Bolden (St. Frances Academy) 23-13, Fr. over Samora Wolokolie (Our Lady of Mt. Carmel) 3-3, Fr. (TF-1.5 3:20 (20-1))
7th Place Match
Elijah Adams (Landon School) 20-7, Fr. over Daniel Stefko (St. Mary`s Ryken) 22-20, So. (TF-1.5 4:25 (22-5))
113
1st Place Match
Liam McGettigan (Gilman School) 36-5, So. over Eli Chesla (Archbishop Spalding) 20-8, Jr. (MD 12-0)
3rd Place Match
Becket Geary (St. Mary`s Ryken) 49-19, So. over James Wright (Mount Saint Joseph) 19-9, Jr. (Dec 5-3)
5th Place Match
Evan Kaliakoudas (Archbishop Curley) 40-10, Fr. over William Jacques (Georgetown Prep) 39-13, So. (Fall 1:25)
7th Place Match
Ansar Kmt (DeMatha Catholic) 30-20, So. over Weylin Myers (Gerstell Academy) 20-10, So. (Dec 2-0)
120
1st Place Match
Jayden Jackson (Loyola-Blakefield) 31-3, Jr. over Quentin Bailey (Archbishop Spalding) 23-11, So. (MD 9-1)
3rd Place Match
JD Vassar (Gilman School) 24-9, So. over CJ Votta (Mount Saint Joseph) 23-14, Fr. (Fall 2:28)
5th Place Match
Freddy Brinkman (Georgetown Prep) 38-12, So. over Reid Swirnow (McDonogh School) 23-21, Jr. (Fall 0:53)
7th Place Match
Cody Lehman (Calvert Hall College) 2-2, So. over Dexter Kane (DeMatha Catholic) 22-14, So. (TF-1.5 2:05 (18-1))
126
1st Place Match
Sean Garretson (Archbishop Spalding) 28-3, Sr. over Jake Tamai (Mount Saint Joseph) 38-4, Jr. (MD 14-6)
3rd Place Match
Wes Baumgartner (McDonogh School) 41-11, Fr. over Michael Holmes (St. James School) 36-4, Jr. (Dec 4-2)
5th Place Match
Cayden Farver (Loyola-Blakefield) 30-16, Sr. over EJ Hill (Boys` Latin School) 30-15, Sr. (Fall 0:26)
7th Place Match
Michael Banks (Our Lady of Mt. Carmel) 3-2, Sr. over Max Guillen (DeMatha Catholic) 3-3, Jr. (Dec 9-3)
132
1st Place Match
Christian Manley (Our Lady of Mt. Carmel) 4-0, Sr. over Mason Comegys (McDonogh School) 40-13, Fr. (Dec 7-4)
3rd Place Match
Zach Glory (Gilman School) 34-14, Sr. over Ben Scheiner (Mount Saint Joseph) 31-5, So. (Fall 4:52)
5th Place Match
Henry Moltumyr (St. Mary`s Ryken) 43-16, So. over Rock Zang (Archbishop Spalding) 13-12, Sr. (For.)
7th Place Match
Evan Jackson (Loyola-Blakefield) 21-17, So. over Dominic Montgomery (Severn School) 27-9, So. (Fall 2:29)
138
1st Place Match
Zane Leitzel (Archbishop Spalding) 31-4, Jr. over Tyler Stephens (Mount Saint Joseph) 40-7, So. (Dec 4-2)
3rd Place Match
Joshua Hale (Loyola-Blakefield) 35-12, Jr. over Oscar Davis (Archbishop Curley) 43-15, So. (MD 12-0)
5th Place Match
Cole Genua (McDonogh School) 29-14, So. over Rohan (RJ) Bucknor (Bullis School) 36-5, Sr. (For.)
7th Place Match
Niko Rakis (Good Counsel) 28-13, Fr. over Joe Papalia (Landon School) 22-14, Jr. (For.)
144
1st Place Match
Brooklyn Pickett (Mount Saint Joseph) 36-4, Fr. over Nick Melfi (Severn School) 30-4, Sr. (Dec 11-4)
3rd Place Match
Soshiant Ahanj-Elias (Bullis School) 40-8, Fr. over Henry Gessford (Archbishop Spalding) 21-8, Sr. (Dec 4-1)
5th Place Match
Brodie Burdette (St. James School) 38-8, Jr. over Lincoln Weeks (Loyola-Blakefield) 15-9, So. (MD 16-6)
7th Place Match
Joshua Jackson (Calvert Hall College) 19-7, Jr. over Seve Lombardo (Boys` Latin School) 28-13, Sr. (Dec 9-2)
150
1st Place Match
Evan Boblits (St. Mary`s Ryken) 44-5, Sr. over Braxton McAvey (St. Frances Academy) 30-6, Sr. (TF-1.5 2:43 (15-0))
3rd Place Match
Griffin Stewart (Calvert Hall College) 39-6, Sr. over Connor Allison (Mount Saint Joseph) 36-13, So. (Dec 6-1)
5th Place Match
Dominic Manna (McDonogh School) 35-15, So. over Nevan McKneely (Loyola-Blakefield) 22-9, Jr. (MD 9-1)
7th Place Match
Ryder Kolat (Archbishop Spalding) 17-9, Jr. over Tegan McCaw (Severn School) 2-3, . (Fall 0:49)
157
1st Place Match
Cameron Cannaday (Mount Saint Joseph) 30-9, Sr. over John Jurkovic (Gilman School) 36-8, Sr. (Dec 9-7)
3rd Place Match
Noah Tucker (Bullis School) 41-4, So. over Chase Carpinteri (St. Frances Academy) 26-7, Sr. (MD 14-3)
5th Place Match
Liam Kilner (The Heights School) 28-9, Jr. over Aidan Kammar (Calvert Hall College) 3-3, Sr. (MD 11-3)
7th Place Match
Dylan Briles (Archbishop Spalding) 15-10, Sr. over Caden Gardner (McDonogh School) 28-18, Jr. (Fall 1:44)
165
1st Place Match
Salah Tsarni (Bullis School) 32-2, So. over Hayden Myers (The St. Paul`s School for Boys) 4-1, Jr. (TF-1.5 2:48 (20-4))
3rd Place Match
Rhonin Swenson (Bishop McNamara) 61-2, Sr. over Josh Taylor (Archbishop Spalding) 21-13, Jr. (MD 12-3)
5th Place Match
Dylan Fish (Archbishop Curley) 42-13, Sr. over Jack Bruffey (Gerstell Academy) 29-6, Sr. (Dec 7-3)
7th Place Match
Sawyer Peck (Gilman School) 4-2, So. over Jimmy Lazzati (Loyola-Blakefield) 15-14, Jr. (TF-1.5 3:54 (18-3))
175
1st Place Match
Arthur Konshak (Gilman School) 38-7, So. over Joseph Lagman (DeMatha Catholic) 25-11, Sr. (Dec 9-7)
3rd Place Match
Riley Miller (Loyola-Blakefield) 20-11, So. over Izaac Robertucci (Calvert Hall College) 22-8, So. (Fall 3:46)
5th Place Match
Adeoluwa Adewuyi (Archbishop Curley) 39-17, Jr. over Jacob Buxton (Bullis School) 18-13, Jr. (Fall 1:40)
7th Place Match
Josue Sanchez (Maryland School for the Deaf) 19-2, Jr. over Constantine Polis (Georgetown Prep) 16-6, Jr. (For.)
190
1st Place Match
Emmitt Sherlock (Gilman School) 46-3, Sr. over Sepanta Ahanj-Elias (Bullis School) 37-4, Sr. (Fall 3:33)
3rd Place Match
Elijah Josey (St. Frances Academy) 32-7, Sr. over George Tate (Good Counsel) 32-8, Jr. (MD 18-5)
5th Place Match
Bailen Boutz (Archbishop Curley) 44-10, Jr. over Luke Winkler (Archbishop Spalding) 19-8, Fr. (Fall 1:17)
7th Place Match
Ryan Ellis (Gerstell Academy) 22-8, Jr. over Benny Laupert (Boys` Latin School) 22-16, Sr. (Fall 2:47)
215
1st Place Match
Evan Gavin (St. Mary`s Ryken) 47-14, Jr. over Tiller Smith (Landon School) 23-4, Sr. (SV-1 4-1)
3rd Place Match
Isaiah Trusty (Gilman School) 25-4, Jr. over Douglas Johnson (St. Frances Academy) 28-15, Sr. (Dec 8-5)
5th Place Match
Stephan Mason (Bullis School) 34-10, So. over Derek Owumi (St. James School) 37-11, Sr. (Dec 4-1)
7th Place Match
Maxwell Garland (Calvert Hall College) 20-8, Sr. over Luke Barulli (Archbishop Spalding) 18-11, So. (TF-1.5 4:03 (23-7))
285
1st Place Match
Luke Randazzo (Loyola-Blakefield) 38-3, Sr. over Kahlil Regan (Archbishop Curley) 43-7, Sr. (MD 9-1)
3rd Place Match
Bryton Brown (Good Counsel) 34-10, Jr. over Baen Summerlin (Maryland School for the Deaf) 34-5, Jr. (TB-1 2-1)
5th Place Match
Maxwell Ohamuo (Calvert Hall College) 17-6, Sr. over Evan Smith-Matlock (St. Frances Academy) 19-17, Fr. (Dec 5-1)
7th Place Match
Logan Brown (McDonogh School) 19-12, Fr. over Sean Jewett (St. Mary`s Ryken) 28-22, Sr. (Dec 4-1)
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