Six East County mat men and mat women earn place-finishes at state wrestling meet

Granite Hills Collin Guffey

The high school wrestling season has wrapped up for mat men and mat women in California following the 51st annual state championship for boys and 13th annual state championship for girls Feb. 29 to March 2 at Bakersfield’s Mechanics Arena.

Poway won the boys state team title – the fifth in Titan history — to halt a seven-year run by Buchanan High School while Walnut captured its first girls team championship.

Poway set new state records for most state place-winners (12) and highest team score (290.5 points).

“I’m really proud of these guys and our coaches,” Poway coach John Meyers said. “Not a lot of people see what goes on behind the scenes. No one sees what these kids have gone through — the discipline and dedication.”

The San Diego Section qualified 56 wrestlers for the boys tournament, including 12 from East County (10 from Granite Hills), and 42 wrestlers for the girls tournament (seven from East County — two each from Granite Hills and Santana).

The section’s final tally sheet featured 14 boys place-winners and 12 girls place-winners — six total from East County (four girls and two boys).

East County place-winners in the boys field included senior 165-pound champion Collin Guffey and senior 113-pounder Abram Cline (third place) from Granite Hills. East County girls place-finishers included Monte Vista’s Olivia Davis (140 pounds, second place), Granite Hills’ Lucia Ledezma (140 pounds, fourth place) and Kyli Stanley (130 pounds, eighth place) and Santana’s Amber Spencer (145 pounds, eighth place).

Buoyed by the two state medalists in the boys field, the Eagles (100.5 points) placed eighth as a team.

“It was a great tournament for our team,” Granite Hills coach Jesse Sheard underscored. “All of our boys and girls wrestled very hard. Placing eighth as a team was a huge accomplishment. Obviously, some didn’t get the results they wanted or achieve the goals they set, but every single one of them fought every match and never gave up. They all made me very proud.

“This senior group is a very special group to me. They were the ones who bought into what we were doing and trusted us. They laid the foundation for the future of Granite Hills wrestling. I love them all, wish them nothing but the best, and am really going to miss them.”

Alpine’s Guffey, the reigning poster boy for East County wrestling, finished 5-0 at the state meet to record a rare undefeated season at 51-0. He opened the three-day tournament with a 19-6 major decision over Rim of the World’s Roman Loya before pinning South’s Junior Bojorquez in 1:33 in the Round of 16.

The San Diego Section Division II and Masters champion pinned Pitman’s Brodie Johnson in 1:07 in the quarterfinals before topping Palm Desert’s David Alonso by an 8-0 major decision in the semifinals to continue to cut through the weight class.

Guffey, whose father and uncle both wrestled for Valhalla High School, remained dominant with a 3-0 shutout win over St. John Bosco’s Joseph Antonio in the championship round.

Alonso went on to place third in the field while Johnson placed eighth. The bracket started out with a Round of 64.

“Collin winning state was just an amazing experience,” Sheard said. “That kid has put in so much work and dedication to this sport, it was great to see it pay off for him. I’m saying it here now, he will be an NCAA champion. Last time we had a state champion was Aaron Gaeir in 1987.”

The long wait was certainly rewarded in Guffey’s case following a runner-up finish at last year’s state tournament.

Guffey’s 51-0 record includes 39 pins.

But Guffey wasn’t the only Eagle to shine in Bakersfield.

Cline also had a “great tournament,” according to Sheard.

Cline opened the tournament in the Round of 32 with a commanding 16-0 technical fall against Cypress’ Jimmy Romero, then re-corded a 9-0 major decision over De la Salle’s Caleb Tatad.

Things got excruciatingly tight for everyone left in the field.

Cline tip-toed past Merced’s Elijah Valencia by a slim 1-0 score in the quarterfinals. The Granite grappler met a familiar foe in the semifinals, Poway’s Edwin Sierra, who had previously shaded him by a 1-0 score in the section’s Division I finals and 4-1 at Masters.

Sierra won the rematch 2-1 to advance to the championship bout against Buchanan’s Rocklin Zinkin while Cline dropped to the consolation semifinals. Cline hunkered down to turn defeat into victory with a 2-0 decision over Clovis’ Thunder Lewis to advance to the medal round.

Lewis finished sixth in the weight class while Valencia was eighth.

“Watching him (Cline) grow the last couple years has been a fun journey,” the Granite Hills mat boss said. “No matter the situation you can always count on him to grind it out. He’s taken some tough losses in the semis the last two years but both times he didn’t let his emotions get the best of him. Instead, he used it as motivation to get third. That’s not a character trait you see much of these days.”

Poway had three state champions: G. Elias Navida (132 pounds), Angelo Posada (175 pounds) and Robert Platt (215 pounds).

Rancho Bernardo finished 40th in the team standings while Division III section champion Brawley was a distant 63rd.

Ledezma, a freshman, proved to be the wild card in her girls bracket.

“She was unranked going in, but definitely made a statement and put everyone on notice,” Sheard said. “The next three years with her is going to be fun.”

Kyli Stanley placed eighth. “She had a rough first-round match but fought through the consolations to place,” Sheard said. “She definitely showed a lot of heart.”

Section girls state champions included Poway’s Alejandra Valdiviezo (120 pounds) and Brawley’s Delarie Juarez (145 pounds).

Other section placers included LCC’s Alexandria Perez (second, 170 pounds), Poway’s Eden Hernandez (third, 110 pounds) and Xiomara Gallego (third, 115 pounds), Mira Mesa’s Birta MacCaskill (fourth, 115 pounds), Brawley’s Lauren Zaragoza (sixth, 120 pounds) and RBV’s Kayla Edwards (fourth, 135 pounds).