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St. Paul's young wrestling team scores
championship milestone
I read the article twice.
The reporter was there; I saw her taking notes. But
on the third read, my shoulders slumped. There was no mention of our
team's extraordinary feat.
Then I plopped on my glasses to read the tiny
results schedule. And there, under Wrestling, Independent School
Championships, was a small asterisk beside St. Paul's ninth-place finish.
The note read, "B Conference Champion."
"Yes!" I shouted and began waving Sunday's Sun.
In black and white, after almost 30 years, St. Paul's had a wrestling
championship all its own.
Wrestling has been part of my life since college
days when I dated a wrestler for four years. Those wrestlers were a
unique bunch. Muscular, yet lean, most had an intensity about life
that was both charming and a little scary. Often their unbridled
enthusiasm ushered adventure into the ordinary while translating
into a steely resolve on the mat.
Discipline ruled during the season where 6 a.m. runs
and three-a-day workouts punctuated their college schedules. And in
competition, where one man's training, technique and conditioning
faced another's, each stood alone, and the battle of the will to win
began.
Twenty-five years later, my son Peter first stepped
out on a wrestling mat to compete. As a 7-year-old, Pete's best move
was his bridge, the desperate defensive position designed to prevent
shoulders from touching the mat and being pinned, the goal of every
wrestling match. But with good training and coaching, his technique
flourished and he soon knew how to pin to win.
In high school this year, he joined the small and
surprisingly young team at
St. Paul's. With no seniors or juniors on the
squad, the sophomore-led team competed admirably within their
limits. But it was hard to win a meet with no wrestlers in five of
the 14 weight classes, since each forfeit counts the same as a pin
in team scoring.
Weight classes structure wrestling, equalizing the
competitors. Their weight defines them. It's not just Connor
Clayton; it's the 119-pounder. Or the 130-pounder, Austin Sauter.
The coaches adjusted the abbreviated lineup to keep
the team competitive. Kids sometimes "wrestled up," or competed in a
higher weight class to help the team score. Some, like Clayton,
Sauter, and 125-pounder George Doub, lost chances of individual
medals at tournament meets when their wins were split between weight
classes.
For others, like heavyweight Hunter Lee who'd never
set foot on a wrestling mat before this season, the small team
demanded he excel immediately and wrestle varsity.
Everyone had to learn how to offset the forfeits.
Winning wasn't enough. They became, as team captain Nick Skudrna
says, "The pinning team."
And it worked. With a 12-9 record, they headed to
the state championships.
With eight entries and six forfeits, five wrestlers
pinned their way into the next day's rounds. No one wrestled with
more heart than freshman Michael Green, who wrestled with one leg
taped stiff with a double knee brace. He still pinned two opponents.
While his father made room for him on the bench, I
could only offer my cooler's baggie of ice to the spent young man as
his dad draped a comforting arm around his courageous son.
Eight pins later, the small but mighty team hoisted
high the B Conference Championship trophy. Freshman standout Eric
Friedman received the outstanding wrestler award.
What a tribute to the team, the coach, and the sport
where the will to win pushes individual achievements to accomplish
extraordinary team goals.
Even if only marked with an asterisk.*
*Four of the eight wrestlers qualified for National
Preps: Friedman, Galli, Skudrna, and Lee.


02/25/09, Towson
Times
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