by Stephen Von Slagle
In the early days of organized professional wrestling, charisma and marketability were already surpassing wrestling skill as the primary assets a wrestler could possess. During the Twenties, Thirties and Forties, the sport certainly featured a much more realistic look & feel, entirely because pro wrestling was supposed to be a legitimate sport, even though it no longer was. The bottom line of professional wrestling has always been just that; the bottom line. As the stakes were raised and the popularity of wrestling grew, it became clear to promoters that, while grappling prowess & ability was absolutely a requirement for success, pure ring skill was no longer the be-all, end-all of the mat game. At least not when it came to drawing paying fans to the show, which was/is the sole purpose of presenting a wrestling card. While it may be accurate to say that there were other wrestlers more talented inside of the ring than NFL superstar-turned-pro wrestler, the legendary Bronko Nagurski, few, if any, carried the same kind of name recognition and mainstream popularity that the famous former Chicago Bear enjoyed. However, as previously noted, pro wrestling greatness is determined by a performer’s ability to draw money, and exceptional in-ring ability is not always a sure-fire ticket to success. That said, Nagurski, a natural athlete in the truest sense of the term, never had any amateur experience as a wrestler but became a more-than-competent worker after his career as a football player ended. The combination of his acquired wrestling fundamentals, which eventually became quite solid, and brute strength (not to mention his famous name) eventually resulted in not one, but several reigns as the World Heavyweight champion for Nagurski. During the Thirties and Forties, Bronko was unquestionably one the biggest names in wrestling and he was among the most famous athletes (of any sport) in the country.
Having established himself as one of the wrestling’s top box-office draws, Bronko bounced back by gaining an even more prestigious World championship, the National Wrestling Association World Heavyweight title, by defeating Thesz on June 23, 1939 in Houston, TX. Over the course of the following nine months, the famous NWA World champion (and the promoters who had Nagurski wrestling on their card) enjoyed a great deal of success as he traveled the country defending his version of the World title. And, while there were other claimants to the World Championship also defending their belts at the same time as Bronko, his stature among the public was nearly unrivaled and the man who The Ring (once the most popular wrestling/boxing magazine in the country) referred to as “the true World champion” was, indeed, respected by all.
The rugged Nagurski eventually lost his NWA World title to Ray Steele on March 7, 1940 in St. Louis, Missouri, and spent the next year enjoying the reduced schedule of a non-champion. However, almost one year to the day since his loss of the title, Nagurski regained the National Wrestling Association World championship from Steele in Minneapolis, and he again became the reigning World champion. However, several months later, Nagurski was upset by Sandor Szabo on June 5, 1941. Although no one could have known it at the time, the loss, which took place in St. Louis, Missouri, would mark the end of The Bronko’s run as the World Heavyweight champion. It did not, however, end his career and Nagurski continued on as one of the top box-office draws in the business. In October of 1946, Nagurski, by now a seasoned ring veteran, gained some measure of revenge when he captured the National Wrestling Alliance’s Pacific Coast championship by defeating Sandor Szabo, the same man who had taken Bronko’s World title five years earlier. During their respective careers, Nagurski and Szabo met numerous times in the ring, with each man taking his share of victories (and championships) from the other. After dropping the Pacific Coast title to Billy Hansen several weeks after his win over Szabo, Bronko regained the once-prestigious title by defeating Len Hall on October 1, 1948 in Oakland, CA. However, just three weeks later, Szabo once again scored a win over his popular rival, and regained the Pacific Coast title as a result of his victory over Nagurski.
With decades’ worth of intense physical punishment finally beginning to take a toll of his body, the battered Nagurski made the decision to retire in 1960 following one of the most memorable athletic careers of modern times. After nearly three decades in the wrestling business, Nagurski hung his wrestling gear up and returned home to a quiet life in rural Minnesota.
Bronko Nagurski is a member of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter Hall of Fame (1996), the International Wrestling Institute & Museum’s George Tragos/Lou Thesz Professional Wrestling Hall of Fame (2009) and the Professional Wrestling Hall of Fame and Museum (2011).
Bronislau “Bronko” Nagurski passed away on January 8, 1990 at the age of 82.