Caswell from Pitt. Cliff was mostly bald; he had a long, leathery face with remarkable ears â his neck and his hands were huge. And Cliff didnât like the way the crowd was reacting to his call. He went over to the scorerâs table and took the microphone away from the announcer.
âNo biting â is that clear enough?â Cliff said into the microphone. The fans didnât like it, but they quieted down.
We had a few more weight classes (and a lot more illegal headlocks) to get through; we kept alternating the matches, between referee and mat judge, and we kept blowing our whistles â in addition to the headlocks without an arm, there were over-scissors and full-nelsons and figure-four body-scissors and twisting knee-locks and head-butts, but there was no more biting. In the 177-pound class, I called the penalty that determined the outcome of the match; I thought the fans were going to rush me on the mat, and the coach of the penalized wrestler distinctly called me a âcocksuckerâ â normally another penalty, but I thought Iâd better let it pass.
Cliff conferred with me while the crowd raged. Then he went to the microphone again. âNo poking the other guy in his eyes over and over again â is that clear enough?â Cliff said.
It was Cliff who refereed the heavyweights, for which I was â for which I
am
â eternally grateful. The boy whoâd been thrown on the scorerâs table, and had thus been victorious in the semifinals, was a little the worse for wear; his opponent was a finger bender, whom Cliff penalized twice in the first periodâ patiently explaining the rule both times. (If you grab your opponentâs fingers, you must grab all four â not just two, or one, and not just his thumb.) But the finger bender was obdurate about finger bending, and the boy whoâd been bounced off the scorerâs table was already ⦠well, understandably,
sensitive.
When his fingers were illegally bent, the boy responded with a head-butt; Cliff correctly penalized him, too. Therefore, the penalty points were equal as the second period started; so far, not one legal wrestling move or hold had been initiated by either wrestler â I knew Cliff had his hands full.
The finger bender was on the bottom; his opponent slapped a body-scissors and a full-nelson on him, which drew
another
penalty, and the finger bender applied an over-scissors to the scissors, which amounted to another penalty against
him.
Then the top wrestler, for no apparent reason, rabbit-punched the finger bender, and that was that â Cliff disqualified him for unsportsmanlike conduct. (Maybe I should have
let
him be thrown on the scorerâs table without penalty, I thought.) Cliff was raising the finger benderâs arm in victory when I spotted the losing heavyweightâs mother; it was another easy gene-pool identification â this woman was without question a heavyweightâs mom.
In Maine that year â
only
in Maine â I had heard us referees occasionally called âzebras.â I presume this was a reference to our black-and-white-striped shirts, and I presume that Cliff had previously heard himself called a âzebra,â too. Notwithstanding our familiarity with the slur, neither Cliff nor I was prepared for the particular assault of the heavyweightâs mom. She lumbered manfully to the scorerâs table and ripped the microphone from the announcerâs hands. She pointed at Cliff, who was standing a little uncertainly in the middle of the mat when she spoke.
âNot even a zebra would fuck you,â the mom said.
Despite the crowdâs instinctive unruliness, they were as uncertain of how to respond to the claim made by the heavyweightâs mother as Cliff Gallagher; the crowd stood or sat in stunned silence. Slowly, Cliff approached the microphone; Cliff may have been born in Kansas, but he was an old Oklahoma boy â he still
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