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WRESTLING PREVIEW: Carthage to build around eight returning starters

The Carthage Tigers return eight starters from a team last season that finished 8-2 overall in dual competition and placed fifth in the Central Ozark Conference, fourth at districts, and 17th at state.

Class 4 state runner-up Davion King headlines the Tigers’ returning wrestlers for veteran head coach Kenny Brown, who enters his 20th season at the helm of the Tigers.

Brown said that around 70 wrestlers went out for the team at the start of practice and the Tigers are looking to bring that number down to 56 before the start of the season in an effort to maximize their opportunities to develop their JV wrestlers.

“We did have a successful season last year, but definitely came up short of where we wanted to end up,” Brown said. “We wrestle some very talented competition just within our conference. The boys know what we have returning and are looking forward to the opportunity to test themselves against those programs.

“With gas prices this last year, we chose not to attend any camps this summer and just worked in our own room. We focused on more high-level technique that our boys are more likely to see at some of the tougher tournaments.

“Our goals this season are the same as every season. We want to continue to improve throughout the course of the season to give us the best opportunity to challenge for a district championship and set ourselves up for a run during the state tournament.”

King finished 38-5 overall last season, won a district title, and finished second in the COC at 160 pounds. He also placed fifth at 145 his sophomore year and qualified for state at 138 his freshman year.

“Davion placed second last year at state,” Brown said. “He had some health issues that kept him from putting on any weight and he ended up wrestling his finals match way undersized. Davion has worked hard putting on muscle this offseason and will be a tough match for just about anyone he sees this year.”

King plays key roles for the Carthage football team as defensive back and wide receiver. A deep playoff run for the Tigers in football would impact their basketball and wrestling teams.

Slated to wrestle at 132 his junior season, Bradyn Tate finished 31-12 last season at 126 and qualified for state at 113 his freshman campaign.

“Bradyn had a very consistent season for us last year as a sophomore and qualified as a freshman for the state tournament,” Brown said. “Bradyn spent a lot of time on the mats this summer and preseason, competing in multiple tournaments.”

Grey Petticrew went 25-10 overall at 145 last season and he could have an even more successful senior season.

“Grey did a tremendous job for us last year qualifying for state for his first time,” Brown said. “He was wrestling at a better weight last season for himself and the team. He is going to pull back down to 150 and we are looking at him with a legitimate shot at the podium.”

Dylan Huntley finished 25-14 overall at 113 last season and he’s moving up in weight for his junior season.

“Dylan Huntley will be looking to fill our 120-pound spot,” Brown said. “He just missed out on qualifying for the state tournament last season and we are looking for him to punch his first ticket to the state tournament this year.”

Tanner Putt recorded a 6-4 mark at 106 his freshman season.

“Tanner really came on strong towards the end of last season,” Brown said. “He was undersized all year at 106 and we are hoping to see continued improvement now that he is an actual 106-pounder. He spent most of the summer in the wrestling room and competed in a few tournaments this summer as well.”

Other returning wrestlers from last season are 138-pound senior Kip Castor (23-13 at 132), 157-pound senior Gabe Lambeth (11-12 at 170/182), and 285-pound sophomore David Recinos (11-6 at 285).

The graduation of five seniors from last season, including state medalist Braxdon Tate, has opened up a few spots in the Carthage lineup.

“Trey Nye started wrestling as a freshman and has come a long way in the three years he has wrestled for us,” Brown said. “He has been stuck behind some of our best wrestlers the past two years and we need for him to find a spot in the varsity lineup.”

Brown said that 10 wrestlers are in competition to replace Bradyn Tate at the 126 spot.

The Tigers open their season with a dual Tuesday against conference rival Carl Junction. They compete in the Farmington Duals (Dec. 10), Harrisonville (Dec. 16-17), Excelsior Springs (Jan. 7), and Platte County (Jan. 20-21) tournaments, as well as being the host of the Carthage Varsity Duals on Dec. 28.

Carthage’s schedule especially picks up in intensity in January, between the tournaments in Excelsior Springs and Platte County, as well as the Tigers’ annual Black and Blue Brawl Jan. 17 against longtime rival Neosho.

The Tigers defeated Neosho 38-31 on their home mat last season for their first win in the Black and Blue series since 2007, a victory secured by Recinos’ win by pin at 285 in the final match of the night.

Carthage competes Jan. 28 in the conference tournament and districts and state both follow in February.  

 

WRESTLING PREVIEW: Carl Junction excited for new season with six returning state qualifiers

The Carl Junction Bulldogs started making noise last season in head coach Mike Frizzell’s third season at the helm, finishing 15-3 overall in duals, placing second in the Central Ozark Conference tournament, and qualifying seven wrestlers for the Class 3 state tournament.

Carl Junction returns six of the seven qualifiers in seniors Lukas Walker, Chance Benford, and Cayden Bollinger, juniors Sam Melton and Max Matthews, and sophomore Tony Stewart. Melton finished second at 113 pounds and Walker third at 106 at state.

The Bulldogs also return sophomore Carter Foglesong and juniors Dexter Merrell and Arlen Wakefield, with freshmen Cole Beezley and Markus Lopez both in the mix for mat time.

“We have been excited for the upcoming season and building off of last season’s accolades,” Frizzell said. “We had a great offseason with several kids wrestling freestyle and Greco during the spring and summer months and beating some good quality competition.

“We have high expectations and have set some hefty goals for this season. With the number of returning state qualifiers/placers, we expect to be a contender for the Class 3 team title, but it will take a ton of hard work and consistency to be competitive.”

The Bulldogs have a strong trio of seniors in Walker, Benford, and Bolinger.

Walker finished 43-5 overall last season with district and conference titles in addition to his third place at state. He also qualified for state at 106 during his sophomore year.

Benford went 40-12 overall, won a conference title, and placed fourth in districts at 182, while Bollinger finished 38-17 overall, won a conference title, and placed fourth in districts at 220 last season.

“Experience is on our side this season,” Frizzell said. “We have a great senior class of leaders that have helped shape the culture in the wrestling room over these last few years and it is starting to pay off big with our confidence and expectations.”

Melton put together a 40-6 overall record with a second at state and conference and district titles last season.

Matthews finished 23-21 overall and qualified for state at 120, Stewart 36-17 overall and qualified for state at 170, Foglesong 29-8 overall at 106 as Walker and Melton also wrestled at 113 and 120, and Merrell and Wakefield both return as two-year varsity lettermen, while Beezley and Lopez both enjoyed success at the youth level.

“Mental toughness is always a key component in wrestling when competing at a high level,” Frizzell said. “We need to make sure we keep a competitive edge against our opponents when we walk out on the mat to compete and keep that edge throughout the match. Always manage the match to give yourself a chance to win.

“Being consistent day in and day out and staying healthy. It’s a long season that can be hard on your body both physically and mentally. Staying focused on the task at hand will be important to reach our goals.”

The Bulldogs graduated one of their state qualifiers, heavyweight Kameron Bennett.

Carl Junction opens the new season on Tuesday at conference rival Carthage.  

The Bulldogs open at home Dec. 1 against Joplin and their schedule plays out with a dual at Seneca (Dec. 6), their own CJ Classic (Dec. 10) with Blue Springs, Bolivar, Monett, Nixa, Seneca, Webb City and Willard joining the Bulldogs, a dual at Webb City (Dec. 13), a tournament in Harrisonville (Dec. 16-17), the Kinlock Tournament (Dec. 29-30) hosted by Parkview in Springfield, a tournament in Jenks, Okla. (Jan. 6-7), the Branson Tournament (Jan. 14), the Pacific Tournament (Jan. 21), a home dual against Marshfield (Jan. 24), a home dual against Neosho (Jan. 26), the conference tournament in Webb City (Jan. 28), a dual at McDonald County (Feb. 2), and a dual at Pittsburg, Kan (Feb. 3).

District and state take place in February.

WRESTLING PREVIEW: Webb City returns seven wrestlers for new head coach

The Webb City Cardinals have seven wrestlers returning from last season for their new head coach Jamie Williams, a Seneca graduate and former Webb City and Seneca assistant.

The returners are seniors Dominic Boles, Aidan Moore, Aidan Rose and Liam Taylor, juniors Colt Taylor and Cooper Heilbrun, and sophomore Trenton Ogle.

Brantley Carter, Javon White, and Buddy Belcher are the wrestlers who graduated from the Cardinals’ starting lineup.

“This team is extremely excited,” Williams said. “They all have been putting in hard work over the summer and preseason. There seems to be a buzz with the kids, and they all seemed really fired up for the upcoming season.

“Our expectations for this year is each kid will see where they are at in their personal performance and build on it each day. Each day we get a little bit better than we were the day before. When we do this, our goals will be able to be accomplished.”

None of Webb City’s 10 varsity wrestlers qualified for state last season and the Cardinals placed 10th overall in the Central Ozark Conference tournament with none of their wrestlers finishing with a medal.

“The biggest strength that our kids have is the desire to work,” Williams said. “Each day they show up willing to work and push themselves. There’s also some great leadership in the room with the upperclassmen, as well as some great underclassmen really stepping up.

“We need to clean up our technique and be able to execute the moves when we are tired. We need to be able to be very disciplined when we are working on our skill sets to build this mindset in our routine. We have the kids in the room that are wanting to work and eager to learn, and they are holding each other accountable in the room and outside of the room. This is going to be very critical for us being able to correct our technique and our mindset.”

Last season, Ogle finished 2-8 overall at 113 pounds, Colt Taylor 21-10 at 126, Moore 18-16 at 138, Boles 8-9 at 145, Carter 22-7 at 152, Heilbrun 12-18 at 160, Rose 5-24 at 170, Liam Taylor 14-17 at 182, White 13-9 at 195, and Belcher 10-5 at 220.

The Cardinals open their new season on Tuesday night at COC rival Joplin and their schedule has duals against Diamond and host Monett (Dec. 8), Carl Junction at home (Dec. 13), Frontenac at home (Dec. 15), Seneca at home (Jan. 3), Neosho and McDonald County at Neosho (Jan. 12), Marshfield on the road (Jan. 17), and Carthage at home (Jan. 24).

Their tournament slate begins Dec. 10 at Carl Junction and continues with Harrisonville (Dec. 16), Parkview (Dec. 29), Monett (Jan. 7), Rockwood Summit (Jan. 14), and Paola (Jan. 20).

Webb City hosts the conference tournament Jan. 28, and the Cardinals have district competition in mid-February.

“Being disciplined, keeping our goals in our view, showing up each day and be willing to work harder than anyone else, and make progress each day becoming a little better every chance we get,” Williams said of the keys to having a successful season.

WRESTLING PREVIEW: Five returning starters to lead Joplin

The Joplin Eagles return five starters, including one Class 4 state qualifier, for the upcoming season in seniors Draven VanGilder, Drew VanGilder and Alex Short and juniors Johnny Williams and Johnathon Burke.

The Eagles graduated 182-pound Brayden Thomas and heavyweight Gunner Price, and their newcomers include freshman Andrew Snider and sophomores Brennan Washington and KeyShawn Peavler.

Joplin finished 7-8 overall in dual competition last season.

“We have the potential to be pretty good if we get strong leadership from our upperclassmen and our young guys and gals learn and grow up in a hurry,” Joplin’s fifth-year head coach Jeremy Finley said. “We have strong leadership from our senior class. The VanGilders do an excellent job of bringing energy everyday into the practice room and get everyone going. Alex Short has been involved with wrestling for a very long time. We are looking for him to turn the corner this season.”

Draven VanGilder, an outstanding three-sport star fresh off a senior season in football when he made 145 total tackles (98 solo, 47 assist) in 10 games, qualified for state at 195 pounds and posted an 18-11 overall record last season.

Price was Joplin’s other state qualifier last season, and he managed a pair of wins before bowing out in the third consolation round.

Draven’s twin brother Drew, who rushed for nearly 400 yards and scored five touchdowns at running back his senior season, finished 14-8 last season and just a couple victories shy of also qualifying for state at 170.

Short finished 11-18 overall at 126 and Burke 14-15 overall at 145.

There will be less-experienced wrestlers surrounding the five returning starters.

“We will have to fill a few varsity weight classes with some underclassmen,” Finley said. “In order for us to be successful, they must grow up and adapt to varsity high school wrestling.

“Like any year, we hope to get as many kids in the room as possible. Usually if we can get them to show up, they will stay. We need as many as we can get. For us to be successful, we must obtain and keep kids interested and focused throughout the year. We have plenty of athletes walking the halls of JHS that do nothing in the winter. We need to turn these athletes into wrestlers.”

The Eagles open their season on Tuesday at home against Webb City and their schedule includes tournaments at Bentonville West, Columbus, Republic, and Columbia Hickman.

Webb City hosts the Central Ozark Tournament on Jan. 28.

District and state take place in February.

BOYS HOOPS PREVIEW: Senior class to lead Neosho in 2022-23

Despite the departure of dynamic scorer K’dyn Waters, who is currently playing basketball at NorthArk College, Neosho boys basketball has high hopes for improving upon its 17-11 record from a year ago in the upcoming 2022-23 season.

The reason for those hopes? A seven-man senior class with a bevy of varsity experience. 

“We are very excited, especially coming off a year where we had the most wins in the program

since 2005 and are bringing back seven seniors,” said Neosho coach Zane Culp, who is in his fourth year at the helm of the program. “The guys are out to prove last year was just a

stepping stone to an even better season this year.

“I believe we should be able to put ourselves in position to win most games. I think if we do that, our experience will help us pull out some wins. Our boys will go out with the intention to win

every game.”

The returning senior class is led by 6-foot-1 G/F Isaiah Green, who averaged 9.6 points, seven rebounds, four assists and 2.6 steals per game last year. 

“He started all 28 games last year,” Culp said. “One of our best all-around players. He is the

definition of a stat sheet stuffer. He was second in points last year and first in rebounds, steals and assists.”

Green is joined by fellow seniors 6-foot-3 F Kael Smith (7.9 PPG, 4.8 RPG), 6-foot-2 G Carter Fenske (7.6 PPG, 2.3 RPG), 5-foot-7 G Brock Franklin (5.2 PPG, 2.3 APG), 6-foot-4 F Carter Baslee (3.8 PPG, 3.0 RPG), 5-foot-11 G Jared Siler (3.1 PPG) and 5-foot-11 G Michael Day. Expected to make an impact at the varsity level this year is junior G Collier Hendricks.

While it is true that the Wildcats lost 23 points per game with the graduation of Waters, Neosho has the collective ability to try to make up for the loss thanks to the experience they bring back. All but one senior has started a game at the varsity level, giving Culp the peace of mind knowing there isn’t a situation his players haven’t been through and can’t figure out on their own on the court. It might just take a little time.

“I think our biggest strengths are our depth and experience,” Culp said. “Bringing back seven lettermen, and six guys who started games last year should be really advantageous for us. These guys set out a goal as freshmen to have the best four-year run the program has had in the last 20 years and I think they will do everything to accomplish that this year.

“We will have to find consistent scoring and that may be something we kind of figure out as we go. Losing Waters, who averaged 23 ppg while being so efficient, will be something that we will have to adjust to. I think we will be a more balanced offensive team this year, but it may take a while to figure out exactly what that looks like night in night out.”

Neosho opens the season at home with a matchup against Nevada on Tuesday.

“We have to take the season one day, one practice, one drill at a time,” Culp said when asked what the keys to his team’s success this year will be. “We can’t be looking ahead. We

need to just be focused on the task at hand everyday. Then, by the time we reach the end of the

season, hopefully, we are playing our best basketball.”