Daily Times (Primos, PA)

McFarland already making his mark at Haverford

- By Terry Toohey ttoohey@21st-centurymed­ia.com @TerryToohe­y on Twitter

Wrestling coach Joe Jones had a quick response when asked to describe his 106-pounder, Haverford’s Cole McFarland.

“Freshman sensation is what comes to mind,” said Jones, a twotime PIAA qualifier who is in his third season as the Fords’ head coach. “We normally have some good kids coming up through the middle school, but we haven’t had someone with Cole’s talent in a long time.”

McFarland is the first freshmen in Haverford High history to make it to what is considered to be the equivalent of the state tournament. Confused? Don’t be.

Because of COVID-19, the PIAA added two Super Regionals, East and West, in Class 3A and Class 2A. This was done to limit the number of wrestlers at each step of the postseason in an effort to mitigate spread of coronaviru­s.

McFarland is one of 10 Delaware County wrestlers who have qualified for Saturday’s Class 3A East Super Regional at Quakertown High School, which will be conducted in two sessions. Weight classes 106-138 will start wrestling at 9 a.m. and go right through the finals and consolatio­n. The gym will be cleared and weight classes 145-285 will start at 2 p.m. The top four wrestlers advance to next week’s PIAA championsh­ips at the Giant Center in Hershey.

While technicall­y not the PIAA championsh­ips, wrestlers who qualified for the Super Regionals are being considered as state qualifiers for the purpose of prestige points, which is part of the formula used for seeding purposes in the postseason.

At least from that perspectiv­e, then, McFarland is the first freshman state qualifier in program history, which is pretty impressive for a program that has produced two state champions, four runners-up and 33 state qualifiers.

“I think it’s pretty cool, but I would like to do better,” McFarland said. “I would like to be the first freshman state champ.”

McFarland (14-4) has his work cut out for him. He opens up against Northampto­n’s Carson Wagner, who is ranked No. 1 in the state at 106 and finished sixth at the PIAA championsh­ips at that weight a year ago. Wagner (8-0) is one of three state qualifiers in McFarland’s half of the eight-person bracket. Tony Burke of Council Rock North and Josh Jasionowic­z of Stroudsbur­g are the other two.

“Every match you have to expect anything,” McFarland said. “You have to be open for anything. You have to have a good mindset and go in thinking you’re going to win the match.”

McFarland isn’t afraid of a challenge. After winning his first 10 matches, six by pin, five in the first 36 seconds, another by technical fall and one by major decision, Haverford assistant coaches Luke Bilyeu and Jim Knapp approached Jones about having McFarland move up in weight to see how he would respond to stiffer competitio­n.

Jones asked McFarland’s father if he was OK with the move, which he was. The younger McFarland was up for it, too, so he bumped up two weight classes to take on Garnet Valley 120-pounder and Super Regional qualifier Matt Ricci.

Even though McFarland lost that match, 6-2, he showed he could wrestle with the area’s best and used that as a springboar­d to win a Central League title, finish second at District 1 South and fourth at the South East Regional.

“He doesn’t shy away from competitio­n, he embraces it,” Jones said. “He’s an awesome kid in the room. Toward the end of the year he’s become more and more vocal, which is good, because you need leaders in the room and he’s been looking up to veteran guys that we have like Jon Harwood and Stephen Lozano and those guys and he’s definitely following in their footsteps.”

McFarland’s success is not a surprise. He made the Pennsylvan­ia Junior Wrestling state championsh­ips last year. He did not place, but that gave him the incentive to do what he has accomplish­ed this season. If McFarland gets to the real state tournament he would be an automatic state medalist, Haverford’s first since Mike Jones, Joe’s older brother, took fourth at 112 in 2005.

“It has been a weird year because of COVID but I still feel I got the work in that I needed,” McFarland said. “Nothing has messed up my schedule since COVID started. I think if I go out there this weekend and put everything I have into it I’ll get the result I want.”

• • •

Ricci (120) and Jaguars teammate Sam DiTrolio (189), Interboro’s Nate Shippey (126) and Dom D’Agostino (152), Strath Haven’s Kelton Brunner (132) and Chase Barlow (152), Sun Valley’s Ryan Catka (215), Upper Darby’s Julien Laventure (285) and Radnor’s Daetrel Jerome (285) are the other Delco wrestlers in the tournament.

Catka is a returning state medalist. He was third at 195 last season. D’Agostino, Barlow and Laventure made it to Hershey last year, too. Catka (13-0) and Laventure (11-0) are among the 23 undefeated wrestlers in the Super Regional.

A year ago, Haverford made a storybook run to the Central League title but couldn’t parlay the momentum of 11 straight wins beyond the second round of the District 1 Class 6A tournament.

This year, after falling in the Central League quarterfin­als, the Fords are hoping things reverse in the postseason.

The Fords start their quest Saturday afternoon, the No. 13 seed hosting No. 20 Upper Dublin at

3 p.m.

Last year’s districts run was blighted by an injury to John Seidman, who took control in the Central League playoffs. But the 1,000-point scorer leads a veteran contingent this year.

“It’s tough but we’ve got to move past it,” guard Nick Colucci said after a last-possession loss to Strath Haven last Sunday in the Central League playoffs. “We’ve got to focus on our next opponent. We think we can make a big run in districts, so that’s our focus now.”

In all classifica­tions, only the district champ advances to the PIAA pandemic tournament, alleviatin­g the endless parade of playbacks. District 1 teams enter the state tournament at various stages depending on the class, with the Class 6A champ fasttracke­d to the semifinals and the 5A champ to the quarters.

Four Delco teams are in action Saturday in Class

6A. No. 15 Strath Haven

hosts No. 18 North Penn at 12:30. The winner gets No. 2 Conestoga, which fell in the Central League final to Garnet Valley on Thursday. The Jaguars own the No. 4 seed in the tournament, awaiting the winner of the Upper DublinHave­rford game.

The 10-team Class 5A tournament opens with an All-Delaware County nightcap, No. 10 Chichester visiting No. 7 Marple Newtown at 7 p.m. The winner has No. 2 Chester waiting in the quarterfin­als Tuesday.

In Class A, No. 4 Christian Academy has a tough task against top-seeded Phil-Mont Christian in the semifinals Monday night. Delco Christian advances straight to the Class 2A final Wednesday, hosting No. 2 Bristol.

 ?? NATE HECKENBERG­ER - FOR MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? Haverford’s Cole McFarland, top, scrambles with Boyertown’s Gavin Sheridan before pinning Sheridan in the 106-pound semifinals at the District 1Class 3A South tournament. McFarland finished second.
NATE HECKENBERG­ER - FOR MEDIANEWS GROUP Haverford’s Cole McFarland, top, scrambles with Boyertown’s Gavin Sheridan before pinning Sheridan in the 106-pound semifinals at the District 1Class 3A South tournament. McFarland finished second.
 ?? PETE BANNAN – MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? Haverford’s Nick Colucci hits a basket in a game early last month against Ridley. Colucci and the Fords are on their way to the district playoffs.
PETE BANNAN – MEDIANEWS GROUP Haverford’s Nick Colucci hits a basket in a game early last month against Ridley. Colucci and the Fords are on their way to the district playoffs.

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