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Wrestling Team Inducted: 2005 - Graduated: 1981
High schoolwrestling as a spectator sport?No, that’s not amisprint. Not back in its heyday in Rockland County, when fans with diehard allegiances swarmed gyms to watch young warriors in headgear and unitards match brains and brawn in this most physically demanding sport. Anyone involved in the scholastic sports scene in the late 1970s and early 1980s can well remember the intensity of these highstakes square-offs. In the winter of 1980-81, Rockland County wrestling was in a halcyon era. Perennial dreadnought Suffern, coached by Bill White, set a gold standard that other squads strove to attain. Legitimate challenges were mounted by the likes of Tappan Zee, under Gibby Sweet, Ramapo, piloted by Tom Canty, Nanuet, led by fourth-year coach Rich Conklin, Pearl River under Julie D’Agostino, and North Rockland under Don Daniels, among others. Out of that barrel of contenders emerged the Golden Knights of Nanuet, who posted a 12-1 dual-meet record – their only loss a 28-21 decision to Minisink Valley in the first match of the season. The Knights routed solid teams like New Paltz, Rye and Sleepy Hollow. Nanuet has had many successful wrestling teams over the years, but none could match the 1980-81 edition for sheer competitive drive and tenacity. “With the spirit of these Nanuet kids, their demeanor toward competition raised us to a level where we were able to compete with the best programs in the state consistently,” Conklin says. “You didn’t have to do anything to motivate them. Just put a challenge in front of them, give thema goal, and they could push each other.” The stiffest challenge to Conklin’smatmen came during a six-day stretch in February 1981 when they faced a murderer’s row of Tappan Zee, Suffern and Ramapo. Those three matches “defined the character of the team,” according to Conklin. Nanuet got rolling with a 37-19 victory over host TZ, spearheaded by Bob Judge’s pin at 141 pounds. Judge, the Section 9 champion that season, pinned Greg Kessaris (a future head wrestling coach at TZ) to give the Knights an insurmountable 24-10 advantage. Four days later came the showdown that wrestling aficionados are still talking about today. The Suffern gymhad been a chamber of horrors for opponents: the Mounties were riding a 37-match win streak in dualmeets andwere the three-time defendingRCPSAL titleholders. Anyone who set foot on their turf would not only have to leave blood, sweat and tears on the mats; they would somehow have to overcome the vaunted Suffernmystique as well. Close to 3,000 onlookers shoehorned into the Suffern lair. Fans were literally sitting on the basketball rims. The gym floor and stands were a sea of spectators from all over the county. There were so many bodies that the Suffern Fire Department had to close the gym. Accounts from that evening estimated the gym temperature as high as 105 degrees. Suffern kept things hot for Nanuet by crackling out of the starting gate and taking a commanding 20-3 lead after six matches. However,Nanuet then won three straight bouts to get right back in contention. Pat Harris gave the team a big motivational lift with a 17-8 major decision over Jeff Mazza, a Suffern captain, at 135 lbs. Bob Judge followed quickly with a 27-second pin of Anthony Guccione at 141, and Scott Sahlstrom, at 148, came from behind and pinned Jim Dunnigan with just 16 seconds left in regulation. Now Nanuet trailed by just one, 20-19. Heading into the climactic heavyweight match, the teams were tied, 25-25. At this point Nanuet pulled off a psychological ploy to unnerve Suffern. In the Tappan Zee match, Steve Bailey had wrestled at heavyweight and won. Nanuet had circulated a rumor that Eric Lewis was injured. At the Suffern weigh-in, Lewis was weighed in for 180 lbs. but also qualified for heavyweight. Suffern expected to see Bailey at heavyweight and was caught off guard when Lewis stepped on the mat to face Ken Donohue. Heading into the third period, Lewis held a tenuous 4-3 edge. Starting from the bottom position, Lewis scored a reversal for two points. Donohue then escaped to make it 6-4, but Lewis maneuvered a takedown for a four-point cushion. Referee Spike Israel assessed a penalty point inDonohue’s favor to close the deficit to three, but Lewis managed an escape in the waning seconds to clinch an 8-6 victory. Final score: Nanuet 28, Suffern 25. Goodbye, 37- match win streak. A watershed moment in Nanuet wrestling history. And bedlam among the Golden Knights faithful. “It was one of the greatest single high school wrestling events I’ve ever been a part of,” Conklin says. “In my 35 years in the sport, I’ve never seen anything quite like that level of intensity. And I’ve never seen 3,000 people in one place for a wrestling match!” Two days later, still riding the adrenaline rush of toppling a Mount Rushmore in Rockland wrestling, Nanuet posted an emphatic 38-17 triumph over Ramapo to complete the dual-meet trifecta. The Knights went on to take second at the Rockland County championship tournament –Nanuet’s highest finish in the County meet – with six finalists, and 11 wrestlers out of 14 finishing in the top four. Other impressive numbers:Out of 14wrestlers in the varsity lineup, 12 had winning records, and the two who did not were just two victories shy of .500. Additionally,Nanuet wrestlers recorded 34 pins in RCPSAL dual meets and were pinned just twice; overall in dual meets, they notched 53 pins and were pinned only six times. “These were old-fashioned, throwback, hard-nosed kids,” Conklin recalls. “One characteristic that separated this team from most wrestling teams was the killer instinct. They knew how to go for the jugular vein. Each kid knew his own personal role, took on the personal challenge and still kept his team responsibility to get the job done.” The team’s lineup consisted of the following wrestlers: 94 lbs., Tom McCormick; 101, Paul DeEntremont; 108, Steve Gentile; 115, Eric Schulte; 122, Tim Harris; 129, Tom Quaglia; 135, Pat Harris or Joe Mellia; 141, Bob Judge; 148, Scott Sahlstrom; 158, JimLong or JimO’Connor; 170, Paul Hannon or Joe Munnelly; 180, Eric Lewis or Tony Sedotto; heavyweight, Steven Bailey. Conklin was assisted by Mike Achille. |