Taylor wins regional; Tigers send five to sectionals

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IVC's Nick Nevitt gets an upside down look at Prouty Gym compliments of Princeton's Ty Taylor in their 140-pound championship match in Saturday's regional action. Taylor finished off his fourth regional crown with a fall in 1:00. (BCR photo/Kevin Hieronymus)

PRINCETON — Ty Taylor was undefeated and stood as big a favorite as the New England Patriots, except he won.

The Princeton senior claimed his fourth-straight regional championship when he made off with the 140-pound weight class at Princeton’s Prouty Gymnasium. Ranked No. 1 in the state, Taylor needed all of a minute to pin Nick Nevitt of IVC to improve his record to 40-0.

Taylor, a 2007 state runner-up, advances to the Byron Sectional starting Friday, along with classmate Jordan Sluis, the runner-up at 215, and third-place finishers Kyle Lilley (103), Reiter Bird (119) and Joe Staton (189).

PHS coach Randy Swinford was pleased how his team performed with a fourth-place team finish and four individuals with fourth-place finishes in addition to the five qualifiers.

“We had a lot of freshman and sophomores wrestling. We had a freshman qualify at 3 and Taylor did exactly what we expected him to,” he said. “I think they have a lot ahead of them. The future looks bright with only two seniors.”

Taylor, who three weeks ago captured his first Princeton Invitational championship, took a ho-hum approach on his fourth regional crown.

“I’m looking more toward to state, but it’s always good to win a four-time anything,” he said. “Regionals have been hard, this year wasn’t the most difficult.”

Taylor joked about the move that took Nevitt down for the count in the championship match.

“I used the never-before-seen headlock,” he said with a laugh. “He wasn’t doing much, so I just played with his head for awhile. I pushed it down. He opened himself up for it, so I just threw him.”

Taylor didn’t know he could get him in the first minute, but said he was hoping.

“I didn’t want to wrestle too long. Today’s been a long day,” he said.

Swinford could tell exactly what Taylor’s strategy was.

“He didn’t want to be out there too long. You could tell,” he said. “There are other days when he’ll shoot a couple things. In semis, he started some other offense. I think he said, ‘it’s time to get out of here and get ready for sectionals.’”

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