Life is a Highway

Life is a Highway
Source: GeoCaching.com
Showing posts with label WCW Classic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WCW Classic. Show all posts

Sunday, August 4, 2019

The Hannibal TV: 'Lex Luger on his Friendship With Sting'


Source:The Hannibal TV- in the 1980s and 90s, Lex Luger was The Total Package in the WCW.

"Lex Luger on his Friendship with Sting

Multiple Time World Champion and former WWE, WCW and WBF Superstar "The Total Package" Lex Luger talks about how his longtime friendship with Sting got started despite Lex being rude to the Stinger at first." 


I can't imagine a pro wrestler who had a better and more accurate nickname to describe himself as a pro wrestler, then Lex Luger. Here's a man who was 6'5, 275-280 pounds, with 4-5% body fat, who was very quick and athletic. I mean who looked like one of those great NFL pass rushing defensive ends, where like every offensive tackle is either too slow, or not strong enough to block him. Similar to let's say Howie Long with the Los Angeles Raiders. 

Lex Luger was The Total Package for about 5 years in the late 80s, early 90s in World Championship Wrestling, because of the physical qualities that I just laid out. And it's just a damn shame as far what has happened to him since where now he just looks like a normal tall man on the street, because of all the weight and muscle that he lost.

Saturday, February 2, 2013

WWE Fan Nation: WCW 1992- World TV Championship- Steve Austin vs Barry Windham


Source:WWE- Steve Austin vs Barry Windham in 1992.

"Barry Windham defends the World TV Title against "Stunning" Steve Austin who happens to have Paul E. Dangerously in his corner." 

From WWE

Cheating to win in clean site with the referee of course not aware of what's going on. Something I don't like about pro wrestling, especially when the wrestlers are good enough to beat each other. Steve Austin was never as good of a pro wrestler as Barry Windham (but almost no one else was back in the 1980s and 90s) but he was big and strong enough to even beat a man who was as big, strong, athletic, quick, and as great as a mat wrestler as Barry Windham.

Friday, November 30, 2012

Monsoon Classic: WCW 1986- US Title Magnum TA vs Nikita Koloff Worldwide: 8/23/1986


Source:Monsoon Classic- Magnum TA facing Nikita Koloff for the WCW United States Heavyweight Championship, in 1986.

"US Title Magnum TA vs Nikita Koloff Worldwide Aug 23rd, 1986" 

From Monsoon Classic

Here are two wrestlers who could wrestle all night because they were both all muscle and always in great shape. Nikita Koloff was 6'4 or 6'5, 275-280 pounds and Magnum TA was maybe 6'3, 250 pounds, so Nikita was obviously, the bigger stronger man. But Magnum was big and strong enough to beat someone with the size and strength of Nikita Koloff.

Sunday, July 8, 2012

WCW: 'Ric Flair & The 4 Horseman'

Source:Amazon- WCW's original 4 Horseman.

"One of the first, and coolest, factions in sports-entertainment was the Four Horsemen. This stable was a powerful group that ran roughshod over WCW and lasted for the better part of a decade with its various members, including 16-time World Champion Ric Flair. The constant among the Four Horsemen, the "Nature Boy" was joined by other members such as Arn Anderson, Ole Anderson, Tully Blanchard, Barry Windham, Sting, Lex Luger, Brian Pillman, Chris Benoit, Dean Malenko, and more. This release covers the creation of the Horsemen, with interviews from many of the superstars that were part of it, as well as highlights and complete matches." 

From Amazon 

"Originally formed over thirty five years ago, the Four Horsemen are still considered within the
professional wrestling industry to be the measuring stick as far as stables are concerned. Coming into existence in Jim Crocket promotions in 1985, the original Horsemen lineup consisted of
Ric Flair, Tully Blanchard and Ole and Arn Anderson, AKA the Minnesota Wrecking Crew... 

Source:Cultaholic Wrestling- the original WCW 4 Horseman.

From Cultaholic Wrestling 

I guess I look at World Championship Wrestling's 4 Horseman the way I look at the Pittsburgh Steelers Steel Curtain defense or the Showtime Los Angeles Lakers, or Phil Chicago Bulls from the early 1990s.. I'm interested in the original group. 

There's the old sayings in Hollywood that the original is always better than the sequel, or there will never be another original. Well, by the late 1980s the 4 Horseman in the WCW were no longer the Horseman. Ric Flair was mostly doing his own thing and settling his own scores with Ron Garvin, Ricky Steamboat, and Terry Funk personally. Arn Anderson and Tully Blanchard were in the WWE. Barry Windham and Lex Lugar were never really full-time members of this new group anyway. The 4 Horseman were almost out of business all together, at least as a group until they short of came back briefly as a group in the mid 1990s. 

When I think of the 4 Horseman, it's Ric Flair, Arn Anderson, Tully Blanchard, and Ollie Anderson. If Arn and Tully weren't part of the Horseman, they would be world heavyweight championship contenders themselves. They weren't the 4 best wrestlers in the WCW, but if they were all wrestling singles full-time, Ric, Arn, and Tully, would all be top 10 contenders for the WCW World Heavyweight Championship. They were the best of the best in the WCW. 

The Horseman weren't just 4 friends, 5 friends if you include James Dillon their manager. This was a partnership whose job was to watch the back of each other and to make sure that all of their members were always taken care of. They were the originally bad boys of pro sports who were so good at being bad and eliminating the competition, that if you didn't have to like them as a group and individually, you at least had to respect them and be fans of them, even if you always rooted for any of them to loose, regardless of who they were wrestling. 

The guys after the fab 4 of the Horseman, were guys who were probably fans and admirers of the Horseman who wanted to be part of the elite wrestling, but other than Lex Lugar, Barry Windham, and Sting, were never good enough to be full-time members of the group. Paul Roma, Dean Millenko, and unfortunately many other WCW wrestlers who were never in the league of the Horseman, but were part-time members anyway.  

I think the Horseman went out of business in the 1990s because they were all getting older and perhaps their party lifestyles caught up with them, but also because the WCW was getting bigger and better, with more and better competition. But from about 1985-89, the 4 Horseman represented the best of the WCW.