Longevity in sport
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The Nature Boy was the Intercontinental Champion at 56!
WHOOO!
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@mariner4life said in Longevity in sport:
The Nature Boy was the Intercontinental Champion at 56!
WHOOO!
Honky Tonk Man held that until the Warrior wasted him in the late 80s. Then he lost it to Ravishing Rick who was my Mums favourite wrestler for some reason.
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@mariner4life said in Longevity in sport:
The Nature Boy was the Intercontinental Champion at 56!
WHOOO!
Itâs spelled âWOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!â
(As many âoââs and exclamation points as you like, but thereâs no âh,â not even three of them.)
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@mn5 said in Longevity in sport:
Ravishing Rick who was my Mums favourite wrestler for some reason.
Clearly a woman of refined taste. She had no time for fat, out of shape, sweathogs.
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Ted Williams â thatâs âTeddy Ballgameâ to you; âThe Splendid Splinterâ to everybody else â won a batting title at age 40. Not bad for a guy whoâd already served in two wars. Still the greatest hitter who ever lived.
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@salacious-crumb said in Longevity in sport:
@mn5 said in Longevity in sport:
Ravishing Rick who was my Mums favourite wrestler for some reason.
Clearly a woman of refined taste. She had no time for fat, out of shape, sweathogs.
Rick Rude was a pretty legitimate tough guy in real life too apparently. He gave the Ultimate Warrior a hiding backstage.
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@salacious-crumb speaking of baseball. Nolan 'The Express' Ryan pitched in Major League Baseball until he was almost 47. He played til 1993 having debuted in the 1960s. One of the best pitchers of all time.
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@mn5 said in Longevity in sport:
@mariner4life said in Longevity in sport:
The Nature Boy was the Intercontinental Champion at 56!
WHOOO!
Honky Tonk Man held that until the Warrior wasted him in the late 80s.
Honky says he suggested a 30 second thrashing because Warrior was dangerous in the ring, so he didn't want to spend any more time than he had to.
Someone mentioned Demolition as still wrestling, One Man Gang (aka Akeem), Hacksaw Jim Duggan, Powers of Pain, Haku, Rikishi, Brutus the Barber Beefcake and Tito Santana also still lace up the boots occasionally.
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@godder said in Longevity in sport:
@mn5 said in Longevity in sport:
@mariner4life said in Longevity in sport:
The Nature Boy was the Intercontinental Champion at 56!
WHOOO!
Honky Tonk Man held that until the Warrior wasted him in the late 80s.
Honky says he suggested a 30 second thrashing because Warrior was dangerous in the ring, so he didn't want to spend any more time than he had to.
Someone mentioned Demolition as still wrestling, One Man Gang (aka Akeem), Hacksaw Jim Duggan, Powers of Pain, Haku, Rikishi, Brutus the Barber Beefcake and Tito Santana also still lace up the boots occasionally.
Yeah it's funny reading the backstage stories. Google Haku and all the shit he got up to out of the ring. Interesting that Honky suggested that,I woulda thought the ego woulda prevented him wanting a hiding.
Apparently Hogan refused to wrestle Rick Rude cos he was dangerous. Considering some of the guys he's taken on that is some praise.
I watched one of the Royal Rumbles from 1989, fairly certain about half of the 30 guys who were in it are dead now.
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@mn5 Haku's tough guy stories and Andre the Giant's drinking stories are legendary in wrestling...
Almost all matches on Summerslam 90 have at least one dead person involved, and there are more matches booked where everyone is dead than matches where everyone is alive.
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@godder said in Longevity in sport:
@mn5 Haku's tough guy stories and Andre the Giant's drinking stories are legendary in wrestling...
Almost all matches on Summerslam 90 have at least one dead person involved, and there are more matches booked where everyone is dead than matches where everyone is alive.
Haku was about the only guy that Andre legitimately feared apparently. He sounds like an absolute headcase. Best story is him biting off someone's nose in a pub brawl.
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@nepia said in Longevity in sport:
Gordy Howe played his last NHL season in 1979/1980 at the age of 52.
HIs much younger son Mark (and also a Hall of Famer, pretty sure the only father-and-son combo in the hockey hof) suffered the most gruesome injury Iâve ever seen in sports. Essentially a steel goal post spike â a dagger, moreorless â impaled his testicles. It makes me curl up into a fetal position just thinking about it. The scream was heard in every corner of the arena, apparently. He went unconscious immediately thereafter, and the whole sport had to redesign their goals to ensure such carnage never-ever-for-Chrissakes-never happened again, nobody could stomach it.
If youâre bored some day, just youtube search âWorstâ and âMost Brutal NHL injuries everâ and watch all the different reels, thereâs lots of highlight packages, youâll see ice skates slicing necks and faces and enough gallons of blood for a Tarantino movie.
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@salacious-crumb said in Longevity in sport:
@nepia said in Longevity in sport:
Gordy Howe played his last NHL season in 1979/1980 at the age of 52.
HIs much younger son Mark (and also a Hall of Famer, pretty sure the only father-and-son combo in the hockey hof) suffered the most gruesome injury Iâve ever seen in sports. Essentially a steel goal post spike â a dagger, moreorless â impaled his testicles. It makes me curl up into a fetal position just thinking about it. The scream was heard in every corner of the arena, apparently. He went unconscious immediately thereafter, and the whole sport had to redesign their goals to ensure such carnage never-ever-for-Chrissakes-never happened again, nobody could stomach it.
If youâre bored some day, just youtube search âWorstâ and âMost Brutal NHL injuries everâ and watch all the different reels, thereâs lots of highlight packages, youâll see ice skates slicing necks and faces and enough gallons of blood for a Tarantino movie.
I don't ever think I'll be that bored.
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@no-quarter said in Longevity in sport:
In cricket Misbah-ul-Haq for Pakistan played his last match when he was nearly 43, which is a pretty amazing effort in the modern era. Everyone else above him in the list played a long time ago now, before the game was professional.
Pretty sure the game was professional in 1976 when (legend) Brian Close was getting pounded opening the batting for England against Roberts Holding etc - at 45 years of age. Close is particularly memorable because he was/is the youngest test debutant for the Poms (18) meaning there were 27 years between his first and last tests.
Put into context that akin to him opening the batting with Wright in 91 and still being around to face the Poms next month. He debuted against Walter Hadlee's 49 team and by the time he retired, Paddles had been playing tests for 3 years.
Misbah pffft - John Traicos is also on your list
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@dogmeat I will bow to your superior knowledge (age). I'm too young to know who those guys are, Misbah was the only one that stood out to me