Showing posts with label Feared. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Feared. Show all posts

Sunday, March 15, 2026

George Tragos: A Legendary Hooker That Laid A Foundation For American Catch Wrestling

George Tragos isn't a big name you hear even in most circles today especially in wrestling but let's help change that. To start, let's just point out that this wasn’t just some pretty boy showman prancing around under the lights. This dude was a goddamn hooker in the truest, most vicious sense of the old-school catch-as-catch-can wrestling game. A Greek immigrant who crossed the ocean with nothing but raw power, unbreakable technique, and a mean streak that that stretches to mars and back. He didn’t just wrestle, he broke men. He taught life lessons that left bruises and wisdom in equal measure. Most importantly may we add, he took a skinny kid named Lou Thesz and helped develop him into one of the greatest professional wrestlers who ever laced up boots. Without Tragos, nearly the entire lineage of real grappling in America looks a hell of a lot weaker.

Born March 14, 1897, in the rugged hills of Katsaros, Messinia, Greece, Tragos grew up breathing the same ancient air that birthed the Olympics. Back then, wrestling wasn’t entertainment, it was survival. It was honor. It was the ultimate test of a man’s will. Young Georgios (as he was known) absorbed Greco-Roman technique like it was mother’s milk. He dominated local tournaments, stacked amateur titles in Greece, and earned his spot on not one, but two Olympic teams for his homeland. Think about that for a moment: a teenager from a tiny village standing shoulder-to-shoulder with the best grapplers on the planet, throwing men around with hips like pistons and shoulders like cannonballs.

But Greece couldn’t hold him. In 1910 he emigrated to the United States, landing in a country hungry for real tough guys. By 1922 he was already coaching amateur catch wrestling at the University of Missouri in Columbia. Think about that timeline – the Roaring Twenties, Prohibition, gangsters, and Tragos quietly building killers in the heartland. He didn’t just teach wrist locks and half nelsons. He taught hooks. Those nasty, fight-ending submissions that separate the pretenders from the legends. Hooks that could tear ligaments, pop joints, and make a man tap or sleep before the referee even blinked. This was one of the most feared wrestlers of his time.

Then he stepped into the pro ranks himself. Debut 1922, mostly working the St. Louis territory where the crowds knew real wrestling from the circus acts. Tragos became the pro middleweight champion and earned a reputation that traveled faster than any railroad. The term Hooker wasn’t a compliment back then and sure as hell didn't mean prostitute, it was a warning, to let you know if you crossed one, they will put the fear of God in you if you crossed or tested them. One story that still gets whispered in old wrestling circles tells it all. Some young hotshot decided to test the brutal Greek in the gym. Tragos knew what he had to do, locked in I believe a double wrist lock, and drove it home before the kid could even scream “uncle.” Ripped muscles, torn tendons, separated bone – the arm got infected and the poor bastard had it amputated. Legend says he didn’t lose a wink of sleep. That’s the kind of ruthlessness this guy was. No mercy. No apologies. Downright psychotic.

His real legacy wasn’t the titles he won or the arms he ruined. It was the beast he created in a young Lou Thesz. Thesz himself said it best: “George Tragos was a great wrestler and a great human being. I’ve learned more from him, about life as well as wrestling, than I could ever possibly repay.” 


Tragos didn’t just show Thesz moves – he poured the entire ancient science of catch wrestling into him. The intricate counters. The psychology of the ring. How to chain submissions so seamlessly that your opponent never knew he was caught until it was too late. Greco-Roman base meets American catch-as-catch-can grit. Tragos bridged the old world and the new. He taught this future legendary figure the same way the old masters taught him – through pain, repetition, and relentless pressure.

Could you imagine those sessions? Hour after hour in smoky St. Louis gyms. Thesz, still a teenager, getting twisted, stretched, and submitted until his body screamed. But Tragos was there every step, refining that iron will. The same will that let Thesz hold the NWA World Heavyweight Championship for years and years. Three-time champ that was held across different eras. The man who carried professional wrestling on his back during its golden age. All of it traces back to the brutal Greek who saw potential in a raw kid and refused to let it go to waste. If Thesz was ever tested in his career, those instincts from those times with George would kick in almost automatically. Unlike Tragos, Thesz didn't want to hurt anyone unless it was a last resort. 

Tragos himself traveled the Midwest as a true professional. He coached young men wherever he went. He lived the wrestler’s life – hard roads, harder matches, and an even harder code. He passed away on September 5, 1955, in St. Louis at just 58 years old. Right on the cusp of the television explosion that would make wrestling a national obsession. He never got to see the full spectacle his pupil helped create, but his fingerprints are all over it. Thesz may have been more known to be the student of Ed Lewis, but before Ed, Thesz was learning the dark and brutal entities of what a Hooker was in those days.

And that’s why the George Tragos/Lou Thesz Professional Wrestling Hall of Fame carries his name. Posthumously inducted in 1999 alongside his greatest student, the hall sits inside the National Wrestling Hall of Fame and Museum. Every year the best of the best – guys with amateur roots who made it in the pros – get honored there. The George Tragos Award goes to wrestlers who take that same competitive fire and adapt it to mixed martial arts or other combat sports. It’s fitting. Because Tragos wasn’t just a wrestler. He was the prototype for the modern hooker.

Compare him to the legends I’ve written about before. The Great Gama with his endless Hindu squats and dands – pure conditioning beast. Ed “Strangler” Lewis, the gorilla-built stamina monster who could wrestle five partners for hours and still be fresh. Joe Stecher and his deadly scissors. The Greek Legend sits right there with them, but in a different lane. He was the teacher. The bridge. The guy who took the old Greco-Roman purity and weaponized it with American catch brutality. He didn’t need 5,000 daily squats to prove his worth (though I bet he could have done them and not be winded). He proved it every time he stepped on the mat and made bigger, stronger men quit.

In today’s world of Instagram athletes and choreographed spots, guys like this feel like ghosts from another dimension. No flash. No drama. Just hooks, heart, and hellish training. He reminded everyone that real wrestling isn’t about entertainment – it’s about dominance. It’s about being the last man standing when the lights go out and the crowd goes home.

If you’re training today – whether it’s catch wrestling drills, old-school isometrics, band-resisted leg work to build those Stecher-style scissors, or just grinding out heavy pulls – channel George Tragos. Lock in that wrist like it’s your last match. Build the kind of strength that doesn’t just look good in the mirror but can actually end a fight.

He didn’t chase fame. He chased mastery. And in doing so he created a legacy that outlives every title, every win, every broken limb. The hall of fame, the students, a catch wrestling bloodline, a lot of it flows from that Greek immigrant who refused to be soft.

Be amazingly awesome and kill it in your endeavors. 

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Friday, September 15, 2023

What A Looker....No, A Hooker



That line makes me laugh, think it was either in Castle, Psych or Supernatural; it's got to be one of those three right? Anyway, despite the meaning behind it, there's another term for Hooker most people don't know and that's to describe a wrestler. It's a term used back in the days of Lou Thesz, Ed "Strangler" Lewis, Ad Santel and Karl Gotch. By definition, this means a wrestler was at the top of the food chain when it came to such serious submissions to the extent that these holds were not only dangerous, but could cripple a person in the blink of an eye. In other words these guys were the nastiest bastards in the sport. 

Today in some circles, hookers are also called Rippers meaning the submissions they would use would tear most people to shreds by crippling an opponent by ripping their tendons and bones. There was a story in Lou Thesz's Bio about one of his mentors George Tragos teaching a boy not only a lesson but by today's standards would be thrown in jail. This kid was cocky and thought he can take on the old man and Tragos proceeded to not only tear this kid apart but finished him off by tearing his shoulder in a Double Wrist Lock. The guy just put enough pressure on to break him and the kid ended up having that arm amputated because there was no anti-biotics back then and that arm developed a hideous infection of Gangrene. That's just pure cruelty man.

The closest I ever came to understanding even a few of these holds was when Tom Puckett put them on me while we were working out at this gym down the street from me. Cross Face, Double Wrist Lock, A Couple Neck Cranks and another one that slips my mind but I felt them all. Neck and Back were cracking and he didn't let up on me because he wanted me to understand what these holds can do to a person. Thank god I didn't end up like that kid. I'll never forget how those things felt and he hardly put any strength into them, it was incredible. 

Hooking in retrospect is a lost art in wrestling and very few in comparison to the old timers know them with such intensity. Guys like Joel Bane, Harry Smith (son of the British Bulldog), Josh Barnett, Sakuraba and some others are the last remnants of an earlier age and are incredibly skilled at these submissions it's almost baffling that these holds still exist in this time. If you haven't been put in these holds, you can't understand the magnitude of what they feel like and that near fear of them tearing you apart if you pissed these guys off. Catch Wrestling is rising from the ashes but unless you've been around someone who even remotely has small knowledge of the sport or even one of the holds, most don't even know what Catch is. Catch is more than just hooking, it's the violent art of wrestling that even some of the best freestyle wrestlers would be afraid of. Say if you took Ad Santel in his prime against Dan Gable in his Olympic days, it would be a decent match but no disrepect to Gable, Santel would most likely end up putting him in a hold that would have him begging for his life. That's just my opinion, other than that by today's standards, most wrestlers in Gable's weight class would have a hard time with him. 

  Catch and Hooking are fascinating aspects of wrestling and it's important to understand the History and the men that defined the term Superhuman when it came to the sport. Think only a few women on the entire planet have definitive knowledge of Catch and the current famous one is WWE's Shayna Baszler who learned some stuff from Barnett & Fujiwara (Fujiwara was Karl Gotch's best student according to the man himself). It might be inappropriate to call her a Hooker since some would take it completely the wrong way but in terms of wrestling and the knowledge of dangerous submissions, think it might be safe to say she's the only woman right now who can claim that title. 

If you like the shirt above, grab one for yourself here and support Catch Wrestling. I've got books, dvds and have been in the company of a man trained by Gotch himself, I fully support these guys and have a great deal of respect for them. Keep being amazingly awesome.