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Return to the top: Connellsville battles its way to 8th WPIAL wrestling title and first since 2008

By Rob Burchianti 8 min read
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ConnellsvilleĢƵ wrestling team poses with the WPIAL Class AAA championship trophy and plenty of HersheyĢƵ chocolate bars after the Falcons defeated Trinity, 33-32, at Peters Township High SchoolĢƵ AHN Arena Saturday. Connellsville also advanced to the PIAA tournament in Hershey.
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ConnellsvilleĢƵ Nicholas Rohal rejoices after defeating TrinityĢƵ Cael Nicolella, 4-2 in overtime, in the 172-pound bout of the WPIAL Class AAA championship match at Peters Township High SchoolĢƵ AHN Arena Saturday.
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ConnellsvilleĢƵ Nolan Rice battles TrinityĢƵ Jacob Wright in the 114-pound bout of the WPIAL Class AAA championship match at Peters Township High SchoolĢƵ AHN Arena Saturday. Rice won a 7-4 decision that clinched the championship for the Falcons. Rice also won the clinching match in ConnellsvilleĢƵ 31-28 win over Franklin Regional in the semifinals.
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Connellsvilles Tommy Gretz gets a leg up on TrinityĢƵ Mickey Horne in the 107-pound bout of the WPIAL Class AAA championship match at Peters Township High SchoolĢƵ AHN Arena Saturday. Gretz built a 10-3 lead before winning by fall at 4:33.
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Lonzy Vielma from Connellsville rolls his opponent on his back before registering a pin at 160 during WPIAL Class AAA team championship action.
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Connellsville coach Bill Swink signals to one of his wrestlers during the WPIAL Class AAA championship match against Trinity at Peters Township High SchoolĢƵ AHN Arena Saturday. Swink guided the Falcons to their eighth WPIAL title and first since 2008 with a 33-32 victory over Trinity.
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ConnellsvilleĢƵ Tyler Gallis works from the top against Trinity's Jase Banco in the 285-pound bout of the WPIAL Class AAA championship match at Peters Township High SchoolĢƵ AHN Arena Saturday. Gallis won a 7-3 decision as the Falcons defeated the Hillers, 33-32.

McMURRAY – The wait for eight is over.

ConnellsvilleĢƵ wrestling team had been sitting on seven WPIAL titles since 2008, but ended that drought Saturday at Peters Township High SchoolĢƵ AHN Arena.

The Falcons downed two previously unbeaten teams in Franklin Regional, 31-28, in the semifinals, and Trinity, 33-32, in the final, to earn their eighth WPIAL Class AAA championship trophy.

“Everybody did their part,” said Connellsville junior Lonzy Vielma, who recorded a pin in both matches to help propel his team to the title. “I’m really proud of the teamĢƵ overall effort.”

“We knew it was going to be a battle,” Falcons coach Bill Swink said. “They’re both quality programs. Both have a lot of history and are well coached.”

Falcons freshman Nolan Rice provided the clinching points in both victories.

Connellsville (13-2) advances to the PIAA tournament in Hershey with its opening match set for Thursday. Mount Pleasant also qualified for the state tournament in Class AA.

The Falcons had come close to the elusive eighth title the past two years, finishing as runner-up in 2022 and fourth in 2023.

“ItĢƵ good to get over the hump,” said a joyous Vielma.

VielmaĢƵ pin of Jackson Burckner in the 160-pound bout against Trinity, which came at 3:09 after he built a 12-3 advantage, gave Connellsville an 18-16 lead following a pin by the Hillers’ Thomas Allison of junior Kolten Turek in 4:52 at 152.

“ItĢƵ hard to wrestle someone when they’re not really wrestling back, but I was able to get the pin and get the momentum back,” Vielma said.

Nicholas Rohal, the Falcons’ lone senior, then stepped up to record a key win at 172.

Rohal trailed 2-0 before recording a takedown of Cael Nicolella in the final seconds to knot the score and force overtime.

“I definitely didn’t want to give up there,” Rohal said. “I kept looking over to my coaches. They were all pointing to their hearts, and I knew I needed to push it, push it, push it.”

In sudden victory, Rohal got around Nicolella for the winning two points to secure a 4-2 win and three precious points in a bout he almost couldn’t finish when he suffered a first-period nosebleed.

“I’ve never had a nosebleed before,” Rohal said. “We headbutted and then it just started pouring out after that.”

The gutsy performance is one Rohal admitted he’ll never forget.

“It really does feel phenomenal doing that, knowing itĢƵ my last year,” Rohal said.

RohalĢƵ win gave Connellsville a 21-16 lead, but the Hillers (11-1) rallied to go up 26-21 after Bodie MorganĢƵ pin of sophomore Cooper Lembo in 3:07 at 189 and Robbie AllisonĢƵ 11-1 major decision over junior Chris Cook at 215.

In another important bout, junior Tyler Gallis fought off Jase Banco for a 7-3 decision at 285 to pull Connellsville within two. The match was tied 2-2 after two periods, but Gallis seized control in the final two minutes.

“We thought we could do what we did in the third period the whole time and we didn’t get it going,” Swink said. “I was glad he started that, went with his underhooks and was able to score out of them.

“RohalĢƵ match was big. We knew when we lost the toss they were going to bump their whole lineup at the top there. We were hoping we could get two of those matches from 172 to heavyweight (285) and thatĢƵ what we did.”

Freshman Tommy Gretz put the Falcons ahead to stay with a pin of Mickey Horne at 107. Gretz fashioned leads of 4-1 after one period, 8-2 after two and pushed his advantage up to 10-3 before finally recording the fall at 4:33 to make it 30-26.

Connellsville needed a win by Rice at 114 against Jacob Wright, TrinityĢƵ hero in its 27-26 semifinal victory over Bethel Park with a decision in the final bout, to wrap up the title.

Rice delivered, building leads of 5-0 and 7-2 before an injury timeout was called while he was up 7-3 with 1:17 left. Rice hung on for a 7-4 decision and the Falcons had the title.

“When he took the injury time (with 1:17 left) I told him just finish the match,” Swink said. “We felt good about 107 and 114. We wanted to get bonus points in one of them.”

Connellsville forfeited the final bout at 121 to set the final score.

“Knowing you came so close hurts,” Trinity coach Ron Tarquinio said. “We had one match go a different way or we would have wrestled that match rather than get a forfeit. Everyone is disappointed and they should be because our goal is first place. But, we get to move on and experience another week as a team.”

The teams split the first four bouts which led to a 12-10 Connellsville lead.

Trinity got a pin by Zane Garner over freshman Chase Sparks in 5:15 at 127 and a 15-5 major decision by Blake Reihner over junior Julian Ruggieri at 139.

The Falcons got pins by freshman Kai Vielma, over Devin Junko in 1:26 at 133, and junior Evan Petrovich, over Luke Poland in 2:32 at 145.

Swink commended Vielma, who also won a key 4-2 decision over Franklin Regional 2023 PIAA medalist Tyler Kapusta in the semifinals.

“Kai is a different kid. He grinds everyday and he never gets rattled,” Swink said. “As long as he keeps doing that he’ll keep progressing.”

Connellsville didn’t have its usual flexibility in the lighter weights with sophomore Landon Lynn out of action.

“Landon Lynn, who has been our 114-pounder, has a concussion,” Swink explained. “He is cleared Monday to go, but he wasn’t cleared today.”

Swink looked back on a 28-25 loss at North Allegheny on Jan. 13 in the Connellsville Duals tournament as a possible turning point for the Falcons.

“Sometimes you need a loss. We were flat that day. We didn’t come out with much energy,” Swink said. “The three things we talk about are effort, energy and attitude. When one of them is not there you usually don’t have a good day.”

When asked if he was going to celebrate his teamĢƵ WPIAL championship, Swink said, “Not much celebration. Go have some dinner tonight and start getting ready for Hershey.”

As for how he is approaching the upcoming state tournament, Swink added, “Have three good days of practice, travel out there and keep doing what we’re doing, and hopefully get a little more healthier.”

Franklin Regional (19-1) earned the third seed in Class AAA with a 28-27 win over Bethel Park in the third-place consolation match. Only the top three advance to the state tournament in Class AAA.

Trinity trailed its semifinal match with Bethel Park, 26-23, heading into the final bout which Wright won on a 5-2 decision over Pierce Reinhart at 114, giving the Hillers the win on the tiebreaker of most matches won.

The Falcons defeated Franklin Regional, 31-28, in the semifinals with RiceĢƵ 5-2 decision over Titus Colangelo at 107 giving Connellsville an insurmountable 31-22 lead in the penultimate match.

The Falcons racked up 18 points on falls by Zachary Franks, over Sam Nassif in 2:42 at 121, Ruggieri, over Nico Samic in 5:12 at 139, and Lonzy Vielma, over Jordan Perks in 54 seconds at 160.

Petrovich earned a 14-1 major decision over Cohen Buccicone at 145, and Connellsville also got the 4-2 decision by Kai Vielma over Kapusta at 133 and a 4-1 decision by Gallis over Elisua Daugherty at 285. The Falcons forfeited the final match at 114 after clinching the victory.

Mount Pleasant, under first-year head coach Tommy Dolde, had already earned its spot in the PIAA tournament with a 37-31 win at Derry on Jan. 31 to advance to SaturdayĢƵ final four.

The Vikings (12-4), who finished first in Section 2-AA, will enter the state tournament as the fourth seed after falling to top-seeded Burgettstown in the semifinals, 56-15, and to Quaker Valley, 42-28, in the third-placed consolation match.

Mount Pleasant will wrestle in a PIAA preliminary round bout Monday at Fort LeBoeuf, the District 10 runner-up.

Mount PleasantĢƵ 15 points against the Blue Devils came on pins by Jamison Poklembo, over Billy Seibel in 41 seconds at 145, and Greg Shaulis, over Jason Murray in 47 seconds at 152, and Dylan PitzerĢƵ 6-0 decision over Joseph Baronick at 285.

Shaulis and Pitzer also won their matches against Quaker Valley, both by fall, while Poklembo (145) along with Stephen Predajna (160) won by forfeit. Shaulis pinned Jack Diemert in 1:44 at 152 and Pitzer pinned Chase Kretzler in 59 seconds at 285 to up his record to 30-0 on the season.

The Vikings other four points in the consolation bout came from Tristan Wtorkiewicz with a 15-6 major decision over Eoin Parnell at 127.

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