Browning Campaigns nyob Kansas

Nyob rau hauv 1922, Yav tom ntej Heavyweight Wrestling Tau zus ib Jim Browning pib nws cov hauj lwm nyob Kansas. Browning nyuam qhuav txav los ntawm nws hometown ntawm Verona, Missouri hauv 1921 Tsheb ciav hlau rau ib tug wrestling hauj lwm wrestling hauj lwm. Tom Qab Cai Lij Choj, Lub Wichita, Kansas promoter, oversaw Browning txoj kev kawm.

Yog ntuj 1923, Browning twb nyob rau hauv cov kev tshwm sim loj ntawm me qhia tau hais tias. Rau ib lub yim hli ntuj, Kansas card, Browning wrestled Jack Roller in a best 2-out-of-3-falls match. Roller actually won the first fall in 36 minutes with an armbar.

Browning took over the match after the first fall. He won the next two falls with the leg scissors. It took him 10 minutes to win the second fall. Roller was a little harder to defeat in the third fall. It took Browning 14 minutes to apply the leg scissors for the third fall.

jim-browning-1923

Photo of Jim Browning from 1923 (Public sau)

Browning used a number of different holds and didn’t really specialize in one finishing hold. Txawm li cas los, his successful use of the leg scissors drew comparisons to past and future World Champion Joe Stecher. Fans and reporters started referring to Browning asYoung Stecher”. The nickname stuck for several years.

Browning was bigger than Stecher and was a large heavyweight for the day. He stood 6’03” thiab weighed 215 phaus. Browning was a lean, muscular young wrestler the fans could get behind.

It wasn’t all success for the young prospect though. Nyob rau lub rau hli ntuj 22, 1923, Browning wrestled “SailorJack Lewis. Browning had previously defeated Lewis in March 1923. This rematch was the undercard of a Dick Daviscourt-Taro Miyaki main event in Wichita. It was a tough match for Browning.

In what may have been an accident, Lewis kicked Browning under the chin near the ropes. Browning fell through the ropes. Ringside spectators said Browning’s head struck the floor.

Whether it was a bad fall from a worked spot or a stiff kick, Browning appeared legitimately injured. The referee stopped the match. Browning was reportedly semi-conscious for 30 minutes after the fall.

Five days later on June 27th, Browning recovered enough to wrestle Charles Jenkins of Emporia, Kansas for the chance to meet Kansas Heavyweight Wrestling Champion Alan Eustace. Law scheduled the match for Eureka, Kansas.

Jenkins won the first fall in 58 feeb. Browning took the second fall in 26 feeb. Neither man was able to win the third fall before the 2-hour time limit expired. Law was disappointed with the small crowd, not an uncommon occurrence in the summer months.

It was obvious by his early wins and wrestling in the main event on smaller cards that Tom Law had big plans for Jim Browning. It is doubtful at this time, if either man knew how big a star Browning would become one day.

Koj yuav tawm ib saib los nug cov lus nug txog qhov no los yog tej tsev xa rau kuv Facebook phab los sis Twitter profile.

Qhov chaw: The Augusta Daily Gazette (Augusta, Kansas), Tej zaum 8, 1923 ib tsab, p. 1, Herrington Times (Herrington, Kansas), Lub peb hlis ntuj 22, 1923 ib tsab, p. 3, Dav dawb hau Wichita txhua hnub, Lub rau hli ntuj 23, 1923 ib tsab, p. 3 and The Eureka Herald (Eureka, Kansas), Lub rau hli ntuj 28, 1923 ib tsab, p. 1


PIN rau nws
Qhia tawm