Daily Pilot Athlete of the Week -- Jeremy Valdes: Quieting the
critics
Barry Faulkner
While some athletes measure success by the roar of the crowd, it is
periods of silence by which Estancia High senior Jeremy Valdes weighs his
worth.
Quiet time is, in fact, what the 135-pound wrestler is working for
when he steps on the mat. The better his performance, the shorter his
father’s videotape critique.
“We always watch the videos of my matches and he likes to tell me what
I did wrong,” Valdes said of his father, Luis, a former 171-pound
wrestler at Culver City High. “He was kind of quiet after Saturday.”
Saturday included five victories, all by pin, in the University High
12-way Tournament. Valdes, a two-time Pacific Coast League champion who
was 18-4 through Tuesday, was named most valuable wrestler in the lower
seven weight classes.
His pristine tournament showing capped a week in which he pinned all
seven of his opponents, including league dual meets against Costa Mesa
and Northwood. It also earned him Daily Pilot Athlete of the Week
recognition.
Valdes who competed last season at 140 pounds, shed 17 pounds after
football to tackle 135-pounders in his final prep campaign.
“It took me a while to feel comfortable after dropping all that
weight, but things are going as planned,” he said. “My goal, coming into
this season, was to finish in the top four in CIF Southern Section
(Division IV) and make it to the Masters Meet (from which Southern
Section standouts advance to the CIF State meet.)”
Toward that end, Valdes stopped eating junk food and has maintained a
rigid training regimen.
He has also continued to refine his style, which is based on
aggressive counter attacks.
“I like to react off what the other guy is doing,” he said. “My dad
taught me to be aggressive. He always said I should try to be three moves
ahead of the other guy and take advantage of every chance he gives me.”
Valdes said he doesn’t worry much about scouting the opposition, an
opportunity most wrestlers seize in a tournament setting. Instead, he
relies on six years of wrestling experience to feel his competition out
early in the first period.
“I can tell a lot by the handshake,” said Valdes, who began wrestling
in a freestyle club as a sixth-grader. “Usually I know how serious the
challenge is going to be within the first minute. If it’s a decent
opponent, I get serious. If not, I try to kick back and work on some
technique. Against the guys I can fool around with, I try to score a lot
of points.”
But, clearly, he is not above bringing a quick halt to his matches, as
his seven pins last week would attest.
Valdes said he does not favor any particular move, but he likes to
utilize his legs when attacking. He said his work in the football weight
room (he started at quarterback, wingback and cornerback the last two
seasons), has given him an edge in the strength department. He noted his
quickness is hardly special for his weight class, but he considers
aggressiveness and experience as attributes.
Valdes, who won the El Rancho Tournament earlier this year, is also a
strong leader for the Eagles, guided by Co-Coaches Steve Perez and Matt
Atalano.
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