Dan Gable: Driven
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At a press conference prior to the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich, West Germany, the Soviet Union’s wrestling coach made a simple declaration: “We will find someone to beat Dan Gable.” The pre-Olympics publicity assured that Gable, a 23-year-old from Waterloo, Iowa, wasn’t going to sneak up on anybody. The kid who had been undefeated in high school and 182-1 in college was a marked man. However, when the anguish and sweat were over and the medals were passed out, only one man was standing atop the podium, and that was Dan Gable.
What was most impressive was the dominating manner in which Gable won the gold medal for freestyle wrestling. In six Olympic matches in the 1541/2-pound (70-kg) division, he hadn’t allowed an opponent to score a single point on him. Three of those matches ended in a pin and the other three Gable won by a combined score of 29-0. The feat was even more impressive considering what had happened just two weeks prior to the Games: Gable tore his anterior cruciate ligament, an injury that even today can often sideline an athlete for more than 10 months.
“Anybody who knows the sport of wrestling appreciates what Dan was able to do,” U.S. teammate Ben Peterson said. “I didn’t know he didn’t give up a point until a month or two later. I was totally baffled. Not many athletes in any sport could boast something like that.”
Even more unrecognized was the ferocity with which Gable wrestled in his 15 U.S. qualifying matches. Nine of his 15 opponents were pinned. Gable avenged his only college loss by defeating Larry Owings 7-1, and that point was the only one he allowed. Also in the qualifying finals, he won by scores of 22-0 and 11-0 over Lloyd Keaser, who would win the world championships in Tehran the following year.
In 1977 Gable became head coach at the University of Iowa, leading the Hawkeyes to an unprecedented 15 NCAA team championships and 21 Big Ten Conference titles in his 21 years at the school. He served as co-head coach of the freestyle team at the 2000 Olympic Games in Sydney, Australia, the fifth time he had held a coaching position on the U.S. team.