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Professional wrestler Abe Coleman claimed to have developed his signature drop kick from watching kangaroos in Australia. (Family photo) |
Abe Coleman, professional wrestler; at 101
WASHINGTON -- Abe Coleman, a Polish-born professional wrestler promoted as the Hebrew
Starting in the late 1920s, Mr. Coleman had more than 2,000 fights during a 25-year career. He was among the oldest-living professional wrestlers.
He was a strikingly broad but diminutive man whose 5-foot-3 frame prompted jokes that he appeared to be standing in a ditch. At 200 pounds, however -- not to mention his 18-inch biceps and 18 1/2-inch neck -- he stood his ground in the ring like an impenetrable fireplug.
And he was amazingly agile. His signature move was the drop kick, in which the wrestler jumps up and boots his opponent with the soles of his feet. He claimed to have introduced the maneuver in 1930 after having toured Australia and seeing kangaroos attack in the same way.
Wrestler and promoter Paul Boesch wrote in his memoir, "Hey, Boy! Where'd You Get Them Ears?": "Coleman liked to leap up and put his feet in his opponent's face and did it frequently. But Abie never learned to use it with the explosive power needed to become a winning weapon."
After beginning his career in New York armories and dingy arenas, he moved on to larger venues, taking on such world champions as Jim Browning and Greek heavyweight Jim Londos.
Later reports show him pitted against a wide range of opponents, including World Wide Wrestling Federation champion Bruno Sammartino; George Zaharias, the husband of golfer "Babe" Didrikson Zaharias; and George Temple, the brother of actress Shirley Temple.
During one unfortunate matchup against Man Mountain Dean, who weighed 465 pounds, Mr. Coleman managed to picked up his foe and slam him into the mat. They came crashing through the ring to the hard floor below.
Mr. Coleman played in exhibition matches and appeared twice on "The Jackie Gleason Show" before becoming a promoter and wrestling referee in the late 1950s.
A wrestling fan website quoted a review of Mr. Coleman's refereering work during a 1959 match in Washington between Johnny Valentine and Bola Hawkawa:
"Before he could reach three, Valentine had Hawkawa's [limp] upper body in an upright position again, slugging him over the head," the 1959 story from Boxing Illustrated/Wrestling News said .
Mr. Coleman, who later spelled his name Colman, also inspected license plates for the New York Department of Motor Vehicles.
Abba Kelmer was born Sept. 20, 1905, in Zychlin, Poland, where his father sold coal for household heating. He was among the youngest of 15 children, and much of his extended family died during the Holocaust.
He moved to Canada, to Winnipeg, Manitoba, in 1923 before settling in New York, all the while working odd jobs and working out whenever possible.
He had admired wrestling since he was a child and got a chance to try it professionally when a promoter named Rudy Miller spotted him at a Brooklyn gym. As he later told The
The Cauliflower Alley Club, an association of retired wrestlers, honored him in 1995.
His wife and only immediate family member, June Miller Coleman, died in 1984.![]()
