Cary Kolat Lost Golden Opportunity At 2000 Olympic Games - FloWrestling
No American wrestler has faced injustice like Cary Kolat did from 1997 through 2000. In 2024, we are still wondering why.
Cary Kolat Lost Golden Opportunity At 2000 Olympic Games
No American wrestler has faced injustice like Cary Kolat did from 1997 through 2000. In 2024, we are still wondering why.
Jun 5, 2024 by Kyle KlingmanAn undefeated prep career (137-0) at Jefferson-Morgan High School in Pennsylvania, four state titles, and two third-place finishes at the Midlands â a prestigious tournament at Northwestern featuring some of the best college and post-college wrestling in the nation â as a junior and senior in high school meant Kolat was on track to become one of the nationâs finest wrestlers.
Kolat enrolled at Penn State and placed second at the NCAA tournament in 1993 as a true freshman and third as a sophomore in 1994. Following a redshirt year in 1995 Kolat transferred to Lock Haven University Wrestling, winning NCAA titles in 1996 and â97.
But Kolatâs heart belonged to freestyle. College was a stepping-stone to international wrestling â and near the end of his time at Lock Haven wrestling began getting stale.
âI loved wrestling,â Kolat said. âAt seven years old the first national title I won was the AAU nationals in Omaha, Nebraska â a freestyle tournament. And I fell in love with freestyle at that point. In 1984 I watched all those guys win gold medals (seven in freestyle, two in Greco-Roman) and I was just obsessed with trying to chase down an Olympic gold medal.
âWhen they raised my hand on that NCAA platform for the final time I was saying inside that Iâm glad this phase of my wrestling career is over because my passion and my love always was for freestyle. Thatâs where I loved to be. It was like the gloves are off, I donât have to do the folkstyle stuff any more and I can focus on where I really want to wrestle.â
1997 World Championships
Following an unsuccessful bid to make the Olympic team in 1996, Kolat put all his efforts into freestyle. Kolat watched Tom Brands win the Olympics that year and learned an important lesson: You have to be hard-nosed and tough to win international wrestling tournaments â especially if youâre an American.
The 1997 World Championships in Krasnoyarsk, Russia, could have been the start of a gold medal run. Kolat won his first four matches and reached the finals against Iranâs Abbas Hajd Kenari, the same opponent Brands had defeated in the opening round of the â96 Olympics.
Kolat learned another important lesson: Donât fall behind early. He gave up a takedown and gut wrench within the first minute and had to play catch up â a dangerous game against crafty international opponents.
âThat match in â97, I donât know if we can say thatâs due to FILAâs corruption,â said Kolat. âThat was more of a referee thing going on. I can kind of live with the â97 thing. Not that Iâm happy with a silver but in â97 I gave up points 40 seconds into the match.
âIâve never watched the match but people have told me there are seven or eight times he tied his shoes and he untied his shoes and thatâs where we came up with the taped laces. And thatâs more of a referee thing. You donât know who youâre going to get.
âItâs us versus the world and itâs always been that way.â
A 4-2 loss to Kenari meant Kolat settled for a silver medal in his first World Championships.
He would never place higher.
1998 World Championships
At the 1998 World Championships in Teheran, Iran, Kolat won his first-round match and was pitted against Serafim Barzakov of Bulgaria in the second round.
âCary wins the match,â said Bruce Burnett, U.S. Freestyle National Team Coach from 1992 through 2000. âThe match is over and Cary wins. They go into the back room, with no representation from the United States, and overturn it. Thereâs no wrestling. They overturned his win and turned it into a loss.
âAnd it wasnât Cary (they were after). It was the Bulgarianâs chance to get a medal.â
Following the overturned match, Barzakov went on to win the gold medal, the only medal for Bulgaria at the tournament. Kolat reeled off six consecutive wins â including two over former World champions â to take third.
Kolat had his hand raised in every match but settled for the bronze.
The next yearâs World Championships were even stranger.
1999 World Championships
In the opening round, Kolat defeated Russiaâs Shamil Umakhanov â Olympic champion the following year â in a wild shootout. But during the first takedown, Kolat separated his shoulder defending a shot.
Wrestling severely injured for the entirety of the tournament, Kolat reached the semifinals against Elbrus Tedeev of Ukraine â the same wrestler he defeated for third the year before.
Down by two late in the match, Kolat hit a swing single, turned it into an ankle lace, and won with two seconds left. Kolat won the match but a protest from the Ukrainians ensued.
The officials reviewed the situation matside and the decision stood for Kolat. But then, similar to the previous year, officials went into a back room (with no coaches allowed) to âdiscussâ the decision. The match was overturned and the match was re-wrestled.
âNow itâs like (Ukraine has) a one-armed guy trying to wrestle,â Kolat said. âThey know whatâs going on now and I wind up losing the next match 2-1 and thereâs a questionable call but you canât protest a protested match so it was done right there. For third and fourth that year I couldnât perform. After that point mentally I was out of it. My shoulder is a wreck and Iâm getting shot up after every match.
âHere I am where Iâve beaten everybody and Iâm forced to wrestle for third when I should be wrestling in the finals. So I wind up losing to Uzbekistan to take fourth.â
2000 Olympic Games
Yet the strangest event occurred at the 2000 Olympics.
To advance in the tournament each wrestler had to win his respective pool. Kolatâs pool consisted of two other wrestlers: Mohammad Talaee of Iran and Ramil Islamov of Uzbekistan.
âPeople always ask me if I was nervous at the Olympic Games and I can tell you honestly this was the first time in my life where there were absolutely no butterflies,â Kolat said. âLike I knew I was going to win that event. I was ready, I felt good, and I didnât have an ounce of nervousness in me. Iâm ready to goâŠthis is where I wanted to be.â
Kolat faced Talaee in the opening round. But, like many of Kolatâs matches, a scramble occurred. The Iranians argued the call. A matside video review showed that the score would stand and Kolat eventually won.
ButâŠFILA reviewed the match in a back room where coaches werenât allowed, and it was overturned. The match had to be re-wrestled.
âThis is the only part of my career that I have a lot of regrets and a lot of anger at myself because I could have beat him,â said Kolat. âI could have beat him in the second match, too. When we came out and shook hands in the second match, when we had to re-wrestle, the whole time I was thinking âI canât believe Iâm wrestling this guy again.â If youâre thinking when youâre competing in the Olympic Games your mindâs not in it.â
Talaee won the protested match, 5-4, but there was still hope for Kolat. Because the loss was in pool competition Kolat could advance if he beat Islamov and if Islamov beats Talaee.
There was only one thing Kolat could not do: pin Islamov. That meant Islamov had no chance of advancing out of the pool even if he did beat Talaee.
But wrestlers are trained to pin, so when Kolat saw an opening he took it. Pinning Islamov meant that Kolatâs fate rested in the hands of Islamov wrestling â and beating â Talaee.
âJohn Smith goes over to (Islamov), and we used John Smith, heâs our six-time World and Olympic champion, he carries some weight with those dudes,â Kolat said. âHe asks if heâs going to wrestle and he was like âIâm going to wrestle. Iâm not going to lay down.â Iâm waiting back at the hotel and Iâm calling and Johnâs like âLook, Iâve talked to them, the dude is going to wrestle, youâre good. The guy is going to give it his all.ââ
âI looked at my watch and I call and (John) said he saw the Russians walk over to him â and Uzbekistan is one of those old Soviet republics â so the Russians still have some reach. So they go over and they say something to him, they point to his shoes and the guy took his shoes off, left the arena, and didnât wrestle. And then the Russian went on and won the gold medal. And that was how the whole thing finished up.â
Cary Kolatâs Olympic dream was gone in two matches.
The Aftermath Of Corruption
â(Corruption) goes on,â Burnett said. âThis is part of what happens. You have all of these Olympic ideals and all of a sudden you get the backside of it. And thatâs not to say Cary couldnât have beaten the guy again, but he shouldnât have had to. He won the match based on the rules that they had in place at the time.
âCan you justify it? Absolutely not. Can you complain? Yeah, I complained. To this day Iâm convinced that FILA has a picture of me hanging on its walls.â
For Kolat, life was a blur for two months following the Olympics. The Pennsylvania native flew back from Sydney to a home he had just rented in Morgantown, West Virginia. His wife, as he found out during the Olympics, was pregnant with their first daughter, Zooey.
âWeâve always screamed to fight more but (USA Wrestling) did some things behind the scenes to try and help me get through it and try to help me when I was over there and I appreciated it,â said Kolat. âIt just took me some time to calm down. I was projecting my anger on everyone that was around me.
âSince 2000 there isnât a day I donât walk around thinking I donât have one gold medal â and I wanted multiple. I would take just one now. There are days where Iâm still not fully recovered. You donât ever escape something like that.â
How Could This Happen?
Yet, through it all, an even deeper question looms: How could all of this happen to one person?
âIf you think about it, youâd say that it canât happen to one guy,â said Burnett. âTheyâre out to get Cary. But it wasnât Cary â it was who he was wrestling. Honestly, thatâs one of the reasons I got out of international wrestling because I was so disgusted by that part of it.â
Burnett, the current head coach at the U.S. Naval Academy, had Kolat serve as a clinician at a summer camp this year. And for the first time the two sat down and opened up about what went on during those four years.
âWhen Bruce talks about it, it bothers me more than anybody else because he was always in the trenches there with me,â Kolat said. âWhen he starts reliving it, it really stirs up emotion in me. When other people ask me it doesnât bother me but he said âYou had the wrong guys with the wrong connections in your weight and it was just pure bad luck.ââ
Burnett left his position as National Teams coach following the 2000 Olympics but Kolat kept wrestlingâŠsort of. He placed second at the 2001 World Cup with little training.
Cary Kolat’s Return To Wrestling
Kolat entered a couple of tournaments with an Olympic run in mind, but lackluster performances led to his decision to step away from wrestling.
However, in 2007, Kolat found his way back to the mat to challenge the nationâs best in earnest. He entered the 2007 U.S. Nationals â training only with his Adam Takedown Machine â and placed fourth. His next competition was the 2008 U.S. Nationals where he lost in the first round to Jared Lawrence.
Kolat was eligible for the 2008 Olympic Trials because he made a previous Olympic Team. He competed there, losing in the semi-finals of the mini-tournament to Chris Bono, for the last time.
Or was it?
âI miss it,â said Kolat. âI miss it every day.
âIf the right situation was there where I could support my family and train Iâd be on the mat again. I wrestle and I love doing it.â
Watch FloWrestling’s series on Cary Kolat
Episode OneEpisode TwoEpisode Three
Jun 8, 2024
Jun 8, 2024
Jun 8, 2024
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