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Pahrump Valley wrestlers finish 9th at Chaparral Invitational

The ups and downs of sports were fully on display Friday and Saturday for the Pahrump Valley High School wrestling team at the Chaparral Invitational in Las Vegas.

On the up side, Tristan Maughan, Isaak Cruz and Coby Tillery combined to score 63 team points for the Trojans, who accumulated 106 to finish ninth in the 37-team tournament.

On the down side, Donnie Miller and Dylan Grossell, who each had wrestled for the first time this year a week earlier after coming back from a hernia and a shoulder injury, respectively, were back on the sidelines, and Dylan Wright suffered a dislocated shoulder in his opening bout while absorbing his first defeat after 26 victories.

Maughan finished second at 160 pounds, Cruz finished third at 145 and Tillery took fourth at 126, combining to go 13-4 over the weekend. But Maughan (26-4) was almost as impressive in his one loss, when he lost 7-6 to Benjamin Rowley of Enterprise, Utah, in the finals, as he was in his four victories.

The two took totally different paths to the final. Perhaps nobody in the field worked as hard as Maughan, who went the distance in three of his first four bouts, winning by four points each time: a 7-3 win over Coronado junior David Darlington, a 6-2 decision over senior Joshua Gurbutt of Cheyenne and a 4-0 triumph over Lincoln County junior Trevin Perkins. Mixed in was a pin in 3:16 over David Moore of Arbor View.

Meanwhile, Rowley (32-10) was crushing his competition. After a first-round bye, the senior won by fall three consecutive times, finishing off foes in 1:40, 1:08 and 1:26.

But the final was another story. Early on, Rowley took control with a takedown and near-fall points, giving him a 5-0 lead after the first period. But, starting on top in the second, Maughan recorded 2 near-fall points and then, after a Rowley escape, scored a takedown with 15 seconds left to go into the third trailing 6-4.

Another takedown 30 seconds in tied the bout, and with 55 seconds left Maughan allowed Rowley to escape. But he could not get that final takedown and settled for second place.

Meanwhile, the only Pahrump Valley wrestler to end the event with a win was Cruz. After two second-period falls and a seven-point decision, Cruz’s run in the main draw was ended by Coronado’a Andrew Olson in a 6-5 decision. He then rebounded to beat Enterprise’s Bryant Jimenez for the second time in the consolation semifinals to set up a third-place bout against Jimenez’s teammate, Steven Anzalone.

It was no contest. Cruz led 5-1 after one and 9-1 after two and coasted to a 12-2 victory.

“Normally, I just work what I always work — ankle pick, duck under, simple things that I like,” Cruz said. “Sometimes I go for a single leg, but I haven’t been on top of my game. I could have at least been in the finals but I played myself in the semifinals, and I almost played myself over here with the other Enterprise kid. So I think I beat myself more than anybody else beat me.”

Despite a 26-5 record, Cruz feels much the same way about his season as a whole.

“At least three of those losses could have been prevented,” he said. “It was myself beating me.”

Cruz did have another regret: He wanted a shot at Palo Verde senior Grey Garcia, who pinned Olson in the last second of the first period to win the title and improve to 36-6.

“I’m kind of upset that I didn’t get to wrestle against the Palo Verde kid, because I’ve heard he’s pretty good,” Cruz said. “Everyone else, I beat most of these kids before.”

And he’ll see the ones from Class 3A schools again in the Southern Region Championships on Feb. 1-2 at Moapa Valley High School.

“I’m ready,” he said. “I just need to fix my mentality and make sure I’m confident in what I do, and once I am confident, I’ll be able to dominate like I should.”

Tillery put on a solid performance in getting to the third-place bout at 126. He recorded four pins during the tournament, including in 2:45 against Tatum Pine of Palo Verde in the quarterfinals and in 2:26 over Wyatt Larsen of Enterprise in the consolation semifinals.

Tillery led Virgin Valley junior Austin Workman 7-2 after one period in the third-place bout, but Workman turned the tables in the second and came away with the fall in 2:49.

Meanwhile, Wright was watching all of that action from the sidelines after his Friday night injury. It came during the second period against Jeremiah Harrison of Cheyenne.

“I threw him and I put him on his back right away, but he slipped out, got on top, and cranked my shoulder behind my head,” Wright said. “He’s a really big kid, and he just cranked my shoulder behind my head and dislocated it. I felt it pop. It’s not the first time I’ve dislocated a shoulder, so I knew what it felt like. And it hurt.”

Now technically 26-2 after having to forfeit his first consolation bout, Wright is optimistic he won’t be sidelined for long, aiming to be back tonight for the Senior Night match against Western.

“Hopefully I can wrestle Wednesday at home,” he said. “It’s bad, but I just need to strengthen it a little bit.”

Otherwise, it was a mixed bag for the Trojans. Garrett Cosper recorded three consecutive pins in the consolation bracket and wound up in sixth place at 113, while Henry Amaya won by fall twice and was eliminated 16-14 in sudden-victory overtime by Alex Sullivan of Western. Both split their bouts at Chaparral, as did Spencer Lane, who recorded two pins at 138, and Armani McGhee, who went 2-2 at 285.

The Trojans wrap up the regular season at 6 p.m. tonight against Sunset League rival Western at home.

Contact Sports Editor Tom Rysinski at trysinski@pvtimes.com On Twitter:@PVTimesSports

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