Voordat hij Ed was “Worger” Lewis
Worstelhistorici beschouwen Ed “Strangler” Lewis of Frank Gotch als de grootste Amerikaanse professionele worstelaar. Terwijl we aardig wat weten over de vroege carrière van Frank Gotch, we weten veel minder over de vroege carrière van Ed “Strangler” Lewis.
Verschillende bronnen beweren dat Lewis het catch-as-catch-can-worstelen leerde tijdens de kermissen toen hij nog maar veertien jaar oud was. Lewis was born Robert Friedrich on June 30, 1891, in tiny Nekoosa, Wisconsin. In 1900, Nekoosa boasted a population of 745 people.
Door 1910, when Friedrich wrestled his earliest professional wrestling match I can find, Nekoosa had doubled in population to 1,500. The town population never rose above 2,700.
Op dinsdag, December 27, 1910, Friedrich wrestled “Babe” Abel of Madison, Wisconsin in a best two-out-of-three-falls match. The men wrestled at Brook’s Hall in Nekoosa.
One of the myths about Friedrich is that Friedrich changed his name to Lewis to keep his parents from finding out that Friedrich was wrestling professionally. Echter, Friedrich wrestling in his hometown argues against this theory. It is impossible to believe Friedrich could keep his profession a secret from his parents after wrestling under his real name in his small hometown.
Friedrich wrestled a legitimate contest in this match. Friedrich needed one hour, fifty-five minutes to pin Abel for the first fall. Even with a 15-minute intermission, Friedrich only need forty-nine seconds to slam an utterly exhausted Abel for the second fall and match in two straight falls.
In 1913, Friedrich changed his name to Ed “Strangler” Lewis in honor of the original “Strangler”, Evan Lewis. Evan Lewis was a fellow Wisconsin native, who was born in Ridgeway, Wisconsin and lived in Dodgeville, Wisconsin.
Friedrich started using Ed “Strangler” Lewis when he travelled to Kentucky to wrestle in early 1913. From that point until his retirement, Friedrich wrestled as Ed “Strangler” Lewis. Tijdens de jaren 1920, Lewis earned more money from professional wrestling than any other professional athlete not named Jack Dempsey.
In 1910, Friedrich was just an up-and-coming local star. Grandiose things were in store for the Wisconsin native.
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Sources: The Daily Tribune (Wisconsin Rapids, Wisconsin), December 28, 1910, p. 4
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