Gilroy Wrestling

Home of Gilroy's Finest Wrestlers

All content published and shared on www.gilroywrestling.com is covered by a “Creative Commons” Licensing agreement.

This license lets others remix, tweak, and build upon your work non-commercially, and although their new works must also acknowledge you and be non-commercial, they don’t have to license their derivative works on the same terms… unless explicit agreement otherwise is provided.

View License Deed | View Legal Code

Creative Commons License
Gilroy Wrestling by www.gilroywrestling.com is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.
Based on a work at www.gilroywrestling.com.
Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available at www.gilroywrestling.com.

There were quite a few people who have never experienced a wrestling tournament not to mention trying to get your son/daughter registered, weighed in, to staging, and least to mention wrestling.

Here are my quick notes on what is needed:
To check in at every tournament
* USA Wrestling Card
* Birth Certificate
* $10 for each event being wrestled (ie. Freestyle and/or Greco) not $10/match but for the whole day.

Weigh-ins
* A Singlet is necessary for weigh-ins

To wrestle
* Singlet
* Wrestling Shoes
* Good sportsmanship

Some other questions:
* How long does the day last:
Typically a local tournament will last from 7am at registration/weighins till 2 to 5pm depending on the age of your child and number of people registered (The younger children are typically first to start and first to end)

Additional Note:
* Your son/daughter or and you are representing Gilroy Wrestling we encourage everyone to be respectful both on and off the mat (Win or Lose be a good sport). There will be many occasions where all don’t agree with calls made or appreciate the attitude of some other wrestler, coach, parent or official, we need to all do our best to set a good example for the young wrestlers and continue to make our program one we are all proud of.

See you on the mat.

http://www.gilroydispatch.com/sports/263017-wrestling-mustangs-are-tcal-champs

Feb 6, 2010
By Josh Weaver

GILROY – Seven Mustangs wrapped up individual titles as the GHS wrestling team toppled the competition at Saturday’s Tri-County Athletic League championship tournament, winning the team crown with 257 overall points.

Already capturing the league title, going undefeated in dual meets for the eighth straight season, the Mustangs left no doubt at the top of the leader board at this year’s tournament, using 39 points to separate themselves from second place San Benito – a much different outcome in comparison to last year’s fiasco at the top in which the top-three finishers (Palma, Gilroy and San Benito) were spaced by a mere 4.5 points.

The Chieftains eked out the victory by .5 points over the Mustangs. Palma finished fourth Saturday with 146.5 points.

Nine wrestlers appeared in the finals Saturday, two more than second place San Benito’s seven grapplers.

Leif Dominguez (105), Jesse Delgado (125), Willie Fox (132), Blake Kastl (137), Vincente Aboytes (154), Dominic Kastl (162) and Luis Barragan (287) took home first-place medals in their respective weight classes.

Rodney Balajadia (119) and Adam Rosso (147) finished in second place, and Mike Lucero (140) and Andrew Toste (189) achieved third place, punching their tickets to the Central Coast Section championships.

“CCS is coming up and they are getting stronger,” head coach Greg Varela said.

The top-six wrestlers from the TCAL in each weight class advance to CCS. Jasmine Yanez, who won the girls state championship last weekend, will also participate.

“I can’t wait to get back in the room and grind it out,” Varela said with a huge grin on his face. “I know for sure what we need to work on.”

The CCS championships take place in two weeks at Independence High School in San Jose. The Mustangs are seven-time defending champs.

In the past, only one week separated the league tournament and the CCS championships, this year, however, the Mustangs have two weeks to prepare and recuperate.

“I think it will affect us in a good way,” Barragan said. “It gives us time to get in even better shape. It gives us a lot more time to focus on technique. Going into CCS a lot of us are already focused on one person.”

Dominguez, a freshman, had his opponent, Johnny Alonzo of Alisal searching for escapes from the get go in the 103-pound finals. Dominguez posted points in a fury of take downs and near-falls, working his way to a 16-0 technical fall victory.

“I try to listen to my coaches,” Dominguez said. “I’m not a guy who likes to show off, so I just take one match at a time.

Defending state champion and three-time state placer, Delgado, demonstrated another methodical dismantling of a challenger in the 125-pound finals, racking up 22 points in a technical fall triumph over Arturo Morado of Alisal.

Fox, Aboytes, the Kastl brothers and Barragan all came away with pins, with Barragan getting the nod in just 46 seconds.

“It boosted my confidence,” Barragan said. “I hadn’t been able to win a single tournament this year and I’m not used to that.”

Arguably the most intense showdown of the afternoon came in the 119-pound finals, where the Mustangs’ Balajadia took on San Benito’s best wrestler, Junior Davila.

In a rematch of last Wednesday’s pairing in the league-dual meet finale, the two went back and forth, each taking single-leg shots at one another in search of the match-changing attack.

Davila jumped in front with a take down in the first period, but Balajadia responded in the second, taking a more aggressive approach and recording two take downs.

Davila went up 5-4 heading into the third period and capitalized on a Balajadia missed takedown, picking up the senior and slamming him to the mat for two points, to secure a 7-5 win.

“I shouldn’t have given that take down,” said Balajadia, who will most likely get another crack at Davila at CCS. “I just have to get stronger over the next two weeks.”

The Mustangs are currently ranked fourth in the state and first in CCS, according to The California Wrestler.

2010 TCAL Championships

TEAMS

1, Gilroy, 257; 2, San Benito, 218; 3, Alisal, 170; 4, Palma, 146.5; 5, North Salinas 105; 6, Salinas, 99; 7, Everett Alvarez, 24.5.

INDIVIDUAL

103 – 1, L. Dominguez, Gilroy; 2, J. Alonzo, Alisal; 3, A. Espinoza, Everett Alvarez; 4, N. Busby, Palma; 5, A. Gatto, San Benito; 6, A. Fragoso, North Salinas.

112 – 1, E. Lopez, Alisal; 2, N. Renteria, Salinas; 3, J. Gonzalez, Palma; 4, R. Rodriguez, San Benito; 5, G. Martinez, North Salinas; 6, J. Yanez, Gilroy.

119 – 1, J. Davila, San Benito; 2, R. Balajadia, Gilroy; 3, C. Moreno, Alisal; 4, S. Eastman, Palma; 5, L. Combs, North Salinas; 6, A. Farias, Salinas.

125 – 1, J. Delgado, Gilroy; 2, A. Morado, Alisal; 3, J. Garcia, San Benito; 4, C. Palacios, Palma; 5, A. Galapon Olivas, Salinas.

130 – 1, W. Fox, Gilroy; 2, Z. Rodriguez, San Benito; 3, A. Nunez, North Salinas; 4, O. Mendez, Alisal; 5, N. Short, Palma; 6, C. Perales, Salinas.

135 – 1, B. Kastl, Gilroy; 2, E. Meza, Alisal; 3, E. Henry, San Benito; 4, D. Proa, Salinas; 5, A. Reyes, Palma.

140 – 1, E. Tapia, Alisal; 2, M. Soto, San Benito; 3, M. Lucero, Gilroy; 4, A. Noza, North Salinas; 5, E. Farfan, Palma.

145 – 1, T. Christenson, San Benito; 2, A. Rosso, Gilroy; 3, R. Sarmiento, Palma; 4, E. Antonio, North Salinas; 5, C. Ivey, Salinas; 6, A, Gonzalez, Alisal.

152 – 1, V. Aboytes, Gilroy; 2, S. McVannel, Salinas; 3, N. Abulencia, Palma; 4, J. Antonio, North Salinas; 5, E. Ortega, San Benito; 6, J. Ochoa, Alisal.

160 – 1, D. Kastl, Gilroy; 2, M. Sarmiento, Palma; 3, D. Guzman, Salinas; 4, J. Raine, San Benito; 5, H. Bueno, Alisal; 6, J. Rodriguez, North Salinas.

171 – 1, A. Berber, Alisal; 2, L. Diller, San Benito; 3, A. Martinez, Palma; 4, B. Torricer, Gilroy.

189 – 1, M. Martin del Campo, San Benito; 2, N. Castillo, Salinas; 3, A. Toste, Gilroy; 4, R. Galvan, Everett Alvarez; 5, S. Nakamura, North Salinas; 6, J. Pulealii, Palma.

215 – 1, A. Davis, San Benito; 2, G. Omictin, North Salinas; 3, J. Talauban, Palma.

285 – 1, L. Barragan, Gilroy; 2, B. Pulealii, Palma; 3, T. Avila, Alisal; 4, C. Flores, North Salinas; 5, M. Avila, Salinas; 6, N. Angelo, San Benito.

GILROY – Abalone diving, rodeo and wrestling – three activities that aren’t usually grouped together, and three activities that most might not include on a bucket list.

But for Gilroy High wrestlers Dominic and Blake Kastl, those interests, among others, are what separates them from the rest – not to mention the countless trophies, medals and championships the two brothers have racked up over the years wreaking havoc out on the mat.

“There is a season for it,” Blake said with a shy, yet in some ways proud, grin about the obscure hobby of hunting for abalone, a type of edible sea snail. “My dad has been doing it since before we were born. We go take two-hour dives. We bring them home and eat them. They are good.

“We used to be cowboys, too,” he adds with a laugh. “I broke a collar bone my eighth-grade year riding a steer.”

Those unique hobbies and myriad of accomplishments only scratch the surface of an intriguing bond built through wrestling but carried out beyond the humid, sweat-filled practice room.

Dominic, a senior, and Blake, a sophomore, transferred to GHS this year after their family relocated from Half Moon Bay. Already accomplished prep wrestlers – Dominic has three Central Coast Section championships and Blake a National High School Coaches Association National Championship – the impact the two have had on the perennially formidable Mustangs’ wrestling program is immeasurable. Oh, and they have a younger brother, Mario, a sixth-grader who attends and wrestles for South Valley.

“He’s probably going to be the best one out of the three of us,” Blake said. “He was exposed to better coaching and technique at a younger age.”

When the expenses of private school at St. Francis High in Mountain View began to pile up, Dominic said his parents made the decision to move to Gilroy, a choice that took him by surprise, but his familiarity with the community’s passion for wrestling kept him at ease and made the transfer to a new school all much easier to digest.

“It was sprung on us,” Dominic said. “I wasn’t sad or anything. It had to be done. I had been to tournaments with Jesse (Delgado) and Vince (Aboytes) and I knew they were good kids.”

There is of course a brotherly rivalry, both confess to wanting to be better or outdo each other. That sibling rivalry in the end, though, adds to the relationship rather than divides it. In victory or defeat each is there for reassurance or a figurative slap in the face as motivation to continue to improve.

“When I would go to tournaments and watch (Dominic), I would wear my singlet and want to wrestle,” the younger Blake said. “I always wanted to strive to be like him and be as good as him. Dom never wants to lose to his little brother or have me accomplish something he hasn’t. It’s better when we both win.”

Even still, even with the desire to be better, it is hard to imagine what motivates an individual to continually take the punishment the sport is eager to dish out day in and day out.

“It’s just wanting to get my hand raised, wanting to be the best and go to college,” Blake said.

The list of injuries an athlete could suffer even before the collegiate ranks are staggering and even painful to read; bruises, cuts, dislocations, surgeries and cauliflower ear, to name a few. Both have had knee surgeries in the past year and a half, with Blake’s keeping him out of action for the first month-plus this season and Dominic’s threatening his chances of a three-peat at the CCS championships last season.

“Last year at Cupertino, I went to shoot in and my knee locked up,” Dominic said, moving his body to add a visual as he recalled his injury. “The guy got me on my butt. I tried to get up but the knee just gave out. I had to have surgery on it. Funny enough I was wrestling a Gilroy guy.”

Despite the setback, Dominic went on to capture his third straight CCS title.

“My family is a never-quit kind of family,” Dominic said. “During the season you have practice and you have to cut weight. It starts to grind on you. But when you come out at a tournament and you have your friends and family there and you win, that’s what it’s all about.”

The sacrifices made to the sport aren’t always understandable to everyone. But one no-no that most can relate to is fast food. With all the restrictions on diet to ensure that they can keep at their wrestling weights, there is no fast food allowed.

“You get used to it, it’s not a big deal,” Blake said, consenting that after the season he will probably indulge in a large cookies-and-cream milkshake.

With the Central Coast Section championships fast approaching, the Kastl’s are beginning to find their groove. Both have back-to-back tournament victories in the last two weeks at the Mid-Cal Invitational and the Overfelt Classic.

“Everything we do is to prepare us for the state meet,” Dominic said.

Each has aspirations of not just qualifying or placing, but to finish first at the state tournament held the first weekend in March in Bakersfield.

Dominic has already signed on to wrestle at CSU San Luis Obispo, joining fellow senior Jesse Delgado. Blake, who hasn’t given a lot of thought to college yet, will be a senior when Mario steps onto the mat as a Mustang.

For now, the state meet is the No. 1 priority.

http://www.gilroydispatch.com/sports/262852-yanez-crowned-state-champ

HANFORD – Rolling to a perfect 5-0 record, including three pins and two major decisions, GHS junior Jasmine Yanez wrestled her way to a state championship at the California Girls Invitational held in Hanford over the weekend.

Yanez, the No. 1-seed, worked through a field of 36 wrestlers in the 98-pound bracket, leaving little doubt as to who was champion after a 10-1 win in the finals over Marina Sanchez of La Sierra High School.

The tournament serves as the state championship for girls wrestling because the sport is not yet sanctioned by the CIF.

The state championship is just one of a handful of tournament accomplishments for Yanez this season.

She placed second at the Lady Lancer in Manteca, third at the Queen of the Mat in Antioch and dazzled at the CIF NorCal Regional, taking first, which qualified her for last weekend’s state meet.

Yanez also finished in the top-12 at this year’s Mid-Cals, wrestling in the 103-pound division.

http://www.gilroydispatch.com/sports/262934-wrestling-mustangs-wrap-up-regular-season-with-victory-over-balers

GILROY – The Mustangs honored nine seniors in front of a large crowd gathered inside Bob Hagen Gym prior to Wednesday’s Tri-Country Athletic League dual meet against rival San Benito.

After the ceremony, it was business as usual for the home team in a 47-25 triumph to close out the regular season.

Seniors Rodney Balajadia, Jesse Delgado, Vincente Aboytes, Mike Lucero, Adam Rosso and Luis Barragan are on track for their fourth straight Central Coast Section team title and the eighth in a row for the Mustangs’ program. Senior transfer Dominic Kastl, a three-time CCS individual champ, is in search of his first team-title after finishing runner-up a year ago with St. Francis.

“It’s their last home meet in front of their home crowd against Hollister,” head coach Greg Varela said. “They wanted to put on a good show and do their part. It’s just great that we can count on the seniors like that. They are definitely sharpening their claws getting ready for state.”

Wednesday’s win gives the Mustangs their eighth straight undefeated league dual meet season.

Both teams showcased why they are considered the top-two squads in the TCAL and are predicted to finish first and second at Saturday’s league championship tournament in Gilroy.

The Balers built an early 13-5 lead after capturing three of the first four bouts. However, once the meat of the Mustangs’ lineup began to take the mat, the momentum swung toward the fourth-ranked team in the state.

“I knew it was going to be rough because we bumped a few guys up in weight class,” Varela said. “They are tough. I’ve got nothing but great things to say about Hollister. They have been our rival for so long because they are so good. They are well coached and the kids are tough. For them to come out and battle us was no surprise.”

After Leif Dominquez earned a 17-2 technical fall in the opening match of the night, the Balers stormed back, getting three key victories, including a pin by Robb Rodriguez and a 6-3 decision from Junior Davila.

“I think we did pretty good,” Davila said. “We gave it all we got. We just have to keep working hard. We are working toward CCS and state, so this is just practice.”

The tide began to turn as Delgado, Willie Fox and Blake Kastl picked up three wins in a row. Kastl didn’t waste any time, pinning his man in 40 seconds.

The Balers responded with two straight decision victories, pulling to within four team points, 23-19.

But three consecutive pins by Aboytes, Dominic Kastl and Ben Torricer blew the gap open as the Mustangs took a commanding 41-19 lead.

The quickest pin of the night went to Dominic Kastl, when he disposed of his opponent in 22 seconds.

“This is probably one of the more memorable moments,” said Aboytes, who missed the last few weeks resting an injury. “My condition is still there. I didn’t miss a run, I didn’t miss a lift and I didn’t miss one practice. Getting that three-week rest really helped my body.”

Gilroy High will be the site of Saturday’s TCAL championship tournament. Competition will begin between 9 and 10 a.m.

The CCS championship are two weeks away, followed by the state meet during the first weekend of March.

There were quite a few people who have never experienced a wrestling tournament not to mention trying to get your son/daughter registered, weighed in, to staging, and least to mention wrestling.

Here are my quick notes on what is needed:
To check in at every tournament
* USA Wrestling Card
* Birth Certificate
* $10 for each event being wrestled (ie. Freestyle and/or Greco) not $10/match but for the whole day.

Weigh-ins
* A Singlet is necessary for weigh-ins

To wrestle

* Singlet
* Wrestling Shoes
* Good sportsmanship

Some other questions:
* How long does the day last:
Typically a local tournament will last from 7am at registration/weighins till 2 to 5pm depending on the age of your child and number of people registered (The younger children are typically first to start and first to end)

Additional Note:
* Your son/daughter or and you are representing Gilroy Wrestling we encourage everyone to be respectful both on and off the mat (Win or Lose be a good sport). There will be many occasions where all don’t agree with calls made or appreciate the attitude of some other wrestler, coach, parent or official, we need to all do our best to set a good example for the young wrestlers and continue to make our program one we are all proud of.

See you on the mat.

Gilroy Hawks Wrestling

This post is “Sticky” it will always be on the top of the page.
Scroll down the page for new posts and information!

Location: South Valley Middle School cafeteria.

Time: 6:30pm
8 and under: Monday/Wednesday
9 and over: Tuesday/Thursday

If you have not already signed up you can join our mailing list
Under Hawks Wrstling you can view this seasons freestyle schedule

I have just moved www.gilroywrestling.com to a new home… paid for hosting so it will be up ALL THE TIME!

Some features I am planning on implementing are:

email hosting: yourname@gilroywrestling.com

mailing lists: get email when we have updates

SMS Alerts… and more!

If you are interested in being an administrator just let me know.

-Steven

Live and direct from Gilroy High School, tonights Gilroy vs. Hollister dual meet.
Beginning at 5pm

Free video chat by Ustream

Powered by WordPress Web Design by SRS Solutions © 2010 Gilroy Wrestling Design by SRS Solutions
Better Tag Cloud