Wednesday, May 24, 2023

Wrestling: Gardner, Smith shifting roles at High Point

You could call it a changing of the guard somewhat for High Point's wrestling program as iconic head coach John Gardner is transitioning from his everyday duties with the boys to be more involved on the the girls side -- effective at the end of the 2023-24 campaign.

Gardner informed Open Mike late Wednesday evening that this winter will be his last in charge of a boys program that became a consistent New Jersey powerhouse during his 25 seasons at the helm.

Smith and Gardner 
The plan is for former Wildcats state champion Billy Smith, who's been the heir apparent since joining the staff seven years ago straight out of Rutgers University, to be promoted from assistant to boys head coach for the 2024-25 season. 

Longtime boys assistants Mickey Thomas and Mark "Otto" Veltri are also expected to remain in their current roles beyond 2023-24 -- meaning the entire staff essentially remains in tact. Erin Bang will continue as Gardner's assistant on the girls' side.

A wrestling room dedicated solely to the girls is also in the works at the Wantage-based school.

"I think it's the perfect time," said Gardner, who led the High Point boys to a Sussex County-best 30th North 1, Group 2 sectional title and its seventh state championship this past season. "We have a lot of horses coming up [in the youth program on the boys side] and I think it's one of the best decisions in the interest of the program."

It's the second major coaching change in the area this offseason as Chris Hrunka stepped down as head boys coach at North Hunterdon. The Lions captured their third sectional title and second Group 4 state championship in four years. 

As first reported by Open Mike, former Somerville head coach and Rutgers alum Brent McGuinness was the favorite to succeed Hrunka, but the sides were recently unable to come to terms, according to sources, and the search has opened back up. This past Tuesday's Board of Education meeting had no candidates for approval on the agenda and the next regular session is scheduled for June 27.

Gardner, whose teams have gone 406-122-2, wanted to make it clear that he isn't going anywhere. But he feels this move is necessary in order to get the girls program where it needs to go, while also giving Smith a long-awaited and deserved opportunity to be a head coach.

High Point celebrates its 7th state team title
High Point (12-9), which stood at 5-5 on Jan. 21 and took on Group 5 kingpin (Southern) and the Group 3 (Delsea) champion and runner-up (Warren Hills) along the way, rallied to reclaim the Group 2 title with a 36-34 win over Governor Livingston at Jersey Mike's Arena.

In doing so, the 'Cats earned the program's 780th victory in 57 seasons and its seventh state championship -- matching Pope John and moving one back of archrival Kittatinny, which ranks 10th on the state's all-time list with eight, for the Sussex County lead. Sparta (Group 2 in 1983) is the only other county program to win a state title.

"The goal is not to go undefeated in [dual meets], but to be ready when it comes time for Groups," Gardner said leading up to the 2023 postseason.

Gardner, a four-time region and 1990 state champion at 189 pounds for the 'Cats who ranks seventh on the school's all-time wins list as a wrestler (131-8-1 from 1986-90), joined Kittatinny's John Gill (629), Hunterdon Central's Russ Riegel (533 with the Red Devils and another 305 with Harrison County High School in Kentucky) and Phillipsburg Hall of Famer Rick Thompson (477 overall and 347 in New Jersey with P'burg, Hackettstown, Voorhees, Franklin and Mountain now West Orange) as the only Hunterdon-Warren-Sussex coaches to log 400-plus wins.

HP  celebrated Gardner's 400th coaching win on Jan. 24

"I've been very lucky. I really enjoy what I do," Gardner said earlier this season after that milestone victory.

In all, High Point, which sits behind only Paulsboro (42) and Phillipsburg (40) with 30 sectional titles in New Jersey wrestling history, is now 7-11 in state championship matches -- winning its first in 2008 and all seven (two in Group 3) under Gardner, a member of four sectional championship teams guided by former coach Jeff Hull.

Smith, 29, a special education and history teacher, has been on staff at his alma mater since the 2016-17 season. He was a key member of those great High Point teams (98 wins in his four years) in the mid-to-late 2000s -- going 138-20 overall from 2007-11. The 'Cats finished No. 1 in New Jersey for the 2007-08 and 2010-11 seasons. The only public school since to rank No. 1 was South Plainfield in 2011-12.

During that time, High Point won three sectional and two Group 3 championships, including the program's first in '08. Smith was a three-time district and two-time region champion, capturing the 285-pound state title in '11, one of three 'Cats seniors to win gold medals, along with three-timer Nick Francavilla, two-timer Ethan Orr and Drew Wagenhoffer during that magical 2011 state tournament in Atlantic City. 

All four will be inducted into the High Point Athletic Hall of Fame next month. Gardner's nephews and former 'Cats state placewinners, Joe and Jason Gaccione, are now serving as coaches at the youth level.

Smith went on to a successful collegiate career at Rutgers -- one of just four wrestlers for the Scarlet Knights at the time to make four consecutive national tournament appearances, joining Scott Winston (2009, 2011-13), Dan Rinaldi (2010-13) and Andy Roy (2002-05). Smith, who finished a round shy of All-American status at 285 pounds as a senior, went 105-39 overall and was one of just 16 to record 100 wins at the school upon graduation.

Gardner's teams were consistently ranked among the best in New Jersey from 2006-11, with the 2007-08 club arguably the best of them all. That team finished No. 1 in the state with a school-record 30 victories against one loss and captured the Group 3 title. The 'Cats have won 17 sectional titles under Gardner, who has coached 81 district ( a school-record nine in 2008 and at least one every year but 2000, '01 and '03), 34 region and 11 of the Sussex County program's 13 individual state champions since winning his own, including the only three-time winners in Brian Soldano (2020-22), now a starter at Rutgers University and Top 16 finisher at 184 pounds in this year's NCAA Division I Tournament, and Francavilla (2009-11). Gardner, Francavilla and Soldano are the school's only four-time region champs.

Additionally, Gardner's second region champion David Zabriskie, a 2005 district and state champion as well that season, made collegiate history as the first three-time heavyweight All-American at Iowa State, where he became the only NCAA Division 1 champion (2010) produced by the 'Cats. Zabriskie, who placed fifth (2009) and sixth ('08) his junior and sophomore seasons, finished 116-22 overall for the Cyclones. 

Sunday, May 7, 2023

Wrestling: McGuinness among 2 vying for North job

It appears that North Hunterdon is zeroing in on its next head wrestling coach.

According to sources, former Somerville head coach Brent McGuinness appears to be the clubhouse leader among the candidates who recently completed a first round of interviews with administrators at the Hunterdon County school.

A second round of interviews, said to be scheduled for Monday, will also include North assistant coach Shawn Flesche, a social studies teacher in the district.

A decision is expected to be reached by the next scheduled Board of Education meeting on May 23.

Hrunka (with GR trophy) and Flesche (top left)
The North job opened when Chris Hrunka resigned following six seasons in charge of the Lions shortly after the 2022-23 campaign.

"It was not something easy to do, turning away from the [high school] program," Hrunka said in a March interview.

Former Delaware Valley state champion Ricky Krieger, who had head coaching stints at Franklin and Wilson (Pa.) Area High School, confirmed that he did submit an application. Roselle Park head coach Ryan Rooney was also thought to be a candidate.

Along with Hrunka, 33, who is now running Warren Hills' youth program, longtime and well-respected assistant coach Joe LaSpada, a 1971 state champion at 106 pounds for Bernards, decided not to return after spending 37 of his 40-year coaching career with the Lions. 

McGuinness, whose son, Dylan, will be a freshman in North Hunterdon's program next season, makes for an interesting and logical choice, despite the fact he hasn't coached in nearly a decade. The Rutgers alum currently is employed as a special services supervisor at Millburn High School. 

As a co-head coach with former Madison star Ben Weiland, McGuinness guided Somerville, his alma mater, for 10 seasons (2004-14) and had a state champion under his watch Jimmy Kirchner (125 pounds in 2008). McGuinness was inducted into the Somerset County school's Athletic Hall of Fame in '09. 

North coaches with state champ Logan Wadle in AC
McGuinness, 44, was a two-time Region 5 champion and three-time New Jersey state tournament qualifier (top-eight finish as a junior at 160 pounds in 1995) for the Pioneers under 2023 National Wrestling Hall of Fame inductee Mike Suk. McGuinness certainly has strong ties with the North program overall as he also serves as wrestling director for BaseCamp 31, an athletic facility in Clinton Township. 

Also involved with the club in some capacity, according to its web site, are former North wrestlers Eric Eisenhart (strategic advisor, board liason), Dr. Justin Bagley (team physician, coach), Mike Ciavarro (coach and 2014 state placewinner), three-time placewinner Ryan Pomrinca (coach) and Lions great Ricky Frondorf (coach), a two-time state champion (2001-02) and four-time medalist.

Additionally, Steve Kempinski, a former Phillipsburg state finalist and youth coach for North, also is on the club's staff.

Flesche, 30, who has also served as an assistant coach in North's field hockey program, was a former standout wrestler at Old Tappan (2011 graduate) and the University of Scranton, where he was a four-year letterwinner. He compiled an overall record of 77-45, and ranked fourth on the school's all-time wins list and second in pins (29) upon graduation. Flesche was voted District 13 assistant wrestling coach of the year for 2021-22.

Hrunka, a standout wrestler for Warren Hills and Edinboro University, succeeded former Phillipsburg star Tim Flynn, now the school's vice principal and Phillipsburg youth coach, as North's eighth head coach. But Hrunka felt it was time to lighten the workload. He lives in the Warren Hills district and said he wanted to spend more time with his wife, Ellie, and their two young children -- Raymond (6), a youth wrestler for the Blue Streaks, and Ruby (5).

It's hard to imagine going out on a higher note.

North (15-5), ranked No. 15 in the final the New Jersey Wrestling Writers Association Top 20, captured its second North 2, Group 4 sectional (third since 2020) and Group 4 state championships in three years. There were no team tournaments in '21 due to the pandemic. 

In addition, three wrestlers placed in the 90th State Championships at Boardwalk Hall in March, including senior Logan Wadle (35-2), who snapped the program's 20-year title drought with his victory at 106 pounds.

Hrunka, who also presided over North's 800th victory (59-15 vs. Montgomery on Jan. 4), is the second Lions head coach to capture two state team titles during their tenures. Fred Pierrro's teams, which went 83-28 from 1977-85, won Group 3 championships in '82 and '84.

During his reign, Hrunka's teams went 95-18 overall with two of the program's four 20-win campaigns, including North's only perfect season -- a school-record 23 wins in 2019-20.