We're doing our best to keep him loose. But that's the great mystery. When you get to the highest levels of competition, what do you say? You have to handle every kid differently. Make sure he's confident. Make sure he knows he's ready.

We really feel like we are the best in the state balance-wise. But it's one thing to say it and another to do it. Talk is cheap if you don't go out and back it up. We're going to try and get better and we'll see what happens in six weeks.

We won where we should have won.

The kids going (today) have an uphill battle. That was a huge pillar we lost. But he's a 17-year-old kid and predicting what they'll do is like playing the stock market.

Their pillars didn't fall and couple of ours did. They're guns were a little bigger than our guns today.

There is no better feeling than to finish your high school career knowing you were a member of the top team in the state. There is nothing like it.

When all is said and done, it's just a game and it's not bigger than life. Try not to worry about it too much. After all, a match is just six minutes of your life.

You have to understand the measurement of success sometimes comes in not where you wanted them to end up, but how far they've come. I've asked a lot of these kids to step up, and they've done that. I can't fault the kids. The majority of them wrestled as hard as they could possibly wrestle.

If you're a coach from another section and you read that, you've got to think it's a misprint. Thirteen? Nobody ever does that.