In the old Marigold Arena on Chicago’s North Side, the crowd knew him before he even stepped through the ropes. “Moooose! Moooose!” the chants rolled across the arena, low and steady, like a drumbeat announcing a coming storm. And then Edward Cholak would appear—a tower of a man, 6-foot-4 and nearly 400 pounds, sometimes with … Read More “Edward “Moose” Cholak: Wrestling’s Gentle Giant of the Midwest” »
In pro wrestling, nicknames usually live larger than the men who wear them. But for William Jones, better known as Chilly Willy, the name was only part of the story. Born September 24, 1969, in North Carolina, Jones carved a life that straddled the madness of Extreme Championship Wrestling and the unforgiving heat of war … Read More “Chilly Willy: From the ECW Arena to the Front Lines” »
A Feathered Hero from Ohio Wrestling has always thrived on myths—heroes with painted faces, villains with sneers, and men who seemed larger than life under the hot lights of a VFW hall or Madison Square Garden. For Ohio, one of those myths walked into the ring wearing a headdress, stomping the mat in rhythm, and … Read More “Chief White Owl: The Rise, Fall, and Complicated Legacy of George Dahmer” »
From Hoehne to the World In the small Colorado community of Hoehne—more cattle than people—Ventura Tenario was born on November 25, 1911. The son of Jose “Joe” Tenario and Maria “Mary” Tenario, he was the second of four children and, according to the locals, a boy with a wrestler’s frame before he even hit his … Read More “Chief Little Wolf: The People’s Warrior Who Took Australia by Storm” »
The Opening Bell Richard Thomas Bryant wasn’t a man who stumbled into wrestling—he was the kind of guy born for the road, the ring, and the roar. Born on March 21, 1935, he came up in the swamp heat, where the air hangs heavy and the mosquitos are meaner than some men you meet in … Read More “Chief Little Eagle: The Warrior Who Fought in Smoke-Filled Arenas and Died in the Dark” »
There are some wrestlers whose legacies are built on championships, pay-per-view moments, and mainstream appeal. Chris Chetti’s story in the world of professional wrestling wasn’t about glitz and glamour. It was about grit. It was about the kind of raw determination that makes a wrestler’s story feel like the underdog finally making it, even when … Read More “Chris Chetti: A Raw, Relentless Force in the ECW Trenches” »
In the rough-and-tumble heyday of Detroit wrestling, the name “Leaping” Larry Chene didn’t just sell tickets—it rattled the rafters. To the Motor City faithful, Chene was more than a competitor; he was a homegrown hero with French-Italian grit in his blood, a daredevil in the ring, and a man who could make the Olympia roar … Read More “THE RISE & FALL OF “LEAPING” LARRY CHENE” »
In a sport where gimmicks come and go like tides under a full moon, few monikers have lingered with the surreal gravity of Rainman. For Kory Chavis, the man behind the name, Rainman wasn’t just a handle—it was a forecast. Dark skies. Thunder in his fists. Lightning in his kicks. And when the bell rang, … Read More “RING RECKONING: THE UNTOUCHABLE STORM CALLED RAINMAN” »
By the time the bell rings, Andre Chase isn’t just another wrestler striding into the squared circle. He’s part coach, part cult leader, part throwback to the eccentric personalities that made professional wrestling tick long before hashtags and highlight reels. But before Chase U chants echoed through the Performance Center, before he became the unlikely … Read More “Andre Chase: The Professor of Pain” »
Every promotion has them—the guys who look like they’ve been carved from marble, walk tall like they own the locker room, and get handed a gimmick straight from central casting. Todd Champion was one of those guys. Six-foot-six, 295 pounds, billed from WCW Special Forces, trained by Dusty Rhodes himself—he had the look, he had … Read More “Todd Champion: From Special Forces to Forgotten Soldier” »


