Blog

By: AJ Vicens

Category: Panorama, People, Sports

Posted: December 31, 2009 9:41 AM

Remembering Steve Williams

Williams, SteveSteve Williams, a professional athlete from Denver who came to be known as "Dr. Death," passed away Tuesday at 49. The former Lakewood High School and University of Oklahoma star athlete and professional wrestler died of throat cancer. The Denver Post notes that Williams was a well-known pro wrestler in the 1980s and '90s who went by the name Dr. Death, a moniker he earned after donning a hockey goalie's mask to protect a broken nose during a wrestling match in Lakewood. Williams was a two-time, Colorado prep wrestling champion and went on to a stellar career at Oklahoma, eventually playing football under coach Barry Switzer in 1982. He was diagnosed with throat cancer in 2003 and given six months to live, although he survived for at least six more years. Earlier in 2009 he told the Post he'd been cancer-free since 2005, and friends were helping him fund an artificial voice box, which they presented to him at a wrestling event in the fall. Williams touched a lot of people over the course of his life, including officials still involved in Oklahoma wrestling. Current school wrestling coach Jack Spates tells the Associated Press Williams was "one of the greatest athletes that the University of Oklahoma has ever produced." The Oklahoman reports that Williams continued to pay homage to his alma mater by naming one of his finishing moves the "Oklahoma Stampede," and sometimes entered the ring to a modified version of the OU fight song, "Boomer Sooner." Photo courtesy Online World of Wrestling.

Facebook Comments Box

Denver Real Estate 2013 - Get In The Game

Here’s why it’s finally time to get back in the Denver real estate market.

Spin Cities

We’ve highlighted some of the best road cycling routes along the Front Range and in the high...

Risky Business

Colorado’s labor market has more than its share of occupational hazards.

Escape

Each year, more than 18,000 victims of domestic violence call SafeHouse Denver’s hot line. Meet...

Get Well

From obesity to food allergies, we break down five issues facing Colorado’s kids.