Education

Pahrump Valley Wrestling Returns Home, Dominates Somerset Losee 98-28 on Senior Night

Pahrump Valley beat Somerset Losee 98-28 on senior night, returning home after a run of road meets. The dominant win lifts community spirit and underscores the value of local youth sports.

Lisa Park2 min read
Published
Listen to this article0:00 min
Share this article:
Pahrump Valley Wrestling Returns Home, Dominates Somerset Losee 98-28 on Senior Night
Source: pvc.news

Pahrump Valley's wrestling team made a long-awaited homecoming memorable, rolling past Somerset Losee 98-28 during Senior Night inside the Pahrump Valley High School gym. The Jan. 16 dual marked the Trojans' first full home event after a stretch of meets in Las Vegas, Reno and Mesquite, and it doubled as a celebration for seniors and their families.

The team opened with an immediate momentum swing when seniors Timothy Stutzman and Ethan Rouse earned back-to-back forfeits at 106 and 113 pounds, producing a quick 12-point advantage. That early edge set the tone for a night dominated by depth, lineup advantages and a string of bonus-point victories. At 120 pounds, junior Zachary Hulderson recorded an 11-2 fall at 1:24, and senior Joseph Scheer followed with a 27-second pin of Kevin Dino. Senior Dominic Chiancone added another forfeit at 126 pounds.

Freshman Carlos Flores extended the Trojans' run at 132 pounds, building a 10-1 lead and finishing with a pin of Somerset sophomore Joaquin Rogers at 2:45. Senior Jacob McLaughlin delivered one of the fastest falls of the night, pinning Antonio Moreno in 16 seconds at 138 pounds. Somerset Losee offered resistance at 144 pounds, but Pahrump Valley continued to accumulate technical falls and pins through the upper weights to close the overwhelming 98-28 victory.

Beyond the scoreboard, the dual has local implications that reach the mat. For a rural school program that has spent recent weekends traveling to Las Vegas, Reno and Mesquite, bringing a full meet back to PVHS reduced travel strains on student-athletes and families, allowed seniors to be honored in front of a home crowd, and reinforced community ties. Youth sports in Nye County contribute to physical activity, mental resilience and social connection, particularly for students whose extracurricular opportunities can be limited by distance and transportation barriers.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

The match also highlights ongoing public health and safety considerations for school athletics. Sustained travel can increase missed classroom time and parental time off work, and high-contact sports like wrestling require consistent access to athletic training, injury prevention programs and concussion protocols. Investing in on-site medical support and equitable transportation funding can improve athlete safety and help keep rural programs competitive.

Pahrump Valley now turns its attention back to the road, preparing to face rivals in Mesquite in upcoming duals. For the community, the Senior Night rout is a reminder of local pride and the broader role school sports play in health, education and civic life. Supporting the Trojans - by attending matches, backing booster efforts, and advocating for resources that reduce travel burdens and expand medical support - will help ensure that more home nights like this one are possible.

Sources:

Know something we missed? Have a correction or additional information?

Submit a Tip

Never miss a story.
Get Nye, NV updates weekly.

The top stories delivered to your inbox.

Free forever · Unsubscribe anytime

Discussion

More in Education