Clarentiae Whistler moritur in Australia

clarence, whistler

Clarentiae Whistler natus est in Indiana in 1856. Dum modo stantes V "’09” aut sic et adpensa 165 pondo, Whistler inter luctatores suae aetatis potentissimus habebatur. Whistler unicus luctator Gulielmo Muldoon difficile tempus in Muldoon's 9 annorum curriculum Mundus Champion dare poterat.. Whistler praesertim certavit in palaestra Graeco-Romana, dominans style in

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Zbyszko Injures Dr. Roller

Stanislai-zbyszko

May 17, 1910, Stanislaus Zbyszko’s year-long tour of America continued as he met Dr. Benjamin F. Roller in Buffalo, Novi Eboraci. Zbyszko, a Greco-Roman Wrestling Champion from Poland, wanted to generate interest in a potential match with World Heavyweight Wrestling Champion Frank Gotch. While Dr. Roller was never able to beat Gotch, he was considered one of the top American

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Et “Strangulatam” Lewis’ Headlock mortiferum

extraneus nibh Lorem phantasma

ducens in suum Januarium 24, 1921 title match with former world champion Earl Caddock, Mundus Heavyweight Wrestling Champion Ed “Strangulatam” Ludovicus prior duos adversarios laesisse existimatur, Wladek Zbyszko et Joe Stecher, cum headlock. Ut uti Cicero headlock ad coxae pavimento iactare adversarium suum. Zbyszko pulsabatur insipiens, quando in capite ejus ledo

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How to Setup a Big Rematch

Fred-Beell-posing

On St. Patrick’s Day 1908, Martin “Agricola” Burns met the small but powerful Fred Beell. While both wrestlers weighed 165 pondo, “Agricola” Burns stood 5’11to Beell’s 5’04”. The 32-year-old Beell had a big age advantage over the 47-year-old Burns though. Ardens debuted in 1879, when Beell was 3-years-old. The men were scheduled for a match in Omaha, Nebraska, unus

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Duncan Ross Wrestles Sorakichi Matsuda

duncan-c-ross

Aprilis, 21, 1884, Duncanus C. Ross met Sorakichi Matsuda, also known as Matsada, the first Japanese professional wrestler in the United States. Matsuda immigrated to the United States to pursue his dream of becoming a professional wrestler because it didn’t really exist in Japan at the time. 28-year-old Duncan Ross was born in Turkey of Scottish descent on March

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Stecher and Lewis At It Again

puer-ed-aliena-Ludovicus

Et “Strangulatam” Lewis enjoyed one of the most successful careers in professional wrestling. Although Lewis wrestled in mostly staged exhibitions, he possessed legitimate wrestling skills. Future protege Lou Thesz said many times Lewis could beat any wrestler at any time, ideo ille est specimen mundi champion in moderna aetate compositus. Autem, early in his career, Lewis

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Was It a Shoot or a Work?

joe-stecher-pilae-cingulum

At the end of December 1916, a strange event occurred. John F. Olin, a local Massachusetts wrestler, won a match with the current World Champion Joe Stecher. The referee declared Olin the winner after Stecher walked away from the match. Before the National Wrestling Alliance (NWA) made changes to the rules in the 1950s, championships changed hands through disqualification or

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Pesek Goes Into Business for Himself

john-tigr-man-pesek

John “Tigerman” Pesek wrestled several “shoot” matches during the “worked” era of the 1920s. By this time, American professional wrestlers cooperated with each other to put on exciting matches for the fans. Results were predetermined by promoters and managers. Legitimate contests or “shoots” were rare. When they did occur, it was normally to settle a dispute among promoters or a

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Legitimate Brawl or Pre-Match Hype?

Fred-Beell-posing

Ad finem 1905, Fred Beell was traveling America hyping up a match with former American Heavyweight Wrestling Champion Tom Jenkins. Beell was a former American Heavyweight Wrestling Champion having defeated Frank Gotch in a “worked” match in New Orleans during December 1903. He lost the title back to Gotch a few weeks later. Capable wrestlers, Jenkins and Beell

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Stecher Meets Pesek in St. Ludovicus

joe-stecher-pilae-cingulum

Joe Stecher and JohnTiger ManPesek were legitimate wrestlers in a primarily “worked” era, where matches were predetermined unless someone decided to double-cross the other wrestler or promoter by turning the match into a legitimate contest. Double-crosses only worked, if the wrestler could legitimately win the match. John Pesek didn’t like the worked nature of wrestling and often turned

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