Lewis yuav siv sij hawm title rov qab los ntawm Zbyszko

Nyob rau lub hlis ntuj nqeg 14, 1922, ib pawg neeg 10,000 Kiv cua ua tus St. Louis Coliseum saib lub rematch ntawm tam sim no ntiaj teb Heavyweight Wrestling Champion Ed “Strangler” Lewis thiab qub tau zus ib Stanislaus Zbyszko. Lewis “tua yeej” Zbyszko rau lub npe nyob rau hauv Wichita, Kansas nyob rau hauv lub peb hlis ntuj 1922. Tsis paub rau cov kiv cua, the plan was for Zbyszko to lose the match to Lewis but look strong in the process.

Billy Sandow, Lewis’ manager, and Lewis controlled the World Championship at the time. When Lewis dropped the title in 1921, it was with the understanding Zbyszko would drop it back at some time in the future. With his title reign running out of steam, Sandow and Lewis let Zbyszko know it was time to drop the title back in March 1922. As I wrote last month, they were concerned about whether Zbyskzo would actually cooperate in the rematch or try to turn the match into a legitimate contest.

zbyszko-working-toehold

Stanislaus Zbyszko working the toe hold on Ed Strangler Lewis (Public sau)

The match began at a very quick pace. Lewis secured several headlocks, which Zbyszko powered out of time and again. Zbyszko worked for a toe hold, when he was on offense. The fast pace of the match demonstrated Lewis and Zbyszko were working together to make an exciting match.

The back and forth continued until the 41-minute mark. Zbyszko caught Lewis with a flying mare for the first fall in 41 feeb, 15 vib nas this. With Zbyszko winning the first fall, it was further evidence Lewis trusted Zbyszko to go through with the finish.

lewis-zbyszko-handshake

Ed “Strangler” Lewis thiab Stanislaus Zbyszko ntsib hauv qhov chaw nplhaib rau tus tuav teb dab qhuas.

After the 15-minute intermission, Lewis dominated the second fall. After securing a succession of headlocks, Lewis threw Zbyszko heavily with a flying headlock. Zbyszko’s right shoulder struck the mat first before rolling onto his left shoulder for the second fall at 24 feeb, 25 vib nas this.

Jack Herman was managing Zbyszko for the match, while John Furla served as chief second. They had to help Zbyszko to his feet as he appeared to be in agony. Zbyszko held out his right arm like his shoulder was separated. Lewis could have accidentally hurt Zbyszko but it’s unlikely. Tus “injurywould setup the finish in the third fall.

After another 15-minute rest, the men returned with Zbyszko milking his injured shoulder. Lewis immediately attacked with a series of headlocks. When Zbyszko attempted a second flying mare at the 14 feeb kos, Lewis pulled the arm down behind Zbyszko’s back into a hammerlock. The hammerlock on his injured arm was too much and Zbyszko was forced to submit. Ed “Strangler’ Lewis was still World Heavyweight Wrestling Champion.

The gate was announced at $16,000.00 nrog 60 percent of the gate going to Lewis and Zbyszko. Lewis was supposed to receive $7,200 and Zbyszko $2,400. Txawm li cas los, it’s hard to know how the gate was actually divided. The winner and loser purses were announced to the newspapers to conceal the match was an exhibition. The usual split was much closer to 50-50.

Peace reigned in Sandow’s camp but it would only last for a few years. Professional jealousy would destroy the most profitable partnership in 1920s professional wrestling.

Koj tuaj tawm tswv yim lossis nug ib lo lus nug hais txog qhov no lossis muaj nqe lus hauv qab no saib hauv qab no lossis rau ntawm kuv Facebook phab los sis Twitter profile.

Tau qhov twg los: St. Louis Star thiab lub sij hawm, Hlis ntuj nqeg 15, 1922 ib tsab, p. 20

Double-crossing-the-gold-trio-hau

Npog Double-Crossing kub Trio Trio muaj nyob Paperback thiab Kindle rau Amazon.com

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