Pro

Joe Scarpello

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A native of Omaha , Joe Scarpello wrestled in high school for coach Allie Morrison, 1928 Olympic champion. After high school, Joe joined the Air Force and flew 18 missions over Germany during World War II.

When the war ended, Scarpello enrolled at the University of Iowa , where he was a teammate of 2002 inductee Bob Geigel. The former Hawkeye won two NCAA championships and was a four-time All-American as a wrestler. He was also the first Iowan to win four Big Ten Conference titles.

Scarpello was an alternate on the 1948 Olympic team. Soon after, he turned professional and embarked upon a 25-year career. Wrestling mainly for the AWA, Joe was a top attraction all across the Midwest , the South and in Japan .

A consummate wrestler, Joe stuck to basic wrestling most of the time he was in the ring. He and Verne Gagne were one of the world's top tag teams for several years. Scarpello was respected far and wide for his wrestling abilities and for his gentlemanly ways, both in and out of the ring.

Joe Scarpello died in 1999 and is survived by his wife, Eileen, three children and sixteen grandchildren.

Billy Robinson

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Billy Robinson began his amateur career in his native England . He was national champion in 1957, and in 1958 was European Open Champion in the light heavyweight class, beating an Olympic bronze medal winner in the finals.

Robinson also trained at the legendary Billy Riley School in Wigan , known as "The Snake Pit." It was a school where submission wrestling was taught and only the toughest wrestlers survived. Robinson trained there for nearly eight years, working out with some of the toughest submission wrestlers of that era.

He came to America in 1970 and became a superstar with the AWA. He won nearly every major title available, earning a reputation as one of the most highly skilled and rugged matmen of the 20th century.

He also starred with Verne Gagne (and television star Ed Asner of "Lou Grant" fame) in the 1973 movie "The Wrestler."

George Hackenschmidt

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George Hackenschmidt was born in Dorpat, Estonia, in 1878 and lived in Russia much of his early life. He was known throughout Europe for his tremendous physique and strongman abilities, beginning at the age of 20. He set several world records in weightlifting and then became a professional wrestler. As a classical Greco-Roman wrestler, he was unbeatable. In that style, he won nearly 300 consecutive matches and several world tournaments.

In 1905, he came to America and defeated U.S. champion Tom Jenkins and was declared world heavyweight professional champion. Known as "The Russian Lion", he ruled supreme until defeated by Frank Gotch in Chicago in 1908. Hackenschmidt retired from the ring in 1912, with a reputed record of nearly 2000 wins and only 5 losses! In the popular 1976 Book of Lists, he is rated as the second greatest professional wrestler of all time.

Hackenschmidt had the best physique anyone had ever seen at that time, and then became the most famous wrestler of the day. He also was a linguist and scholar. He spoke five languages and wrote a number of books. He once challenged Albert Einstein to debate the theory of relativity.

He died in 1968 in London at the age of 90.

Ray Steele

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His real name was Pete Sauer, and he came from a family of top amateur athletes near Lincoln , Nebraska . After a brief amateur career, Pete changed his name to Ray Steele and became one of the finest professional wrestling of the 1930s and '40s.

He was known for his lightning-fast reflexes and vast knowledge of the sport. He won the NWA world heavyweight title in 1940 from Bronko Nagurski and was a top attraction for many years. He served as a mentor to many top young pros on the way up, including Lou Thesz, who ranked Steele as one of the finest wrestlers he ever knew. Ray Steele died young, at the age of 49 in 1949, and should be remembered as one of the truly great professional wrestlers in American history.

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