THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT Copyright (c) 1996, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: Friday, February 23, 1996 TAG: 9602210148 SECTION: CHESAPEAKE CLIPPER PAGE: 22 EDITION: FINAL TYPE: Sports SOURCE: BY BILL LEFFLER, STAFF WRITER LENGTH: Medium: 63 lines
Never say never. . . .
That seems to be the sentiment of Southeastern District coaches despite a 12th consecutive victory in the district wrestling tournament by Great Bridge.
The Wildcats racked up 254.5 points in winning the two-day tournament at Great Bridge Monday. Runner-up Western Branch had 201 points, a whopping 53.5 points behind the perennial champion.
But Western Branch coach Terry Perdew and even Churchland coach Joe Boone, whose Truckers were back in sixth place with 85 points, believe opportunities may lie ahead to end the dynasty being created by the Martins at Great Bridge.
``Nobody knows how good Great Bridge is any better than I,'' said Perdew, whose team finished in second place behind the Wildcats in the district competition for the eighth consecutive year.
``But there are nine seniors on the Great Bridge team this year and we have only two. And we closed the gap a little on them this time.''
Both Great Bridge and Western Branch had four individual champions. A year ago, the Wildcats had seven winners while the Bruins had four. Great Bridge compiled a record total of 269 points last year while Western Branch had 188.5.
Churchland had a single winner, 160-pounder Orlando Morton. He was the second Trucker to take a district title since 1988.
``The very first thing we all must do is convince our wrestlers that Great Bridge is not invincible,'' said Boone, a three-time high school state champion himself at Granby when the Comets were a dynasty under Billy Martin.
``Those of us who do not have middle school wrestling are at a disadvantage, but if the commitment is made, we can be competitive with Great Bridge. That commitment includes hard, hard work.''
Four wrestlers repeated as district champions, three at different weights. The lone holdover at the same weight was Oscar Smith's 275-pounder, Rafael Butts. A junior, Butts raised his career record to 43-11 by pinning Western Branch freshman standout Marvin Urquhart in the final in 4:19.
Great Bridge's Carl Perry, the 125 winner last year, pinned Indian River's Mike Baja for the 130 title. It was Perry's 40th straight victory this season and his career record is a fantastic 154-14.
Travis Woodhouse of Great Bridge, who won at 130 last year, claimed the 135-pound crown with a 13-2 major decision over Luke Armagast of Indian River. It was Woodhouse's 80th career victory and raised his season record to 32-2.
Western Branch's Sean Sanderlin, now 37-1 for the season, won the 152 division with a 9-5 decision over Great Bridge's Michael Harper. Sanderlin pinned Harper in the 145 final last year.
The top four finishers at each weight advanced to the Eastern Regional, which started Thursday night at Churchland and continues through Saturday. ILLUSTRATION: HIGH SCHOOL WRESTLING
File photo by L. TODD SPENCER
Great Bridge's Carl Perry, shown last year pinning a Cox wrestler,
has a 154-14 record.
by CNB