Stanislaus Zbyszko trifft Charley Olson

Stanislaus Zbyszko tourte durch die Vereinigten Staaten 1910 in Vorbereitung auf einen Titelkampf mit dem World Heavyweight Wrestling Champion Frank Gotch später im Jahr. Seine Tour führte ihn nach St. Louis im Mai 29, 1910. Zbyszko sollte auf den hoch angesehenen Halbschwergewichts-Grappler Charley Olson treffen.

Olson war ein erfahrener Wrestler, der bei St. trainierte. Louis wrestler George Baptiste and was based out of St. Louis. Jedoch, Olson weighed 180 pounds at his heaviest. Zbsyzko was the same height at 5’09” but he weighed 245 pounds for the match. Zbyszko was a massive weightlifter, so he had size and strength not just mass.

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Stanislaus Zbyszko posing from the Public Domain

Olson was game though and showed up for their match at the Olympic Theater confident of at least giving Zbyszko a tough match. Zbyszko wouldn’t be denied on his tour though and defeated Olson in two straight falls.

Keen observers did see some areas of concern when Zbyszko actually wrestled Gotch, who was a talented technical wrestler with good size and strength. Gotch was nearly 6 foot tall and weighed between 198 und 210 Pfund.

Zbyszko was more familiar with Greco-Roman wrestling than catch-as-catch-can, the dominant American style and the style for this match with Olson. Zbyszko undertook the tour to help him adapt to this wrestling style.

Zbyszko’s lack of exposure to catch-as-catch-can made him very defensive. Olson was able to take Zbyszko’s back at one point but was unable to take Zbyszko off his feet. The constant strain of trying to move Zbyszko eventually tired Olson.

After over 25 minutes of wrestling, Zbyszko secured a back hold and scissors for the first fall at the 28 minute mark. After an intermission, the men met for the second fall, which Zbyszko dominated. Zbyszko eventually secured an arm hold into a roll for the second fall in 16 Minuten.

Quinn-Baptiste-und-Olson

Foto von der 1932 St. Louis Star Times von Frank Quinn, George Baptiste und Charley Olson (Public Domain)

Zbyszko’s tour helped build anticipation for his match with Gotch. Gotch would use a dirty tactic to win the first fall of this bout. The match is shrouded in controversy to this day. After this one title match, Gotch never wrestled Zbyszko again before retiring in 1913.

Zbyszko returned to Europe in frustration during 1914. Caught up in World War II, he would not return to America until 1921, when he was in his early 40s. Despite his advanced age, Und “Würger” Lewis said Zbyszko and Joe “Toots” Mondt were the only wrestlers who could give him a legitimate contest.

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Sources: St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Mai 30, 1910 edition, p. 10 und Nutte von Lou Thesz

gotch-vs-zbyszko

Cover von Gotch vs. Zbyszko als E-Book bei Amazon erhältlich, Taschenbuch und Hardcover

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