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David Crockett, Volunteer, Cherokee, Tennessee High Among Schools With New Region, District Assignments as TSSAA Approves Next Classification Cycle

22-11-2022-11-18-32-am-1958896.jpg
 
 
 

by STEVE WILMOTH
TriCitiesSports.com
November 22, 2022
 
MURFREESBORO, Tenn. – In last week’s Board of Control Meeting, the TSSAA approved, after hearing around 20 appeals, the next cycle of classifications for the 2023-24 and 2024-25 school years and corresponding district and regional assignments for each of its sanctioned sports.
 
Locally, that means significant changes for Volunteer, David Crockett, Cherokee and Tennessee High Schools.
 
The most significant changes come for Volunteer and David Crockett where the Pioneers are sliding down to Class AA in multiple sports, and largely as a result, the Falcons will move from District 1 to District 2 in many of those same sports.
 
For basketball, baseball and softball, Crockett goes from Class AAAA to Class AAA joining District 1-AAA with Elizabethton, Sullivan East, Tennessee High and Unicoi County. Crockett also moves from District 1-AAA to District 1-AA in soccer joining those same schools. Additionally, the Pioneer track and field and cross country programs are on the move, relocating from District 1-AAA to District 1-AA in track and from Region 1-AAA to Region 1-A/AA in cross country.
 
“The change in classification for David Crockett High School athletics will allow much greater opportunities for our student-athletes,” said David Crockett Athletic Director Josh Kite. “For years we have competed and had much success in our current classification. However, our main purpose is to help athletes have equitable opportunities, fair competition as well as academic success. I firmly believe the new classification will be very beneficial to our entire athletic program.”
 
However, one sport unaffected at David Crockett is volleyball. Like soccer, volleyball is also a three-classification sport, but each is sport is divided equally by the number of participating schools and that number varies just enough that Crockett lands in Class AA for soccer, but AAA in volleyball.
 
The Pioneers’ exit from Class 4A in basketball leaves the both District District 1-AAAA and District 2-AAAA with just four teams each. It’s interesting to nate that with four teams advancing to the Region 1 Tournament from both districts, no team will be eliminated in any district tournament and all eight have already qualified for the 2024 and 2025 Region 1-AAAA Tournaments.
 
With Crockett’s new assignment in basketball, baseball and softball, Volunteer will slide into District 2-AAA and into District 2-AA for soccer along with Cherokee, Claiborne, Grainger and Greeneville.
 
“I think it is exciting for Volunteer High School. The new classification will provide at least two years of playing opponents that we have not played traditionally,” said Volunteer Athletic Director Jeremy Bailey. “We have played Grainger in numerous events recently and an out of county rivalry has started to formulate with highly competitive games. Playing Greeneville will give our student athletes an opportunity to play against some of the best talent in East Tennessee, in turn, making our players better. The Cherokee games being a District game will add an extra amount of significance to that already storied rivalry.
 
And in an unexpected move, Volunteer also joins District 2-AA volleyball with those same four and Union County. District 1-AA volleyball’s jumbling started with Tennessee High’s move back to Class AAA after two years in Class AA.
 
But instead of leaving the remaining members of District 1-AA volleyball status quo, the TSSAA opted to make the interesting relocation of Chuckey-Doak and Greeneville into District 1-AA from District 2-AA and move Volunteer from District 1-AA to District 2-AA. While the move surprised many, no appears were heard from any of those schools affected at last week’s meeting.
 
“We will stay focused on controlling what we can control from within our programs, and I believe Volunteer will be successful in any District that they are placed in, now and into the future,” continued Bailey. “Change is often met with opposition, but Volunteer will embrace this change with a positive mindset, build new relationships, provide hospitality for our ‘new’ opponents, represent Hawkins County to the best of our abilities, and go places we have never gone before.”
 
Bailey said all Volunteer sports will likely seek to continue its longstanding District 1 relationships.
 
“We hope to secure some of the District 1 teams in non-conference play to continue the traditions and friendships among coaches that have been developed with Sullivan East, Tennessee High, Elizabethton, and Unicoi County,” advised Bailey. “At the end of the day, if our teams take care of business, we will see some of those similar foes in Region anyway.
 
In football, the vast majority of Region 1 & Region 2 remain unchanged. However, Cherokee is moving from Region 1-5A to Region 1-4A while Northview Academy comes up from Region 1-3A to Region 1-4A. Thus, Seymour slides out of Region 1-4A to Region 2-4A.
 
Coming into Region 1-3A replacing Northview are Gatlinburg-Pittman and Pigeon Forge with Kingston moving from Region 3-3A to Region 2-3A.
 
West Greene’s reclassification moves the Buffaloes out of Region 1-3A as well and into Region 1-2A along with Eagleton College and Career Academy, a new school opening this fall in Blount County.
 
The TSSAA initially moved York Institute and Midway from Region 2-2A to Region 3-2A but York appealed, and won, and will stay in Region 1-2A along with newcomer Bledsoe County.
 
Here are the complete Region 1 & 2 / District 1 & 2 assignments for the next TSSAA classification cycle (2023-25):
 
FOOTBALL – Six Classes, Split Evenly
 
Region 1-1A: Cloudland, Cosby, Hancock County, Jellico, North Greene, Unaka
Region 2-1A: Coalfield, Greenback, Harriman, Midway, Oakdale, Oliver Springs, Rockwood, Sunbright
 
Region 1-2A: Cumberland Gap, Eagleton College and Career Academy, Hampton, Happy Valley, South Greene, West Greene
Region 2-2A: Bledsoe County, Oneida, Polk County, Tellico Plains, Wartburg Central, York Institute
 
Region 1-3A: Chuckey-Doak, Claiborne, Gatlinburg-Pittman, Johnson County, Pigeon Forge, Unicoi County
Region 2-3A: Alcoa, Austin-East, Kingston, Scott, Union County
 
Region 1-4A: Cherokee, Elizabethton, Grainger, Greeneville, Northview Academy, Sullivan East, Volunteer
Region 2-4A: Anderson County, Carter, Fulton, Gibbs, Seymour, South-Doyle
 
Region 1-5A: Cocke County, Daniel Boone, David Crockett, Morristown West, Sevier County, Tennessee High
Region 2-5A: Heritage, Knox Central, Knox Halls, Powell, Knox West
 
Region 1-6A: Dobyns-Bennett, Jefferson County, Morristown East, Science Hill, West Ridge, William Blount
Region 2-6A: Bearden, Bradley Central, Cleveland, Farragut, Hardin Valley, Maryville
 
BASKETBALL, BASEBALL, SOFTBALL – Four Classes, Split Evenly
 
District 1-A: Clinch, Cloudland, Hancock County, North Greene, Unaka, University High
District 2-A: Career Magnet Academy, Cosby, Hancock County, Samuel Everett School of Innovation, Tennessee School for the Deaf, Washburn
 
District 1-AA: Chuckey-Doak, Hampton, Happy Valley, Johnson County, South Greene, West Greene
District 2-AA: Alcoa, Austin-East, Cumberland Gap, Eagleton College & Career Academy, Gatlinburg-Pittman, L&N Stem Academy, Oneida, Pigeon Forge
 
District 1-AAA: David Crockett, Elizabethton, Sullivan East, Tennessee High, Unicoi County
District 2-AAA: Cherokee, Claiborne, Grainger, Greeneville, Volunteer
 
District 1-AAAA: Daniel Boone, Dobyns-Bennett, Science Hill, West Ridge
District 2-AAAA: Jefferson County, Morristown East, Morristown West, Sevier County
 
VOLLEYBALL – Three Classes, Split Evenly by Participating Schools
 
District 1-A: Hampton, Hancock County, Happy Valley, North Greene, South Greene, West Greene
District 2-A: Cosby, Eagleton College & Career Academy, Greenback, Jellico, Tennessee School for the Deaf, Washburn
 
District 1-AA: Chuckey-Doak, Elizabethton, Greeneville, Johnson County, Sullivan East, Unicoi County
District 2-AA: Cherokee, Claiborne, Gibbs, Grainger, Union County, Volunteer
 
District 1-AAA: Daniel Boone, David Crockett, Dobyns-Bennett, Science Hill, Tennessee High, West Ridge
District 2-AAA: Cocke County, Jefferson County, Morristown East, Morristown West, Sevier County
 
SOCCER – Three Classes, Split Evenly by Participating Schools
 
District 1-A: Chuckey-Doak, Cosby, Cumberland Gap, Gatlinburg-Pittman, Pigeon Forge, University High, West Greene
District 2-A: Eagleton College & Career Academy, Greenback, Harriman, Kingston, Oliver Springs, Oneida, Rockwood
 
District 1-AA: David Crockett, Elizabethton, Sullivan East, Tennessee High, Unicoi County
District 2-AA: Cherokee, Claiborne, Grainger, Greeneville, Volunteer
 
District 1-AAA: Daniel Boone, Dobyns-Bennett, Science Hill, West Ridge
District 2-AAA: Jefferson County, Morristown East, Morristown West, Sevier County
 
TRACK & FIELD - Three Classes, Split Evenly by Participating Schools
 
District 1-A: Bledsoe County, Brainerd, Career Magnet Academy, CSAS, Chattanooga Girls’ Leadership Academy, Chattanooga Prep, Chattanooga School for the Liberal Arts, Chuckey-Doak, Cumberland Gap, Eagleton College & Career Academy, Gatlinburg-Pittma, Happy Valley, Ivy Academy, Johnson County, L&N Stem Academy, Marion County, Pigeon Forge, Polk County, Sale Creek, Sequatchie County, South Greene, South Pittsburgh, Sunbright, Sweetwater, Tellico Plains, Tennessee School for the Deaf, Tyner Academy, University High, West Greene.
 
District 1-AA: Alcoa, Anderson County, Austin-East, Carter, Chattanooga Central, Cherokee, Claiborne, Clinton, Cocke County, David Crockett, East Ridge, Elizabethton, Fulton, Gibbs, Grainger, Greeneville, Hixon, Kingston, Loudon, McMinn Central, Northview Academy, Red Bank, Scott, Sequoyah, Seymour, Signal Mountain, Soddy Daisy, South-Doyle, Tennessee High, Unicoi County, Union County, Volunteer
 
District 1-AAA: Bearden, Campbell County, Daniel Boone, Dobyns-Bennett, Farragut, Hardin Valley, Heritage, Jefferson County, Karns, Knox Central, Knox Halls, Lenoir City, Maryville, Morristown East, Morristown West, Oak Ridge, Powell, Science Hill, Sevier County, Knox West, West Ridge, William Blount
 
CROSS COUNTRY – Two Classes Based on Track & Field Classes w/Combined A/AA
 
Region 1-A/AA: Cherokee, Chuckey-Doak, Claiborne, Cloudland, Cocke County, Cumberland County, David Crockett, Elizabethton, Gatlinburg-Pittman, Grainger, Greeneville, Happy Valley, Northview Academy, Pigeon Forge, Seymour, South Greene, Sullivan East, Tennessee High, Unicoi County, University High, Volunteer, Washburn, West Greene
 
Region 1-AAA: Daniel Boone, Dobyns-Bennett, Jefferson County, Morristown East, Morristown West, Science Hill, Sevier County, West Ridge
 
GOLF – Two Classes Split Evenly by Participating Schools
 
District 1-A: Chuckey-Doak, Hampton, Happy Valley, Johnson County, North Greene, South Greene, Unaka, Unicoi County, University High, West Greene
 
District 1-AA: Daniel Boone, David Crockett, Dobyns-Bennett, Elizabethton, Science Hill, Sullivan East, Tennessee High, Volunteer, West Ridge
 
TENNIS – Two Classes Split Evenly by Participating Schools
 
District 1-A: Chuckey-Doak, Hampton, Happy Valley, Johnson County, North Greene, South Greene, Unaka, Unicoi County, University High, West Greene
 
District 1-AA: Daniel Boone, David Crockett, Dobyns-Bennett, Elizabethton, Science Hill, Sullivan East, Tennessee High, Volunteer, West Ridge
 
WRESTLING – Two Classes Split Evenly by Participating Schools
 
District 1-A: David Crockett, Elizabethton, Sullivan East, Tennessee High, Volunteer
District 2-A: Chuckey-Doak, Cocke County, Greeneville, West Greene
 
District 1-AA: Daniel Boone, Dobyns-Bennett, Science Hill, West Ridge
District 2-AA: Jefferson County, Morristown East, Morristown West, Sevier County
 
BOWLING – One Class
 
District 1: Cherokee, Chuckey-Doak, Dobyns-Bennett, Greeneville

 

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38 minutes ago, Davidjohnson2001 said:

Cleveland and Bradley brought their whole team. The varsity teams squared off in the finals and a mixture of their jv kids were on team x which placed 3rd.

Cleveland won 31-30 which sets up the dual in January and the ones in February to be electric.

Based on how Bradley closed the gap every time they wrestled last year, the fact that round 1 was only a 1 point win for Clevelend is very good for Bradley.

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Jefferson Ga., info of late...

https://www.hngnews.com/waterloo_marshall/marshall-finishes-third-at-jefferson-invitational/article_626c54b6-758f-11ed-a223-93ee693b6a9a.html

Early Projections…

https://www.google.com/url?rct=j&sa=t&url=https://www.dailyunion.com/sports/wrestling-preview-numbers-excitement-high-for-jefferson-high-school-this-season/article_b6a4a28e-670e-11ed-a391-b3e344adeca0.html&ct=ga&cd=CAEYACoTNzMwMTcxODcwMDc2MjMwOTMwMTIaYmY0YmU5OTEzODljZTNhMjpjb206ZW46VVM&usg=AOvVaw2CxeNc6Yan85RiDnTR-Lyy

https://www.google.com/url?rct=j&sa=t&url=https://www.hngnews.com/cambridge_deerfield/ruben-bach-wins-113-weight-class-deerfield-wrestling-sees-other-strong-finishes-at-jefferson/article_ca40ef82-74c9-11ed-a1a8-e7c3b90843be.html&ct=ga&cd=CAEYAioUMTE2MDI1ODE3NjYzMTk3MzAxNzAyGmJmNGJlOTkxMzg5Y2UzYTI6Y29tOmVuOlVT&usg=AOvVaw0N7KwY13NSsD_ct98aWuxD

https://www.google.com/url?rct=j&sa=t&url=https://www.hngnews.com/waterloo_marshall/marshall-finishes-third-at-jefferson-invitational/article_626c54b6-758f-11ed-a223-93ee693b6a9a.html&ct=ga&cd=CAEYAyoUMTE2MDI1ODE3NjYzMTk3MzAxNzAyGmJmNGJlOTkxMzg5Y2UzYTI6Y29tOmVuOlVT&usg=AOvVaw0mpfdBbRgMMjqCYqK9V29f

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UTC Wrestling Great Turner Jackson Named To Athletic Hall Of Fame At Huntsville

Was Two-Time NCAA Division II Champion

  • Wednesday, December 7, 2022
Turner Jackson
Turner Jackson

Turner Jackson, a two-time state champion at Butler High in Huntsville, Ala., who was a two-time NCAA Division II champion at UT-Chattanooga, has been named to the Huntsville-Madison County Athletic Hall of Fame.

The current athletic director at Bradley Central High School won 55 consecutive wrestling matches during his final two years at UTC. He was named Tennessee’s 1976 Amateur Athlete of the Year and is in UTC’s Hall of Fame.

He was among athletes representing nine different sports who have etched their names in the history books locally, nationally and internationally. Among the honorees are an Olympic medal winner, the first NHL player born in Alabama and the first black athlete to play in the Alabama High School Athletic Association state championship.

The Huntsville-Madison County Athletic Hall of Fame banquet, presented by TOC, will be Monday, April 10, 2023 at the Von Braun Center’s South Hall. The class of 2023 was selected by a vote of the Hall of Fame board of directors after receiving nominations from the public.

The members of the Class of 2023 also include: Adam Bass (baseball), Darrell Blackburn (football), David Cain (coaching/track and field), Kenyon Hambrick (football), Margaret Hoelzer (swimming), Holly Richards (volleyball/coaching), Jared Ross (ice hockey), Marvin Stone (basketball), Dr. Warren Strickland (outdoors), Jon Sumrall (football) and Gary Wagner (football).

The Special Achievement Award will be presented to Danny Treadwell, who played one season at Butler High School and led the Rebels to the state championship, enduring the taunts of fans as he was the lone black player on the floor at Tuscaloosa’s Foster Auditorium.

Gary Wagner was an All-State football player at Grissom and state wrestling championship finalist. He spent his freshman year in college at Wake Forest before transferring to Jacksonville State, where he was named All-Gulf South Conference and Little All-American

Adam Bass played for Madison Academy and UAH before pitching five years in the minors in the Arizona and San Diego systems, ending his career in Japan.

Darrell Blackburn, a Butler graduate, started at linebacker at Alabama as a freshman. However, his promising career was cut short by a degenerative kidney disease that ultimately necessitated a transplant.

David Cain, who participated in track and field and cross country at Grissom High and Mississippi State, has been the track and field and cross country coach, for both men’s and women’s teams, at the University of Alabama in Huntsville since 1998, He is an eight-time Gulf South Conference Coach of the Year and his teams have won a total of 15 GSC team titles, including the men’s track and field championship in 2022.

Kenyon Hambrick, a J.O. Johnson graduate, played wide receiver for Alabama A&M, where he caught 102 passes and scored 14 touchdowns in two seasons. He was signed by the Baltimore Ravens and spent two years on their practice squad, and one season in Frankfurt in NFL Europe before returning home and starring for the Tennessee Valley Vipers.

Margaret Hoelzer, a Huntsville High and Auburn graduate, won three medals in the 2008 Summer Olympics at Beijing, and was also on the U.S. team in 2004. She set a world record in the 200 meter backstroke during the 2008 Olympic trials. She was a 22-time All-American and won six national titles at Auburn.

Holly Richards was a star volleyball player at Westminster Christian Academy and went on to become a second-team All-SEC choice at Alabama. She has coached for a quarter-century with club, college and high school teams, winning a state title at McGill-Toolen in 2004 and has won back-to-back titles in 2021 and 2022 at Westminster.

Jared Ross, the son of the late UAH hockey coach Doug Ross, a 2008 Hall of Fame inductee, was signed by the Philadelphia Flyers after his UAH career and in 2008 became the first Alabama-born and raised player to appear in an NHL game. He wrapped up his pro career with five seasons in Germany.

Marvin Stone was a high school All-American at Grissom, which he led to the 1999 state championship. He signed with the University of Kentucky, then transferred to Louisville after 2 ½ years with the Wildcats, scoring 10.3 points per game for the Cardinals as a senior.

Dr. Warren Strickland, a widely respected cardiologist, has been a nationally renowned bowhunter and archer, producing a plethora of hunting-related videos and programs. He is also an active conservationist, with more than a dozen years as a member of the Alabama Conservation Advisory Board.

Jon Sumrall was a two-time All-State football selection at Grissom and lettered three years as a linebacker at the University of Kentucky. After serving as assistant coach at a number of schools, including Kentucky, Ole Miss, Tulane and San Diego, he was named head coach at Troy University last December. He led the Trojans to an 11-2 season and a Cure Bowl bid.

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Huge!!!  You familiar??

Hardin Valley's Matthew Bates wins high school coaching Broyles Award for Tennessee


The president of the Tennessee Football Coaches Association was honored for his efforts at Oak Ridge High in 2021

Former Oak Ridge defensive line coach Matthew Bates was awarded the 2022 High School Broyles Award for Tennessee on Monday at the Capital Hotel in Little Rock, Arkansas.


The award recognizes the best assistant high school football coaches, and Bates won the award for his time in 2021. 

“To win it for Tennessee, it was a very humbling experience, very much an honor to be mentioned with all the past college Broyles Award winners,” Bates said. “It's more of a group award, honestly. I feel like there’s so many guys I’ve been blessed to coach, really it’s a reflection of them.


“It's an honor for not just me, but it's all the people that have invested in me and worked with me and that I got the opportunity to work with.”

The Broyles Award, named after famed Arkansas coach Frank Broyles, started as a recognition given to assistant college football coaches. In 2019, the award incorporated high school assistant coaches and now considers 22 different states.

“High school coaches, especially assistant coaches, get the recognition that they deserve for their hard work, the time and effort that they put (in), the sacrifices that they make,” said Clayton Harrell, executive director of the High School Broyles Award. "What we're trying to build is a fraternity of coaches and a network."

Along with his coaching duties, Bates is the president of the Tennessee Football Coaches Association. He joined the board of directors in 2017 when he was the head coach at Clay County and became the interim president in September 2021. Bates was later voted president unanimously last December. 
Bates said maintaining his role as an assistant coach, a full-time teacher and president of an association is a “balancing act.” He credits his wife, Kari, for her understanding of the demand of his career and the other members of the board of directors who support him. He said one of his biggest coaching influences is Jerry Joslin, his former high school football coach at Cookeville.

Bates is now an assistant football coach, assistant track and field coach and wrestling coach at Hardin Valley Academy.

https://www.knoxnews.com/story/sports/high-school/2022/12/07/matthew-bates-high-school-football-broyles-coaching-award-oak-ridge-hardin-valley-tn/69709457007/

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Immediate NIL Changes at TSSAA level…

MURFREESBORO — The TSSAA will allow student-athletes to receive Name, Image, Likeness (NIL) payments under certain parameters after the Legislative Council amended the organization's amateur rule Thursday.

The rule change is effective immediately and will allow athletes to make money from giving lessons and/or personal ventures — like selling merchandise through personal social media or receiving sponsorships — not related to their on-field performance as long as there is no TSSAA or member school involvement.

Athletes are not allowed to use their school jersey or any other TSSAA-affiliated insignia while performing or promoting the activity. And they are not allowed to be paid for how they perform.

https://www.mainstreetpreps.com/county/cheatham/tssaa-will-allow-nil-payments-for-tennessee-student-athletes-under-certain-parameters/article_86addb0c-7714-11ed-bf7f-df63cd3d574d.html

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2022 WALSH IRONMAN
Complete Preview & Predictions 

The 2022 Wash Jesuit Ironman is loaded! Here's a complete preview and with predictions for all 14 weights. Link below

Baylor only...

113 lbs - 8 Top 20s
15 - HM Jacob Bond, Baylor School

144 lbs - 9 Top 20s
12 - #17 Logan Paradice, Baylor School

157 lbs - 3 Top 20s
12 - Hunter Sturgill, Baylor School

175 lbs - 6 Top 20s
7 - #17 Omaury Alvarez, Baylor School

https://www.flowrestling.org/articles/10100079-complete-preview-predictions-for-ironman.

Note: Hat’s off to Ben Smith and his Bear Nation for even competing with these guys!!

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A Beast exceeding expectations…

175 lbs

Rocco Welsh (Waynesburg Central) 3-0 won by decision over Myles Takats (Perrysburg) 2-1 (Dec 11-5)

Tyler Eise (Ponderosa) 4-0 won by major decision over Dominic Federici (Wyoming Seminary (PA)) 2-1 (MD 14-4)

Jarrel Miller (St. Edward) 3-0 won by decision over Luke Vanadia (Brecksville) 3-1 (Dec 4-2)

Omaury Alvarez (Baylor School) 3-0 won in the ultimate tie breaker over Gage Wright (Parkersburg South) 2-1 (UTB 3-2)

https://www.flowrestling.org/articles/10122799-results-from-incredible-ironman-finals

 

Union Co Ky…

113 lbs
Bo Bassett (Bishop McCort) 3-0 won by decision over Jayden Raney (Union County) 3-1 (Dec 7-3)
Anthony Mutarelli (Malvern Prep) 4-0 won by fall over Mack Mauger (Blackfoot) 2-1 (Fall 5:29)
Nate Desmond (Bethlehem Catholic) 3-0 won by decision over Seth Mendoza (Mt. Carmel) 3-1 (Dec 3-1)
Beric Jordan (Stillwater) 4-0 won by decision over Louie Gill (Reynolds) 2-1 (Dec 5-0)

Workout partner…

120 lbs
Jax Forrest (Bishop McCort) 4-0 won by tech fall over Sebastian Degennaro (Jensen Beach) 2-1 (TF-1.5 1:30 (18-2))
Kael Lauridsen (Bennington) 4-0 won by decision over Jordyn Raney (Union County) 3-1 (Dec 7-4)
Leo DeLuca (Blair Academy) 4-0 won in sudden victory - 1 over Marcus Blaze (Perrysburg) 2-1 (SV-1 2-1)
Luke Lilledahl (Wyoming Seminary (PA)) 4-0 won by decision over Gylon Sims (Joliet Catholic Academy) 3-1 (Dec 3-0)

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  • 2 weeks later...
On 12/11/2022 at 2:49 PM, soms2 said:

A Beast exceeding expectations…

175 lbs

Rocco Welsh (Waynesburg Central) 3-0 won by decision over Myles Takats (Perrysburg) 2-1 (Dec 11-5)

Tyler Eise (Ponderosa) 4-0 won by major decision over Dominic Federici (Wyoming Seminary (PA)) 2-1 (MD 14-4)

Jarrel Miller (St. Edward) 3-0 won by decision over Luke Vanadia (Brecksville) 3-1 (Dec 4-2)

Omaury Alvarez (Baylor School) 3-0 won in the ultimate tie breaker over Gage Wright (Parkersburg South) 2-1 (UTB 3-2)

https://www.flowrestling.org/articles/10122799-results-from-incredible-ironman-finals

 

Union Co Ky…

113 lbs
Bo Bassett (Bishop McCort) 3-0 won by decision over Jayden Raney (Union County) 3-1 (Dec 7-3)
Anthony Mutarelli (Malvern Prep) 4-0 won by fall over Mack Mauger (Blackfoot) 2-1 (Fall 5:29)
Nate Desmond (Bethlehem Catholic) 3-0 won by decision over Seth Mendoza (Mt. Carmel) 3-1 (Dec 3-1)
Beric Jordan (Stillwater) 4-0 won by decision over Louie Gill (Reynolds) 2-1 (Dec 5-0)

Workout partner…

120 lbs
Jax Forrest (Bishop McCort) 4-0 won by tech fall over Sebastian Degennaro (Jensen Beach) 2-1 (TF-1.5 1:30 (18-2))
Kael Lauridsen (Bennington) 4-0 won by decision over Jordyn Raney (Union County) 3-1 (Dec 7-4)
Leo DeLuca (Blair Academy) 4-0 won in sudden victory - 1 over Marcus Blaze (Perrysburg) 2-1 (SV-1 2-1)
Luke Lilledahl (Wyoming Seminary (PA)) 4-0 won by decision over Gylon Sims (Joliet Catholic Academy) 3-1 (Dec 3-0)

Kudos Pete Miller and Co

Summit Wrestling made some noise at the Beast of the East Tournament in Newark, DE. With a top 25 with over 150 teams there.
 

Jarvis Little (120) finished 4th & Landon Desselle (138) finished 8th.

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    • Tax payer dollars are paid for certified teachers to "teach" and then coach. The primary job is to teach.  There are some district that ay awesome supplements and others that don't. Dyersburg and Dyer County are pretty close if I remember correctly. I would imagine that Football and basketball are above $10,000 now.  I've heard that Milan is $20,000 for boys basketball. I would imagine that football is more than that in Milan.  Collierville has camps that coaches get paid extra for. 3 camps a year, 100 kids a camp, $30,000 right there.  There are places like Memphis-Shelby County schools where the supplements are garbage even for the head coaches. I made less than $3,000 as the head assistant at Germantown in 2015 when we were 26-4 and one of the best teams in the Southeast. As a head middle school coach next year I will make between $4-5,000 at a municipal in Shelby County.  Coaches should be compensated for the jobs that are required but lets keep in mind that they are educators first.  It's pretty frustrating to other teachers that work their tale off teaching 6-7 classes a day to watch someone roam campus, not teach (or have very minimal responsibilities), and get paid the same (more with supplements) as a person who has the some years of experience or sometimes less. 
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