The Ultimate Warrior has died aged 54, WWE confirms
The Ultimate Warrior has died aged 54, WWE confirms
Early life
Warrior was born in 1959 as James Brian Hellwig, in Crawfordsville (Indiana, US). He was the oldest of five children and was raised by his mother (along with, later, his stepfather) after his father left his family when James was 12. The family moved to Indiana. James spent a year at Indiana State University.
Bodybuilding career
Prior to his career in professional wrestling Hellwig was an amateur bodybuilder,[6] competing in a number of NPC contests and winning the 1984 NPC Mr. Georgia crown.[7] Hellwig started training with weights when he was 11 years old and has described himself as "the small, insecure kid who wasn't into any sports".[6] He moved to California where, after seeing bodybuilder Robby Robinson, he decided to take up the sport. His first contest took place in Florida where he placed 5th. Later, while he was attending Life University in Marietta, Georgia, he won the Junior Atlanta contest and placed 5th at the 1981 AAU Collegiate Mr. America. In 1983, he won the AAU Coastal USA, before taking the Mr. Georgia title the following year. His last bodybuilding contest was 1985's Junior USAs, which was won by future IFBB Pro, Ron Love. Hellwig finished 5th.[8]
In 1985, after spending six weeks in California training for a bodybuilding contest, he was invited to join a group of bodybuilders – Garland Donoho, Mark Miller, andSteve "Flash" Borden – who were attempting to make the transition into professional wrestling. Warrior accepted the invitation and abandoned his bodybuilding career and his plans to become a chiropractor.[9]
Professional wrestling career
Early career (1985–86)
Main article: Blade Runners
Hellwig began his professional wrestling career as Jim "Justice" Hellwig of Powerteam USA, the group of bodybuilders trained by Red Bastien and Rick Bassman.[10]
Later, they wrestled as The Freedom Fighters (Hellwig was known as Justice and Borden was called Flash) in Memphis' Continental Wrestling Association under manager Dutch Mantel. Hellwig and Steve Borden, who would later go on to success as "Sting", formed a tag team known as the Blade Runners, with Hellwig changing his ring name to "Blade Runner Rock" and Borden changing his name to "Blade Runner Flash". Debuting in the Memphis, Tennessee-based Continental Wrestling Association (CWA) promotion, run by Jerry Jarrett, the team played baby faces at first, but fans were actually slow to take to the hulking duo in a territory that had featured sympathetic "good guy tag teams" like the Rock 'n' Roll Express and The Fabulous Ones. They were quickly turned heel as The Blade Runners. The Blade Runners went on to wrestle for the Mid-South Wrestling promotion, which became the Universal Wrestling Federation (UWF) in 1986. They were part ofEddie Gilbert's Hotstuff International group, before disbanding in 1986 when Hellwig left the UWF.[11]
Years later in a TNA interview when Steve Borden (Sting) was asked about teaming with Hellwig, Borden referred to the relationship with Hellwig as being a "tense year, and when we parted ways it wasn't a friendly part".[citation needed]
World Class Championship Wrestling (1986–87)
In 1986, Warrior debuted in the Dallas, Texas-based World Class Championship Wrestling (WCCW) promotion, where he wrestled for $50 a night. He has stated that he adopted the ring name "Dingo Warrior" after a member of the WCCW locker room remarked that he looked like "a warrior".[9] Warrior formed a tag team withLance Von Erich, and the duo began competing for the WCWA World Tag Team Championship. On November 17, 1986, Warrior and Von Erich defeated Master Gee(substituting for champion Buzz Sawyer) and Matt Borne to win the title. They held the Championship until December 1 of that year, when they lost to Al Madril andBrian Adias.[12]
In 1987, Warrior began competing for the WCWA Texas Heavyweight Championship, losing to Bob Bradley in a tournament final on January 12. He won the title from Bradley on February 2 of that year. The title was held up in April 1987 after Warrior left the WCCW. He was reinstated as champion upon returning, but vacated it once more upon resigning from WCCW to join the World Wrestling Federation, where he adopted the ring name Ultimate Warrior.[13] Warrior began appearing on house shows in June and was initially billed as The Dingo Warrior in house card promos by Gene Okerlund, but soon had his name modified. There is dispute over who created the Ultimate Warrior name. Bruce Prichard stated that Vince McMahon did not know what a "Dingo" Warrior would be, but because there was the "Modern Day Warrior" Kerry von Erich and the Road Warriors there should not be one more simple warrior, but The Ultimate Warrior.[14] Warrior claims after one of his first matches, McMahon had him do a pretaped promo. It was there Vince said we want you to do Warrior, but we don't want Dingo. The Warrior then proceeded to cut the promo and stated that he was not this warrior or that warrior, he was The Ultimate Warrior.[15]
In the late 1980s, while Warrior was still wrestling in Texas, he appeared in several TV ads for Westway Ford, a car dealership in Irving, Texas. Warrior interacted in full wrestling costume with Westway's wacky character, "Mean Joe Greed."[16][17]
World Wrestling Federation (1987–91)
Debut and early push (1987–88)
Hellwig joined the World Wrestling Federation (WWF) in June 1987. First competing on house shows under his Dingo Warrior moniker, he defeated the likes of Steve Lombardi, Barry Horowitz and Iron Mike Sharpe. He made his television debut as The Ultimate Warrior on the October 25, 1987 airing of WWF Wrestling Challenge, where he defeated Terry Gibbs.[18] The Ultimate Warrior was known for his high-energy ring entrances, which featured him racing into the arena at full speed, bursting into the ring, and violently shaking the ropes up and down. He was also known for his distinctive pattern of face paint. After several months of impressively defeating enhancement talent, he suffered his first pinfall loss in the WWF to fellow WWF rookie/future rival Rick Rude on December 28, 1987.[19] In early 1988 Warrior entered into his first real WWF feud, with fellow strongman Hercules Hernandez. The two faced off on the February 7, 1988 airing of Wrestling Challenge, where Hercules was disqualified for using his steel chain. Warrior then grabbed a hold of the chain and in the midst of a tug of war over it, snapped it.[19]This led to a match at WrestleMania IV, where Warrior was victorious in his pay-per-view debut.[19] However, the Warrior did suffer two pinfall losses shortly thereafter: a clean pinfall loss to André the Giant in April in Italy, and another to Dino Bravo in Montreal in June (although Bravo had his feet on the ropes for leverage).[citation needed]
Intercontinental Championship reigns (1988–90)
Less than a year after his WWF television debut, Warrior won the prestigious Intercontinental Championship, defeating The Honky Tonk Man in 27 seconds at the first ever SummerSlam on August 29, 1988.[19] As champion, he captained a team at Survivor Series '88, where he was the sole survivor, pinning Outlaw Ron Bassand Greg Valentine in succession to win the match for his team.[19]
As 1989 began, Warrior entered a feud with Ravishing Rick Rude over the Intercontinental title. The feud was sparked at the 1989 Royal Rumble, where the two met in a "super posedown." After Warrior predictably had the support of the live crowd in their judging of the contest, Rude attacked Warrior and choked him with a steel bar. This led to a championship match at WrestleMania V, where Rude pinned Warrior to win the title with the help of his manager Bobby "The Brain" Heenan, who held down Warrior's foot from outside the ring as he was being pinned.[20] At SummerSlam '89, Warrior defeated Rude to regain the title and become a two-time champion.[20] Warrior then began a feud with André the Giant, leading to a number of matches on house shows where Warrior pinned the massive giant in a matter of seconds, firmly establishing Warrior as a main event level talent. The feud culminated at Survivor Series '89 where the two captained opposing teams. Warrior quickly eliminated André by knocking him out of the ring, where he was counted out. Warrior would go on to once again be the sole survivor, pinning Arn Andersonand Bobby Heenan to win the match.[20]
WWF Champion (1990–91)
The Warrior was heralded as the wrestler to become the biggest star of the 1990s, and the successor to Hulk Hogan, who had remained wrestling's biggest star throughout the 1980s. Following a few confrontations with Hogan, most notably at the 1990 Royal Rumble, the Warrior was written in as Hogan's opponent in the main event for WrestleMania VI at the SkyDome in Toronto, Ontario. The match was billed as "The Ultimate Challenge", as both Hogan's WWF Championship and Warrior's Intercontinental Championship were on the line. Warrior pinned Hogan after a Warrior Splash to become the first, and as of 2013, only wrestler to hold the WWF Intercontinental and World Championships simultaneously.[21] Warrior vacated the Intercontinental title, as WWF rules at the time prohibited a wrestler from holding both singles titles.[22]
After WrestleMania, Warrior successfully defended the championship against the likes of Haku, Mr. Perfect and Ted DiBiase. At SummerSlam '90, he retained the title over his old nemesis Rick Rude in a steel cage match.[21] "Macho Man" Randy Savage was also introduced as a potential rival after interfering in a Saturday Night's Main Event title match at the behest of DiBiase.[citation needed]
Warrior was inserted into the feud between The Legion of Doom and Demolition, leading to victories for the Warrior and LOD in six-man tag team matches on numerous house shows as well as the July 28, 1990 airing of Saturday Night's Main Event. The feud culminated at Survivor Series, where The Warriors (Ultimate Warrior, LOD and Kerry Von Erich) defeated The Perfect Team (Mr. Perfect and Demolition). For the third consecutive year, Warrior was the sole survivor for his team. He would go on to survive the "Grand Finale Match of Survival" with Hulk Hogan.[21]
In January 1991, Warrior faced Sgt. Slaughter at the Royal Rumble. Slaughter's gimmick at the time was a traitor who had betrayed America by aligning himself with an Iraqi (kayfabe) military general, General Adnan. In the context of the Gulf War, this made Slaughter one of the most hated heels at the time. After rejecting an earlier request to grant a title shot to Savage, Sensational Sherri interjected herself in the Warrior's championship match to distract him. Her interference eventually led to a Savage sneak attack where he struck Warrior over the head with a metal scepter, and Slaughter pinned Warrior to win the title.[11][23][24] Warrior would go on to feud with Savage, and the rivalry culminated in a 'Career Ending' match at WrestleMania VII with the Warrior victorious, forcing Savage to retire.[25]
Various feuds (1991)
The next chapter of Warrior's career was an encounter with The Undertaker, after Undertaker and his manager, Paul Bearer, locked Warrior in a coffin on the set of Bearer's Funeral Parlor. WWF officials worked feverishly to break the casket open, finally revealing Warrior's seemingly lifeless body, and the torn fabric inside of the coffin indicating Warrior's desperate struggle to get out. Warrior was finally revived by the officials performing CPR. This led to Jake "The Snake" Roberts offering to give Warrior "the knowledge of the dark side" in order to prepare Warrior to take his revenge on the Undertaker. This involved Roberts giving Warrior three "tests" shown on WWF TV in consecutive weeks. For the first test, Roberts locked Warrior inside of a coffin for a second time.[26]
For the second test, Warrior was "buried alive" by Roberts. For the third test, the Warrior entered a room full of snakes, to find "the answer" in a chest in the middle of the room. Waiting inside the chest was a Spitting Cobra, which bit Warrior in the face. As Warrior weakened from the effects of the cobra's strike, Roberts made a heel turn and was joined by the Undertaker and Paul Bearer, revealing the three were working together all along. Roberts then uttered, "Never trust a snake."[26] The stage was now set for a feud between the Warrior and Roberts. The feud never took place, as Warrior was involved in an alleged pay dispute with WWF owner Vince McMahon over the SummerSlam main event, where Warrior was teamed with Hulk Hogan in a handicap match against Sgt. Slaughter, Colonel Mustafa, and General Adnan.[27]
1991 departure
On July 10, 1991, Warrior sent a letter to Vince McMahon requesting what was to be included in Warrior's new WWF contract. Warrior requested $550,000 for performing at WrestleMania VII as well as a guaranteed number of working days, travel accommodations, and a higher percentage of merchandise sales. In particular, Warrior remarked that the $550,000 figure "was not fair," and that "(Warrior) meant as much or more to the show than Hulk." Warrior ended his letter by stating, "Whatever your decision, I can and will live with it. Till then I remain home with one who cares."[28][29]
The WWF responded on July 13, 1991 and stated that he would be paid $550,000 for WrestleMania VII, he would receive a higher royalty rate and no other WWF performer would be paid more than him on WWF pay per views. Vince McMahon personally ended the letter by saying, "I would like to express my deepest appreciation and admiration for you as a performer, as a member of the WWF family, as a man, and as my friend."[30][31]
Following WWF's annual SummerSlam event, Warrior was handed a letter dated August 26, 1991 from Vince McMahon stating that Warrior would be suspended effective immediately. Among other things, Vince stated, "you threatened to 'stay at home' thereby not even appearing at Titan's major summer pay-per-view eventSummerSlam. I had no choice but to accede to your exorbitant demands. This was a serious mistake on your part." Vince later testified that the only reason the company agreed to the contract was to "acquiesce to his demands temporarily" to ensure Warrior would perform at the SummerSlam event.[32][33]
Upon receiving the letter, Warrior refused the suspension and left the WWF. Warrior formally sent a letter of resignation to the WWF in October 1991. The WWF refused to accept the letter since Warrior was under contract until September 1992.[34]
Return to the WWF (1992)
With Hulk Hogan about to leave WWF in mid-1992, McMahon contacted Warrior about returning. He made his comeback at WrestleMania VIII (to rescue Hulk Hogan from a beat down at the hands of Sid Justice and Papa Shango). Upon his return, he received a degree of creative control over his bookings. One storyline involved Papa Shango, a "witch doctor," casting a spell over Warrior, causing him to convulse and vomit in very odd colors, though Warrior says he hated that story and had no control over it.[11] The Warrior was booked for a WWF Championship match against then-champion, "Macho Man" Randy Savage at SummerSlam in August 1992. The Warrior would win the match by count-out but not the title.
In November 1992, Warrior was scheduled to be the tag team partner of Savage, to be known as the Ultimate Maniacs to face Ric Flair and Razor Ramon at Survivor Series. Weeks before the event, Warrior was released for disputed reasons.[35] In his book Sex, Lies and Headlocks, ESPN writer Shaun Assael stated that Canadian chemist Mauro Di Pasquale nailed Warrior for steroid use in September and was able to successfully persuade McMahon, who was under federal scrutiny at the time for allegations of illegally supplying steroids to some of his wrestlers, to release Warrior from the company.[36]
Semi-retirement (1992–96)
Between November 1992 and July 1995, Warrior was semi-retired. During his time away from the WWF, Warrior opened the short-lived "Warrior University", aprofessional wrestling school based in Scottsdale, Arizona.[citation needed]
In December 1992, he wrestled as the Dingo Warrior against Hercules Hernandez in Billerica, Massachusetts, for Killer Kowalski's International Wrestling Federation.[citation needed]
In 1993, Hellwig played the role of "the swordsman" in the action movie Firepower.[37]
In March 1995, World Championship Wrestling (WCW) introduced The Renegade as Hulk Hogan and Randy Savage's "ultimate weapon", using ring attire and mannerisms that closely resembled Warrior's.[38]
In July 1995, he returned to the ring for the National Wrestling Conference (NWC) promotion in Las Vegas, defeating The Honky Tonk Man. He had also wrestled a tour of Europe for Otto Wanz's Catch Wrestling Association (CWA) promotion.[citation needed]
Return to the WWF (1996)
Warrior returned to the WWF in March 31, 1996, defeating Hunter Hearst Helmsley at WrestleMania XII.[1] He made his first appearance on Monday Night Raw on April 8, where he gave an in-ring interview and credited the "voices" of the "warriors" (his name for members of the WWF audience) for his return; he was then interrupted by Goldust.[citation needed] Warrior challenged for Goldust's Intercontinental Championship at In Your House 7; Warrior won the match by countout, but did not win the title.[1] The following night on Monday Night Raw, Warrior defeated Isaac Yankem.[1] A rematch with Intercontinental Champion Goldust, on the May 27 edition of the show, ended in a double countout.[1] Warrior defeated Jerry Lawler at the King of the Ring,[1] and defeated Owen Hart by disqualification on the July 8 edition of Monday Night Raw.[1] Soon, events would lead to Warrior's firing from the WWF.[1]
Warrior was scheduled to team with Shawn Michaels and Ahmed Johnson to face Owen Hart, Davey Boy Smith, and Vader at In Your House 9 later that month, but the WWF terminated Warrior's contract when he took time off allegedly to grieve the death of his father. WWF owner Vince McMahon claimed that Warrior had not seen his father in ten years and did not care much for him; therefore, he did not take Warrior's excuse for missing bookings at face value. Warrior disputes McMahon's explanation, claiming that the real reason why he no showed those events was a breach of contract by McMahon, in which WWF sold Warrior's merchandise without giving him a percentage. He was replaced by Sycho Sid at In Your House 9.[citation needed]
World Championship Wrestling (1998)
WCW signed Warrior in 1998 and gave him a degree of creative control over his matches.[39] He created a storyline where he formed a stable opposing Hollywood Hulk Hogan's New World Order: the "One Warrior Nation." The acronym oWn (One Warrior Nation) was a play on the name nWo. Highlights of the storyline included Warrior kidnapping and "converting" The Disciple and frequent instances of "magic smoke" knocking out all of the nWo members except for Hollywood Hogan and covering Warrior's movement through a trapdoor in the ring. The Trapdoor was responsible for nearly paralyzing the wrestler Davey Boy Smith, when he awkwardly fell on it during a match at Fall Brawl 98.[40]
Warrior only participated in four matches in WCW. The first was the War Games match at Fall Brawl, where he competed as a member of Team WCW, competing against 8 other wrestlers for a shot at Goldberg's WCW World Heavyweight Championship at Halloween Havoc. Diamond Dallas Page won the match by pinningStevie Ray. On WCW Monday Nitro the next night when he faced Jim "The Anvil" Neidhart. On WCW Monday Nitro, he teamed with Sting to defeat Hogan and Bret Hart by disqualification, a match in which he had little participation; he was tagged in for a short exchange with Hart, then singlehandedly chased several nWo members down the entry way, whipping them with Hogan's belt. The third was his loss to Hogan at Halloween Havoc, in what is considered by Eric Bischoff to be one of the worst main event pay-per-view wrestling matches ever.[41] In the Halloween Havoc match, the timing of the maneuvers and hits was poor; an arm injury that Warrior received at WarGames further slowed the action. An attempt to "blind" Warrior with a fireball backfired when Hogan faced complications igniting a piece of flash paper, causing the fire to go up in Hogan's face instead. The match came to an end when Horace Hogan hit Warrior in the back with a chair while Eric Bischoff had referee Nick Patrick distracted. Hogan then scored the pinfall.[citation needed]
WCW claimed that attempts were made to save the storyline though Warrior has claimed in interviews and convention appearances that the only reason he was brought back was so Hogan could get a win over Warrior in return for Hogan's WrestleMania job. Warrior's last appearance in WCW was on the November 9, 1998 edition of Nitro, when he came to the rescue of The Disciple who was being attacked by members of nWo. Warrior announced his retirement the following year.[citation needed]
Nu-Wrestling Evolution (2008)
After retiring in 1998, Warrior only wrestled one match after that in 2008, against Orlando Jordan in Barcelona, Spain.[42] Warrior won the match and thus the Nu-Wrestling Evolution heavyweight championship, but then immediately vacated the title.[43][44]
Return to WWE, Hall of Fame induction (2014)
On July 15, 2013, Warrior was featured in a WWE 2K14 game trailer and revealed he was in the roster as a pre-order bonus.[45]
On April 5, 2014, the Ultimate Warrior was inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame Class of 2014.[46] The next day, Warrior appeared at WrestleMania XXX, and the following night on April 7 he delivered a promo on Raw, his first appearance on the show since 1996 where he gave a speech in character as the Ultimate Warrior. He died less than 24 hours after his Raw appearance.[47]
Personal life
Warrior married Shari Lynn Tyree on October 2, 1982. The couple met in Dallas, Texas at the famous Million Dollar Saloon strip club where Shari was working at the time.[48] They remained together for the majority of Warrior's WWF career before divorcing on March 22, 1991, two days before WrestleMania VII.[49] Warrior married for the second time in 2000 to Dana. Together they have two daughters: Indiana Marin "Indy" Warrior (born 2000) and Mattigan Twain Warrior (born December 16, 2002).[citation needed]
Trademark and libel litigation
In 1993, Hellwig legally changed his name to the mononym Warrior.[50][51] This one-word name appears on all legal documents pertaining to Warrior, and his children carry the Warrior name as their legal surname.[citation needed]
Warrior and the WWF engaged in a series of lawsuits and legal actions in 1996 and 1998,[52] where both parties sought a declaration that they owned the characters, Warrior and Ultimate Warrior, under both contract and copyright law. The court ruled that Warrior was legally entitled to use the gimmick, costuming, face paint designs, and mannerisms of the "Warrior" character.[3][53]
On September 27, 2005, WWE released a DVD documentary focusing on Warrior's retrospective wrestling career, titled The Self-Destruction of the Ultimate Warrior. The DVD featured clips of his more notable feuds and matches along with commentary from WWE stars past and present (most of which are unflattering), with Triple H (by this point one of WWE's top main eventers and the husband of Vince McMahon's daughter Stephanie McMahon) adding that his WrestleMania debut loss against Warrior at WrestleMania XII left him with mixed emotions, saying that Warrior "ruined the experience" for him and was "one of the most unprofessional guys" he's ever performed with.[54] The DVD has provoked some controversy due to Warrior's own allegations of libel by WWE against him. Originally, Warrior was asked to help with the production of the DVD, but as he refused to work with WWE (citing he did not want to be associated with their promotion), there has been some resulting animosity between Warrior and WWE over the Warrior claiming bias on the part of WWE.[55] In January 2006, Warrior filed another lawsuit against WWE in anArizona court over the depiction of his wrestling career in The Self-Destruction of the Ultimate Warrior DVD.[56] On September 18, 2009, Warrior's lawsuit in Arizona was dismissed.[57]
Motivational speaking
Warrior formally retired from wrestling in 1999 and had a short-lived career as a conservative speaker and commentator, partnering with conservative spokesman Daniel Pinheiro, denouncing left-wing politics. In one instance, he mentioned that "queering doesn't make the world work" during a speech at the University of Connecticut.[58] Warrior explained those comments on his website as meaning that the human race would die out if everyone were a homosexual.[3][59]
Writing
In May 1996, Warrior began publishing a comic book titled Warrior, featuring himself as the main character. The series was co-written with Jim Callahan and illustrated by the Sharp Brothers. The comic was canceled in early 1997.[citation needed]
Warrior maintained a blog on his personal website titled "Warrior's Machete", where he discussed his personal life, his personal views on politics, sexuality, patriotism, and his legacy as a wrestler, amongst other topics. There were numerous instances where Warrior used his blog to address his viewpoint on members of his wrestling past (Vince McMahon, Road Warrior Animal, The British Bulldog, Owen Hart, Hulk Hogan, Lex Luger);[60] historical (Martin Luther King, George Washington) or religious figures (Jesus).[61] Warrior depicted celebrities who were newsworthy at the time of his blog (Heath Ledger and Paris Hilton). Warrior occasionally referenced his respect for the Founding Fathers of the United States, and also enjoyed books like Homer's "Odyssey" and James Allen "As A Man Thinketh".[62][63] In 2012 he started selling "Weapons of Wisdom", inspirational 6×9 pieces of watercolor paper with drawings, quotes and doodles on them by the Warrior himself.[64] He also used the blog to post replies to letters from fans.[65]
Death
Warrior died on April 8, 2014. He had been inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame on April 5, appeared at WrestleMania XXX on April 6, and made his first Rawappearance in 18 years on April 7, one day before his death.[66] According to TMZ, Warrior collapsed at 5:50 p.m. (PDT) while walking to his car with his wife in Arizona outside of their hotel. He was rushed to the hospital where he was pronounced dead.[67]
During his final appearance on Raw and less than 24 hours before his death, Warrior gave a speech to the fans and wrestlers past and present as his Ultimate Warrior character. During the speech he said,[68]
No WWE talent becomes a legend on their own. Every man's heart one day beats its final beat. His lungs breathe their final breath. And if what that man did in his life makes the blood pulse through the body of others and makes them believe deeper in something larger than life then his essence, his spirit, will be immortalized. By the story tellers, by the loyalty, by the memory of those who honor him and make the running the man did live forever. You, you, you, you, you, you are the legend makers of Ultimate Warrior. In the back I see many potential legends. Some of them with warrior spirits. And you will do the same for them. You will decide if they lived with the passion and intensity. So much so that you will tell your stories and you will make them legends, as well. I am Ultimate Warrior. You are the Ultimate Warrior fans. And the spirit of the Ultimate Warrior will run forever!
News spread quickly through social media of Warrior's death. Jake Roberts, a fellow 2014 Hall of Fame inductee and former opponent in the ring, said that the two were able to finally put their past problems behind them. Roberts said "Deeply saddened. We just had a great talk & buried a senseless hatchet. Talked working together. RIP Warrior. Taking solace we made peace." Kevin Nash, another wrestler who has spent years publicly feuding with Warrior was also able to end their problems. Nash said "So happy I embraced Warrior with a hug when we saw each other backstage Saturday night. My heart goes out to his family. Always Believe."Hulk Hogan, one of Warrior's most hated rivals in and out of the ring said through his Twitter page "RIP WARRIOR. only love. HH"[69]
Legacy
Although Warrior's relationship with WWE has been strained at times,[70] more recently WWE has recognized him as one of the legends of the company.[71] WWE described him as being "As devastating and intense as any Superstar who stepped through the ropes...", further saying that "The Ultimate Warrior may be the most enigmatic man to ever hold the WWE Championship."[72] In a recent review of a fantasy match between John Cena and Warrior, the WWE described him as having been "One of the most recognizable Superstars in WWE history", and further spoke of his impact, describing how "The Ultimate Warrior brought Hulkamania to its knees on The Grandest Stage of Them All at WrestleMania VI, retired the Madness at WrestleMania VII and press slammed a slew of the greatest legends of his era."[73] In WWE All Stars, in which Ultimate Warrior appears as one of the Legends, WWE stated that he was the "ultimate archetype of strength and intensity," and further stated that "without question, the Ultimate Warrior has etched his name in the pantheon of WWE greats".[74]
Warrior appears in the Mattel Legends figures line in both Series 4 and Series 6. He was also chosen as one of six legends to be included in the Defining Momentsseries of action figures. Most recently he was one of a number of figures in the WWE Superstars line of Mattel action figures in an assortment called "World Champions". Warrior further appears as a playable legend in WWE All Stars and WWE Legends of WrestleMania. It was announced that The Ultimate Warrior would be in WWE 2K14. Warrior was inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame on April 5, 2014, the night before WrestleMania XXX.[46]
In wrestling
- Finishing moves
- Running splash,[1] usually preceded by a gorilla press drop[1]
- Signature moves
- Entrance themes
- World Class Championship Wrestling
- "Born To Be Wild" by Steppenwolf (1986)[citation needed]
- "The Warrior" by Scandal (1986–1987)[citation needed]
- World Wrestling Federation/Entertainment
- "Unstable" by Jim Johnston[75][76]
- World Championship Wrestling
- "One Warrior Nation"[citation needed]
- Nu-Wrestling Evolution
- World Class Championship Wrestling
Championships and accomplishments
- Nu-Wrestling Evolution
- NWE World Heavyweight Championship (1 time)[79]
- Pro Wrestling Illustrated
- PWI Comeback of the Year (1992)
- PWI Feud of the Year (1991) vs. The Undertaker
- PWI Match of the Year (1990) vs. Hulk Hogan at WrestleMania VI
- PWI ranked him #101 of the top 500 singles wrestlers of the "PWI Years" in 2003[80]
- World Wrestling Federation/WWE
- WWF Championship (1 time)[24]
- WWF Intercontinental Championship (2 times)[23]
- WWE Hall of Fame (Class of 2014)[46]
- World Wrestling Superstars
- WWS Heavyweight Championship (1 time)
- Wrestling Observer Newsletter awards
- Most Overrated (1989–1991)[81]
- Readers' Least Favorite Wrestler (1989–1990)[81]
- Worst Feud of the Year (1989) vs. André the Giant[81]
- Worst Feud of the Year (1992) vs. Papa Shango[81]
- Worst Feud of the Year (1998) vs. Hulk Hogan[81]
- Worst Worked Match of the Year (1989) vs. André the Giant on October 31[81]
- Worst Worked Match of the Year (1998) vs. Hulk Hogan at Halloween Havoc[81]
- Worst Wrestler (1988, 1998)[81]
The Ultimate Warrior has died aged 54, WWE confirms
This article is about a person who has recently died. Some information, such as the circumstances of the person's death and surrounding events, may change as more facts become known. |
The Ultimate Warrior | |
---|---|
Birth name | James Brian Hellwig |
Ring name(s) | Blade Runner Rock[1] Dingo Warrior[1] Jim "Justice" Hellwig [1] The Ultimate Warrior Warrior[1] |
Billed height | 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m) [1] |
Billed weight | 275 lb (125 kg) [1] |
Born | June 16, 1959 Crawfordsville, Indiana, U.S. |
Died | April 8, 2014 (aged 54) Arizona, U.S. |
Billed from | Parts Unknown (as The Ultimate Warrior) [1] Queens, New York (as The Dingo Warrior) |
Trained by | Bill Anderson Rick Bassman Red Bastien[1] |
Debut | November 28, 1985 |
Retired | November 1998 |
Warrior (born James Brian Hellwig;[2] June 16, 1959 – April 8, 2014), was an American professional wrestler, who most famously wrestled under the ring name The Ultimate Warrior. He was best known for his appearances in theWorld Wrestling Federation (now WWE) from 1987 to 1991 and again in 1992 and 1996, and in World Championship Wrestling (WCW) in 1998.
He was a 2-time WWF Intercontinental Champion and won the WWF Championship when he pinned Hulk Hogan in the main event of WrestleMania VI making him the only wrestler in the history of the company to hold both the WWF Championship and the Intercontinental Championship at the same time.[3] Hellwig legally changed his name to Warrior in 1993 which is also the last name of his wife and children. Warrior retired from professional wrestling in 1999 and embarked on a public speaking career.
Warrior died on April 8, 2014 at the age of 54, three days after being inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame and one day after reappearing on Monday Night Raw. He was described by WWE as having been "the ultimate archetype of strength and intensity",[4] and "one of the most intense and physically impressive competitors to ever appear in the WWE".[5]
It still has not really sunk in
ReplyDeleteR.I.P The Ultimate Warrior
ReplyDeleteThanks Rhonda :-)
ReplyDelete