January 10 Notebook

January 10 Notebook

A look back

2024 CIF State Team Results

Boys
1. Poway 290.5 points
2. Buchanan 255
3. Gilroy 206
4. St. John Bosco 186
5. Clovis 144
6. Bakersfield 124
7. Palm Desert 112.5
8. Granite Hills (El Cajon) 100.5
9. Fountain Valley 71
10. Vacaville 66

Girls
1. Walnut 96 points
2. Newport Harbor 87
3. Poway 77
4. Gilroy 69
5. Pitman 65
6. Central Catholic 55.5
7. Northview 52
8. Brawley 51.5
9. Clovis East 47
10. Santa Ana 42

Underclass state champions

Boys
106 – Henry Aslikyan, Birmingham (Sophomore in 2024)
113 – Rocklin Zinkin, Buchanan (Soph.)
120 – Ronnie Ramirez, Walnut (Jr.)*
126 – Nikade Zinkin, Clovis (Jr.)
138 – Daniel Zepeda, Gilroy (Jr.)*
175 – Angelo Posada, Poway (Jr.)
* = Two-time champions

Girls
100 – Jillian Wells, Central Catholic (Junior in 2024)
110 – Deandra Meza, Walnut (Jr.)
115 – Isabella Marie Gonzalez, Clovis East (Jr.)*
130 – Yzabella Austin, Pitman (Soph.)
145 – Delarie Juarez, Brawley (Jr.)
170 – Leilani Lemus, Clovis (Soph.)*
190 – Juliana Marquez, Gabrielino (Jr.)
* = Two-time champion

Underclass state placers (top 8)

Boys

106
1. Aslikyan
2. Arseni Kikiniou, Poway (Freshman in 2024)
3. Blake Woodward, Buchanan (Soph.)
4. Anthony Garza, Clovis (Fr.)
5. Nathaniel Granados, Merced (Jr.)
6. Aiden Garcia, Palma (Fr.)
7. Zachary Samano, Chino (Fr.)
8. Zachary Hoover, Laguna Creek (Jr.)

113
1. R. Zinkin
3. Abram Cline, Granite Hills (El Cajon) (Jr.)
4. Siraj Sidhu, Del Oro (Loomis) (Soph.)
5. Sean Willcox, St. John Bosco (Soph.)
6. Thunder Lewis, Clovis (Soph.)
7. Paulo Valdes, Hesperia (Jr.)

120
1. Ramirez
3. Moses Mendoza, Gilroy (Soph.)
5. Antonio Rodriguez, Los Gatos (Soph.)
6. Robert  Jones, Poway (Jr.)
7. Christopher Huerta, Jr., Buchanan (Soph.)

126
1. N. Zinkin
2. Jeff  Lopez, Clovis West (Jr.)
3. Isaiah Cortez, Gilroy (Jr.)
4. Ashton Besmer, Buchanan (Soph.)
5. Billy Townson, Poway (Jr.)
6. Christian Garcia, Walnut (Jr.)
7.  Michael Romero, St. John Bosco (Fr.)

132
2.  Jesse Grajeda, St. John Bosco (Fr.)
3. Elijah Cortez, Gilroy (Jr.)
4. Victor-Alexander Gutierrez, Central Catholic (Soph.)
5. Joshua Requena, Camarillo (Soph.)
6. Jacob Perez, Monache (Jr.)
7. Paris Ruiz, Buchanan (Jr.)

138
1. Zepeda
4. Aiden Simmons, Bakersfield (Jr.)
8. Wyatt Lewis, Clovis (Fr.)

144
2. Joseph Toscano, Buchanan (Soph.)
3. Mario Carini, Poway (Fr.)
4. Max Del Bosque, Clovis North (Jr.)
7. Slava Shahbazyan, Chaminade (Soph.)
8. Braden Priest, Bakersfield (Jr.)

150
None

157
3. Leo Contino, Buchanan (Jr.)
4. Beau Priest, Bakersfield (Jr.)
6. Christopher Creason, El Diamante (Soph.)
8. Travis Grace, Gilroy (Soph.)

165
2. Joseph Antonio, St. John Bosco (Jr.)
8. Brodie Johnson, Pitman (Jr.)

175
1. Posada
2. Mason Ontiveros, Pitman, (Soph.)
6. Levi Bussey, Granite Bay (Jr.)
7. Logan Bruce, Maria Carillo (Jr.)
8. Primo Catalano, Chaminade (Jr.)

190
2. Brokton Borelli, Los Banos (Jr.)
5. Khale McDonnell, Fountain Valley (Jr.)

215
2. Coby Merrill, Gilroy (Soph.)
6. Dominic Wilson, Tulare Union (Jr.)

285
2. Nicholas Sahakian, St. John Bosco (Jr.)
8. Justice El Sayad, Temecula Valley (Jr.)

Girls

100
1. Wells
2. Lily Dizon, Pitman (Freshman in 2024)
4. Christina Estrada, Buchanan (Fr.)
5. Marlee Solomon, Newport Harbor (Fr.)
6. Josie Benitez, Kingsburg (Jr.)

105
3. Jazmine Turner, Grace Davis (Jr.)
4. Megan Morales, Central (Fresno) (Jr.)
5. Maggie Cornish, Tesoro (Soph.)
6. Alicia Serratos, Santa Ana (Jr.)
7. Kailey Salazar, Selma (Jr.)

110
1. Meza
2. Kaiya Maggini, Del Oro (Loomis) (Soph.)
5. Avy Perez, Birmingham (Jr.)
7. Abbi Cooper, Clayton Valley (Jr.)
8. Ajalynn Jimenez, Hillcrest (Jr.)

115
1. Gonzales
2. Kylee Golz, Trabuco Hills (Jr.)
3. Xiomara Gallego, Poway (Jr.)
6. Samantha Rivera, Northview (Jr.)
8. Anabelle Serratos, Santa Ana (Fr.)

120
2. Shayna Ward, Oakland Tech (Jr.)
4. Riana Bernal, Lemoore (Soph.)
5. Me’kala James, Central (Fresno) (Soph.)
6. Lauren Zaragoza, Brawley (Soph.)
7. Zahra Stewart, Yucaipa  (Soph.)
8. Eliana Garcia, Walnut (Fr.)

125
2. Samantha Sachs, Glendora (Jr..)
3. Lilyana Balderas, Anaheim (Soph.)
4. Dulcy Martinez, Central Catholic (Fr.)

130
1. Austin
2. Tamara Grace, Gilroy (Soph.)
4. Skye Schneider, Elk Grove (Soph.)
7. Lana Nguyen, Dublin (Soph.)

135
2. Alex Maday, Whitney (Jr.)
5. Renice Gonzalez, Colony (Jr.)
7. Roxanne Raab, Clairemont (Jr.)
8. Jestinah Solomua, Corona (Fr.)

140
2. Olivia Davis, Monte Vista (Danville) (Soph.)
4. Lucia Ledezma, Granite Hills-El Cajon (Fr.)
6. Jaelyn Unpingco, Clovis East (Soph.)
8. Aila Duus, Fremont (Jr.)

145
1. Juarez
4. Adelaida Fernandez, Birmingham (Soph.)
7. Kayleen Tuavao, Tokay  (Jr.)
8. Amber Spencer, Santana (Jr.)

155
2. Angelinah De Leon, Santa Clara (Jr.)
3. Nisa Rogers, Righetti (Soph.)
6. Symone Jewell, Northgate (Fr.)
7. Angelina Jiang, Gunn (Jr.)
8. Audrey Segura, Redwood (Visalia) (Jr.)

170
1. Lemus
2. Alexandria Perez, La Costa Canyon (Jr.)
5. Eva Garcia, Newport Harbor (Fr.)
6. Reese Hart, Tehachapi (Jr.)
7. Alyssa Guzman, Orange Vista (Jr.)

190
1. Marquez
3. Evelyn Vargas, Merced (Jr.)
4. Briana Alvarado, Highland (Soph.)
5. Golda Demby, Hollister (Jr.)
8. Onyi Oragwam, Centennial (Bakersfield) (Fr.)

235
3. Anna Bozanic, Liberty (Winchester) (Soph.)
4. Ashley Wafer, Lakewood (Soph.)
6. Brianna Espinoza, Central Valley (Jr.)


Old hat for Buchanan at Doc B
The 50th Doc Buchanan Invitational took place at Clovis High School over the weekend and, as usual, attracted a national field. Wrestlers from 127 separate teams and 18 states competed in search of the coveted cowboy hat bestowed upon the bracket champions. 

California was very well represented at the event. The Golden State took the top five spots in the team competition, led by Buchanan, which has won every Doc B, except for last year, since 2019. California wrestlers claimed cowboy hats in 10 of the 14 brackets.


Coby Merrill of J.W. North won a Doc B title for the second straight year

Ashton Besmer of Buchanan beat two nationally-ranked wrestlers and was named lower-weight MVP. Coby Merrill of J.W. North won a second consecutive Doc B title and was the upper-weight MVP. Nikade Zinkin of host Clovis defeated local rival Joe Toscano of Buchanan, a 2023 champion; to earn tournament MVP honors.

Other repeat winners included Ronnie Ramirez of Walnut and Angelo Posada of Poway, the 2024 Doc B and CIF State champions.

Buchanan finished with 205 points to win the team competition over St. John Bosco, which finished with 174 points. Clovis, Poway, and Gilroy occupied the final three spots in the top five.

The Bears, who did not have an individual champion last year, put five in the finals and had three champions, with Paul Ruiz and Leo Contino joining Besmer atop the podium.

“I thought we had some great individual performances,” said Buchanan coach Troy Tirapelle. “It showed with having six wrestlers in the top three of their weight classes at a national-caliber level tournament.  But we relied too heavily on those six. We need more contributions from all members.  We must be ready to fight all situations, and… we have to be willing to fight them.”

St. John Bosco finished second despite wrestling without injured senior Nicholas Sahakian, the top-ranked heavyweight in the nation. The Braves had no individual champions, but put nine on the podium, two more than any other team. Jesse Grajeda finished second at 141 pounds to lead the way.

Clovis had seven placers, including Zinkin, to finish third.

“As a team, we had a pretty good performance, especially since we had two kids out (113 and 120),” said Cougar coach Gabriel Schaefer.

Clovis had two heavyweights, Mark Marin (third) and Adam Sanchez (seventh), finish on the podium. Schaefer said that his program has four heavyweights who could start at most schools in California.

At the state tournament last February, the order of finish was as follows:

1. Poway
2. Buchanan
3. Gilroy
4. St. John Bosco
5. Clovis

On Saturday at Doc B, the top five were:

1. Buchanan
2. St. John Bosco
3. Clovis
4. Poway
5. Gilroy

Same five teams. Different order. The cream always rises.

No more so than for Buchanan, which lost the team competition to Poway both at the Doc Buchanan and at State. The Bears had won seven straight team competitions in Bakersfield before being felled last February by Poway.

“It was great to win the Doc Buchanan, both as a team and for our individuals,” Tirapelle said. “It’s a great barometer for seeing where you are at the halfway point of the season.  Ultimately, though, it is not our main objective.  Our goal is always to be standing at the top come the end of the season.  We did not get it done last year.  We want nothing more than to rectify that this season.”

Here’s more about the California championship match victors at the Doc B:

109 pounds
Samuel Sanchez, Esperanza d. Anthony Garza, Clovis 7-1
Sanchez was the top seed despite being a freshman, because, in August, he won the U17 45 kg world championship. He only had one pin for the tournament but won every match by a wide margin, including in the final against the second-seeded Garza, a sophomore who finished fourth at State at 106 last year.

“I think I wrestled really good,” Sanchez said. “It’s unreal to win.”

116 pounds
Paul Ruiz, Buchanan d. Henry Aslikyan, Birmingham, 9-8 TB2
Ruiz, a freshman, won an extra time, ultimate tiebreaker thriller over the acrobatic Aslikyan, a junior and the reining state champion at 106 pounds. Ruiz grabbed an early lead in the match and had a near fall, but Aslikyan rallied back to tie at the end of three periods. 

“It’s a once-in-a-lifetime experience to win,” said Ruiz, who’s been coming to the Doc B since he was four years old.

129 pounds
Ronnie Ramirez, Walnut d. Antonio Rodriguez, Los Gatos, 13-4
Ramirez, a two-time state champion, repeated his title at Doc B in a high-scoring match over Rodriguez, a junior who was fifth at State at 120 last February.

“I expected it to open up but not that open,” Ramirez said. “I saw that a majority decision was a possibility and worked for it.”

135  pounds
Ashton Besmer, Buchanan d. Manuel Saldate, SLAM Academy (NV), 8-5
Besmer, a junior who placed fourth in the state tournament last year at 126 pounds, won as the fourth seed by defeating two wrestlers ranked among the nation’s top 10. He outpointed Moses Mendoza of Gilroy, the top seed, in the semifinals, 22-15, before edging a tough out-of-state wrestler for the cowboy hat.

Besmer attributed his success to hard work.

“I work as hard as I can in the room and it pays off,” he said. “I am grinding to be able to beat top-ranked wrestlers in the nation.”

Tirapelle called Besmer’s effort a “coming out party.”

“We as coaches knew of his capabilities, but I’d wager not too many people picked him to win it from the 4-seed in a loaded weight class, beating two nationally-ranked wrestlers in the process,” the coach added.

147 pounds
Nikade Zinkin, Clovis d. Joe Toscano, Buchanan, 7-5
Zinkin, a defending state champion and senior committed to Nebraska, defeated Toscano, a two-time state runner-up, in a match where most of the action came early. Toscano scored a first-period takedown, but Zinkin reversed to a near fall that had the raucous crowd at Clovis erupting.

“I wanted the pin for sure,” Zinkin said. “I wanted to end it then and there but he fought off his back. I knew I needed to keep wrestling and put more points on the board.”

“Nikade wrestled great,” Schaefer said. “His ability to wrestle through positions is incredible.”

Zinkin, who won State at 126 pounds last year, is a true middle weight this season.

“Nikade cut a lot of weight last year,” Schaefer explained. “He decided to just try and get better at wrestling and not worry about his weight and try to develop into a college middle weight.”

Zinkin, who finished second at the Doc B last year, said he was thrilled to win a match between local rivals at the Cougar Den.

“They want to see a show and I’m here to put it on,” he added.

153 pounds
Daniel Zepeda, Gilroy d. Noah Nininger, Staunton River (VA), 4-1
The spotlight match of the night featured Zepeda, a two-time state champion and No. 1 nationally at 150 pounds;  against Nininger, who is No. 4 nationally.

“When you have guys wanting to take what’s yours, you have to protect it,” Zepeda said.

The highlight of the match, Zepeda added, was a second-period two-minute ride, a skill California wrestlers are not usually given credit for.

160 pounds
Leo Contino, Buchanan d. Gabriel Delgado, SLAM Academy (NV),4-0
Contino, a senior and the top seed said that he was aware that his team needed those in the championship brackets to excel after the team struggled in the consolation brackets. The core five all made the championship final, with three winning titles.

“The spotlight was bright but I was able to hold up,” he said.

193 pounds


Levi Bussey was Granite Bay's only participant at the Doc B, but the senior emerged with the coveted cowboy hat.

Levi Bussey, Granite Bay d. Brokton Borelli, Los Banos, 13-11
Bussey, who was sixth at State at 175 pounds, defeated Borelli, who was second at 190, thanks to two early takedowns.

“It’s all about momentum,” Bussey said. “It helps out a lot.”

Bussey finished with four takedowns, but it was still close at the end.

“The last 30 seconds you just have to grit it out and find a way,” he explained.

Bussey was Granite Bay’s only entrant but having him do so well “has given our team and community some great joy,” said coach Robert Cooley. “The championship bout was an excellent opportunity to be in the spotlight with another excellent athlete and show what they have worked so hard to achieve. What a fun, exciting experience! 

218 pounds
Angelo Posada, Poway d. Khale McDonnell, Fountain Valley, 10-0
Posada wrestled 40 pounds heavier than when he won last year at 178.

“I’m no longer the tall, skinny guy,” the Stanford-committed senior said.

Posada, the reigning state champion at 175, said that it helps to bring a light weight style to the bigger weight classes. He’s had a lot of success, including winning the  Reno Tournament of Champions at 215 in December.

Against McDonnell, a senior who was fifth t State at 190 last year, Posada said that he focused on his attacks the entire bout.

“I do not worry about what my opponent is doing,” he added.

288 pounds
Coby Merrill, J.W. North d. Travyn Boger, South Summit (UT), by fall in 1:25
Merrill won at 215 last year but has moved up to 285 now that his older brother, state champion Cody Merrill, has graduated to Oklahoma State University. Merrill pinned his way through the bracket and has been dominant all year. In the final, he got a Period 1 takedown straight to an arm bar that proved decisive.

Merrill now has won both Doc B and the Reno Tournament of Champions, but Sahakian wasn’t in either field, a fact that leaves the junior wanting more.

“We were really hoping to have that match against Sahakian,” said JW North coach Harlan Kistler. “Not seeing him at Doc B and Reno was a bummer but we understand he is healing from some injuries. Otherwise, it was a great weekend for Coby to showcase his prowess and abilities.”

Merrill knows a bit about injuries himself. Last year, ranked first in the state at 215 pounds, Merrill tore the meniscus in both knees in a semifinal win and still wrestled in the finals, losing in overtime. He had surgery after the state meet and only recently returned to the mat. As a heavyweight, he has been dominating and has won all matches against high school competition by fall or technical fall.

Merrill said that he likes being a heavyweight.

“I’m eating a lot of food,” he said. “I don’t have to worry about making weight. I worry only about wrestling and getting better.”

***

Four California wrestlers finished as runners-up in their respective brackets.

Rocklin Zinkin of Buchanan, a reigning state champion, fell in the 123-pound final by a 5-3 score to a Pennsylvania wrestler. Grajeda lost by fall in Round 3 to an Arizona wrestler in the 141-pound championship bout. Mario Carini of Poway made the finals only to lose to a Georgia wrestler, 11-2. And junior Mason Ontiveros of Pitman made the final at 178 pounds only to lose to a Missouri wrestler, 7-1.


Bosco Braves Worlds
The weekend before the Christmas holiday, many California boys and girls high school teams made their way to Reno for the Dollamur Reno Tournament of Champions and  College Invitational, “Where champions are born.”

Eighty-seven teams participated on the boys’ side, with three from California in the top five: champion St. John Bosco, runner-up Poway, and fourth-place Gilroy. Last year, only champion Poway was a top-five finisher among Golden State schools.

Bosco had six champions in the event: Aaron Meza (113), Sean Willcox (120), Nathan Carillo (126), Grajeda (138), Antonio (165) and Isai Fernandez (175).

Sanchez, Zepeda, Bussey, Posada, and Merrill, who won at Doc B, also won in Reno. 

Mendoza rounded out the California champions with a dominating effort at 132, including a 16-3 major decision over Saldate in the final.


The World is a Titan
On the girls’ side in Reno, Poway (first), Esperanza (fourth), and Gilroy (fifth) finished among the top five in the 47-team event. The margin between first and second was a mere 3.5 points; between first and seventh just 36.5 points. No team won more than one weight classification.

Poway’s lone champion was Isabella Fodera at 105. Olivia Davis won for Esperanza at 155. Tamara Grace prevailed at 135 for Gilroy. Fodera won all of her matches by fall. Davis and Grace, state second-place finishers a year ago, each won all but one match by fall.

The three other California winners were Aubree Storm Gutierrez of Marina at 110, Epenesa Elison of Los Altos (Downey) at 115, and Ruby Julien-Newsom of Torrey Pines at 130. Elison, a freshman, is the No. 1-ranked wrestler nationally at 115 pounds.


Dating a wrestler
The 2024-2025 wrestling season is building to the CIF State championship tournament, which takes place Feb. 27 to March 1 in Bakersfield. This will be the 52nd boys tournament and 14th for girls.

Before that, however, the state’s 10 Sections will hold their own competitions. Here are the dates to know:

Oakland Section – Section championships are Feb. 15

San Francisco Section – Section championships are Feb. 15

Northern Section – Division championships are Feb. 15; Master’s Meet is Feb. 21-22

Sac-Joaquin Section – Team championship is Feb. 1; Boys’ Divisions and Girls’ North/South Regionals are Feb. 14-15; Master’s/Section finals are Feb. 21-22

North Coast Section – Duals are Feb. 8; Section championships are Feb. 21-22

Central Coast Section – Regional tournament is Feb. 15; Master’s Meet is Feb. 22

Central Section – Division finals are Feb. 14-15; Section championships are Feb. 21-22

Los Angeles Section – Duals are Feb. 1; City championships are Feb. 14-15

Southern Section – Boys’ and Girls’ Team Duals are Feb. 1; Individual championships are Feb. 14-15; Master’s Meet is Feb. 21-22

San Diego Section – Girls’ Duals are Feb. 8; Boys’ Duals are Feb. 15; Master’s Meet is Feb. 21-22


News and notes
Denair High School
 is a small school in Stanislaus County with fewer than 300 students. The Coyotes have often had a problem attracting kids to the wrestling room. An average year has 10 wrestlers. Two years ago, the team finished with just two. In 2020, Denair started with four. Last year saw 15 join the Coyotes’ squad. That spawned the program’s first dual win in Coach Bryan Herrington’s six-year tenure at the school. This year, the wrestling room is overflowing with 30 kids – roughly 10 percent of the school! – and the Coyotes can fill all slots at a dual meet. They had their first league dual with a team in a larger league for the first time anyone can remember in a while, and managed a 54 -23 victory!

***

Northview’s
 girls placed seventh last year. The Vikings add to their roster this year with the transfer, from Brawley, of senior Delarie Juarez, the CIF State champion at 145 pounds.

***

No freshman won a state title last year.

Four sophomores, Henry Aslikyan of Birmingham (44-1) and Rocklin Zinkin of Buchanan, won first titles on the boys’ side. Leilani Lemus of Clovis and Yzabella Austin of Pitman won as sophomores on the girls’ side. Only Lemus has a chance to be a four-time champion.

There have only been eight four-time champions in state history. The last boys’ four-time champion was in 2020; the last for girls was 2018.

***


The gold sledgehammer winners at the Quarry Queen Invitational, from left: Woodcreek freshman Rieeyah Blackwell, Northgate sophomore Symone Jewell, Orland sophomore Addison Bernstein

Whitney hosted the inaugural Quarry Queen Invitational this past weekend. A total of 32 teams competed and most brackets were full to overflowing. Northgate won the team championship and had one champion, Symone Jewell at 157 pounds. Jewell also was one of three to earn gold sledgehammers as an Outstanding Wrestler at the event.

The host school had two earn medals for finishing top six: sophomore Grace Berg and junior Kayla Mougeotte.


100 % COMMITTED!
In this section, we identify those wrestling high school this year who have made commitments to wrestle in college.

Sonny Acuna, Sr., Northview, 197 – Cal Baptist
Joseph Antonio
, Sr., St. John Bosco, 165 -- Army
Ben Bomberger
, Sr., Poway, 184/197 – Cal Poly SLO
Brokton Borelli
, Sr., Los Banos, 197 -- Maryland
Levi  Bussey
, Sr., Granite Bay, 197 – Cal Poly SLO
Primo Catalano
, Sr., Chaminade, 197 – Army
Bailey Cathey
, Sr., Galt, 131 – Minot State
Leo Contino
, Sr., Buchanan, 165/174 – West Virginia
Elijah Cortez
, Sr., Gilroy, 141/149 -- Cornell
Isaiah Cortez
, Sr., Gilroy, 133/141 -- Cornell
Olivia Davis
, Sr., Monte Vista (Danville), 145 – William Jewell
Justice El-Sayad, Sr., Temecula Valley, 285 – Cal Poly SLO
Christian Garcia
, Sr., Walnut, 125/133 – Cal Poly SLO
Mackenzie Gilbert
, Sr., Modesto, 103 – Waldorf
Isabella Marie Gonzalez
, Sr., Clovis East, 117/124 – Iowa
Christian Herrera
, Sr., Bakersfield, 157 -- Wyoming
Robert Jones
, Sr., Poway, 125 – Cal Poly SLO
Kaiya Lopes
, Sr., Rancho Bernardo, 103 – Minot State
Jeff Lopez
, Sr., Clovis, 141 – Oregon State
Leo Maestas
, Sr., Clovis West, 133 – American University
Khale McDonnell
, Sr., Fountain Valley, 285 – Oregon State
Dylan Pile
, Sr., Los Gatos, 174 -- Stanford
Angelo Posada
, Sr., Poway, 197/285 -- Stanford
Beau Priest
, Sr., Bakersfield, 157/165 – Oregon State
Braden Priest
, Sr., Bakersfield, 149 – North Carolina
Ronnie Ramirez
, Sr., Walnut, 133 – Oklahoma State
Adrien Reyes
, Sr., Clovis, 184 – Oregon State
Samantha Sachs
, Sr., Glendora, 131 – Iowa
Nicholas Sahakian
, Sr., St. John Bosco, 285 -- Michigan
Jaelynn Serna
, Sr., Apple Valley, 110 – Missouri Valley College
Edwin Sierra
, Sr., Poway, 125/133 -- Stanford
Aiden Simmons
, Sr., Bakersfield, 141 – Cal Poly SLO
Billy Townson, Sr., Poway, 133 -- Rutgers
Evelyn Vargas
, Sr., Merced, 180/207 – Dickinson State
Daniel Zepeda
, Sr., Gilroy, 149 – North Carolina State
Nikade Zinkin
, Sr., Clovis, 149/157 -- Nebraska

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