"Build it and they will come" is a phrase heard numerous times which applies to
a baseball field in Iowa. Build it bigger and more will come is a phrase that
can now be applied to Waterloo, Iowa's Dan Gable International Wrestling
Institute & Museum which is a larger version of the museum formerly located in
Newton, Iowa.
Downtown Waterloo, Iowa has multiple bridges over the Cedar River. Waterloo's
wrestling museum also has several bridges. It showcases a bridge between
amateurs and pros, generations of families, other sports, mainstream media, and
entertainment. When one becomes a wrestling fan, history to them often starts at
that time. The museum
lets visitors know that wrestling has a history from the very get go of history.
There is artwork of Jacob wrestling the Angel of the Lord. Museum executive
director Mike Chapman make it a point to emphasize that the Lord did not send an
angel to play soccer, golf, tennis, or to play catch. He sent the angel to
wrestle.
Continuing in this history vein, there are exhibits of wrestling in antiquity,
the first Olympics, the civil war era, early American times, and even the
history of wrestling in sports cards. Several walls highlight wrestling in the
Olympics and the involvement of
American athletes. Numerous walls and display cases celebrate great amateur
wrestlers and career achievements. Upon entering the museum, there is an entire
wall of a painting of Abraham Lincoln (Repub.) wrestling. In the museum there
are pictures also of U.S. House Representative Dennis Hassert (Repub., Ill.).
Not sure in this political era if Democrat wrestlers should be mandated equal
time in the museum.
If one is in Waterloo and the wrestling bug bites, then you would be in the
right place because the museum has scores of instructional material on both the
amateur and pro level. The amateur instruction material is in the Dean Rockwell
Library & Research Center along with volumes of wrestling periodicals and books.
On the pro style side,
there is a poster of Verne Gagne applying holds which is sponsored by Stag Beer.
There is a series of wrestling and jujitsu instruction cards that came with
packages of cigarettes. What a concept, wrestling instruction sponsored by minor
vice companies. If you don't
know what to wear as a wrestler there are many examples of singlets and shoes
worn by amateurs. On the pro side, there are robes, jackets, boots, and hoods.
The museum is about 70%-80% devoted to amateur wrestling but on July 13 and 14
it was pro wrestlers, their families, and followers that made up 90% of the
large crowd for the ninth induction ceremony to the George Tragos / Lou Thesz Pro
Wrestling Hall Of Fame. Adding a special dimension to the weekend was a Friday
night card by HOF member Harley and BJ Race's World League Wrestling. This card
was a bridge from
wrestling's past to wrestling's future.
The past was represented by DiBiase and Hennig and the future was represented by DiBiase and Hennig. To clarify that sentence, it was Gotch Award winner Ted
Dibiase and HOF member Larry Hennig being seconds for the tag team of Ted DiBiase, Jr. and Joe Hennig. This was one of several unique photo ops of the
weekend. How many times will you find two young men whose grandfathers and
fathers have not only been in the wrestling business but also are members of the Tragos/Thesz HOF?
Another big part of the card was a bridge between amateur and pro wrestling.
Steve Williams owned many titles both on the mat and in the ring. Steve was a
part of wrestling's recent past and you could not find anymore more excited that
he has any kind of a future after a battle with cancer.
The crowd was large for an indy show and also very noisy. Decibel levels were
raised even higher by the large contingent of Minnesotans who traveled to view
Joe Hennig's debut match. Joe's entrance music and the perfect plex move were
certainly familiar. Current WWE star Trevor Murdoch was also on the card.
Someone taking pictures at the matches should have been a stringer for the
Japanese press as the pose with Harley, HOFer The Destroyer, and Steve Williams
would bring quite a few decade long
main events moments to fans in Japan. The exciting, fun, and memorable card
brought an end to the day which started with a golf tournament featuring several
sports stars.
The pro part of the wrestling museum is a marvel of space engineering. Most
every inch of the walls are covered with items and lined with crammed-full cases
of items from previous inductees. During the Saturday morning induction
ceremonies every inch of floor space was covered by hundreds of people and the
small replica wrestling ring in the center of the room. There are so many pro
wrestling items here that neither my computer or mind has enough bytes of memory
to recall all of them. I'll mention some items of particular stand out interest.
A cut out of HOF’er George Tragos. HOF’er Lou Thesz would still have been great
but just maybe not as great without the mat tutoring of Tragos.
A cast of the head and facial features of the French Angel. A long wall of HOFer
Frank
Gotch material. Many robes and boots worn by greats including a sparkling ring
jacket a fan made for HOFer Danny Hodge which contains 40,000 beads. (Nature Boy
Danny Hodge???)
It is always great to have HOFer Jim “Baron Von” Raschke at an event and this
event had two of them. The humorous nice guy Jim and also a cutout of a large
scowling Baron threatening to claw anyone that got too close. (Ad piece for the
play The Baron.) Wrestlers use various means to stay in shape with some
conventional methods (HOFerJoe Stecher's wall cable pulleys) and some not
conventional. Near the top of the not
conventional would be HOFer Ed Strangler Lewis' "headlock machine," a round
block of wood with facial features drawn on and strong springs in the middle.
Not sure if most non-fans would enjoy sitting on a plane or train next to a
large man with large rough ears
squeezing a large wooden head for most of the trip. There is a wall of 53
picture and bio plaques of all nine classes of HOFers and Frank Gotch award
winners. Paintings, papers, pictures, portraits, posters (matches and movies),
press clippings, and programs adorn the
pro wrestling room.
Saturday night was the induction ceremony for the 2007 Class of the George
Tragos/Lou Thesz HOF. This was held in not just another banquet room in not just
another convention center. Mike Chapman informed us where we ate was the former
location of a theatre that held a Frank Gotch championship match a century ago.
Lou Thesz's wife,
Charlie, gave the first Thesz award to Bill Murdoch of the Eblen Charities which
Lou and other wrestlers have been involved with. Murdoch also wrote BRISCO.
The late Great Gama from India was the first inductee. Danny Hodge introduced
the late Dale Lewis. It was Hodge who encouraged Lewis to wrestle at Oklahoma.
Lewis was a two-time NCAA champ before starting his pro career. The wife of “Mr.
Perfect” Curt
Hennig's, their two daughters and son, Joe, reminded everyone what a great man
this honoree was. HOFer Tom Drake and wife Chris Drake on behalf of Cauliflower
Alley Club presented the museum a check for $1,000. This was not the only money
to come to the museum's way that night, as Harley and BJ Race donated the
proceeds from the previous night wrestling card.
If a wrestler wanted to know something about himself, probably the best person
to contact would have been wrestling historian and sports fan the late HOF’er
Jim Melby. Jim's daughter presented the Jim Melby award to prolific wrestling
writer Mike Chapman. Kyle Klingman took over the MC duties from Mike Chapman. I
lose track of all the awards Red Bastien has received and on the heels of
retiring as CAC president, Red is in this HOF.
In accepting his Frank Gotch award, Ted DiBiase spent half his speech in praise
of Harley Race's influence and contributions to Ted and his family. Everyone
enjoys themselves on a weekend like this. Few, though, could rival the fun that
Steve Williams seemed to have. The wrestling on the card Friday, TV spot for the
museum on Saturday
morning, and the award on Saturday night, Steve never seemed to stop smiling.
Steve will continue to smile and be grateful for his best win ever and that one
being over cancer.
Among those attending not already mentioned were HOFers, Gene Lebell,, Verne
Gagne, Maurice Vachon, Brad Rheingans, Nikita Koloff, along with stars Tom
Andrews, Nord (John) The Barbarian, managerial great Dr Ken Ramey, longtime
photographer and CAC award winner Bob Leonard, AWA TV producer Al DeRusha, long
time historian and CAC board of director George Shire, historian J Michael
Kenyon, writers Greg Oliver and Steve Johnson, Ted Gordienko (nephew of the
Great George Gordienko), Jason Sanderson a CAC Director, and others I apologize
for not recalling.
Friday and Saturday afternoon one of the very best athletes and one of the very
best coaches in any type of sport, Dan Gable was on hand. Mike Chapman wrote a
book titled "Two Dans" about Hodge and Gable. Two men whose extensive
accomplishments will probably never be equaled stood side by side for sports
fans to take a picture of - one
of the many highlights of a highlight weekend. Thanks to Mike Chapman, Bev
Chapman, Kyle Klingman, Kent Sesker, and all the staff.
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