Page 8-The Michigan Daily- Sports Monday- December 7, 1992 KING Continued from page 1 placed King in the heavyweight spot, a place where he is much more comfortable. Trost has been a significant help in King's development. In his seventh season as an assistant, he has pounded on King for the duration of practice and has taught him more than a thing or two. The former heavyweight champion has paid close attention to King. "It has really been helpful to wrestle against Kirk Trost," King said. "It is good to have one guy beat on you everyday. I mean, (Trost) is an animal." All of the support of teammates and coaches does not equal the amount that King receives from his father, though. Kevin King has been there for his son since the beginning. Kevin King travels to many of Steve's meets and is Steve's biggest fan. Steve knows that his father and mother, Karen, will always be there for him. "My family goes to a lot of my meets," King said. "It is good to know that they are behind me." Steve King began wrestling as a seven year-old in Janesville, Minn. He heard a neighbor talking about going to wrestle and decided to tag along. He really enjoyed himself and performed well. It wasn't long before his dad was sending him to tournaments across the country. King's background is really in greco-roman and freestyle wrestling. These two styles are completely different from the styles of high school and college wrestling. In 1990, at the Olympic Festival in Minneapolis, King took the gold in both greco-roman and in freestyle. He repeated that feat in 1991 in Los Angeles. His varsity high school career began in seventh grade. Saint Clair High was very small, but renowned for its wrestling teams. At the age of 12, King was wrestling against high school upperclassmen. In his senior year, he was a high school all- American with national and state championships. He finished as the Notre Dame and Michigan, King says, are very different places. Notre Dame is a lot more conservative with a much greater stress on football. Michigan, meanwhile, is doing more to support minor sports. Minnesota state-record holder with 119 career pins. And Notre Dame is minuscule compare to Michigan's Ann Arbor campus. King knew or recognized almost every person that he saw. This made the transition a little harder. "Notre Dame is even smaller than it seems," King said. " It has 7,000 people and Michigan is much, much bigger. You know everybody, now I just know the wrestlers and I don't feel like starting over." On football Saturdays, King can be found wearing either a Michigan or a Notre Dame t-shirt. Because of his continuing support of Notre Dame, his teammates call him" lucky charm." And King was one of the few Michigan students that was happy I- King with the 17-17 tie between the two schools in football. He was in attendance Sept. 12 at Notre Dame and decided to root for his friends on the Irish squad, but for the Michigan team as a whole. "I was driving down there wondering who to root for," King said. "I have a lot friends on the team, like (offensive lineman) Justin Hall, but I thought I should root for Michigan. It is kind of funny that it ended in a tie." King subscribes to the idea that Michigan fans are as good as Notre Dame fans, but they are just not that loud. However, he believes that Michigan's athletic program and fan support is far better overall. King has a lot to look forward to in his first season as a Wolverine. The most immediate will be when Morgan State, Ferris State and Lehigh come to Keen Arena on Jan. 9. He is excited about wrestling in front of the Michigan fans and in a good meet. "At Notre Dame it was frustrating, because we had either lost or won by the time the match got to me," King said. "I expect to be in some really great matches that I can contribute in. There is a spirit here. You see your teammate out there winning and you want to win." After that King will have the opportunity to wrestle the best at the Big Ten championships at Ohio State next spring. He has already handily defeated Ray Mendoza from Ohio State (6-1). King will be considered one of the favorites in Columbus, March 6-7. An individual title and a national team title are King's ultimate goal. He really believes that both are strong possibilities. He sees himself and his team as top-10 competitors in the Midwest and on a national scale. The distant future could place King in the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta. With his past efforts in the Olympic Festival, King has more than a legitimate shot of making it. He plans on wresting in the 220 pound Greco-Roman category. Greco-Roman is King's strong point because it stresses upper body strength. King is weighing in now at 240 so that he can compete with the 275-pound monsters of the Big Ten, though he says he feels much more comfortable at a set weight of 220 pounds. No athlete is immune from unexpected occurrences. King's most embarrassing moment came two years ago at a meet in Syracuse. He was wrestling one of the nation's top 190 pounders, Mark Kerr, in a very important and serious match. In the middle of the match, King detected a large amount of laughing coming from the stands and from the cheerleaders. It wasn't until they stopped the match that King realized that there was a large tear in a very bad spot in his singlet, the crotch. As luck would have it, this particular match was being televised so King had to change. The official sent him to the side of the bleachers were he had to put on a completely new singlet. Embarrassed, King finished the match with a disappointing loss. However, he showed his willpower a few months later, with a better singlet, by defeating the same Syracuse wrestler. Steve King is a determined wrestler with a bright future ahead of him. The disappointmoint at Notre Dame is long since gone. Now, it is time to wrestle for himself and for the Wolverines. by Michael Rosenberg Daily Sports Writer In most sports, preseason games are nothing more than hyped-up practices. The participants don't go all out, the coaches substitute freely, and the matchups have little or no effect on the regular season. But in college wrestling, presea- son tournaments are considered an accurate measure of a team's poten- tial. Teams that do well in the pre- season become instant contenders, and those who fare poorly become question marks. That's why Michigan wrestling coach Dale Bahr is not taking the Wolverines' eighth-place finish in this weekend's Las Vegas Classic lightly. "It gives us a chance to regroup and evaluate what we have to do in the second season. We have to get together and fix it together," Bahr said. Michigan totaled 50 points in the meet, 49 behind champion Arizona State. Nebraska finished second and Iowa State placed third. Ohio State (10th) and Michigan State (13th) were the only other Big Ten teams entered in the tournament. The Buckeyes' result is misleading be- cause two of their all-Americans, Ray Mendoza and Kevin Randle- man, did not wrestle in Las Vegas. The Wolverines had no individ- ual champions in the tournament. Sean Bormet's second-place show- ing in the 158-pound class was the highest by any Wolverine grappler. Bormet, the second seed, faced top- seeded Matt Lindland of Nebraska in the final. Bormet was defeated, 3- 1. Bormet improved upon a third- place finish in Las Vegas a year ago. Heavyweight Steve King, com- pleting his first Michigan preseason since transferring from Notre Dame, finished fifth, second highest on the team. King, the third seed, is re- garded as an all-American candidate. "We didn't have the type of per- formance we expected. I think we came out and had a couple of guys not performing up to their ability and I think that affected the rest of the team," Bahr said. All-American Lanny Green fin- ished eighth. Fifth-seeded Serge Mezherisky of Fresno State defeated Green by a score of 6-5. Green, the fourth seed, wrestled at 177 pounds, the weight at which he had wrestled his first three years at Michigan. Green had dropped down to 167 for the two previous tournaments the Wolverines were entered in, but he switched back after disappointing performances. The Classic's team title came down to the final match of the tour- nament. The heavyweight champi- onship featured Todd Kinney of Iowa State vs. Rulon Gardner of Nebraska. Iowa State could have captured the title with a Kinney win. If Gardner had won by a fall, then Nebraska would have won the championship. In the end, Gardner won, but not by a fall, so Arizona State won the title. "The tournament on the whole was what I expected. It was an NCAA-type tournament. Besides Iowa and Penn State, the next five teams in the country were there," Bahr said. Iowa and Penn State are expected to battle for the Big Ten title with Ohio State. Penn State visits Ann Arbor Jan. 16th. The Las Vegas Classic was the first tournament which tallied team points. The Ohio Open and the Northern Open (held in Madison) were each individual tournaments. The Wolverines fared better individ- ually in each of those tournaments. Michigan's fortunes have worsened as the preseason has progressed. "We had a great tournament in Ohio and a pretty good tournament in Wisconsin, but for some reason the kids were down here," Bahr said. Despite the disappointing presea- son, the Wolverines are ranked 11th in the country by the Amateur Wrestling News. They start the regular season Jan. 9 with home matches against Ferris State, Morgan State and Lehigh. MICHELLE GUY/Daily Michigan wrestler James Rawls captured seventh place at 142 pounds in the Las Vegas Classic this weekend. Wrestlers wrap up preseason 'M'finishes eighth at Las Vegas Classic infinal exhibition 0 0 0 Solutions from your Apple Campus Reseller: The holiday gift you can really use. Tell your folks that more college students choose Macintosh than any other computer. They'd want you to be in good company Ask for an Apple*Macintoshcomputer this holiday season and join all of the students who've discovered that no matter what they do, Macintosh helps them do it better and faster. That's because Macintosh is so easy to use. And the thousands of available software applications work in a single, consistent way. So once you've learned one, you're well on your way to learning them all. The advantages of Macintosh don't end when school does. In fact, the majority of Fortune 1000 companies use Macintosh computers: So ask your Apple Campus Reseller to help you choose which Macintosh to put__ at the top of your holiday gift list. Macintosh. It's more than a presentit's a future. 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