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Throwback Thursday: Shane Douglas, WCW, and the Promo That Changed Wrestling

Throwback Thursday: Shane Douglas, WCW, and the Promo That Changed Wrestling

Posted: Aug 28th 2015 By: Ian Williams - Sports.Vice.com

To understand how and why a wrestling promo that aired 21 years ago today still matters, you first need to understand what an incredible dump pro wrestling was in 1994. What was then the World Wrestling Federation was still reeling from a steroid trial that nearly brought down Vince McMahon. McMahon's reaction was to scale the wrestlers down from their freakish 1980s size, bringing in a New Generation, as it was billed, of men like Bret Hart and Shawn Michaels. Mostly, though, his campaign to get with the times involved lots of terrible, silly gimmicks.

World Championship Wrestling was still fairly new at the time: the spawn of Jim Crockett Promotions, a mainstay of Southern wrestling, which gobbled up its regional competition before being gobbled up by Ted Turner, the biggest New South fish of them all. WCW happily picked up WWF's steroid-beast castoffs: Savage, Beefcake, Earthquake, and Hogan. Creative malaise set in as the blood-and-guts style of Dusty Rhodes and Ric Flair was set aside for slightly puffier versions of the Hogan Conquers All stories we'd seen ten years prior.

So wrestling did what it always does in moments of crisis: it looked to its past. In this case, it was a scheme to revive the desiccated National Wrestling Alliance, the hoary presiding body of pro-wrestling promoters. The idea was to bring back the territory days, that period when regional organizations would get together and elect a world champion, who would then tour the country trading blows with whichever local hero was available. The system gave the country legendary champions like Flair, Harley Race, and Buddy Rogers. The NWA was still around in 1994, if pretty thoroughly stripped of talent and money by WWF and WCW; it was a zombie, in other words, and not a terribly well-dressed one. But it was moving.

Central to this Frankenstein revival effort was a Philadelphia wrestling fed called Eastern Championship Wrestling. ECW was one of the most successful second-tier groups in the country, making its name on pushing new talent and a risqu?, violent style that seemed custom made for Philly's raucous wrestling scene. Essentially, ECW was popular enough in one of the few large open markets that any NWA revival effort would have to go through it.

"The NWA was a dead organization at that point," former ECW owner Tod Gordon told me. "Jim Crockett came back down in Texas and wanted to start it up again. But they had to have a champion. Old school, territory-to-territory type of deal. So we had Crockett, us, Jim Cornette down in Tennessee, an Australian group, and a guy from New Jersey named Dennis Coralluzzo."

Coralluzzo, in Gordon's telling, was a cranky small-timer who was able to play the NWA's games but somehow unable to draw a dime in the New York area, a market where just about anyone can get a crowd.

"Coralluzzo was a thorn in our side. We started at the same level, but ECW's on TV while he's still drawing 150 to 200 people to his shows," Gordon said. "So he became obsessed with stopping our growth. He'd call the fire commissioner on our shows, send tapes to local groups showing how violent we were. Stuff like that. I remember one time, on the road with Cactus Jack [Mick Foley's ECW ring name], pulling over after a show got shut down. Cactus called Coralluzzo on a pay phone?we only had pay phones then?and was screaming at him, about how he was taking money from his family. I'd never seen him so mad."

Gordon and his creative partner, Paul Heyman, were given a free hand to crown a new NWA world champion. Coralluzzo fumed, but the facts were simple: as one of the few indies with secure television, the NWA needed ECW way more than ECW needed the NWA.

Which brings us to the tournament and the big moment. ECW packed the tourney with its wrestlers, as might be expected, settling on Shane Douglas as champion. Douglas was an odd choice at the time. Prior to joining ECW, he was a perennial midcarder who was best known as one half of a skateboarding tag team that went by the Dynamic Dudes. Even Gordon wasn't sold on him when he came to ECW, but one-time booker Eddie Gilbert insisted that Douglas could go, both in the ring and on the mic.

Once Douglas won the tournament, beating 2 Cold Scorpio in the final, he launched an in-ring promo for the ages. In it, he thanked the champions before him, rattling off a list of luminaries who were now his peers as NWA champions. Ric Flair. Lou Thesz. Harley Race. Dusty Rhodes. Terry Funk, who was backstage. Poignantly, Douglas looked up to the sky and intoned his father's memory. This is it, he said.

And then Douglas told all those past champions that they could kiss his ass, and threw down the title belt.

Understand two things about this. One, wrestlers do not do this. Disrespect the belt, and you disrespect the men who held it before you; since wrestling is steeped in its own lore, you're disrespecting the form's history. Here was Shane Douglas, not only disrespecting his forebears by implication but calling them out by name. Shane Douglas.

Two, the only people who knew this was going to happen were Gordon, Heyman, and Douglas. Nobody else?not the magazines, not the wrestlers in the back, not Gordon's fellow promoters?saw it coming. Look at the faces in the crowd: they're stunned and confused, and they're not acting.

"We swerved them. I'm not saying I'm proud, but it was a swerve," Gordon said. "That's what we did. I was sitting next to Coralluzzo and he's sitting there confused. I say, 'No, don't worry. This is just an angle. Just an angle. We'll do ECW versus the NWA. Work with it. It'll be great.'"

That's how Coralluzzo came to cut a confused promo of his own backstage, saying that ECW was out of the NWA unless Douglas defended the belt as NWA champion. He looks hunted, as if he suspects that he's been bamboozled but can't quite bring himself to believe it. Within days, Gordon left no doubt, in a tense video rebranding Eastern Championship Wrestling as Extreme Championship Wrestling.

"I was skeptical about 'extreme,'" recalled Gordon. "Paul was very into 'extreme.' He told me don't worry about this, this is gonna be big. And he was right. It blew up. The next thing we know, there's extreme sports, extreme soda. So we were extreme. We were already doing more sex and violence than most, but we turned it up after the rebranding. The phone rang off the hook for three days after that. We needed to do something that said we weren't just a Philly promotion anymore?that our champion was a world champion, not just a regional champion."

Things in pro wrestling changed rapidly after the promo. In Gordon's words, "Industry-wise, it was an atom bomb." ECW didn't have the resources to go head to head with WCW or the WWF. Creatively, though, it had officially changed the landscape.

It's not an exaggeration to say that wrestling would be completely different had the antipathy between Coralluzzo and ECW's executives not sparked the Douglas promo. When the WWF was teetering on the edge of bankruptcy, battered by Ted Turner's ability to poach McMahon's employees at will, the federation turned business around by co-opting ECW's sex-and-violence style.

That co-option eventually led to the WWF putting WCW out of business; business is business, after all. World Wrestling Entertainment was able to achieve its current near-monopoly by cribbing from ECW in the 1990s. For WCW's part, its brief dominance was partly built around a stellar midcard made up of ex-ECW talent like Chris Benoit and Dean Malenko. ECW was able to go all in on its to a fairly wide audience because of the shock that Douglas's promo caused.

The Douglas promo was a spark, a moment of nuclear fission that kicked off a reaction still being felt today, whether that's giving a blueprint for success to today's indie wrestling scene or WWE putting on a three-way dance. You see it when Heyman barks at the crowd on Raw or when TNA puts on an X Division match. All of these things were put in motion by a promo that both broke with and reified wrestling's traditions.

The primary actors are all in different places. Shane Douglas is still active, though he doesn't wrestle as often as he did. Dennis Coralluzzo died of a stroke in 2001. Paul Heyman, of course, now works with WWE as Brock Lesnar's manager. Tod Gordon went back to the family business, a jewelry and loan store in Philadelphia, after he sold his share of ECW to Heyman.

"We're fourth generation. My kids work here," Gordon said, with a smile I could hear over the phone. "I did this before wrestling."

 

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Spotlight in History

  • 1941 Maurice Shapiro became the TSW Missouri Junior Heavyweight Champion
  • 1958 Jim LaRock became the TSW United States Junior Heavyweight Champion
  • 1958 Jim LaRock def. Sandor Kovacs for the TSW Oklahoma Junior Heavyweight Champion
  • 1978 Jerry Brown & Bobby Jaggers def. Ray Candy & Steven Little Bear for the TSW United States Tag Team Champion
  • 1982 King Kong Bundy def. Kerry Von Erich for the WCCW American Heavyweight Champion
  • 1982 Junkyard Dog & Mr. Olympia def. The Wild Samoans (Afa & Sika) for the MSW Mid-South Tag Team Champion
  • 1986 Rick Rude def. Lance Von Erich for the WCCW Television Champion
  • 2002 Red Eagle def. Terry Montana for the OCW Oklahoma Hardcore Champion
  • 2002 Terry Montana def. Red Eagle for the OCW Oklahoma Hardcore Champion
  • 2007 Compound Varsity (Romero Contreras & Justin Lee) became the FCW Tag Team Champions
  • 2012 Kareem Sadat def. David Kyzer for the SWCW Hardcore Champion
  • 2017 El Greengo Loco & Karnage def. Team Dean Machine (Christopher Dean & Jerry Dean) for the BPPW Oklahoma Tag Team Champion

Week of Sun 05-05 to Sat: 05-11

  • 05-05 1941 Maurice Shapiro became the TSW Missouri Junior Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-05 1958 Jim LaRock became the TSW United States Junior Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-05 1958 Jim LaRock def. Sandor Kovacs for the TSW Oklahoma Junior Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-05 1978 Jerry Brown & Bobby Jaggers def. Ray Candy & Steven Little Bear for the TSW United States Tag Team Champion
  • 05-05 1982 King Kong Bundy def. Kerry Von Erich for the WCCW American Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-05 1982 Junkyard Dog & Mr. Olympia def. The Wild Samoans (Afa & Sika) for the MSW Mid-South Tag Team Champion
  • 05-05 1986 Rick Rude def. Lance Von Erich for the WCCW Television Champion
  • 05-05 2002 Red Eagle def. Terry Montana for the OCW Oklahoma Hardcore Champion
  • 05-05 2002 Terry Montana def. Red Eagle for the OCW Oklahoma Hardcore Champion
  • 05-05 2007 Compound Varsity (Romero Contreras & Justin Lee) became the FCW Tag Team Champions
  • 05-05 2012 Kareem Sadat def. David Kyzer for the SWCW Hardcore Champion
  • 05-05 2017 El Greengo Loco & Karnage def. Team Dean Machine (Christopher Dean & Jerry Dean) for the BPPW Oklahoma Tag Team Champion
  • 05-06 1959 Pretty Boy Collins & Duke Scarbo became the TSW Louisiana Tag Team Champion
  • 05-06 1969 Ramon Torres & Alberto Torres def. Karl Von Stroheim & Treacherous Phillips for the TSW United States Tag Team Champion
  • 05-06 1974 Rip Tyler def. Bob Sweetan for the TSW Brass Knucks Champion
  • 05-06 1984 The Rock & Soul Connection (Buck Zumhofe & King Parsons) def. The Super Destroyers (Super Destroyer 1 & Super Destroyer 2) for the WCCW American Tag Team Champion
  • 05-06 1984 The Von Erichs (Fritz Von Erich & Kevin Von Erich & Mike Von Erich) def. The Fabulous Freebirds (Terry Gordy, Michael Hayes, & Buddy Roberts) for the WCCW World 6-Man Tag Team Champion
  • 05-06 1984 The Von Erichs (Kerry Von Erich & Kevin Von Erich & Mike Von Erich) became the WCCW World 6-Man Tag Team Champion
  • 05-06 1985 The Fantastics (Tommy Rogers & Bobby Fulton) became the WCCW American Tag Team Champion
  • 05-06 2005 Shane Morbid def. Kenny Campbell for the SRPW X Division Champion
  • 05-06 2005 The 918 Boyz (Timmy J & Cade Sydal) became the SRPW Tag Team Champions
  • 05-06 2011 Jeff Starchild became the MWA Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-06 2017 Lone Star, Inc. (Cody Burns & Trey Cole & The Longhorn Outlaw) def. Simply the Future (J. D. & Alex) for the WFC Tag Team Champions
  • 05-06 2017 Team Dean Machine (Christopher Dean & Jerry Dean) def. El Greengo Loco & Karnage for the BPPW Oklahoma Tag Team Champion
  • 05-06 2023 Thrash def. Jason Jones for the WFC Prime Champion
  • 05-06 2023 MLP def. Red James for the RDW Brass Knucks Champion
  • 05-06 2023 Red James def. MLP for the RDW Brass Knucks Champion
  • 05-07 1984 Killer Khan became the WCCW Television Champion
  • 05-07 2010 Cody Jones became the NWA-OK Texoma Champion
  • 05-07 2010 Jack Legacy def. Jeff Starchild for the MWA Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-07 2010 Dustin Heritage def. Shane Morbid for the MWA MAX-Division Champion
  • 05-07 2010 A. T. F. (Al Farat & Gurkha Singh) became the NWA-OK Oklahoma Tag Team Champion
  • 05-07 2010 La Reina de Corazones became the NWA-OK Women's Champion
  • 05-07 2011 Rudy Edwards def. Ryan Styles for the SWCW All-American Champion
  • 05-07 2011 Bernie D & Max McGuirk def. Nemesis (Rage Logan & Damien Morte) for the IZW Tag Team Champions
  • 05-07 2016 Tyson Jaymes def. Brandon Groom for the BCW Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-07 2018 Jack Swagger became the WCR Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-07 2018 The Von Erichs (Marshall Von Erich & Ross Von Erich) became the WCR Tag Team Champions
  • 05-07 2018 Damon Windsor became the WCR Revolutionary Champion
  • 05-07 2021 Jerome Daniel Griffey def. Tino Valentino for the ASP Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-07 2022 Drake Gallows def. Oxley for the RDW Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-07 2022 Derek James became the AWE Lion Heart Champion
  • 05-07 2022 Luna Nightshade became the RDW Women's Champion
  • 05-07 2022 Brandon Groom def. Derek James for the AWE Lion Heart Champion
  • 05-07 2022 Becky def. Luna Nightshade for the RDW Women's Champion
  • 05-08 1970 The Hollywood Blondes (Jerry Brown & Buddy Roberts) became the TSW United States Tag Team Champion
  • 05-08 1985 The Snowman became the MSW Television Champion
  • 05-08 1988 Kerry Von Erich def. King Parsons for the WCCW World Champion
  • 05-08 2004 Brandon Groom def. Michael Barry for the NWA-OK Oklahoma Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-08 2004 John O'Malley became the IZW Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-08 2004 Kenny Campbell became the IZW Impact Division Champion
  • 05-08 2004 Luc Lapointe & Se7en became the IZW Tag Team Champions
  • 05-08 2010 Excellence Personified (Dustin Heritage & Se7en & Michael Barry & Jack Legacy) became the TAP Tag Team Champions
  • 05-08 2010 Wage def. Eric Rose for the IZW Impact Division Champion
  • 05-08 2010 John O'Malley def. Kevin Morgan for the IZW Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-08 2010 Michael H def. Tex for the 412PE Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-08 2010 J. R. Orullian & The Unknown def. The Trenchcoat Mafia (Ryan Reed & Dennis Williams) for the 412PE Tag Team Champions
  • 05-09 1967 Gorgeous George, Jr. & Jack Brisco def. The Assassins (Assassin #1 & Assassin #2) for the TSW United States Tag Team Champion
  • 05-09 2004 John O'Malley def. Chris Matthews for the ACW Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-09 2004 Se7en became the ACW Hardcore Champion
  • 05-09 2004 Bernie Donderwitz def. Se7en for the ACW Hardcore Champion
  • 05-09 2009 Crazy Beautiful (Brett Taylor & Michael York) def. Team SuperBad (El Super Colibri & Justin Lee) for the ComPro Tag Team Champions
  • 05-09 2009 Dane Griffin def. Dustin Heritage for the IZW Impact Division Champion
  • 05-09 2009 BLK-OUT (Jermaine Johnson & Montego Seeka) def. Impact, Inc. (Johnny Z & Bernie D) for the IZW Tag Team Champions
  • 05-09 2015 The Trenchcoat Mafia (Ryan Reed & Billy Ray [1st]) def. Hurricane Ross & J. R. Orullian for the NAW Tag Team Champions
  • 05-09 2021 Erica def. Brandon Barricade for the ASP All Time Champion
  • 05-10 1966 The Assassins (Assassin 1 & Assassin 2) became the TSW United States Tag Team Champion
  • 05-10 2008 Jerry Bostic became the 3DW Violent Division Champion
  • 05-10 2014 Billy Ray [1st] def. Running Wolf for the NAW Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-10 2014 American Made def. Tim Rockwell for the UWE United States Champion
  • 05-10 2019 Kody Lane def. Latrell Upton for the ComPro Oklahoma X Division Champion
  • 05-10 2023 Leo Fox def. The Wolf of War for the RDW Iron Man Champion
  • 05-11 1976 Karl Kox & Bob Sweetan def. Ted DiBiase & Dick Murdoch for the TSW United States Tag Team Champion
  • 05-11 1981 Ernie Ladd def. Kerry Von Erich for the WCCW American Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-11 2008 The Midnite Rider def. Outlaw for the MSWA Oklahoma Champion
  • 05-11 2008 Limited Edition (Les Mayne & Dane Griffin) def. The South Side Soul Assassins (Tyson Jaymes & 3rd Rail) for the MSWA Mid-South Tag Team Champion
  • 05-11 2013 Billy Ray [1st] became the NAW Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-11 2013 The Trenchcoat Mafia (Ryan Reed & Billy Ray [1st]) def. Pretty In Pink (Mike Rose & Michael Duplanti) for the NAW Tag Team Champions
  • 05-11 2019 Drake Gallows became the KCW National Champion
05-05
  • Bill Watts May 5th Today!
  • Miss Diss Lexia May 5th Today!
  • El Matador Dos May 5th Today!
  • Princess Victoria May 5th Today!
  • Shane Rawls May 5th Today!
  • Maria Brigitte May 5th Today!
  • Pat O'Dowdy May 5th Today!
  • El Gallardo May 5th Today!
  • Zane Morris May 5th Today!
  • Olivier Vegos May 5th Today!
  • Claire Watson May 6th
  • Hercules May 7th
  • Richie Adams May 8th
  • Jake Danielsson May 9th
  • Sunny War Cloud May 10th
  • Rook Tyler May 10th
  • Tito Santana May 10th
  • Billy Brown May 10th
  • Jerry Brown May 10th
  • Psycho May 11th
  • Big J May 11th
  • Charming Charles May 11th
  • Sol Yang May 12th
  • Brock Baker May 12th
  • Sensei Jamo May 12th
  • Bill Howard May 12th
  • Prince Mahalli May 13th
  • Dave Ryda May 13th
  • Maggie Rae May 13th
  • Lars Manderson May 13th
  • Pete Maguire May 13th
  • Stan Kowalski May 13th
  • Danny Hodge May 13th
  • Payton Scott May 13th
  • Karl Krupp May 13th
  • Little Boy Blue May 13th
  • Steve Williams May 14th
  • Big Van Vader May 14th
  • C. M. Burnham May 14th
  • Scott Irwin May 14th
  • Tommy Rogers May 14th
  • Robert Fuller May 14th
  • Shawn Bragan May 14th
  • Oscar Amazing May 15th
  • Erwin IV May 15th
  • Koko May 15th
  • Andrew Bridge May 15th
  • Joe Cuedo May 15th
  • Kevin Von Erich May 15th
  • Ryker James May 16th
  • Ryan Martin May 16th
  • Alan Jefferson May 16th
  • Buddy Knox May 16th
  • Buddy Roberts May 16th
  • J. B. Pain May 17th
  • Mike Pappas May 17th
  • Wage May 17th
  • Dan Maestro May 17th
  • Billy Red Lyons May 17th
  • Kyle Hawk May 17th
  • Luna Nightshade May 18th
  • Matt Riviera May 18th
  • Kristopher Haiden May 18th
  • Akuma Jones May 18th
  • Jimmy Snuka May 18th
  • J. R. Wind May 18th
  • Gajo May 18th

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