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Massachusetts wrestling

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Though still not as popular as hockey or basketball, high school wrestling is a burgeoning sport in Massachusetts. It is regulated by the Massachusetts High School Athletic Association. According to Wrestling USA Magazine, 3804 boys and 38 girls wrestled in the state in 2004.

The season

Like all MIAA-sanctioned winter sports, the Massachusetts wrestling season officially begins on the first Monday after Thanksgiving. Teams participate in dual meets and tournaments until the second week of February, when the postseason begins. Currently, the official postseason is divided into four rounds, each occurring a week apart: Sectionals, States, All-States and New Englands (which is not overseen by the MIAA). Some leagues also hold their own tournament a week before Sectionals.

There are nine sections in three divisions:

Sections range from 13 teams to over 20. They are two-day tournaments with double-elimination brackets (once a wrestler loses his first match, he is bumped to the consolation bracket) and team scores are kept. Qualifying rules vary, but every weight in every section sends at least 5 wrestlers, and many send 6.

Division 1, 2 and 3 state championships take place a week later. The highest-scoring team in each division is recognized as a state champion. Only the top four placers in each weight compete in All-States. No team score is kept at All-States, and the top six wrestlers go to New Englands.

The MIAA has recently passed a realignment proposal which will create more, smaller sections, setting it so that only the top four wrestlers go to States. There has also been talk of adding a dual meet tournament in the Wednesdays between the postseason weekend, as well as leaving New Englands. This is justified on the grounds that New Englands is unfair to Massachusetts wrestlers because they go through a tougher postseason than other New England wrestlers; furthermore, some claim that the six Massachusetts wrestlers do not proportionally represent the depth of the state.

The off-season.

Massachusetts has often been criticized in the past for failing to represent itself at major national tournaments. Recently, rapid strides have been made in this area. Aaron Polansky, head coach at Hudson High School, was named Massachusetts state chairman for USA Wrestling, a major national governing organization. Polansky has established several new off-season tournaments and clubs, as well as founding the Stance In Motion Initiative, a program designed to help foster new wrestling teams in the state with financial support and training for coaches. Over the last two years, he has taken Massachusetts teams to the Junior National Championships in Fargo, North Dakota, the most prestigious high school wrestling tournament in the country. Several Massachusetts wrestlers have placed here, and Rollie Peterkin of Wellesley is a two-time champion.

Colleges

Currently, Massachusetts has two Division I wrestling programs: Boston University and Harvard University. BU, coached by Carl Adams, competes in the Colonial Athletic Association while Harvard, coached by Jay Weiss, is a member of the Eastern Intercollegiate Wrestling Association. In 2004, Harvard senior Jesse Jantzen was national champion at 149 pounds and was named Outstanding Wrestler of the national tournament.

Massachusetts is home to a number of Division III programs, including Bridgewater State College, Springfield College and Williams College. These teams compete in the New England College Conference Wrestling Association. The University of Massachusetts Lowell once had a Division II program, which was eliminated due to budget cuts; the University of Massachusetts at Amherst currently has a club team. Though they still lag behind other states, Massachusetts wrestlers are well represented in college, competing for such top programs as the University of Nebraska, Edinboro University, and Franklin and Marshall College. Several Massachusetts alum qualified for the 2005 D1 championships, though none were All-Americans.

Prominent Massachusetts Wrestlers

Leagues

Wayland and Weston are the traditional powers in this league: they have won almost every title for the last 30 years. Traditionally, their Christmas Eve meet decided the winner of the league. In 2003-04, however, Lincoln-Sudbury won its first league championship ever; the next year, Concord-Carlisle won its first title in over a decade.

Greater Boston League: Arlington, Waltham, Cambridge, Malden. (No wrestling team: Everet, Somerville, Medford, Revere, Peabody.)

Waltham tends to be the powerhouse in the GBL in almost all sports. However last year Arlington became co-champions with Waltham after defeating them.

St. John's Prep has won 10 overall league titles, BC High 2 and Xaverian 1. (BC High and SJP tied for the conference 1 season).

Duxbury is the six time defending league champion.

Mount Greylock has won 84 consecutive league matches and seven straight league titles

MassWrestling.com

Founded by Weston wrestler Ted Chan on January 30th, 2000, MassWrestling.com has become an integral part of the Massachusetts wrestling community. Chan set the precedent for the main features of MassWrestling.com which still survive today - rankings and colloquium. Chan featured [rankings by Andy Starr], articles, event results, and a [yahoo group discussion forum], which was soon switched to an [UltimateBB] cgi based forum. Remnants of the Chan-era site are available on the [internet archives].

[Mike Atlas] took over on February 22nd, 2004 during his spring semester of his freshman year at Northeastern University, Boston. Ted Chan had graduated from Swarthmore College and decided it was appropriate to focus on his consulting career and that it would be best to hand the site over as a community resource to someone he trusted. Mike saw the potential for the site to take advantage of Open Source Content Management System-ware, and began work implementing the site in the e107 CMS. No longer was it necessary to FTP newly made HTML documents for every new tournament result, article, or rankings. e107 provided a way for the site to be maintained without ever editing files and uploading them - a web interface for adding content to the site made this easier than ever before. Old tournament results were imported into the results archive of the database and an intuitive layout was conceived to deliver the right information quickly to the users of the site - the Massachusetts amateur wrestling community.

During the first wrestling season under Atlas' direction, the site's popularity wavered. Andy Starr's rankings seemed to be missing in action, and results were not being sent in to Atlas to publish on the site, due to the break in ownership and loss of old contacts through Ted Chan. Towards the middle of January, 2005, a loyal user and fan in the community, Jason Ganz (username: Donny Jason), of Newton, stepped forward and started his own set of rankings, which were immediately deemed by Atlas to be the official rankings of MassWrestling.com. Soon, new users came flocking to the site again in droves to see and disuss the hotly contested rankings. Starting in the summer of 2005, the first MassWrestling.com produced DivX video of the Bay State Games was provided for download online using the BitTorrent protocol, with future plans to distribute many of the upcoming state final in a similar fashion.

The wave of new users prompted Atlas to begin providing more features for the community. In February of 2005, Atlas debuted a [boxscoring] module written in PHP and making use of the MySQL database already employed in e107. Registered users of the site could now easily submit dual meet boxscore information to be displayed for the world to see. Users could now keep the community up to date with boxscores from their team's dual meets for the public to see - regardless of newspaper coverage. Shortly thereafter, a Wrestler of the Week module was deployed in a similar fashion as boxscores, and an Event Calendar fashioned specifically for wrestling events was also rolled out to the community for public consumption.

The most popular feature is the forum, which has hosted many heated discussions and attracted many distinct and memorable personalities. These include Hill Billy and EoghanJames (Owen James), older wrestlers who often talk about the wrestling scene of their day and make cultural references incomprehensible to younger posters; Donny Jason, who posts the rankings and often incites controversial discussions; and The Birdman, an endlessly self-confident Wayland wrestler. The visitors of the site include parents, coaches, wrestlers, and fans from all over the state, New England, and abroad. Web traffic to the site during the 2004-2005 season peaked to about 9,500 unique visitors a month and a regular visits of about 1,000 unique visitors per day.

External links

 


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