Stanislaus Zbyszko Box Office Bust?

Thaum tawm tswv yim stanislaus Zbyszko lub npe reign ntawm 1921 mus 1922, Yog vim li cas thiaj muab rau kev noj lub npe ntawm nws yog tias nws lub npe reign yog ib qhov chaw ua hauj lwm tsis ua hauj lwm. Ua cov zauv validate no ntseeg?

Ua ntej yuav yeej lub championship, Zbyszko wrestled qub tau zus ib Joe Stecher ntawm lub 71st Regiment Armory pem lub taub hau 7,000 kiv cua. Nyob rau hauv 1915, tus 6,000 kiv cua, who attended the 1915 International Wrestling Tournament was considered a great success. His first big match in New York outdrew this event.

zbyszko-working-toehold

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

When he defeated Ed “Strangler” Lewis for the World Title on May 6, 1921 at the 22nd Regiment Armory in New York, 7,500 fans squeezed into the building. Promoters moved the match to a slightly bigger building because of fan interest and the bigger gate.

After almost a year as champion, Zbyszko wrestled another former world champion, Earl Caddock, in Madison Square Garden on February 6, 1922. 12,000 fans crowded into the Garden to watch the main event. Zbyszko was not having trouble drawing a crowd.

Txawm li cas los, if all the ring action was like the match with Caddock, his drawing power may have been affected. Controversy clouded this match because of a new rule.

New York promoters instituted a newflying fallrule, which said if a wrestler was rolling through an escape with both shoulders touching the mat during the roll, the opponent would score the fall. Ostensibly, the rule was supposed to promote bridging but it was a gimmick to create controversy. It worked exceptionally well.

During the first fall, Caddock rolled of Zbyszko’s half-Nelson with both men rushing back to their feet. As Zbyszko prepared to charge Caddock, referee John Fleeson patted Zbyszko on the back, the signal that a fall had been scored.

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World Heavyweight Wrestling Champion Earl Caddock from the Public Domain

Zbyszko asked, “What happened?” Fleeson said Caddock’s shoulders hit the mat and Zbyszko won the first fall. The fans were furious and booed throughout the 10 feeb intermission.

Caddock threw Zbyszko for the second fall, so the match and championship would be decided in the third and deciding fall. Controversy would again cloud this fall.

Zbyszko started the fall by securing a crotch hold and turning Caddock onto his head. Caddock bridging to prevent his shoulders from touching the mat, when Fleeson signaled that the match was over. As the fans and wrestlers looked on in confusion, Fleeson said Caddock’s shoulders rolled over the mat for a flying fall.

This time the fans were livid. Police quickly removed Fleeson from ringside. Fans yelled to anyone who would listen that Fleeson was standing and couldn’t possibly see if Caddock’s shoulders had touched the mat or not. Feeling Fleeson robbed Caddock of the title, the fans were riotous. With a controversial finish like this one, it may have been very difficult to draw 12,000 fans in the future.

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: Bridgeport Times and Evening Farmer, Lub ob hlis ntuj 7, 1922 ib tsab, p. 4 thiab The New York Herald, Lub ob hlis ntuj 7, 1922 ib tsab, p. 12

Double-crossing-the-gold-trio-hau

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

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