Peter Mehringer
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Born | (1910-07-15)July 15, 1910 Jetmore, Kansas, U.S. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Died | August 27, 1987(1987-08-27) (aged 77) Pullman, Washington, U.S. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Home town | Kinsley, Kansas, U.S. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Medal record
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Peter Joseph Mehringer (July 15, 1910 – August 27, 1987) was an American Olympic gold medal-winning freestyle wrestler from Kinsley, Kansas. Mehringer was nicknamed the "Kansas Whirlwind".[1]
After learning how to wrestle from a correspondence course, he went on to win two Kansas high school state championships, and then three Missouri Valley Conference titles while attending the University of Kansas. He was an All-American and national runner-up at the 1932 NCAA championships. The KU sophomore won a gold medal at the 1932 Olympic Games, becoming the first KU athlete to ever have won an Olympic gold medal. Mehringer returned to KU in 1932 for his junior season and solidified his place among KU's all-time great athletes by earning All-Big Six Conference honors in football as a 214-pound tackle. Financial considerations prevented him from graduating from KU.
Mehringer went on to play professional football with the Chicago Cardinals[2][3] and the Los Angeles Bulldogs, and worked occasionally as a movie extra and stunt man. He is also KU's only grappling icon to have pursue a career in professional wrestling, mostly doing tours in New Zealand.
He was inducted into the National Wrestling Hall of Fame as a Distinguished Member in 1983 and the Kansas Wrestling Coaches Association Hall of Fame in 1984.
References
- ^ Pete Mehringer | KU's Greatest Grappler. union.ku.edu. Retrieved September 17, 2022.
- ^ Pete Mehringer
- ^ Pete Mehringer Past Stats, Statistics, History, and Awards - databaseFootball.com Archived 2011-11-23 at the Wayback Machine
External links
- Kansas Wrestling Coaches Association Hall of Fame
- National Wrestling Hall of Fame and Museum
- KUhistory.com Biography
- SLAM! Sports: Overcoming the odds: Pete Mehringer's 1932 gold medal[usurped]
- v
- t
- e
- 1920 Anders Larsson (SWE)
- 1924 Jack Spellman (USA)
- 1928 Thure Sjöstedt (SWE)
- 1932 Peter Mehringer (USA)
- 1936 Knut Fridell (SWE)
- 1948 Henry Wittenberg (USA)
- 1952 Viking Palm (SWE)
- 1956 Gholamreza Takhti (IRN)
- 1960 İsmet Atlı (TUR)
- 1964 Aleksandr Medved (URS)
- 1968 Ahmet Ayık (TUR)
- 1972 Ben Peterson (USA)
- 1976 Levan Tediashvili (URS)
- 1980 Sanasar Oganisyan (URS)
- 1984 Ed Banach (USA)
- 1988 Makharbek Khadartsev (URS)
- 1992 Makharbek Khadartsev (EUN)
- 1996 Rasoul Khadem (IRI)
- 1920: 80 kg
- 1924–1960: 87 kg
- 1964–1968: 97 kg
- 1972–1996: 90 kg