t first glance, Birm- ingham Groves High School students Steve Simon and Jeremy Lewin don't appear to have much in com- a:, Simon, 16, a sophomore, is 5- foot-3 and he weighs just over 100 pounds. He was on the ju- nior varsity football team this past fall, but he saw very little action. Lewin, 17, is a junior. At 6-foot- 2 112 and 262 pounds, he's near- ly a foot taller than Simon and he's so much heavier that he nearly triples Simon's weight. On the football field, Lewin has the potential to be a major college line prospect next season. Simon and Lewin do share a common denominator, however. They are the bookends in the lineup of the most successful wrestling team in the history of their high school and both have qualified for Saturday's Class A individual regional meet at Troy It will be their first ap- pearance in the regionals and if they can finish in the top four in their weight classes, they'll move on to the Class A individual state meet Friday and Saturday, March 10-11, at the Kellogg Center in Battle Creek. In the individual dis- tricts held last Saturday at Troy, Simon finished sec- ond at 100 pounds and Lewin was third at 275 pounds. Simon fell to a Redford Catholic Central wrestler, 15-9, in the dis- trict finals and Lewin pinned a much-heavier foe from Oak Park in 2:17 in the match for third place. Groves took a 17-2 dual meet record into the Class A team re- gional tournament Wednesday at Grosse Pointe South. The Fal- cons got to this regional by win- ning their first district title ever Feb. 15 at Royal Oak Kimball. Earlier, Groves won the Divi- sion III championship in the new Oakland Activities Association (OAA) with a perfect 5-0 dual meet record, earning its first league title in nearly 20 years. The individual Class A regionals are next for Birmingham Groves wrestling stars Steve Simon and Jeremy Lewin. STEVE STEIN STAFF WRITER Among the Falcons' non-Division III dual meet wins are victo- ries over Division II winner Troy Athens and Division IV ti- tlist Birmingham Seaholm. Before Wednesday, Simon owned a 29-11 record this sea- son, including a 14-3 mark at 100 pounds (his other matches were at 106 pounds). He won the OAA Division II individual championship at 100 pounds and he has beaten every wrestler who placed in the top six at 100 pounds in the Oakland County meet. "It'll be to Steve's advantage for the rest of the season that he has wrestled in more than 50 matches during his high school career," said Groves coach An- drew Wilson. "Most of the kids in the 100-pound division are rela- tively inexperienced freshmen." At 262 pounds, Jeremy Lewin is a "light" heavyweight. Even though this is only Si- mon's second year as a wrestler, the sport is in his blood. His fa- ther, Jerry, wrestled in high school in Cleveland Heights, Ohio, and for one year in college at the University of Michigan. Lewin was 31-10 at 275 pounds with a team-leading 22 pins before Wednesday. Despite being one of the "lightest" heavy- weights in the area, Lewin has come on strong in the latter stages of the season, using his speed and strength to flatten op- ponents. The third-year wrestler has won the OAA Division II indi- vidual and Chippewa Valley Invitational tournament cham- pionships since the first of the year. In December, he finished sixth in the county meet for the second consecutive season. "When Jeremy gets an oppo- nent on his back, he doesn't usu- PHOTOS BY BILL GEMM ELL Battling For Battle Creek Above: A straining Steve Simon puts the clamps on a Southfield-Lathrup foe. Right: Steve Simon and Jeremy Lewin. ally get up," Wilson said. In dual meets, it's Simon's job to get Groves going because he usually competes in the first or second match. Lewin wres- tles last, so he's some- times called upon to compete in a match which determines the winning team. Simon and Lewin both did their jobs in Groves' defining mo- ment this season, its 35-26 win over peren- nial power Troy on Jan. 19. Si- mon won 16-5 at 100 pounds and Lewin pinned his Troy foe in 2:30 after falling behind 5-0. "I like wrestling early because you get your match over with quickly," Simon said. "Sometimes I hate wrestling last because it can get boring when the meet isn't close," Lewin said. On Feb. 9, the night Groves de- feated archrival Seaholm, the fired-up Falcons were in front 35- 0 more than halfway through the meet. By the time Lewin hit the mat, some of the fans were putting on their coats and getting ready to head home. Then the Seaholm heavy- weight accidentally slapped Lewin in the face. With fire sud- denly in his eyes and his team- mates yelling "Louie!" in the background, Lewin pinned his op- ponent in 2:27. Groves left the Seaholm gym a 50-12 winner. "I can't stand it when someone does that to me," Lewin said about the slap, the anger still in his voice. Berkley High School juniors Aaron Kobernick and Ben Gitler also have qualified for the Class A individual regional at Troy. Kobernick will be making his sec- ond consecutive individual re- gional appearance, but it will be the first for Gitler. In last Saturday's individual district at Troy, Kobernick was third at 112 pounds and Gitler was second at 172 pounds. Gitler was pinned by Hazel Park's un- defeated Aaron Hilgendorf at 5:34 in the district finals, but Berkley coach Bruce Burwitz predicts Gitler will do better if he has a re- match with Hilgendorf in the re- gionals. "I think Ben realizes now that Hilgendorf isn't God ... he's just another kid," Burwitz said. Kobernick edged an opponent from Troy 4-3 to take third place in the district. El