Verne Gagne

Producer

Popular As Laverne Clarence Gagne

Birthday February 26, 1926

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace Corcoran, Minnesota, U.S.

DEATH DATE 2015-4-27, Bloomington, Minnesota, U.S. (89 years old)

Nationality United States

Height 5ft 11in

Weight 215 lb

#19988 Most Popular

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the Minnesota Golden Gophers

1926

Laverne Clarence Gagne (February 26, 1926 – April 27, 2015) was an American amateur and professional wrestler, football player, wrestling trainer and wrestling promoter.

He was the owner and promoter of the Minneapolis-based American Wrestling Association (AWA), the predominant promotion throughout the Midwest and Manitoba for many years.

1942

He attended Robbinsdale High School, where he went on to win the state championship for high school wrestling in 1942 and 1943.

1943

In 1943, he was recruited to play football at the University of Minnesota as defensive end and tight end, while also continuing wrestling.

Gagne's football and wrestling career was interrupted by a tour of duty with the U.S. Marine Corps in 1943.

He played on the Marines Football Team with the likes of Elroy "Crazy Legs" Hirsch, Gopher Great George Franck and other NFL Stars.

Gagne also served with the U.S. Navy's Underwater Demolition Team.

He chose to return to the University of Minnesota, where, as an amateur wrestler, he captured two NCAA titles.

1944

As a freshmen, Gagne won the Big Ten 175 pound wrestling title in 1944 after returning from duty in the Marine Corps.

1947

Gagne joined the National Football League (NFL) soon after being drafted by the Chicago Bears in the 16th round (145th pick) of the 1947 NFL Draft.

1948

As an amateur wrestler, Gagne won two NCAA titles and was an alternate for the U.S freestyle wrestling team at the 1948 Olympic Games before turning professional in 1949.

Gagne was an 11-time world champion in major professional wrestling promotions, having held the AWA World Heavyweight Championship ten times and the IWA World Heavyweight Championship once as the IWA World Heavyweight Championship was considered a world championship in Japan.

He has also won top professional wrestling promotions World Heavyweight Championships such as the World Heavyweight Championship (Omaha version) five times.

He holds the record for the longest combined reign as a world champion in North America and is third (behind Bruno Sammartino and Lou Thesz) for the longest single world title reign.

He is one of only seven men inducted into each of the WWE, WCW and Professional Wrestling halls of fame.

Gagne was born in Corcoran, Minnesota, and grew up on a farm in Robbinsdale, Minnesota.

He left home at the age of 14 after his mother died.

In 1948, he beat Charles Gottfried of Illinois in the 191-pound class to win his first NCAA championship in Pennsylvania.

The next year, he returned to the championships but had moved up a class, to heavyweight.

In the final, he met future NWA World Heavyweight Champion Dick Hutton, the two-time defending national champion in the division.

The showdown ended in a 1–1 tie, but Gagne was awarded the win because he controlled Hutton for longer periods of the match.

He was also an alternate for the U.S freestyle wrestling team at the 1948 Olympic Games; he later said that he might have wrestled in the Olympics, but his coaches had discovered that he had earned money winning a wrestling match at a carnival, thus putting his amateur standing in question.

1949

By 1949, Gagne had signed with the NFL's Green Bay Packers.

He went on to play three preseason games with the Packers before being released.

In 1949, Gagne decided to wrestle professionally, starting his career in Texas.

In his debut, he defeated Abe Kashey, with former World Heavyweight boxing Champion Jack Dempsey as the referee.

1950

On November 13, 1950, Gagne captured the National Wrestling Alliance (NWA) Junior Heavyweight title in a tournament for the vacant championship.

He was rumored to be one of the highest-paid wrestlers during the 1950s, reportedly earning a hundred thousand dollars a year.

1953

In September 1953 in Fred Kohler Enterprises, Gagne was awarded the newly created Chicago version of the NWA United States Championship.

Gagne became one of the most well-known stars in wrestling during the Golden age of television, thanks to his exposure on the Dumont Network, where he wowed audiences with his technical prowess.

1957

On June 14, 1957, Edouard Carpentier defeated NWA Champion Lou Thesz in Chicago.

The NWA later overruled the decision of the referee in Chicago and gave the title back to Thesz.

However, certain wrestling territories of the NWA including Nebraska refused to go along with the decision and continued to recognize Carpentier.

1958

Carpentier lost his title to Gagne in Omaha on August 9, 1958, making him the recognized NWA World champion in the NWA territories that had recognized Carpentier, before dropping the belt three months later to Wilbur Snyder.

1960

By early 1960, the wealthy Gagne rarely wrestled and turned his focus towards building a wrestling promotion of his own.

In 1960, Gagne formed his own promotion, the American Wrestling Alliance (later it became Association).

1991

He remained in this position until 1991, when the company folded.

2006

In 2006's The Spectacular Legacy of the AWA, Verne's son, Greg, said in an interview that Bears owner George Halas prevented his father from pursuing both football and wrestling, and forced him to make a choice.

In the same interview, Greg mentioned that wrestling was a much better paying job at the time than playing football and as a result, Verne chose wrestling over football.