Page 8-The Michigan Daily-Weekend etc.-April 1,1993 0 Blood, sweat, and tears. Emotions run high at 1993 NCAA Wrestling Championships AMES, Iowa - "Need tickets? Anyone need tickets?" Here was the man, standing outside of Iowa State's 14,000-seat Hilton Coliseum, scalping tickets to the 1993 NCAA wrestling championships. Scalping tickets? For wrestling? Welcome to Iowa. Iowans came from all over the state to watch their beloved Iowa Hawkeyes win their third straight national title. They were not disap- pointed. These championships featured everything the world of sports has to offer. There was the dynasty. The Hawk- eyes have won the NCAA title 12 times since coach Dan Gable took over in 1976. "Some of our other teams -were better," Gable said, "but I have never been as proud of a team as I am of this one." There were the thrills. Every takedown, escape, pin executed by a wrestler from Iowa or Iowa State was met with cheers from the packed house. When 177-pound Hawkeye Ray Brinzer wrestled, many spectators called out his name. Some even round. Lindland, the top seed, had not lost all season. Afterwards, Lindland sobbed uncontrollably. There were the athletes who overcame adversity. When perennial power Oklahoma State went on probation, there was a mass exodus of Cowboys to other programs. The wrestlers had to fit into a new school, a new program, a new life. The six former Cowboys who competed in Ames combined for more than 60 team points, which would have placed them fifth. One of those wrestlers, North Carolina's T.J. Jaworsky, won the national title. There were the heartbreakers. When Michigan's Sean Bormet lost to Michigan State's Dan Wirnsberger in sudden death, he stormed off the mat and into the locker room, where he kicked a chair and paced madly for five minutes before finally sitting down. His match was marred by questionable calls by the official. "The ref did not want me to win," Bormet said later. "That's all there is to it." Some of the participants walked out of Hilton Coliseum in a fit of rage. Some walked out pleased with their performance.- A select few walked out as champions. knew his favorite move. Brinzer joined Iowa two weeks before the championships. There were the upsets. Boston University's Earl Walker shocked Nebraska's Matt Lindland 10-4 in the first 0 (top left) Michigan assistant coach Joe McFarland advises Sean Bormet before Bormet's third-place match against Michigan State's Dan Wirnsberger. Bormet avenged an earlier loss to Wirnsberger. (top right) Sean Bormet mourns his defeat at the hands of Wirnsberger. (above) Nebraska wrestler Mike Eierman's girlfriend cheers him on. (left) Michigan wrestler Jason Cluff shoots at Pittsburgh's Jason Richey. Cluff defeated Richey 13-5. 44 ra' K= r