Mike Grey … Antonio Mangione … Pat Glory … Anthony Clark … so many other Delbarton wrestling greats over the years.

And now, Alessio Perentin.

The dust has now settled on the Boardwalk Hall mats and now it can be stated: The senior is indeed one of the best wrestlers in the Green Wave’s illustrious, jam-packed history.

So if you gather around with your friends and sort through the greatest wrestlers in history, don’t forget about the Cornell University-bound Perentin, who belongs right at the top of the conversation.

The 165-pound senior won his third straight state championship in resounding fashion at the state tournament in Atlantic City Saturday, majoring Christian Brothers Academy’s A.J. Falcone, 12-3.

Perentin overwhelmed his weight for much of the tournament, tecking three different wrestlers and then getting by Don Bosco’s Santino Rodriguez, 6-5, to get to the finals.

He was dominant on his feet in beating Falcone for the second time this year, getting two takedowns in the first period and then adding a third takedown and backs in the second to win going away.

“This is so awesome, the cherry on top,” Perentin said. “The first two years I was kind of surprised. This year I kind of expected it.”

Perentin became just the second Delbarton wrestler to have finished as a three-time state champion. Grey was the first four-timer in New Jersey history. Perentin joined fellow three-timer Clark as the only two to have been to the top of the podium three times.

It is quite astonishing when you consider all of the great wrestlers who have come out of the school, far and away more than other Morris schools.

And to think, when Perentin first entertained coming to Delbarton, that winning just one would have sufficed.

“Back then, Ty Agaisse was a state champion (2014),” Perentin said of Agaisse, who was second in the state two other times and was a four-time plaewinner. “I just wanted to win one. I guess I did something right.”

He sure did – and his presence on and off the mat will be missed in the room and in the hallways.

This year, he took on the role of a team leader. Perentin rattled off a laundry list of names at Delbarton who were not only terrific wrestlers but who set the tone and led the team during its demanding workouts, guys like Andy Troczynski, Louis Cerchio, and Simon Ruiz.

“He’s a great, great teammate and a great person,” coach Bryan Stoll said. “He was such a great leader for us. He has a great sense of humor. I’m really, really gonna miss that kid.”

So will Green Wave teammate Jayden James, who’d won a state championship of his own a short time earlier. Those two butted heads all season long. Sometimes the battles in the room would get downright violent with cuts and bruises and gashes and blood flowing.

But that is all part of being a state champion.

“He’s my brother,” James said. “We’re family. Sometimes, it got a little chippy but it’s all good in the end. It’s what families do.”

Half of that family – Perentin – wrestled his final match for the Green Wave and will wrestle for Grey, now the head coach at Cornell.

Perentin (155-10 during his stellar career) is ready for that next step, clearly.

“He’s a college wrestler at this point in time,” assistant coach Guy Russo said. “He’s that good. He’s just so technically sound, just like a college wrestler.”