In response to:
Poster: usawks1
Subject: Re: Upsets???
To the not so casual fan, Pete Tapia over Kyle Detmer is one of the biggest upsets this year!
Mr. USAWKS,
You are right...Detmer was very "upset" after being defeated rather solidly by Tapia 5-0.
The hype of this site about the "untouchables" seems to have gotten to Detmer's head. A couple of wrestlers like Flynn and Tapia however, were not buying it this weekend.
In the Semis, Flynn gave Detmer a run for his money putting Detmer to his back in the second period. Third period, Detmer sat on a 8-6 lead getting two stall warning, giving Flynn 1 point ending the match at 8-7.
The "untouchable", "upset" that his 34 straight pin streak was ended, decided to criticize Flynn for "Stalling and not wrestling" in the Wichita Eagle (See article below). Deter must have forgot he was the wrestler that received the two stall warnings, but he was probably still "upset" and didn't think through his comments before speaking.
Deter also let it be known on the wrestling floor that he was going to pin Tapia in the first period. It was rumored that he may have even made the predication on local T.V.
Pete Tapia, might have learned a thing or two from watching Flynn the day before. 1) The double under hook to a throw and the front quarter half to a pancake muscle move only works if you muscle back), and 2). Detmer is far from untouchable.
During the announcement for the finals, Detmer continued his self-aggrandizing as he stood in just his singlet and a �karate-kid� bandana flexing. (The 10 min flex show could have been his downfall by the way�lot of energy expended.)
The whistle blew, and the battle began. Detmer like a bull charge, Tapia backed. No he circled, and countered. Back and forth they went for the first period. Tapia escapes in the second, the crowd is getting into it. Tapia scores, the crowd is now really excited.
Third period, a look of desperation now falls on the face of the once cocky wrester. Detmer goes for his double unders, but Tapia passed him and takes him down (5-0). The crowd now on their feet (except for the "untouchable" fans) as Tapia rides out the last view seconds.
The match ends as Tapia holds up a single one finger.
The only upset here was Determs feelings. Folks that don't respect their opponents will fall to guys like Tapia. To the fans that spend more time reading this talk form and actually watching studs like Flynn and Tapia battle, will always be surprised when they come out on top.
Wichita Eagle -------------------
Carroll's huge lead looks tough to beat
Dylan Penka's 103-pound semifinal win starts run of six Eagles in finals.
BY JEFFREY LUTZ
The Wichita Eagle
G. Marc Benavidez/The Wichita Ea
Bishop Carroll wrestler Kyle Detmer, top, gets a hold on Lansing wrestler,Nick Flynn during their 152 weight class match at the 78th Annual KSHSAA 5A Wrestling State Championship in Hutchinson, Kan. Detmer defeated Flynn.
Class 5A wrestling results
HUTCHINSON - What has seemed inevitable since the start of the wrestling season appears only hours away from happening.
Bishop Carroll, nationally ranked and undefeated in tournaments and duals this season, looks as if it will keep its streak going in the most important tournament yet.
The Golden Eagles hold a commanding lead over Arkansas City after the first day of the Class 5A tournament at Hutchinson High.
Carroll hasn't mathematically wrapped it up, but it's virtually uncatchable. Six Eagles are in tonight's finals.
"It feels incredible," Carroll coach Darian Eshelman said. "It's the first time in my coaching career I've been in a position to win a state championship. It has been a very good season and we've just been very blessed throughout the year."
Eshelman said he felt more nervous this week than the rest of the season because the Eagles were battling injuries and illness, causing him to wonder how his team would perform.
His doubts were washed away, however, in the first semifinal match, when 103-pounder Dylan Penka scored an unlikely victory.
Penka trailed Nick Mancuso of St. Thomas Aquinas 5-0 in the second period. He was being controlled and seemingly headed toward defeat when he scored a two-point reverse then rolled up Mancuso for the win.
When the referee's hand slapped the mat, Eshelman leaped from his chair and raised both arms.
"Dylan's been putting in extra work since about June, just tons and tons of extra workouts," Eshelman said. "So when he pulled that out, I was so happy for him."
Former champions Jordan Keller (119 pounds), John Keller (125) and two-time champ Mitch Arnold (145) had easy paths to the finals.
Tyler Rosenhamer (160) scored a 2-1 semifinal victory over Arkansas City's Cameron Riojas, while 152-pounder Kyle Detmer, a defending champion, was tested for the first time this season.
Detmer had pinned his previous 34 opponents, including his first two on Friday. But after going ahead 6-1 on Lansing's Nick Flynn, Detmer's opponent in last year's 145-pound championship, Detmer was nearly pinned before pulling out an 8-7 win.
"I knew he was going to stall the whole time and not wrestle, and that's what he pretty much did," Detmer said. "That's what he did last year in the finals, just a defensive match trying not to get pinned."
Detmer's coach saw it differently.
"He really wanted to make it through the whole year pinning everybody," Eshelman said of Detmer. "In that match he kept doing things that were more dangerous to try and get to the pin.
"But (Flynn) was up to the challenge. He was on fire, he was coming after us. He was wrestling a great match. Those things put together caused it to be a very big scare to us."
� Valley Center had four wrestlers reach the semifinals and three advanced -- sophomores Chase Nitcher (119) and Cade Blair (135) and senior Seth Mertins (130).
Hornets coach Brian Shelton saw it as a pleasant surprise to put three in the finals.
"I think Chase and Seth, we had a good idea they'd at least be in the semis," Shelton said. "Cade Blair, he really had three upsets. But the goal (tomorrow) is to go out and win."
� Arkansas City's Trison Graham and Hutchinson's Romero Cotton, each aiming for fourth consecutive titles, got through Friday unscathed.
Graham scored two pins at 130 pounds before pulling out an 11-2 decision over Carroll's Jake Mainz in the semis.
Graham wrestled with an elaborate facemask after taking an inadvertent headbutt in practice last week. The stitches he received above his left eye fell out.
"You can get a little meaner with it because they can't touch your face," Graham said. "But it impairs your vision and puts a lot of extra weight on your head and it's just awkward."
Cotton, a 189-pounder, also had pins in his first two matches, then beat Jerry Cox of Kansas City Sumner 19-7. Cotton is vying to become the first Kansas athlete to win four football and wrestling state titles.
"The first two guys didn't really come out and try to wrestle," Cotton said. "(Cox) didn't either, he just wanted to see how close he could get it."
� Kapaun Mount Carmel advanced four into the semifinals, but only 135-pounder Joe Hagan reached the finals. He faces Blair in today's championship.