Otto Keisker knows he still has plenty of room for improvement. After all, the Noble High 145/152-pound wrestler is only a sophomore.

But Keisker already has done something no one else in the storied history of Noble wrestling has accomplished.

He is Noble’s first sophomore captain, sharing the duties with seniors Billy Gagner and Joe Grenier.

“It’s an honor. We only have a couple seniors and I can’t really tell you why they wanted me as captain,” Keisker said.

Coach Kip DeVoll said Keisker was tabbed by his peers.

“He’s a class act. He works hard. He has respect for the program,” DeVoll said.

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Keisker said he struggled for much of his freshman season, competing at 145 pounds.

“You can’t go out there and wrestle scared,” Keisker said. “It took me a little while. I was working through some of that and making freshman mistakes. My coaches kept telling me I was (improving) and at the end of the year I’d do well at states. It turned out they were right.”

Keisker was the regional runner-up and third at states.

“He’s still got some work to do but he should at this point in his career,” DeVoll said.

Keisker took a big step Saturday when he won the Spartan Annual Wrestling Tournament at 145 pounds, winning all four matches by pin, including a 1:22 upset of Dan Scalzo of Timberlane, N.H., in the final.

“And he pinned a two-time state champ (Lisbon’s Zach Stevens) in the semi,” DeVoll said.

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At 6-foot-8, Sanford senior Andrew Moriarty is always easy to spot at tournaments.

Moriarty said people ask why he’s not playing basketball instead, “about three or four times a tournament.”

Moriarty, who also runs cross country and competes in track, is starting to also get noticed for his success on the mat.

At the Noble Invitational, he finished fourth in the 195-pound division, losing a 5-2 decision to Massabesic’s Mike Risti, a New England Championships veteran, in the consolation final.

At his home Spartan Annual Wrestling Tournament, Moriarty won his first two matches at 220 pounds, and again advanced to the consolation final and finished fourth.

Moriarty’s height – and long exposed legs – works against him in the neutral position, said Sanford Coach Nate Smith. Moriarty often puts one knee on the mat and uses his long arms to deflect opponents. When on top, though, Moriarty’s long levers and surprising strength is too much for many opponents.

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Defending Spartan tournament heavyweight champion Isaiah Reynolds of Bonny Eagle did not wrestle at this year’s event. According to Scots Coach Greg Gonyea, Reynolds was attending a funeral.

The end of the Spartan tournament felt a bit like a two-minute drill in football: an overload of action in a short time. With the normal two-day format condensed to one and the clock fast approaching 9 p.m., the decision was made to run the consolation finals and championship finals at the same time and keep all three mats active. Many final consolation bouts resulted in a forfeit (and even some double forfeits) because wrestlers reached their total of five matches in a day.

In about two minutes of actual time, Keisker pinned Scalzo, who reacted poorly and was ejected, clinching the team title for Marshwood. Keisker ran off the mat, high-fiving teammate Joe Grenier, who roared onto the mat and pinned Portland’s Greg Cassella in 1:10.

All while two other championship bouts were taking place.

Steve Craig can be reached at 791-6413 or at:

scraig@pressherald.com

Twitter: SteveCCraig

 

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