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Eagle Valley High School wrestlers kick off New Year in style

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Eagle Valley High School wrestlers kick off New Year in style

Eagle Valley’s Luvlyn Ward took top honors at the West Grand Invitational on Jan. 4.Bob Good/Courtesy photo Both Lauryn and Luvlyn Ward traveled to Kremmling for the West Grand Invitational. Lauryn pinned her way to the finals, where Moffat County’s Kayla Deaton won by fall 3:29 in. Her younger sister navigated the rounds with a […]

Eagle Valley’s Luvlyn Ward took top honors at the West Grand Invitational on Jan. 4.
Bob Good/Courtesy photo

Both Lauryn and Luvlyn Ward traveled to Kremmling for the West Grand Invitational. Lauryn pinned her way to the finals, where Moffat County’s Kayla Deaton won by fall 3:29 in. Her younger sister navigated the rounds with a pin of Sydney Brazeal in the first round, a medical forfeit against Mackenzie Moore in the second and a 3-1 decision over Gunnison’s Isabelle Crown in the final.

The Eagle Valley wrestling team started 2025 the way it ended 2024: racking up wins and stepping on podiums.

“Malloley is about to move up to higher levels of competition here in the near future,” head coach Travis Ward stated. Assistant coach Brandon Hern also praised Anderson for being coachable, hard-working and having a positive attitude at practice and tournaments.



Josiah Quinn led the junior varsity team in Cedaredge, coming away with the 126-pound title. Christian Pena, Dylan Anderson and Bennett Malloley each placed third in their respective weight classes in the 12-team tournament as well.

“The whole team has been improving, working hard and continuing to emit positive energy,” said assistant coach Tanner Archer. “The vibe of the team has only gotten stronger as the season has progressed.”

“The cerebral young wrestler asks for help and is able to take direction,” Hern said.



Eagle Valley High School wrestling coach Bob Good contributed to this report.

“The freshman and youngest in her bracket approached her opponents with a no-nonsense attitude,” coach Bob Good stated. “She’s been hanging just outside the rankings and this should certainly raise some eyebrows.”

Good said Pena’s “strength and focus have him headed towards bigger and better competition.” The same can be said of Malloley, who took the bronze in the 215-pound division.

On Jan. 4, Luvlyn Ward took the title at the West Grand Invitational, Josiah Quinn was victorious at the Cedaredge junior varsity meet and the Devils notched multiple podiums at the highly-competitive Torgy Torgerson Memorial in Fort Collins.

Eagle Valley junior Nathan Leeper (right) placed third in the 175-pound bracket at the Torgy Torgeson Memorial on Jan. 4 in Fort Collins.
Bob Good/Courtesy photo

“Sometimes a tough loss is better than a win,” Bob Good added. “Sometimes you can wrestle really well and still don’t get a win against a tough opponent.”  

Cole Good won the 126-pound 4A Region 4 tournament last year and placed fourth at the state wrestling meet, finishing his 2024 campaign with a 33-5 record. Both he and his younger brother were state qualifiers last season.

Eagle Valley’s Josiah Quinn won the 126-pound bracket at the Cedaredge Junior Varsity tournament on Jan. 4. Quinn pinned Delta’s Luke Curtis in the championship match.
Bob Good/Courtesy photo

Coach Good said Leeper’s breakout performance was the big story coming out of Fort Collins. He credited the junior’s first-career varsity podium to his athleticism, work ethic and mature demeanor. Leeper’s route wasn’t easy, either. The Devil went through the No. 2-seeded wrestler in the quarterfinals.

Four Devils traveled to Fort Collins to scope out regional competition at the 23-team Torgy Torgerson Memorial. Cole Good finished second at 138-pounds, while younger brother Alex and Nathan Leeper both picked up third-place finishes in the 132 and 175-pound weight classes. Bode Cobb just missed the 150-pound podium after going 2-2.

The Devils will travel to Vernal, Utah this weekend for the 53rd-annual Tournament of Champions, one of the most competitive high school wrestling events in the region.

“(He) was able to execute his textbook ‘splash double leg takedown’ early in the match and then proceeded to hand fight his way to victory,” Good said regarding Leeper’s 4-1 decision over Chaparral’s Aiden Luby-Howard. Leeper fell to Windsor’s Santi Fernandez in the semifinals but defeated Roosevelt’s Kason Lopez in the consolation semifinals. He wound up with the bronze after Jackson Wind forfeited the match.

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“I wrestled too conservative,” Cole Good said after losing to Roosevelt’s Malakii Martin by a 4-2 decision. “I need to force a scramble, my athleticism and physicality are my strengths and I played it too much like a chess match on Saturday.” 

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