Heading into the final session, Tech sat in second place, seven points behind Maryland, and tied it up when Dong picked up his title. But the Terrapins picked up upset wins at 174 and heavyweight and also won four of the last five weight classes to pull away from the Hokies for the team title.
In the finals, Garnett got things off to a good start for the Hokies with a 6-4 win over Matt Snyder in sudden victory. Garnett, the top-seed, got a first-period takedown, but Snyder battled back and forced overtime based on riding time. There, Garnett snuck in and got the ankle and converted the takedown for his second ACC title and a 6-4 win in sudden victory. At 133 pounds, freshman Devin Carter was simply dominating as he picked up a 19-4 technical fall over Joe Spisak to claim the title and a spot to the NCAA Championships. Carter recorded several takedowns in the first period and turned Spisak to his back several times en route to the big win. At 157 pounds, top-seeded Jesse Dong had his way with No. 2 seed Kyle John, picking up a pair of takedowns en route to a 6-3 win.
As quickly as the Hokies got off to in the finals with three wins, the last three matches didn’t go well. Pete Yates fell at 165 pounds to top-seeded John Asper of Maryland, falling 9-3 in the championship bout. Chris Penny fell to second-seeded Zac Bennett of North Carolina, 9-4 at 197 pounds and in the heavyweight division, top-seeded David Marone dropped a heartbreaker to third-seeded Spencer Myers of Maryland, 3-2 in the first tiebreaker.
Overall, Tech qualified four wrestlers automatically for the upcoming NCAA Championships. Garnett, Carter, Dong and Yates are assured of making the trip to Philadelphia for the March 17-19 event. Chris Diaz, who finished fourth at 141 pounds, Brian Stephens, who took third at 149 pounds, and Marone will also be amongst those in the discussion of receiving at-large bids at their respective weight classes. The bids are announced Tuesday, March 9.
Maryland won the title with 94.5 points, outdistancing Tech’s 82.5 points. Maryland finished with five individual champions, as well as a runner-up.
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