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Eddie Sharkey | |
---|---|
Birth name | Edward Shyman |
Born | [1] Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S. | February 4, 1936
Spouse(s) | Dixie Jordan (divorced) |
Professional wrestling career | |
Billed height | 5"9 |
Billed weight | 220 lb (100 kg) |
Debut | 1950 |
Eddie Sharkey (born February 4, 1936) is an American former professional wrestler, promoter, and trainer, widely recognized as "the Trainer of Champions". [2] Eddie Sharkey began his career as a wrestler in the 1950s, but it is his contributions as a trainer and mentor that brought him widespread recognition. He has been instrumental in training many of the most notable talents in sports entertainment including Jesse Ventura and the Road Warriors. [3]
Eddie Sharkey's career in professional wrestling commenced on the carnival circuit in the late 1950s where he was trained and promoted by Boris Malenko, Bob Geigel, and Joe Scarpello.
Sharkey made his American Wrestling Association (AWA) debut in Fargo, North Dakota in 1961 where he assumed the role of a babyface. During his tenure he had feuds with Danny Hodge, Bob Boyer, and Jack Donovan. Sharkey left the AWA over a disagreement with promoter Verne Gagne.
In September 1968, Sharkey clinched the National Wrestling Association (NWA) United States Heavyweight Championship from Jack Donovan. The title was later retired. [4] [5]
In 1982, after leaving the AWA as a result of a pay dispute with promoter Verne Gagne, Sharkey was approached by fifteen other wrestlers similarly upset with Gagne over withholding payment and convinced Sharkey to start his own promotion. Sharkey duly set up his own promotion Pro Wrestling America, starring his own trainees such as the two future members of the Road Warriors tag team (at this stage known as Crusher Von Haig and The Road Warrior respectively) as well as Rick Rude, and Barry Darsow ("Smash"). Sharkey was soon able to sign other wrestlers including Paul Ellering, Tom Zenk, Nikita Koloff, The Destruction Crew (Mike Enos & Wayne Bloom) and the Steiner Brothers (Rick & Scott Steiner) as well as Mad Dog Vachon, Bruiser Brody, Larry Cameron often making appearances. Although a chief rival of the American Wrestling Alliance during the late 1980s, Sharkey and Gagne eventually agreed to a talent exchange deal between the two promotions. A number of PWA veterans were brought into the AWA during its last years including Derrick Dukes and Ricky Rice.
In 1986, Eddie Sharkey and promoter Tony Condello worked out an agreement for PWA wrestlers to appear in televised wrestling events in central Canada. Chris Markoff, Buck Zumhofe, Ricky Rice & Derrick Dukes and The Terminators (Riggs & Wolff) were among those who appeared in the territory. Pro Wrestling America, among other regional promotions such as Georgia All-Star Wrestling and the United States Wrestling Association, also had a working relationship with the Global Wrestling Federation during its last years and allowed its own wrestlers compete in GWF tournaments and other events. Jerry Lynn and The Lightning Kid, two of the promotion's top light heavyweight wrestlers, faced each other in a match to crown the first GWF Light Heavyweight Championship. A number of PWA wrestlers often appeared on The Prima-Donns, a long-running Public-access television cable TV show in the Minneapolis-area, including Eddie Sharkey, Baron von Raschke, Nick Bockwinkel and Jerry Lynn.
While running the promotion Pro Wrestling America Sharkey recognized wrestling talent in four of the bouncers at a local Minneapolis bar (Hawk, Animal, Rick Rude, and Barry Darsow). Sharkey convinced the men to try professional and trained the men himself. The four became known as the Road Warriors.
Pro Wrestling America has led tours throughout the United States, Canada, South America, Asia, the Middle East.
Growing up in Minneapolis, Sharkey was a huge wrestling fan. His father, Tom Shyman, was a first-generation immigrant from Poland who worked in the liquor-display business and would frequently bring him to wrestling matches. Sharkey took up boxing in his teens before transitioning into pro wrestling. Sharkey's brother, James Shyman is an actor, director, and film producer.
Sharkey married professional wrestler Princess Little Cloud (Dixie Jordan). They have two children together.
The American Wrestling Association (AWA) was an American professional wrestling promotion based in Minneapolis, Minnesota that ran from 1960 until 1991. It was founded by Verne Gagne and Wally Karbo. The promotion was born out of the Minneapolis Boxing & Wrestling Club, originally founded in 1933, which served as the Minnesota-based territory of the National Wrestling Alliance (NWA) from 1948 onward, before breaking away from the NWA and becoming an independent territory in 1960.
Michael James Hegstrand was an American professional wrestler. He was best known as Road Warrior Hawk, one half of the tag team known as the Road Warriors, with Road Warrior Animal. Outside of the Road Warriors, Hawk was a sporadic challenger for world heavyweight championships on pay-per-view from the late 1980s to the mid-1990s. He headlined the inaugural 1993 edition of Extreme Championship Wrestling's premier annual event, November to Remember.
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Barry Allen Darsow is an American retired professional wrestler who performed as Smash, one half of the tag team Demolition. He also wrestled as Krusher Kruschev, Repo Man, the Blacktop Bully, Man Mountain Darsow and "Mr. Hole in One" Barry Darsow.
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