Results: 4A-3A State Championships
- Legacy Wrestling

- 6 minutes ago
- 17 min read
Photo Credit to Jeff Randall!
Stephen Decatur’s top-ranked senior Elijah Collick (138) won his fourth state title, Perry Hall’s top-ranked senior Victor Marks-Jenkins (215) and Whitman’s third-ranked senior Solomon Randall (126) made it three-in-a-row after placing third as freshman, and both Roosevelt’s third-ranked junior Austin Hayes (113) and eighth-ranked senior Isisah Womack (144) were repeat title-winners at Saturday’s Class 4A-3A state tournament at Show Place Arena in Upper Marlboro on Saturday.
Annapolis’ third-ranked junior Mike Groszkowski (138) improved on last year’s runner-up finish, Northwest’s second-ranked junior Logan Brown (165) and Roosevelt’s third-ranked senior Leo Foreman (157) remained unbeaten after being third at states last year, and Whitman’s seventh-ranked junior Jabasie Trice (120) also retained an unblemished record among the crowning achievements over the weekend.
132: No. 1 Elijah Collick, Stephen Decatur (46-1) by fall in 1:44 over No. 20 junior Damian Melendez, Rockville (43-2):
Collick used a 60-second pin, a 15-0 technical fall and a come-from-behind, 7-4 overtime semifinal victory over Chesapeake-Anne Arundel’s previously unbeaten second-ranked sophomore Corey Brown to reach the finals, where he built a 12-2 lead before finishing Melendez.
Melendez had reached the title match following a 95-second fall, a 9-7 decision and a pin in 5:29 of his semifinal with Westminster junior Zachary Bowersox, whom he had beaten, 5-4, a week earlier. Brown pinned Bowersox in 3:22 for third place.
Melendez had won his Class 4A-3A East Regional crown by 4-2 decision over Whitman's 18th-ranked senior Adan Magnas, who had beaten him by 5-3 decision in the previous weekend’s Montgomery County tournament finals.

Collick had a much more difficult time overcoming a 1-0 deficit against Brown, a transfer from second-ranked Mount St. Joseph where he earned a Maryland Interscholastic Athletic Association title, and a winner of titles in the Anne Arundel and Class 4A-3A South Region over the previous two weeks.
Collick is ranked 23rd nationally and Brown 25th in those ratings by High School on SI.
Committed to The University of Nebraska, Collick became the Seahawks' first-ever four-time title winner of the conference and the program's first-ever four-time regional and state tournament champion. Having won four Class 2A-1A state titles, Collick won his first of the Class 4A-3A variety.
Collick surpassed three-time champion Danny Miller by becoming the program's first four-time state champion, having previously joined two-time champion Noah Reho as only the second Seahawks' freshman by earning a 106-pound title.
Collick has a career mark of 178-6 and has surpassed three-time state finalist Jagger Clapsadle (158 wins), state champion Nico D'Amico (153), four-time place-winner Andy McKahan (147), Reho (140) and Miller (139) on the Seahawks' list of all-time victories leaders.
“These four years have been very exciting for me. They’ve been the best four years of my life, and I’ve got four more to go [in college,]” Collick said. “This feels great. It’s a privilege. I just came out here to wrestle. I want to thank my coach [Josh] August.”
Collick suffered his lone defeat this year by 8-7 decision when bumping up to South Carroll’s top-ranked 138-pound senior Jo Joe Gigliotti, a University of Maryland-bound wrestler who earned his school-record fourth straight Class 2A-1A state championship to go with as many Carroll County and regional crowns on Saturday.
Collick was also connected through Legacy Wrestling with Aaron Brooks, a North Hagerstown graduate, four-time state, NHSCA and NCAA champion and Olympic Bronze medalist.
“Aaron Brooks is a great guy who knows a lot,” Collick said. “I got an opportunity to learn from him and ask some questions. That was a lot of fun.”
190: No. 1 senior Victor Marks-Jenkins, Perry Hall (54-0) by 12-1 major decision over No. 2 senior Peter Snyder, Stephen Decatur (41-1):
Marks-Jenkins pinned all three opponents in 90 seconds, 1:41 and 5:22 before dominating his clash of unbeatens with Snyder, rising to 54-0 with 40 pins and two technical falls, and 199-1 with 156 pins and 15 technical falls. Marks-Jenkins surpassed Maryland’s all-time victories milestone for public school wrestlers of 195-5 previously held by South Carroll’s Joey Thomas, winner of three state championships over the course of 2015, 2016 and 2017.
Ranked 19th nationally, Marks-Jenkins is now a four-time champion in both the Baltimore County and Class 4A-3A North regional tournaments, having earned his third consecutive Class 4A-3A state title after having placed third at states as a 145-pound freshman.
Snyder reached their title match following consecutive technical falls by scores of 21-6 and 20-5 to go with a 98-second fall over Catonsville’s 18th-ranked junior Josh Agen-Davis, a third-placed county finisher and regional runner-up who has lost decisions to Marks-Jenkins by scores of 7-0 and 6-0.
Marks-Jenkins led, 1-0, entering the second period, where his seven-point lateral drop and a subsequent three-point takedown put him ahead, 11-1, entering the third period of an eventual 12-1 victory.
Ranked 25th nationally and committed to Northwestern University, Snyder returned to the Seahawks following three seasons at Blair Academy, where he earned a National Preps crown as a 165-pound freshman, placed fifth at Preps as a sophomore and missed his junior season due to an injury.
126: No. 3 senior Solomon Randall, Walt Whitman (41-0) by 1-0 decision over No. 7 junior David Dansou, Clarksburg (40-4):
Randall improved his record to 41-0 with 25 pins and seven technical falls, doing so following consecutive technical falls by scores of 20-2 and 18-3 before winning his semifinal bout by 18-8 major decision over Catonsville’s 15th-ranked previously unbeaten sophomore Drew Eveleth.
Dansou reached their title match following a 17-4 major decision and consecutive decisions by scores of 5-4 and 4-2, the latter in his semifinal with Severna Park’s fourth-ranked senior Michael Queen.
An 8-0 loser to Randall in last year’s state final, Queen entered with a record of 43-0 as a winner of three Anne Arundel County titles in four championship berths, three regional crowns after placing third once, and had finished second and third at states.
Queen finished third on Saturday as Randall faced and defeated Dansou for the fourth time, having earned victories by 6-0, 7-3, and 4-3, including consecutive Montgomery County and Class 4A-3A West Regional title bouts.
“David Dansou has been my toughest opponent all year and I can’t score bonus points against him. I’ve had trouble with him in the duals, counties, regions and now states,” said Randall of a match that was wrestled almost entirely from the neutral or standing position.
“I knew he wouldn’t choose down because I knew I would be able to ride him and maybe even turn him [for nearfall points.] This feels good. This motivates me to focus on working harder and I can’t wait to get back to work.”
Armed with the school’s all-time career victories mark of 163-7, Randall has won three straight county, regional and state titles after placing third in each as a freshman.
Having become only the Vikings’ second repeat state champion, Randall will graduate having matched three-time state champion Eren Civan, a 2007 graduate who did not complete his senior year due to a season-ending injury. Civan held the previous career victories mark with 135.
113: No. 3 junior Austin Hayes, Eleanor Roosevelt (39-1) by 7-3 decision over No. 10 sophomore Quinn Greenstreet, Chesapeake-Anne Arundel (35-9):
Hayes used a 15-0 technical fall, a 12-2 major decision and a pin in 3:08 of his semifinal with Sherwood’s 21st-ranked junior Landon Clore to reach the finals against Greenstreet, who advanced following an 18-3 technical fall, a 9-5 decision 22-9 major decision over 14th-ranked Clarksburg junior Aaron Fisahaye, a champion in the Montgomery County and Class 4A-3A West Regionals.
The difference was one each in three-point takedowns by Hayes during the first and third periods against Greenstreet, a two-time champion in the Anne Arundel and Class 4A-3A South Regional tournaments who placed third at states as a freshman after losing his semifinal bout to Hayes by 4-1 decision.
“I had wrestled him last year, realizing that he usually stalls until he can get the bottom [referee’s position,] and tries to get an escape,” Hayes said. “That’s a good strategy from last year, so my priority was to at least get takedowns on him. That way, if he got an escape, I could still win.”
Hayes is now a three-time champion in the Prince George's County and Class 4A-3A East Regional tournaments and a repeat state champion after finishing second as a freshman.
A year ago, Hayes completed a 39-0 state championship-winning season after losing his state title match as a freshman by 10-8 decision and finishing at 40-1.
“This feels nice,” Hayes said. “Especially after my two-point loss as a freshman.”
144: No. 8 senior Isisah Womack, Richard Montgomery (39-2) by fall 5:27 over No. 7 senior Rhys Ferguson, Thomas Johnson (39-3):
Womack’s run to the finals comprised consecutive pins in 2:49 and 2:58 and a 17-2 technical fall in his semifinal with Poly’s 13th-ranked senior Derrell Davis, winner of two Baltimore City titles in three championship berths who has finished first and second once and fourth twice at regions.
Ferguson used a 30-second pin, a 16-0 fall and a 14-3 semifinal victory over Chesapeake-Anne Arundel’s 15th-ranked junior Rex Graves to earn his title bout rematch with Womack, whom he pinned in 1:53 earlier this season.
Womack poured it on after facing a 3-0 deficit, leading, 8-5, before scoring a takedown and the fall with 33 seconds left in the match. Womack is now a two-time Montgomery County and regional tournament champion whose 40-0 record a year ago included winning the Class 4A-3A state tournament by fall in 1:59.
“That first win that he got was a fluke, and I’ve been saying that the entire season, and I got him back,” Womack said. “This was redemption for me, and it feels great to do it the way that I had to do it by pinning someone once again in the state finals.”
Ferguson has now placed second once and third twice in the Frederick County Tournament, first, second and fourth at regions, and second and third at Class 2A-1A states. Graves is a county champion who has placed second and fourth at regions and sixth at states, but finished third after defeating Davis, 8-3.
138: No. 3 junior Michael Groszkowski, Annapolis (36-1) by 18-6 major decision over No. 12 senior Chris Lindstrom, Walt Whitman (44-2):
Groszkowski reached the finals following a 44-second pin, an 18-2 technical fall and a pin in 3:40 over Montgomery Blair’s 13th-ranked senior Johan Chen, who was a county runner-up to Lindstrom following a loss by technical fall.
Lindstrom used consecutive falls of 16-0 and 17-2 to go with an injury default victory over Oakland Mills’ 17th-ranked junior Orlando Castelan-Cortez to reach the finals, having earned county and regional titles after being fourth and second in each last year.
Groszkowski trailed, 3-2, entering the second period, where he built an 11-6 advantage heading into the third.
Another takedown and four nearfall points contributed to the victory margin for Groszkowski, who is now a two-time champion in the Anne Arundel County and regional tournaments whose 40-2 record of a year ago included being a state runner-up to Randall.
“This is an amazing feeling to finally be called a state champion,” Groszkowski said. “I’ve been wanting to do better after last year’s loss, and I put in a lot of work to come back after that, so this is great.”
165: No. 2 junior Logan Brown, Northwest (40-0) by 17-8 decision over No. 1 senior Raul Rodriguez, Oakland Mills (44-1):
This was a clash of unbeatens. Rodriguez was a returning state runner-up who has earned three Howard County titles and two regional crowns in three championship match berths.
Brown was a returning third-place finisher at states who has placed first and second in the Montgomery County Tournament, and first once in three regional championship appearances.
Brown lost last year’s state semifinal, 2-1, in overtime to Leonardtown’s AJ Kuntz, who defeated Rodriguez, 13-4, for the crown.
While Rodriguez used pins in 1:41 and 5:13 to go with a 20-3 technical fall to reach the finals, Brown pinned twice in 4:15 and 4:53 before winning his semifinal by 19-7 major decision.
Brown turned up the heat after a scoreless first period, including a takedown and four nearfall points in the final period.
“I came into this match a little nervous, but just remembering all of the workouts I’ve put in during the mornings, after practice and late at night, I knew that I had worked hard for this and that I deserved this. All of that nervousness went away because of all of the support I had,” Brown said.
“All I was thinking about was domination. Everybody told me that he was pretty good at scrambling, and looking at the tapes, I saw that he doesn’t move around a lot. I knew that all I had to do was to get in on my shots, but that whenever I did, I would have to finish fast. I’m planning to repeat [as state champion.]”
132: No. 3 senior Leo Foreman, Eleanor Roosevelt (39-0) by 6-5 decision over No. 12 Victor Guerra, Frederick (34-2):
A two-time Frederick County champion who had placed first and second at regions, Guerra finished third at states last year. Foreman has won a pair of Prince George’s County titles after being a runner-up as a sophomore, had placed first, second and third at regions, and third at states last season.
Where Guerra pinned all three opponents in 1:51, 3:15 and 3:09 to reach the finals, Foreman required a 36-second pin, and 19-4 technical fall and a 9-6 semifinal victory over Sherwood’s 11th-ranked senior Connor Flickinger, a two-time Montgomery County champion who had finished first and sixth at regions.
Down, 3-0, in the second period of his come-from-behind victory, Foreman’s overtime takedown was the difference after finishing with a record of 32-2 last season.
“The takedown was a body lock, and I almost took him down to his back,” Foreman said. “I had wrestled him once before and I beat him in a one-point match. I was down, but I kept on fighting and I got back up. I’m the greatest. Nobody can beat me.”
120: No. 7 junior Jabasie Trice, Walt Whitman (42-0) by 14-8 decision over No. 11 junior Gabe Helman, Urbana (33-7):
Trice is a two-time county champion who was sixth at states last season, and who was a week removed from having improved on his Class 4A-3A West runner-up regional finish of a year ago by winning that tournament.
A third-place finisher at the previous weekend’s Class 4A-3A West regionals, Helman advanced following a 15-0 technical fall and decisions by 9-5 and 10-8, the latter in his semifinal with Clarksburg’s 17th-ranked sophomore Mason Keller.
Helman gained a measure of redemption by defeating Keller, who lost his regional title bout, 3-2 to Trice after Trice had won his semifinal by 19-3 technical fall over Helman.
Meanwhile, Trice reached the finals following a 16-0 technical fall, a pin in 2:42 and a 13-3 semifinal major decision over South River’s 13th-ranked senior Trent Shipley, winner of three Anne Aruncel County titles in four championship berths who has placed first, third, fourth and fifth at regions, and fifth at states twice.
Trice was in control from start to finish, scoring three takedowns and building as much as a 10-1 lead in the second period.
“I was just staying low in my stance and hand-fighting, because I know he usually starts out with a high-crotch and that he’s really strong when it comes to getting the head lock,” said Trice, who is unbeaten in three matches against Helman.
“I just knew to stay low and limit his opportunities, so this was a really big redemption for me after last year when I felt that I could have done better. This feels amazing. I put in so many hours of sweat and tears, and it’s all paying off.
106: No. 5 junior Amanuel Fisahaye, Clarksburg (43-2) by 3-2 decision over No. 7 sophomore Logan Ardinger, South Hagerstown (33-4):
Fisahaye’s path to the finals comprised technical falls of 18-2 and 21-6 to go with a 14-1 major decision over Glen Burnie’s 10th-ranked junior Daniel Canas in the semifinals.
Ardinger reached the finals following a 16-0 technical fall, an 11-3 major decision and an 8-1 decision over Oakdale’s sixth-ranked sophomore Paul Fitzpatrick, who was a regional runner-up to Fisahaye after decking Ardinger in 3:58.
Fisahaye led, 3-0, after a first-period takedown, allowed two escapes, used his defense to secure the crown as only a third-year wrestler, and continued a season of firsts by adding his initial state titles to those earned in the Montgomery County and Class 4A-3A West Regional tournaments.
“I beat him at regionals last year, but this was a lot closer than that,” Fisahaye said. “But once I was able to establish my offence, I knew that my shot defense would be too much for him.”
Fisahaye also became the Coyotes’ third straight state champion following their first- and second-ever title-winners over back-to-back seasons in 2024 and 2025.
Jonathan Chang became the Coyotes’ first state champion as a senior at 144 pounds in the Class 4A-3A tournament, improving on his state runner-up finish of a year earlier after having placed third as a sophomore. Chang also won his third straight Montgomery County and Class 4A-3A West Region crowns.
Owen Pelaez then completed an undefeated season at 150 pounds that included becoming a four-time county champion, winning his third Class 4A-3A West Region title in four championship berths, and also his first state state title after having placed fifth and third as a sophomore and junior.
Fisahaye’s twin brother Aaron, is a county and regional champion who finished fourth at 113 pounds on Saturday.
“I was on the JV for my first year wrestling, and I didn’t compete in any sports before that,” Fisahaye said, “Now I’m only the third state champion in the history of Clarksburg High School, and the accomplishment still hasn’t really hit me yet.”
285: No. 3 senior Andy Boshnick, Walt Whitman (43-1) by 4-2 decision over junior Payton Green, Henry Wise (34-5):
Boshnick added his first state title to the previous two weekend’s county and regional crowns, picking up steam after winning his first-round match by 5-4 decision by decking his next two opponents in 2:39 and 5:41, the latter being Arundel’s fifth-ranked senior county and regional champion Pierce Read.
Although Payton was a regional runner-up to Read following a 40-second fall, he rebounded by getting pins in 27 and 97 seconds to go with a 3-2 semifinal victory over Dundalk’s previously 15th-ranked senior Dylan Holt, who had won Baltimore County and regional championships.
Boshnick withstood the resilient Payton to join Randall and Trice as the Vikings’ third state champion.
“Before every match I don’t like getting into my head too much, which is why I have been able to make this season all about having fun,” Boshnick said. “This is just a product of our hard work and our amazing coaching. I’m happy that I could be a part of this team’s dominance.”
215: No 10 senior Alex Tortolani, Linganore (41-5) by 5-3 decision over No. 4 senior Zach Richards, Walt Whitman (40-2):
Tortolani’s final three weeks included winning the Frederick County Tournament, finishing second at regionals following a 7-4 loss to Richards, and his season-ending 5-3 redemption victory over his former conqueror.
Tortolani earned his rematch with Richards after pins in 59 seconds and 2:48 before winning his semifinal by 16-5 major decision over Sherwood’s third-ranked senior AJ Lopez, who defeated Richards, 7-1, in their Montgomery County title match before also winning regionals.
Richards reached the finals following a 17-1 technical fall, a pin in 4:12 and an 8-3 semifinal decision over Chesapeake-Anne Arundel’s 14th-ranked senior Gavin Lewis, who wrestled back to finish third at states.
“I really worked on defending Richards’ underhooks, and I also knew coming in that he loved the high crotch. I also believed that I really gained a lot of confidence by beating [AJ Lopez,]” Tortolani said.
“That let me know that I could beat anybody in the state if I set my mind to it. I think that was definitely on [Richards’] mind a little bit, because he came up and spoke to me after my match [with Lopez] and sounded a little nervous because I had just majored the guy who beat him.”
Only a fourth-year wrestler, Tortolani, made a huge leap after having placed third at counties and fourth at regions last year.
“My freshman year I was on the JV, and as a sophomore I lost at counties and didn’t place there. My junior season I was third at counties, fourth at regions,” Tortolani said. “Only being a fourth-year wrestler who never wrestled before high school, this is surreal for me to be able to come to a place like this and to win.”
175: No. 11 senior Chris Millard, South River (45-2) 3-2 UTB over No. 6 senior Ian Tumi, Frederick (40-3):
Tumi was the heavy favorite being a wrestler whose 40-2 record of a year ago included winning his first of two straight Frederick County and Class 4A-3A West Regional tournament titles and being a Class 4A-3A state runner-up following an 11-7 title match loss.
Meanwhile, Millard’s season had been one of improvement as a third-year wrestler who earned an Anne Arundel County title after finishing third as a junior and his second Class 4A-3A East Regional crown after finishing sixth at states last season.
Tumi used a 20-3 technical fall, an 18-6 major decision and a 7-1 decision to reach the finals against Millard, whose more difficult run comprised a 16-3 major decision, another by the score of 4-3, and a second major decision by the score of 13-3.
The combatants wrestled evenly through three periods each in regulation and overtime as the score remained tied at 1-1 before Millard’s escape with three seconds left in the seventh and final period of the ultimate rideout determined the outcome.
“This feels great, because I only started wrestling two years ago. I knew it would be close because it was close the last time we wrestled at MAWAs,” Millard said. “But I’m not going to get into details. He’s a good guy. We knew that if we took him deep that we could get him.”
150: No 4 senior Cash Wheat, Linganore (45-2) by 3-2 overtime decision over No. 5 Matthew Hobbs, Walt Whitman (41-4):
A county champion, Hobbs used technical falls by 17-0 and 20-4 and an 8-7 decision to earn a rematch with Wheat, who blanked him, 8-0, in their previous weekend’s Class 4A-3A West Regional tournament final bout.
But Wheat was even more dominant during his path to the finals, comprising a 94 second-pin and consecutive technical falls by scores of 15-0 and 25-8 before building a 12-0 lead and flattening Hobbs.
“I wrestled Hobbs at regionals last week and I won, 8-0, there,” Wheat said. “But this match was about showing what I’m about, so I just wanted to dominate.”
Wheat’s motivation ended years of frustration comprising three runner-up efforts as well as a fourth-place finish in Frederick County’s Tournament, placements of first, third, fourth and fifth at regions, and another of sixth at states.
“I got sixth place here freshman year and didn’t qualify my sophomore year,” Wheat said. “I got knocked out last year, so to finally be called a state champion feels great since. I’ve been working at this for 13 years.”
Class 4A-3A state tournament results.
106-4A/3A
1st Place Match
Amanuel Fisahaye (Clarksburg) 43-2, Jr. over Logan Ardinger (South Hagerstown) 33-4, So. (Dec 3-2)
3rd Place Match
Paul Fitzpatrick IV (Oakdale) 40-7, So. over Daniel Canas (Glen Burnie) 34-5, Jr. (Fall 2:38)
5th Place Match
Ryan Pickerall (North Point) 36-6, Sr. over MIlano Orduna (Reservoir) 33-9, So. (Dec 8-7)
113-4A/3A
1st Place Match
Austin Hayes (Eleanor Roosevelt) 39-1, Jr. over Quin Greenstreet (Chesapeake-AA) 35-9, So. (Dec 7-3)
3rd Place Match
Paulo Mena-Weber (Stephen Decatur) 33-13, Sr. over Aaron Fisahaye (Clarksburg) 37-9, Jr. (Dec 5-3)
5th Place Match
Landon Clore (Sherwood) 41-6, Jr. over Nick MacWilliams (Bethesda-Chevy Chase) 37-10, So. (MD 10-2)
120-4A/3A
1st Place Match
Jabasie Trice (Walt Whitman) 42-0, Jr. over Gabriel Helmen (Urbana) 33-7, Sr. (Dec 14-8)
3rd Place Match
Owen Shelley (Catonsville) 43-1, So. over Mason Kellar (Clarksburg) 35-11, Fr. (Dec 4-2)
5th Place Match
Trent Shipley (South River) 40-8, Sr. over Owen Healy (Meade) 39-11, Jr. (Fall 2:06)
126-4A/3A
1st Place Match
Solomon Randall (Walt Whitman) 41-0, Sr. over David Dansou (Clarksburg) 40-5, Jr. (Dec 1-0)
3rd Place Match
Michael Queen (Severna Park) 45-1, Sr. over Sava Makarov (Col. Zadok Magruder) 38-5, Sr. (Dec 7-3)
5th Place Match
Drew Eveleth (Catonsville) 40-4, So. over Brody Matson (James Hubert Blake) 32-11, Sr. (MD 13-4)
132-4A/3A
1st Place Match
Elijah Collick (Stephen Decatur) 46-1, Sr. over Damian Melendez (Rockville) 43-2, Sr. (Fall 1:44)
3rd Place Match
Corey Brown (Chesapeake-AA) 23-1, So. over Zachary Bowersox (Westminster) 42-12, Jr. (Fall 3:32)
5th Place Match
Adan Magnas (Walt Whitman) 41-6, Sr. over Kanik Deschene (Bethesda-Chevy Chase) 31-14, Jr. (Fall 2:57)
138-4A/3A
1st Place Match
Michael Groszkowski (Annapolis) 36-1, Jr. over Chris Lindstrom (Walt Whitman) 44-2, Sr. (MD 18-6)
3rd Place Match
Austin Flook (Tuscarora) 47-4, Sr. over Yasir Ruffin (Great Mills) 38-7, Sr. (MD 15-6)
5th Place Match
Jonah Chen (Montgomery Blair) 34-7, Sr. over Orlando Castelan-Cortez (Oakland Mills) 31-4, Jr. (M. For.)
144-4A/3A
1st Place Match
Isisah Womack (Richard Montgomery) 39-2, Sr. over Rhys Ferguson (Gov. Thomas Johnson) 39-3, Sr. (Fall 5:27)
3rd Place Match
Rex Graves (Chesapeake-AA) 32-9, Jr. over Derrel Davis (Baltimore Polytechnic Institute) 35-3, Sr. (Dec 8-3)
5th Place Match
Mason Hu (Winston Churchill) 39-10, Jr. over Porter Wood (Leonardtown) 38-12, Jr. (Dec 11-6)
150-4A/3A
1st Place Match
Cash Wheat (Linganore) 45-2, Sr. over Matthew Hobbs (Walt Whitman) 41-4, Sr. (Fall 5:54)
3rd Place Match
Dillon Estabrook (Rockville) 40-4, Sr. over Maddox Parr (Glen Burnie) 40-8, Jr. (Fall 4:34)
5th Place Match
Ethan Burger (South River) 45-4, Jr. over Ramon Espin (Frederick) 29-10, Sr. (Dec 7-2)
157-4A/3A
1st Place Match
Leo Foreman (Eleanor Roosevelt) 39-0, Sr. over Victor Guerra (Frederick) 34-2, Jr. (SV-1 9-6)
3rd Place Match
Connor Flickinger (Sherwood) 41-4, Sr. over Brody Stauffer (Leonardtown) 36-10, Sr. (MD 10-0)
5th Place Match
Matteo Brown (Arundel) 41-7, Jr. over Akim Burnim (Paint Branch) 31-13, So. (TF-1.5 3:25 (18-1))
165-4A/3A
1st Place Match
Logan Brown (Northwest) 40-0, Jr. over Raul Rodriguez (Oakland Mills) 44-1, Sr. (MD 17-8)
3rd Place Match
Owen Collins (Chesapeake-AA) 38-9, Sr. over Dorian Jordan (Dr. Henry A. Wise Jr.) 35-2, So. (Dec 5-4)
5th Place Match
Filippos Kakos (Walter Johnson) 36-7, Sr. over Eddy Beza (Oakdale) 38-9, Sr. (M. For.)
175-4A/3A
1st Place Match
Chris Millard (South River) 46-2, Sr. over Ian Tumi (Frederick) 40-3, Sr. (UTB 3-2)
3rd Place Match
Adrian Johnson (Northwest) 36-8, Sr. over Thomas MacKenzie (Atholton) 31-5, Jr. (MD 10-1)
5th Place Match
Tommy Trenkamp (Winston Churchill) 29-8, Sr. over Max Hargrove (Marriotts Ridge) 33-7, So. (Dec 14-7)
190-4A/3A
1st Place Match
Victor Marks-Jenkins (Perry Hall) 54-0, Sr. over Peter Snyder (Stephen Decatur) 41-1, Sr. (MD 12-1)
3rd Place Match
Ziya Khozugov (Quince Orchard) 45-1, Sr. over Josh Agen-Davis (Catonsville) 28-6, Sr. (MD 10-2)
5th Place Match
Jeremy Lemus (Gov. Thomas Johnson) 35-12, Sr. over Noah Mayen (Laurel) 19-5, Sr. (M. For.)
215-4A/3A
1st Place Match
Alex Tortolani (Linganore) 41-5, Sr. over Zach Richards (Walt Whitman) 40-2, Sr. (Dec 5-3)
3rd Place Match
Gavin Lewis (Chesapeake-AA) 39-5, Sr. over Olasubomi Atanlogun (New Town) 35-6, Sr. (Dec 8-3)
5th Place Match
Sam Oji (Tuscarora) 32-11, Sr. over AJ Lopez (Sherwood) 33-4, Sr. (M. For.)
285-4A/3A
1st Place Match
Andy Boshnick (Walt Whitman) 43-1, Sr. over Payton Green (Dr. Henry A. Wise Jr.) 34-5, Jr. (Dec 4-2)
3rd Place Match
Daniel Gershon (Walter Johnson) 42-4, Sr. over Brendan Taylor (Dulaney) 33-20, Sr. (TF-1.5 4:25 (18-2))
5th Place Match
Pierce Read (Arundel) 42-3, Sr. over Dylan Holt (Dundalk) 35-1, Sr. (M. For.)




Comments