2023 Hockomock League Wrestling All Stars

Below are the official 2023 Hockomock League Wrestling All Stars, selected by the coaches in the league.

Kelley-Rex Division MVP

Hampton Kaye-Kuter, Milford

Kelley-Rex Division All Stars

Colby Cloutier, King Philip
Alex Foley, Franklin
Riley Carlucci, Franklin
Hampton Kaye-Kuter, Milford
Michael Boulanger, Milford
Aidan Baum, Milford
Derek Marcolini, Milford
Sean Donovan, Milford
Braxton Ferro, North Attleboro
Gregory Berhiaume, North Attleboro
Logan Frank, Taunton
Ethan Harris, Taunton

Davenport Division MVP

Colton Johnson, Mansfield

Davenport Division All Stars

Ruairi Ritson, Canton
Jamie Calabrese, Foxboro
Marco Yerardi, Foxboro
Colton Johnson, Mansfield
Samson Connoly, Mansfield
Jaden Hinton, Oliver Ames
Nathan Lipski, Oliver Ames
Cameron Birnbaum, Sharon
Nicholas Varvak, Sharon
Cyrus Jones, Sharon
Ashmith Yeruva, Sharon
Cormac Horlbogen, Sharon
Caden Beder, Stoughton

Below are the official 2023 Hockomock League Wrestling All Stars and honorable mentions, selected by the coaches in the league. Below are the official Hockomock League Wrestling All Stars and honorable mentions, selected by the coaches in the league. Below are the official Hockomock League Wrestling All Stars and honorable mentions, selected by the coaches in the league. Below are the official Hockomock League Wrestling All Stars and honorable mentions, selected by the coaches in the league. Below are the official Hockomock League Wrestling All Stars and honorable mentions, selected by the coaches in the league. Below are the official Hockomock League Wrestling All Stars and honorable mentions, selected by the coaches in the league. Below are the official Hockomock League Wrestling All Stars and honorable mentions, selected by the coaches in the league. Below are the official Hockomock League Wrestling All Stars and honorable mentions, selected by the coaches in the league. Below are the official Hockomock League Wrestling All Stars and honorable mentions, selected by the coaches in the league. Below are the official Hockomock League Wrestling All Stars and honorable mentions, selected by the coaches in the league. Below are the official Hockomock League Wrestling All Stars and honorable mentions, selected by the coaches in the league. Below are the official Hockomock League Wrestling All Stars and honorable mentions, selected by the coaches in the league. Below are the official Hockomock League Wrestling All Stars and honorable mentions, selected by the coaches in the league. 2023 Hockomock League Wrestling All Stars

Cannon Making His Mark on the Mat for King Philip

Austin Cannon
KP sophomore Austin Cannon cheers on his teammates at the Hockomock Super Quad at Taunton High. (Ryan Lanigan/HockomockSports.com)

Josh PerryFollowJoshPerry


As you neared the doors at the back of the field house, you started to hear the noise. The music was loud, the instructions were being barked out, the bodies were hitting the mats. Listening to the activity and feeling the energy coming from the King Philip wrestling room, it was obvious that the Warriors were primed for a busy weekend at the Div. 2 state meet.

The wrestlers come together at the end of the practice, forming a circle on the floor, one last chance to hype themselves up for the afternoon. At the center of it all kneels sophomore Austin Cannon, inspiring his teammates, as he has done all season, whether on the mat competing himself or keeping the team motivated during meets.

Austin is a wheelchair user. If you thought that would prevent him from training like the other wrestlers or going out and winning matches, one conversation with Austin will quickly dispel that notion.

“Sports are just something I love, as a young kid,” Austin explained a few minutes after the wrestling room cleared for the day. “I just enjoy wrestling because I think it’s really fun and I’ve really bonded with my teammates.”

KP coach John Adams pointed to the diversity of the student-athletes on his team, including the program’s first female wrestler, and how important it is to experience that diversity in high school. He also noted that wrestling is a physically demanding activity at any level, but that none of it has phased Austin at all.

“The philosophy, it says on the wall, is if you can do this then all else in life will be easier,” Adams said. “Austin has bought into our philosophies and belief system from day one – the alignment of mind, body, and spirit; respect, pride, victory; through these doors walks true warriors; be comfortable with discomfort. He gets it. He always has.”

Austin began wrestling with the Kryptonite Wrestling Club in Plainville before joining the KP team last year. He is fully committed to sports, working with Adaptive Sports New England and training with paralympians Mike Prout (swimming) and Anderson Wise (track). He is also rowing during the spring and summer at Community Rowing, Inc.

These former Olympic athletes are providing a platform for wheelchair users, such as Austin, to participate in and build their love of sports.

Carrying that mentality into the wrestling room this winter, Austin has set expectations for himself as high as any expectation from the coaches. Adams said, “He gives me exactly what I expect from everybody. All I want is all you got and he comes in here every single day during training and he’s dedicated to improvement.”

Austin Cannon
Austin in action during a sparring match. (Courtesy of Lisa Cannon)

This season provided the first chance for Austin to compete in a sanctioned match. KP holds an open spot on its calendar for a youth night. The Warriors compete against each other in officiated, intrasquad matches before allowing the youth wrestlers to do the same. A good crowd is normally on hand to support the program.

Austin, who wrestles at 145 pounds, took the mat to face off against classmate and co-captain Kevin Gillis, giving the 126-pounder a battle to the end. “The first time he wrestled a match, it was a team thing so it was me and him wrestling and he’s definitely picked up on all of the fundamentals and he executes them very well,” Gillis said.

He continued, “It’s great for [Austin]. He’s working as hard, if not harder, than everyone else in the room. He’s really found a way to fit in with everyone. He’s definitely a part of us. There’s no difference in the way anyone treats him and he comes to all our meets and everything, and it’s just been a great time for everyone.”

Doing well in his first match was no surprise to Austin. “I think I was really confident,” he said. “I’ve always been a confident person.” When asked what it was like to compete in front of not only his teammates, but the big crowd in the Wooden Gym, he added, “It’s a great feeling.”

With the varsity wrestlers competing in the state tournament, Adams looked for opportunities to get some experience for the rest of the team. There was a Futures Tournament coming up in just a few days at North Attleboro and Austin was looking forward to another chance to show what he’s learned the past few months.

“He accepted the coaching, he wrestled through situations, positionally he was sound, he attacked in ways that he knows he can score, and he did so,” Adams said about Austin’s first match. “It was great to see. I’m proud of him. We knew that he had that ability to develop as a wrestler, and as a person.

“The first words out of his mouth were, ‘When do I go again?’ So we started to say let’s get him a more challenging opponent, let’s get him another opportunity, just as we would when [preparing] any young athlete into the sport. Each and every time, he’s risen to the challenge. He executes. That defines him.”

Austin has been there all season to make sure the team is focused and ready to go each meet. In the middle of what can be a long, grueling season, he adds an extra intensity during dual meets, urging his teammates on.

“One of the things I appreciate most about that is I do the corner coaching on this team and it can be chaotic and noisy in these competitive environments, but I also like support from the bench,” Adams explained. “He’ll pick up on the scenario and the instruction I’m giving and he’ll reinforce it. The intensity is always there. At the same time, the switch can flip and he’s quick with a smile.”

Winter seasons can be long. Strenuous practices every day, long weekends spent at quad meets or tournaments, a couple nonstop months of working hard on the mat, but Austin is relishing every chance to be with his teammates, and the feeling is mutual.

“I think it would be really surprising to most people just seeing how easily he does things and how well he’s picked it up,” Gillis said. “I think it’s just great seeing him out here.”

Adams added “He has great mat awareness. He has a strong work ethic. He has a positive energy. He handles both defeat and loss with dignity, class, and composure.

“They’re all behind one another. He’s a very important part of that formula.It is a family, of sorts, and he’s a part of that family.”

To learn more about Adaptive Sports New England and its varied programs, visit https://adaptivesportsne.org. For more information about Community Rowing, Inc., visit https://www.communityrowing.org/inclusion/para.

Milford, Sharon, Taunton Repeat As Sectional Champs

Milford, Sharon, Taunton Wrestling Repeat As Sectional Champs
Taunton Wrestling – 2023 Division 1 South Champions
Milford, Sharon, Taunton Wrestling Repeat As Sectional Champs
Sharon Wrestling – 2023 Division 2 Central Champions
Milford, Sharon, Taunton Wrestling Repeat As Sectional Champs
Milford Wrestling – 2023 Division 2 West Champions

By HockomockSports.com Staff

Hockomock League wrestling teams shined over the weekend at the MIAA sectional meets with three schools winning sectional titles and 22 wrestlers snagged individual championships.

Milford, Sharon, and Taunton all repeated as sectional champs with the Scarlet Hawks earning 295 points to win the Division 2 West section, the Eagles dominated the Division 2 Central bracket with 248 points, and the Tigers rolled to 281.5 points and first place in the Division 1 South tournament.

The Scarlet Hawks had the most individual success with six grapplers taking first place overall, Sharon had four earn first place, both Taunton and Oliver Ames had three, the Rocketeers took two in the Division 2 Central tournament, and Canton, Franklin, King Philip, and Mansfield each had one individual champion.

One of the stories of the day came from the Division 3 Central sectional held at Mohawk Trail Regional High School. Canton junior Ruairi Ritson entered the tournament unseeded but quickly grabbed some attention as he knocked off the #2 seed from Norwood with a 4-2 overtime win with a last second takedown. In the quarterfinals, Ritson had a pair of takedowns, a three-point nearfall, and a third period reversal for a 9-0 lead before getting the win by pinfall at 4:32. In the semis, Ritson needed less than a minute to get a pin on the third-seed from Dedham to advance to the finals. In the sectional championship match, Ritson didn’t allow a single point to the top-seed from Longmeadow, building a 4-0 lead with a takedown in each of the first two rounds before scoring the upset win and the sectional championship with a pinfall at 3:26.

Top 4 Placements
Division 1 South
Teams: 1st: Taunton (281.5), 7th: Franklin (131.5)
Franklin: Alex Foley (138, 1st), Riley Carlucci (126, 2nd), Jack Suaer (120, 2nd), Devon Bramson (145, 2nd)
Taunton: Johnnie Mainer-Smith (106, 3rd), Michael Leskoski (113, 2nd), Ryan Jones (120, 4th), Brian Haen (126, 4th), Xavier Sandoval (132, 1st), Anthony Vieira (138, 3rd), Ben Mandeville (145, 1st), Gabriel Leskoski (160, 4th), William Buffington (170, 4th), Ethan Harris (182, 1st), Elijah Prophete (195, 2nd), Logan Frank (220, 2nd)

Division 2 South
Teams: 1st: Bridgewater-Raynham (221.5), 6th: Oliver Ames (158), 10th: Stoughton (50)
Oliver Ames: Jonah Bornstein (106, 2nd), Robby Dobbin (113, 4th), Victor Romeiro (126, 1st), Rory Gallagher (132, 4th), Nathan Lipski (145, 1st), Jack Butler (160, 2nd), Jaden Hinton (285, 1st).
Stoughton: Jaron Andre (138, 4th), Caden Beder (182, 3rd).

Division 3 South
Teams: 1st: Norton (234), 6th: Foxboro (123.5)
Foxboro: Raj Jetty (113, 3rd), Adam Addeche (132, 4th), James Calabrese (145, 2nd), Connor McNamara (152, 3rd), Marco Yerardi (195, 2nd).

Division 2 West
Teams: 1st: Milford (295)
Milford: Derek Marcolini (106, 1st), Aidan Baum (113, 2nd), Robert Lyons (120, 2nd), Michael Boulanger (126, 1st), Patrick Murray (145, 4th), Ryan Donovan (152, 1st), Luke Donis (150, 2nd), Sean Donovan (170, 1st), Owen Matthews (182, 2nd), Matthew Donis (195, 1st), Michael Mastroianni (220, 3rd), Hampton Kaye-Kuter (285, 1st).

Division 2 Central

Milford, Sharon, Taunton Wrestling Repeat As Sectional Champs

Teams: 1st: Sharon (248), 2nd: North Attleboro (183), 3rd: King Philip (182), 8th: Mansfield (95.5)
King Philip: Loden Wells (120, 2nd), Kevin Gillis (126, 2nd), Matthew Oldford (138, 3rd), John Molloy (145, 4th), Colby Cloutier (160, 1st), Jared Shapiro (220, 4th), Cydell Sanchez (285, 3rd).
Mansfield: Sam Connelly (152, 2nd), Odin Miller (170, 3rd), Colton Johnson (220, 1st).
North Attleboro: Jayden Mendes (106, 4th), Alexander Robin (126, 4th), Braxton Ferro (132, 2nd), Austin Dean (160, 2nd), Greg Berthiaume (195, 1st), Zach Gallagher (285, 1st).
Sharon: Ashmith Yeruva (106, 1st), Vehnil Rangaraman (120, 4th), Cam Birnbaum (126, 1st), Nick Varvak (132, 1st), Cyrus Jones (138, 1st), Aaron Stafford (145, 3rd), Mason Lelling (170, 2nd), Cormac Horlbogen (182, 2nd), Adam Loebl (195, 4th).

Division 3 Central
Teams: 1st: Tri-County (204), 11th: Canton (81)
Canton: Max Kupferman (145, 4th), Ruairi Ritson (195, 1st), Julian Prentice (285, 3rd)

Milford, Sharon, Taunton Wrestling Repeat As Sectional Champs

Milford Pins Down Win at Taunton and Three-peat

Milford wrestling
After Taunton rallied from 20 points down to take the lead heading to the final match, Luke Donis earned a pin to secure Milford a win in the dual meet and the outright Kelley-Rex division title. (Josh Perry/HockomockSports.com)

Josh PerryFollowJoshPerry


TAUNTON, Mass. – With five matches left to go in Wednesday night’s dual meet at the Rabouin Field House, Milford led by 20 points and the Hawks seemed ready to cruise to the win. Taunton was heading into the strength of its lineup, but the Tigers needed to not only win those matches but bring in maximum points in each one to have a shot at winning the meet.

Click here for a photo gallery from this game.

Four pins later and Taunton was in the lead 39-35. Luke Donis stepped onto the mat for the final match of the night, at 160, knowing that simply winning his bout wouldn’t be enough to keep Milford’s unbeaten season alive. The sophomore got a quick takedown, but gave a point back. With 33 seconds left in the first period, Donis got the upper hand, got his opponent on his back, and heard the ref slap the mat for a meet-winning pin.

Milford pulled out the 41-39 victory, securing a perfect league campaign and a third straight outright Kelley-Rex division title.

“It’s always a good match, Milford coach PJ Boccia said about competing in the Hockomock League. “You never have an easy Wednesday match. To win the title outright, it’s great for these kids. They’ve put in the work. My juniors and seniors have been in the youth program all the way through, so for them to work together and that was a true team win there.”

The Hawks have faced some of the top programs in the state this season, but Boccia knew that Taunton was going to be the most difficult matchup that the Hawks had seen so far.

“I was a little more nervous,” Boccia admitted. “I know they’re having a great year and the way that the matchups fell I knew it was going to be a close one. We wrestled Shawsheen and Minnechaug and Lowell, and Taunton gave us the closest [meet] so far.”

Taunton was denied at least a share of its first wrestling title, but for head coach Adilson Galvao being in the race to win the Kelley-Rex crown for the second year in a row was a sign of the progress that the Tigers have made as a program.

“We’ve gone from zero wins and maybe 30 losses,” Galvao joked, “to always being in the title hunt in the Hockomock. For years we always pushed that you have to work in the offseason.” When asked if he thought there was a turning point on Wednesday, he added, “It was kind of how we planned it. We knew it was going to be close.”

The meet started at 170 and the Tigers made a lineup adjustment that helped put them in front early. Sean Donovan put the Hawks up first with a dominating 17-2 win, which he led almost from the first whistle. Taunton answered back with Elijah Prophete taking over at 182 and earning a second-round pin.

Ethan Harris, who normally wrestles at 182, was moved to 195 to face Milford’s Matt Donis. Harris led 2-0 after one and had a 5-0 lead in the second before an escape and takedown by Donis cut into the lead. A reversal with just eight seconds left in the period extended Harris’ lead to 7-3 heading to the third. Both wrestlers had an escape and takedown in the third and Taunton grabbed the three points.

Boccia said, “Our 195 has been on a tear and he wrestled him great, that’s one of their best wrestlers, and it’s Matt’s first year in the varsity lineup. Taunton winning at 182 and 195 was a win for them, a good decision on his part. Other than that it kind of went right around where we thought it would be.”

At 220, Logan Frank controlled his match from the outset, but then a flurry of moves ended in his earning a pin with just four ticks remaining in the second period.

Taunton was in front 15-5, but it was Milford’s turn to enter a strong portion of its lineup. Nebraska-commit Hampton Kaye-Kuter needed only 31 seconds to earn a pin at 285. At 106, Derek Marcolino continued the momentum when he got a pin with 11 seconds left in the second period, putting the Hawks up 17-15.

Milford’s roll continued at 113, as Aidan Baum got a pin a minute into the second. Robby Lyons made it four straight pins for the Hawks right at the end of the opening period of his match at 120. It quickly became five straight pins and a 35-15 lead when Mike Boulanger got a pin at 126 less than a minute into the match.

Now it was the Tigers who needed a spark, but they were about to bring some of their toughest wrestlers to the mat to try and produce a comeback.

At 132, Xavier Sandoval continued his impressive season with a pin 1:09 into the match. Anthony Vieira came out intent to do the same at 138, leading 7-0 after the first period, but it took another 1:40 before he finally ended his match and secured the six points. Ben Mandeville followed by pinning his opponent with 20 seconds left in the first period at 145.

The Tigers trailed just 35-33 with two matches remaining. John Mandeville stepped onto the mat with the mindset of not settling for three points. He came close to getting a pin at several points in the first, but had to wait with a 9-0 lead. A quick takedown in the second, turned into a pin that gave Taunton the four-point edge.

Galvao explained, “The kids that got all those pins in row, that’s just experience. We kind of knew that was our strongest part of the lineup, so that just came down to experience.”

It was a dual meet that didn’t seem to have a turning point. Most of the favorites did exactly what was expected of them and got the max points. Donis was no exception at 160, as he sealed the win for the Hawks by earning the team’s sixth pin of the night.

With Taunton producing teams capable of winning titles, Milford turning into a perennial power, Sharon winning the Davenport, and the traditional powers like Foxboro, North Attleboro, and Franklin, Galvao praised the depth of the league for preparing teams to meet tough challenges.

“Last year we had four or five teams winning sectional titles,” he said, “and I feel like every team we’ve wrestled in the Hock, whether we think they’re having a down year, a down year is still a good year for them. It helps our team get ready for the state tournament.

Milford (18-0) will host a tri-meet with Algonquin and Hopkinton on Saturday. Taunton (12-2) will travel to Sandwich for a quad meet this weekend before closing out league play with a visit from North Attleboro.

Click here for a photo gallery from this game.

Player of the Week: Victor Romeiro, OA Wrestling

Victor Romeiro
 
By HockomockSports.com Staff

Oliver Ames senior Victor Romeiro has been selected as the HockomockSports.com Player of the Week, presented by Morse Insurance, for Jan. 9 through Jan. 15. Romeiro is the 16th player chosen as Player of the Week for the 2022-23 school year and fourth in the winter season.

Romeiro continued his outstanding senior season with a big week for the Tigers. Wrestling at 126, he went 4-0 overall and earned a gold medal at the 2023 Kieron Smith Memorial Tournament (held in honor of the former Monty Tech coach). He picked up back-to-back pins to advance to the semifinals, where he won by major decision (10-1). In the final, he pinned Southwick’s Isiah Wood at 2:50 to claim the individual title. For the season, Romeiro is 10-1 overall with seven pins and three major decisions. OA stayed one back of Sharon in the Davenport standings with two league dual meets remaining, and the Tigers have now won seven of their nine dual meets in 2023.

“Victor has been on a mission this season,” said Oliver Ames head coach John McKeon. “Since getting healthy, he has been making up for lost time, scoring points for his team in bunches and getting quick pins. This weekend’s tournament win is hopefully just the beginning, as Victor has put in a lot of hard work to be successful, and it’s exciting to see it pay off.”

OA won two of three matches at the Sandwich quad meet heading into the week and on Wednesday earned its second win of the league season by beating Stoughton 48-28. In the win over the Black Knights, Romeiro secured a pinfall victory in 1:06. Over the weekend, the Tigers won all four of their matchups, including close battles against Milton and Norwood. Romeiro was at the heart of all OA’s success, winning all five of his individual matches, including four pins.

The Player of the Week, presented by Morse Insurance, is selected by the HockomockSports.com staff. Nominations can be submitted throughout the week up until Saturday night at midnight. There may be a poll posted on every Sunday with the nominations. The results of the poll influence the selection but do not strictly dictate the decision.

Victor Romeiro
Victor Romeiro The Player of the Week, presented by Morse Insurance, is selected by the HockomockSports.com staff. Nominations can be submitted throughout the week up until Saturday night at midnight. There may be a poll posted on every Sunday with the nominations. The results of the poll influence the selection but do not strictly dictate the decision. Victor Romeiro The Player of the Week, presented by Morse Insurance, is selected by the HockomockSports.com staff. Nominations can be submitted throughout the week up until Saturday night at midnight. There may be a poll posted on every Sunday with the nominations. The results of the poll influence the selection but do not strictly dictate the decision. Victor Romeiro The Player of the Week, presented by Morse Insurance, is selected by the HockomockSports.com staff. Nominations can be submitted throughout the week up until Saturday night at midnight. There may be a poll posted on every Sunday with the nominations. The results of the poll influence the selection but do not strictly dictate the decision. Victor Romeiro The Player of the Week, presented by Morse Insurance, is selected by the HockomockSports.com staff. Nominations can be submitted throughout the week up until Saturday night at midnight. There may be a poll posted on every Sunday with the nominations. The results of the poll influence the selection but do not strictly dictate the decision. Victor Romeiro The Player of the Week, presented by Morse Insurance, is selected by the HockomockSports.com staff. Nominations can be submitted throughout the week up until Saturday night at midnight. There may be a poll posted on every Sunday with the nominations. The results of the poll influence the selection but do not strictly dictate the decision. Victor Romeiro The Player of the Week, presented by Morse Insurance, is selected by the HockomockSports.com staff. Nominations can be submitted throughout the week up until Saturday night at midnight. There may be a poll posted on every Sunday with the nominations. The results of the poll influence the selection but do not strictly dictate the decision. Victor Romeiro The Player of the Week, presented by Morse Insurance, is selected by the HockomockSports.com staff. Nominations can be submitted throughout the week up until Saturday night at midnight. There may be a poll posted on every Sunday with the nominations. The results of the poll influence the selection but do not strictly dictate the decision. Victor Romeiro The Player of the Week, presented by Morse Insurance, is selected by the HockomockSports.com staff. Nominations can be submitted throughout the week up until Saturday night at midnight. There may be a poll posted on every Sunday with the nominations. The results of the poll influence the selection but do not strictly dictate the decision.