As the Penn State wrestling team won yet another Division 1 title over the weekend--its 13th of the past 16 awarded--and did so in overwhelming fashion, I realized there is a deeper competitive advantage at play than exists even in other sports.
College wrestling dominance requires a layer that goes beyond the normal advantages that come from having a great coach and a roster of superb college athletes. Penn State-level dominance in wrestling requires an additional, self-reinforcing factor--of the sort I think can come from early success with AI, as it builds and builds and builds on itself.
I'll explain.
To understand that self-reinforcing factor, you need to look at the Penn State coach and at the coach whose record of 15 NCAA wrestling titles in 21 seasons Penn State is now approaching.
The Penn State coach is Cael Sanderson, arguably the best college wrestler ever. He was undefeated in college, winning 159 matches, and won four NCAA individual titles. He also won a gold medal at the 2004 Olympics.
The man he's chasing, Dan Gable, who coached the University of Iowa from 1976 through 1997, ranks even higher in the wrestling pantheon. He not only won two NCAA individual titles (in an era when freshmen weren't allowed in the tournament) but took the gold medal at the 1971 world championships and at the 1972 Olympics. In those tournaments, Gable won each of his six matches in those tournaments without giving up a point--a preposterous achievement given how scoring works in international wrestling.
Sanderson's and Gable's credentials are so impressive that they naturally attracted top recruits -- and started to build that self-reinforcing layer.
Wrestling differs from most college sports because the very best tend to pursue international careers after graduating but don't have any affiliation akin to what other athletes take on in professional leagues. Post-college wrestlers need a home. They need a wrestling room. And the best go to the best room, making it even better... and on and on we go.
Penn State has easily the best roster of collegiate talent at the moment -- six wrestlers made it to the NCAA finals among the 10 weight classes last weekend, tying the record, and four won titles. And Penn State has even better talent among the international wrestlers, who bring with them scores of NCAA titles and medals from world championships and the Olympics. In the finals of the 190-pound weight class at the U.S. trials for the 2024 Olympics, two wrestlers from that room went up against each other and had an epic battle -- which qualified as just another day in the life of Penn State wrestling.
The insurance industry should, I think, draw a lesson because AI can create a flywheel effect similar to what's happening at Penn State and what happened under Dan Gable at Iowa in the '80s and '90s.
Adopting AI won't happen overnight. Using it is an unnatural act for many people, especially older ones, so you need to find ways to get people to start to get comfortable with it. You need to produce successes that you can use to evangelize about AI. You need to create rock stars that, while not at the level of a Sanderson or Gable, can attract talented people who want to take on more ambitious projects. You need to keep testing and feeling your way toward more aspirational business models, going beyond efficiencies to, perhaps, embedding insurance in other companies' sales processes or developing services that predict and prevent losses before they can occur.
In fact, early successes with AI can generate savings that you can pump into more future projects, so you just keep accelerating.
(I realize I made more or less this point about a flywheel in last week's commentary on Lemonade, but I think it's so important that it's worth reinforcing, and college wrestling turns out to be even a better example than Lemonade.)
No competitive advantage lasts forever. Gable retired at age 48 -- coaches often mix it up with their wrestlers, and even an all-time great eventually wears down. The Iowa program, while still strong, has drifted in the decades since. Sanderson is now 46, and maybe he'll tire out one of these days, too. Meanwhile, David Taylor, a just-retired big name, has set up camp at Oklahoma State, which had four wrestlers make the NCAA finals. Three won. All four are freshman. So another cauldron of a wrestling room may be taking shape.
But I'll bet any insurer would be happy with an advantage on AI of the sort that Sanderson has produced at Penn State and that Gable developed at Iowa before him.
Cheers,
Paul
