The Michigan Daily - SPORTSTuesday - Tuesday, January 17, 1995 - 7 UPSET Continued from page 1 victories. Not exactly an even matchup. And it looked like the veteran was going to come through when he got Richardson on his back near the edge of the ring midway through the first period, coming within an eyelash of a pin. "There were people on the sides saying, 'Come on, come on, come on!"' said Richardson of the season- high 1,141 screamingspectators. "The fan support helped tremendously. I knew that I only had a foot or half a foot to go and I would be out of bounds." Richardson, in what turned out to be the key point of the match, fought his way outof bounds from on his back and was able to avoid what would have been the match-losing pin. "When he was on his back, that was the biggest heartache I've had all year," Michigan coach Dale Bahr said. "Because, here we are, we've wrestled pretty well we're up by five, and boom a pin, we would lose by one." Richardson's near pin proved to be the only major scare of the match which he lost by decision, enabling a"'y the Wolverines to win the meet, 17- 15. Michigan would not even have had the chance to get the win if it weren't for the performances of Chad Biggert and Jesse Rawls, Jr. earlier in the meet at 167 and 177 pounds, re- spectively. The Wolverine pair each man- handled their own opponents and reg- istered major decisions to give the Wolverines a 14-12 lead instead of a 12-12 tie. "We knew we needed (the major decisions)," Rawls said. "I was trying for the pin and I think Chad was too. We were trying to put the match away early before it got to the heavyweight." Rawls and Biggert helped get the Wolverines back on track after the lower weights lost four of the first six matches to put the Lions, who were wrestling in their third match in 24 hours, up, 12-6. After Michigan's Matt Stout started the day off with a narrow 7-6 victory at 118, Brandon Howe, Brian Aparo and Mike Ellsworth dropped the next three matches to put the Wolverines behind, 9-3. Howe nearly upset No. 1 Sanshiro Abe at 126 before falling, 6-5, while Ellsworth fell, 3-1, to No. 2 John Hughes at 142. Jake Young put the Wolverines on track again with a 12-9 decision over John Lange at 150, but No. 6 Jeff Catrabone was upset at 158 by No. 9 Glenn PritzlafftoputMichigan behind, 12-6, heading into the Biggert match. "I was starting to look to see where we were going to get anymore points," said Bahr of his feelings after the Catrabone loss. "We had two wins 'We're real pleased with (the wins), and I think they will be a spring board for doing real well in February.' - Dale Bahr Michigan wrestling coach and four losses and we couldn't af- ford another loss along the way, be- cause we knew would struggle at heavyweight." Bahr got the major decisions from Biggert and Rawls, and 190-pounder Jehad Hamdan won, 6-3, to give the Wolverines the comfortable, albeit not clinching, 17-12 lead heading into the heavyweight showdown. "Our kids hive done a lot," said Bahr of a week that included an upset victory over Michigan State. "They beat the fourth and sixth ranked teams in the country in one week. We're real pleased with (the wins), and I think they will be a spring board for doing real well in February." - a Michigan wrestler Chad Biggert (top) helped the Wolverines upset No. 4 Penn State with a majority decision over Matt Hardy. His victory along with that of Jesse Rawls, Jr. gave the Wolverines a 1442 lead. BLUE MATTERS: Top weights ,Can't do it all for Blue By DANIELLE RUMORE Daily Sports Writer Tfe Penn State wrestling team should have beaten Michigan at Cliff Keen Arena Sunday. After all, the Nittany Lions are the No. 4 team in ge country and boast national cham- pion heavyweight Kerry McCoy, who holds a 68-game winning streak. The No. 20 Wolverines did the unexpected when they upset the Li- ons, 17-15, in front of a home crowd of 1,141. The victory was sweet and one to be remembered, yet behind the cheers, the excitement and the dethroning of enn State from the top five, one ing is abundantly clear - the Wol- verines need to wins from the lower weight classes and they need to do it fast. The lack of performance in the first five weight classes has been a constant problem all season and Sunday's meet was no different. Though Michigan won two of its first five weight classes, it did so in a *ost unimpressive fashion. At 118-pounds, senior Matt Stout only beat freshman Shawn Fishburn by a point. Fishburn brought a 4-5 record into his match. "Matt won his first one but didn't look especially strong," Michigan coach Dale Bahr said. The 126-, 1340- and 142-pound classes lost in Sunday's contest. ranted, Brandon Howe (126) and 'ike Ellsworth (142) lost to the No. I and No. 2 wrestlers in the country, but freshman Brian Aparo (134) lost to sophomore Erik Smith, who was 0- 3 coming into the match. "Aparo is a true freshman at 134 and they (true freshmen) struggle in the Big Ten," Bahr said. The Wolverines lost four of the rst five classes against both Illinois d Michigan State and dropped all five against Lehigh. The upper five weight classes have been the saving grace for Michigan all season. Freshman Jeff Catrabone (158), senior Chad Biggert(167),jun- ior Jesse Rawls, Jr. (177) and senior Jehad Hamdan (190) are each ranked in the top 15 in the country. The pressure from losing most of *e first five classes puts the pressure on the upper weight classes to bring the Wolverines back into contention. The first four matches are usually not in question, but the deciding factor is unfairly left in the hands of freshman heavyweight Airron Richardson "We still need to split the first four (weight classes)," Bahr said. "We can't go one out of the first four; it rs too much pressure on our upper uys. "it's a problem that we have on our team this year. We'vebeen able to overcome it four out of six (dual meets), but you can't go to the well you can. And now, for the first time have protection of your owr REAUTY Female Condoms were designed to help prote and your partner against se transmitted diseases, especi AIDS. They also help prev unwanted pregnancies. Wh used correctly every time in 6-month clinical trials, REA had a 2.6% pregnancy rate Finally. The REALITY" Female Condom is here. you ' Over a year's tii n . a5.1% pregna correctly ever increases tol ct you :r out more a xually A by calling, ally or 1-800 ent en If sayin and yo F,,Tr m ale kLI I ;me, this is projected to be ancy rate. 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