I noticed someone gave a link to Tony Cecchine's website. I don't mean to contest the skill or ability of the turn of the century professional wrestlers, and nothing I am about to say is any solid proof, but I think everyone should take some things into consideration before spending hundreds of dollars on tapes that may have almost no historical validity. A couple of months ago Joe Rogan (Fear Factor Host and UFC Commentator) and his 150lb JiuJitsu instructor (Eddie Bravo) challenged Tony Cecchine via
www.mma.tv after they had some supposed evidence that Tony Cecchine was using a pseudonym to harass the two of them which included calling them homosexuals. Now, this in itself wasn't really important, but Joe Rogan contacted a few of Tony's ex students to dig up whatever dirt he could on Tony, along with a few who came forward, and many had some detremental things to say.
All thats really relevant to my point and this thread is that there were serious questions raised towards Tony Cecchine's cedentials. For example, he has claimed to be a Golden Gloves Champ on numerous occasions, but he can't produce a record of ever competing. The contents of his Lost Art of Hooking tape set (which I own, along with a couple of his other tapes) had dramatically different contents from a promotional video he made less than a year before. This timeframe also mirrored his change in advertising the system as a submission grappling style and something that could easily defeat and/or complement Brazilian JiuJitsu, Judo and Sambo. There is also a record of him buying Gokor Chivikian's (Sambo/Judo under Gene Lebell) Leg Lock tape set only three weeks before filming the leg lock section of his ten series tapes, in which he performs a completely identical 7 leg lock chain. Tony's tapes do have alot of exotic submission holds a couple leg lock set-ups and an extremely strong emphasis on top position that Brazilian JiuJitsu simply doesn't have, and I know a few people who have sucsessfully added a few of these into their Submission Grappling game.
It's still possible that Tony Cecchine and his former associate Matt Furey (who claims to have been a student of Farmer Burns who died in 1937 and Frank Gotch who disowned him after 6 months) are the two holders of this completely legitimate and historically accurate style of wrestling. But the evidence seems to point in the direction that Tony Cecchine is a decent wrestler who spent a few years with Lou Thez (who admitted to only competing in two matches that weren't worked in his entire career) and supplemented existing material from the numerous instructional tapes on contemporary grappling styles he bought in his name, to make himself marketable to people interested in Submission Grappling with with Western (In the LOAH intro Pankration to Lancashire Wrestling to American Catch Wrestling) orgins.
Pro Wrestling matches have been worked since the thirties and it is most likely that Catch Wrestling only survives in some of the submissions that Brazilian Jiu Jitsu adopted from it (such as the Americana lock) and Karl Gotch's influence on Japanese Pro Wrestling, which was also greatly influenced by Brazilian Jiujitsu and Judo. Now, I don't mean to call Tony Cecchine a fraud, but I don't think his tapes are means to validate a strong tradition of submission holds in the Western World.
This art is just as effective as Ju Jitsu.
It very well could be, but the only evidence for that is Catch Wrestlers claiming they dominated people at BJJ schools and BJJ practitioners claiming they dominated Catch Wrestlers who came to their school.