From an altitude,
which is how most people see it, Iowa in winter is a dreary quilt-work of corn
stubble. But a gradual descent reveals a friendlier geography. Roads finally
form an intersection. A white church steeple or a water tower announces a
concentration of people. A town materializes. Iowa has its cities, of course,
but it's mostly a stitching of small towns--that much is clear from
overhead--none of them any bigger than they need to be to service the land
around it.
And in his office
Dan Gable is saying he could drive to any one of these towns--no matter how
small, featureless or remote--and find me a wrestling story. "That's just
the way it is," he says. "It's Iowa."
In Humboldt (pop.
4,452) they still talk about Frank Gotch, the sport's Babe Ruth. He was the
professional heavyweight champion from 1906 to '13 and famous enough for it
that he was invited to the White House to meet Teddy Roosevelt. In Sheldon
(pop. 4,912, A REALLY NICE PLACE!), they still talk of the Brands twins--Tom
and Terry--a couple of hyper handfuls who became Olympic medalists, Tom winning
a gold in '96, Terry a bronze in 2000. Cresco (pop. 3,905, IOWA'S YEAR 'ROUND
PLAYGROUND!) somehow produced five admirals and a Nobel Peace Prize winner as
well as two Olympians, a couple of college coaches and scores of individual
champions. The Nobel laureate, Norman Borlaug, wasn't one of the champs; he
finished second at the state tournament, in '32.
In fact, the only
school to have piled up more hardware than little Cresco in the 87 years of the
state tournament--a fever dream of small-town America--is Gable's alma mater,
West Waterloo High. Waterloo is no town (pop. 68,747, BIG CITY
EXCITEMENT�... HOMETOWN HOSPITALITY), but it's no Des Moines, either. Yet
it supports a wrestling museum with Gable's name on it, several vibrant high
school programs and a tradition that belies its size. Bob Siddens, who won 11
titles and coached more than 50 individual champions at West Waterloo, walks
around town, all dapper and crisp at the age of 81, recalling all the "lads
and lassies" he coached, and is accorded John Wooden respect. Gable, 58,
was a three-time champ under Siddens before earning three titles at Iowa State,
winning Olympic gold at 149.5 pounds in 1972 and then coaching Iowa to 15
championships in 21 years. (Wooden, by the way, won only 10 in 27 seasons at
UCLA.) He is treated more along the lines of a god.
For decades the
state's top high school wrestlers followed the roads out of town to Iowa City
or Ames. Iowa and Iowa State combined for 26 NCAA championships and produced 60
wrestlers, who won 91 titles from 1968--69 to 1999--2000. But then both
programs fell into relative doldrums. To remedy that, they hired coaches who
embody the sport's greatest glory, and each is rebounding fiercely. In its
first season under Cael Sanderson--perhaps the most accomplished U.S. wrestler
ever, having won Olympic gold in 2004 after going undefeated in four seasons at
Ames-- Iowa State is ranked No. 2 going into the NCAA championships, which start
on March 15 in Auburn Hills, Mich. Tom Brands left Virginia Tech last April to
take over at Iowa. He has lifted the Hawkeyes to No. 10, aided by an assistant
with a few credentials himself, Gable.
Wrestling is
characterized by nothing so much as work ethic, which is something worth
celebrating and remembering in a place that requires so much of it. Iowans like
their football and basketball, too, but they love their wrestling. And this
passion has transferred directly into an extended excellence that neither
Indiana in basketball nor Texas in football can claim. The lore is pure
Americana, reminding us of a permanence of achievement and small-potatoes glory
that doesn't seem possible outside places like Iowa. Would Bob Steenlage
persevere in memory if he'd been California's first four-time high school
champion? In Britt (pop. 2,052; FOUNDED BY RAIL, SUSTAINED BY PLOW), he remains
famous, hauled out for newspaper reminiscences 45 years later.
Even Northern
Iowa, in Cedar Falls, and Cornell College, in Mount Vernon, have won NCAA
titles, giving the 30th most populous state a total of 30. Oklahoma is a
powerhouse too--between them, Oklahoma State and Oklahoma have 41--but other
programs advance tentatively, mindful of the mystique. Minnesota coach J
Robinson, who assisted Gable for 12 seasons (and who poaches an Iowa four-time
state champ, like 133-pound Mack Reiter, when he can) has the No. 1 team,
having crushed Iowa 29--13 in a meet last month. But he does not anticipate a
reworking of wrestling mythology anytime soon.
"At
Minnesota," he says, "we've got a minor sport. In Iowa, it's still a
major sport. There's a different mind-set, a different attitude. Wrestling is
important. I mean, [the Hawkeyes] have their own beat writer." When the
Golden Gophers came to Iowa City, 8,274 fans showed up. Iowa, which has won
"only" three championships since Gable left in 1997--his successor Jim
Zalesky was replaced after finishing fourth in the NCAAs last year--still leads
the country in attendance, with 6,740 fans per meet.
Iowa State has a
formidable tradition as well, and it's rebuilding, too, perhaps at a faster
clip than its rival. Under Sanderson, the Cyclones are in the hunt for their
first championship in 20 years. For all his success, though, the 27-year-old
Sanderson remains something of an outsider, having grown up in Heber City,
Utah. But he understands Iowa wrestling. "When I came to Iowa State as a
freshman," he says, "and, remember, I'd been a four-time champion in
Utah, somebody asked me if I thought I could have won even one in Iowa. That's
the attitude."
To maintain such
tradition, such attitude, in the face of increasing distractions and
competition from other sports is nothing less than a marvel. There is no reason
that other, more populous states, shouldn't surpass Iowa. Brands says the top
high school programs right now are in New Jersey and Ohio. His best prospect,
who won't be eligible until next season, is from Michigan. But he knows, all
the same, that the key to success is to recruit those four-timers, the
small-town legends, the hard-nosed and aggressive ones, and make them
competitive at the college level. "These fans deserve that," he says.
"They expect that."