Nick Bockwinkel

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Nick Bockwinkel
Statistics
Ring name(s) Nick Bockwinkel
The Sensational White Phantom
Dick Warren
Billed height 5 ft 10 in (178 cm)
Billed weight 241 lbs (110 kg)
Born December 6, 1934 (1934-12-06) (age 73)
St. Paul, Minnesota
Resides Las Vegas, Nevada
Billed from Beverly Hills, California
Trained by Warren Bockwinkel
Lou Thesz
Debut 1955
Retired 1987

Nicholas Warren Francis Bockwinkel [1] (born December 6, 1934) is a former American professional wrestler, better known by his ring name, Nick Bockwinkel. He mainly competed in the American Wrestling Association (AWA) in the United States. He is a former multi-time AWA World Heavyweight Champion and co-holder of the AWA World Tag Team Title. He is remembered for his spellbinding if somewhat wordy promos.citation needed

Contents

Wrestling career

Bockwinkel began his career in 1955, after a knee injury forced the University of Oklahoma to withdraw his football scholarship. After training to become a wrestler by his father Warren, a regional star in the 1940s, and Lou Thesz, he spent the early years of his career teaming with his father. He won his first major title in 1970, at the age of 36, defeating Assassin #1 for the NWA Georgia Heavyweight Championship. Bockwinkel soon joined the AWA, where he formed one of the most successful tandems in wrestling history with Ray Stevens, and manager, Bobby Heenan. Together, they won the AWA World Tag Team Championship three times, the first in 1972.

By 1975, Bockwinkel had become one of the biggest stars in the AWA, and won the first of many AWA World Heavyweight Championships, at the age of 40, ending Verne Gagne's seven year reign. As AWA Champion, Bockwinkel had notable feuds with Billy Robinson, Dick the Bruiser, The Crusher, Mad Dog Vachon, Jerry Lawler, Otto Wanz, Mr. Saito and most famously, Verne Gagne and Hulk Hogan. He last held the title in 1987, at the age of 52, before dropping the championship to another second generation wrestler, Curt Hennig, at SuperClash. The match ended in controversial fashion due to interference by Larry Zbyszko, who had handed a roll of coins to Hennig to use on Bockwinkel.

Bockwinkel has the distinction of being involved in the first ever AWA vs. World Wide Wrestling Federation (WWWF) World Title Unification match, wrestling WWWF Champion, Bob Backlund, to a double count-out, on March 25, 1979.

Bockwinkel wrestled NWA champion Ric Flair for the NWA title at the last AWA show in Winnipeg, Manitoba on January 16, 1986 at the Winnipeg Arena before the AWA territory lost Winnipeg to the WWF. Bockwinkel was not the AWA champion at this time.

Bockwinkel retired in 1987, ending a career that spanned four decades. In one of his final matches as an active competitor, he paid Zbyszko back for costing him the AWA World title by pinning him on an episode of AWA Championship Wrestling on ESPN after knocking out the self-proclaimed "New Living Legend" with a roll of coins.

Bockwinkel returned to the ring in 1993 at Slamboree: A Legends' Reunion. The card was promoted by World Championship Wrestling (WCW) but featured veteran wrestlers from all over the country. Bockwinkel wrestled former NWA World Champion Dory Funk, Jr. to a time limit draw as part of the undercard.

Bockwinkel was considered by his peers and many industry experts to be an excellent wrestler, known for his exceptional technical ability and ring psychology. He was also known for his calm, charismatic, articulate promos, which distinguished him from many of his contemporaries. Larry Zbyszko once commented, "If you asked Bockwinkel for the time, he'd tell you how to build a watch."citation needed

In 1992, a Chicago radio station took a listener poll of the top five greatest professional wrestling moments in the city's history, Nick Bockwinkel's title match against Jerry Lawler at the UIC Pavilion was voted number 3.

Post wrestling career

Bockwinkel worked as a road agent for the World Wrestling Federation after he departed the AWA in 1987. It was rumored that the WWF initially wanted Bockwinkel to wrestle and manage under the "Million Dollar Man" gimmick, but given that Bockwinkel was in his early 50s, decided to go with the much younger Ted DiBiase in the role.

In 1994, Bockwinkel became the on-screen commissioner of World Championship Wrestling. He lost his job in 1995 after an incident at The Great American Bash when he forgot the name of the event in the middle of a promo.citation needed

In 2000, he and Yoshiaki Fujiwara were the commissioners for a short-lived shoot style promotion, the Japan Pro Wrestling Association, but as the shoot-style market in Japan had been low since the collapse of UWF International, the wrestlers on it moved to other promotions. Bockwinkel is currently the President of the Cauliflower Alley club, as well as the on-screen General Manager for AWA Superstars.

On March 31, 2007, he was inducted in the WWE Hall of Fame. He now lives in Las Vegas, Nevada. On November 8, Nick Bockwinkel underwent triple bypass heart surgery.

In 2008, he was featured on NWA TV, aiding Adam Pearce in retaining the NWA World Championship..

In wrestling

Championships and accomplishments

Other media

In 1968, Bockwinkel appeared as a contestant on a prime-time version of the NBC game show Hollywood Squares. He played Harry in the episode Savage Sunday in the show Hawaii Five-O.1 Bockwinkel also played a wrestler in an episode of the 1960s television series "The Monkees".

Notes

References

  • Dave Meltzer & John F. Molinaro (2002). Top 100 Pro Wrestlers of all Time. Winding Stair Press. ISBN 1-55366-305-5. 

External links

Wikipedia content modification information:

  • This page was last modified on 18 November 2008, at 00:23.

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