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Pat Flanagan a key figure in Toronto wrestling history

Wrestlers Pat Flanagan and Mike Sharpe whoop it up with a gang of young admirers in March 1947.

REAL NAME: Winnett Wallingford Watson
BORN: Toronto, Ontario
6’1″, 230 pounds
DIED: March 28, 1985

In 1936, after excelling in lacrosse, football, hockey and baseball, Pat Flanagan turned to friend Whipper Billy Watson to learn pro wrestling.

Watson got Flanagan to head to England, where The Whip also got started.

Flanagan wrestled there for years until the war intervened, and he returned home and enlisted in the Royal Canadian Air Force.

After the war, his career picked up.

‘The Fighting Irishman’ often teamed with Watson against the evil Kalmikoff Brothers.

Legend has it that he began wrestling under his real name, but upon arriving on Ireland’s shores, was informed that name wouldn’t fly with the locals. The name Pat Flanagan was taken from a neighborhood pub.

Always a hero, Flanagan was a master of the mule kick and hit his peak in the late fifties.

After retiring from wrestling, he did some refereeing and was a commentator for wrestling shows originating from Hamilton and Kitchener, Ontario. Overall, he was in wrestling for almost 40 years.

He passed away on March 28, 1985 at 68 after a lengthy illness.


Memories


Pat Flanagan was my uncle … He was a fighter to the end.
Lynn

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