On Friday, Jayson Ness sat in his Bloomington home and watched Gable Steveson play the ultimate game of beat the clock in the Tokyo Olympics, and immediately felt a slight sense of déjà vu.
Steveson, the Gophers heavyweight from Apple Valley, had just completed the most improbable of comebacks, scoring two takedowns in the final 10 seconds, including the winning two-pointer with 0.2 remaining, to beat Georgia's Geno Petriashvili for the gold medal.
The final takedown gave Steveson a 9-8 lead after he trailed 8-5, and he was awarded an extra point for an unsuccessful video challenge by Petriashvili's corner for the 10-8 final score.
The scene from Tokyo brought Ness back to the night of March 20, 2010, in Omaha. Ness, a Gophers senior 133-pounder at the time, was wrestling Iowa's Daniel Dennis for the NCAA championship. Trailing 4-1 in the third period, Ness produced his own improbable rally with a four-point move in the final seconds to win 6-4.
"Definitely, a little bit [similar], but this one was much bigger,'' Ness said, laughing. "No offense to myself or Dan Dennis, but [Steveson and Petriashvili] are two of the best athletes in the entire world.''
Back in 2010, Ness trailed Dennis 4-2 with 1:06 left, but Dennis successfully countered Ness' moves for the next 56 seconds. With 14 seconds to go, Ness got in deep on a double-leg shot and took Dennis down and to his back with seven ticks left. The four-point move gave Ness a dramatic 6-4 win, capping a 31-0 season and stunning a crowd heavy with Iowa fans.
"I'm guessing that Gable and I had the same mind-set: Just stick to the game plan and don't get rattled and go for something stupendous,'' Ness said of the late heroics. "Just chip away at that lead.''