Two Housatonic wrestlers qualify for New England tournament

FALLS VILLAGE — Housatonic seniors Sam Schwartz and Brad Visconti each won four matches at the Connecticut State Open Championships in New Haven last weekend. The four wins coupled with a pair of losses gave each wrestler a fourth-place finish and a trip to this weekend’s New England Championships.

Schwartz defeated Andrew Nederlof of Staples, Danny Thompson of Bacon Academy and John Millaras of Waterford in route to the consolation semifinals. Schwartz’ reversal late in the third period gave him an 8-7 victory over Class L champion Oleg Mironchenko of Woodstock Academy in the consolation semifinals. The win marked the second time this year Schwartz has defeated Mironchenko. Shane Sullivan of Ledyard proved too much for Schwartz in the consolation finals, his second loss of the weekend to Sullivan.

Visconti defeated James Queiros of Wethersfield, Dan Thompson of Xavier, Matt Rahman of Platt and Shane Duplice of Waterford. Visconti lost a close 7-5 match to class M champion Zach Fleming of Windham in the quarterfinals and also lost to class L champ Sean O’Connell of Farmington in the consolation finals. Visconti’s best match of the weekend was versus Duplice, when he erased a second-period deficit and pinned him with a minute to go in the match.

The duo’s accomplishments mark the first time Housatonic has sent two wrestlers to the New Englands. Mike Spadaccini of North Canaan made the trip in 1989-90 and was an open finalist both years, winning it in 1990. He also finished second in New England both years.

Housatonic finished 18th out of the 85 teams that sent at least one wrestler to the open and placed higher than any other Berkshire League team. Housatonic’s nine wins are the most ever in a state open by a Housatonic team.

Freshman Steven Wingard pinned Cam Gonzalez of Class L Fitch to help Housatonic boost their standings.

Despite excellent efforts by Ben Schwartz and Dominic Ghi, each suffered two hard-fought losses. Ghi lost to eventual champion Rob Ferrante from Shelton in the first round, despite a 2-0 lead at the end of the first period.

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