Overcast
72°
St. Charles, IL
Overcast|Forecast »

Marmion wrestling's Fritz gears up for final state run

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa
Marmion’s Alex Fritz takes on Josh Hinkley of Marist in their 285-pound semifinal match Saturday at the IHSA Class 3A Shepard Sectional in Palos Heights. (Sean King – For the Kane County Chronicle)

Marmion heavyweight wrestler Alex Fritz confidently climbed the awards stand Saturday as the 3A Shepard Sectional concluded.

Much of the crowd had dispersed by the time the night’s final medal presentation was over, but Fritz’s grin and fellow senior George Fisher’s over-the-top cheers were hard to miss.

“Yeah,” Fritz said. “I feel a little bit like I’ve got to finish off the day every time.”

Early February podium trips have been customary for Fritz, who has qualified for the IHSA state meet in each of his four high school seasons. He has been unable to duplicate his sectional success in Champaign, however, and the urgency to make the most of his final bid to place downstate set in quickly.

Once Fritz absorbed the last of his sectional photo-ops, he returned to ground level and focused his attention to the state tournament, which begins with preliminary matches today at the University of Illinois’ Assembly Hall.

“My offense is so much better than last year and the years before,” Fritz said. “I used to be really hesitant about everything, but now I’m really getting into my offense a lot better, so everything’s going well.”

The heftiest of the Cadets’ seven state qualifiers, Fritz still holds that distinction despite competing between 245 and 250 pounds, a fair amount shy of his weight class’ 285-pound limit.

He considers himself “more athletic than most heavyweights I wrestle. A lot more agile, quick.” That, he says, balances out most size disadvantages.

Fritz learned those principles of quickness early. For a time in middle school, he joined the ranks of St. Charles Youth Wrestling, a club that has produced many fellow Cadets standouts at lower weights.

Anthony Bosco (106), Johnny Jimenez (120), Jake Field (126) and Fisher (132) – like Fritz – are multi-year state qualifiers and hail from St. Charles.

“Fritz, he’s got a motor when he wants to,” Bosco said. “When he goes, he’s tough to stop. He’s slick on his feet for a heavyweight. He’s going to do big things.”

Being the big guy has been both a bane and a boon for Fritz, who admittedly shied away from football after playing with a Tri-City Chargers eighth-grade team in fifth grade.

Previous Page|1|||

Reader Poll

Have you ever witnessed a tornado?

Yes
No