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Sycamore's Akins wins elusive wrestling state championship

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CHAMPAIGN – A Sycamore state wrestling champion, runner-up and third-place winner shared a room at a Drury Inn this weekend.

In their arrangement before Saturday's finals, 195-pounder Jake Davis enjoyed the pullout couch to himself while Kyle Akins (113) and Austin Culton (152) slept on opposite ends of a king size bed.

No word on whether Akins got more room to spread out after taking the Class 2A crown at the University of Illinois' Assembly Hall. After defeating Montini senior Tommy Pawelski to cap a 40-1 campaign, the junior seemed agreeable to just about anything.

Culton finished second after a dramatic ending to his bid for a second successive state title, while Davis, a fellow senior, rallied to place third. Naturally, the trio spent much of its hotel time resting, but that didn't mean they were unproductive.

"We just kind of relaxed and then we got to the arena, and just tried to stay confined the whole time," Akins said.

Sycamore will look to channel its individual success when the team faces Northern Illinois Big 12 East rival Yorkville in the Rochelle dual team sectional at 6 p.m. Tuesday. A win there would send the Spartans to the dual team state tournament in Bloomington on Feb. 23.

Moments after Culton (43-1) allowed a go-ahead takedown to Richmond-Burton's Garrett Sutton with 25 seconds remaining in their title bout at 152, Spartans coach Alex Nelson offered quick perspective. The Northern Illinois-bound Culton didn't have to let his season end with a 5-4 loss in Champaign.

"He's got nothing to be ashamed of. He works hard. He's a great kid. He's going to do well next year at NIU," Nelson said. "It can't be a black eye. I mean, he had a great career and I hope for great things for him."

Just ahead of the Culton match, Kaneland senior Dan Goress downed Montini senior Michael Sepke, 3-1, for 2A 145-pound title before beginning to deliver a series of cliches. He lived a dream. His hard work paid off. While trite, that much was true. Still, Goress undoubtedly turned those phrases and his parents' daily reminders of his ability to accomplish whatever he put his mind to into currency.

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