Wladek Zbyszko Loses Unexpectedly

wladek-zbyszko

Wladek Zbyszko’s legacy is often overshadowed by his brother Stanislaus Zbyszko.  Stanislaus, who was 12 years older, posed the last real threat to Frank Gotch’s World Heavyweight Wrestling Championship. Wladek Zbyszko was a skilled wrestler in his own right.  Unfortunately, he didn’t arrive in the United States until 1914, when most wrestling matches were prearranged.  Wladek had proved his bona

Share
» Read more

Charley Olson Kills Wrestler

quinn-baptiste-and-olson

I’ve frequently found the biggest challenge in researching early professional wrestling is separating fact from fiction.  Even when the wrestlers competed in legitimate matches, they often inflated outcomes, built up apocryphal folklore around their victories and made up fanciful tales to explain away their losses.  Professional wrestling sprang from the carnivals and retained the promotional instincts of this art. St.

Share
» Read more

Stanislaus Zbyszko Defeats Former Boxer

stanislaus-zbyszko

On January 10, 1910, recently arrived Polish wrestler Stanislaus Zbyszko took on Charlie “The Kid” Cutler in a best two-out-of-three falls match.  Cutler had been a boxer in a troupe run by John L. Sullivan before transitioning to wrestling.  While Cutler was extremely tough, Stanislaus Zbyszko had been wrestling since his youth.  Zbyszko would use these skills to overcome Cutler

Share
» Read more

The One Opponent Gotch Could Not Beat

frank-gotch

On December 16, 1917, Frank Alvin Gotch lost a three week battle with uremic poisoning.  Doctors attempted to keep his kidneys going through an operation in Chicago but it provided only temporary relief.  Gotch intended to travel to Hot Springs, Arkansas to try and restore his health.  The operation ended this hope.  Gotch spent the last couple weeks only able

Share
» Read more

Lewis’ and Acton’s Hippodrome

ed-strangler-lewis-prime

On Monday, February 7, 1887, Evan “Strangler” Lewis and “Little Demon” Joe Acton met at Battery D in Chicago, Illinois.  It would be the first of several exhibition bouts between the men.  They performed these exhibitions in the larger Midwestern cities in early 1887.  Like the St. Paul match I covered in an earlier post, Lewis and Acton agreed to

Share
» Read more

Evan Lewis’ Stranglehold

evan-lewis-paperback

This post was formally a podcast broadcast in 2015.  In this episode, I discuss what Evan “The Strangler” Lewis’ hold would be called today. Main Content – When I first heard of the stranglehold or “hang hold” of Evan “The Strangler” Lewis, it sounded like a guillotine choke.  However, several sources I checked described it as a rear naked choke. Lewis

Share
» Read more

Zbyszko Double Crosses Trio

lewis-zbyszko-handshake

Rarely does one fundamentally alter their profession but Stanislaus Zbyszko did just that on April 15, 1925 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.  Zbyszko defeated Wayne Munn in one of the last shoot (not staged) professional wrestling matches in the United States.  It was a shoot or legitimate match because Zbyszko double crossed the “Goldust Trio” wrestling promotion and beat Munn for the

Share
» Read more

Lewis Takes Title Back from Munn

ed-strangler-lewis-wrestling

On the same day Joe Stecher wrestled Stanislaus Zbyszko for the recognized version of the World Heavyweight Wrestling Championship in St. Louis, Ed “Strangler” Lewis challenged “Big” Wayne Munn for his disputed Michigan-Illinois World Heavyweight Wrestling Championship.  Lewis dropped the title to Munn in February 1925.  In April 1925, Zbyszko defeated Munn in a famous double-cross.  The match between Lewis and

Share
» Read more

Did Lewis Defeat Drunken Wrestler?

evan-strangler-lewis

Evan “Strangler” Lewis was a scary competitor.  Although he was not a large man at 5’09” and weighed 170 pounds, Lewis’ mastery of submissions made him an equal or better of most wrestlers of his era.  Jack Carkeek was a terrific wrestler but one match with Lewis almost caused him to retire. Lewis’ reputation was strongly related to his feared

Share
» Read more

Zbyszko and Lewis Start Riot

young-ed-strangler-lewis

On April 7, 1914, 22-year-old Wladek Zbyszko met 22-year-old Ed “Strangler” Lewis would meet in the first of many matches between the two men.  They would cooperate in a number of worked or “prearranged” matches.  Lewis in fact dropped his American Heavyweight Wrestling Championship to Wladek Zbyszko in 1917.  In the early 1920s, Lewis would drop his World Heavyweight Wrestling

Share
» Read more
1 13 14 15 16 17 20