On the Mat, a documentary playing at the Tribeca Film Festival, examines the world of high school wrestling as experienced by Washington state鈥檚 Lake Stevens High team, winner of seven state championships in the past decade. Actor Chris Pratt (Moneyball, Parks & Recreation), a Lake Stevens wrestling alumni, recruited filmmaker Fredric Golding to follow the team for five months and document their blood, sweat and tears鈥攍iterally. We spoke to Golding about the grueling training that high school wrestlers endure. View the as part of the Tribeca Online Film Festival.
Since wrestling can be a pretty technical sport, were you worried it might not translate in a movie?
Really, it鈥檚 very simple. I mean simple in the sense that while wrestling is technical, it鈥檚 as simple as: If your shoulders get pinned to the mat, you lose. That鈥檚 really the basis of the whole sport. It鈥檚 just like when the Greeks did it鈥攖hey literally drew a circle in the sand and put two guys in the middle and blew a whistle and said go. It really hasn鈥檛 changed that much except for the fact that there鈥檚 technical moves, like a takedown or a reversal.
It definitely has a built-in drama.
Exactly, and it鈥檚 three two-minute periods. In a certain sense it鈥檚 like boxing in that it really is an exhausting, exhausting six minutes. As a high school sport it鈥檚 the ultimate sacrifice, just by virtue of the fact that these kids first of all have to cut weight. There are pretty simple rules about it, in terms of you can only lose a certain amount of weight, but ultimately these kids are not eating during the week in order to 鈥渕ake weight.鈥
You usually hear athletes talk about stocking up on calories and eating the right kinds of foods, so it鈥檚 a bit counterintuitive when some of the boys starve themselves to make specific weight classes. How does a kid maintain energy to wrestle if he鈥檚 hardly eaten all day?
It鈥檚 a good question. Jesse Peterson, who鈥檚 103 pounds, is 120 pounds as a normal kid. Jesse has to lose, hypothetically, 15 pounds. So as it gets closer to the season, he鈥檚 starting to lose weight. Then say he walks around during the week at 108 or 109 pounds, he knows that come Tuesday or Wednesday of that week, if he has a match on Friday, that he simply has to start running more, really working out. He has to watch everything that he puts into his system, inclusive of water. Ultimately these kids really don鈥檛 eat very much as it gets to what they call the weigh-in, where they 鈥渕ake weight.鈥 Then after the weigh-in there鈥檚 a period of two hours or so where they eat before a match and get their energy. They鈥檙e always drinking Pedialyte or Gatorade, which is an instant dose of energy.
Does that generate any sort of culture of boasting about how long you鈥檝e gone without food?
It鈥檚 not really a boasting because it鈥檚 an extremely arduous and difficult process. Not only is it physical but ultimately it鈥檚 emotional for a kid. Unlike college wrestlers, what is interesting in high school is that when a kid eats they鈥檙e still growing. So he鈥檚 eating and he grows and yet he has to wrestle at a certain weight. It鈥檚 very complex. So there鈥檚 not really a boasting about it because it鈥檚 extraordinarily difficult. You literally sometimes almost have to dehydrate yourself to make weight. These kids know how to count calories.
Did you interview any parents who were concerned about their kid鈥檚 eating habits?
I did interview a lot of parents, yes. These kids have been wrestling for a long time鈥攎ost of them had been wrestling since they were 7, 8, 9 years old鈥攕o they knew what a weight cut was and they weren鈥檛 doing it at a point where it was dangerous. There鈥檚 state laws, and even national laws I believe, in terms of how much weight you can lose in relation to body fat. The [rules are] pretty severe about what a kid can do and can’t do. I believe two or three years ago it used to be there was no outlawing of saunas, because naturally the way you lose weight is one of two things鈥攊t鈥檚 exercise or sweating. But nowadays kids cannot go in the sauna. I think a couple kids actually died, so they can鈥檛 go into saunas.
The film gives a real sense of how important camaraderie is for the sport. For example when Steven refuses to lose a couple of pounds to make weight, you see how his decision affects the entire team.
It鈥檚 an odd sport because on the one hand it鈥檚 an individual sport, but on the other hand it鈥檚 a team sport. It has that inherent irony built in, in that you want to win an individual state title in your weight class. But if you lose, you still have to wrestle to get consolation points for your team. And losing is really crushing for these kids. That鈥檚 what鈥檚 really interesting is that they鈥檙e still kids, so many kids who lose also lose their emotions.
At one point Eric tears his ACL. I imagine there was an instinct in the parents to urge him to stop wrestling. Was that discussion brought up?
Oh absolutely. They went to a pretty prominent surgeon outside of Lake Stevens, near Seattle, and ultimately they said he can wrestle. He could have done some greater damage to his knee, there was that possibility, but he put on a knee brace and wrestled. It鈥檚 really pretty remarkable when you think about it. For us laymen to walk around with a torn ACL is one thing, and it鈥檚 painful, but imagine wrestling with a torn ACL.
At another point, one of the kids doesn鈥檛 get up from the mat and is taken away on a stretcher. Was Coach Brent Barnes ever worried it might look bad for wrestling if this was in the film?
No, he wasn鈥檛 worried that there was a camera crew there because he was concerned about Jesse鈥檚 well-being. Even though we kept shooting, the fact of the matter is that everyone was concerned for his safety. I kind of don鈥檛 wanna give it away, but as soon as he moved his foot, people knew he wasn鈥檛 paralyzed. But he was out for a while. It was really scary. Really scary. I鈥檝e shot a fair amount of sports and a fair amount of people in hospitals鈥攁ny documentary producer does, because you go after narrative moments鈥攂ut this definitely was a life and death moment.
How many minutes was he down?
He must鈥檝e been out for at least three minutes.
As a documentary filmmaker, do you naturally keep shooting in that moment? Or is there a part of you that feels you should withdraw?
It鈥檚 the age-old expression, 鈥淒on鈥檛 hope what you wish for, don鈥檛 wish what you hope for,鈥 in the sense that you know that it鈥檚 going to be a story highlight when something tragic happens. I have a job, and my job is to capture those moments that are both in the agony of defeat and the elation of victory, and sometimes defeat comes with physical defeat. So my task is to document that鈥攎y task is not necessarily to comment on it as it鈥檚 happening. So there was never a question in my mind as to whether I would turn off the cameras or not.
And you can always make decisions later in the editing room.
That鈥檚 exactly right. Obviously if the cameras would鈥檝e gotten in the way of someone鈥檚 safety, that鈥檚 when you back off. But backing off is one thing as opposed to turning off the cameras. It鈥檚 the ultimate documentary question, when you turn the cameras off or not.
Clearly a big part of the team鈥檚 continual success is Coach Barnes. How does he stand out from other wrestling coaches, and sports coaches in general?
Coach Barnes is just an extraordinarily well-rounded individual. He reads a lot. He has a lot of interests outside of wrestling. As he says in the film, he has to have other interests because he鈥檚 extremely obsessed with wrestling. He鈥檚 really a spiritual mentor, if you would, to these kids. He believes wrestling is a sport where you learn life lessons: You get pinned, you have to get back up. If something happens in life that鈥檚 tough, you have to scrape yourself out of the bottom of the barrel and keep walking. That鈥檚 what he believes, and he teaches the kids that. I鈥檇 say most of the kids maintain relationships with Coach Barnes throughout their life. In fact, that鈥檚 one of the reasons we did the project, was that Chris [Pratt] is still to this day very friendly with Coach Barnes.
Do a lot of the teammates stay in touch afterwards?
Absolutely. You have to remember that even in practice, you have to wrestle with someone and you have very close body contact with another kid. There鈥檚 something about wrestling with one kid perhaps for four years. There鈥檚 a certain level of, I don鈥檛 wanna call it intimacy … or yeah, intimacy, among these kids. They know each other鈥檚 bodies and they know how tough they are and they know what it takes to excel.