Remembering Wayne Munn

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Wayne “Big” Munn’s a meteoric rise in professional wrestling.  Debuting in 1924, Munn “won” the World Heavyweight Wrestling Championship from Ed “Strangler” Lewis in early 1925.  His fall was just as quick.  By 1926, Munn was retired. A college football lineman from Nebraska, Munn was recruited into professional wrestling by Billy Sandow, defacto leader of the Gold Dust Trio.  The

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Beell Wins Title

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Fred Beell was a strong, talented professional wrestler at the turn of the 20th Century.  Beell gave all the best wrestlers of the day tough contests but his lack of size often hampered his ability with world class wrestlers. Although powerfully built, Beell was generously listed at 5’06”.  At his heaviest, Beell never exceeded 170 pounds.  While possessing a bodybuilder’s

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Lewis and Stecher Shoot One Last Time

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The Gold Dust Trio’s dominance of professional wrestling in the early to mid-1920s bred lots of resentment with other wrestlers and promoters.  This professional jealousy led to a famous double-cross in 1925.  From this time on, the world title was disputed as Joe Stecher held one version, while Ed “Strangler” Lewis held the other version. Due to the real resentment

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Jenkins’ and Beell’s Closed Door Match

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Tom Jenkins had the distinction of being the only wrestler to defeat Frank Gotch multiple times.  Jenkins and Gotch traded the American Heavyweight Wrestling Championship between 1902 and 1906. At the time of this match, Jenkins was the champion again. Fred Beell had been campaigning for a match with Jenkins for the past several months.  Beell finally convinced Jenkins to

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“Toots” Mondt’s Injured in 1922

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Joseph “Toots” Mondt wrestled professionally from the early 1910s through the 1930s but he made his real mark as a booker, booking agent and promoter.  While Ed “Strangler” Lewis considered Mondt his equal in a legitimate wrestling match, Mondt has a genius for creating angles and finishes in worked wrestling exhibitions. Mondt would join Lewis and his manager Billy Sandow

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Taro Miyake Wrestles in St. Louis

taro-miyake

From late 1921 to 1923, John Contos promoted professional wrestling in St. Louis, Missouri.  However, Contos decided to leave promotion to focus on managing the career of budding star Dan Kolov.  Prior to leaving St. Louis, Contos sold the promotion to Tom Packs, his nephew and assistant in the promotion. Packs’ first card was scheduled for Friday, January 4, 1924. 

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Stanislaus Zbyszko Box Office Bust?

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When discussing Stanislaus Zbyszko’s title reign from 1921 to 1922, the main reason given for taking the title from him was that his title reign was a box office failure.  Do the numbers validate this belief? Prior to wining the championship, Zbyszko wrestled former champion Joe Stecher at the 71st Regiment Armory in front of 7,000 fans.  In 1915, the

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Joe Stecher Beats Ad Santel

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Joe Stecher started out 1915, a fateful year for his career, with a victory over Adolph Ernst.  Ernst wrestled under the name Otto Carpenter for this match but was known to professional wrestling fans as Ad Santel.  Santel had a deserved reputation for being a vicious “hooker”, a wrestler skilled in submission holds. Stecher was a 22-year-old Nebraskan, who made

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