MSU-N's Borges
brings a national title back to Havre
(Created:
Monday, March 10, 2008 11:29 AM MDT)
George
Ferguson Havre Daily News sports editor gferguson@havredailynews.com
The goal for every collegiate wrestling program in the
NAIA is to win a national championship when the season starts. The same can be
said for every individual wrestler that takes to the mat in October. And this
weekend in Sioux City, Iowa, the Montana State University- Northern
wrestling team accomplished one of those goals and made a strong push towards
another. On Saturday night at the Tyson
Events Center,
MSU-N junior Corey Borges capped off a stellar season by defeating Lindenwood's Dennis Kakrah in the
125-pound championship match. The victory atoned
Borges' loss in the 125-pound final a year ago and gave a big boost to the
Lights' team. "Corey is phenomonal," MSU-N
head coach Dan Troupe said. "He has helped put life back in to our program
and he is a great leader for this team. "A lot of
people didn't know this, but he had a knee injury coming into this
tournament," he added. "So his effort this weekend was incredible. He
just wasn't going to lose, and you could just see it in his eyes before the
final, he was not going to be denied. So I'm just happy for him, especially
after losing in the final last year. He's just had a tremendous season."
Borges' national championship was part of a weekend that saw three Lights earn
NAIA All-American. Northern also got a third-place finish from Byron Kuylen and a fourth-place finish from Chris Thompson,
helping MSU-N to ninth place overall with 75 points. "I think we really
did some good things this weekend, and fro this tournament, I think we can take
away that the program is heading in the right direction," Troupe said.
"I mean, we were third after the quarterfinals, and eventually we ran out
of steam. But it was our second top 10 in a row, we were a win away from
seventh place, and we had guys go out and really rack up points with pins and
major decisions. So I feel good about what we accomplished this weekend, and
I'm really proud of our guys." Lindenwood
captured its second straight national championship by scoring 130 points to McKendree's 109.5. Dickinson State was third with 107.5,
and the University of Great Falls, and former Light national champion Caleb
Schaeffer, had its best-ever finish, which was fourth. The Argos scored 101 points and got the schools’
first-ever national champion in 184-pounder Mike Kummer.
But as well as Northern wrestled over the weekend, depth and injuries played a
factor in where the Lights finished. MSU-N was without two-time All- American
Brian Fritchman, who would have likely reached the
197-pound final for the second straight season. But young wrestlers like Kuylen and Thompson did well to pick up the slack. Kuylen, a sophomore from Sidney,
reached the semifinals before falling to Brian Graham of Missouri Valley,
12-8. In that match, Kuylen injured a rib, but fought
back to pin his way to third place at 149 pounds. "I am really happy for
Byron," Troupe said. "He had a tough year, but it ended really well.
He's a great wrestler and he's become one of the leaders on this team and it
showed this weekend. He went out and got us pins and he just wrestled at a such a high level. I'm just really proud of the way he
competed." Meanwhile, Thompson, a 184-pound freshman from Kalispell, also
reached the semifinals before losing to Oklahoma
City's Mitchell Eisenhauer.
Thompson rebounded to reach the consolation final before being defeated
again." "Chris wrestled great this weekend," Troupe said.
"He was aggressive and he really went after guys. As a freshman, he had a
tremendous tournament, and he's going to be right there for us for a long
time." Northern may have lacked the depth that the top teams had this
weekend, but the Lights did well to score points throughout the tournament.
Junior Carlos Alaniz (133) was one win away from
reaching the All-American round as was senior Mike McPeak
(141) . Colt Heger (141),
Austin Ouelette (165) and Rob Shaw (275) also scored
points for the Lights in the wrestlebacks, helping
MSU-N keep pace with the top end of the field. "At the end of the day, our
depth caught up to us," Troupe said. "But we wrestled extremely well
from top to bottom. On the mat, it was a great tournament for us, and I'm just
so proud of these guys. "And with guys like Cory Borges, Byron Kuylen, Chris Thompson and so many others coming back, we
really feel like we're heading in the right direction. We still have to work
hard and recruit well, but I think this weekend was a good sign for where our
program is and where we want it to go. And again, it's these kids and how hard
they worked this season. I am just really proud of them."