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High school highlights for Tuesday, May 27, 2025

SECTION 1-3A Elimination Bracket ADVERTISEMENT • Austin scored early and late to defeat Faribault 4-0 in the second round of the Section 1-3A Elimination Bracket. John Rollie pitched a shutout for the Packers and had a multi-hit game, going 2-for-3 with a double and an RBI. Casey Denzer was 2-for-3 and put up a double […]

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High school highlights for Tuesday, May 27, 2025

SECTION 1-3A

Elimination Bracket

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• Austin scored early and late to defeat Faribault 4-0 in the second round of the Section 1-3A Elimination Bracket. John Rollie pitched a shutout for the Packers and had a multi-hit game, going 2-for-3 with a double and an RBI. Casey Denzer was 2-for-3 and put up a double with two runs scored and two stolen bases. Austin will head to Red Wing for the next round of the Elimination Bracket on Thursday.

SECTION 1-2A

Elimination Bracket

Tyler Meyers and Caiden Huebsch combined for an allowed three hits, no runs, four walks and six strikeouts across seven innings to help Cannon Falls (18-5) take down Lourdes 1-0 in the second round of the Elimination Bracket. Meyers also drove in the game-winning run in the first inning. The Bombers advance to the next round of the 1-2A Elimination Bracket to take on No. 7 St. Charles on Saturday.

Our newsroom occasionally reports stories under a byline of “staff.” Often, the “staff” byline is used when rewriting basic news briefs that originate from official sources, such as a city press release about a road closure, and which require little or no reporting. At times, this byline is used when a news story includes numerous authors or when the story is formed by aggregating previously reported news from various sources. If outside sources are used, it is noted within the story.

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High School Sports

2025 IHSA softball state finals recap

PEORIA — The Illinois High School Association Class 3A and Class 4A softball state championships were Saturday at Louisville Slugger Sports Complex. Chatham Glenwood won the Class 3A state title, while Oswego earned its first title with a win in Class 4A. Here is a look at both championship games: IHSA softball championship coverage Championship predictions and players […]

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2025 IHSA softball state finals recap


PEORIA — The Illinois High School Association Class 3A and Class 4A softball state championships were Saturday at Louisville Slugger Sports Complex.

Chatham Glenwood won the Class 3A state title, while Oswego earned its first title with a win in Class 4A. Here is a look at both championship games:

IHSA softball championship coverage

Championship predictions and players to watch  | What to know | Scoreboard | Peoria playoff brackets

Class 4A: Oswego 4, Barrington 1

PEORIA — Oswego cashed in on its return trip to the Class 4A state finals, winning its first state championship over Barrington at Louisville Slugger Complex.

Oswego (37-2), which finished third last season, leaves with the program’s first title. Purdue commit Jaelynn Anthony (22-1) was sharp in the circle, allowing one run on four hits with eight strikeouts. She added a hit and two walks on offense.

Northern Illinois recruit Aubriella Garza was 3-for-4 with a double an a home run for Oswego. Kennedy Gengler and Savannah Page added RBIs.

Barrington (34-4-1) was seeking its first state championship in its 13th trip to state — 11 of which have come since 2004, under longtime coach Perry Peterson.

PEORIA — Irie Lohrenz played the hero once again.

The junior pitcher and Miami-Ohio commit delivered the game-winning hit in the eight inning, sending Chatham Glenwood to the Class 3A state championship over New Lenox Providence.

Lohrenz not only delivered the winning hit, she struck out three and allowed seven hits in an eight-inning complete game. In Friday’s 5-0 semifinal win against Crystal Lake Prairie Ridge, she struck out four in a three-hit shutout to send Glenwood to the title game.

Sophia Feld delivered two hits for Glenwood (37-1), including a home run in the sixth inning for a 2-0 lead. Providence (26-12) tied the game with a two-run sixth, getting RBI hits from Angelina Cole and Aleigh Hill.

This is Glenwood’s second state championship in six trips to state, the first title coming in 2014. Providence earned its third state trophy and best finish in school history. Providence was third in both 2012 and 2018.

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High School Sports

Results, highlights from Day 1 of the WIAA state baseball tournament

11:13 am CTShare this update Up next, No. 1 Hudson vs. No. 8 Badger Zac Bellman With Hamilton punching their ticket to the semifinal in our first quarterfinal of the day, our focus shifts to who will join them in Wednesday afternoon’s semifinal. Top-seeded Hudson (19-6) will face No. 8 seed Badger (21-7). Our starting […]

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Results, highlights from Day 1 of the WIAA state baseball tournament

11:13 am CT

Up next, No. 1 Hudson vs. No. 8 Badger

Zac Bellman

With Hamilton punching their ticket to the semifinal in our first quarterfinal of the day, our focus shifts to who will join them in Wednesday afternoon’s semifinal. Top-seeded Hudson (19-6) will face No. 8 seed Badger (21-7).

Our starting pitchers today will be Riley Lussmyer for the Badgers and Mark Susa for the Raiders.

10:55 am CT

Hamilton advances to D1 semifinals with victory over Oak Creek

Mike Sherry

Hamilton has advanced to the Division 1 state semifinals with a 6-1 victory over Oak Creek.

The Knights scored a run in the top of the seventh inning on an RBI single by Brady Martin, which scored Nate Schopf after he led off the inning with a single.

Ethan Hibicke and Jacob Osmanski combined to limit Oak Creek to five hits.

Hamilton improves to 22-8 overall, while Oak Creek finishes the season with a 23-6 record.  

10:48 am CT

Hamilton three outs away from advancing to D1 semifinals

Mike Sherry

Oak Creek mounted its first threat in the top of the sixth inning but came up empty.

The Knights got back-to-back singles to start the inning by Carson Dachel and Brandon Briesemeister.

Jackson Villarreal then struck out and Camden Jeske flew out to center field for the second out. That was the end for Hamilton starting pitcher Ethan Hibicke.

Jacob Osmanski came on in relief and got Brian Simmons on a soft liner to shortstop to end the Oak Creek threat.

Hamilton got a one-out single from Hibicke in the bottom of the sixth inning, but that was it.

The Chargers lead 6-0 heading to the seventh inning.

10:32 am CT

Hamilton in control with 6-0 lead over Oak Creek

Mike Sherry

Oak Creek went down in order in the top of the fifth inning – the fourth time in five innings.

Hamilton added to its lead in the bottom of the fifth.

Pinch-hitter Kyle Becker led off the inning with a single into shallow center, then Nick Brauhn tripled off the wall in left-center to score Becker. After an out, Blake Guthrie singled through a drawn-in infield to score Brauhn and make it 6-0.

And that’s the score as we head to the sixth inning.

10:17 am CT

Hamilton adds to lead, holds 4-0 advantage over Oak Creek

Mike Sherry

Oak Creek went down in order in the top of the fourth inning, including a nice sliding catch in foul territory by Hamilton right fielder John Arnold for the third out of the inning.

Chargers pitcher Ethan Hibicke has thrown 50 pitches through four innings.

Hamilton got a double from Nate Glapa to lead off the bottom of the fourth inning, and that was the end for Oak Creek starting pitcher Ryan Buchta. Ben Mills came on in relief.

Mills retired Luke Lehnen on a shallow fly ball to right, but Wes Spreng grounded a single between third and shortstop and Glapa advanced to third. Spreng then stole second base.

Ethan Hibicke followed with a soft liner to right field to score Glapa. Spreng slowed down at third, but when the ball was bobbled in right field he continued around to score and give Hamilton a 4-0 lead.

Mills got out of the inning with a 6-4-3 double play.

9:58 am CT

Hamilton leads 2-0 after three innings in first D1 quarterfinal

Mike Sherry

Oak Creek picked up its first hit of the game in the third inning with a two-out single by No. 9 hitter Brandon Briesemeister, but Jackson Villarreal grounded out to second base to end the inning.

Hamilton got a two-out double off the wall in left field from Nick Brauhn in the bottom of the third, then Luka Tusic hit a grounder up the middle that snuck through into center for a single to score Brauhn and make it 2-0.

The Chargers have six hits through three innings. The Knights have one hit.

9:43 am CT

Hamilton leads Oak Creek 1-0 after two innings

Mike Sherry

Oak Creek went down in order in the second inning for the second time in a row.

Hamilton got a one-out single to right field from Blake Guthrie in the bottom of the inning, then Nate Glapa dumped a single into left field to put runners on first and second.

Luke Lehnen struck out looking for the second out, but Wes Spreng walked to load the bases for the second inning in a row and bring up cleanup batter Ethan Hibicke.

Hibicke hit a hopper back to the mound that Oak Creek pitcher Ryan Buchta snared with his bare hand, and he tossed to first for the out to get out of the inning.

9:24 am CT

Hamilton takes 1-0 lead after one inning, but leaves the bases loaded

Mike Sherry

Oak Creek went down in order in the top of the first inning against Hamilton ace Ethan Hibicke, who threw just 8 pitches.

Hamilton then loaded the bases with one out in the bottom of the frame against Oak Creek ace Ryan Buchta. Luke Lehnen walked with one out, Wes Spreng followed with an opposite-field single to left field and Ethan Hibicke walked to load the bases.

John Arnold then lined a single to center on a 1-2 pitch to bring home the game’s first run and leave the bases loaded.

Brady York struck out looking for the second out, then pinch-hitter Nick Brauhn also struck out looking for the final out.

Buchta threw 31 pitches in the inning.

9:05 am CT

We’re underway at Fox Cities Stadium with the first D1 quarterfinal game

Mike Sherry

The WIAA state baseball tournament is underway.

Sussex Hamilton is the home team and has taken the field. Ethan Hibicke is on the mound for Hamilton.

The crowd is a little sparse for this first D1 quarterfinal game. Hamilton fans outnumber Oak Creek fans and have been making more noise.

It’s mostly cloudy with a little bit of sun poking through.

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High School Sports

Connecticut spring high school sports end with state championships

3

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Connecticut spring high school sports end with state championships


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Wisconsin high school baseball

2:53 pm CTShare this update End 1st – 2-1 Hartford Zac Bellman Aidan Kolb got Hartford started in the top of the first with a first-pitch base hit up the middle, which Carter Kutz followed with a base hit of his own two pitches into his at-bat. Brady Helms sacrifice bunted the runners to second […]

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Wisconsin high school baseball

2:53 pm CT

End 1st – 2-1 Hartford

Zac Bellman

Aidan Kolb got Hartford started in the top of the first with a first-pitch base hit up the middle, which Carter Kutz followed with a base hit of his own two pitches into his at-bat. Brady Helms sacrifice bunted the runners to second and third, then Joe Landgraf got one home with an “excuse me” half swinging infield hit between third and shortstop. Hortonville’s pitcher Taiven Gass tired to pick off the runner at third with two outs and threw it wildly up the third base line, allowing a second run to score on the error. Gass proceeded to strike out Ayden Grulke looking to strand a pair of runners to end the top of the first.

A packed and raucous Hortonville crowd got into things early in the bottom half, as Turner Kuhnke tripled to right field and scored on a sacrifice fly by Kameron Chronis a batter later. Hartford’s Carter Kutz worked around a hit by pitch to get out of the frame with just one across.

2-1 Hartford after one.

2:14 pm CT

D1 quarterfinals pick up at 2:30 with Hartford Union-Hortonville

Zac Bellman

We are almost ready to return to action here at 2:30, as No. 3 seed Hortonville (22-7) faces No. 6 seed Hartford Union (21-7). Hortonville has senior Taiven Gass taking the ball as it makes the program’s 10th state appearance, while Hartford Union throws Carter Kutz on the mound in the program’s ninth appearance at WIAA state.

The winner of this game faces the winner of No. 2 seed Sun Prairie East and No. 7 seed Muskego in a matchup immediately following this game to determine the other semifinal qualifier.

1:20 pm CT

Badger advances to D1 semifinal with 14-3 win over Hudson

Zac Bellman

Badger’s Riley Lussmyer is relieved with two outs in the bottom of the fifth, giving way to Gavin Stewart after surrendering a two-out double. Stewart closes it out with a pop-out to shortstop.

Lussmyer gets the win, allowing three runs on five hits and a walk while striking out four in four and two-thirds. Leading hitters for Badger were Matthew O’Grady (2-for-3, three runs scored, one RBI) and Ryan McCarthy (3-for-4, one run scored, two RBIs) amidst a 13-hit effort for the team.

The Badgers will face Sussex Hamilton on Wednesday at 2:30 p.m. back at Neuroscience Group Field in Grand Chute. Hamilton won our first quarterfinal of the day, 6-1 over Oak Creek. Our next game is at 2:30 p.m., as No. 3 Hortonville faces No. 6 Hartford Union.

1:08 pm CT

Mid 5th – Badger puts run rule in effect with 9-run inning

Zac Bellman

Matthew O’Grady doubled to right center to lead us off in the top of the fifth, and after a Gavin Stewart walk to put two on, Hudson’s Mark Susa was chased from the game. Right-hander Bennett Brathol took over on the mound with nobody out and two on. Ryan McCarthy laid a perfect bunt single between third base and short to load the bases, before Brathol got the next hitter via strikeout. Lussmyer helped his own cause a batter later with a one-out, two-RBI base hit to center. Brendan Kellar followed with an RBI base hit that made it 8-3. Kellar stole his way into scoring position, and Ryan Albanese brought home two more with a base hit while advancing to second himself on the throw.

The beat went on with a bunt single by Zach Walton, who stole his way to second to put two in scoring position for Trent Ertmann. Another run scored on a high-chopping grounder to shortstop that resulted in Ertmann reaching on an error, making it 11-3. O’Grady sent his second double of the inning into the left center field gap to follow, driving home the seventh run of the inning. Stewart sent a sacrifice fly to center field to put the run rule in effect for the bottom of the inning, and Ryan McCarthy doubled off the left field wall to add an insurance run. Brathol was relieved by Myles Howe with two away in the inning, and walked one before inducing a 6-3 groundout on a nice play fading to his right by Jace Mataczynski.

12:40 pm CT

End 4 – Badgers add a run as lead holds

Zac Bellman

Badger mounted its first scoring threat since the first inning, as leadoff hitter Bradley McCarthy sent a rocket past the glove of third baseman Silas Heisler in what was ruled a two-base error. He would score two batters latter on a wild pitch after being advanced to third by a Lussmyer groundout. Hudson’s Susa stranded two on to end the inning, as he sits at 71 pitches for the game.

Third base umpire Brian Jicha took a line shot on a foul ball in the bottom half of the inning on what looked to be his right forearm, but he stayed in the game. Lussmyer is at 62 pitches after stranding another runner in scoring position on his second strikeout of the inning and fourth of the game.

Our score is 5-3, Badger.

12:23 pm CT

End 3 – Badger quells scoring threat

Zac Bellman

Another clean frame for Susa on the mound for Hudson, as he walked the leadoff man before inducing a 4-6-3 double play and a flyout to center. His pitch count is at 51 through three, as he has faced the minimum since allowing the first five to reach in the first.

The Raiders put the tying run on third with a two-out triple to center by Jace Mataczynski, his second hit of the game. Lussmyer struck out the next batter though, preserving the lead as he sits on a pitch count of 46.

We’re still at 4-3 through three complete.

12:13 pm CT

End 2nd – Both teams down 1-2-3

Zac Bellman

Both pitchers settled in after a high-scoring first, as Susa went 1-2-3 with one strikeout. His pitch count stands at 40 after two frames.

In the bottom half, the Raiders were also down 1-2-3 with a strikeout, as Lussmyer’s pitch count stands at 35.

It remains 4-3, Badger as we head to the top of the third.

12:04 pm CT

End 1st – Seven total runs in high-scoring inning

Zac Bellman

The Badgers got to Hudson starter Mark Susa in the first, as Zach Walton walked, Trent Ertmann bunt singled, Matthew O’Grady reached on an error that scored Walton and Gavin Stewart doubled home Ertmann and O’Grady. Ryan McCarthy followed with an RBI single that scored Stewart to make it 4-0, before McCarthy was balked to second on the ensuing at-bat. Susa retired the next three-in-a-row, as Bradley McCarthy popped out to second to end a stretch of five-straight reaching base for the Badgers to start the inning, Lussmyer popped out to short and Brendan Kellar struck out.

In the bottom half of the first, Hudson loaded the bases with a base hit up the middle by Sam Abrahmson, a walk by Logan Hagman and an infield hit to third by Jace Maytaczynski. After a fielder’s choice scored one run, Steele Homme tripled to right with two outs to score two more. A pop-out to first ended a high-scoring first frame.

It’s 4-3, Badger.

11:13 am CT

Up next, No. 1 Hudson vs. No. 8 Badger

Zac Bellman

With Hamilton punching their ticket to the semifinal in our first quarterfinal of the day, our focus shifts to who will join them in Wednesday afternoon’s semifinal. Top-seeded Hudson (19-6) will face No. 8 seed Badger (21-7).

Our starting pitchers today will be Riley Lussmyer for the Badgers and Mark Susa for the Raiders.

10:55 am CT

Hamilton advances to D1 semifinals with victory over Oak Creek

Mike Sherry

Hamilton has advanced to the Division 1 state semifinals with a 6-1 victory over Oak Creek.

The Knights scored a run in the top of the seventh inning on an RBI single by Brady Martin, which scored Nate Schopf after he led off the inning with a single.

Ethan Hibicke and Jacob Osmanski combined to limit Oak Creek to five hits.

Hamilton improves to 22-8 overall, while Oak Creek finishes the season with a 23-6 record.  

10:48 am CT

Hamilton three outs away from advancing to D1 semifinals

Mike Sherry

Oak Creek mounted its first threat in the top of the sixth inning but came up empty.

The Knights got back-to-back singles to start the inning by Carson Dachel and Brandon Briesemeister.

Jackson Villarreal then struck out and Camden Jeske flew out to center field for the second out. That was the end for Hamilton starting pitcher Ethan Hibicke.

Jacob Osmanski came on in relief and got Brian Simmons on a soft liner to shortstop to end the Oak Creek threat.

Hamilton got a one-out single from Hibicke in the bottom of the sixth inning, but that was it.

The Chargers lead 6-0 heading to the seventh inning.

10:32 am CT

Hamilton in control with 6-0 lead over Oak Creek

Mike Sherry

Oak Creek went down in order in the top of the fifth inning – the fourth time in five innings.

Hamilton added to its lead in the bottom of the fifth.

Pinch-hitter Kyle Becker led off the inning with a single into shallow center, then Nick Brauhn tripled off the wall in left-center to score Becker. After an out, Blake Guthrie singled through a drawn-in infield to score Brauhn and make it 6-0.

And that’s the score as we head to the sixth inning.

10:17 am CT

Hamilton adds to lead, holds 4-0 advantage over Oak Creek

Mike Sherry

Oak Creek went down in order in the top of the fourth inning, including a nice sliding catch in foul territory by Hamilton right fielder John Arnold for the third out of the inning.

Chargers pitcher Ethan Hibicke has thrown 50 pitches through four innings.

Hamilton got a double from Nate Glapa to lead off the bottom of the fourth inning, and that was the end for Oak Creek starting pitcher Ryan Buchta. Ben Mills came on in relief.

Mills retired Luke Lehnen on a shallow fly ball to right, but Wes Spreng grounded a single between third and shortstop and Glapa advanced to third. Spreng then stole second base.

Ethan Hibicke followed with a soft liner to right field to score Glapa. Spreng slowed down at third, but when the ball was bobbled in right field he continued around to score and give Hamilton a 4-0 lead.

Mills got out of the inning with a 6-4-3 double play.

9:58 am CT

Hamilton leads 2-0 after three innings in first D1 quarterfinal

Mike Sherry

Oak Creek picked up its first hit of the game in the third inning with a two-out single by No. 9 hitter Brandon Briesemeister, but Jackson Villarreal grounded out to second base to end the inning.

Hamilton got a two-out double off the wall in left field from Nick Brauhn in the bottom of the third, then Luka Tusic hit a grounder up the middle that snuck through into center for a single to score Brauhn and make it 2-0.

The Chargers have six hits through three innings. The Knights have one hit.

9:43 am CT

Hamilton leads Oak Creek 1-0 after two innings

Mike Sherry

Oak Creek went down in order in the second inning for the second time in a row.

Hamilton got a one-out single to right field from Blake Guthrie in the bottom of the inning, then Nate Glapa dumped a single into left field to put runners on first and second.

Luke Lehnen struck out looking for the second out, but Wes Spreng walked to load the bases for the second inning in a row and bring up cleanup batter Ethan Hibicke.

Hibicke hit a hopper back to the mound that Oak Creek pitcher Ryan Buchta snared with his bare hand, and he tossed to first for the out to get out of the inning.

9:24 am CT

Hamilton takes 1-0 lead after one inning, but leaves the bases loaded

Mike Sherry

Oak Creek went down in order in the top of the first inning against Hamilton ace Ethan Hibicke, who threw just 8 pitches.

Hamilton then loaded the bases with one out in the bottom of the frame against Oak Creek ace Ryan Buchta. Luke Lehnen walked with one out, Wes Spreng followed with an opposite-field single to left field and Ethan Hibicke walked to load the bases.

John Arnold then lined a single to center on a 1-2 pitch to bring home the game’s first run and leave the bases loaded.

Brady York struck out looking for the second out, then pinch-hitter Nick Brauhn also struck out looking for the final out.

Buchta threw 31 pitches in the inning.

9:05 am CT

We’re underway at Fox Cities Stadium with the first D1 quarterfinal game

Mike Sherry

The WIAA state baseball tournament is underway.

Sussex Hamilton is the home team and has taken the field. Ethan Hibicke is on the mound for Hamilton.

The crowd is a little sparse for this first D1 quarterfinal game. Hamilton fans outnumber Oak Creek fans and have been making more noise.

It’s mostly cloudy with a little bit of sun poking through.

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Guardians & Reds Weekly Dispatch

BY BRANDON UNVERFERTH Sports Editor bunverferth@cherryroad.com Guardians: Week in Review Record this Week: 1-4 Game Highlights: Tue (6/10) – Reds edge Guardians • Box score:… 0

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Guardians & Reds Weekly Dispatch

BY BRANDON UNVERFERTH Sports Editor bunverferth@cherryroad.com Guardians: Week in Review Record this Week: 1-4 Game Highlights: Tue (6/10) – Reds edge Guardians • Box score:…


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Ask 411 Wrestling

Welcome guys, gals, and gender non-binary pals, to Ask 411 . . . the last surviving weekly column on 411 Wrestling. I am your party host, Ryan Byers, and I am here to answer some of your burning inquiries about professional wrestling. If you have one of those queries searing a hole in your brain, […]

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Ask 411 Wrestling

Welcome guys, gals, and gender non-binary pals, to Ask 411 . . . the last surviving weekly column on 411 Wrestling.

I am your party host, Ryan Byers, and I am here to answer some of your burning inquiries about professional wrestling. If you have one of those queries searing a hole in your brain, feel free to send it along to me at [email protected]. Don’t be shy about shooting those over – the more, the merrier.

Hey, ya wanna banner?

Night Wolf the Wise is renewing old rivalries:

I read that the Rock and Stone Cold wrestled against each other 10 times. Stone Cold has 7 victories over the Rock. Rock only has 1 win over Stone Cold. The other 2 are no contest. Has any other wrestler in wrestling history won only 1 match in that rivalry? Keep in mind when I say rivalry, I mean they wrestled multiple times like Rock and Austin did. Also tag team matches, fatal 4 ways, etc don’t count. Only one on ones.

With those numbers and with the Rock only beating Austin once, that tells me you’re only counting televised matches, because if you add in house shows and dark matches, the Rock has more victories over Steve Austin than just the one.

If we are only accounting for TV bouts, then I was able to locate one definite example of a feud in which a wrestler only won one of the matches.

Bret Hart versus Owen Hart.

If you look at the televised record between the brothers, Owen’s victory at Wrestlemania X is the only one that he ever picked up the win, though he did also have a non-televised victory in the quarterfinals of the 1996 Kuwaiti Cup tournament.

I am sure that if you reviewed every feud in the modern history of wrestling you could find several more examples, but that is one that came to me offhand.

We’ve given Tyler from Winnipeg the book:

Three part question. Did you read Hardcore Holly’s book? Becky’s? Your top 3 wrestling books?

No.

No.

Mick Foley’s first two books and Chris Jericho’s first book.

Those aren’t exactly unique answers, but sometimes the consensus picks are the best picks.

Big Al has a new body:

While watching Wrestlemania the other day, one of my in-laws mentioned how John Cena definitely took steroids. However I don’t ever remember hearing about him getting involved in those. That got me thinking, while it’s impossible to know with 100% certainty, who are the most successful wrestlers that we can say most likely did NOT use PED’s? When I say successful, I am thinking multiple time world champions or a years-long push. Just WWF(E) and WCW to narrow it down.

Lance Storm. Given the prevalence of PEDs in wrestling for decades, Storm is about the only person who ever operated in the WWF or WCW that I am 99% confident never did anything. That’s not to say there haven’t been others who were clean, but I just don’t know who they are, and my default assumption is that a wrestler from the 1980s on has at least dabbled in something at some point unless there’s strong evidence to the contrary.

Have you heard the one about Craig?

Has there ever been a main event on a weekly live TV show in which one of the competitors gets seriously injured and unable to finish the match? I remember Triple H got injured at the end of a tag match but let’s say there is a singles match in which a wrestlers are given 15 minutes to wrestle and one wrestler gets injured a few minutes into it and unable to continue. How would the show fill in the rest of the time slot with no wrestling?

I’m not aware of that situation having ever occurred, but the answer to the second half of the question is that there are any number of ways that you could fill out the remaining TV time, depending on the context – perhaps most importantly how much time is remaining.

The first thing you can do, which works if the remaining television time is relatively short, is just pad it out with replays of the injury and footage of the injured wrestler being removed from the ring, and perhaps an interview with the other wrestler who was in the match about what exactly happened.

The second thing to do, which would be an option if you have more time left in the show, would be to just have somebody else on the card cut an impromptu promo or have a couple of other guys on the card wrestle an impromptu match. Wrestling doesn’t have to be planned all that much in advance. True pros can get in there and improvise a promo or call a match in the ring. Granted, those skills may be falling by the wayside given how new wrestlers are getting trained these days, but grapplers with sufficient seasoning should still be able to do it.

GRT is menacingly stroking his briefcase:

Has any title reign started by a Money in the Bank cash in ever been ended by a Money in the Bank cash in? Or is Tiffany Stratton the only current time this could occur?

No, this has never happened before.

If MNMNB‘s friends jumped off a cliff, so would he:

Just learned there was someone named Roger “Nature Boy” Kirby.

How many wrestlers can you find that used the Nature Boy name?

Well, let’s count them:

1. Buddy Rogers: This is the original Nature Boy. I think I’ve told this story in the column before, but the name originates with a popular song that Nat King Cole first recorded in 1948. It has been covered many times since then.

2. Al Oeming: This fellow is an interesting yet sometimes forgotten footnote in wrestling history. He served in the Canadian Navy in World War II and, when he came home from the war, he was broken into wrestling by his childhood friend Stu Hart. This means he would have adopted the nickname “The Nature Boy” around the same time Buddy Rogers did, though it’s not clear to me who used it first. Eventually, Al got into promoting and co-founded Stampede Wrestling with Hart. He also became a noted zoologist and conservationist, wit the CBC making a docuseries about that part of his life in 1980.

3. Tommy Phelps: Phelps was another contemporary of Rogers, wrestling at the same time he did, though Rogers definitely had the gimmick first. After wrestling, Phelps became an evangelist and released a spoken word record about his conversion from grappler to man of god.

4. Chief Lone Eagle: Not to be confused with the little person wrestler who was also called Chief Lone Eagle, this guy wrestled for promoter Jack Pfeffer in Chicago and Ohio in the 1950s and 1960s. Though Lone Eagle was his most commonly used ring name, for some of his bouts he was dubbed the “Indian Nature Boy.”

5. Roger Kirby: The man who inspired this question. Kirby began wrestling in the 1960s and was dubbed “The Nature Boy” due to his physical resemblance to Buddy Rogers, who he was actually friendly with. Kirby wrestled for almost every major promotion during the territorial era of wrestling, and when his career was winding down in the 1980s, he had matches for the WWF, the AWA, and All Japan Pro Wrestling.

6. Ric Flair: When you talk to 90% of people who recognize the “Nature Boy” name these days, they’ll no doubt tie it first and foremost to Ric Flair.

7. JJ Dillon: It didn’t last long, but when the future manager of Ric Flair was wrestling In and around Hallifax, Nova Scotia between 1973 and 1975, he was known as Nature Boy Dillon.

8. Adrian Street: American fans will remember Street using the nickname “Exotic,” but when he started wrestling in his native England, he used the “Nature Boy” moniker in large part because he had been a fan of Buddy Rogers, who his flamboyant character was based upon.

9. Nature Boy: This is a true oddity. In David McLane’s all women’s promotion GLOW, one of the wrestlers who only had a handful of matches was called Jungle Woman, doing a Tarzan-esque gimmick. She had a male valet who wore a loincloth and was lead to the ring on a leash. He was called “Nature Boy,” with no other name given. In reality, Nature Boy was portrayed by Tony Cimber, and this is an example of somebody behind the scenes being given an on camera role. Tony Cimber is listed as an associate director in GLOW’s credits, and his brother Matt Cimber is listed as a director and a producer. In more trivia, the Cimber brothers are children of Hollywood legend Jayne Mansfield, which makes them half-brothers of Law and Order star Mariska Hargitay. So, David McLane is one degree of separation away from Mariska Hargitay.

10. Ricky Fuji: This one is also going to be a bit of a story. Fuji is a long-time Japanese indy wrestler, starting in 1990 and continuing through today. His most notworthy run was with FMW in the mid-to-late 1990s. He was a huge Rock n’ Roll Express fan and patterned a lot of his style on them. Another Japanese indy wrestler, Men’s Teioh (who had a cup of tea in the WWF as part of Kaientai), was known early in his career as Terry Boy because of his extreme Terry Funk fandom. For a couple of tag matches in 2011, Teioh reverted to his Terry Boy persona, while wrestler Great Kojika joined him as Dory Boy (based on Dory Funk), and Fuji rounded out the trio as Nature Boy (based on Ric Flair). It wasn’t his full-time gimmick or anything, but he did use the name.

11. Lance Idol: This journeyman wrestler debuted in 1978 and his career ended when he died of a heart attack in 1991. He had a ton of ring names during his career. He never used “Nature Boy” with the name Lance Idol to my knowledge, but he wrestled as Nature Boy Austin for a time. Interestingly, he was also Steve Austin for a time – before he would’ve known about the wrestler who ultimately became Stone Cold – so he has shared names with two of wrestling’s greatest.

12. Buddy Landel: Probably the third most notable Nature Boy on this list behind Rogers and Flair, most fans reading this will know that he overlapped with Slick Ric in the gimmick and feuded with him over the rights to the name for a time – including while he was managed by JJ Dillon, another Nature Boy from this list.

13. Tito Senza: Another 1970s and 1980s journeyman. I’ve listed him as Tito Senza because that was his most widely known ring name – including the name he did some WWF enhancement work under – but he was never “Nature Boy” Tito Senza. Instead, his alternate ring name was Nature Boy Nelson, which he used from the mid-70s through the early 80s in Nova Scotia.

14. Verne Siebert: This is another example of a journeyman wrestler having many names. Siebert is his most recognizable one, but he was also Nature Boy Sweetan when he wrestled in the late 80s in . . . Nova Scotia? Why was this gimmick so popular in eastern Canada? (Yeah, yeah, I’m the guy that answers the questions . . . I shouldn’t be asking them . . .)

15. Paul Lee: In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Paul Lee did what was essentially a Ric Flair tribute act on southern independents, and he was respected enough that he was brought in as an enhancement wrestler on shows for Jim Crockett Promotions, WCW, and, later on, Smoky Mountain Wrestling. He’s also had several matches in the 2020s, including one in 2023 against Joey Janela.

16. Charles Robinson: Robinson, the referee who refuses to age, was involved in an angle in late 1990s WCW in which he was a Ric Flair fanboy and was dubbed “The Little Nature Boy” or “Little Naitch” for short. Though he’s a referee and not a wrestler, the Little Naitch run did see him have a couple of matches, including an infamous bout in which Randy Savage caved his chest in with a flying elbow.

17. Rik Ratchet: A New Jersey indy fixture from 1994 through 2022, Ratchet didn’t do much of interest that I could find, but his final match was a singles bout against Jerry Lawler, which is a great note to go out on.

18. Kevin White: Trained by Bill Dundee, Mr. White was referred to as the “New Nature Boy” and made numerous appearances on the Tennessee independents from the early 2000s through 2015.

19. Barry Ace: Based out of Massachusetts, Barry Ace is a 20+ year indy veteran who also has quite a few small film roles to his credit. Though he currently calls himself “The Mill City Samurai,” at an earlier phase of his career he was the “New Age Nature Boy.” He’s still active, and you can see his website here.

20. Scoot Andrews: Scoot was a northeastern indy wrestler who competed from 1994 through 2022 with his greatest exposure coming in early Ring of Honor during its Feinstein era. He was actually known as the “Black Nature Boy” because, well, he was Black. It probably says something that we had to specify he was a “Black” Nature Boy when the entire origin of the Nature Boy gimmick was with a song recorded and popularized by a Black performer.

21. Gary Gold: This fellow is a Massachusetts-based independent wrestler who began wrestling in 1981 and continued through 2017. In an interesting side note, if you poke around on YouTube, you can find several episodes of a public access talk show about professional wrestling that he hosted during the 2020s.

22. Dylan Eaton: His career was pretty short in the grand scheme of things, lasting only three years in the 2000s, but Dylan Eaton came into the sport with quite the pedigree. He was the grandson of Bill Dundee and the son of Bobby Eaton, who was married to Dundee’s daughter. Interestingly, despite being related to two other wrestling legends, Dylan was a “Nature Boy” in tribute to Flair for a time as opposed to being a “Superstar” or “Beautiful.”

23. Ricky Landell: Trained by Steve Corino and debuting in the early 2000s, Rick Landell’s early career largely consisted of following Corino around wherever he was going and acting almost as a “young boy” in the Japanese tradition. When Ricky was allowed to start showing some personality of his own, he did take up the “Nature Boy” mantle for a time.

24. Chic Canyon: No, not Chris Kanyon. Active in the late 2000s through the early 2010s on the indy circuit in Kentucky and deep southern Illinois, Canyon referred to himself as the “Strong Style Nature Boy.”

25. Johnny Dynamo: Still wrestling in Michigan today after a career that has lasted over 20 years, Mr. Dynamo took up the mantle of the “New Nature Boy.”

26. Reid Flair: We all remember the tragic tale of Ric Flair’s younger son, who had a sold amateur career and seemed likely to follow in his father’s footsteps, even touring with All Japan Pro Wrestling in 2013. During his unfortunately brief career, he was called “The Third Nature Boy,” with the first two presumably being Rogers and his father . . . though many more were obviously disregarded.

27. Kyle Brooks: This Canadian independent wrestler is still active, mostly around Ontario, after having debuted in 2019. Though he used the Nature Boy for a period of time, more recently he has adopted the moniker “Brother Earth” and started doing an environmentalist gimmick. Go buy his t-shirt if you’re so inclined.

28 & 29. The Nature Boyz: This entry is a little bit different, as it’s a tag team. In 2022 and 2023, trainees Jonny Lyons and Dylan Fliehr were put together as a tag team called “The Nature Boyz” in Booker T’s Reality of Wrestling promotion.

And there you have it. I was able to count 29 Nature Boys.

I would be remiss if I didn’t mention that there are also two “Nature Girls” that I became aware of in my research. One his Charlotte Flair, for obvious reasons, though it’s not a moniker that really stuck with her on the main roster of WWE.

The other is a more interesting case. Adela Antone was a lady wrestler in promoter Billy Wolfe’s troupe for less than a year between 1951 and 1952, where she used the nickname “Nature Girl.” That’s not the interesting part, though. The interesting part is that, according to a 1995 newspaper clipping unearthed by When It Was Cool, Antone was once asked to be involved in a murder plot. A man named Harry Washburn was accused of killing a woman named Helen Weaver with a car bomb. According to Antone, Washburn also once offered her $10,000.00 to kill Harry Weaver, the husband of Helen Weaver.

I don’t believe that had anything to do with her being a Nature Girl, though.

We’ll return in seven-ish days, and, as always, you can contribute your questions by emailing [email protected]. You can also leave questions in the comments below, but please note that I do not monitor the comments as closely as I do the email account, so emailing is the better way to get things answered.

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