Boxning effekt på legitima Wrestling

I 1910-talet, Amerikansk wrestling flyttas permanent från legitima brottning tävlingar till förinställd utställningar. fan intresse, promotorkontroll och mindre slitage på brottarna alla spelat en roll i denna övergång. En annan mindre omtalade trycket var utanför sporten i sig.

Före 20-talet, proffsboxning var olagligt i USA. Bare knuckle prize fighting had long been banned but professional boxing with gloves was also outlawed. While fights still occurred, they happened in private and often a few steps ahead of the law. Promoters and fighters were often arrested before or right after a fight.

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Wladek Zbyszko in 1917

Amateur boxing in sporting clubs started to gain in popularity in the late 19th Century. Sold to upper class youth as exercise in a manly art, the newfound interest in gloved boxing eventually led to the legalization of professional boxing.

Instead of hiding before fights, the bouts were hyped in newspapers for weeks before the actual fight. It was newspapers, the mass medium before the electronic age, which started to put pressure on wrestling.

Först, wrestling matches were prearranged or fixed before the 1910s. The suspicion of faking always hung over wrestling and made sports columnist reluctant to cover the sport.

För det andra, evenly matched bouts could be quite boring. Wrestlers could be engaged in a collar and elbow tie-up, struggling for an advantage, for hours. William Muldoon and Clarence Whistler wrestled to a 7-hour draw, where neither man was really able to secure a hold.

I 1915 International Wrestling Tournament, Wladek Zbyszsko and Alex Aberg were in a tie-up for three hours without advantage. The New York Police called the match at midnight. Reporters, looking for copy, could only write that the men tied up for three hours without advantage.

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Jack Johnson (vänster) och “Denver” Ed Martin (höger)

Emellertid, boxing matches were constant action with the boxers trading punches, sometimes hundreds of them, over the course of a fight. Even a short fights, like Jack Johnson’s two round demolition of Bob Fitzsimmons in 1907, produced six paragraphs about the fight. Johnson finally put “Fitz” out of his misery with an overhand right to the jaw.

The most exciting moment in the first International Wrestling Tournament involved Wladek Zbyszko. In a relatively short match, Zbyszko’s opponent grabbed his leg, a clear foul in Greco-Roman wrestling, and refused to let go. Zbyszko had him upside down in a body hold. The man didn’t want to be slammed.

After the referee disqualified him, the opponent still would not let go. A frustrated Zbyszko finally spiked him into the mat and knocked him unconscious. Reporters were able to get a three paragraph story out of this match but it was one of the few noteworthy moments.

Pro wrestlers started to cooperate in their matches to make them more exciting and keep the fansinterest. While they would struggle to keep up with the fast pace of professional boxing, the Joe StecherStanislaus Zbyszko World Title Match in 1925 covered two full pages in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Prearranged matches were at least helping them compete for newspaper coverage.

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