As we put a bow on the high school wrestling season, let's take one final look by the numbers at the 91st New Jersey State Championships at Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City -- boys and girls edition.
Lots of interesting stuff involving wrestlers from Hunterdon-Warren-Sussex area, plus some statewide stats and info, as well as the never-ending Public vs. Non-Public debates.
Hawk (fourth from left) is 110-19 overall |
7 -- High Point freshman Ella Poalillo became the second at her school to win a state title in the six-year history of the girls tournament -- scoring a 3-1 win over Sussex County-rival and Newton sophomore Eva Barry in their final 138 pounds. Poalillo, who went 4-2 vs. Barry this season and is just the second freshman girl from the area to win a title (Sparta's Paige Weiss won at 107 in 2023), became the sixth winner from HWS overall. Noelle Gaffney was the first champion for the Wildcats with her victory at 165 in 2022. Phillipsburg's Jewel Gonzalez (2019-20), the area's only OW, and Hunterdon Central's Stephanie Andrade (2019-20), the first champ for HWS, are the lone two-time winners.
Rossi is HC's first top-three placer since 2019 (Brett Ungar first at 106) |
32 -- Though the number of medals was a 58-54 split favoring the Non-Public schools, consider this: among the top-four finishers at each weight, Non-Publics accounted for 32 of the 56 (57 percent) medals. It revealed what we already knew in that the talent level is top-heavy in favor of the wrestlers from private schools. Pope John junior Jake Holly (eighth at 106) and sophomore Dalton Weber (third at 126) were among that group, along with Walsh, a three-time placewinner who broke his 0-for-2 skid in state semifinal bouts this season. Non-Publics, which accounted for seven medals at 138 and six at 175, had no fewer than three at every other weight but 144 (one). Region 7 led the way with 20 medals, followed by Region 2 and Region 5 with 19 apiece. Region 3 was next with 16, while Region 4 had 12. Region 1 had 10, Region 6 had nine and Region 8 rounds out the list with seven.
Coesfeld is the 105th member of Sussex's 100-wins club |
"That makes me really happy," Rossi said of putting his name up with some of the Central greats. "I wish it could've been higher, but things happen, COVID. Didn't get a lot of matches [9-3 as a freshman]. Just tried my best and gave my full effort."
There are now 233 wrestlers from the HWS area to reach this milestone, including Phillipsburg's Hawk (110-19), Luke Geleta (102-25) and Wargo (102-18). This was the first time in program history that three Stateliners hit this mark in the same season. Former state runner-up Brian Meyer (131-35 from 2014-18) ranks first for the 'Liners in career wins. On the Sussex side, Kittatinny senior Bryce Coesfeld became the 19th at his school to hit the century mark (100-28) and first since Jackson Crawn (106-33 from 2017-21) with a 6-3 victory over Madison's Jack McCaffrey in the third round of wrestlebacks at 175.
Weber and Perez on the podium at 126 |
"It's not the result I wanted, but it's the result I got," Perez said. "I'm not mad [about] it, but there's definitely some stuff to work on [in the offseason] for sure. Hopefully, I can get that No. 1 next year."
72 -- Rossi and Brunetti were the first pair of semifinalists and top-four finishers for Central since 2000, when Mike Carr won the state title at 215 and Dan Eberstein placed fourth at heavyweight in the Meadowlands. Overall, the Red Devils now have 72 top-four state finishes in the program's 68 seasons.
"Obviously the semis didn't end how I wanted to, but things happen," said Rossi, a four-time state qualifier. "Big difference between this year and the other years is that I'm not treating it like a job. I'm really having fun out there. I'm scoring points and not worried about getting taken down. If I get taken down, I'm going to get out, get my points and have fun, try and get a takedown.
"Good things come when you're not worried about aspects like that."
Zobian (2nd from left), Wiecoreck, Kurtz, Evans (far right) |
85 -- It's been awhile for the five schools in Warren County, which has produced 85 champions -- now fourth behind Bergen (140), Union (129), Sussex (121) and Morris (90) -- in the 91-year history of the State Championships. Washington-Warren Hills has 46 of those, which is second only to Newton (82) statewide, but none since Justin Colaluce won back-to-back titles in 1997-98. Phillipsburg's last and 33rd boys champion was Brandon Hull (220 in 2012). Morris County surpassed Warren with five champions (four from Delbarton) in this year's tournament -- including Mount Olive senior Tyeler Hagensen (113), the Region 2 OW, who ended his school's title drought. Anthony Guidi (152 in 1988) was the Marauders' first champ.
Balella (37-9), who finished 15 wins shy of 100, gave Hackettstown state medal winners in consecutive seasons for the first time in 15 years (Cory Vernon seventh and Zach Ulm eighth in 2007; Owen Vernon third in '08 and Corey Kozimor seventh in 2009). Tigers coach Jim Berringer was a two-time placer for Hopatcong (sixth at 140 in 2000 and seventh-eighth at 130 in '99). Balella's uncle, Jim, a current assistant coach, also was a standout wrestler for Hackettstown.
"These coaches are [among] the best in the state, I truly believe," said Nicolas, who avenged a 6-5 OT loss in the semifinals to St. John Vianney's Patrick O'Keefe with a 4-3 win in their fifth-place bout.
"They are all really talented and push me in the [practice] room every day to get better. I really wanted to make the semis, that was my main goal, but we got set back in overtime. We continued to fight. I'm OK with fifth place. Not too bad."
Interesting story here as Aiden Scheeringa, who was sixth at 106 in '23, had one more year of high school eligibility at Hackettstown, but his family moved to South Carolina and he enrolled early at Liberty University. He competed at 125 pounds this season, going 16-17.