The following article was featured in a blog I started called Afterthoughts. I was really busy at the time, and let the blog go to seed, so I am planning on resurrecting a few of those article for KUDZOO. This is the first one, written about four years ago. -MBS
Today I decided to re-launch an ongoing series of tributes to
some of my favorite professional wrestlers (ie; “Rasslers”) who played a part
in my life during the seventies and eighties. If you read my book, Prisoner of
Southern Rock, you know that there were a number of years where me and my
and theatre performed by the likes of Ric Flair, Andre The
Giant and Blackjack Mulligan. I’ll be dropping one of these in ever so often
just for fun. Let’s begin with one of the best. The “American Dream,” Dusty
Rhodes.
friend “The Weasel” went to Greenville Memorial Auditorium every Monday night
to watch Mid-Atlantic Championship Wrestling and experience the bizarre hybrid
of sports
I was fortunate enough to catch Rhodes in matches countless
times at the old Greenville [SC] Memorial Auditorium (and a few times in
Spartanburg) and every event was a show stopper. And then there were the
numerous appearances on the Mid-Atlantic Championship Wrestling TV show every
Saturday afternoon.
I had a several chances to speak with Dusty over the years,
and have always found him to be a genuine and downright nice guy.
Rhodes was born Virgil Riley Runnels, Jr. in Austin, Texas
on October 12, 1945. During the peak years of his career, which began in 1968,
Rhodes weighed in at 302 pounds and stood 6’ 2.”
Dusty is a 3-time NWA World Champion and has also won the
NWA Georgia Heavyweight Championship once, the NWA Florida Heavyweight
Championship ten times, the NWA Southern Heavyweight Championship (Florida
version) seven times and the NWA National Heavyweight Championship one time. He
has also won many other championships during his wrestling career. He is a
member of the WCW and WWE.
Rhodes began his illustrious career as a heel [a bad guy,] tag teaming
with fellow Texan Dick Murdoch to form the tag team The Texas Outlaws in the
American Wrestling Association.
In 1974, Rhodes turned solo star after turning on tag team
partner Pak Song and manager
Soon he began wrestling with Jim Crockett Promotions in the
Mid-Atlantic area, the forerunner of World Championship Wrestling (WCW). Here,
he formed a team with Manny Fernandez. He also teamed with Magnum T.A. as
"America's Team," fighting the Four Horsemen in 1985. They were one
of the more dominant tag teams in the promotion until 1986, when Magnum's
career was ended in a car wreck. Subsequently, he teamed with Nikita Koloff as
The Super Powers. Rhodes was a World Six-Man Tag Team Champion with the Road
Warriors.
In Greenville, Rhodes was involved in several memorable
feuds over the years, including an outstanding series of matches against
Blackjack Mulligan, and some serious contests against Harley Race, "Superstar" Billy
Graham, "Crippler" Ray Stevens and especially “Nature Boy” Ric Flair.
I was front and center for a few of those blood-lettings and I can honestly
say, Rhodes vs. Flair was one of the most entertaining cards I ever witnessed.
After years as a superstar in the Mid-Atlantic, Rhodes
continued his career with the WWF where he left in January 1991, marking the
end of Dusty Rhodes' career as a full-time in-ring competitor.
Rhodes soon returned to WCW as a member of WCW's booking
committee and later joined the broadcast team. Then in 1994, Rhodes returned to
the ring to team up with his son Dustin along with The Nasty Boys versus Arn
Anderson, Terry Funk, Bunkhouse Buck, and Col. Rob Parker.
He eventually left WCW and went to ECW before returning once more to WCW and re-igniting
his feud with Ric Flair.
For several years, Rhodes operated Turnbuckle Championship
Wrestling, a small Georgia-based promotion, featuring wrestlers trained by
himself alongside veterans such as Steve Corino.
In 2005, Rhodes signed a WWE Legends deal and was brought
onto the Creative Team as a creative consultant. Dusty was inducted into the
WWE Hall of Fame on March 31, 2007 by his two sons, Dustin and Cody. He also
works as a backstage booker and producer on the FCW brand. He is one of six men
inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame, the WCW Hall of Fame, the Professional
Wrestling Hall of Fame and the Wrestling Observer Newsletter Hall of Fame.
- Michael Buffalo Smith
Rhodes died from complications brought on by stomach cancer, June 11, 2015.
- Michael Buffalo Smith
Rhodes died from complications brought on by stomach cancer, June 11, 2015.
No comments:
Post a Comment