Part 1 of 3
For those of you who
may have been self-injurious enough to have checked out the first post I made
on my blog (“Greetings & Salutations” posted 5/14/15), you already know how
badly I misused my Facebook page when I first began posting things on it.
The Cliff Notes version of this account is
that I fired Facebook up sometime last summer, reached out to 3 – 4 friends,
didn’t bother connecting with anyone else and started posting 5 – 6 page
missives on things “near & dear” before a few old friends found me and
demonstrated through example how the damned thing is supposed to be used.
I was using it as a blog instead of the
dynamic medium for reconnecting (and staying connected) to people that it is
intended to be.
As a result, in the
recent past, I began moving most of those long-form musings that I originally
posted on Facebook to this very blog, which is where such things are right and
properly pastured.
However, another thing
I didn’t realize back during those early, ignorant days was that all of those
other articles and entries that I “liked” or commented on with Facebook were
often popping up on my friends’ pages too.
As a result, all of my “likes” and most of my comments were being
advertised for all of my friends to see.
That, in and of itself, was not such a bad thing.
The problem was that, during those early
days, many of the articles and posts I “liked” and commented on had to do with
a very guilty little pleasure of mine, one I had thought I was keeping
secret.
The long and the short of it was
that I was broadcasting my love and interest in the business of professional
wrestling for all of my Facebook friends to see.
You see, one of the
first things I discovered about Facebook (correctly, as luck would have it) was
that there are oh-so-many Facebook pages dedicated to professional wrestling
topics, many of them maintained by people who ran promotions or performed in the
ring themselves – so if you’re into professional wrestling, there are some
great sources of information for it on Facebook.
After “liking” one or two of those pages,
Facebook did what it does so well and kept directing more and more of those
types of pages to my attention.
As a
result, I spent a lot of my early time on Facebook “liking” and commenting away
on professional wrestling posts to my little heart’s content.
Little did I know that with each “like” and with
each comment, I was broadcasting my interest in professional wrestling to the
few Facebook friends I had at the time - people with whom I was very
self-conscious about how I came across.
Oh brother.
I’m amazed I didn’t end up getting
“unfriended” by at least a few of them.
You see, I’m very aware
of the disdain in which non-fans and folks who are not into “the business” hold
professional wrestling.
Hell, for most
of my life, I was one of those people.
So why do I like
professional wrestling so much at this late point in my life?
The truthful, if
somewhat surprising answer is: I
don’t.
I can’t stand to watch
a match these days. And while it would
be easy of me to chalk that up to the fact that pro wrestling is pretty much
dominated by one nationwide promotion these days (WWE, previously WWF, whose
brand of wrestling didn’t appeal to me much even back during its two “golden
ages”), the fact is that I don’t even enjoy watching the older matches all that
much. I’ll watch them out of historical curiosity,
or to get the low-down on a wrestler I’ve heard a lot about but haven’t seen in
action, but rare is the time when I actual “enjoy” watching a match for its own
aesthetic purposes.
So why do I spend so
much time paying attention to professional wrestling (as my older Facebook
friends witnessed first-hand)?
Because I’m fascinated
by the history of the business.
Professional wrestling
is a unique phenomenon in the landscape of human entertainment.
Nowhere have I ever seen a business where
theater and pageantry, cheap drama and outright pandering, has been so
deliberately blended with athletic endeavor to yield such a strange,
bewildering product.
It has its own
lingo, its own culture and own unique history.
How wrestling evolved over so many years from being a legitimate sport,
to being a sideshow attraction, to being an association of regional promotions
to, finally, becoming an international phenomenon able to fill world-class
arenas and capture millions of dollars in pay-per-view revenue is, to me, a
fascinating line of inquiry that one could easily spend a lifetime tracing and
studying.
Scholarly interest aside, I
also find that studying the history of wrestling is immensely entertaining –
much more entertaining, in my humble opinion, than the actual product presented
in the ring.
Don’t believe me?
Assuming you have a library card, go to your
local library and look up any book by any professional wrestler who lived,
breathed and worked at any time over the last thirty years.
Then actually read the damn thing.
Go ahead, you won’t be disappointed.
I don’t care if the wrestler you’re reading
about was a lifelong “jobber” (i.e. – someone who lost consistently in the ring
to make the “stars” look good) or a 16-time world heavyweight champion, I
guarantee he/she will have more than a few behind-the-scenes stories about
their wrestling days that will make you howl with laughter, or your jaw drop in
astonishment, or some combination thereof.
There are simply no stories more entertaining than “wrestling stories”,
which is why the writing, publishing and sale of books about wrestlers has
become a very lucrative side-industry in its own right.
So while at this point
in my life I feel confident characterizing myself as fairly well-informed and
knowledgeable about professional wrestling, I didn’t come by that knowledge the
way most people do (i.e. – by being a lifelong fan and witnessing the “sport”
firsthand over many years).
My “path to
knowledge”, so to speak, was forged via my interest in one man – a wrestler by
the name of Barry Windham.
To begin at the
beginning . . .
As most of my long-time
friends know, even though I was born in Pennsylvania, I spent the vast majority
of my early childhood growing up in the State of Florida.
We lived down there from approximately 1973
to 1983, give or take a few months in either year.
I was a one year-old when we took up
residence in what was then a small town called Fort Pierce, an old naval
outpost situated on the east coast of the state, approximately equal distance
between Daytona Beach and Miami.
Now
most of us nowadays naturally think of Florida as being a fairly populous,
urban and well-developed state.
However,
most of the growth in Florida has occurred rather rapidly over the last 20 – 30
years or so.
Back in the seventies,
Florida was still pretty much a “redneck” state.
Sure, Miami was well on its way to becoming
the sophisticated metro/cosmopolitan destination it is today, but that was a
relatively recent development by the time my family lived down there.
Much of the rest of the state, even the urban
centers, were far from cosmopolitan, and the vast majority of its population
would proudly consider themselves either “redneck fishermen” or “redneck
cowboys”, or both.
Other than for its
beaches and its citrus industry, Florida really wasn’t renowned for much of
anything on the national level until the Miami Dolphins suddenly became a force
in the NFL with the first and only undefeated championship season in 1972 (the
year before we moved there).
Other than
that, there really wasn’t much going on in the state as far as sports were
concerned.
The then-fledgling Tampa Bay Buccaneers
were birthed a few years later, and then very quickly made everyone wish they
hadn’t been as they rapidly set new marks for failure and futility.
The Miami Heat Basketball Team, the Florida
Marlins Baseball Team, The Tampa Bay Devil Rays Baseball Team, Tampa Bay
Lightning Hockey Team and the Jacksonville Jaguars Football Team were far in
the future and the prospects for such teams were just simply not on anyone’s
horizons back in those days.
Even the
University of Miami’s college football team, the championship-laden Miami
Hurricanes, had yet to rise to national prominence in those days, their first
national championship being about a decade away.
No, what really ruled the Florida sports
scene back in those days were two grimy, fledgling, and distinctively
“southern” sports which were just not generally appreciated on the national
level.
I’m talking about auto racing and
professional wrestling.
Back then, professional
wrestling existed as a series of loosely-affiliated regional wrestling
promotions, organized nationally through the National Wrestling Alliance
(NWA).
These regional promotions or
“territories” were allowed to operate with a great deal of independence and
autonomy provided they:
1.) limited
their reach and operations within the geographical areas allotted to them, and;
2.) recognized only one true “World Heavyweight Champion” who was a wrestler
sanctioned by the NWA who continually travelled around to all the territories
taking on each promotion’s top talent.
This was a decidedly different arrangement than what one saw with
wrestling since the nineties, where there existed one or two wrestling
promotions that operated on a nationwide-level and competed against each other
with completely different wrestlers, titles, storylines and champions.
Of course, nowadays, there really is only one
game in town on the national level, the WWE.
But back in the day, the wrestlers you saw on TV were the same ones who
lived in your community, shopped in your grocery stores and performed, almost
exclusively, in your state or geographical area.
The wrestlers you became familiar with
largely depended upon which “territory” you lived in and which promotion had
rights to that area.
Where I lived in
Florida, that promotion was Championship Wrestling from Florida (CWF), run by
its legendary promoter, Eddie Graham.
|
My "Territory" |
Eddie Graham
effectively began what became known as CWF in the late sixties when he rode
into Tampa and bought into what was essentially a part-time, seasonal wrestling
promotion owned and operated by a character named Cowboy Luttrell.
Graham had a reputation for being a genius in
the business and a master of “finishes” (i.e. – the creative ways in which
wrestling matches come to their conclusions). Through a combination of business
acumen and sheer creativity, Graham turned Luttrell’s part-time operation into
a thriving, statewide spectacle and turned CWF into one of the “crown jewel”
promotions in the NWA.
In addition to Graham,
CWF was known for two other prominent wrestling figures who obtained that
oh-so-rare status of becoming so popular they gained acclaim on a national
level – “The American Dream” Dusty Rhodes (one of maybe five personalities in
the history of wrestling who became recognizable to fan and non-fan alike on a national
level), and “The Dean of Wrestling”, Gordon Solie, whom many consider to have
been the finest professional wrestling announcer even up to this very day.
In addition to these bona fide CWF stars, CWF
also proved to be a developmental ground for wrestling personalities and
talents who went on to achieve considerable fame and success beyond CWF’s
border.
By my unofficial count, CWF
spawned no less than five wrestlers who went on to become either World
Heavyweight Champion or WWF/WWE Heavyweight champion on the national
level.
Perhaps the most notable of these
was a tall, blond kid by the name of Terry Bollea, the man who went on to
become arguably the most popular and famous character professional wrestling
has ever spawned – Hulk Hogan (though the lion’s share of his fame and fortune
was earned outside of CWF’s borders).
So while CWF was a
local, regional wrestling promotion in every sense of the term, it offered
national-level entertainment to an eight year-old me growing up well within its
sphere of influence.
The
larger-than-life personalities, the carnival atmosphere when they rode into
town for a live show, the easy-to-understand good versus evil dynamic between
the “faces” (i.e. – wrestler portrayed as “the good guys”) and the “heels”
(i.e. – “the bad guys”) all appealed to my child’s eye view of the world.
This was probably the one time in my life
when I was a true, dyed-in-the-wool, professional wrestling fan.
While the talent was
national-level in CWF at the time, what I remember most about wrestling in
those days was just how damned local it felt.
It really was a part of the community.
Their weekly, late Sunday morning TV show was sponsored by local
businesses (most notably, Janie Dean Chevrolet in nearby Vero Beach).
They didn’t just stick to the big metro
arenas, but they also came to your town or the next town over and had matches
in civic centers and rec halls and National Guard armories all over the
state.
Plus, it was right there on the
banner – Championship Wrestling from
Florida.
This wasn’t the WWF here, which purported to
be a worldwide organization even back when it, too, was just a regional
promotion.
CWF was distinctly Floridian
in its approach and feel, and whenever I think back to those now so misty early
childhood memories in the Florida heat, those memories are inevitably wrapped
up in CWF and how it made me feel.
One of the other
distinctly CWF (and perhaps more widely, NWA) attributes that I think are
noteworthy was the fact that, at least back then, CWF still took the time and
effort to portray professional wrestling as a legitimate sporting
endeavor.
Sure, it was still wildly
dramatic and exaggerated, and any mature adult who took the effort to take an
objective step back from the product and see it for what it truly was could see
that CWF was more theater than it was true sporting competition.
But I loved that they took so much time and
energy to portray it as a true sport.
Instead of just yelling with bombast about how strong the competitors
were or that such-and-such move has “busted” such-and-such wrestler “wide
open”, Gordon Solie actually called each move, counter or hold as it happened
in his professional, deadpan delivery.
Solie
may have been the only wrestling announcer I know of where you could have
listened to him on the radio (or with your eyes closed) and still have had a
good idea what was happening in the ring from moment-to-moment.
The wrestler’s names, height, weight and
city-of-origin were all announced in the ring immediately before each match
occurred, and they even occasionally had good old “Coach Shaffer” sit in every
now and then and explain how such-and-such move evolved from the Greco-Roman
tradition, or that so-and-so wrestler trained under such-and-such coach at,
say, the University of Oklahoma, and explained how this effected that
wrestler’s style and track record of success.
Now 85% of this explanatory information was complete fiction, but it
added so much to the illusion that what you were seeing was real (that concept
is known as “maintaining kayfabe” in the lingo of the business – seemingly a
lost art these days).
Plus I just loved
how the wrestlers were just portrayed as wrestlers and actual human beings –
good old “Terry Allen” or “Steve Keirn” or “Brian Blair”, not “Mr. Perfect” or
“The Birdman” or “Hillbilly Jim”.
Don’t
get me wrong, CWF had a share of gimmicky wrestlers on their roster, but it was
the exception, not the rule, and I just appreciated how wrestlers were allowed
to be portrayed as competitors and not repackaged as superheroes or
supernatural characters at every step and turn.
And of all these
wonderful, athletic, larger-than-life personalities, somehow I ended up fixated
on some young, exceedingly tall, somewhat gawky young kid of a wrestler named
Barry Windham.
|
A Very Young Barry Windham |
I’m not sure why, of
all the characters to choose from on the CWF roster, I chose Barry Windham to
be my hero.
There were, especially at
that time, much tougher and stronger characters to go with.
There were wrestlers who were flashier,
gaudier, more experienced, with more style, more personality, more muscles, and
more pizazz than the young Barry Windham.
But there was something about Barry that just stuck out to me.
One, he was probably the single youngest
person I had ever seen in a wrestling ring at that time (Barry was about
nineteen when he had his first CWF match, and probably about 21 or 22 by the
time I discovered him), so the fact that he was the closest thing wrestling had
to a competitor my own age (all of 8 – 11 years old) may have appealed to
me.
In addition, there was the fact that
he wasn’t a flashy wrestler or a “gimmick man” as well.
All through my life, and even to this day, it
has always been the athletes that just go out and put their heads down and work
hard that appeal to me most.
Athletes
who worried more about putting in the hours training than with coming up with a
catch-phrase or an image.
Athletes who
put performance ahead of reputation, and Barry, at least with how he was
“packaged” back in those days, definitely fit that mold.
But in addition to those things, there was
just something intrinsic in Barry’s look and his in-ring performance that
appealed to me.
It would have been
largely nascent and still-to-be-developed back in those early days, but there
just was really something noteworthy about a six-foot-seven kid who could go
into the ring and take the punishment he seemed to be taking and move the way
that he could move that amazed me.
There
was a fluidity and grace in him, even during these earliest days of his career,
that I just found compelling.
Back then,
you just didn’t find athletes above the height of 6-2 who could move the way he
did outside of the NBA, and as I indicated above, Florida wasn’t going to have
a pro basketball team for another decade-and-a-half yet.
So Barry was my
guy. And boy did I love watching
him. I loved watching him be terrorized
by, and eventually overcome, the much savvier and much more experienced Don
Muraco. I loved his early feud with an
equally young and developing Jake “the Snake” Roberts. I vividly remember being shocked and outraged
when Roberts put young Barry face-first through the wooden ringside
partition. And I also remember the
excitement of anticipation as I waited for Barry to come back the following
week and wrestle Roberts again with a broken nose. I loved how he was portrayed as being Dusty
Rhodes’s young protégé, and how he always gave the travelling NWA champ the
fight of his life whenever he rolled into town.
He was 6 – 7, he was billed as being from Sweetwater, Texas, he took
what appeared to my young eyes to be some of the worst beatings I had ever
witnessed, but he always came back up swinging with those long-assed lanky arms
of his. And more often than not, he ended
up putting the bad guy’s shoulders onto the mat for the three-count.
Oh, and then there was
the “Flying Lariat”.
Or, more accurately,
the “Flying Freaking Lariat”.
That was Barry’s
finishing move. Again, in the parlance
of the biz, a “finishing move” is a wrestling move that is used, usually at the
end of the match to finish off your opponent and cause him to submit or
otherwise render him incapable of resisting a pin. When you saw a wrestler perform his or her
finishing move, you knew the match was likely about to end. Most famous wrestlers had a finishing move of
some sort which often became their calling cards. Hulk Hogan had the “Guillotine Leg Drop”. Ric Flair had the “Figure Four Leg Lock”. Stone Cold Steve Austin had “The Stunner”. And Barry, at least at this point in his
career, had the “Flying Freaking Lariat”.
First off, a Lariat is
a term normally used to describe the rope a cowboy uses to catch
livestock. In the wrestling biz, a
Lariat is really just another term for a clothesline, where a wrestler catches his
opponent with the length of his arm across his opponent’s neck, usually while one
of the two wrestlers are moving towards each other off the ring ropes. What makes a Lariat different from a standard
clothesline really has more to do with the wrestler using it than it does with the
move itself. “Cowboy Characters” are
usually the ones who use Lariats over clotheslines as it is more in keeping
with the mythos of their image. Stan
Hanson was a famous cowboy-wrestler who used the standard Lariat with great success
both in the States and overseas.
The “Flying Lariat” was
different. In describing this move to
you, it will be difficult to do it justice.
First, Barry would push his opponent against the ring ropes and then
launch them across the ring into the ropes on the other side. After launching his opponent in this manner,
Barry would then launch himself into the ropes opposite his opponent, spring
boarding himself toward the center of the ring where he would be, for all
intents and purposes, on a collision course with his opponent. However, a step or two before crashing into
his opponent, Barry would instead launch himself into the air and somehow
position himself to his opponent’s side, his own body a good four feet in the
air and parallel to the mat, and stick out that long-ass arm of his where it
would come down on his opponent’s neck/chest area and literally knock him
flat. It has to be about the coolest
looking wrestling move I had ever seen and must have taken an amazing amount of
agility and dexterity to perform properly.
Quite frankly, I’ve never seen another wrestler even try to perform it,
and I can’t imagine it looking quite right unless it’s being performed by a
six-foot-seven-inch lanky kid from Sweetwater, Texas.
So, again, Barry was my
guy.
To sum it up, he was a childhood
hero of mine, and while childhood heroes are always the most special and most
enduring kind of heroes we have, it’s very difficult to explain exactly how and
why they mean so much to us.
They just kind of
do.
Suffice it to say, my
childhood heroes became even more important to me during some very dark years
my family had in Florida.
My parents
separated on two separate occasions while we lived down there and there were
times when I didn’t think my family would ever be whole and healthy again.
During those times, my heroes provided a very
important avenue of escape for me when I could forget those suffocating
troubles and relax and feel like a kid again.
I had exactly two heroes when I lived in Florida.
One was Spider-Man.
The other was Barry Windham.
However strange and groan-inducing it may
sound all these years later, that should give you an idea of just how important
the young Barry Windham was for me in those days.
|
Barry - Staring Down Danger |
Now as 1982 went on, my
family, back together and whole again, made the monumental decision to move
wholesale back to our “home state” of Pennsylvania.
While this was a move that I, and my family
as a whole, were largely in support of, it did occur to me that I would be
leaving behind at least one of my childhood heroes.
You see, Barry wrestled for Championship
Wrestling from
Florida.
Quite frankly,
I didn’t know what kind of wrestling they would have in Pennsylvania.
I suppose I could have asked my Dad at the
time, but Dad was one of those people who held wrestling in mild disdain.
Being a transplanted Northerner, he just
didn’t get why all of his southern friends and co-workers got so much into what
to him were badly-staged theatrics.
And
the more his neighbors and co-workers go excited about wrestling, the more it
grated on him.
Since I was a kid, he
tolerated the fact that I enjoyed it (and, to his credit, he even took me to a
CWF match once at the Fort Pierce Civic Center).
However, as the years passed he became
increasingly impatient with my fascination with the business, and I didn’t want
to risk his ire by asking him if they had wrestling where we were moving.
Regardless, whatever they had up in
Pennsylvania, I was pretty sure it wasn’t CWF wrestling and I was pretty sure I
wasn’t going to see Barry Windham up there.
Turned out I was
wrong. Who knew?
The process of moving
from Florida to Pennsylvania proved to be a long and tortured one.
We didn’t do it the way most people would –
by actually securing a house and location to move into immediately upon
arriving.
No, Dad’s big plan was to
spend time with relatives in West Virginia and southeastern Pennsylvania while
scouting out a new house and location in some rural part of Pennsylvania he
wasn’t familiar with.
So, not only did I
have the usual burden of having to get used to a new state, a new geography, a
new culture and new friends, all of that was preceded by a good solid three to
four months of living on the sufferance of relatives and long-ass drives in the
family van as we looked at homes a good hundred or so miles away from where we
were staying.
Quite frankly, in
retrospect, I’m amazed we got through it with our sanity intact.
But the details of that
little adventure are better left to another column.
Suffice it to say that, due to more pressing
concerns, professional wrestling didn’t bubble back up on my radar for a good
year or so when, finally settled into a new house and well into the first term
at a new school, conversation on the school bus inevitably turned to
professional wrestling.
It turned out they did
have professional wrestling in Pennsylvania, and while its fan base may not
have been as pervasive as it was in the deep South, the fans it had were every
bit as excited and enthusiastic about it as they were in Florida.
I sat quietly at first and listened to my
schoolmates go and on about wrestlers I had never heard of before.
Jimmy “Superfly” Snuka.
Ivan Putski.
Tito Santana.
And there was also
this dude named Hulk Hogan everyone seemed so excited about.
I also heard names that
were familiar to me, as some of the then-current WWF wrestlers had spent time
in Georgia and/or Florida in recent years.
Roddy Piper.
Bob Orton, Jr. (though
he was apparently going by “Cowboy” Bob Orton now).
Barry’s old nemesis, Don Muraco, was
apparently up north at that time too, engaged in a long and bitter feud with
Tito Santana over the “Intercontinental Championship” (whatever the hell that
was).
And also the Iron Sheik, who was
pushed as absolute badass heel in Florida for a good eight months or so before
disappearing for parts unknown.
Well,
apparently he had showed up in the WWF by that point and had a run as their
champion.
Heady stuff indeed.
When finally the conversation
turned to the new kid (me) and I was asked the question of whether I liked
wrestling and who my favorite wrestlers were, I asked with some trepidation,
and not much enthusiasm, “Have you guys ever heard of Barry Windham?”
Had they heard of Barry
Windham?
You bet your sweet ass they had
heard of Barry Windham!
The “U.S.
Express” baby!
Turned out that in the
year or so while I was dealing with the weightier issues of transitioning
between Florida and Pennsylvania, Barry had made the move, along with a
relatively “new” wrestler who was matriculating in Florida at the time named
Mike Rotundo, up north to the brighter lights and larger arenas of the World
Wrestling Federation (the WWF, now known as WWE).
And, what’s more, the team of Windham and Rotundo
were the current WWF Tag-Team Champions, and about to engage in a historic and
bitter feud with the Iron Sheik (as soon as he had finished dropping the WWF
Championship to the soon-to-be-mega-star Hulk Hogan) and that damned Soviet
“commie” Nikolai Volkoff.
It was the
down-home, salt-of-the-earth, young American good old boys versus the evil
international forces from Iran and the then Soviet Union.
It was a classic wrestling “angle” and
apparently had had the intended effect of whipping the fans into a froth over
the upcoming matches.
I was floored.
Barry Windham was up here wrestling?
Who’s this Mike Rotundo guy he was with
(apparently he hadn’t crossed my radar by the time I left Florida).
And, wow, he was one-half of the tag-team
champions right now?
And feuding with
the badass and scary Iron Sheik (I had no idea who Volkoff was at that
time).
What’s this wrestling show
called?
WWF?
When’s it come on?
Early Sunday afternoon’s (right around the
time my old CWF show used to come on)?
You bet I’ll check it out!
So the by the time the
next weekend rolled around, I had convinced my Dad to tune in to this
new-sounding WWF TV show and see my old hero in action.
We had only one TV at the time, so if my Dad
was going to commit to allowing me to watch wrestling, then the whole family
was watching it or finding some other way to spend their time.
It also didn’t help that the WWF show was on
one of about three channels we were getting at the time (oh how I missed the
cable TV we had in Florida!), and wouldn’t you know it was the one channel that
came in fuzzy and required us to move the antenna rotor (a concept and device I
was completely ignorant about as even regular network TV through an antenna didn’t
require an antenna rotor in flat-as-a-pancake Florida).
But those obstacles were quickly surmounted
and I tucked myself into the couch and glued my eyes to the TV for my first
look at my childhood hero in over a year.
And, thank goodness, he
was booked to appear on the show that week.
What the hell?
Is that Barry Windham?
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Barry Windham (Left) & Mike Rotundo (Right) - The U.S. Express |
End of Part 1
Part 2:
http://epp101.blogspot.com/2015/06/running-thoughts-chasing-barry-windham.html