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Wrestling History #208900 10/26/12 10:20 AM
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smokeycabin Offline OP
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http://www.nwcaonline.com/nwcawebsite/savingwrestlinghome/famouswrestlers.aspx

Famous Americans Who Wrestled
U.S. PRESIDENTS
Chester Arthur
Calvin Coolidge
Dwight Eisenhower
Ulysses S Grant
Andrew Jackson
Abraham Lincoln
Teddy Roosevelt
William Howard Taft
Zachary Taylor
John Tyler
George Washington
U.S. SENATE
The late John Chafee (former senator RI)
Lincoln Chafee (former senator RI)
Chuck Hagel ( Nebraska )
John McCain ( Arizona )
The Late Paul Wellstone ( Minnesota )
U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
Brad Glass
Greg Ganske ( Iowa )
Jim Jordon (Ohio)
Jim Leach ( Iowa )
Jim Nussle ( Iowa )
The Late Carl Albert (Former Speaker of the House)
Dennis Hastert ( Illinois ) (Former Speaker of the House)
SECRETARY OF DEFENSE
Donald Rumsfeld
Frank Carlucci
WHITE HOUSE STAFF
Ari Fleischer
George Stephanopoulos
ACADEMY AWARD WINNER
John Irving
ACTORS
Billy Baldwin
Nate Parker
Mario Lopez
Ashton Kutcher
Tom Cruise
ATHLETES
NFL
Stephen Neal – New England Patriots
Antonio Garay – San Diego Chargers
Davin Joseph - Tampa Bay
Ronde Barber - Tampa Bay
Joe Condo - Oakland
Chris Colley - Washington
Ray Lewis - Baltimore
Lorenzo Neal - San Diego
Donnie Edwards
Kelly Gregg - Baltimore
Bryant McKinnie - Minnesota
David Patten - New England
Adam Vinatieri – Indianapolis
Ricky Williams – Miami
Coy Wire – Atlanta
Roddy White – Atlanta
Ronnie Brown – Miami
Matt Roth – Cleveland
Mike Patterson – Philadelphia
Luis Castillo – San Diego
Retired NFL
Jim Nance – New England
Brand Benson – NY Giants
Mike Reid – Bengals
Jeff Richardson – NY Jets
Tiki Barber – NY Giants
Tedy Bruschi – New England
Larry Czonka – Miami
Bob Golic – Cleveland
Mike Golic – Philadelphia
Carlton Haselrig – Pittsburgh
Bo Jackson – Oakland
Matt Millen – Oakland
Warren Sapp – Tampa Bay
Mark Schlereth – Denver
Chuck Noll - Pittsburgh
Curley Culp - Kansas City Chiefs

Mike Webster
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mike_Webster

http://www.wifca.org/news_article/show/141469?referrer_id=480362



http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1141550/index.htm

February 06, 1995
The Civil Warrior
On the U.S. frontier, young Abe Lincoln was a great wrestler—and sportsman
David Fleming


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Abraham Lincoln, the 16th president of the U.S., was such an accomplished wrestler that once, after disposing of an opponent with a single toss, he stepped to the center of the mob that had gathered and shouted, "Any of you want to try it, come on and whet your horns!"
No one stepped forward.
Which is not surprising, because the self-taught scholar who wrote the ringing Gettysburg Address was also one of the American frontier's fiercest grapplers during the early 1830s. "He can outrun, outlift, outwrestle and throw down any man in Sangamon County," said Bill Green, a store clerk in New Salem, Ill., as he watched the 22-year-old Lincoln whip all comers one day in 1831.
Lincoln's wrestling supremacy, however, was challenged often. Gangly and awkward as a child, he grew into a tall, muscular man with broad shoulders. But at 6' 4" and 185 pounds, Lincoln was a tempting target for any newcomer to the frontier eager to make a name for himself.
"He sure was the big buck of this lick," said another New Salem resident who saw Lincoln give the notorious county wrestling champion Jack Armstrong the worst thrashing of his life one hot September day more than 163 years ago. That was the future president's most celebrated victory. Frustrated from the start by Lincoln's tremendous reach, Armstrong began stomping on his opponent's feet. Lincoln lost his temper. And a few tosses later Armstrong lost consciousness.
"We can only find one recorded defeat of Lincoln in 12 years," says Bob Dellinger, director emeritus of the National Wrestling Hall of Fame in Stillwater, Okla., where Lincoln is enshrined in the Hall of Outstanding Americans. "He was undoubtedly the roughest and toughest of all the wrestling presidents."
There were nine, actually, who were accomplished grapplers. At 18, George Washington was the school champion at the Reverend James Maury's Academy in Fredericksburg, Va. Washington was a master of the British style known as collar and elbow—named for wrestlers' hand placements in the face-to-face starting position. This was a disciplined sport in which success depended on tactical expertise. Later in life, as the commander of the Continental armies, Washington, then 47, used his superior wrestling skills to defeat seven consecutive challengers from the Massachusetts Volunteers.
Other commanders in chief who were successful wrestlers include Andrew Jackson, Zachary Taylor, Ulysses S. Grant and Chester A. Arthur. At 225 pounds William Taft was twice crowned undergraduate champion at Yale after he mastered a wicked move called the Flying Marc with which he would savagely flip an opponent to the ground. And Theodore Roosevelt kept fit with regular wrestling workouts during his term as governor of New York.
On the American frontier the sportsmanlike collar and elbow gave way to a catch-as-catch-can style that required less skill and more brute strength. The matches were decided when an opponent was thrown off his feet. In the name of civic pride (and, of course, some friendly wagering) champions from each county were pitted against each other. Lincoln progressed swiftly in this rougher style of wrestling—though he often helped conquered opponents to their feet or gave them water after matches. He was a proud competitor but a humble sportsman. And when his wrestling skills diminished, Lincoln's leadership qualities emerged.
In his service with the Illinois 'Volunteers during the Black Hawk Indian uprising of 1832, Lincoln was one match away from a regimental championship. Wrestling for the Sangamon County Volunteers, he had disposed of seven opponents before facing Hank Thompson, a fellow soldier. The two men locked up and strained for advantage before Lincoln broke away and declared Thompson "the most powerful man I ever had hold of." Honest Abe wasn't lying. Upon resuming the match Thompson secured his place in history by becoming the only man ever to throw Lincoln. And he did it twice.


Last edited by smokeycabin; 10/26/12 10:37 AM.
Re: Wrestling History [Re: smokeycabin] #208902 10/26/12 12:25 PM
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coach craig Offline
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In this group you need to add Jay Mohr. He goes out of his way to talk about wrestling. He had Anthony Robles on the Jim Rome show a couple of weeks ago and he talks about wrestling all the time on his pod cast.

Re: Wrestling History [Re: coach craig] #208903 10/26/12 12:40 PM
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lazyman_1 Offline
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http://www.hammondwrestling.com/nflwrestlers.shtml

check out site. list of nflers who have wrestled is much longer than the one previously posted.

Re: Wrestling History [Re: coach craig] #209039 11/03/12 03:45 PM
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Westfahl Offline
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Didn't Jay Mohr place in the nationals for maybe Eastern Michigan or Central Michigan. One of those directional Michigan schools I think. Seems like maybe late 80's or early 90's. Maybe the time it was in Ames, not sure, maybe someone else knows.

Nope, a friend of mine said he wrestled at Brown. Ok, I officially do not have any idea but our best guess is that he did wrestle in college.

Last edited by Westfahl; 11/03/12 03:48 PM.

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