The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Iowa’s Lee chases history in going for his 4th NCAA title

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History is the light at the end of Iowa wrestler Spencer Lee’s tunnel vision.

The 125-pounder has a chance to win his fourth national title this weekend at the NCAA championsh­ips in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and join an exclusive club with names he can recite in just a few seconds.

Lee’s six-year career with the Hawkeyes will end with this tournament, a career that has been built with a singular focus on the next match.

The two-time winner of the Dan Hodge Trophy as the nation’s most dominant wrestler knows what he can accomplish in this final tournament.

“Yeah, of course, I’ve definitely thought about it,” Lee said. “It would mean a lot to me. The thing is, I haven’t done it yet.”

Lee would become the first Iowa wrestler to win four national championsh­ips. Cornell 149-pounder Yianni Diakomihal­is also is pursuing his fourth. If both accomplish the feat, there would be six four-time Division I champions in NCAA history.

Oklahoma State’s Pat Smith (1990-92, 1994), Iowa State’s Cael Sanderson (19992002), Cornell’s Kyle Dake (2010-13) and Ohio State’s Logan Stieber (2012-15) are the others.

Challenged to name them during a media availabili­ty Monday, Lee quickly went through the list.

Then he smiled.

“Come on, man,” Lee said, jokingly shaking his head at the question.

Lee’s appreciati­on for wrestling history only adds to his status as one of the most respected figures in the sport.

“How he can regurgitat­e the history of wrestling and past results and his favorite matches, people tune in and listen, and they pay attention,” coach Tom Brands said. “It’s a natural that when the results are there and the mouth starts working, people are interested, colleagues and teammates are interested in what he has to say.”

It has been futile throughout Lee’s career for anyone to get him to look beyond his next match, and Brands said that trait has served him well.

“I think Spencer is a cool cucumber,” Brands said. “He’s cool under fire. I think he has a knack for moving on to the next thing the right way. That’s not to say there isn’t frustratio­n, but he handles it well. He can move on quick, and that’s a pretty good ingredient for great athletes, I think.”

Lee has a 95-5 career record — 38 of his wins have ended in the first period, including 11 falls in under one minute — and is on a 55-match winning streak. He is 17-0 this season, with eight wins by fall and four technical falls. Lee won his third Big Ten championsh­ip and was named the conference’s wrestler of the year for the third time.

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