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Wednesday, September 27
Kolat beat world champ to no avail


SYDNEY, Australia -- Cary Kolat might be the most star-crossed American wrestler ever. Even when he wins, he loses.

Cary Kolat
It was a topsy-turvy day for Cary Kolat of the U.S., who beat Mohammad Talaei, the defending world champion from Iran, only to have the result overturned. Kolat lost the rematch.

Kolat, one of the best U.S. amateur wrestlers ever, won his first Olympic freestyle match Thursday, saw it protested, then lost the rematch to world champion Mohammad Talaei of Iran 5-4.

Kolat, one of the favorites at 138¾ pounds, later pinned Ramil Islamov of Uzbekistan in 5:52. But Kolat's only chance of advancing into the quarterfinals was for Islamov to beat Talaei later in the day.

Remarkably, it was the third time in four years that a Kolat victory in a world-level championship was stripped by protest.

"When I get to heaven, one of the first things I'm going to ask is: Why does this keep happening to Cary Kolat?" U.S. coach Bruce Barnett said.

Former world champion Sammie Henson, a two-time NCAA champion at Clemson, easily won his first match, needing barely a minute to pound Moon Myung-seok of South Korea 11-0 at 119 pounds.

Kolat won his first match against Talaei 3-1 in overtime, but the Iranian apparently protested -- the details of a protest are not revealed by mat officials -- a two-point scoring move Kolat initiated off a scramble. Kolat later added the point needed to end the match in overtime.

In the rematch, Kolat gave up his first point when he lost his grip on a clinch -- the same kind of point that gave Greco-Roman wrestler Rulon Gardner his improbable victory over three-time Olympic champion Alexander Karelin on Wednesday.

Talaei, wrestling with considerably more energy and confidence than he did in the first match -- no doubt relieved that he had gotten a reprieve -- then hit a pair of two-point scoring moves in the next 30 seconds to lead 5-0. Barnett argued one move was worth only one point, not two, but the scoring was not changed.

"He gave up that point and he had a mental letdown," Barnett said. "We can sit and explain the situation to him, but it's still difficult to force yourself to go out and wrestle the world champion again after you've already beaten him."

Kolat, a Pennsylvania high school wrestling icon whose name is on the road sign at the city limits of his Rices Landing, Pa., hometown, scrambled back. He got a point off a caution, another off a takedown and two more on a throw to make it 5-4, but Talaei managed to wrestle out the final 30 seconds without allowing another point.

In the stands, Kolat's wife, Erin, and mother, Judy, sat hand-in-hand, sobbing, distraught at Kolat's latest mat misfortune.

"I don't like it, and I've never liked it, that a point can be awarded on the mat and allowed to stand, and somebody goes into a back room and changes it," Barnett said. "To have your hand raised in victory over a world champion, then have to come back and wrestle him again, it's tough.

"I'm disappointed in the system because they keep making mistakes with it."

Kolat was obviously angry at losing a match he felt he had already won, responding only with an expletive as he ran by reporters. The United States did not have the option of filing a protest and asking for a re-wrestle of the re-wrestled match.

Because of the appeals and protests that led to his two prior match reversals in the world championships, Kolat is personally responsible for two international rule changes -- including the rule that led to the protest format that cost him his victory Thursday.

Following a loss in the 1997 world finals which an opponent -- also from Iran -- gained advantage by untying his own shoes on the mat, wrestlers now must tape their shoes. Also, all protested matches now are re-wrestled, rather than the decision being awarded to the protesting wrestler, as happened when Bulgarian Serafim Barzakov overturned his 1998 loss to Kolat in the second round of the world championships. Kolat wrestled back to get a third place that year.

Last year, wrestling with a badly separated shoulder, Kolat beat Elbrus Tedeev of Ukraine 4-2 in the world semifinals. But Tedeev protested, arguing a takedown attempt early in the match was incorrectly ruled out of bounds, and Tedeev won in overtime 2-1.

"What you're thinking is, 'I can't believe I'm wrestling this guy again,' " Kolat said earlier this year. "You get a guy who is walking off the mat thinking he's lost and then he's told he's got another shot and he's on cloud nine."

Kolat is trying to become the fourth consecutive American to win at 138¾ pounds, joining Randy Lewis (1984); John Smith (1988-1992), now one of the U.S. tri-coaches; and Tom Brands (1996), whose brother, Terry, wrestles Friday at 127¾ pounds.

Henson, the only other U.S. wrestler in action in the first of two sessions Thursday, said his goal in his first Olympics was to "eliminate and dominate. I want to eliminate all mistakes and beat everyone by six or seven points."



 

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American Gardner stuns 'unbeatable' Russian on mat

Russian great Karelin seeks fourth gold

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