I'm not generally fond of the bigger bodybuilders. Their musculature is usually unbalanced. Overall proportion is sacrificed to size, and so often muscle mass is built atop bone structure that isn't large enough to properly support it; how often do we see massive arms, shoulders, and thighs paired with the daintiest of wrists, necks, calves and ankles.
But McCune's bone structure is ample support for the musculature. His ankles and calves and forearms are all proportionate with the rest of him; everything is as large as everything else is large. He's supple despite his bulk, and poses gracefully. And the architecture of his head and face seems perfectly suited to his size and proportions.
Very few of the "bodies beautiful" of the golden age of the "physique pictorial" have left any story of themselves behind; most exist only in the instant of the photographer's shutter release. But, rarely, one finds something more than a trace. Here is McCune's obituary in the Las Vegas Sun:
Tuesday, June 18, 2002 | 9:27 a.m.
Robert
E. "Bob" McCune, one of Las Vegas' top sports handicappers of the
1980s, who hosted seminars where his glib tongue and vast knowledge
convinced gamblers they could beat the odds, has died. He was 80.
McCune stressed money management and an understanding of probability in his teachings.
McCune,
who won the professional bodybuilding title of Mr. America 1949 and
competed several times for the world pro wrestling title in the 1950s,
died Friday at Havasu Nursing Center in Lake Havasu City, Ariz., where
he has lived since March.
There will be no local services for the
handicapper, who operated the Vegas Sports Information Center from 1981
through the 1990s. Lake Havasu Mortuary is handling the arrangements.
"Bob
was very knowledgeable in all areas of sports betting," said Howard
Schwartz, manager of the Gambler's Book Shop at 630 S. 11th St. "Because
he was never at a loss for words, he put on seminars that were well
attended by people who were entertained by what he had to say."
Schwartz
said McCune's books on betting are still available, including "Insights
into Sports Betting," "Revelations in Sports Betting" and "The Gambling
Times Guide to Sports Betting and Handicapping."
McCune was born
Dec. 11, 1921, in Amsterdam, New York, and early on became interested in
athletics, specifically track and field and youth hockey.
As the
sole member of the St. Mary's High School track team, McCune, at an
eight-team meet at Johnstown, N.Y., in 1939, competed in eight events.
He garnered five second-place finishes and two thirds, finishing third
in the overall team standings. That day, he put the shot, threw the
discus and javelin, did the long jump and ran four races, including the
100-yard dash in 10.1 seconds and the mile in 4:42.
In 1941,
McCune competed in the New York State Hockey Championships. He was
drafted by the New York Rangers but instead of pursuing a hockey career,
he enlisted in the Navy during World War II.
After the war,
McCune moved to San Francisco and, in 1946, opened the San Francisco
Bodybuilding Club gym while attending Stanford. After winning the Mr.
America title, McCune graced the covers of America's top bodybuilding
magazines, including "Strength and Health" and "Iron Man."
McCune
then turned to pro wrestling, where his rippled physique and good looks
made him a popular star on the circuit. Nine times he wrestled world
champion Lou Thesz, who also recently died, and earned three draws.
McCune wrestled 1,200 matches in eight years and retired from the sport
in 1958.
In the 1960s, McCune's charisma and gift of gab helped
make him the nation's top salesman for Encyclopedia Britannica's "Great
Books" series.
As a Las Vegas sports service operator selling
betting lines to bookies and selections to gamblers nationwide, McCune
wrote for gambling publications and penned his own sports betting
newsletter, "The Profit Line."
He urged the sports service
industry to clean up its act, telling less scrupulous operators they
were killing the business by making blatantly false claims -- such as
that their betting selections were winning at a rate of 80 percent and
higher -- to entice new and unwitting customers.
In 1983, McCune's
service won the United States Football League Handicapping
Championship. That same year, his company boasted a record of 198 wins
and 159 losses for pro basketball over-unders.
McCune is survived
by his brother, William McCune of Lake Havasu; two sisters, Kathleen
Robinson of Lake Pleasant, N.Y., and Maria Bell of St. Petersburg, Fla.;
and a stepson, Bruce Gray of the Netherlands.
He was preceded in death by his wife Maisie and a sister, Elizabeth Slade, both in December 1994.