WRESTLING CROWN
ro WHOM DOES IT BELONG? MANY CLAIMANTS NAMED HACKENSCHMIDT RATED BEST WHAT OF McCREADY AND GEORGE. Jack Curley, the pioneer impresario who has promoted everything from gum chewing contests to bull fights, is rapidly becoming convinced, after years of scoffing, that the hand is quicker than the eye, declares a New York sports wxiter. From every section of the spinning globe, wrestlers are signing "world's heavy-weight champion" as they write down their names on contracts and hotel registers, and Maestro Curley is in stitches. "Never saw anything like it," puffed the mischievous-looking maestro, as he exhibited a list of razzling champs. "Right off, I can think of 15 claimants to the title, but if you'll come around an hour from now I'll dig up ten or fifteen more. Such a muddle!" Curley's list had every contingent and every country represented by "one true champion." "In this country," the maestro said sadly, "we have almost as many 'champs' as spectators. In my books, of course, I think Dean Detton is all over the champion, but the New York State Athletic Commission won't recognise anyone. Then there are Yvon Robert, of Montreal, Steve Casey, Cliff Olsen, Danno O'Mahoney, Everett Marshall, Davey Levin, and others too numerous to mention." Jim Liondos, who lost his title to O'Mahoney and went back to Greece to spend his money, is now wrestling in South Africa. "Jeems" claims the title, saying the O'Mahoney match was just an exhibition. Next to Gedrge Hackenschmidt, the "Russian Lion," Londos made more money than any man in wrestling history, Curley estimates. Over in France, Henri de Glane makes a noisy claim to the title because he beat Ed "Strangler" Lewis three years ago. In Australia, two "champions" lay claim to the throne. They are Don George and Earl McCready, the Saskatchewan grappler. Somewhere in China lives a rassler named "Whang Punch" who wears no man's collar. In England, a wrestler with a title claim went to court and had it sustained, revealed Curley. "His name Is Jack Sherry, who Lewis ran out on him in a match over here. An American wrestler went over there and called Sherry a faker, and Sherry sued him for damages. And I'll be smoked out if the court didn't award judgment of £4000." Curley, who exhibits figures from ,Beni Hasan's tomb of 3000 B.C. to prove a new wrestling hold hasn't jbeen concocted since that day almost 5000 years ago, rates Hackenschmidt as the greatest wrestler of them all, with Frank Gotch the smartest.
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Hawke's Bay Herald-Tribune, Issue 60, 27 March 1937, Page 14
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421WRESTLING CROWN Hawke's Bay Herald-Tribune, Issue 60, 27 March 1937, Page 14
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