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Posted 4 y ago
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Thank you my friend SGT (Join to see) for making us aware that on September 10, 1972 American freestyle wrestler Daniel Mack Gable won the 68kg division gold medal at the Munich Olympics.
Dan Gable Full Documentary
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TZyz4Jk1LrY
Images:
1. Dan Gable, 7 at the time, and sister Diane, who was 11, in 1956 outside their home in Waterloo, Iowa
2. Dan Gable with his four married daughters Jenni Mitchell(Brian), Annie Gavin(Mike), Molly Olszta(Danny) and Mackenzie McCord(Justin).
3. Dan Gable 'I’m a big believer in starting with high standards and raising them. We make progress only when we push ourselves to the highest level. If we don’t progress'
4. 1969_ Breakfast of Champions - On the Mat with Dan Gable
biographies
1. thefamouspeople.com/profiles
2. espn.com/classic/biography/s/Gable_Dan.html
1. Background from {[https://www.thefamouspeople.com/profiles/dan-gable-1126.php l}
Gable dominated as wrestler and coach
Dan Gable Biography
Dan Gable
Quick Facts
Birthday: October 25, 1948
Nationality: American
Age: 71 Years, 71 Year Old Males
Also Known As: Daniel Mack Gable
Born In: Waterloo
Famous As: Wrestler
Height: 5'9" (175 cm), 5'9" Males
Family:
Spouse/Ex-: Kathy Gable
Father: Mack Gable
Siblings: Diane Gable
U.S. State: Iowa
More Facts
Dan Gable is a former Olympic wrestler and head coach who is often considered to be one of the greatest amateur wrestlers in American history. Born in the small town of Waterloo, he did not devote himself to wrestling with full concentration until the age of 16 when a tragedy took place in the family. While Dan and his parents were away on a fishing trip, his older sister was raped and murdered in the family’s living room. This unfortunate incident changed the course of his life and motivated him to pursue a career in wrestling to make his family proud, including his late sister who he believed was watching him from the skies. He focused on the sport and became famous for having lost only one match in his entire Iowa State University collegiate career. After graduating, Gable undertook an intensive training program and won the 1971 world and Pan-American championships. Later, in his six matches at the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich, Gable did not lose a single point, becoming the first American in 12 years to win a wrestling gold medal. But he became most famous for his tenure as the head coach at the University of Iowa where he was able to win15 NCAA team titles between 1976 and 1997. He dedicated his entire career to wrestling and still remains close to his beloved sport as a wrestling analyst
Childhood & Early Life
Danny Mack "Dan" Gable was born on October 25, 1948, in Waterloo, Iowa, to Mack Gable, a real-estate salesman, and his wife, Katie Gable, a homemaker.
He began competing in sports at an early age, but realized that wrestling was his true passion around middle school when an unfortunate tragedy struck his family. His older sister, Diane Gable, was molested and murdered on May 31, 1964, in the Gable family home, while Dan and his parents were on vacation.
After the incident, he became motivated to earn a name for himself in order to make his family proud of him and thereafter started wrestling for Waterloo West High School. He was undefeated in high school competitions and won three consecutive Iowa state high school championships.
After completing high school, Dan Gable got enrolled at the Iowa State University where he decided to continue his wrestling.
Career
In his freshman year, he participated in the Midlands Tournament, a major U.S. wrestling meet, and emerged victorious in that competition, defeating two national champions.
After graduating from Iowa State University, he won the 1971 Pan American Games in Cali Columbia and World Championships in Sofia Bulgaria.
At the 1972 Munich Olympics, he won a gold medal in the Freestyle, 68 kg category.
In 1972, Dan Gable decided to become a coach and joined the Iowa coaching staff, assisting the head coach, Gary Kurdelmeier. In 1976, Gable became the head wrestling coach at the University of Iowa and went on to become the most successful coach in American collegiate history.
His team won 15 NCAA titles in 21 seasons, including a record nine titles in a row, from 1978 to 1986. He also coached the 1980, 1984, and 2000 U.S. Olympic teams and served as an assistant coach in 1988.
In 1997, he retired as the head wresting coach of University of Iowa.
In June 2002, he was appointed to the President’s Council on Physical Fitness and Sports.
In 2007, he rejoined the coaching staff at Iowa and later also served as a wrestling analyst for Iowa public television.
He shared his coaching techniques for developing wrestling champions in his book titled ‘Coaching Wrestling Successfully’. He has also created a series of wrestling instructional videos.
Awards & Achievements
Dan Gable was undefeated at Waterloo West High School, winning 64 matches and earning 25 pins. His success continued at Iowa State where he won 117 matches in a row, along with two NCAA championships and three All-America titles.
At the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich, Germany, Dan Gable won a gold medal in Men's Freestyle, 68 kg event. In the whole Olympics, he did not surrender a while single point.
From 1976 to 1997, Gable was the head coach of wrestling at the University of Iowa. Under his supervision, the Iowa team achieved extraordinary success, winning 15 NCAA titles and 21 Big Ten championships.
In 1980, Dan Gable was inducted into the U.S. Wrestling Hall of Fame.
In 1985, he was inducted into the U.S. Olympic Hall of Fame.
In 1996, he was named on the list of ‘100 Golden Olympians’, an honor bestowed to the top 100 U.S. Olympians of all time.
In 1999, he was selected as the greatest sports figure in the history of the state of Iowa by ‘Sports Illustrated’.
During the 2012 Olympic Games, Dan Gable was inducted into the FILA Hall of Fame Legends of the Sport.
In his honor, October 25, 2013 was recognized as ‘Dan Gable Day’ in Iowa.
Personal Life & Legacy
In 1974, Dan Gable married Kathy Carpenter and the couple has four daughters: Jenni, Annie, Molly and Mackenzie"
2. Background from {[http://www.espn.com/classic/biography/s/Gable_Dan.html]}
Gable dominated as wrestler and coach by Mike Puma
Special to ESPN.com
"What Gable understood about wrestling is that it's the cruelest mistress in the world and that it required all your attention, all your time, all your focus. What Gable did is he was able to concentrate on one area. Wrestling was all he cared about," says writer Douglas Looney on ESPN Classic's SportsCentury series.
Chat wrap: Dan Gable (April 26, 2001)
There is no disputing that Dan Gable is the most recognizable name in collegiate and U.S. Olympic wrestling history. The challenge is determining whether Gable wrote a greater legacy as a wrestler or coach. He was a rarity: the exceptional athlete who taught at the same level he performed.
Dan Gable
Dan Gable coached Iowa to 15 national titles in 21 years.
On the mat, he had an amazing run through high school and college, compiling a combined 182-1 record. After winning his first 117 matches at Iowa State, including two NCAA championships, the three-time All-American suffered his lone defeat when he was upset as a senior in the 1970 NCAA final.
Gable rebounded and starred in international competition, climaxed by his winning a gold medal at the 1972 Olympics, where he didn't surrender a point in six matches.
Taking over as head coach at Iowa in 1976, he led the Hawkeyes to 15 national titles in 21 seasons, including a record nine consecutive from 1978-86. Iowa won the Big Ten title in each of Gable's 21 seasons and went undefeated seven times. His career coaching record was 355-21-5 for a winning percentage of .938.
"[Wrestling] is the only sport I've ever competed in that puts you totally in a situation of constant [motion] without breaks," Gable said in his biography, A Season on the Mat, which chronicled his final year at Iowa. "I could play football or baseball, swim -- but there's always some kind of situation that would break my thoughts, break my concentration."
Gable was born on Oct. 25, 1948 in the blue-collar town of Waterloo, Iowa. His father Mack was an investor/real estate salesman and his mother Katie was a homemaker. Mack, who wrestled in high school, sometimes took Dan to wrestling meets, but the younger Gable didn't become hooked on the sport until he was a teenager after trying baseball, football, track and swimming.
Mack and Katie were disciplinarians who didn't hesitate to use corporal punishment on each other or on Dan and his older sister Diane. At least once police were called to the house because Mack, who drank too much, was hitting the kids.
On Memorial Day weekend in 1964, while Dan and his parents were away on a fishing trip, Diane, 19, was sexually attacked and murdered in the Gable living room. When her body was found, Dan told his father about Tom Kyle, who had said he wanted to have intercourse with Diane. Kyle, 16, an acquaintance of Diane who had dropped out of high school six weeks previously, confessed to the murder and was sentenced to life in prison.
"My life tightened up," Gable said. "It made me even more of a horse with blinders as far as wrestling went."
At Waterloo West High School, Gable went 64-0, with 25 pins. As a sophomore, he wrestled mainly in the 95-pound weight class before moving up to 112 pounds by his senior year.
In 1966, he entered Iowa State, 110 miles away in Ames. However, because of NCAA freshmen ineligibility rules, he was allowed only to participate in tournaments open to all amateurs. Wrestling in the 130-pound weight class, he was named Most Valuable Wrestler of the Midlands Tournament for the first of five times in his career. In all, he went 17-0 as a freshman against non-varsity competition.
"Right out of high school I never had the fear of getting beat, which is how most people lose," Gable said. "They're scared of somebody. But I really didn't have a clue how I'd do in college. I knew I could beat guys in practice, and I did well, but there were guys I had trouble with."
Not too much trouble as evidenced by his record. As a sophomore, he went 37-0 and won the NCAA 130-pound title. As a junior, he was 30-0 and began a string of 25 straight pins, an NCAA record. At 137 pounds, he was also named the Most Outstanding Wrestler of the NCAA Tournament in leading Iowa State to the first of back-to-back championships.
Gable earned the Gorrarian Award as a junior and senior for the most pins in the least time in the NCAA Tournament. In 1969, he pinned five opponents in a total of 20 minutes, 59 seconds. The next year, he pinned five opponents in 22:08.
But in the 1970 NCAA 142-pound final, it would be a different story when Gable met Washington sophomore Larry Owings, normally a 150-pounder who pared weight to compete in Gable's class. Gable rallied from a 7-2 deficit to tie the match 8-8 in the third period before Owings re-established control and pulled off a 13-11 shocker.
The defeat left Gable in tears. "At first, I couldn't face my parents," he said. "I felt I had let them down. Two weeks later I won the national AAUs, was voted the Outstanding Wrestler there and that got me back on the right road.
"I needed to get beat because it not just helped me win the Olympics, but it helped me dominate the Olympics. But more than that, it helped me be a better coach. I would have a hundred times rather not have that happened, but I used it."
At the 1972 Olympics in Munich, Gable pinned three of six opponents on his way to the gold medal in the 149-pound class. Gable won much to the dismay of the Soviets, who had vowed to scour the country to find somebody capable of beating him.
Gable returned to the U.S. and became an assistant coach at Iowa. Four years later, he was promoted to head coach. In his first season, the Hawkeyes went 17-1-1 and finished third at the 1977 NCAA Tournament. Gable was voted the NCAA's Rookie Coach of the Year.
The Hawkeyes started their nine-year national championship streak the next season, in which they went 15-1 in dual meets. They became the first national championship team that didn't crown an individual champion.
Gable's first undefeated season -- at 19-0 -- came in 1979. A year later, he was named coach of the Olympic freestyle team before the U.S. boycotted the Games. In 1984, he got to coach in the Olympics, guiding the U.S. freestyle team to seven gold medals.
Two years later, he coached the U.S. team to a bronze medal in the Goodwill Games. In 1987, Iowa's championship run ended with a second-place finish in the NCAA Tournament. That season also marked the first time under Gable that the Hawkeyes, who finished 19-2, lost more than one dual meet. After three more seasons without an NCAA title, they won again in 1991. That season Iowa went 25-0-1, the most victories in any year of Gable's coaching career.
Gable guided Iowa to five more national championships, and a second in 1994, over the next six seasons. In January 1997, he underwent hip replacement surgery and missed four matches, but returned to guide the Hawkeyes to the national championship with an NCAA record of 170 points.
By the end of 1997, Gable had undergone more than a dozen knee and back surgeries. No longer able to get down on the mat to demonstrate holds and escapes, he retired from coaching.
"Wrestling has been a way of life with me day in and day out," Gable said at his retirement press conference. "I won't get too far away from it. I might walk through the wrestling room once a week. I could go every day if I wanted. But just walk through, make sure it's still there."
Staying true to his word, Gable served as head coach for the 1999 World Cup and was a co-coach of the 2000 U.S. Olympic freestyle team. Currently an assistant to the athletic director at Iowa, he also remains close to the sport he loves as a wrestling analyst for Iowa Public Television."
COL Mikel J. Burroughs LTC (Join to see) LTC Greg Henning Lt Col Charlie Brown MSG Felipe De Leon Brown MSgt Robert "Rock" Aldi Maj Bill Smith, Ph.D. Maj William W. 'Bill' Price Maj Robert Thornton MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D. SSG Stephen Rogerson SSG Robert Mark Odom PO1 William "Chip" Nagel PO2 (Join to see) SGT Denny Espinosa SGT Robert Pryor SPC Woody Bullard SGT Michael Hearn SPC Michael Duricko, Ph.D
Dan Gable Full Documentary
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TZyz4Jk1LrY
Images:
1. Dan Gable, 7 at the time, and sister Diane, who was 11, in 1956 outside their home in Waterloo, Iowa
2. Dan Gable with his four married daughters Jenni Mitchell(Brian), Annie Gavin(Mike), Molly Olszta(Danny) and Mackenzie McCord(Justin).
3. Dan Gable 'I’m a big believer in starting with high standards and raising them. We make progress only when we push ourselves to the highest level. If we don’t progress'
4. 1969_ Breakfast of Champions - On the Mat with Dan Gable
biographies
1. thefamouspeople.com/profiles
2. espn.com/classic/biography/s/Gable_Dan.html
1. Background from {[https://www.thefamouspeople.com/profiles/dan-gable-1126.php l}
Gable dominated as wrestler and coach
Dan Gable Biography
Dan Gable
Quick Facts
Birthday: October 25, 1948
Nationality: American
Age: 71 Years, 71 Year Old Males
Also Known As: Daniel Mack Gable
Born In: Waterloo
Famous As: Wrestler
Height: 5'9" (175 cm), 5'9" Males
Family:
Spouse/Ex-: Kathy Gable
Father: Mack Gable
Siblings: Diane Gable
U.S. State: Iowa
More Facts
Dan Gable is a former Olympic wrestler and head coach who is often considered to be one of the greatest amateur wrestlers in American history. Born in the small town of Waterloo, he did not devote himself to wrestling with full concentration until the age of 16 when a tragedy took place in the family. While Dan and his parents were away on a fishing trip, his older sister was raped and murdered in the family’s living room. This unfortunate incident changed the course of his life and motivated him to pursue a career in wrestling to make his family proud, including his late sister who he believed was watching him from the skies. He focused on the sport and became famous for having lost only one match in his entire Iowa State University collegiate career. After graduating, Gable undertook an intensive training program and won the 1971 world and Pan-American championships. Later, in his six matches at the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich, Gable did not lose a single point, becoming the first American in 12 years to win a wrestling gold medal. But he became most famous for his tenure as the head coach at the University of Iowa where he was able to win15 NCAA team titles between 1976 and 1997. He dedicated his entire career to wrestling and still remains close to his beloved sport as a wrestling analyst
Childhood & Early Life
Danny Mack "Dan" Gable was born on October 25, 1948, in Waterloo, Iowa, to Mack Gable, a real-estate salesman, and his wife, Katie Gable, a homemaker.
He began competing in sports at an early age, but realized that wrestling was his true passion around middle school when an unfortunate tragedy struck his family. His older sister, Diane Gable, was molested and murdered on May 31, 1964, in the Gable family home, while Dan and his parents were on vacation.
After the incident, he became motivated to earn a name for himself in order to make his family proud of him and thereafter started wrestling for Waterloo West High School. He was undefeated in high school competitions and won three consecutive Iowa state high school championships.
After completing high school, Dan Gable got enrolled at the Iowa State University where he decided to continue his wrestling.
Career
In his freshman year, he participated in the Midlands Tournament, a major U.S. wrestling meet, and emerged victorious in that competition, defeating two national champions.
After graduating from Iowa State University, he won the 1971 Pan American Games in Cali Columbia and World Championships in Sofia Bulgaria.
At the 1972 Munich Olympics, he won a gold medal in the Freestyle, 68 kg category.
In 1972, Dan Gable decided to become a coach and joined the Iowa coaching staff, assisting the head coach, Gary Kurdelmeier. In 1976, Gable became the head wrestling coach at the University of Iowa and went on to become the most successful coach in American collegiate history.
His team won 15 NCAA titles in 21 seasons, including a record nine titles in a row, from 1978 to 1986. He also coached the 1980, 1984, and 2000 U.S. Olympic teams and served as an assistant coach in 1988.
In 1997, he retired as the head wresting coach of University of Iowa.
In June 2002, he was appointed to the President’s Council on Physical Fitness and Sports.
In 2007, he rejoined the coaching staff at Iowa and later also served as a wrestling analyst for Iowa public television.
He shared his coaching techniques for developing wrestling champions in his book titled ‘Coaching Wrestling Successfully’. He has also created a series of wrestling instructional videos.
Awards & Achievements
Dan Gable was undefeated at Waterloo West High School, winning 64 matches and earning 25 pins. His success continued at Iowa State where he won 117 matches in a row, along with two NCAA championships and three All-America titles.
At the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich, Germany, Dan Gable won a gold medal in Men's Freestyle, 68 kg event. In the whole Olympics, he did not surrender a while single point.
From 1976 to 1997, Gable was the head coach of wrestling at the University of Iowa. Under his supervision, the Iowa team achieved extraordinary success, winning 15 NCAA titles and 21 Big Ten championships.
In 1980, Dan Gable was inducted into the U.S. Wrestling Hall of Fame.
In 1985, he was inducted into the U.S. Olympic Hall of Fame.
In 1996, he was named on the list of ‘100 Golden Olympians’, an honor bestowed to the top 100 U.S. Olympians of all time.
In 1999, he was selected as the greatest sports figure in the history of the state of Iowa by ‘Sports Illustrated’.
During the 2012 Olympic Games, Dan Gable was inducted into the FILA Hall of Fame Legends of the Sport.
In his honor, October 25, 2013 was recognized as ‘Dan Gable Day’ in Iowa.
Personal Life & Legacy
In 1974, Dan Gable married Kathy Carpenter and the couple has four daughters: Jenni, Annie, Molly and Mackenzie"
2. Background from {[http://www.espn.com/classic/biography/s/Gable_Dan.html]}
Gable dominated as wrestler and coach by Mike Puma
Special to ESPN.com
"What Gable understood about wrestling is that it's the cruelest mistress in the world and that it required all your attention, all your time, all your focus. What Gable did is he was able to concentrate on one area. Wrestling was all he cared about," says writer Douglas Looney on ESPN Classic's SportsCentury series.
Chat wrap: Dan Gable (April 26, 2001)
There is no disputing that Dan Gable is the most recognizable name in collegiate and U.S. Olympic wrestling history. The challenge is determining whether Gable wrote a greater legacy as a wrestler or coach. He was a rarity: the exceptional athlete who taught at the same level he performed.
Dan Gable
Dan Gable coached Iowa to 15 national titles in 21 years.
On the mat, he had an amazing run through high school and college, compiling a combined 182-1 record. After winning his first 117 matches at Iowa State, including two NCAA championships, the three-time All-American suffered his lone defeat when he was upset as a senior in the 1970 NCAA final.
Gable rebounded and starred in international competition, climaxed by his winning a gold medal at the 1972 Olympics, where he didn't surrender a point in six matches.
Taking over as head coach at Iowa in 1976, he led the Hawkeyes to 15 national titles in 21 seasons, including a record nine consecutive from 1978-86. Iowa won the Big Ten title in each of Gable's 21 seasons and went undefeated seven times. His career coaching record was 355-21-5 for a winning percentage of .938.
"[Wrestling] is the only sport I've ever competed in that puts you totally in a situation of constant [motion] without breaks," Gable said in his biography, A Season on the Mat, which chronicled his final year at Iowa. "I could play football or baseball, swim -- but there's always some kind of situation that would break my thoughts, break my concentration."
Gable was born on Oct. 25, 1948 in the blue-collar town of Waterloo, Iowa. His father Mack was an investor/real estate salesman and his mother Katie was a homemaker. Mack, who wrestled in high school, sometimes took Dan to wrestling meets, but the younger Gable didn't become hooked on the sport until he was a teenager after trying baseball, football, track and swimming.
Mack and Katie were disciplinarians who didn't hesitate to use corporal punishment on each other or on Dan and his older sister Diane. At least once police were called to the house because Mack, who drank too much, was hitting the kids.
On Memorial Day weekend in 1964, while Dan and his parents were away on a fishing trip, Diane, 19, was sexually attacked and murdered in the Gable living room. When her body was found, Dan told his father about Tom Kyle, who had said he wanted to have intercourse with Diane. Kyle, 16, an acquaintance of Diane who had dropped out of high school six weeks previously, confessed to the murder and was sentenced to life in prison.
"My life tightened up," Gable said. "It made me even more of a horse with blinders as far as wrestling went."
At Waterloo West High School, Gable went 64-0, with 25 pins. As a sophomore, he wrestled mainly in the 95-pound weight class before moving up to 112 pounds by his senior year.
In 1966, he entered Iowa State, 110 miles away in Ames. However, because of NCAA freshmen ineligibility rules, he was allowed only to participate in tournaments open to all amateurs. Wrestling in the 130-pound weight class, he was named Most Valuable Wrestler of the Midlands Tournament for the first of five times in his career. In all, he went 17-0 as a freshman against non-varsity competition.
"Right out of high school I never had the fear of getting beat, which is how most people lose," Gable said. "They're scared of somebody. But I really didn't have a clue how I'd do in college. I knew I could beat guys in practice, and I did well, but there were guys I had trouble with."
Not too much trouble as evidenced by his record. As a sophomore, he went 37-0 and won the NCAA 130-pound title. As a junior, he was 30-0 and began a string of 25 straight pins, an NCAA record. At 137 pounds, he was also named the Most Outstanding Wrestler of the NCAA Tournament in leading Iowa State to the first of back-to-back championships.
Gable earned the Gorrarian Award as a junior and senior for the most pins in the least time in the NCAA Tournament. In 1969, he pinned five opponents in a total of 20 minutes, 59 seconds. The next year, he pinned five opponents in 22:08.
But in the 1970 NCAA 142-pound final, it would be a different story when Gable met Washington sophomore Larry Owings, normally a 150-pounder who pared weight to compete in Gable's class. Gable rallied from a 7-2 deficit to tie the match 8-8 in the third period before Owings re-established control and pulled off a 13-11 shocker.
The defeat left Gable in tears. "At first, I couldn't face my parents," he said. "I felt I had let them down. Two weeks later I won the national AAUs, was voted the Outstanding Wrestler there and that got me back on the right road.
"I needed to get beat because it not just helped me win the Olympics, but it helped me dominate the Olympics. But more than that, it helped me be a better coach. I would have a hundred times rather not have that happened, but I used it."
At the 1972 Olympics in Munich, Gable pinned three of six opponents on his way to the gold medal in the 149-pound class. Gable won much to the dismay of the Soviets, who had vowed to scour the country to find somebody capable of beating him.
Gable returned to the U.S. and became an assistant coach at Iowa. Four years later, he was promoted to head coach. In his first season, the Hawkeyes went 17-1-1 and finished third at the 1977 NCAA Tournament. Gable was voted the NCAA's Rookie Coach of the Year.
The Hawkeyes started their nine-year national championship streak the next season, in which they went 15-1 in dual meets. They became the first national championship team that didn't crown an individual champion.
Gable's first undefeated season -- at 19-0 -- came in 1979. A year later, he was named coach of the Olympic freestyle team before the U.S. boycotted the Games. In 1984, he got to coach in the Olympics, guiding the U.S. freestyle team to seven gold medals.
Two years later, he coached the U.S. team to a bronze medal in the Goodwill Games. In 1987, Iowa's championship run ended with a second-place finish in the NCAA Tournament. That season also marked the first time under Gable that the Hawkeyes, who finished 19-2, lost more than one dual meet. After three more seasons without an NCAA title, they won again in 1991. That season Iowa went 25-0-1, the most victories in any year of Gable's coaching career.
Gable guided Iowa to five more national championships, and a second in 1994, over the next six seasons. In January 1997, he underwent hip replacement surgery and missed four matches, but returned to guide the Hawkeyes to the national championship with an NCAA record of 170 points.
By the end of 1997, Gable had undergone more than a dozen knee and back surgeries. No longer able to get down on the mat to demonstrate holds and escapes, he retired from coaching.
"Wrestling has been a way of life with me day in and day out," Gable said at his retirement press conference. "I won't get too far away from it. I might walk through the wrestling room once a week. I could go every day if I wanted. But just walk through, make sure it's still there."
Staying true to his word, Gable served as head coach for the 1999 World Cup and was a co-coach of the 2000 U.S. Olympic freestyle team. Currently an assistant to the athletic director at Iowa, he also remains close to the sport he loves as a wrestling analyst for Iowa Public Television."
COL Mikel J. Burroughs LTC (Join to see) LTC Greg Henning Lt Col Charlie Brown MSG Felipe De Leon Brown MSgt Robert "Rock" Aldi Maj Bill Smith, Ph.D. Maj William W. 'Bill' Price Maj Robert Thornton MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D. SSG Stephen Rogerson SSG Robert Mark Odom PO1 William "Chip" Nagel PO2 (Join to see) SGT Denny Espinosa SGT Robert Pryor SPC Woody Bullard SGT Michael Hearn SPC Michael Duricko, Ph.D
(8)
(0)
LTC Stephen F.
The champion Author: Edward W Rearick Jim Doran filmmaker. University, Department of Speech/Telecommunicative Arts. Subjects: Gable, Dan Wrestlers -- Iowa St...
The champion
Author: Edward W Rearick Jim Doran filmmaker.
University, Department of Speech/Telecommunicative Arts.
Subjects: Dan Gable, Wrestlers -- Iowa State University
Description:
Profiles Dan Gable's high school and collegiate wrestling career. Includes comments by Dan Gable, his parents, and coaches. Contains film footage of his many wrestling matches including his one loss in the NCAA finals of his senior year.
Publisher: Special Collections Department, Iowa State University Library
Creation Date: c1971
Format: 16mm
Notes:
Transfer from original 16mm A and B roll and 1/4" magtrack
Music, Gary White, Bruce Eberle ; faculty advisor, R.H. Kraemer.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TIF1uYh9SIE
Images
1. Dan Gable went undefeated as a high schooler, lost just one match in college and did not allow a point in winning a gold medal at the Munich 1972 Olympic Games.
2. Dan Gable 'Gold medals aren't really made of gold. They're made of sweat, determination, and a hard-to-find alloy called guts'
3. Dan Gable - 1972 Olympics Team USA
4. Dan Gable 'Talent is everywhere, winning attitude is not.'
5. Danny Mack 'Dan' Gable with jar of pickles at lectern
Biographies:
1. chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-1999-07-20 [login to see] -story.html
2. widerightnattylite.com/2012/4/20/2960838/dan-gable-leaves-wife-for-a-jar-of-pickles]
Background from {[https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-1999-07-20 [login to see] -story.html]}
It was a car ride forced by...
Michael Hirsley, Tribune Staff WriterCHICAGO TRIBUNE
It was a car ride forced by tragedy. Two parents and their teenage son were returning hastily from a getaway trip, knowing the family member they had left behind had been raped and murdered.
As the father was driving home, the 15-year-old son suddenly blurted that there might be a clue to his older sister's murder in something an older neighborhood youth had told him about her. The father's gloom burst into anger. He stopped, pulled his son out, pushed him against the car, and shouted "What do you mean?" as he slapped him.
It turned out the son's instinct was correct. The disturbed neighbor who once had said he wanted to be intimate with the boy's sister was arrested and convicted of her murder.
The son went beyond understanding and forgiving his father's rage. He vowed to move into his sister's room to dissuade his parents from moving from their home, where their daughter's bloody body was found, and to keep his parents together despite fits of despair that threatened the marriage and family structure.
He focused on a naive goal: "I needed to give them enough entertainment that they didn't have to look other places."
"Gable." If a documentary with that one-word title showed up in most places under most circumstances, most people would associate it with legendary Hollywood icon Clark Gable.
But the feature-length documentary titled "Gable" has shown up this month in Iowa City, as a completed project shot on videotape and a tight budget by independent filmmakers with Shadow Bird Productions and the University of Iowa Video Center, winner of national awards primarily for videos on health and family issues. This video is a departure, but it begins with a family crisis. It tells what happened to that 15-year-old whose world teetered on the verge of ruin when his 19-year-old sister, Diane Gable, was murdered in 1964.
This documentary is about legendary Iowa wrestling icon Dan Gable. He won an Olympic gold medal, compiled a 181-1 high school record in Waterloo, Iowa, and at Iowa State University, then coached the University of Iowa to wrestling dominance with 15 national championships, including nine in a row from 1978 to 1986.
Gable retired after the 1997 season, during which the documentary was shot.
Wrestling has been Dan Gable's life. At 15, he already had wrestled for eight years, beginning when his father, real estate salesman Mack Gable, put him in YMCA competitions. Dan focused and honed his skills with the single-minded zeal consistent with having vowed to be his parents' reliable entertainer . . . and knowing only one way to do that.
He became so overwhelmingly dominant his talent focused his parents' attention . . . along with that of an ever-growing legion of followers, from wrestling fans to sports fans to celebrity watchers.
As one might expect, many Iowans still recognize and greet the trim, balding 50-year-old who now coaches a smaller number of top wrestlers as one of three U.S. Olympic coaches. When he helped Olympic hopeful Mark Ironside, a two-time national champion on Gable's Iowa teams, give a wrestling clinic last week at Jefferson High School in Cedar Rapids, those seeking Gable's autograph ranged from 1st graders to high schoolers to parents.
Unexpectedly, his dedication and success in wrestling has made him a hero transcending his sport and his state. Comedian Al Franken, author John Irving and actor Tom Cruise, all of whom wrestled as amateurs, count themselves among Gable's admirers.
Irving, who earned a Master of Fine Arts degree at Iowa and uses wrestling imagery in his novels, worked out with the Iowa team and wrestled with Gable. In a subsequent magazine piece, he wrote in praise of being thrashed by his idol: "When Dan Gable lays his hands on you, you are in touch with grace."
Franken and Irving agreed to be interviewed by the documentary filmmakers, who worked on the project from 1997 until this year. Cruise, who was working on "Eyes Wide Shut," the just-released film, might yet appear in the documentary.
HBO was impressed with the work sufficiently to purchase broadcast rights, intending to premiere it on its Signature network in November after changing the title to "Freestyle: The Victories of Dan Gable."
David Gould, who co-produced the documentary with Daniel Lind of the Iowa Video Center, said, "I felt we needed to do this story of an extraordinary person, right in our midst, before all those Gable stories are lost.
"We want to take his story beyond wrestling, beyond athletics. . . . This is a mainstream human-interest story. Whether you're an athlete, an accountant or a dentist, Gable's story makes you question how hard you're working toward your goals."
Director Kevin Kelley said he felt how Gable's intensity could intimidate when they first met to discuss the project: "He said, `If you're going to shoot this, it better be great.' "
The video team became partners with the wrestling team, as Gable allowed the crew ever-increasing access during the 1997 season--even to the hospital where he went for hip-replacement surgery.
Editor Bryan Less, whose filming included chasing wrestlers up stairs during their exhausting climbing exercises, said the crew decided early that the video did not need a narrator.
The story line is carried in scenes such as Gable's instructions to his team; and, after he won his Olympic gold medal at the 1972 Munich Games, a strange interview in which he was still so focused on the sport that he didn't immediately recognize that reporters' questions about the "atmosphere" meant the deadly terrorists who disrupted the Games.
"His work ethic is what makes him tick," Less said. "He happened to pick wrestling, but you can't imagine anyone being that focused in any walk of life."
But those who think his intensity made him the most successful wrestling coach "are wrong," Gould said. "The reason Gable always won was because his guys looked over and saw a coach who had been with them every step of the way. I never saw him get on a kid who lost but gave his all."
Gable still trains for an hour every day, but says he has cut down his sit-ups, push-ups, rope jumping and bike riding and has increased his time in the whirlpool and sauna.
Nonetheless, Kelley still was amazed at Gable's athleticism. He did repetitions of chin-ups on a horizontal bar for a scene in the documentary.
"Finally, we went from long-range shots to close-ups, just showing his head coming above the bar," Kelley recalled. "I realized he didn't actually have to keep doing chin-ups for that, so I asked, `Dan, would you like to just stand on a box?' "
Silly question, Kelly quickly realized.
"He just said, `No,' " Kelly recalled.
The documentary includes historical footage of the gold medal-deciding match that completed Gable's incredible Olympic run in which he held every opponent scoreless and the lone defeat on his 181-1 high school and college record, a 13-11 loss to Larry Owings of the University of Washington in 1970. It was Gable's last collegiate match. Owings, whose career never again rose to that level, lost to Gable two years later in the Olympic trials.
When the documentary crew interviewed Owings, who is now on the administrative staff at an Oregon school, the filmmakers were surprised to see no wrestling memorabilia in his home.
"When we asked, he brought down the national championship trophy he won by beating Dan Gable in the most stunning upset in college wrestling," Gould said. "It was covered with cobwebs."
- - -
Dan Gable's home on a large wooded lot in Iowa City is filled with trophies and posters, with his Olympic gold medal a centerpiece. He says his wife, Kathy, is the one who has loaded showcases and walls with wrestling memorabilia.
In a nearby cabin he has furnished as an office, his choice of displays include photographs of his hero, Mickey Mantle.
Gable is pleased with the documentary. Some friends in wrestling circles think it doesn't show enough of the sport and he admits he agreed at first.
"It took me a while to understand it, because I'm narrow-minded," he said. "But this is about more than wrestling and a sports point of view. Because it is, I hope it can help promote wrestling to a wider audience."
And promoting wrestling is his ultimate motive in most of what he does. He is a critic of Title IX because he believes it is funding women's sports at the expense of college sports such as his.
"Title IX is creating (sex) discrimination against male wrestlers," he said. "In 10 years, you'll need another rule to correct the damages of Title IX."
He says that as the father of four--all daughters.
Producer Gould says he told Gable when the documentary project began that it would not be a puff piece. Lengthy footage of the Owings match confirms that. And only a dramatic comeback salvaged the 1997 season that would be the documentary's centerpiece regardless of how the team did or whether Gable retired when it was over.
It was a tough season, complete with the hip surgery that left Gable on crutches for the final weeks. Oklahoma State was a solid favorite to win the NCAA championship.
But the tournament was on the Cedar Falls campus of Northern Iowa, where a packed house of screaming fans created almost a home-arena atmosphere for Gable's team. The Hawkeyes scored an NCAA-record 170 points, crowned five individual national champions and won their 17th national title.
It did more than give the documentary a fitting climax that could not have been better if scripted. Gable thinks it might have saved his life.
"If they had not won that championship, I don't know if I could have stepped down, although I'd pretty much said I would early in the season," he said. "And if I hadn't, I might not be talking to you today."
Citing the job's stress, his health problems and his perfectionist attitude, he said, "Yes, I made the right decision. I was going to go downhill."
Failure gnaws at him, even the slight imperfection of not winning a record 10th consecutive national championship and of falling one victory short of a perfect career record as a wrestler. He did lose several times in the freestyle competition that he ultimately perfected at the 1972 Olympics. It is a style different from U.S. high school and college wrestling and it is not counted in his 181-1 record.
He has had surgery to replace both hips and is active again. He demonstrated that vividly, along with a series of wrestling holds and escapes, at the Cedar Rapids clinic. He has put his father in a nursing home. He has found solace over the recent death of his mother, Kate, and the childhood murder of his sister.
He believes his mother would agree with his decision to step down from coaching because she knew how stressful it was: "She never watched me wrestle matside. She always watched through windows, doors, from far away."
And when he won his gold medal, and stood on the podium, "I could vividly see my sister, almost like a ghost that was real," he said.
It was a good apparition, he explained. "She had a big grin, one of congratulations."
Background from {[ https://www.widerightnattylite.com/2012/4/20/2960838/dan-gable-leaves-wife-for-a-jar-of-pickles]}
Dan Gable Leaves Wife For a Jar of Pickles
By I am a Cyentist Apr 20, 2012, 3:30pm CDT
When bandages for an injured knee became difficult for Gable to obtain as he prepared for the 1972 Olympics, who outside of the cloak-and-dagger group knew that five dozen rolls valued at $100 would turn into one of the best investments in Hawkeye history?
"All I know is I couldn't get a roll of tape (at Iowa State)... It was like a dogfight to get a roll of tape. Then all of a sudden there was a case." - Andy Hamilton, Press-Citizen
In a stunning development Friday morning, Dan Gable announced that he was leaving his wife of 28 years over a disagreement about groceries. The former Iowa State and Iowa wrestler/coach indicated that he was no longer able to reconcile his differences with his wife Kathy over her refusal to buy pickles.
"Look, all I want in my life is a nice pickle spear to go along with my sandwich at lunch," Gable stated today. "Is picking up a case of kosher dills when you're at the store that much to ask? I don't think so, and I let Kathy know it. But she always brought up something about being "allergic" or whatever, I don't know. I wasn't really listening."
Gable's announcement is the latest in a string of high-profile defections for the legendary coach. Gable famously left his alma mater in 1972 to join the Iowa Hawkeye coaching staff after he couldn't, in his words, "get a roll of tape" at Iowa State. More recently, Gable switched dentists after being unable to get the latest issue of Newsweek in the waiting room; he left his recently-purchased car on the side of the road when he couldn't find a good song on the radio; and fled from a Bennigan's parking lot when the parking spot next to the door wasn't available.
Gable clarified these moves further, saying "I'm a guy who knows what he needs in life; be it a roll of athletic tape from a school, a jar of pickles from my wife or my insistence that none of my daughters look me directly in the eye. If I can't get what I need from a place or a person, I'm moving on. It's how I lead my life, and what I try to teach my children. "All or nothing," that's my motto. I tell my kids that all the time. That, and "Eyes on the floor, girls."
When pressed on why he didn't simply ask for more athletic tape and try to make the situation work at Iowa State, Gable put his fingers in his ears and closed his eyes. Efforts to question Gable further were met with a nonsensical song apparently made up on the spot, which included the lyrics, "I'm not listening to you, I'm not listening to you, a la la la la."
Dan Gable is expected to try and remarry quickly, reportedly to the stork mascot of the Vlasic Pickle Company. When it was pointed out that Vlasic's mascot was a fictional cartoon bird and unsuitable for marriage to a human man, Gable quickly left the press conference he had called and ducked out the side entrance of the building."
FYI SSG Chad Henning Capt Rich BuckleyCW4 G.L. SmithSPC Nancy GreeneSSG Franklin Briant1stsgt Glenn Brackin Sgt Kelli Mays SGT Gregory Lawritson SGM Gerald FifeSFC Bernard WalkoMaj Wayne CristSGM Bill FrazerMSG Andrew WhitePO3 Phyllis Maynard CSM (Join to see) CPL Dave Hoover SPC Russ Bolton SP5 Dennis Loberger SFC William Farrell MSG Felipe De Leon Brown
Author: Edward W Rearick Jim Doran filmmaker.
University, Department of Speech/Telecommunicative Arts.
Subjects: Dan Gable, Wrestlers -- Iowa State University
Description:
Profiles Dan Gable's high school and collegiate wrestling career. Includes comments by Dan Gable, his parents, and coaches. Contains film footage of his many wrestling matches including his one loss in the NCAA finals of his senior year.
Publisher: Special Collections Department, Iowa State University Library
Creation Date: c1971
Format: 16mm
Notes:
Transfer from original 16mm A and B roll and 1/4" magtrack
Music, Gary White, Bruce Eberle ; faculty advisor, R.H. Kraemer.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TIF1uYh9SIE
Images
1. Dan Gable went undefeated as a high schooler, lost just one match in college and did not allow a point in winning a gold medal at the Munich 1972 Olympic Games.
2. Dan Gable 'Gold medals aren't really made of gold. They're made of sweat, determination, and a hard-to-find alloy called guts'
3. Dan Gable - 1972 Olympics Team USA
4. Dan Gable 'Talent is everywhere, winning attitude is not.'
5. Danny Mack 'Dan' Gable with jar of pickles at lectern
Biographies:
1. chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-1999-07-20 [login to see] -story.html
2. widerightnattylite.com/2012/4/20/2960838/dan-gable-leaves-wife-for-a-jar-of-pickles]
Background from {[https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-1999-07-20 [login to see] -story.html]}
It was a car ride forced by...
Michael Hirsley, Tribune Staff WriterCHICAGO TRIBUNE
It was a car ride forced by tragedy. Two parents and their teenage son were returning hastily from a getaway trip, knowing the family member they had left behind had been raped and murdered.
As the father was driving home, the 15-year-old son suddenly blurted that there might be a clue to his older sister's murder in something an older neighborhood youth had told him about her. The father's gloom burst into anger. He stopped, pulled his son out, pushed him against the car, and shouted "What do you mean?" as he slapped him.
It turned out the son's instinct was correct. The disturbed neighbor who once had said he wanted to be intimate with the boy's sister was arrested and convicted of her murder.
The son went beyond understanding and forgiving his father's rage. He vowed to move into his sister's room to dissuade his parents from moving from their home, where their daughter's bloody body was found, and to keep his parents together despite fits of despair that threatened the marriage and family structure.
He focused on a naive goal: "I needed to give them enough entertainment that they didn't have to look other places."
"Gable." If a documentary with that one-word title showed up in most places under most circumstances, most people would associate it with legendary Hollywood icon Clark Gable.
But the feature-length documentary titled "Gable" has shown up this month in Iowa City, as a completed project shot on videotape and a tight budget by independent filmmakers with Shadow Bird Productions and the University of Iowa Video Center, winner of national awards primarily for videos on health and family issues. This video is a departure, but it begins with a family crisis. It tells what happened to that 15-year-old whose world teetered on the verge of ruin when his 19-year-old sister, Diane Gable, was murdered in 1964.
This documentary is about legendary Iowa wrestling icon Dan Gable. He won an Olympic gold medal, compiled a 181-1 high school record in Waterloo, Iowa, and at Iowa State University, then coached the University of Iowa to wrestling dominance with 15 national championships, including nine in a row from 1978 to 1986.
Gable retired after the 1997 season, during which the documentary was shot.
Wrestling has been Dan Gable's life. At 15, he already had wrestled for eight years, beginning when his father, real estate salesman Mack Gable, put him in YMCA competitions. Dan focused and honed his skills with the single-minded zeal consistent with having vowed to be his parents' reliable entertainer . . . and knowing only one way to do that.
He became so overwhelmingly dominant his talent focused his parents' attention . . . along with that of an ever-growing legion of followers, from wrestling fans to sports fans to celebrity watchers.
As one might expect, many Iowans still recognize and greet the trim, balding 50-year-old who now coaches a smaller number of top wrestlers as one of three U.S. Olympic coaches. When he helped Olympic hopeful Mark Ironside, a two-time national champion on Gable's Iowa teams, give a wrestling clinic last week at Jefferson High School in Cedar Rapids, those seeking Gable's autograph ranged from 1st graders to high schoolers to parents.
Unexpectedly, his dedication and success in wrestling has made him a hero transcending his sport and his state. Comedian Al Franken, author John Irving and actor Tom Cruise, all of whom wrestled as amateurs, count themselves among Gable's admirers.
Irving, who earned a Master of Fine Arts degree at Iowa and uses wrestling imagery in his novels, worked out with the Iowa team and wrestled with Gable. In a subsequent magazine piece, he wrote in praise of being thrashed by his idol: "When Dan Gable lays his hands on you, you are in touch with grace."
Franken and Irving agreed to be interviewed by the documentary filmmakers, who worked on the project from 1997 until this year. Cruise, who was working on "Eyes Wide Shut," the just-released film, might yet appear in the documentary.
HBO was impressed with the work sufficiently to purchase broadcast rights, intending to premiere it on its Signature network in November after changing the title to "Freestyle: The Victories of Dan Gable."
David Gould, who co-produced the documentary with Daniel Lind of the Iowa Video Center, said, "I felt we needed to do this story of an extraordinary person, right in our midst, before all those Gable stories are lost.
"We want to take his story beyond wrestling, beyond athletics. . . . This is a mainstream human-interest story. Whether you're an athlete, an accountant or a dentist, Gable's story makes you question how hard you're working toward your goals."
Director Kevin Kelley said he felt how Gable's intensity could intimidate when they first met to discuss the project: "He said, `If you're going to shoot this, it better be great.' "
The video team became partners with the wrestling team, as Gable allowed the crew ever-increasing access during the 1997 season--even to the hospital where he went for hip-replacement surgery.
Editor Bryan Less, whose filming included chasing wrestlers up stairs during their exhausting climbing exercises, said the crew decided early that the video did not need a narrator.
The story line is carried in scenes such as Gable's instructions to his team; and, after he won his Olympic gold medal at the 1972 Munich Games, a strange interview in which he was still so focused on the sport that he didn't immediately recognize that reporters' questions about the "atmosphere" meant the deadly terrorists who disrupted the Games.
"His work ethic is what makes him tick," Less said. "He happened to pick wrestling, but you can't imagine anyone being that focused in any walk of life."
But those who think his intensity made him the most successful wrestling coach "are wrong," Gould said. "The reason Gable always won was because his guys looked over and saw a coach who had been with them every step of the way. I never saw him get on a kid who lost but gave his all."
Gable still trains for an hour every day, but says he has cut down his sit-ups, push-ups, rope jumping and bike riding and has increased his time in the whirlpool and sauna.
Nonetheless, Kelley still was amazed at Gable's athleticism. He did repetitions of chin-ups on a horizontal bar for a scene in the documentary.
"Finally, we went from long-range shots to close-ups, just showing his head coming above the bar," Kelley recalled. "I realized he didn't actually have to keep doing chin-ups for that, so I asked, `Dan, would you like to just stand on a box?' "
Silly question, Kelly quickly realized.
"He just said, `No,' " Kelly recalled.
The documentary includes historical footage of the gold medal-deciding match that completed Gable's incredible Olympic run in which he held every opponent scoreless and the lone defeat on his 181-1 high school and college record, a 13-11 loss to Larry Owings of the University of Washington in 1970. It was Gable's last collegiate match. Owings, whose career never again rose to that level, lost to Gable two years later in the Olympic trials.
When the documentary crew interviewed Owings, who is now on the administrative staff at an Oregon school, the filmmakers were surprised to see no wrestling memorabilia in his home.
"When we asked, he brought down the national championship trophy he won by beating Dan Gable in the most stunning upset in college wrestling," Gould said. "It was covered with cobwebs."
- - -
Dan Gable's home on a large wooded lot in Iowa City is filled with trophies and posters, with his Olympic gold medal a centerpiece. He says his wife, Kathy, is the one who has loaded showcases and walls with wrestling memorabilia.
In a nearby cabin he has furnished as an office, his choice of displays include photographs of his hero, Mickey Mantle.
Gable is pleased with the documentary. Some friends in wrestling circles think it doesn't show enough of the sport and he admits he agreed at first.
"It took me a while to understand it, because I'm narrow-minded," he said. "But this is about more than wrestling and a sports point of view. Because it is, I hope it can help promote wrestling to a wider audience."
And promoting wrestling is his ultimate motive in most of what he does. He is a critic of Title IX because he believes it is funding women's sports at the expense of college sports such as his.
"Title IX is creating (sex) discrimination against male wrestlers," he said. "In 10 years, you'll need another rule to correct the damages of Title IX."
He says that as the father of four--all daughters.
Producer Gould says he told Gable when the documentary project began that it would not be a puff piece. Lengthy footage of the Owings match confirms that. And only a dramatic comeback salvaged the 1997 season that would be the documentary's centerpiece regardless of how the team did or whether Gable retired when it was over.
It was a tough season, complete with the hip surgery that left Gable on crutches for the final weeks. Oklahoma State was a solid favorite to win the NCAA championship.
But the tournament was on the Cedar Falls campus of Northern Iowa, where a packed house of screaming fans created almost a home-arena atmosphere for Gable's team. The Hawkeyes scored an NCAA-record 170 points, crowned five individual national champions and won their 17th national title.
It did more than give the documentary a fitting climax that could not have been better if scripted. Gable thinks it might have saved his life.
"If they had not won that championship, I don't know if I could have stepped down, although I'd pretty much said I would early in the season," he said. "And if I hadn't, I might not be talking to you today."
Citing the job's stress, his health problems and his perfectionist attitude, he said, "Yes, I made the right decision. I was going to go downhill."
Failure gnaws at him, even the slight imperfection of not winning a record 10th consecutive national championship and of falling one victory short of a perfect career record as a wrestler. He did lose several times in the freestyle competition that he ultimately perfected at the 1972 Olympics. It is a style different from U.S. high school and college wrestling and it is not counted in his 181-1 record.
He has had surgery to replace both hips and is active again. He demonstrated that vividly, along with a series of wrestling holds and escapes, at the Cedar Rapids clinic. He has put his father in a nursing home. He has found solace over the recent death of his mother, Kate, and the childhood murder of his sister.
He believes his mother would agree with his decision to step down from coaching because she knew how stressful it was: "She never watched me wrestle matside. She always watched through windows, doors, from far away."
And when he won his gold medal, and stood on the podium, "I could vividly see my sister, almost like a ghost that was real," he said.
It was a good apparition, he explained. "She had a big grin, one of congratulations."
Background from {[ https://www.widerightnattylite.com/2012/4/20/2960838/dan-gable-leaves-wife-for-a-jar-of-pickles]}
Dan Gable Leaves Wife For a Jar of Pickles
By I am a Cyentist Apr 20, 2012, 3:30pm CDT
When bandages for an injured knee became difficult for Gable to obtain as he prepared for the 1972 Olympics, who outside of the cloak-and-dagger group knew that five dozen rolls valued at $100 would turn into one of the best investments in Hawkeye history?
"All I know is I couldn't get a roll of tape (at Iowa State)... It was like a dogfight to get a roll of tape. Then all of a sudden there was a case." - Andy Hamilton, Press-Citizen
In a stunning development Friday morning, Dan Gable announced that he was leaving his wife of 28 years over a disagreement about groceries. The former Iowa State and Iowa wrestler/coach indicated that he was no longer able to reconcile his differences with his wife Kathy over her refusal to buy pickles.
"Look, all I want in my life is a nice pickle spear to go along with my sandwich at lunch," Gable stated today. "Is picking up a case of kosher dills when you're at the store that much to ask? I don't think so, and I let Kathy know it. But she always brought up something about being "allergic" or whatever, I don't know. I wasn't really listening."
Gable's announcement is the latest in a string of high-profile defections for the legendary coach. Gable famously left his alma mater in 1972 to join the Iowa Hawkeye coaching staff after he couldn't, in his words, "get a roll of tape" at Iowa State. More recently, Gable switched dentists after being unable to get the latest issue of Newsweek in the waiting room; he left his recently-purchased car on the side of the road when he couldn't find a good song on the radio; and fled from a Bennigan's parking lot when the parking spot next to the door wasn't available.
Gable clarified these moves further, saying "I'm a guy who knows what he needs in life; be it a roll of athletic tape from a school, a jar of pickles from my wife or my insistence that none of my daughters look me directly in the eye. If I can't get what I need from a place or a person, I'm moving on. It's how I lead my life, and what I try to teach my children. "All or nothing," that's my motto. I tell my kids that all the time. That, and "Eyes on the floor, girls."
When pressed on why he didn't simply ask for more athletic tape and try to make the situation work at Iowa State, Gable put his fingers in his ears and closed his eyes. Efforts to question Gable further were met with a nonsensical song apparently made up on the spot, which included the lyrics, "I'm not listening to you, I'm not listening to you, a la la la la."
Dan Gable is expected to try and remarry quickly, reportedly to the stork mascot of the Vlasic Pickle Company. When it was pointed out that Vlasic's mascot was a fictional cartoon bird and unsuitable for marriage to a human man, Gable quickly left the press conference he had called and ducked out the side entrance of the building."
FYI SSG Chad Henning Capt Rich BuckleyCW4 G.L. SmithSPC Nancy GreeneSSG Franklin Briant1stsgt Glenn Brackin Sgt Kelli Mays SGT Gregory Lawritson SGM Gerald FifeSFC Bernard WalkoMaj Wayne CristSGM Bill FrazerMSG Andrew WhitePO3 Phyllis Maynard CSM (Join to see) CPL Dave Hoover SPC Russ Bolton SP5 Dennis Loberger SFC William Farrell MSG Felipe De Leon Brown
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Remember watching those Olympics and him but everything else in this is new to me. Thanks for sharing.
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SGT (Join to see)
I was a junior high wrestler at the time. He was about the most motivated individual ever. It is a shame he lost his very last match, but it made him who he was.
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