Welcome to the second installment of "Remembering the Midcard."
Last week, we discussed one of the greats of the late 1980's and throughout the 1990's, "Ravishing" Rick Rude. He was a well-respected worker with a great look, great work-ethic, and very good microphone skills.
Now, since I wanted to create these threads to both praise and make fun of mid-card wrestlers of the past, I figured that my next choice would be someone who wasn't quite nearly as successful as Rick Rude. He was a perfect example of how a superstar with nothing but a large physique can only go so far in the business of professional wrestling. I'm speaking of none other than The Warlord.
Terry Szopinski began his professional wrestling career in 1986, working for Jim Crockett's National Wrestling Alliance. He was discovered by Hawk and Animal of the Road Warriors who encouraged him to become involved in professional wrestling. After over a year of seasoning in and out of other promotions, he was teamed up with another large wrestler named The Barbarian, and together they formed a tag team called The Powers of Pain. They aligned themselves with Ivan Koloff and feuded with Dusty Rhodes and the oad Warriors for a while before they were picked up by Vince McMahon and the WWE.
Upon entering the WWE, the Powers of Pain were managed by The Baron for a while before being picked up by Mr. Fuji. After some unsuccessful feuds with Demolition and the Hart Foundation, the Powers of Pain split in 1990 and the Warlord became managed by Slick. His look changed from facepaint to a metal mask that covered half of his face, but his road to success remained the same... dismal.
The Warlord was mostly remembered for spending the shortest amount of time in a Royal Rumble match (2 seconds in 1989) before being eliminated by Hulk Hogan. This record was held until the 2009 Royal Rumble, when Kane eliminated Santino in 1 second. If I'm not mistaken, his career ended as a result of a car accident that he had with a Pizza Hut delivery guy LOL.
My Take:
So, my take on the Warlord is that he was one of the biggest pieces of garbage that the WWE ever picked up. He wrestled like shit, was stiff in the ring, and his mic skills were atrocious. Vince and company always believed that a big man with a large physique could always be successful in the professional wrestling industry, but were clearly proven wrong by the Warlord. I can remember his ridiculous metal wand and his Phantom of the Opera type metal mask that he wore, and how pale he looked standing next to the blackness of Slick. That pairing was such a mismatch and made Slick's stable of wrestlers look weak and pathetic. Such a shame, since Slick will always be one of my favorite managers of all time.
Does anyone else have any thoughts on the Warlord? The floor is yours...
Last week, we discussed one of the greats of the late 1980's and throughout the 1990's, "Ravishing" Rick Rude. He was a well-respected worker with a great look, great work-ethic, and very good microphone skills.
Now, since I wanted to create these threads to both praise and make fun of mid-card wrestlers of the past, I figured that my next choice would be someone who wasn't quite nearly as successful as Rick Rude. He was a perfect example of how a superstar with nothing but a large physique can only go so far in the business of professional wrestling. I'm speaking of none other than The Warlord.
Terry Szopinski began his professional wrestling career in 1986, working for Jim Crockett's National Wrestling Alliance. He was discovered by Hawk and Animal of the Road Warriors who encouraged him to become involved in professional wrestling. After over a year of seasoning in and out of other promotions, he was teamed up with another large wrestler named The Barbarian, and together they formed a tag team called The Powers of Pain. They aligned themselves with Ivan Koloff and feuded with Dusty Rhodes and the oad Warriors for a while before they were picked up by Vince McMahon and the WWE.
Upon entering the WWE, the Powers of Pain were managed by The Baron for a while before being picked up by Mr. Fuji. After some unsuccessful feuds with Demolition and the Hart Foundation, the Powers of Pain split in 1990 and the Warlord became managed by Slick. His look changed from facepaint to a metal mask that covered half of his face, but his road to success remained the same... dismal.
The Warlord was mostly remembered for spending the shortest amount of time in a Royal Rumble match (2 seconds in 1989) before being eliminated by Hulk Hogan. This record was held until the 2009 Royal Rumble, when Kane eliminated Santino in 1 second. If I'm not mistaken, his career ended as a result of a car accident that he had with a Pizza Hut delivery guy LOL.
My Take:
So, my take on the Warlord is that he was one of the biggest pieces of garbage that the WWE ever picked up. He wrestled like shit, was stiff in the ring, and his mic skills were atrocious. Vince and company always believed that a big man with a large physique could always be successful in the professional wrestling industry, but were clearly proven wrong by the Warlord. I can remember his ridiculous metal wand and his Phantom of the Opera type metal mask that he wore, and how pale he looked standing next to the blackness of Slick. That pairing was such a mismatch and made Slick's stable of wrestlers look weak and pathetic. Such a shame, since Slick will always be one of my favorite managers of all time.
Does anyone else have any thoughts on the Warlord? The floor is yours...