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Three Qualify as Wrestling Finishes Fourth in EIWA Championhips

Jantzen, Rechul win individual titles, O’Donnel joins pair in qualifying for NCAA championships.

RECHULIGAN
Danielle Hobeika

Senior DAVID RECHUL (R), last year’s Most Outstanding Wrestler, won his second-straight individual EIWA title in the heavyweight with a come-from-behind victory in the final over Brown’s Bronson Lingamfelter.

Dawid Rechul will end his Harvard career as a two-time EIWA champion. With his first title, sophomore Jesse Jantzen’s reign has just begun.

Although defending team champion Harvard placed fourth at last weekend’s Eastern Intercollegiate Wrestling Association (EIWA) championships at Lehigh, Rechul, Jantzen and junior Pat O’Donnell qualified for the NCAA championships March 21-23 in Albany, N.Y.

Like last year, two Harvard wrestlers won their divisions, and one was named the tournament’s most outstanding wrestler.

Co-captain Rechul, last year’s Most Outstanding Wrestler, defended his heavyweight championship, while the top-seeded Jantzen, a sophomore, won the 149-lb. division, earning Most Outstanding Wrestler honors and the Sheridan Award for most falls. O’Donnell placed third at 165 lbs. to win a wild-card berth in the NCAAs.

Co-captain Kevin El-Hayek ended his career by finishing third in the 133-pound class, while juniors Reggie Lee (184 lbs.) and Robbie Griffin (157 lbs.) finished fourth and fifth, respectively.

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DIRTY JANTZEN

DIRTY JANTZEN

In one of the tournament’s most exciting matches, Rechul avenged a late February loss to Brown’s Bronson Lingamfelter, winning 6-5 in the heavyweight final to defend his title.

Rechul, seeded second, had lost to No. 1 Lingamfelter, 10-2, at Brown while bothered by a leg injury.

Now healthy, the smaller Rechul came back from an early takedown and 2-0 deficit to claim a 5-2 lead in the second period and hold on for the win.

“He wrestled the best he’s wrestled all year,” Harvard coach Jay Weiss said of Rechul.

En route to the championship, Rechul, a native of Poland, took down two-thirds of the U.S. military with victories over Army’s Brendon Devlin and Navy’s Steve Kovach. In defeating Lingamfelter, Rechul became only the third Harvard wrestler to win two consecutive EIWAs, following Joey Killar ’00 and Dustin DeNunzio ’99.

Jantzen’s final was as decisive as Rechul’s was exciting. When Jantzen faced Penn senior Joe Henson several weeks ago, he wrestled defensively to earn a 1-0 victory. Facing Henson again on Sunday, Jantzen showed little restraint, pinning his top ten-ranked opponent in 1:47.

If Jantzen gave Henson’s second seed a second thought, he certainly didn’t show it. Jantzen took him down, turned him, let him up, took him down again, turned him and pinned him.

“When I wrestled him a few weeks ago, I didn’t feel as good,” Janzten said. “[This time] I ended up a getting a throw on him when he was nearly out of bounds, so maybe he let up a bit. It was a combination of me feeling better and getting lucky.”

Jantzen’s victory in the finals came a day after he pinned semifinal opponent Jason Mercado of Brown in 1:26, recorded a 19-4 technical fall over Navy’s Pat Lukanich, and blanked Lehigh’s Troy Minarovic, 14-0.

“Jesse would have pinned [Minarovic], but the guy had rubber shoulders,” Weiss said. “He spent five miuntes of the seven minute match on his back.”

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