Heâs really got that dog in him.Â
The Island Trees Bulldogs havenât had a state-champion wrestler since 1979, but that can all change beginning Friday thanks to the shot and takedowns of senior Joe Filocamo, the schoolâs first three-straight Nassau County title holder.Â
The 17-year-old cruised to victory this year with a win over Seafordâs Yiannis Thomas two weeks ago.
Filocamo is on track to become one of the most memorable athletes the tiny school district â one not widely known as an athletic powerhouse â has ever seen.Â
âWe were always looked down on,â Filocamo told The Post. âIâm just here to show them just because weâre small doesnât mean you donât have what it takes.âÂ
The team name under which Filocamo plays three sports is the perfect metaphor for his underdog athletic career.Â
In the fall, he barely sees a second on the football sideline as a running back, linebacker and long-snapper before shedding about 20 pounds to wrestle in the 138-pound weight class, only to put on more muscle as a lacrosse midfielder in the spring.Â
âWrestling is my least favorite sport,â admitted Filocamo, who is going to Long Island University for lax next year.
He joined the wrestling team for two reasons: to stay in shape during the cold weather months and to pound heads without getting in trouble.Â
Going into senior year, two epic wrestling title wins were enough.
As a sophomore, Filocamo erased a 1-0 deficit against Locust Valleyâs Justin Dvorak to post a dramatic 7-1 win in the final seconds.
Then, as a junior, he defeated an East Meadow wrestler, Sebastian Barco, to whom the Bulldogs had lost earlier in the year, to claim gold.Â
âI really hated wrestling last year,â Filocamo said of its fatiguing commitment that can break down many athletes. âI was done wrestling up at that point. I was like, âI canât do this anymore. I donât enjoy the sport.ââÂ
However, just because he was down for the count didnât mean coach Damian Garcia was.Â
âCoach told me, âItâs not about you. Itâs about everyone around you and your family, your community, and the boys on the team,ââ Filocamo said.Â
Filocamo truly got the message when Garcia, who said there would be no hard feelings either way, impressed his star leader with what it means to finish what he started â and how his success really impacted the small Levittown school.Â
âThe community itself, the wrestling community, the parents, they just like having him around. Heâs just such a good, positive role model,â Garcia said of Filocamo, who happily works with middle schoolers and young athletes to develop them into the next leaders on varsity.Â
The coach added that Filocamoâs presence and mentorship immediately changed the tenor of Island Trees wrestling.Â
âWe havenât had as much newsworthy stuff over the last 10 years,â Garcia said. âJoe has led the way. Weâve had five county champions in the last three years, and 10 kids qualify for the state tournament.âÂ
Then, Filocamo started noticing the fanfare himself.Â
âMy guidance counselor was coming up to me, my home and careers teacher, my dad, all saying, âYou gotta wrestle, you gotta wrestle,â â he recalled.Â
âAnd I dominated my senior year. Everything came together. ⌠The second I won my third championship, the first thing coach asked, âArenât you glad I made you wrestle?â And I was.âÂ
Garcia proudly says Filocamo wrapped his high school tenure on the highest note possible for reasons beyond claiming school history.Â
âThe younger kids got to see somebody who can lead by example because he is an extremely hard worker,â the coach said. âI knew once we got him in the room that it would be like riding a bike, and he would be right back where he was.âÂ
Whatever happens at states in Albany, this weekend will be Filocamoâs last dance as a wrestler.Â
Even if he wins, nationals would conflict with lacrosse, and the one-sport-a-season athlete would have to shift gears. Regardless, Filocamo is looking forward to his collegiate future and that of the Bulldogsâ wrestling program, where heâll likely volunteer as a coach next year in his downtime.Â
âThese guys have the potential to win it all,â he said of the gritty squad that made him into a repeat champion.Â
âItâs not about the size of the dog in the fight; itâs about the size of the fight in the dog. That was my senior quote this year.â