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In a wrestling family, Sweet Home's Kyle Sieminski the first to win 4 state titles: Oregon wrestling 120/110 small-school roundup

“I know how good my brother and my dad were. I’m the first one, so that feels pretty good.”

Kyle Sieminski had his heart set on going out with a blaze of glory. 

Not only would the Sweet Home senior become his school’s first four-time state champion, but he would do so by pinning his way to the title.

He won his first three matches in a combined 169 seconds, but as time wound down in the final match of his run to becoming the 51st four-time champion in state history Friday night during the Class 4A 120-pound final at the OSAA wrestling state championships in Portland, despite holding a comfortable lead over Tillamook’s Jak Hopkes, he couldn’t pin his opponent down. 

“I was a little frustrated at first when I couldn’t get to my stuff,” Sieminski said. “But I guess it worked out.”

Kyle Sieminski Sweet Home Rene Ferran 2

Finally, after getting a reversal, Sieminski turned Hopkes toward the mat, and as the final second clicked off the clock, the referee’s hand slapped the Veterans Memorial Coliseum floor.

“I’ve been thinking about this a lot, but deep down, I knew that I was going to come out on top,” said Sieminski, who finished the season 54-3 and went 166-14 for his career. “It feels pretty good, yeah. The first one for my school. Yeah, it’s pretty awesome.”

Not only does his victory make him his school’s first four-timer, but it also gives him bragging rights in a family where his father, Clint, won his third title a quarter-century ago and brother Jacob — who fretted behind the mesh barrier as he watched Kyle’s match — won his second a year ago before graduating in June.

Kyle Sieminski Sweet Home Rene Ferran 3

“I get to bully them a little bit about it, yeah,” Kyle said, smiling. “But I know how good my brother and my dad were. I’m the first one, so that feels pretty good.” 

3A: In a year, Harrisburg junior Luke Cheek might join Sieminski in the four-timers club. Cheek won his third title with a first-round pin of Yamhill-Carlton’s Cayden Hill, and like Sieminski, he did so while helping his team win a state championship.

“That’s definitely in front of my mind now,” Cheek said. “To be the second to do it at Harrisburg (Dax Bennett was the first from 2016-19) would be pretty cool. So, it’s just back to training and keep training to achieve that goal.” 

2A/1A: Lowell junior Harley Hardison won his second title, overcoming a stalling penalty with 6 seconds left to hold on for a 9-8 decision over Willamina’s Kisor Savage. 

4A/3A/2A/1A Girls: Harrisburg freshman Paxton Steele denied Siuslaw’s Macali Lade a second title, escaping with 4 seconds left after Lade tied the 110-pound final with a reversal 10 seconds earlier for a 7-6 decision. 

Meet the champions: Class 6A | Class 5A | Class 4A | Class 3A | Class 2A/1A | Class 6A/5A Girls | Class 4A/3A/2A/1A Girls

Vote for best wrestler: Class 6A | Class 5A | Class 4A | Class 3A | Class 2A/1A | Class 6A/5A Girls | Class 4A/3A/2A/1A Girls

Previewing the state meets: Class 6A | Class 5A | Class 4A | Class 3A | Class 2A/1A | Class 6A/5A Girls | Class 4A/3A/2A/1A Girls

Recapping the district meets: Class 6A | Class 5A | Class 4A | Class 3A | Class 2A/1A | Class 6A/5A Girls | Class 4A/3A/2A/1A Girls

COMPLETE COVERAGE OF 2024 OSAA WRESTLING CHAMPIONSHIPS