That pinning touch
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Bryce Alderton
Tasting a piece of the “pin” pie became routine for every Costa
Mesa High wrestler who faced an Estancia Eagle Thursday in a Golden
West League dual meet on the Estancia mats.
Five forfeits were the only points the Eagles scored against the
Mustangs, 13-3, 3-0 in league, in a 52-29 Mesa victory, taking back
the city title after Estancia won, 48-27 a year ago. All six Mustangs
who wrestled pinned their opponents, the quickest in just 31 seconds
by senior Mike Simonoff at 160 pounds.
Sophomore Joe Amburgey wrestled up from his usual 189 spot to 215
against Estancia senior Landon Pulizzi. Estancia didn’t have a
wrestler at 189, but Costa Mesa didn’t have one at 215, so Amburgey
moved up so he and Pulizzi could wrestle. The sophomore needed five
minutes after getting ahead, 20-6 in the third period, to pin
Pulizzi, who was only wrestling for the second time.
Mesa’s Adam Garcia pinned in 1:54 at 171 while junior Christian
Rivero (125) won in 3:55 over Estancia sophomore Cayley Carr, who
wrestled in place of senior Victor Carmona.
Carmona was sidelined with a hip bruise along with what Eagles’
Coach Steve Perez called “cauliflower ear.” The ear ailment occurs
when water and blood below the cartilage mix together and dry up,
causing pain.
Perez expects Carmona to return for the Eagles’ appearance at a
tournament in San Clemente this weekend.
First-year wrestler Sergio Cabrera (135) pinned his opponent in
1:57 and senior Jesse Franco (145) got one takedown for two points
before getting the fall in 41 seconds.
“I was really happy with (Cabrera),” said first-year Mesa Coach
Brett Shainfeld. “He was on the attack the whole time, being
aggressive. It’s great to see. Amburgey also wrestled well. Everyone
stepped up to the plate.”
Shainfeld didn’t plan on using the five wrestlers he held out
Thursday that included junior Silvio Estrada, who is 26-4 this
season. A CIF rule limits wrestlers to 40 matches before league
finals begin.
Estancia lost its third dual meet in a rebuilding season, Perez
said. Carmona is the team’s only senior.
“(Carmona) is the only varsity wrestler we have,” Perez said. “A
lot of my guys have to move up from frosh-soph and junior varsity to
wrestle at the varsity level. All my guys who should be wrestling
either didn’t have the grades or didn’t come out. But you have to
deal with it. It’s not something new.”
Carmona took second place in the 125’s in a tournament at
Northwood High in Irvine last weekend. He won on two pins and a major
decision before losing in the finals, 20-11, to an opponent from
Mission Viejo.
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