This is a story about numbers. They are the first numbers all of us learn. 1-2-3. That's what this is about. Oh, there's more. Plenty more. But in the end, this is about those simple numbers 1-2-3.

Let's jump to the No. 3. This number belongs to Austin Goergen. This talented big man from Caledonia is attempting to win an unprecedented third heavyweight title. It's never been done in Minnesota before. Prior to two weeks ago, his last high school loss was the sectional final to Casey Johnson as a sophomore. He has run the table the last two regular seasons.
Finally, we stop on No. 1. This belongs to the young sophomore Sam Stoll, who is in search of his very first gold medal. Sam went undefeated this season and was never really challenged. He is the future at this weight in Minnesota.
Here's where this story starts gathering momentum. All three of these warriors are ranked in the top 10 in the United States. All of them wrestle in Minnesota and all are in Class AA. After this is over, only one of these guys will be able to say they got their number. Only one of these guys will be able to say they survived the most harrowing heavyweight Minnesota state tournament, and came out on top. I have the pleasure of following these three fighters as they narrow their paths and wait for that inevitable collision that is coming this weekend. I'm bringing the rest of you along for the ride.
Thursday, March 1, 2012
This is the team portion of the tournament and it's an entire day of duals. Of our three heavyweights, only Sam Stoll and Michael Kroells will be wrestling. Austin Goergen will be watching and waiting.

1. Michael Kroells 41-0
2. Austin Goergen 33-1
3. Sam Stoll 41-1
4. Jesse Hein 41-0
5. Matt Kadrlik 37-4
That's a combined record of 193-6 for the season. Today, Stoll is scheduled to face Hein in the first round of team (dual meet) quarterfinals, and likely Kadrlik in the team semifinals. If the favored teams win, Kroells will get Kadrlik in the finals. It goes according to plan. Stoll gives Hein his first loss of the season, 5-3, and then has a brutal 3-2 win over Kadrlik in the next round. Kroells pins Kadrlik
Friday, March 2, 2012
Stoll definitely has one of the more unfortunate draw in the individual competition. His first round is against Kadrlik, the wrestler he beat the previous night, and then likely a rematch with Hein. Stoll makes a big mistake in the first period and loses to Kadrlik. He now has to count on Kadrlik to beat Hein in the quarterfinals to stay alive. Fortunately for Sam, this is exactly what happens.
But this is a big disappointment for the fans from Minnesota. If Sam wins those first two matches, he would likely get Michael Kroells in the semifinals. Meanwhile, Kroells easily dispatches his first two opponents with pins. Kroells looks completely at ease at 285 pounds. He has been ranked No. 4 nationally at 220 all year and some questioned why he would move up to this weight class. His response, "Frankly, there's no one at 220 that challenges me. This is the weight with all the talent. I want to know if I'm the best. Plus, I want to prove I am the top heavyweight in Minnesota. I want to stop this train. I want to send a message!"

Goergen has a routine that never varies. First he goes through a series of stretches. Then he always thanks God for the opportunity to be in this position in life. Finally he puts on the head phones and cranks AC/DC. The two songs he plays over and over are "TNT" and "Shook me all night long." If he makes it into the championship match, he plans on wearing his gold singlet and his bright yellow shoes. Austin is a man that stays with this plan and it never varies. Never has.

Fortunately, the second premier match happened in the finals. Future Minnesota Gopher Sam Brancale, an InterMat JJ Classic champion, was in a rematch with three-time state champion Mitch Bengtson. This one was as tight as can be with Brancale getting a reversal in the last 10 seconds for a 2-1 victory.
With Sam Stoll taking the surprising early loss, this left Goergen-Kroells as the third premier match. They have never met personally or on the mat. This buzz has been building ever since Michael Kroells started wrestling at 285 pounds on mid-January. Everyone wondered if this was really going to happen.
Saturday, March 3, 2012
We are now two matches away from the showdown. If it happens, it will be the last match in Minnesota high school wrestling this season. In any ordinary year, it's not unusual for fans to start filing out before the heavyweights hit the mat. Unfortunately, many of the kids that wrestle at 285 pounds aren't technically-skilled wrestlers. Many fans think the heavyweights are boring and don't have the skills the lighter weight kids have. This is not the case with Goergen and Kroells. Both are extremely skilled on their feet with leg attacks, fireman's, and various throws and slide-byes. They are a treat to watch. Both can pin from any position.

So far, neither Michael Kroells nor Austin Goergen has given up a point in this tournament. Michael tells me that he ran the table here without giving up a point during his first title run as a junior. I begin to wonder if a wrestler has ever gone two straight years at the state tournament without surrendering an offensive point. And will it happen this year?
There is a long delay before the championship round. The normal routine of consolation matches needs to be completed. Sam Stoll has taken the longest road possible to make it to the third-place match. Along the way he needed to take out Jesse Hein again, who he defeated two days ago. In the end, Stoll, a Cadet National double champion last summer, wins his third-place match.

During this break and throughout the tournament, I get the pleasure of talking to Kroells and Goergen down in the tunnel. This is my 30th state tournament, but first time up close with the kids as they both enter and exit. There's a common theme going on here. There's hope and confidence everywhere on the way in. There's exultation and despair on the way out. I see many kids running into the tunnel after a loss with tears flowing, hoping no one is watching. I see kids whip their headgear at the wall, kick garbage cans and scream in agony. The winners don't seem nearly as happy as I expect. Most are completely out of breath and are only looking for more oxygen. Both Michael and Austin feel compelled to comment on the way some kids behave after a loss. They both have been trained to handle a win or loss the same way ... with class. One of these two guys is going to suffer this fate in a few hours. Both are convinced it will be their opponent.

Michael's routine is pretty simple. He puts on the headgear three matches before his bout. The sweat pants come off two matches away and the warmups, one match away. He does not listen to music. But there is something deep going on in him. Kroells finds a way to channel hatred and anger towards his opponent. He does not want to be friendly or any of that chummy stuff he sees all around him. He has a job here, and that is to win. He feels he has to psychologically work himself into this part-evil frame of mind to conquer. But then after the match it turns right off. He no longer has any of that rage. Mission accomplished.
It's getting closer and each of these two warriors reflect on the moment. Austin is a soft-hearted, sentimental man and knows this is the last match he will ever wrestle in Minnesota. Tomorrow it all ends. Michael talks about how much he will miss his friends on the team. Both seem to know their lives are about to change. Neither believes their opponent can beat them.
I choose to watch this in the stands. I have no interest in watching either of these two men come back into the tunnel after losing. Over the last three days, I've crossed over the line with these guys and I don't want to see either dream crushed. I know it's going to happen. This sport is almost dehumanizing. There is always a loser and no one to blame but the mirror. No wrestler is coached to lose and most of the elite wrestlers don't do it enough to know the ugly taste of watching your opponent get his arm raised. In a championship match, this is often followed by a victory celebration of some sort. Many kids run into the stands to hug family members, while the loser can't wait to get out of the arena. The pain is excruciating. I'm not interested in seeing it.

They shake hands and within 30 seconds, Kroells is in on a low single for a takedown. Michael has plenty of pinning moves from the top position and he throws several Austin's way. Goergen fights off every one and struggles to get out. All of those moves are countered beautifully by Michael and the period comes to an end with the score 2-0.
Kroells wins the coin toss and chooses down. He gets an early escape, 3-0. This next takedown could decide the match. All of Goergen's shots are blocked. Kroells tries moves that work on just about everyone else in the state. Kroells shoots for a double leg and finds success. It's now 5-0 with only the third period to go. Goergen chooses down. He scores a beautiful reverse to bring the score to 5-2. It occurs to me both wrestlers have given up points for the first time this entire weekend. Austin tries valiantly to turn Kroells. Michael isn't budging, but the referee warns Kroells for stalling. Not long after he yells stalling again and it's 5-3 with 30 seconds to go. Goergen desperately tries for a pinning combination and Kroells counters with a slick reversal. It comes to an end with the final score 7-3. Michael Kroells win his second straight state title. Austin Goergen finishes as state runner-up for the first time in three seasons.

Recommended Comments
There are no comments to display.
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now