Épisode 51 – Marin Plestin

Dans cet épisode, Je discute de la menace que Marin Plestina représentait pour la confiance en matière de lutte entre 1917 and 1921.

Update

We should be back to the same prodcution schedule with Dan by the middle of April.

Je partage pourquoi vous ne devriez jamais regrouper les SMS.

I also talk about how Vince McMahon never made long-term agreeements.

Articles sur la lutte professionnelle dans les années 1900

Photo de Marin Plestina (Domaine Public)

Main Content

I discuss how my recent research changed my opinion of the threat that Marin Plestina posed to the wrestling trust between 1917 and 1921.

Plestina posed a dangerous threat as one of the top three or four hookers in the business at the time. Plestina could submit any wrestler and held his own with World Champion Joe Stecher.

Despite Plestina and his manager, Joseph C. “OleMarsch exposing Jack Curley’s manipulation of the world championship through worked matches, Curley refused to let Plestina wrestle the Big Four: Joe Stecher, Comte Caddock, EdStrangler” Lewis, et Wladek Zbyszko.

After four years of an intense rivalry, Curley gave Plestina a match with John “L'homme-tigre du Nebraska” Le sable. If Plestina defeated Pesek, Curley would have to book Plestina to wrestle the World Championship and Curley would have to work with Pesek’s promoter, Tex Rickard.

Revoir

I tell the back story behind Dick Shikat’s and Joseph “Toots” Mondt’s relationship and recommend the seven minute video of the two men from the University of South Carolina archive.

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Shooter in A Worked World Book Cover

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