LAS VEGAS, NV – The Hokies placed four of seven wrestlers at the prestigious Cliff Keen Las Vegas Invitational over the weekend led by sophomore No. 4 Caleb Henson's runner-up finish at 149-pounds in his first appearance. Also finding the podium in their first CKLV were No. 5 Bryce Andonian, true freshman Sonny Sasso, and No. 18 Sam Fisher to round out the Tech wrestling contingent.
In a match-up that lived up to the billing, sophomore sensation No. 4 Caleb Henson gave Nebraska's No. 1 Ridge Lovett all he could handle and battled to a 3-4 decision loss in the finals of the Cliff Keen Las Vegas Invitational at 149-pounds. Henson put on display his relentless pace but it was Lovett who struck first off the Hokie's pressure to end the first period. The Cornhusker would choose bottom to begin the second period and garner an escape but not before Henson erased riding time advantage to make it a more manageable deficit. Henson would fire off an attack as the second period ended to make it a one-point bout heading into the final frame. Henson chose bottom to begin the third period and would continue to force his pace to eventually garner a stall call in his favor with time still left to rally for the victory. The Tech sophomore would launch a final attempt and was within seconds of securing the winning takedown but just ran out of time to finish as runner-up in his first CKLV appearance.
It was a highly credentialed semifinal battle with a trip to the finals at stake in Las Vegas to begin day two at the Cliff Keen Las Vegas Invitational. No. 4 Caleb Henson opened the morning session of day two right where he left off last night as he added another All-American to his list of defeated foes, this time over Arizona State's three-time All-American, No. 3 Kyle Parco. Henson struck first with a knee pull to finish and was relentless as he led 3-0 with 2:40 of riding time by the end of the first period. Henson would start the second on bottom and garner an escape to increase his lead to 4-0 and nearly added another takedown but ran out of time in the period. The Sun Devil would select neutral to begin the final period with constant pressure by Henson to maintain the dominant lead. Henson would add a riding time point to push his ticket into the finals against the country's No. 1 ranked wrestler.
𝐂𝐚𝐥𝐞𝐛 𝐇𝐞𝐧𝐬𝐨𝐧 𝐂𝐊𝐋𝐕 𝐑𝐮𝐧𝐧𝐞𝐫-𝐔𝐩
— Virginia Tech Wrestling (@HokiesWrestling) December 2, 2023
Great tournament all weekend from The Hitman to claim 🥈 in Las Vegas! Only hitting his stride!#ALLINALLTHETIME #Hokies 🦃 pic.twitter.com/IYwElQyeXO
No. 5 Bryce Andonian did Bryce Andonian things as he navigated the backside on day two of the Cliff Keen Invitational where he would finish fourth to end his CKLV campaign. Andonian secured a 7-3 victory over Ohio State's No. 16 Paddy Gallagher for the second time this season with an electric follow-up over No. 9 Daniel Cardenas (Stanford). Andonian struck first with a takedown off a Cardenas high crotch and would never look back as he would take the 17-7 major decision with many acrobatics including a six-point sequence that would ice the bout for the most exciting wrestler in the country. His win would book a spot in the third-place bout where he would meet NC State's No. 8 Ed Scott for the eighth time in their careers.
Wrestling coaches: "Just stand up. Find a wrist. Don't reach back. Stay on your feet. Fundamentals."
— Virginia Tech Wrestling (@HokiesWrestling) December 2, 2023
Bryce Andonian: "I got you, coach. Watch this."
The Human Highlight Reel is something else.@FloWrestling #Hokies 🦃 https://t.co/NYzg7NgLud pic.twitter.com/SliNEIu4iX
True freshman Sonny Sasso would finish his CKLV debut with a sixth-place finish including rattling off four-straight victories on the backside – all against ranked opponents – to find the podium in Las Vegas. Sasso would put on a short, yet dominant consolation quarterfinal bout against NCAA qualifier and No. 13 Nick Stemmet out of Stanford with a 7-0 lead and putting an exclamation point on things with a fall at 2:44 of the bout. Sasso would drop his next two bouts to All-American No. 6 Jacob Cardenas (Cornell) and Big Ten champion, No. 8 Silas Allred of Nebraska in a close bout to finish sixth in Vegas.
𝐒𝐨𝐧𝐧𝐲 𝐒𝐚𝐬𝐬𝐨
— Virginia Tech Wrestling (@HokiesWrestling) December 2, 2023
6th Place Finish at 197-pounds
The true freshman drops his first bout but rattles off FOUR STRAIGHT victories all over ranked opponents to find the podium in his first CKLV! Have yourself a weekend, gunslinger!#ALLINALLTHETIME #Hokies 🦃 pic.twitter.com/cMfNDgXR2j
Sam Fisher finished eighth on the podium in his first CKLV event after battling in the consolation bracket over the course of the weekend. The Hokie redshirt junior went 4-3 with a win over two-time All-American and No. 10 ranked Gavin Kane to continue building his season's resume.
𝐒𝐚𝐦 𝐅𝐢𝐬𝐡𝐞𝐫
— Virginia Tech Wrestling (@HokiesWrestling) December 2, 2023
CKLV 8th Place Finisher at 184-pounds!
Fisher goes 4-3 including a win over a two-time All-American to wrap up his Cliff Keen Invitational debut!#ALLINALLTHETIME #Hokies 🦃 pic.twitter.com/tM8lauLdkU
The Hokies return to action on Sunday, December 17 at 1 p.m. EST in Cassell Coliseum against Stanford in the final competition of the semester. Follow Hokies wrestling on X and Instagram for all the latest updates and news. Go Hokies!
Virginia Tech Wrestling Results
Caleb Henson, 149-pounds – Runner-Up
Round of 32 – tech fall Derek Raike (Ohio University), 15-0, 6:08
Round of 16 – maj dec Alek Martin (South Dakota State University), 13-2
Quarterfinal – dec No. 7 Chance Lamer (Cal Poly), 10-6
Semifinals – dec No. 3 Kyle Parco (Arizona State), 5-0
Finals – loss No. 1 Ridge Lovett (Nebraska), 3-4
Bryce Andonian, 157-pounds – Fourth Place
Round of 32 – fall Charlie Evans (Navy), 16-3, 6:00
Round of 16 – loss Meyer Shapiro (Cornell), 4-16
Consolation – tech fall Carter Baer (Binghamton), 19-4, 6:07
Consolation – fall No. 18 Cody Chittum (Iowa State), 6-1, 1:16
Consolation – dec No. 13 Cael Swensen (South Dakota State), 7-3
Consolation Quarterfinals – dec No. 16 Paddy Gallagher (Ohio State), 8-2
Consolation Semifinals – maj dec No. 9 Daniel Cardenas (Stanford), 17-7
Third Place – loss No. 8 Ed Scott (NC State), 7-18
Sonny Sasso, 197-pounds – Sixth Place
Round of 32 – loss No. 2 Tanner Sloan (South Dakota State University), 1-17, 5:40
Consolation – dec No. 28 Robert Striggow (Michigan), 3-1
Consolation – maj dec No. 21 Evan Bates (Northwestern), 13-5
Consolation – maj dec No. 25 Levi Hopkins (Campbell), 11-3
Consolation – med forfeit No. 8 Luke Surber (Oklahoma State)
Consolation Quarterfinals – fall No. 13 Nick Stemmet (Stanford), 7-0, 2:44
Consolation Semifinals – loss No. 6 Jacob Cardenas (Cornell), 4-14
Fifth Place – loss No. Silas Allred (Nebraska), 5-8
Sam Fisher, 184-pounds – Eighth Place
Round of 32 – dec Adam Ortega (Citadel), 9-3
Round of 16 – loss No. 8 Gavin Hoffman (Ohio State), 1-2
Consolation – dec Quayin Short (Wyoming), 4-3
Consolation – fall Aaron Ayzerov (Columbia), 6-1, 2:16
Consolation – dec No. 10 Gavin Kane (North Carolina), 4-2
Consolation Quarterfinals – loss No. 5 Dustin Plott (Oklahoma State), 0-3, 1:44
Seventh Place – loss No. 20 Dylan Fishback (NC State), 4-16
Eddie Ventresca, 125-pounds
Round of 32 – loss Dominic Mendez (Cal Poly), 4-14
Consolation – loss Noah Luna (App St), 2-14
Connor Brady, 165-pounds
Round of 32 – dec Dominic Baker (Campbell), 4-2
Round of 16 – loss Garrett Thompson (Ohio University), 2:34
Consolation – dec Ben Haubert (Citadel), 4-2
Consolation – loss Will Miller (App State), 1-5
Hunter Catka, 285-pounds
Round of 32 – tech fall Kevin Zimmer (Wyoming), 15-0, 3:52
Round of 16 – maj dec Nolan Neves (Columbia), 15-1
Quarterfinals – loss No. 3 Lucas Davison (Michigan), 2-11
Consolation – loss No. 21 Lewis Fernandes (Cornell), 3-9