What are you, RoverNation? the official Easton historian?
I can add to your history a bit. I used to go up there ever December to see what they called, I think, The Final Four or something like that. They'd bring in teams from Oklahoma or Oregon (I liked that Oregon team) to compete with Easton and Blair. How'd you like to fly all the way across the country to take two butt beatings?
I'd go up with a friend or two, and we used to take bets as to how fast the Easton crowd started calling "STALLING!!!" Usually it was about the time of the coin flip.
Official, no, I'm not Jack Logic. But I've worked with the Hall of Fame committee, I lived through a lot of it, and am pretty good at looking up what I don't remember (the old Easton Wrestling and D11 sites are amazing if you get an archive of them, pa-wrestling is incredible for brackets, etc.), which helps supplement what I do know and jog memories. And I've got old docs from Hall of Fame, Lehigh Valley Wrestling History, and other stuff I've looked up and contributed to that I can go to in a pinch.
The Final Four was always my favorite event of the year. It started as the Elite Duals, which they used to host at Lafayette, which was basically an excuse to get Walsh Jesuit to come wrestle Easton and Nazareth in 1996. There were various iterations of it that brought in a bunch of teams - St. Ed's, Blair, Walsh always were pretty consistent participants. It morphed into the NHSCA Final Four in 2002. The first Final Four was Blair, Easton, Solon (OH) with Deonte Penn, and some school from New Jersey (don't have it in front of me). Not a great field - Easton and St. Ed's actually dualed separtely that year - but it was a chance to get Easton/Blair when they were #1 and #2 in the country that year. Easton took the first six matches, then Dan Brown lost to Ryan Davis in OT, then Blair's run of Mark Perry, Zack Esposito, Hudson Taylor, Matt Palmer, and Kurt Backes erased the deficit and then some.
The Final Four really got going in 2003, when it was Great Bridge (VA) who was at the height of their powers, Edmond North (OK) but the year after Johny Hendricks and Teyon Ware graduated, Easton, and Blair. I mostly remember that for Mike Rogers hammering future AA Chris Brown, but Great Bridge beat Easton in the dual. The best field was 2004, with St. Paris Graham, Apple Valley, Blair, and Easton - like I said in the other post, Easton beat Graham and Apple Valley in the first two sessions, both incredible duals. The big hero was Alex Krom, who beat Cameron Doggett who was either 2 or 3 in the country at the time and then Richard Fessler from AV, who was a two or three time Minnesota state champ, who was getting beat handily by Krom and tried to punch him and got DQ'd in the last 30 seconds. Seth Ciasulli also beat Charlie Falck in the same dual to end some super long winning streak. That might be the only single day in school history that Apple Valley went 0-3.
The 2005 Final Four was in a massive snowstorm where they had to compress the whole event. Rio Rancho (NM) flew out for it when they were ranked #6 by AWN and were on some huge in-state winning streak, Great Bridge came back, this time ranked #2 nationally after really good Beast and Ironman showings, and then Easton and Blair. Easton put it on Rio Rancho pretty good in the opening session, then came back immediately and beat Great Bridge, Ciasulli beating the younger Frishkorn kicked that one off. They moved the Easton-Blair dual up from being a stand alone night match to like 1 PM to beat the snow, which Easton fans mostly remember for Alex Krom beating then national #1 Adam Frey in just an incredible 10-7 match, where Krom put him on his back in the second period, then when he was up 8-7, hit a double to ice it and rode him out. That was also the Mario Mason coming out party as he was a freshman and beat Frishkorn and the older Oliver brother in two of his first varsity matches.
Great Bridge came back the next year, and Bishop Lynch (TX) came up with the Silvers and Ashmores. I think Russ Souders beat Ben Ashmore in the standard huge Final 4 upset for the Red Rovers. Hermiston, Oregon came in 2007 in an expanded field with Bishop Lynch, Easotn, and Nazareth. I think there was one more final four in 2008, but Blair was really pulling away from Easton at that point and the event made less sense from a competitive perspective. I'd love for the good guys to get back to that level and put stuff like that on their schedule.