Freestyle wrestling icon vector. Female. Pictogram women sport. Logo. Match girls. Symbolic image is one of a series. Greco-Roman. Isolated.

Freestyle wrestling icon vector. Female. Pictogram women sport. Logo. Match girls. Symbolic image is one of a series. Greco-Roman. Isolated.

Girl wrestlers make history as first IHSA state qualifiers

Spread the love

By Steve Millar 
Correspondent

For Morton senior Karla Topete, Feb. 12 was a special day for a greater reason than just her winning a sectional wrestling championship.

Topete and her teammates competed at the Andrew Sectional, one of four sectionals that marked the start of the IHSA’s first individual girls wrestling state series.

For the first time, girls have a chance to compete against other girls for a state championship.

“It’s pretty exciting,” Topete said. “I’ve been wrestling since sixth grade and there was a time where there were no girls. So, aside from winning, just seeing all these girls is amazing.”

Topete (14-1), who pinned Oak Forest’s Sabrina Sifuentez in the 130-pound championship match, was one of three champions for Morton.

The Mustangs qualified nine wrestlers for the inaugural girls wrestling state meet, set for Feb. 25-26 at Grossinger Motors Arena in Bloomington.

There was no official team champion in the event, but Morton had the highest score in the unofficial team standings out of the 37 schools competing.

“I feel like a proud mom since I’m one of the co-captains,” Morton senior Jennifer Villagomez said. “I feel so proud of everyone that they wrestled so hard and didn’t give up.

“I try to help them at practice and tell them, ‘Oh, do this,’ and to see them do it in matches makes me feel so proud of everyone.”

Villagomez (14-1), who pinned Hillcrest’s Cha`Anna Kassim in the finals at 110 pounds, said she was not able to qualify for the girls state finals held by the Illinois Wrestling Coaches and Officials Association in previous years, so she was thrilled to break through in her final high school season.

“I felt like this year I was ready to come forward after so many hard practices,” she said. “I feel like it was all worth it. It feels very exciting.”

Morton junior Leilany De Leon said she dealt with a lot of anxiety throughout the day, but it did not show in her results.

De Leon (10-2) pinned all three of her opponents, including Kankakee’s Estefany Mendez in the 120-pound championship match.

“I get so nervous,” De Leon said. “I was late for my last match because my coach had to talk to me to calm me down. He said, ‘It doesn’t matter, you’re already going to state, just try your best and have fun.’ Also, I didn’t want to lose.

“This is history. I still can’t believe it.”

Also qualifying for state for Morton were Ximena Juarez (2nd at 125), Neida Arreola (3rd at 115), Diana Rodriguez (3rd at 190), Aseel Jadallah (3rd at heavyweight), Paris Flores (4th at 100) and Faith Comas (4th at 135).

The Andrew co-op team qualified six wrestlers for state. Four of them are Andrew students, but two go to the other District 230 schools.

Stagg sophomore Ava McGuire (5-7) finished second at 145, pinning Joselin Rodriguez from Back of the Yards in the semifinals to clinch her spot at state.

Sandburg freshman Emma Akpan (14-6) also was a runner-up, at 170. She had two pins, including one over Homewood-Flossmoor’s Madison Skowronski in the semifinals.

Evergreen Park junior Elliana Balderrama (11-5) bounced back from a loss in the semifinals at 155 to pin her final two opponents at finish third.

In the consolation semifinals — also known as the “blood round” as winners clinch their spot at state and losers are eliminated — Balderrama needed just 16 seconds to pin Back of the Yards’ Rachael Villegas.

“I just used heavy hands and threw her down, got it over,” Balderrama said. “It was a big relief. I knew I had to get the job done.

“This means literally everything. I love the sport. I’m a first-year wrestler and this has given me so many opportunities. I love going out there by myself and putting it all on there on the mat.”

Riverside-Brookfield sophomore Eleanor Aphay (17-7) also came through with a pin in the blood round, defeating Oak Park-River Forest’s Maria Diaz to clinch her spot at state. Aphay finished fourth.

“It feels amazing, especially for my first year wrestling to make it to state,” she said. “It feels like a big accomplishment.”

Mother McAuley’s Maggie Summer, St. Laurence’s Christel Rodriguez and Marist’s Reese O’Keefe all made it to the blood round, but fell one win short of qualifying for state.

Rodriguez and O’Keefe each had to win just one match to reach that round.

Zumer, a freshman competing in a 13-wrestler bracket at 125, had three pins but got pinned by Lincoln-Way Central’s Ashley Villa in the blood round.

Still, it was a memorable day.

“It’s amazing,” Zumer said. “All the girls wrestling, it’s such a great experience. You see all these girls who are just like you doing their best. It’s always so cool with the competitiveness but also the sportsmanship that people might not always see.”

Local News

GSWNH_KeithThornton_021122

Mayor ‘out of control,’ hero says

Spread the love

Spread the lovePolice ranks ‘thousands’ short, dispatcher tells Scottsdale  By Tim Hadac It’s not every day that a City worker has the courage to attend a public meeting and call a mayor “out of control.” But Keith A. Thornton Jr. did exactly that earlier this week on the Southwest Side. A 911 dispatcher hailed as…

GSWNH_FrontPageBottom_021122

Rockie is the new kid on the block

Spread the love

Spread the love While some folks see heavy snowfall and curse the skies, children across the Southwest Side seemed thrilled with last week’s winter windfall. Schools cancelled classes, and kids like 9-year-old Rosie Arroyo showed her creativity by working with her father, Raul, to build a snowman in front of their home near 49th and…

Brother May

Brother Robert May, St. Laurence Hall of Famer

Spread the love

Spread the loveBy Tim Hadac Brother Robert Liguori May, C.F.C. was an Edmund Rice Christian Brother for 70 years, but he was best known for his 26 years of service at St. Laurence High School. Brother May died Jan. 30 at age 87. He was an active member of the St. Laurence community from 1978…

Cook County Assessor Fritz Kaegi

Kaegi, legislators, advocates unveil affordable housing initiative

Spread the love

Spread the loveFrom staff reports Cook County Assessor Fritz Kaegi was joined by state legislators and affordable housing advocates earlier this week to launch the Affordable Housing Special Assessment Program, a new form of property tax relief recently signed into law. Kaegi worked with legislative partners who passed the law last spring, including State Sens.…

GSWNH_Dibs15thWard_021122

Lopez nixes dibs

Spread the love

Spread the love While calling dibs on parking spaces in the winter is an informal tradition in the city, 15th Ward Ald. Raymond Lopez recently reminded his constituents in Back of the Yards, Brighton Park, Gage Park and West Englewood that no one may call dibs indefinitely. He instructed his Streets and Sanitation ward superintendent…

It’s not every day that a child can ride a flying elephant, but this boy and girl appeared to do exactly that at the 25th Annual St. Daniel the Prophet Parish’s Summerfest back in 2017. --File photo

St. Dan’s Summerfest to return

Spread the love

Spread the lovePopular event was gone for several years By Tim Hadac Details are just starting to emerge, but it looks like St. Daniel the Prophet Parish’s Summerfest will return in 2022, after an absence of several years. The family-focused event is set for Thursday, June 16 through Sunday, June 19 on parish grounds at…

Joan Hadac

Skating is winter’s silver lining

Spread the love

Spread the loveBy Joan Hadac Your correspondent in Clearing and Garfield Ridge (708) 496-0265 • joan.hadac@gmail.com Hi everyone. As I write this, snowmageddon is raging outside. I’m not sure how many inches we have as of yet, or how many we will end up with; but I hope by the time you read this, we are…

Cook County Treasurer Maria Pappas

Property tax bills due soon, Pappas says

Spread the love

Spread the loveFrom staff reports Cook County Treasurer Maria Pappas recently mailed nearly 1.8 million Tax Year 2021 First Installment property tax bills. Payments are due March 1, 2022. The First Installment is 55% of the previous year’s total tax. Exemptions that can reduce a property owner’s taxes are applied to the Second Installment bill.…

CRRNH_IrishParade_090821

Marchers welcome in St. Patrick’s Day parade

Spread the love

Spread the loveBy Tim Hadac Southwest Side organizations are welcome to march in the community’s annual St. Patrick’s Day parade, set for Saturday, March 12. It is anticipated that local schools, churches, Scout troops, youth athletic associations and others will have units in the parade. Units will have to register in advance with parade organizers.…

GSWNH_Troop1441SundayMass_021122

Scout Sunday at St. Mary Star of the Sea

Spread the love

Spread the love Members of Boy Scout Troop 1441, sponsored by the St. Mary Star of the Sea Holy Name Society, as well as their families, attended Mass last weekend at St. Mary’s on what is traditionally Scout Sunday in churches across America. It also signals the start of a month of celebration in recognition…

Neighbors

Pritzker signs bill creating new Department of Early Childhood

Pritzker signs bill creating new Department of Early Childhood

By PETER HANCOCK Capitol News Illinois phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – Gov. JB Pritzker signed legislation Tuesday creating a new cabinet-level state agency dedicated to early childhood education and development. The new Department of Early Childhood, which will become operational in July 2026, will take over programs currently housed across three state agencies, including funding for preschool…

Speaker Welch rebuffs lawsuit from would-be staff union as ‘forum shopping’

Speaker Welch rebuffs lawsuit from would-be staff union as ‘forum shopping’

By HANNAH MEISEL Capitol News Illinois hmeisel@capitolnewsillinois.com Illinois House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch is urging a Cook County judge to dismiss a lawsuit members of his staff filed against him last month seeking to force recognition of their union. In a new filing Monday, attorneys for Welch argued the Illinois Legislative Staff Association has no…

Advocates say SCOTUS ruling paves way for law ensuring abusers have guns confiscated

Advocates say SCOTUS ruling paves way for law ensuring abusers have guns confiscated

By HANNAH MEISEL Capitol News Illinois hmeisel@capitolnewsillinois.com After the U.S. Supreme Court last week upheld a federal law that bars those under domestic violence-related restraining orders from owning guns, victim advocates say Illinois lawmakers should pass a measure to ensure firearms are actually confiscated in those situations. The legislation has been stalled for more than…

Communities, commission push Pritzker admin for more prison plan details

Communities, commission push Pritzker admin for more prison plan details

By DILPREET RAJU Capitol News Illinois news@capitolnewsillinois.com Jimmy Soto spent more than 42 years wrongfully imprisoned in Illinois Department of Corrections facilities. In 2020, he was moved to the “F-House” at Stateville Correctional Center in Joliet, a condemned unit, not because he was being punished, but because it was where the facility was housing individuals…

Elections board urged to dismiss complaint that Bailey illegally coordinated in 2022 campaign

Elections board urged to dismiss complaint that Bailey illegally coordinated in 2022 campaign

By HANNAH MEISEL Capitol News Illinois hmeisel@capitolnewsillinois.com A hearing officer is recommending the Illinois State Board of Elections dismiss a complaint that alleged conservative radio host and political operative Dan Proft illegally coordinated with former Republican state Sen. Darren Bailey during his 2022 campaign for governor. Proft, a one-time gubernatorial candidate himself, is behind an…

State highway shootings decline as critics sue over ‘dragnet surveillance’

State highway shootings decline as critics sue over ‘dragnet surveillance’

By JERRY NOWICKI Capitol News Illinois jnowicki@capitolnewsillinois.com Illinois State Police say an automated license plate reader program has helped the agency identify witnesses or suspects in 82 percent of highway shooting cases this year, including all eight that resulted in a death.  But as the state looks to further expand its network of more than…

Just weeks before Republican National Convention, Illinois GOP chair announces resignation

Just weeks before Republican National Convention, Illinois GOP chair announces resignation

By HANNAH MEISEL Capitol News Illinois hmeisel@capitolnewsillinois.com Halfway through the 2024 election cycle and just a few weeks away from the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, Illinois GOP Chair Don Tracy on Wednesday announced his resignation as head of the state Republican Party. Tracy, who’d held the job since February 2021, explained his resignation in…

As Illinois session ends, lawmakers’ attempt to reinstate wetland protections fails

As Illinois session ends, lawmakers’ attempt to reinstate wetland protections fails

by JENNIFER BAMBERG Investigate Midwest jennifer.bamberg@investigatemidwest.org In 2006, 19-year-old Jessica Whinston inherited 20 acres of land that her grandparents once farmed in Quincy, Illinois. The land had sat dormant since the 1980s and was overgrown, but Whinston and her husband Bradley worked to turn it into a productive farm. The couple were eventually able to…

Elections board dismisses illegal campaign coordination complaint, declines to clarify law

Elections board dismisses illegal campaign coordination complaint, declines to clarify law

By HANNAH MEISEL Capitol News Illinois hmeisel@capitolnewsillinois.com CHICAGO – State elections officials on Tuesday indicated they were unlikely to step in to clarify what constitutes illegal campaign coordination after voting to dismiss a complaint alleging such coordination in the 2022 campaign for governor. At their monthly meeting in Chicago, Illinois State Board of Elections members…

Illinois’ ban on ‘bump stocks’ remains in place despite U.S. Supreme Court decision

Illinois’ ban on ‘bump stocks’ remains in place despite U.S. Supreme Court decision

By PETER HANCOCK Capitol News Illinois phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – An Illinois law banning the sale and use of “bump stocks” and other devices that increase the firing power of semiautomatic weapons remains in place, at least for now, despite a U.S. Supreme Court decision Friday striking down a federal ban on such items. “Illinois law…