48 --The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, March 25, 1996 WRESTLING Homecoming productive for Mic ' sophomore I By Jennifer Hodulik Daily Sports Writer MINNEAPOLIS-Everybody's not All-American. To achieve that honor, Michigan's Brandon Howe had to finish in the top eight in a field of 37 of the best 126- pound wrestlers in the nation. The sophomore got by with a little help from his friends and family, as he returned to his home town of Minne- apolis and got enough of a boost to propel himself into an eighth-place fin- ish. In fact, as the downtown area around the Target Center and First Avenue was crammed with knowlegeable wrestling personnel and enthusiasts, a mention of the Michigan wrestling team will elicit a reference to Brandon Howe surpris- ingly often. Howe actually hails from the city of Dayton, Minn., which is about 15 min- utes north of Minneapolis. He attended Totino-Grace High School and was named Minnesota wrestler of the year in 1993. "I have been looking forward to this all year - coming home," Howe said of his return to the city. "My goal was to be an All-American, and I hit that, and it was nice to do it in Minnesota." Howe came into the tournament unseeded, but made quick work of the No. 8 seed, pinning Chris Marshall of Clarion in 1:59. This performance set the tone for the rest of the tournament, as Howe had to postpone any plans that included celebrating out on the town until the tournament was completed Saturday. Because of the way the tournament was formatted, many of the competi- tors had been eliminated from competi- tion by Thursday. Anticipating this pos- sible outcome for himself, Howe was prepared to spend his evenings revisit- ing his old hangouts in the bustling city. But as he continued to be successful, Howe's nights were filled with rest for upcoming rounds of matches. Howe's performance was somewhat surprising, although he was underrated coming into the tournament. After be- ing sidelined following knee surgery his freshman year and being hampered by a shoulder injury earlier in the sea- son, things started to come together for Howe as the tournament approached. Howe attributed much of his success to the friendly surroundings at the Tar- get Center, although the crowd decid- edly favored Iowa as chants of"I-O-W- A, Iowa" were the most prominent cheers at the meet. But wrestling does not really generate the same type of attention as other sports (unless you live in Iowa) because much of the fan support comes from a close-knit wres- tling community and family. "It's nice coming home," Howe said of his return to the city. "Back in high school I had a good support group wh followed me. It was nice to have the family come down and to have some buddies come down which really pumped me up." In the second round of competition, Howe fell to Scott Schatzman of North- western, 8-0. But following that match, Howe got rolling, winning three straight matches, including an emotional come- from-behind victory over the No. 1i seed, Michigan State's Brian Bolton. After trailing 5-0 to Bolton, Howe w able to turn things around and chalk up an 8-7 victory. "I think that my emotion from that match carried over to my teammates," Howe said. "I had some extra incentive to perform for my supporters and the whole team stepped it up a level." Howe squared off against Schatzman again in the seventh-place bout, but came up short 5-0 for the third time in many meetings with Schatzman th. season. Of his many followers, Brandon's brother was able to view his matches after travelling via skywalk from his office. And while Brandon was submit- ting a resume to intern at his brother's stock brokerage firm, he savored chang- ing his status as 1996 NCAA qualifier to All-American. KRISTIN SCHAEFER/Daily Michigan sophomore Brandon Howe went home to Minneapolis this weekend and won All-American honors. G RAP PLERS Continued from Page 1B Penn State. Lacure started out strong and had a 3-1 lead through two rounds. But the Nittany Lion senior showed why he was the favorite, coming out aggres- sively in the third stanza. After regu- lation time, the score stood at 4-4, bringing on a sudden-death overtime period. The extra stanza solved noth- ing, and the match went into what the -Target Center announcer termed the "30-second surprise," where the wres- tler starting in the down position must escape the hold in 30 seconds to win the match. Lacure won the coin toss, and chose to start in the down spot. Halfaminute later, Lacure had spun free of Hughes' death-grip and into the semifinals. Lacure's emotional win wasn't quite enough to overcome the handi- cap of a broken finger, a fate that befell third-seeded Catrabone in the next match. Facing defending champion Ernest Benion of Illinois, Catrabone caught his right ring finger in Benion's kneepad, fracturing the fourth metac- arpal bone. "I ended up finishing the match with a broken hand and didn't realize it until afterwards," Catrabone said. "It took me out of my game. I couldn't control, couldn't move the way I wanted to." He went on to win two of his next three matches, including a pin of No. 8 seed Matt Hughes of Eastern Illi- nois in the seventh-place contest. Sixth-seeded Rawls, competing in his last tournament, soundly routed Lock Haven's Mike Geurin, 8-1, to relegate the fifth seed to the seventh- place match. Rawls then helped provide partici- pants in the fifth-place match as he rendered No.4 Erich Harvey of Michi gan State a loser, gaining a 5-3 deci- sion. That victory set up a rematch of Rawls' quarterfinal loss to an old foe, Rohan Gardener of Northwestern. Gardener had beaten Rawls in Friday's quarterfinal to knock him into the consolation bracket. Unfortunately for Rawls, history repeated itself, and his last outing as a Wolverine ended with the acquisition of a fourth-place plaque. Although Richardson won the fifth- place match because of an injury to Minnesota's Billy Pierce,.he had early proven himself well worthy of the honor. The Ohio native reached the final match having satisfactorily taken care of some old debts. He defeated Purdue's Tony Vaughn, who had handed Richardson his only Big Ten regular season loss and then pinned him in the conference tourna- ment. In the next round, Richardson dis- posed of Ohio State's Nick Nutter, who had relegated the Wolverine grap- pler to sixth place at the Big Tens. From wrestler to coach, the Wol- verines expressed satisfaction with the outcome of this year's campaign, and looked ahead hopefully to next season. Hawkeyes roll to title; Big Ten finishes strong By Will McCahiII Daily Sports Writer MINNEAPOLIS - And the winner is ... Surprising no one, Iowa won its second consecutive national team title, its fifth in six years. The Hawkeyes clinched the championship-their 16th - even before Saturday night's final round. Iowa took three of the 10 individual titles - at 142, 158 and 167 pounds - in addition to one each placing third, fifth and eighth. The Hawkeyes finished all of 44 points ahead of sec- ond-place Iowa State, scoring 122.5 points. Michigan tallied 47 points, fin- ishing ninth. BIG TEN STRONG: Notebxg Notebook Unlike in the NCAA basketball tourna- ment-the Midwest regional finals of which were being held at Minneapolis' Metrodome this weekend - the Big Ten represented itself well in the wres- tling tournament. Ten of the i1 teams finished in the top 20, with four in the top 10. Purdue was the only straggler, placing 31st. The otherteamof local interest, East- ern Michigan of the Mid-American Conference, finished 27th. REFUSE TO LOSE: Two wrestlers capped offundefeated seasons with wins in Saturday night's final matches. The more impressive of the two win- ning streaks belongs to Les Gutches of Oregon State. By defeating Wyoming's Reese Andy in the title bout, Gutches completed a second straight season with- out a loss. The Beaver senior has won 69 matches in a row since the 1994 NCAA tournament. For his accom- plishments, Gutches was named the tournament's most outstanding wres- tler. Penn State senior Sanshiro Abe won his 29th match in as many outings this season, beating Iowa State's Dwight Hinson in the ultimate match at 1I pounds. Abe's last loss came at the hands of Iowa's Jeff McGinness in last year's tourney final. The Tokyo native was deprived of a rematch, however, when Arizona State walk-on Shawn Ford de- feated McGinness in the second round of the championship bracket. The next step for Abe is the Asian Games, where he will compete with the Japanese national team in hopes ofwi ning a spot on the Olympic team. leaves for Tokyo tomorrow. NOT JUST ACADEMICS: Willie Car-. penter of Brown became that institution's first All-American athlete in any sport, placing sixth at 126 pounds. The New Jersey native, who defeated, Michigan's Brandon Howe on his way to the honor, was competing in his third tournament in as many years wrestling for the Ivy League school. OH, THE HUMANITY: They were real packing in the crowds at the Target Center this weekend, as this year's tour- nament drew 77,489 spectators for six sessions over three days. The figure was more than double what host school Minnesota had ex pected, but nevertheless fell just short of the all-time tournament attendance record. That honor belongs to last year's' event, held at Iowa's Carver-Hawkeye Arena. The tournament filled 81,5 seats and was won by theHwy Hawkeyes. MARK YOUR CALENDARS: Next year's NCAA tournament will be hosted by- the University of Northern Iowa in Ce- dar Falls. The championships, to be held March 20-22,1997, will take place in the UNI-Dome, which normally- houses the school's football and bas- ketball teams. The arena, which seat 16,324 for football games and 10,03 for basketball, can be expanded to hold up to 25,000 for other events. KRISTIN SCHAEFER/Daily Michigan's Bill Lacure placed fourth at this weekend's NCAA tournament. He was one of five Wolverines to win All-American honors. As a team, Michigan finished ninth overall. The top 25 at the 1996 NCAA wrestling championships Team 1. Iowa 2. Iowa State 3. Cal State Bakersfield 4. Penn State 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10 11 12 Nebraska Oklahoma State Michigan State Oregon State Michigan . Arizona State Lock Haven . Clarion Illinois Points 122,50 78.50 66.00 65.00 61.00 54.50 53.50 48.50 47.00 45.00 43.00 42.50 42.50 I