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Monday, January 19
Berlin places second at Art Powers Duals
Saturday, January 17, 2009 9:51 PM EST
By ANDREW LOVELL
Herald Staff
BERLIN – Though his team had just fallen to Daniel Hand in the championship match, Berlin wrestling coach Dave Tremblay was more than pleased with his team’s performance at the annual Art Powers Duals Saturday afternoon.
The Redcoats defeated Killingly (42-27), Maloney (40-28) and Waterford (35-28) to earn a berth in the championship round against Hand, who also went 3-0 in the round robin competition, topping Trumbull, RHAM and Platt.
"It’s a great day. This is a tough tournament. Platt was ranked, Hand was ranked, Waterford was ranked, we were ranked like 17th, and the other teams are tough. There was no easy match today," Tremblay said. "We lost to Waterford during the season by quite a bit, so to be able to come back and beat them shows that our kids are improving."
Hand, however, controlled the pace of the matchup from start to finish, scoring wins in the first three bouts to build up a 15-0 lead, which they would eventually turn into a 39-26 victory.
"[Hand’s] a good team, and they’re able to make moves which we can’t make," Tremblay said. "They have big numbers, they can adjust their lineup, and we’ve got to go with what we got, so sometimes we’re at a disadvantage there."
After a 5-1 decision gave the Redcoats their first points of the match, senior captain Kevin Moss brought Berlin to within six points by earning a dominant 17-2 decision.
Moss and junior Jack Banks were the only two Redcoats to win in all four matchups on the day.
Moss, who wrestles at 135 pounds, remains undefeated on the season for Berlin.
The win against Waterford served as the highlight of the day for Tremblay.
The Redcoats, who fell to Waterford 42-28 on Dec. 27, defeated one of the top 10 teams in the state this time around.
The victory was due in no small part to Jack Rudy victory in the final bout of the match, which clinched the slim win.
"That was a huge match," Tremblay said. "If he lost but didn’t get majored, we would have won by one [point]. If he got majored it would have been tied, and it would have gone down to most pins. So instead of having any guessing there, he won outright, and that’s good. ... He’s a senior, he works hard in practice, so that was a great win for him."
The 3-1 mark on Saturday improved Berlin’s season record to 11-3, a solid mark at this point in the season.
But Tremblay said the team needs to continue to improve individually to advance as a whole.
"They wrestled hard, they did what they had to do to win the match. We could work on our intensity level a little against teams like that. But they wrestled hard and did what they needed to do. We had some kids that were a little under the weather, but they fought through it," Tremblay said. "There’s still always room [for improvement]. There’s individual work we’ve got to work on. As a team overall, I’m happy with where we’re at, but individually we still have a lot to work on for our goals of a conference title and possibly state title."
Tremblay said the Redcoats have only won the annual tournament four times since its inception in the 1980s when it was simply called the Berlin Duals. But that number is more a factor of the high number of quality teams the tournament attracts each year, rather than struggles for Berlin.
The upcoming schedule doesn’t get much easier for Berlin, as the Redcoats next take part in the Eagle Classic next Saturday at East Catholic High School.
"Again, another big tournament," Tremblay said. "Mount Anthony is there, they’re ranked in New England. I think there a couple other teams that are ranked. South Windsor is ranked second and they’ll be there."
Monday, February 18
Locals ready for the State Open
Monday, February 18
Fiorillo finds a major win to land Berlin 2nd
Monday, February 18
Loaded Class L doesnt faze locals
Thursday, January 31
Statement made against Bacon Academy
Sunday, January 20
Fiorillo wins 160 at Eagle Classic
Thursday, January 3
Berlin 49 Vs Plainville 18
Berlin 49 Vs Plainville 18No score for this post |
January 3 2008, 9:19 PM |
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In Conference Action on Thursday night the Redcoats dominated Plainville
Berlin stands 2-1 in conference
215 Jake Caron (P) For
285 John Reardon (P) Pin 4:26 Jack Rudy
103 Jared Greider (B) Pin 1:59 Timmy Lancaster
112 Matt Taner (P) 9-2 Andrew Soneson
119 Will Matuszak (B) 2-1 Zach Harper
125 Ryan Bisson (B) 8-0 Brandon Giando
130 Chris Solek (B) Pin 2:45 Jon Dunne
135 Kevin Moss (B) Tech Fall 15-0 Jamal Carrobert
140 Justin Ronciaoli (B) Pin 3:38 Ryan Bolton
145 Ethan Berube (B) 11-3 Chad Pelletier
152 Jack Banks (B) Pin 3:06 Mike Cobuzzi
160 Jon Fiorilo (B) 5-3 Mario Acca
171 Cameron Banks (B) Pin 1:30 Kevin Spence
189 Ben Sparks (P) 11-8 Jamie Luczynski
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Tuesday, January 1
Quick pins help Berlin roll EC
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BERLIN — John Fiorillo and Cameron Banks set the tone with quick pins, and Berlin rolled on from there for a 54-16 win over East Catholic. Fiorillo earned his pin in 21 seconds, while Banks was done in 28 seconds.
Jared Grieder, Chris Solek, Justin Roncaioli, Ethan Berube and Jack Banks also had pins for Berlin, which is at the Windham Duals (hosted by Waterford) on Saturday.
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Thursday, January 3
Middletown fights off Berlin
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| By GERRY deSIMAS, JR., Special to The Herald |
| MIDDLETOWN – When Middletown senior Alex Drew pinned Berlin’s Andrew Soneson in the second-to-last match at 119 pounds, the Blue Dragon bench and the partisan home crowd at Middletown High erupted in celebration. Drew’s pin in 24 seconds clinched the second-ever win for Middletown over perennial league champion Berlin Thursday night, 35-34. But the seeds of this victory were sown throughout this hard-fought Northwest Conference battle as the defending Class L champion Dragons (6-1, 2-0 NWC) earned crucial points that set up Drew’s match-winning pin. At 152 pounds, Middletown’s Ronnie Brown earned a 9-1 victory over Jack Banks. The key was a takedown with about a minute left in the third period that gave Brown an eight-point lead. Winning by eight points is worth four team points. Winning by seven is worth just three. At 145, Berlin’s Ethan Berube dominated freshman Vinny Quiniliano but couldn’t pin him in a 14-3 victory. The Redcoats earned just four points instead of six for a pin. That helped set up Drew, who took the mat with Middletown holding a 29-28 lead. Earlier in the day, Fong told Drew that he would likely have to pin for the Dragons to win. “It’s pressure but you do what you have to do,” Drew said. “I was going for whatever (move) presented itself.” He caught Soneson in a cradle to earn the pin and clinch the match. “They’re a great program,” Middletown coach Mark Fongsaid of Berlin, which has won 20 of the last 22 league titles. “It’s always satisfying to beat them.” It was a frustrating defeat for the Redcoats (6-3, 1-1 NWC) but one loss doesn’t automatically eliminate anyone in the competitive Northwest Conference. For the last two years, there have been multiple champions in the league. A year ago, Berlin shared the title with Farmington and Middletown while in 2006, the Dragons shared the title with Plainville. Each year, the championship teams had one loss. “For the most part, we wrestled tough,” Berlin coach Dave Tremblay said. “We’re two evenly-matched teams. If we wrestle them a week later from now, it could be different. It’s tough when it comes down to a single point.” Injuries didn’t help, either. Berlin gave up 12 points in forfeits. Jack Rudy (285) missed the match with a concussion he suffered in the season-opening win over Glastonbury while J.R. Dynak (215) is still out for a hernia. Still, the Redcoats were right there. Berlin took a quick 16-0 in the match that began at 130 pounds with a pin from Chris Solek (130), a hard-fought 3-0 win by Kevin Moss (135) over John Brown, a 4-2 win by Justin Roncioli (140) over Jake Melhorn and Berube’s 11-point victory at 145. Middletown got on the board with Ronnie Brown’s win at 152 but Fiorillo extended the Berlin lead to 18 with a quick pin at 160. Fong admitted he would have liked to have seen senior Ryan Thiel challenge Fiorillo but the Dragons needed the points. Thiel moved up to 171 and won by pin and teammate Brian Sylvester (189) won by a 13-4 margin to cut the lead to 22-14. After two forfeits at 215 and 285, Middletown led for the first time, 26-22. Berlin’s Jared Grieder (103) pinned in 55 seconds and Will Matasuk (112) nearly caught Middletown sophomore Victor Ekpenyong in a 12-11 defeat. Matasuk trailed 10-4 at one point but his third period rally fell short. Both Berlin and Middletown still have to face No. 13 Farmington (10-0) along with Plainville and RHAM.“This race isn’t over. We lost by one to the defending Class L champion,” Tremblay said. “We’re going to keep working hard and correcting our mistakes.” |
Saturday, February 24
Day gets elusive Class L victory
By: Ken Lipshez , The Herald Press
BRISTOL - Berlin High wrestling coach Jim Day will leave behind a legacy of distinction when he steps down in two weeks after a brilliant 26-year career.
He put the Redcoats' program on the map, virtually owned the Northwest Conference for 22 years and added nine state championship trophies to Berlin's dazzling showcase. He stirred the passion that produced scores of state placewinners and dozens of coaches.
The one glory that eluded him was watching his son Shane climb to the top of the podium to receive the rewards of a state championship. The elder Day can now ride into the sunset with a smile as top-seeded Shane left the competition at 135 pounds in the dust Saturday at the Class L championships at Bristol Central.
"It was a big relief because he's had a great career but this is one thing he hadn't been able to attain," Coach Day said. "Although it wouldn't define him it's nice that we got it."
What would more accurately define Shane is that he has achieved more takedowns than any wrestler in state history, a number that his father says is over 600.
"I'm not sure it's really sunk in," Coach Day said. "As a coach you stay focused on the team but tonight when I get home and relax a little bit, it will sink in big-time. He's worked so hard. It hasn't come easy."
Junior Jon Fiorillo (160) joined Shane in the winners' circle to lead the Redcoats to a fifth-place finish among 29 schools.
Middletown bore the pride of the Northwest Conference by taking the tournament with 178.5 points. Bristol Central finished second at 159.5 and Farmington recorded its highest finish in school history, taking third with 145.5.
Wethersfield, led by 103-pound champion Ken Velez, finished 11th with 84 points. Mike Brignano won the title at 125 for Farmington, which had a school-record eight placewinners in the 14 weight classes.
Shane Day, the ultimate technician, scored major decisions in each of his four bouts on the road to the title. He began with a 10-2 win over Conard's William Jones, crushed Andrew Turnbull of Fermi 19-5 and frustrated his Farmington rival Malcolm Yancey, 13-3, in the semifinals.
He was never threatened by second-seed Brian Onofrio of Hand in an 11-3 finale. Shane (41-0 in 2007) had defeated Onofrio in two previous encounters this season. He used what he called his "bread-and-butter" move to ease past him a third time.
"It's an outside single but I've been working on a single to the other side and that's what my first takedown was," Shane said. "He was leading with the other foot so he was expecting my usual outside single but I switched it up off the first one. I had a good cushion halfway through the match and I wanted to go with what I feel most comfortable with."
Fiorillo (1st seed, 39-2) was dynamic in tearing through his four foes. He won by first-period fall in the second round, a 14-3 decision over Eric Sassu of Bristol Eastern in the quarters and a 22-9 thumping of semifinal foe David Kerr of Fitch. He scored a technical fall in the final by beating Abraham Casarez of Middletown, 23-8.
"I hadn't gone against him but I'd seen a lot of him," Fiorillo said. "I felt like the seedings in the tournament were kind of lopsided. I thought my side of the bracket (upper) had the better kids and the lower half was misleading to how it was seeded."
Farmington coach Eric Misko, whose construction of the program has drawn raves from far and wide, had hopes of a championship.
"We came in hoping to win but a lot of matches didn't go the way we needed them to," Misko said. "But it was a deep tournament and this is the best the school has ever done."
The 7-2 victory over sixth-seeded Ryan Clarke of East Lyme in the final was anti-climactic for Brignano (top seed, 45-2). His 3-1 overtime win over long-time rival Chris Malenfant of Bristol Central in the semifinals was an epic struggle.
"I've wrestled him four times and it's even," Brignano said. "Last time I beat him right before overtime. I needed to win. I've been training to win the whole year. That was my goal. That was my dream."
Velez, top-seeded and 38-4 on the season, was never challenged in his four bouts.
He won by technical fall (15-0) over Rockville's Julio Amaez in the second round. He pinned Garrett Gitterman of Maloney (3:16) in the quarterfinals, chalked up another tech fall over fourth-seeded Kevin Workman of Bunnell in the semis and had little trouble with Bristol Central sophomore Ryan Carbonell in a 21-7 final.
"That was the second time I faced him," Velez said. "The first time I beat him 4-2 when I had a reversal near the end of the third period. I knew it was going to be a tough match and I wasn't going to take him for granted but I was ready to wrestle."
Farmington received a second-place finish from sophomore Luke Walsh, who lost to Middletown's Casey Leslie, 11-4, in the 112 final. Walsh's signature win was a 7-5 overtime win against Eric Bergeron of Maloney in the semifinals.
Also placing for the Indians were Eric Orrell (5th at 103), Evan Baily (6th at 112), Yancey (3rd at 135), Jim Coyle (5th at 189), Kia Gholampour (5th at 215) and George Robinson (4th at 285).
Placing for Berlin were Kevin Moss (4th at 125), Chris Solek (5th at 130) and Jim Walonoski (3rd at 171). Wethersfield was also represented by Diego Perez (5th at 119) on the winners' platform.
Sunday, October 22
-Dare to be Great-
It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out where the strong man stumbled or where the doer of deeds could have done better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by the dust, the sweat, and the blood; who strives valiantly; who errs and comes short again and again; who knows the great enthusiasms and the great devotions; who spends himself in a worthy cause; who in the end, at best, knows the triumph of high achievement, and at worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be among those cold and timid souls who know neither victory nor defeat."
-Teddy Roosevelt
Sunday, August 20
We Made iIt Home
Well if you can guess I didn't have access to a computer in Rio so was unable to update everyone. We had a great time and have many good memories to bring home. I will begin working on the pictures for everyone and hope to have it shortly.
Sorry for the delay - summer has been very busy.
Roger
Tuesday, July 4
Happy 4th From Brazil
Well today was a day of traveling and sightseeing. we Left around 8 AM to go to the mountains. We arrived and walked through a chocolate factory and many of us bought some great chocolate. Hopefully some will make it home for you all to try. We then went to a shop and purchased some gifts and things. We then headed to lunch which was Fondue. It was great, bestwas dessert with chocolate covered fruits.
After Lunch we went to Black lake where the boys could take a paddle boat out or walk around the outside of the pond. We then went to a chairlift that you could take and view this 500 foot water fall from. It was amazing. Then someofthe boys discovered this zip line that they could ride which most did. Went down from mountain and took about 15 seconds. They all loved it and some of the adults even got into it.
It was then time to return home to Dr. Toms´for homecooked soup (potato and chicken noodle) and fruit and cup cakes - guess what they liked the best. The boys loaded their bags on bus so we didn~t have to deal with them in the morning.
We will be leaving the hotel at 3:45 AM and then going to pick up the boys so we can leave for airport by 4:15 AM. It~s off to Rio where we will celebrate Jason Seigels 25th birthday.
Hopefully we will have computer access there and I will keep you updated. Everyone is fine, all seem to still have money and getting along. Kevin Moss seems to hvea slight head cold but is making it through okay at this point.
We work out in Rio starting tomorrow, guess the vacation is over.
Roger
Tuesday, July 4
Monday´s Events
Today we go to the mountains for some German stuff. Lunch at a German Fondue place, chocolate factory and some ...
Sunday, July 2
Sunday - On The Move
Saturday, July 1
It´s Saturday
Friday, June 30
Its Friday
Saturday, July 1
Coming Home
Saturday, June 17
It´s Thursday
New England Champions
When will Berlin get its first?
State Open Champions
We are still waiting.
What year will it be?
Berlin keeps its title
By KEN LIPSHEZ, Staff Writer February 13, 2003
BERLIN -- Northwest Conference championships have come ...
"A TRADITION OF EXCELLENCE"
Keep Their Heads Ringing by Dr. Dre
State Champions
9 Time State Champions
2003 "L" 2001 "L" 2000 "M" 1999 "M" 1996 1992 1991 1989 1986
Northwest Conference Champions
18 Time Conference Champions
2007 - Co Champions with Middletown and Farmington 2005 - Tournament Champions 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1996 1995 1994 1993 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985
State Tourrnament Runner-up
7 Time Runner-ups in State Class Tournament
2002
1994
1993
1990
1988
1987
1985
Berlin High Finishes Third - 2004
Class M At Windham Team results (top 10): 1. Windham High 227; 2. Killingly 167½; 3. Berlin 163; 4. Bethel 155½, 5. Waterford 155; 6. RHAM-Hebron 151; 7. Hand-Madison 122; 8. New Fairfield 106½; 9. Seymour, 88; 10. Enfield 86 Individual Berlin results 119 Third: Mike Crowe (Berlin) dec. Brennan Ward (Waterford), 7-2. 125 Third: Kris Lance (Bethel) dec. Shane Day (Berlin), 9-3 130 Fifth: Mike Robinson (Berlin) dec. Nick Spinnato (Hand), 7-0. 135 Champion: Dan Madey (Berlin) dec. Jeff Larrow (Woodstock), 4-2. 140 Third: Kevin Turko (RHAM) dec. Dave Fiorillo (Berlin), 9-4. 145 Third: Nick Catalano (Berlin) dec. Scott Ivan (Bethel), 14-0. 152 Third: Jim Solek (Berlin) dec. Christi Goodspeed (Bethel), 5-0. 171 Third: Rich Meahan (Foran) dec. Eric McCurdy (Berlin), 7-2. Also Berlin's own John Holzinger placed 2nd in the Class LL Tournament Congratulations to all - Good luck next week in the State Open.
State Tournament 3rd Place Team Finishes
2004 - Class M, Champion Windham 2nd - Killingly
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Berlin Youth Wrestling
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