US was king of the freestyle Worlds 20 years ago

By
Updated: August 8, 2013

By Kyle Klingman

 

Editor’s Note: The following story appeared in the recent issue of Wrestling Insider Newsmagazine (WIN). For additional information on the 1993 U.S. World freestyle team, including a breakdown of results by all ten members of that team, you can receive the issue by calling 1-888-305-0606 or go to WIN-magazine.com to subscribe to WIN either in print, digitally or both. If you want a subscription to start with the August issue where this article appeared, please e-mail the WIN office specifying that.

Members of the 1993 United States freestyle team posed together on top of the medal stand in  Toronto, Canada, after claiming their country’s first World team championship

Members of the 1993 United States freestyle team posed together on top of the medal stand in
Toronto, Canada, after claiming their country’s first World team championship

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Kevin Jackson, a three-time World and Olympic champion, is looking for a pedestal. On that pedestal are spots reserved for the greatest wrestlers in America.

Jackson himself is certainly among those wrestlers deserving of a spot, yet his concern relates to our lack of awareness for wrestling’s greatest champions. With the exception of a few wrestlers who transcend the sport, our best wrestlers live in the shadows.

“These accomplishments don’t get brought up,” Jackson said. “There are a lot of things that don’t get brought up enough. I think the recognition of our athletes that are World and Olympic champions don’t get put in the limelight enough. They don’t get put on the pedestal that they should be put on so the youth in our country know their history. It’s hard to win a World championship as a team.”

There should also be a spot on that pedestal for a team championship that rarely gets mentioned. This year marks the 20-year anniversary of a historic wrestling team, but no one is celebrating it.

At the 1993 World Championships in Toronto, Canada, the United States achieved a notable first: they won a team World title in men’s freestyle. Prior to that the United States could only manage a second-place finish to the powerful teams from the former Soviet Union.

The United States began participating in the World Championships in 1961. The Soviets won 22 team titles over a 24-year span, including 19 in a row from 1967 through 1991.

What the United States achieved at the 1993 World Championships was groundbreaking, but it was not monumental. The characters from the team, however, remain a colorful and important part of the wrestling landscape in the United States.

It is worth mentioning that the 1993 World Championships were the beginning of the end of international wrestling’s peak. It would be the last Olympic wrestling cycle that included 10 weight classes.

In 1997, it shrunk to eight weight classes; in 2002 it shrunk to seven; in 2013 the International Olympic Committee recommended the elimination of wrestling from the 2020 Olympic Games.

The United States entered the 1993 World Championships with a unique blend of youth and experience. Veterans like Bruce Baumgartner (286 pounds) and Dave Schultz (163 pounds) combined for 14 World and Olympic medals (including four gold) up to that point. Zeke Jones (114.5 pounds), Kevin Jackson (180.5 pounds), and Melvin Douglas (198 pounds) were near the apex of their careers. Jones and Jackson were defending World champions while Douglas had reached the World finals in 1989.

And then there were Tom and Terry Brands, identical twins who weren’t expected to be successful because their style was deemed too aggressive for international wrestling. They would prove the world wrong.

All in all, the United States had five of 10 wrestlers on the team who made it to the World Championship finals. This was certainly a team capable of winning.

“Here’s what made it such great team,” said Bruce Burnett, head coach of the freestyle national team from 1993 through 2000. “We had a real mix of veterans and young guys, so it was a really interesting training camp. The expectations were raised because of the performance of the guys that were there. If you look back, the competition to make the team was great. They all knew they were capable of winning. Clearly it was a team effort.”

Although the United States had one of its best teams entering the World Championships, there were other factors that contributed to the team title. First — and perhaps most importantly — the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, which meant disarray.

“(The Soviet Union collapse) absolutely made a difference,” said Burnett. “No question about it. I just don’t think (the Russians) were as organized. The reality of it now is the best wrestlers still wrestle for Russia, but I don’ think they were as organized (after the Soviet Union split). I’m just going to say they weren’t as confident as they had been in the past. So it definitely made a difference.”

Turkey won the 1994 World Championships and the United States won its second World title in 1995 in Atlanta. But Russia found its stride after that; winning nine of the next 12 team championships; including a dominating 2007 World Championship performance which included six gold medals and one bronze medal. Amazingly, they only lost one match the entire tournament.

Then, there was the heat. The venue in Toronto was not air-conditioned. The mats were wet from the humidity so it was, as Zeke Jones put it, “like a slip and slide.” Typical turns became more difficult because all of the competitors were sweaty. Americans traditionally thrive on conditioning, which led to fatigue for wrestlers from other countries.

“I remember it being so hot,” said Baumgartner. “The Soviet Union was coming apart so there were a lot of new wrestlers at the time. I remember the Turkish wrestler was oiling down before I wrestled him. I remember saying to myself ‘I don’t know why you’re oiling down because it won’t make a difference anyway.’

“The venue was absolutely packed. It was a small venue. I remember going to the restroom and seeing the Iranians climbing through the windows. They were sneaking in because it was sold out. There were way more people in that arena than there were supposed to be. It was an unbelievable atmosphere.”

Finally, don’t underestimate the importance of the World Championships being in Canada. Travel was minimal and the American team spoke the language. The timing was ideal for the United States to win at the 1993 Worlds.

But a team title was never part of the narrative for the United States entering the Championships. It was never discussed by Burnett or the members of the team. Individual World titles were the standard. A team title would be a by-product of everyone achieving their goals.

In fact, Zeke Jones doesn’t remember being aware they were going for their first team title until the United States got closer to winning and everyone began talking about it.

“My mentality was that I wasn’t going to be the one who doesn’t win a World title,” said Jackson. “I think that was the mentality of everyone on the team. I didn’t have my best tournament. I ended up fourth that year. I recognize that we had several guys on the team that were World and Olympic champions already and they were all going to be going after the title, and I wanted to be one of them.”

Four of the 10 wrestlers on the team reached their individual goals. Terry Brands (125.5 pounds), Tom Brands (136.5 pounds), Melvin Douglas, and Bruce Baumgartner were World champions (although Douglas’s championship would come later since the wrestler he lost to in the finals tested positive for a banned substance). Dave Schultz placed second. Zeke Jones, Townsend Saunders (149.5 pounds) and Kevin Jackson placed fourth. Mark Kerr (220 pounds) placed seventh and Rob Eiter (105.5 pounds) placed ninth.

The United States scored 76 points, 22 points more than second-place Russia.

“We had a group of individuals that believed they could win medals,” said Baumgartner. “It was a pretty harmonious team. There wasn’t a lot of politics or interference on the team. I’m not going to say we were best friends, but I think we all got along pretty well. We all stayed out of everyone else’s business and that’s one of the things about that team.

“Dave Schultz brought experience. The Brands twins brought unbelievable intensity. Obviously Zeke, Kevin and Melvin were veterans. You had a lot of people who were a World champion already, or became one shortly after. That was a pretty good team when you look at the accolades and the individual medals that the group had won.”

Twenty years later, Zeke Jones is the head freestyle national teams coach for USA Wrestling. Occasionally, he will use a team title as motivation during practice. But the greatest lesson Jones learned from the 1993 team is that it takes a combination of first- (Olympic) and second-cycle wrestlers to be successful at the World Championships. And it takes unity.

“One of the things we want to do in the national teams program is to create a team culture that guys like Kyle Dake and Jordan Burroughs can work out together,” said Jones. “Although these guys compete against each other, they’re still part of the United States team together. We have to work together to beat the Russians and to beat the Iranians. We cannot do it individually.”

Regardless of their individual accomplishments, the 1993 World Championship team created a blueprint on how to win. Timing, talent and the right training environment are essential for future success.

“The team awards are fantastic but when every individual on the team does their best that’s what’s important,” said Baumgartner. “Those 10 guys came through and brought home the gold for the United States, and that’s a feeling I will cherish for the rest of my life.”