How a culture change turned Paramus Catholic from a loser to contender by Sean Farrell of The Record

The new coach came in with an honest warning.

It wasn’t all about winning.

From the start, Jon Piela knew it would take time.

That was clear when just six wrestlers showed up on his first day. It would take patience back when the practice room was empty at Paramus Catholic and its lineup was even more barren. Watching away fans outnumber the Paladins’ own had become normal.

Paramus Catholic had hit rock bottom when Piela arrived and needed a change, on and off the mat.

He could accept the losses, but not the culture.

“The culture’s got to change,” said Piela, in his third year. “That was the No. 1 thing. I didn’t care about wins or losses my first year. Culture has got to change. These guys have to buy into believing in the system and how it works, what it takes to win.”

Paramus Catholic went 2-22 in his first year. It jumped to 11-8 in the next one.

This season looks even more promising.

The Paladins are shaping up to be one of North Jersey’s better programs with most starters now training year-round for a club. Three of their lower weights even placed at the Bergen County tournament. That’s helped the 22nd-ranked team get off to a 7-4 start and become a destination for good wrestlers. With one senior on the varsity roster, the outlook only looks to be getting better.

“It’s amazing,” said Sean Faraon, a 120-pound junior. “Going from where we were having nothing to where we are now and having a great team right now shows us how we can move forward, how we’re determined to go places.”

Paramus Catholic doesn’t have much tradition.

Two league titles from the 1970’s are all that keeps its wrestling banner from being empty. So Piela likes to point to another banner, the one nestled in the corner of the gym, when prospective students visit for an open house. Until a few years ago, its football team didn’t have much to show for, either.

“My line to everybody who comes here is, why don’t you be the Jabrill Peppers of wrestling? One guy made that commitment to come here and they all followed. We’re thinking we’re headed in the right direction. That guy might be on my team right now.”

Piela speaks boldly about his vision.

He wants Paramus Catholic to eventually be thought of alongside Don Bosco and DePaul – two county champions in his division – or Bergen Catholic, a league rival now ranked No. 1 in the nation. Those high standards may have been formed by his own career as a region champion for the Crusaders, a three-sport high school athlete who later played football at Fordham.

His Paladins aren’t there yet, but have made progress.

Faraon and sophomore Kley Peralta each took seventh at last month’s BCCA tournament. Will Matistic came in eighth and fellow freshman Chris Lydon has been very good.

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“Winning and losing are both contagious,” Piela said. “Unfortunately in the past, in my first year here, we had guys get pinned and more guys get pinned. It almost feels like the kids were saying that it’s OK to get pinned. Now we’re at a point where we’re winning matches and kids are getting excited about it. We’re a team and now they feel that my buddy just pinned somebody and I have to do the same.”

Building that culture took some time in Piela’s first year.

Even with a small lineup, mat time became a privilege.

Sometimes, only two or three wrestlers got into a match while the rest of the team was left to watch on the bench. Getting rid of bad habits in practice or the classroom was more important to Piela than the score. There were growing pains to workouts that were more structured and more demanding.

“It was a little bit hard,” senior Liam Lynch said. “We weren’t used to it. I definitely wasn’t. But it was really good to have someone ready to work with us. You come in ready for 1-on-1, trying to make us better than what we were.”

Lynch said he still feels like an underdog, though that label may not last. Paramus Catholic now has about 20 wrestlers on its team these days and occasionally gets on the right side of some blowouts.

“I’m sad to be leaving,” Lynch said. “I really wish we could have done better in my earlier years, but I’m just ecstatic about how I’m leaving the program and where it’s headed because it’s only up from here. I could never imagine us getting as far as we did.”