8B -The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday -- March 24, 1997 WRESTLING Despite one All-American, 'M' wrestlers struggle at NCAAs By Tracy Sandler Daily Sports Writer CEDAR FALLS, Iowa - All in all, it was a pretty tough weekend for the Michigan wrestling team. At NCAA championships at the Northern Iowa, the Wolverines were rep- resented by unseeded Chris Viola (118 pounds), No. 3 seed Bill Lacure (150 pounds), No. 3 seed Jeff Catrabone (167 pounds) and No. 6 seed Airron Richardson (heavyweight). Catrabone came in third place, earn- ing All-America honors for the second straight year, while Viola, Lacure and Richardson were each eliminated from competition with a third-round loss in the consolation matches of their respec- tive weight classes. Catrabone (167 pounds), the Big Ten runner-up, lost in the quarterfinals in overtime, 3-1, to the tournament's run- ner-up, Pennsylvania's Brandon Slay. The loss sent Catrabone to the consola- tion round. "I felt that I had my things going dur- ing that match," Catrabone said. "I just couldn't get in. I couldn't get in for a fin- ish. Every time I usually get in on my shot, I finish. I had trouble even getting inon my shot on him." After cruising through his first conso- lation match with a 6-2 win over Central Michigan's Mike Greenfield, Catrabone pinned Iowa State's Bart Horton to face the same opponent he lost to at Big Tens, Wisconsin's Kevin Wilmot, in the third- place match. Catrabone won the match, 3-0. "We were tying up and moving, and we both took a few good shots," Catrabone said. "He took two good shots in the third period and came close to scoring. I fought him off. With 15 sec- onds left, I just dropped down to a single leg and scored on him to clinch the match:' After a disappointing seventh-place finish at Big Tens two weeks ago, Viola bounced back. In his first match of the tournament, Viola took Oklahoma State's Teague Moore, the No.2 seed, to sudden- death overtime, before losing, 9-7. "I thought Chris Viola had a great tournament;" Michigan coach Dale Bahr said. "He had a great match (against Moore). Then, Chris came back and won three matches, really wrestled great in the tournament. He was being aggres- sive. He was getting after (his oppo- nents)." In the consolation round, Viola beat Penn State's Jeremy Hunter, 7-4, and Cal State-San Luis Obispo's Tyson Rondeau, 12-5. In his next match, he lost to Michigan State's number three-seeded and Big Ten Champion David Morgan, 10-5. "David's one tough competitor," Bahr said. "To me, David's good enough to be in the finals. If anybody on our team stepped it up and wrestled to the best of his ability, it was Chris." Two of the biggest disappointments for the Wolverines were the perfor- mances of Lacure and Richardson. Each came as All-Americans, but neither left with that honor. Richardson began well. He wdn his first match and was also victorious in his following bout, with a 14-2 win over Fresno State's Darin Priesendorf, giving Richardson his 100th career victory. A loss to Nebraska's No. 3 seed Tolly Thompson in the quarterfinals sent Richardson to the consolation round, where he lost to Minnesota's Shelton Benjamin, whom he defeated at Big Tens. "The kid's a great athlete," Bahr said. "He's won the 100-meter and the 200- meter dash in junior college, besides being a national champion in wrestling. He's quick as can be, and if Airron has any problems, it's (with) the little quick- er guys." Richardson did not wrestle as well, or better, than in his regular-season perfor- mances. "Last year, I wrestled above what peo- ple expected me to," Richardson said. "I think that's important for a national tour- nament, to wrestle harder and better than you have been during the season, and I didn't. "When I dropped in the loser's brack- et, I had a guy I had beaten at Big Tens, and I still didn't push him hard enough." For Lacure, the NCAAs got off to a dubious start. He was ill throughout the tournament. "Bill's been sick as a dog," Bahr said. "He took a couple of different medicines for his congestion, and he just has not looked like the Bill Lacure that we know. He lost his first match to a kid (VMI's unseeded Jason Foresman) that he should never have lost to." Lacure bounced back well with an 8-5 win over Purdue's Mickey Griffin. In the waning seconds of the bout's final peri- od, Lacure, trailing, 5-4, scored a two- point reversal and got two back points to win the match. One match later he met Illinois's Eric Siebert. Entering competi- tion, Lacure had a 2-2 record against Siebert - including a semifinal victory at Big Tens - but he was unable to pull out the win, losing, 3-2. "I could make up every excuse in the book for it," Lacure said. "I didn't feel well, whatever, but I just didn't have a good weekend. It happened to be the biggest tournament of the year, and I happened to be in the worst shape of the year, probably. "Mentally, I was fine, until the day before we left, and I started feeling sick:" In the end, the long season may have just caught up with the Wolverines. "All year's been a struggle to keep our head above water," Bahr said. "Most of the year, they did. The kids hung in there and hung in there, but I think it takes i toll. I think mentally it wears on you. "Finally, at the end, when it's the big time, you should be fresh and ready to go. You should be thinking real positive, and when you've been struggling all year, it's hard to get up." I U Aveda Beards Fades Foils Paul Mitchell Bobs Fun Brushes Formals 4- Perms Rusk Shags Shades Waves Walk-ins I Conditioning Eyebrows Experience Highlights Matrix Music 4 NEED ANYTHING ELSE? air Shop S. University Ann Arbor, MI 4 Monday thru Friday 10 am to 6 pm Saturday 10 am to 5 pm (313) 930-1892 i AP PHOTO Michigan wrestler Jeff Catrabone (167 pounds) was the only Wolverine at the NCAA tournament to place (third) and receive All-America honors. Chris Viola (118 pounds), Bill Lacure (150 pounds) and Airron Richardson (heavyweight) each lost in the third round of their respective consolation matches. Payback for All-American Catrabone By Evan Braunstein and Tracy Sandler Daily Sports Writers CEDAR FALLS, Iowa - Sweet revenge. Two weeks ago at the Big Ten cham- pionships in Minneapolis, 167-pound Michigan wrestler Jeff Catrabone reached the finals. He was facing Wisconsin's Kevin Wilmot, a wrestler whom he had beaten three previous times. No problem, right? Wrong. Catrabone lost the match, 4-3. At this weekend's NCAAs, Catrabone got a chance to even the score. He lost a sudden-death overtime bout in the quar- terfinals to Pennsylvania's Brandon Slay, the 167-pound runner-up. The loss put Catrabone in the consolation round, where he pinned Iowa State's Bart Horton and beat Arizona State's Casey Strand, 6-1. Next up was the second-seeded Wilmot, this time for third-place at nationals. The two wrestlers locked-up, neither one wanting to give an inch. After a scoreless first period, Catrabone began the second with an escape to go up, 1-0. The final period began with Wilmot choosing to start neutral, mean- ing he would have to take Catrabone down in order to win the match. "The three previous times that I'd beaten him, he chose down," Catrabone said. "I rode him out every time. He usu- ally takes neutral. He took me down twice in the Big Tens. He probably thought he could do it again." Catrabone pulled out a 3-0 win, earn- ing All-America honors. "Before I walked onto the mat, I looked at (Michigan assistant coach Joe) McFarland," Catrabone said. "I said to him, 'This is a personal match. This is a personal match between me and Kevin Wilmot.' I came out on top, and I knew I could do it going in. I'm just happy to be on the third-place podium." As big tournaments have approached in the past, Catrabone has had a tenden- cy to tense up. "I think this is the first year I've seen him really relax and start to perform to his level," Michigan coach Dale Bahr said. "Rather than sit back, kind of go into a shell and get real cautious" The loss to Slay came in a match that could have gone either way. "I think that Jeff's the best guy in the nation, by far, at his weight class," 150- pound wrestler Bill Lacure said. "He just, for whatever reason, couldn't pull out (his quarterfinal) match, but I think he's better than (Slay)." Throughout the tournament, Catrabone's confidence escalated. He won his second match, 16-5, over Oklahoma State's Mike Roller, whom he beat by one point during the season. Slay produced the only tournament takedown against Catrabone. '"'I like the way he came back." Bahr said. "He came back hard. He came back with a pin (against Iowa State's Bart Horton), putting people on their backs, beating them by four or five points, rather than, 3-1 or 3-2." As much as he wanted to place first this year, Catrabone didn't let his disap- pointment ruin his accomplishments. "I knew that the second-best thing to being in the finals was taking third place" Catrabone said. "I wanted to be a national champ this year, but sometimes things don't go your way. Obstacles come in your way, like Brandon Slay was in mine. I bounced back, and I bounced back harder than ever." Come learn about a unique scholarship that covers TUITION FEES LIVING EXPENSES for an MBA at Brigham Young University's Marriott.School of Management. 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