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THE AAAAA WRESTLING REPORT:  2008 STATE TOURNAMENT EDITION 

Edited by:  Bob Berg

Epstein Becker & Green, P.C.

945 East Paces Ferry Road, Suite 2700

Atlanta, Ga.  30326

(phone)  404/923-9050

(fax)  404/923-9950

(e-mail)  rberg@ebglaw.com

 

 

            Welcome, and thank you for reading this 2008 State Tournament Edition of The AAAAA Wrestling Report.  We hope you enjoy it. 

 

            A Few Words about the  Format:    Once again, we have opted to employ the “modified Brakeman format” this year.  Thus, rather than a blow-by-blow assessment of the State Tournament, following the Region tourneys and the setting of the AAAAA State brackets, we offer up a pre-Region analysis, along with our best estimation of what is likely to happen in a few short weeks, when teams from all over the State converge on the Arena at Gwinnett Center (from now on, the “Gwinnett Center”) for one hell of a weekend of wrestling where, once again, all five classification championships will be wrestled under one roof.  So, how does the “modified Brakeman format” work?

 

            For each weight class, we project the most likely champion; we then give you our best guess at a “top 20” ranking, based on the information available to us as of February 7, 2008, when I sent out the bat signal and convened a conference call of some of the best and brightest minds available to talk AAAAA wrestling (OK, so it was just me and my five wayward partners in crime; “best and brightest” sounds much more Kennedy/Camelotesque!).  You will then see a short “view from 50,000 feet,” where we identify the most probable major combatants for the gold medal, followed by a more detailed look at each of the eight AAAAA Regions.  All told, you should get a pretty thorough blast of information and data, to use in watching and enjoying this year’s AAAAA State Tournament (assuming our assessment is not rendered totally meaningless by the eleventh hour weight class manipulations we are likely to see, resulting from the optimal performance calculating/alpha master reporting/under 7% body fat assessing/hydration testing/1.5% per week weight dropping can of worms known as the new GHSA “weight management program”).

 

            One word about the “rankings”, as they are oftentimes misunderstood.  If it turns out that our #17 wrestler beat our #8 wrestler during the year, there may be several explanations as to why we have the winner at #17 and the loser at #8:

 

            a)         We may not have that particular result in our data base.  Our bad, but even in this era of incredible technology and information flow, we just don’t have all the results, so we operate with something less than full information.  As Hyman Roth said in Godfather II, “this is the business we’ve chosen.”

 

            b)         We may have known the result, but discounted it (a very important technique in the prognosticator’s bag of tricks - - if a result appears to be aberrant or we don’t like it, we just ignore it!) for any number of reasons, including injuries, weight issues, conditioning issues (e.g., for those wrestlers coming out after football season), SAT forfeits, etc. 

 

            c)         We may have known the result, but trumped it based on each wrestler’s full body of work, rather than just that one result.  As we’ve all come to learn, the transitive property of inequalities (if A > B, and if B > C, then A > C) may work in algebra, but “if A beats B, and B beats C, then C will beat A” is a formula for disaster in the wrestling prognostication business. 

 

            d)         Similarly, we may know the result but, especially if it was prior to the first of the year, we may believe that the loser of that particular bout has improved substantially and would win the rematch.

 

            e)         Or, finally (and, in all probability, most likely), we may just have gotten it wrong.  To paraphrase Forest Gump, “stuff happens.”  That’s ok, we will live with our mistakes, hope they are infrequent and, most importantly, continue to understand that, ultimately, the outcomes of wrestling contests are determined on the mats, not on the pages of this Report.

 

            And that’s about it, in terms of the table-setting.  So, in the immortal words of ring announcer Michael Buffer, “LET’S GET READY TO RUMBLE.”

 

            The traditional Bob Berg disclaimer:  Please remember, we are not experts, and this is not the gospel.  We have tried to use the data available to us, along with observations from some very knowledgeable people, to assist us in preparing this Report.  In the end, we stand by our predictions and we will be held accountable for them.  Nonetheless, the primary purpose of this Report is not to engage in speculation.  It is to serve as a resource for wrestling fans throughout the State:  to help identify the many superb wrestlers who compete in Class AAAAA; to lend some perspective to the tournament; to help identify those matches which may dictate the outcome of the tournament or the outcome of an individual weight class.  So, think of this Report not as a set of predictions, but as a “commemorative program” for you to use in watching the tournament, either live at what is sure to be a rockin’ Gwinnett Center or through the posted results on the internet.

 

            A final acknowledgement of special thanks:  I have received an incredible amount of help in this project from some very knowledgeable, very special people, including coaches, the wrestlers themselves or their families, as well as many former wrestlers, plus fans of particular teams or of wrestling in general.  They have e-mailed me results (or posted them on the vent); they have e-mailed me observations; they have corrected my mistakes and supplied me with accurate information; they have been invaluable to me in the preparation of this Report.  I know who you are, and I know what you have done, and I couldn’t have done it without you.  More importantly, you have given me an ever-increasing number of teams to root for, and an even bigger number of individual wrestlers to follow and secretly wish for success.  If only there were enough team trophies and individual gold medals to go around, because I would want all of your teams and all of your wrestlers to win them.  And, of course, my annual note of gratitude to Brian Brakeman, who for the past 37 years has written the Ohio High School Wrestling Forecast, the finest work of its kind in the country, and who even called earlier in the week to share his observations and analysis on the Georgia wrestlers participating in the Ironman, Brecksville and GIT (Wadsworth) tournaments.  He is our idol and his work sets the bar for our efforts here. 

 

            Two other notes of particular gratitude.  First, to my now five partners in crime, who share in this endeavor on a daily basis throughout the year, in-season and out, and who help me see things more clearly, both as to wrestling and as to life its own self:  JimmyO, .theWB, X-Man, Dr. Truth and ScottO.  Thanks for being there when the bat signal went out (except for JimmyO, who no doubt was plotting the next hydraulics problem to keep my flights from taking off on time).  I may be the pilot on this annual trek, but I am flying on instruments only; you are my eyes and my ears and my boots on the ground, and I value your astute observations and keen analysis more than you know.  And, finally, thanks to Jane, who helps me keep everything in perspective and makes every day seem like the State Championship finals.

 

            That about does it for the preliminaries.  The ring announcer has made his call and the fighters are at center ring, getting their final instructions.  What’s left to say, other than to quote famous referee Mills Lane, “LET’S GET IT ON.”

 

 

103 LBS.

 

                        Projected Champion:   Stephen Spradlin (10), Camden County (103 – 5th/Region Champ)

 

 2.        Anderson (11), Hiram (103 – sq/Region Champ)

 3.        K. Salone (11), Centennial (103 transfer from Alpharetta)

 4.        Jones (10), Parkview (103 – sq)

 5.        Anthony (9), Pope (Kids State placer)

 6.        Herrera (10), Kennesaw Mountain (103)

 7.        A. Lazor (9), Union Grove (Kids State placer)

 8.        Doyague (9), Collins Hill [or Carson (12), 103 – sq]

 9.        G. Epps (10), North Gwinnett (103)

10.        Sanders (9), Kell (Kids State placer)

11.        Garcia (12), McEachern (King of the Hill “KOH” 103 – 4th)  

12.        Christakis (9), Harrison (Kids State Champ)

13.        Martin (9), Roswell (Kids State Champ)

14.        Hammett (9), Lowndes

15.        Ard. Smith (9), Marietta

16.        B. Smith, Chattahoochee

17.        Hobby (9), Grayson

18.        Z. Shoemaker (9), Murray County

19.        Jones (11), Warner Robins (112 – sq)

20.        Zunun (9), Colquitt County

 

The View From 50,000 Feet:    

Some of you who, like me, are older than dirt, may remember quite well how each episode started:  “The Lone Ranger!  A fiery horse with the speed of light,  a cloud of dust and a hearty Hi-yo Silver, away.  The Lone Ranger!  With his faithful Indian companion, Tonto, the daring and resourceful masked rider of the plains led the fight for law and order in the early West.  Return with us now to those thrilling days of yesteryear.  The Lone Ranger rides again….”  You may well also remember how each episode ended.  As the Lone Ranger rode off into the sunset (with yet another “Hi-yo Silver, awayyyyyyy”), some amazed and baffled observer would mutter “Who was that masked man?”  Well, it’s much the same for Stephen Spradlin, the younger of the two excellent Spradlin brothers, who fights for recognition in South Georgia and, after the end of each tournament where he’s excelled, leaves baffled observers muttering “who was that kid?”  5th last year at this weight, he has dominated the 103 landscape this year, from winning gold at the Battle of the Border (beating Salone 11-2 in the finals), to taking 1st at 112 at the Coastal Georgia Classic.  He has pinned Anthony in the first period (after spending some rare quality time on his back) and took an impressive 3rd at the extremely tough Zac Jarzynka in Florida.  Assuming the bracket gods are kind, his likely finals opponent is the returning 4AAAAA Region Champ, Anderson.  Last year, he, much like Lone Ranger Spradlin, was small for this weight (as evidenced by his Junior National Freestyle 6th at 98 pounds over the summer).   Following some early troubles (3rd at the Southern Slam, 4th at Sequoyah at 112 and 3rd at the Battle of the Border, losing 6-1 to Salone along the way), he has come on like gangbusters, collecting gold medals at the Dirty South (pinning Anthony in the finals) and Alexander before stumbling a bit with a 3rd at the Crossbones.  (Interestingly, Spradlin and Anderson met in the State consolations last year, where Spradlin’s 7-5 win eliminated Anderson.)  If the bracket gods aren’t cooperative, or even if they are, other possible finalists facing off with Spradlin include Salone, Jones and Anthony, and you can read more about their credentials below.  However, when the cloud of dust clears on the 103 bracket and everyone readies to ride off into the Gwinnett County sunset, the hand being raised will be the Camden County Lone Ranger.  Right?  “Um, that right, Kemosabe!”

 

Region 1AAAAA.   The best of the lot appears to be the freshman Hammett, who has served up a string of nice placements (2nd at the Rebel, 6th at the Dirty South, 5th at the Fayette Christmas, 3rd at the Valdosta Wildcat and 2nd at Tift County).  His failure to place at tough tracks like the Battle of the Border (where Anderson thumped him 10-2) and North Metro (where he did go up by 5 on Lazor before being teched) suggests he may not be quite ready for prime time yet, but that will only be a matter of time.  Zunun was 2nd at the Hornet, and he should earn a trip to the Gwinnett Center, along with Jones, who dropped down to 103 after a two-and-out experience at 112 State last year.  McCall (Tift County), 6th at the Rebel, and R. Jones (Valdosta), 4th at the Coastal Georgia Classic, should also contend.

 

Region 2AAAAA.   Alex Lazor should dominate this Region, as there is no one else who can come close to his “bona fides”:  3rd at the South Metro (where he pinned Rana), 5th at the Stockbridge Tiger (where, tellingly, he lost to Herrera before pinning Rana again), 2nd at the Valdosta Wildcat (where he beat Zunun) and 3rd at North Metro.  Beyond that, perhaps most impressively, he took out Carson 3-2 in the State Duals quarterfinals match between Union Grove and Collins Hill.  He is definitely good enough to stand on the podium at the Gwinnett Center.  As for the podium here, his fellow medalists are somewhere out there, but i haven’t a clue who they might be. 

 

Region 3AAAAA.   Spradlin will rule the school at this weight, with Hymans of Groves (6th at the Toomey) as the only other wrestler from this Region on our radar screen. 

 

Region 4AAAAA.   Anderson is the cream of the Region 4AAAAA crop, with the most likely opposition in the finals coming from the veteran Rana (pinned by Lazor at both the South Metro and the Stockbridge Tiger - - I’ll bet he’s glad to be in a different Region from Union Grove! ) or S. Nakano (Paulding County), recently 6th at the Crossbone Classic.

 

Region 5AAAAA.   While the “southern” Regions lack any serious depth, the “northern” Regions make up for it in spades, starting with 5AAAAA.  Any of the top four in this Region could take the gold:  Herrera won the Raider Rumble, was 2nd at the Fayette Christmas, Titan Cup and Cobb County, and 3rd at the Stockbridge Tiger.  We rate him top dog as a result of his pin wins over Smith (2x) and Sanders, along with a close win over Christakis; however, he has lost twice to Anthony (6-3 and 8-4), so it is critical that he place high in the Region to avoid a nasty first or second round State matchup.  Garcia was 3rd at McCallie and 3rd at Cobb County, where he lost on the first night to Christakis by pin but came back to beat Christakis 6-3 in the consolation finals, a circumstance which suggests foes might want to get Garcia early, when weight is an issue, as he will be a large 103 at tourney’s end.  The aforementioned Christakis, who serves as our most logical baseline at this weight, was 5th at McCallie, 2nd at Whitewater and 4th in Cobb County.  He has won two out of three from Garcia, lost close to Herrera (4-3), won close against Salone (5-4) and pounded Shoemaker (14-1).  Indeed, we may have him highly undervalued here (a theme which appears throughout this Report with regard to Hoya wrestlers, for reasons which baffle me).  Finally, the youngest of the Marietta Smith brothers has managed to nab medals at the Knoxville Catholic (4th), Sequoyah (6th) and Rockmart (4th), and if he is reasonably healthy (seemingly always an issue for the Smith boys), he should nab the last podium spot.  Others to watch would include Z. Shoemaker (4th at the Dalton Carpet and Murray County, 3rd at Soddy Daisy), Levya of Etowah (consolation finalist at the Last Man Standing) and Helterbrand of North Cobb (3rd at the Adairsville Tiger and Coal Mountain, but pin losses to Smith, Garcia and Herrera). 

 

Region 6AAAAA.   While Region 5AAAAA is deep, this Region is cavernous!  K. Salone has spent much of the year at 112, where he did reasonably well (e.g., 3rd at the Crossbone), but perhaps his most telling result was his 2nd at the Battle of the Border, where he lost in the finals to Spradlin 11-2 but took a convincing 6-1 victory over Anderson.  He also has a 4-2 overtime win over Anthony (and, of course, that puzzling 5-4 loss to Christakis) and has definite finalist potential, where he would likely top 115 pounds by the pre-whistle hand shake.  Anthony, younger brother of Pope’s first State Champ, Caleb, has steamrolled through his frosh season, winning at Sequoyah, Bradley Central and Cobb County.  He has beaten Herrera twice, shut out Christakis and teched Garcia, while losing in overtime to Salone and getting pinned by Anderson in the Dirty South finals.  Those two are the likely finalists, but both Sanders (3rd at the Rebel, 14-12 loser to Anderson at the Dirty South), if healthy, and Martin (2nd to Anthony at Sequoyah, 1st in Fulton County, 2nd at Chattahoochee and 3rd at the Titan Cup) will challenge.  They will also be challenged for State berths, most notably by B. Smith, who was 2nd to Herrera at the Raider Rumble, 2nd to Martin in Fulton County (losing 5-2 in the finals), 4th at Chattahoochee, and 1st at both the Santa Slam and the Coal Mountain; his failure to make it out of this Region would speak volumes as to the sick depth sometimes encountered in this 12-team Region.  Gilkenson (Milton), 4th in Fulton County and 6th at the Chattahoochee, Jerrus (Alpharetta), 4th at the Raider Rumble, Leith (Sprayberry), Bailey (Wheeler), 4th at Brookwood, and Hauser (Lassiter), 6th at Whitewater, are also likely to be on the outside looking in when the podium snapshot is taken.  Needless to say, the Region Champ that gets #4 from this Region is in for an unpleasant and undeserved surprise.

 

Region 7AAAAA.   It appears that Carson has lost his weight battle, meaning the Doyague will represent the Eagles in the post-season.  Given Carson’s excellent performance at State last year, where he pinned both Anderson and St. James, his absence is not great news for Collins Hill.  Still, it isn’t all that bad, as Doyague took the gold medal in Gwinnett County (beating Epps 9-4 in the finals), beat Garcia 8-4 at the Walton Duals and has split two close matches with our baseline Christakis.  His opposite number in the Region finals is likely to be Epps, 3rd at Sequoyah (where he lost to Martin 10-9), 3rd in a brief Alabama excursion to Hewitt-Trussville, 2nd in Gwinnett County and, most recently and most impressively, 1st at Whitewater where he put a 13-5 hurting on our baseline Christakis.  The other two State qualification spots are there for the taking, with Beck (Mill Creek), Marionneaux (South Forsyth), 3rd at the Raider Rumble, and Cross (North Forsyth), 2nd at the Coal Mountain in the hunt, perhaps joined by Sponholz (Norcross), 2nd at the Toomey and 4th at the Coal Mountain. 

 

Region 8AAAAA.   Jones has spent most of the season toiling at 112, where he managed to collect a gold at the Southern Slam, 4th at McCallie, 2nd in Gwinnett County, 8th at the Zac Jarzynka and 2nd at Chattahoochee.  Since he dropped to 103 and quickly lost to Salone, he has been a hammer, taking 1st at the Last Man Standing and 2nd at North Metro.  He will be a monstrous 103, if he can survive the weight management required over a grueling three-day State tournament and be wrestling late into Saturday evening.  Hobby was 4th at the Big Red Rumble, and should vie with Thomas (Brookwood) and Wofford (Shiloh), recently 4th at the Lovejoy Wildcat, for the remaining qualification spots.

 

 

 

112 LBS.

 

                        Projected Champion:   Mitchell (10), Collins Hill (AA 103 – 1st at Wesleyan)

 

 2.        Sartain (12), Peachtree Ridge (103 – 2nd/Region Champ)

 3.        Bushart (10), Pope (103 – 4th/Region Champ)

 4.        B. St. James (10), Centennial (103 – sq)

 5.        R. Maus (10), Kennesaw Mountain (103 – sq)

 6.        Vega (12), Brookwood (112 – sq/Region Champ)

 7.        Lane (9), Murray County (Kids State Champ)

 8.        Scott (9), Valdosta (Kids State Champ)

 9.        N. Mullins (9), South Forsyth (Kids State Champ)

10.        An. Stringer (10), Kell (103)

11.        Lunsford (11), Paulding County (112 – sq)

12.        L. Mosher (11), Harrison (AAA 112 – 6th at Cass)

13.        Bell (12), Redan (112)

14.        Kreis (11), Grayson (103 – sq)

15.        Burris (12), Marietta (112 – sq)

16.        Ferreira (12), McEachern

17.        McAraw (12), Parkview (112 – sq)

18.        Mitchell (10), Newton County (112 – sq)

19.        Parks (12), South Cobb (112)

20.        Gary (10), Hiram  

 

The View From 50,000 Feet:     The 112 pound bracket is chock full of youth, with no less than four recent Kids State Champs likely to be among the combatants.  Still, when the final bout is wrestled, we anticipate two grizzled veterans who are used to wrestling under the spotlight toeing the line in the battle for the gold, much to the delight of wrestling fans throughout the State who have speculated, on “the vent” and elsewhere, as to the likely outcome when Mitchell and Sartain finally get it on.  Mitchell, plain and simple, is a phenom.  Undefeated AA Champ at 103 last year, he has done nothing this year (e.g., 1st in Gwinnett County at 119, 2nd at the Toshiba Midwest Classic where he lost 1-0 in the finals to nationally ranked Waters) to tarnish his national reputation and ranking.   He bombed Bushart 12-3 at State Duals, and likewise mashed Luke Mosher 11-2 the next day (giving him a clean sweep of the Mosher brothers, having bested brother Peter 12-4 at the Walton Duals); thus, you get some idea of the gap between Mitchell and some other highly regarded prospects at this weight.  Yet, Sartain is more than a worthy foe, having won championships in Gwinnett County, at Chattahoochee and at the Last Man Standing, and if he can wrestle Mitchell mostly on the mat, he has an excellent chance to climb to the top step on the podium.  Conversely, if the match is wrestled on their feet (as we suspect it will be wrestled), Mitchell is likely to be crowned king of the 112s by a reasonably comfortable margin.  Bushart and St. James look to be the best of the rest (more on them in the Region 6AAAAA summary), but while Bushart did beat Sartain with a last second takedown during last year’s regular season, this year’s 6-1 win by Sartain over Bushart’s teammate and highly ranked 119 Crowe suggests the Sartain may have passed him by over the course of the last year. 

 

Region 1AAAAA.   Two freshmen are likely to lead the way, as Jovan Scott (brother of former 2x State champ Jamal) and Thomas (Lowndes) appear to be the class of this weight class.  Scott was 3rd at the Rebel and 4th at the Battle of the Border, before winning the Valdosta Wildcat (topping Thomas in the finals); there was some early talk that he might contend for State gold this year, but his 11-0 loss to Bushart at the Walton Duals pretty much silenced expectations of that sort.  Thomas has also generated an enviable track record, including a 3rd at the Hornet, 6th at the Rebel, 4th at the Valdosta Wildcat and 2nd at Tift County.  By my count, he’s lost at least three times to Scott, though, so he is likely looking at arriving at the Gwinnett Center as a second seed.  Returning State qualifier Holmes (Houston County) looks to improve on his one win at State last year, with results like his recent 3rd at the Toomey supporting that possibility, while Creech (Coffee 103 - sq) hopes to return to State to better his 0-2 performance of a year ago.

 

Region 2AAAAA.   While this weight class earlier seemed to be wide open, the veteran Bell looks to be rounding into form after some early slips and is now clearly the frontrunner.  He was 4th at the Stockbridge Tiger and 2nd at the Fayette Christmas (losing in each to Maus), before winning gold in Dekalb County and, most recently, at the Lovejoy Wildcat.  Mitchell took 1st at the Red Skin Rumble, which bodes well for him bettering his 0-2 performance at State last year.  Beyond that, the freshman Benton (3rd at the Valdosta Wildcat) will probably join the throng of Union Grove wrestlers qualifying for State.  We expected to see returning Region Champ Nelson of Stephenson at this weight, but we have no results for him this season and don’t know if he is wrestling. 

 

Region 3AAAAA.   No names jump out at us in this bracket, and we lack the data to even hazard a guess.  Most notably,  we have no results for returning State qualifier Sororian of Windsor Forest and don’t know if he is wrestling this year. 

 

Region 4AAAAA.   Lunsford looks to be the clear choice, with a stellar record including 2nd at the Mohawk, 1st at the Raider Rumble (where he shocked the highly ranked Maus 2-0 in the finals), 4th at Alexander and 3rd at the Coal Mountain.  Former Kids State Champ Gary has been up and down, bookended by an 8th at the Southern Slam in South Carolina early in the year and a 6th at the Crossbone late, but he has a strong youth wrestling pedigree and could surprise at this weight.  Forbus (Newnan) won two matches at State last year and has Region finalist potential this year.

 

Region 5AAAAA.   As with 103, 112 in this Region is loaded.  Maus leads the way, and the champ at the Stockbridge Tiger (where he pinned Bell) and Fayette Christmas (along with 2nd at the Raider Rumble, 3rd at the Dirty South and Titan Cup and 2nd at Cobb County)  has definite State placement potential.  But first, he will have to tame a tough set of Region opponents, perhaps led by the youngest of them, Lane, who took gold at the Dalton Carpet and was a finalist at both Soddy Daisy and Murray County (and who punctuated his rise up the charts with same day Region Dual wins over both Mosher, 8-2, and Maus, 3-2).  AAA returning placer Mosher has suffered through the perils of the murderous Harrison schedule (Ironman, the Clash, Powerade, among others) but managed to score some jewelry along the way, including 2nd at Whitewater and 4th at Cobb County; like his running mate at 103, Christakis, I fear we may have misconstrued that brutal schedule and, as a result, underestimated Mosher, as well.  The fourth and final qualifying slot will be the subject of a fierce battle, leaving several qualified candidates by the wayside.  Burriss was 3rd at the Knoxville Catholic, 3rd at Sequoyah, 4th at the Last Man Standing and 6th in Cobb County (where he beat Ferreira 2-1) and he probably has the inside track.  Ferreira went into overtime with Mosher at Cobb County before falling by pin, and, as mentioned, lost 2-1 to Burriss, so the margin between those two is miniscule.  Add in Parks (champion at West Laurens and 5th at Alexander) and it should be exciting times at the McEachern gym.

 

Region 6AAAAA.   Bushart and St. James have been knocking each other around for as long as I can remember, going back to kids wrestling days and continuing through 103 last year, and by all rights, they will lock horns again in the Region finals.  Bushart has been flat out dominant to date, winning gold medals at Sequoyah (where he crushed Burriss 11-0), Bradley Central, the Dirty South (6-2 over Maus in the championship tilt) and Cobb County (5-2 over Maus in the return match), along with a 2nd to the excellent Ohio Division III placer Minnard at the Wadsworth Grizz.  St. James has run in different circles, but with equally dominating results, winning titles at the Battle of the Border, the Heart of Dixie in Alabama, the Coal Mountain (beating Mullins along the way) and North Metro (winning an exciting finals match against Vega).  Beyond those two, the younger Stringer brother (4th at the Rebel, 6th at the Dirty South, 3rd in Cobb County) and Massoor of Milton (5th at the Knoxville Catholic, 3rd in Fulton County) look to have the best chance of punching State tickets (with Stringer’s 15-2 win over Massoor suggesting the likely outcome should they meet in the consolation finals).  Cleary (Northview) took 4th in Fulton County and at the Raider Rumble, and he appears to be the logical  threat to the top four, with Grossman (Walton), Martin (Chattahoochee), 4th at the Coal Mountain, Jennings (Wheeler), 6th at Sequoyah, and A. Lesesne (Sprayberry) more distant pursuers. 

 

Region 7AAAAA.   Mitchell and Sartain exit from this Region, enhancing the possibility that their long-awaited matchup in the finals will, in fact, be a rematch.  N. Mullins is also very good, judging by his 1st at the Santa Slam, 2nd at the Coal Mountain (losing to St. James in the finals and beating Lunsford) and 3rd at the Raider Rumble; his 7-2 loss to Sartain at Chattahoochee also suggests he is not one to be trifled with.  Rivera (Norcross), 5th at the Toomey, is a late arrival on our radar screen.

 

Region 8AAAAA.   Vega returns as the Region Champ at this weight, with an enviable record this year including gold medals at Brookwood and the Santa Slam, a silver at North Metro (losing a close finals match to St. James) and a bronze in Gwinnett County (where he beat closest pursuer Kreis 9-1, suggesting there is no reason to expect that Vega will not repeat as Region titlist).  He was rolling towards placement at State last year when he was derailed by Pope’s Crowe in the consolations, but we see him on the podium at the Gwinnett Center this time around.  Kreis was 3rd at the Big Red Rumble and at Hoover, but stumbled at Gwinnett County and at Region Duals, losing to Vega 9-1 and then by pin.  McAraw was 3rd at the Southern Slam and 4th at the Last Man Standing, each at 119, before taking part in the “Parkview Shuffle” and dropping to 112, where he was an impressive 3rd at North Metro.  Cooley (South Gwinnett), Fernandez (Central Gwinnett), 4th at the Adairsville Tiger, and Daverna (Shiloh) are others to keep in mind.

 

 

 

119 LBS.

 

                        Projected Champion:   Westerman (11), McEachern (103 – 1st/Region Champ; ’06 103 – 1st)

 

 2.        Sam Spradlin (12), Camden County (112 – 3rd/Region Champ; ’06 112 – 5th)

 3.        Crowe (12), Pope (112 – sq)

 4.        Davis (12), Parkview (119 – 5th/Region Champ)

 5.        Devita (11), Union Grove (119 – sq at Northview)

 6.        Willard (10), Collins Hill (112 – sq)

 7.        P. Mosher (11), Harrison (AAA 103 – 3rd at Cass)

 8.        Pfifer (10), Lassiter (103 – sq)

 9.        N. Isburgh (10), Grayson (103 –sq/Region Champ at South Gwinnett)

10.        D. Brown (10), Central Gwinnett (112 – 5th)

11.        Taylor White (12), Forsyth Central (112 – sq)

12.        Knutsen (12), Lowndes (transfer from Michigan)

13.        Ho (11), Shiloh (112 – sq)

14.        Reinhardt (12), Valdosta (112 – sq)

15.        Thompson (12), Newnan (119 – sq)

16.        Balkhanian (12), Northview

17.        Wilson (10), Roswell (103)

18.        Wagner (11), Etowah (103 – sq)

19.        Castanaro (11), Milton (112)

20.        Conti (12), North Cobb (103 – sq)

 

The View From 50,000 Feet:    

They are both highly skilled, with a seemingly endless supply of moves, counters and counter-counters resulting in a long and steady stream of wins.  And now, they seem destined to meet, hopefully in the finals where the spotlight can shine on the two of them.  Westerman, the Champ everyone seems to love to hate - - “He lucked into the title when Fields missed weight.”  “He weighed 140 pounds, he must have cheated to get down to 103.”  “He is part of that evil horde known as the McEachern Indians.”  Bad stuff.  And then there’s Spradlin, the kid everyone seems to love to love - - “He would have won two titles if he could only stay healthy.”  “He’s a great kid and deserves to win a title now.”  “He gets no respect, because he’s from South Georgia.”  Good stuff.  Yep, this is your classic good versus evil, enough so that, if they do meet in the finals, the spotlighted mat may well start to take on the look and feel of the Planet Cybertron!  Westerman, known as Megatron, the leader of the