Inside HOKIE SPORTS | Vol. 12 No. 4 | March 2020

44 Inside Hokie Sports Hearp Financial, LLC Strategies By Tech Fans, For Tech Fans, and more Todd F. Hearp is a Registered Representative and Investment Adviser Representative of, and securities and investment advisory services offered solely by Equity Services Inc. Member FINRA/SIPC, 4401 Starkey Road, Roanoke, VA 24018, (540) 989-4600. Hearp Financial, LLC. and Eddie Hearp are independent of Equity Services, Inc. TC108373(0619)1 4401 Starkey Road, Roanoke, VA 24018 www.nfservicesinc.com • Hearp_Todd@nlvmail.com Strategies For Seeking a Safe Retirement Todd F. Hearp Class of ‘89 Eddie F. Hearp Class of ‘65 Proud to Support Virginia Tech Athletics (540) 989-4600 Our firm provides policy analysis reviews for all existing life insurance policies with any company to confirm how long death benefit will last, to ensure that policy contains all available non tobacco discounts, living benefit riders, and that your beneficiary and ownership are up-to-date. • Investment Services • Insurance Services • Retirement Planning • Estate Planning Strategies • Premium Financed Life Insurance for Estate Protection & Charitable Planning • Guaranteed Lifetime Income Strategies • IRA/401(K) Rollovers LaPrade fell 6-3 to Virginia’s Justin McCoy in the first round and was pinned by North Carolina’s AC Headlee in a consolation semifinal. He bounced back with a 17-2 technical fall of Carter to finish in fifth place in the weight class. LaPrade had received the ACC’s last NCAA automatic qualifying spot in this weight class. 165 pounds —David McFadden, a two-time ACC champion, entered the tournament as the No. 3 seed and advanced to the championship match for the third consecutive year. McFadden opened with a 3-0 victory over Virginia’s CamCoy. He rode Coy for much of the match and then scored on a reversal in the third period to grab a 2-0 lead. A riding time point enabled McFadden to pick up the three-point win. In his semifinal match, McFadden avenged an early-season loss to NC State’s Thomas Bullard. Bullard scored early on an escape, but McFadden’s second-period takedown gave him a 2-1 lead. He added a third-period takedown to beat Bullard 4-1. In the championship match, McFadden took on Pittsburgh’s Jeff Wentzel, and he grabbed a 1-0 lead early by scoring on a penalty point. Wentzel, though, picked up a second-period takedown and held the lead from then on. McFadden nearly scored on a reversal toward the end of the match to tie things at 3, and the officials reviewed the action, but the original call stood. Wentzel ultimately walked away with a 3-1 victory. McFadden still secured a qualifying spot at the NCAA Championships for the fourth time in his career. 174 pounds —Cody Hughes became an NCAA qualifier for the first time in his career by finishing fourth in this weight class. Hughes, the No. 5 seed, lost to North Carolina’s Clay Lautt 11-5 in the first round, but he bounced back with a 7-4 win over Duke’s Mason Eaglin in a consolation semifinal match. He picked up three first-period takedowns and never looked back en route to the win. In the third-place match, Hughes faced Gregg Harvey of Pittsburgh and lost 7-4. Still, Hughes had earned an automatic qualifying spot to the NCAA Championships. 197 pounds —Stanley Smeltzer suffered a tough tournament in Pittsburgh, dropping his lone two matches. He entered as the No. 4 seed, but fell to Duke’s Vincent Baker in the first round by a score of 5-2. In a consolation semifinal match, he lost 11-3 to Pittsburgh’s Kellan Stout. Heavyweight —John Borst secured his place at the NCAA Championships with a third-place finish at the ACC tournament. Borst, the No. 4 seed, bounced North Carolina’s Andrew Gunning by a score of 5-1 in the first round. He scored on a takedown toward the end of the first period, and he added an escape point in the second period. He also picked up a point when Gunning was hit with a second stall call. Borst rode Gunning for most of the third period to seal the win. Things didn’t go as well for the redshirt sophomore in the semifinals, as he fell 10-1 to Pittsburgh’s Demetrius Thomas. But he bounced back, registering a 16-0 technical fall against Duke’s Jonah Niesenbaum in a consolation semifinal, and then he beat Gunning again—this time in the third-place match. Borst scored on a second-period escape, and he picked up another point after two stalling calls on Gunning. He added a riding time point to register a 3-0 victory. Borst qualified for the NCAA Championships for the first time in his career. In all, Tech picked up a gold medal, two silver medals and two bronze medals at the ACC Championships. The Hokies had qualified at least nine wrestlers to the NCAA Championships for the third consecutive year and for the fifth time in the past eight years. BOLEN Continued from page 43

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