{{Short description|American wrestler (1937–2023)}} {{Use mdy dates|date=October 2024}} {{Infobox professional wrestler |name = Kenny Jay |birthname = Kenneth John Benkowski |image =Kenny Jay.jpeg |names = Kenny Jay<ref name="journal">{{cite news |url=https://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4196/is_20031211/ai_n10932102 |title=These gifts make it a very Packer Christmas |accessdate=2007-04-29 |author=Mike Hart for the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel |date=December 11, 2003}} {{Dead link|date=September 2010|bot=RjwilmsiBot}}</ref> |height = {{height|feet=6|inch=3}} |weight = {{convert|275|lb|kg|abbr=on}} |birth_date = {{birth date|year=1937|month=3|day=27}} |birth_place = Holdingford, Minnesota, U.S. |death_date = February 2, 2023 (aged 85) |death_place = Bloomington, Minnesota<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.startribune.com/obituaries/detail/0000449405/ |title=Obituary: Kenneth John 'Kenny Jay' Benkowski |accessdate=2024-03-05 |author= |date=February 3, 2023}} </ref> |billed = Minnesota<br/>Cleveland, Ohio |trainer = Verne Gagne<br/>Bob Hawkins |debut = 1958 |retired = 2012 |}}

'''Kenneth John Benkowski''' (March 27, 1937 – February 2, 2023), better known by his ring name, '''Kenny "Sodbuster" Jay''', was an American professional wrestler, best known for his appearances with the American Wrestling Association.

Jay primarily performed as a jobber. He was often paired with fellow AWA jobber Jake "The Milkman" Milliman in tag team matches.<ref name="slam">{{cite web |url=http://slam.canoe.com/Slam/Wrestling/2005/04/02/980462.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150501102146/http://slam.canoe.com/Slam/Wrestling/2005/04/02/980462.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=May 1, 2015 |title=This time, Kenny Jay is on top |access-date=2007-04-29 |author=Canadian Online Explorer |author-link=Canadian Online Explorer |date=April 2, 2005 }}</ref> During his career, he was known for his stiff wrestling style.<ref name="slam"/>

==Early life== Kenny Jay was born on March 27, 1937, in Holdingford, Minnesota.<ref name="cauliflower"/> Kenny was a natural athlete in high school, lettering in both football and shot put. When he graduated from high school in 1955, he moved to Milwaukee, Wisconsin, where he found employment as a factory worker.<ref name="slam"/>

==Professional wrestling career==

===Early career; military service=== His first match was at the Southside Armory for John Hinds. Before long he was working larger venues at the Marigold Arena in Chicago. His wrestling career took a hiatus when he joined the U.S. Army for a two-year stint.<ref name="cauliflower">{{cite web |url=http://www.caulifloweralleyclub.org/2005Awards-KennyJay.html |title= CAC 2005 Honorees - Kenny Jay |accessdate=2007-04-29 |author=Cauliflower Alley Club |author-link=Cauliflower Alley Club |year=2005 |archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20070418135000/http://www.caulifloweralleyclub.org/2005Awards-KennyJay.html |archivedate = 2007-04-18}}</ref>

===American Wrestling Association (1962–1985, 1990)=== After his military tour, he found employment with the American Wrestling Association (AWA), wrestling every Saturday's television taping and then house shows during the week for promoter Wally Karbo.<ref name="cauliflower"/>

Whenever a new name would come in, they would give them to Jay to make them look good. He used his mat-based scientific wrestling style<ref name="wrestling">{{cite web |url=http://www.onlineworldofwrestling.com/profiles/k/kenny-jay.html |title=Online World of Wrestling Profiles: Kenny Jay |accessdate=2007-04-29 |author=onlineworldofwrestling.com}}</ref> with the likes of Mad Dog Vachon, The Crusher, Verne Gagne, Jesse The Body Ventura, Jerry Blackwell, Bobby Heenan, Mr. Saito, and Bruiser Brody.<ref name="slam"/>

To help pay the bills, Jay started his own landscape business, which is where he got the "Sodbuster" nickname.<ref name="slam"/> He never left the Midwest, as he was rooted in the area with his landscape business, wife, and three children.

{{quote|text = Kenny Jay is ''the best'' overall talent in wrestling. He was what we called a 'job guy' or 'jobber' but he could work with any human being and get a good match out of them. He would go in the ring with a big name who really couldn't do much and make him look good, and he could get in there with a Danny Hodge or Verne Gagne and make them look even better than they were. He was just an incredibly talented guy.|author=Harley Race<ref name="cauliflower"/>}}

Early career highlights included several overseas trips to Japan, beginning in 1972, where he worked 18 matches (including five cage matches), winning most of them.<ref name="cauliflower"/> Later in 1976 he took on Muhammad Ali in a boxer vs wrestler bout that also featured Verne Gagne as the Referee, a match Kenny Jay considered one of the high points of his career.

In the late 1970s Jay teamed with George Gadaski. In 1984 The Sodbuster also appeared as a tag-team partner with legendary wrestler Baron Von Raschke.<ref name="slam"/>

In 1985 he retired from wrestling. He came out of retirement in 1990.

Jay continued working for the AWA for nearly thirty years until they went out of business in 1991.<ref name="cauliflower"/>

===Later career (1990–2012)=== Jay later wrestled in North Premier Wrestling with J.B. Trask, Lenny Lane, Jerry Lynn, "Mr. Everything" Dan Jesser and his enemy the Texas Badman. Jay occasionally wrestled for several promotions in the 1990s and 2000s primarily appearing in the State of Minnesota. He wrestled his last match in 2012 at 75 years old.

In 2005 the Cauliflower Alley Club board of directors unanimously chose Kenny Jay to be honored.<ref name="cauliflower"/>

{{quote|text = Being the first jabroni to be honored by the Cauliflower Alley Club is real exciting. It's nice to be recognized by the boys.|author=Kenny Jay<ref name="cauliflower"/>}}

===Death=== On February 2, 2023, it was announced that Jay had died at the age of 85.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Walia |first1=Nikunj |title=Former AWA Star Kenny Jay Passes Away |url=https://www.ringsidenews.com/2023/02/02/former-awa-star-kenny-jay-passes-away/ |access-date=2 February 2023 |publisher=Ringside News |date=2 February 2023}}</ref>

==Championships and accomplishments== *'''American Wrestling Association Champion''' **Other honoree (2005)

==References== {{Reflist}}

==External links== *{{IMDb name|1267727|Kenny Jay}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Jay, Kenny}} Category:1937 births Category:2023 deaths Category:20th-century male professional wrestlers Category:20th-century American professional wrestlers Category:21st-century male professional wrestlers Category:21st-century American professional wrestlers Category:American male professional wrestlers Category:People from Stearns County, Minnesota Category:Professional wrestlers from Minnesota