May 22nd 2024 07:55am

Sign Up / Sign In|Help

 

Joe Babinsack Looks At The End of The Flair Era

Joe Babinsack Looks At The End of The Flair Era

Posted: Apr 3rd 2008 By: CMBurnham

WrestleMania XXIV truly was the end of an era.

Like most eras, this one really was over a few years back. In many ways, when Vince bought WCW, and Sting and Ric Flair had that last, symbolic match on a Turner Cable TV Station, that was the end.

That Ric Flair lived on, and had some memorable moments and pretty good matches afterwards, is yet another testament to his enduring reputation and his undeniable legacy as one of pro wrestling?s greatest performers.

Today, we live in another era. Actually, Raw on Monday Night, March 31, 2008 is the start of the new, ?Modern? era of professional wrestling. While there are many who would argue that the 1980?s, and some of the 1990?s, comprise the Hulk Hogan era, I?ll stay true to my heel fan roots, my visceral appreciation for the leader of the Four Horsemen, and my hardcore schooled, neo-old school, well rounded opinion on Mr. Flair, and stick with calling it the Ric Flair era.

We know when the era was over, March 30, 2008. But when did it begin?

If we went with Hogan, we?d say January 23, 1984. Actually, December 27, 1983 or December 26, 1983 would be more appropriate. The former being Hogan?s debut against Bill Dixon; the latter being the end of Bob Backlund?s long reign as WWF champ, via disputed loss to the Iron Shiek.

Is it then September 17, 1981, the first of Ric Flair?s NWA Championships, not so coincidentally against Dusty Rhodes, in a championship reign that would be like most of the Nature Boy?s reigns, short but well-defended?

Would it begin with the last great match of Bruno Sammartino?s career, the record setting cage match against Larry Zbyszko at Shea Stadium?

Certainly, it cannot be earlier than that. The 1970?s were still the age of NWA domination. The WWF still pledged fealty to the NWA back then. And through the Funks, Brisco and Harley Race, the regions thrived, and television was local, popular and decidedly old school.

Then again, could it be December 17th, 1976, when TBS first started broadcasting to four cable stations via Satellite? For what was World Championship Wrestling, in any of its versions, without Ric Flair?s presence, and the time that the Superstation made its biggest strides was the building of the foundation of Ric Flair?s legacy.

But what was the Flair era?

For one thing, it was the transition period between old school and modern sensibilities.

When Flair debuted, on December 10, 1972, the NWA regions were still mostly in place, and there was a solid arrangement between that overarching organization and its two major spin-offs, the AWA and the WWWF.. Television was a tool for bringing in locals to the local shows, which was almost entirely the profit-making arm of the industry. Closed circuit was on the horizon, and cable TV?s deep involvement was beginning to bubble up, but only after the war over Atlanta subsided.

Today, at the end of the Flair era, Closed Circuit is an ancient technology, the Internet is an influential tool of pro wrestling fans (and a major thorn in the side of promoters) and the WWE has gone through major name changes and has swallowed the industry almost whole.

Television now dominates the product, being the most watched aspect, and driving fans world-wide to PPV?s. That technology blossomed during Flair?s intermittent reigns, and is now the significant profit-making arm of the industry. Merchandising is another significant portion, which likely never aspired to such lofty goals thirty-five years ago.

The Flair era saw the explosion of cable TV. He was on the Flagship of the NWA, and lead the transition from centralized NWA hegemony, lead by a loose association and a revolving presidency, to Carolina based Crockett promotional tool. Flair first won the NWA title when there existed demands on his time and schedule, and transitioned to WCW?s control of the belt, and then its diminished reputation, and then Flair himself foreshadowed WCW?s demise as he took a contract dispute and the digitized title to the WWF. The enemy.

Things change. And over thirty-five years, things changed immensely.

The one thing that remained quite constant was Flair.

Sure, he spent some time as a face, especially in his established home base of the Crockett?s Mid Atlantic core territory. In many ways, he pioneered the tweener role, the blending of typical heel and face roles. He was a heel that a significant portion of the fans would get behind. He brought a sense of ?coolness? to his championship reigns, basking in his greatness, trumpeting his triumphs and gloating over his conquests.

Storyline or otherwise, in the Ring or in the minds of fans who projected themselves into
his massive ego, his legendary status, his awesome ability to talk the talk. And walk the walk.

He was the champ, he is the champ. He was the MAN, and he still is the man.. He touted himself as ?the dirtiest player in the game? and because his character is and always seems to have been the perfect blend of villain and anti-hero. Even when he lost the belt, he made sure to win the wars. Even as he established his legacy, he trumped it by ?creating? the first real, modern pro wrestling fan movement.

The Four Horsemen.

Flair undoubtedly tapped into the teenage sentiments and the growingly violent mindset of the 1980s and beyond. His character was no longer the heel of the past, dastardly but cowardly, inevitably doomed to failure, cheating to win, but always to be caught, and destined to be driven out of town.

The NWA?s champion transcended heel and face. While they portrayed characteristics, they played a role of traveling champion, matching up with the local drawing power, helping to draw crowds and profit.

The Northeastern branch of the NWA, Vince McMahon Sr?s promotion, relied upon a hero as the champion. Heels were transitory. Larger than life ethnic heroes ruled the world, and were legend because of their stature. (Hogan shed the ethnicity for American patriotism, but played the same role.)

The Midwestern and Western branch was mostly the playground of its owner, Verne Gagne. He was the bland face of wrestling?s history, and part of wrestling?s ongoing reality. Domination by ownership; even if deserved it by technical prowess.

Flair embraced the concepts, and ran with it straight to wrestling immortality.

He made the heel a natural champion. Even if he never dominated through unbeatable spans, he created the legend akin to the heroes of the sport. Even as he became a hero to a growing heel portion of the fans, his reputation grew, larger than any part of his now recognized greatness: his title reigns, his charisma, his superlative ability in the ring, his drawing power.

Ric Flair became the perennial champion. His momentum went unchecked by losses. He became a hero despite them. His connection with the heel fans was simply awesome. And like any heel throughout history, his persistence, his longevity and his cocky demeanor eventually turns fans to him. For Flair, he already created a base.

Over time, he won over more and more.

Flair picked up more than just the mannerisms of Rogers, the pomp of George, the bumps of Stevens, the whooing of McDaniels, the aura of Valentine. He captured the essence of the heel: the ability to draw heat, the psychological attraction, the glamour and the sheer tenacity.

Beyond that, he captured the break all the rules atmosphere that propelled ECW to niche status. He spoke in catch phrases a decade or more before Stone Cold Steve Austin and The Rock captivated many more millions of mainstream fans. And he was the perfect counter-point to the bombastic pride of Hulk Hogan.

That underlying competition, between Hogan, whom the hardcores, the newsletter readers and the truest of fans, not the kiddies and the mainstream marks, knew to be a media creation more than a wrestling talent, and Flair, the technically superior antithesis, was the stuff that propelled legends to the status of greatness.

Like mid-1990?s WWF versus WCW, the rivalry raised the stakes and pumped up an already overwhelming character to new heights.

Flair, even after his stint with the WWF in the early 1990?s, even after being chased out, forced to second tier status, virtually retired on several occasions, and even after horrific treatment by Eric Bischoff, Hogan and political powers, could not break his spirit, or his connection to the fans.

That is why this is the Flair era.

He won the war.

Flair may have moved from WCW to the WWF, back again, and then to the dominance of the WWE, but he never compromised. He never wore out his welcome with the fans. His selfishness is, in many ways, a problem in addressing his ultimate greatness, but despite some odd presentations, some stupid skits and a period where his red-faced rantings were truly cringe-worthy, the fans never abandoned him.

Sure, he could have been used better. People have been saying that for twenty years, intermittently, incredulously, and never indifferently.

So, today, a few days removed from his retirement match, we look to the future.

What?s in store for the future of professional wrestling without THE MAN?

And who?s going to lead it?

Those are questions which will arise in hindsight.

For now, let?s hope that there is a man who can capture the spirit of the crowds, the essence of professional wrestling talent and the tenacity to be true to himself, like Flair has done, and will undoubtedly continue to be.

 

Tags: WCW, Sting, Ric Flair, NWA, Dusty Rhodes

Printable version Email to a friend

Supplemental Information

Latest News

1
King Kong Bundy: The Master of the Five Count

King Kong Bundy: The Master of the Five Count

Wrestling has always had its share of big men: Andre the Giant, Yokozuna, The Undertaker, but few could match the supreme awe... Read More

All Columns

1

Spotlight in History

  • 1955 Mike Clancy def. Ricki Starr for the TSW Oklahoma Junior Heavyweight Champion
  • 1985 The Nightmare [1st]/The Masked Champion/The Champion def. Terry Taylor for the MSW North American Heavyweight Champion
  • 2009 Texas Outlaws, Inc. (Tim Rockwell & Bernard Funk & Bobby Burns & J. W. Hardin) became the TAP Tag Team Champions
  • 2021 DNR (Drake Gallows & Revan) def. Rejecs LM (Elijah Sparks & Dr. Corvus) for the EPW Tag Team Champions
  • 2021 Father Padge def. Revan for the BCW Buzzsaw Champion
  • 2021 Paul Puertorico became the XDWF New GenX Champion

Week of Sun 05-19 to Sat: 05-25

  • 05-19 1937 Hugh Nichols def. Bobby Chick for the NWA World Light Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-19 1980 Gino Hernandez def. Kevin Von Erich for the WCCW American Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-19 1984 The Super Destroyers (Super Destroyer 1 & Super Destroyer 2) def. The Rock & Soul Connection (Buck Zumhofe & King Parsons) for the WCCW American Tag Team Champion
  • 05-19 1989 Super Zodiac & Cactus Jack def. Jeff Jarrett & Kerry Von Erich for the WCCW World Tag Team Champion
  • 05-19 1989 Super Zodiac def. Eric Embry for the WCCW Texas Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-19 2007 Brent Albright def. Rocco Valentino for the NWA-U Universal Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-19 2007 Texas, Inc. (Tim Rockwell & Bernard Funk) def. Mass Destruction (Spoiler 2000 & The Bounty Hunter) for the NWA-U Universal Tag Team Champion
  • 05-19 2012 Ignition def. Steven Sterling for the ComPro Showtime Champion
  • 05-19 2012 Super Skunk Ape, Jr. def. Se7en for the ComPro Oklahoma X Division Champion
  • 05-19 2018 Jerry Dean/Jerry Storm became the BPW Lion Heart Champion
  • 05-19 2018 Aaron Anders def. Michael Wolf for the ComPro Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-19 2023 Brody Wortman def. Skidz for the MajCW 24/7 On Call Champion
  • 05-19 2023 Skidz def. Brody Wortman for the MajCW 24/7 On Call Champion
  • 05-19 2023 Jason Simon def. Skidz for the MajCW 24/7 On Call Champion
  • 05-19 2023 Drake Gallows def. Jason Simon for the MajCW 24/7 On Call Champion
  • 05-19 2023 Punk Synister def. Drake Gallows for the MajCW 24/7 On Call Champion
  • 05-19 2023 Jason Simon def. Punk Synister for the MajCW 24/7 On Call Champion
  • 05-19 2023 Brandon Groom def. Jason Simon for the MajCW 24/7 On Call Champion
  • 05-19 2023 Punk Synister def. Brandon Groom for the MajCW 24/7 On Call Champion
  • 05-19 2023 Jason Simon def. Punk Synister for the MajCW 24/7 On Call Champion
  • 05-19 2023 Nibira def. Jason Simon for the MajCW 24/7 On Call Champion
  • 05-19 2023 Mikey O'Shea def. Nibira for the MajCW 24/7 On Call Champion
  • 05-20 1980 Junkyard Dog def. Terry Gordy for the MSW Louisiana Champion
  • 05-20 2006 Impact Inc. (John Zorthos & Bernie Donderwitz) def. The Old School Assassins (Brad Michaels & Seth Allen) for the IZW Tag Team Champions
  • 05-20 2006 John O'Malley became the IZW Cruiserweight Champion
  • 05-20 2017 Robyn Reid def. Erica for the IZW Womens Champion
  • 05-20 2017 Beach Bod Gods (Angel Camacho & Ray the Bae) def. Nemesis (Rage Logan & Damien Morte) for the IZW Tag Team Champions
  • 05-20 2017 Kevin Morgan def. Johnny Z for the IZW Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-20 2017 Riker def. Mr. Nasty for the UWE Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-20 2022 Wesley Crane def. Anarchy [2nd] for the UWE Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-20 2023 Royal Pimpin' (Alex Royal & Mr. Nasty) def. Southern Aristocracy (Eddie LeVaughn & Anthony Wild) for the UWE Tag Team Champions
  • 05-20 2023 Cappuccino Jones def. Dan Webber for the UWE Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-21 1971 Dusty Rhodes def. Bill Watts for the TSW North American Champion
  • 05-21 1984 Kevin Von Erich def. Killer Khan for the WCCW Television Champion
  • 05-21 2004 Cade Sydal def. X-Cal for the SRPW Light Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-21 2004 Michael Faith def. Butch Dalton for the TPW Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-21 2004 New Canada (AWOL & Jon Davis) def. Sexy Bologna (Anthony Jackson & Sudden Impact) for the TPW Tag Team Champions
  • 05-21 2016 Skylar Slice def. Athena for the IZW Queens Champion
  • 05-21 2017 Von Erichs (Marshall Von Erich & Ross Von Erich) def. The Arrow Club (Kyle Hawk & Ky-Ote) for the IWR Tag Team Champions
  • 05-21 2017 Von Erichs (Marshall Von Erich & Ross Von Erich) def. The Arrow Club (Kyle Hawk & Ky-Ote) for the TCW Tag Team Champions
  • 05-22 1955 Mike Clancy def. Ricki Starr for the TSW Oklahoma Junior Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-22 1985 The Nightmare [1st]/The Masked Champion/The Champion def. Terry Taylor for the MSW North American Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-22 2009 Texas Outlaws, Inc. (Tim Rockwell & Bernard Funk & Bobby Burns & J. W. Hardin) became the TAP Tag Team Champions
  • 05-22 2021 DNR (Drake Gallows & Revan) def. Rejecs LM (Elijah Sparks & Dr. Corvus) for the EPW Tag Team Champions
  • 05-22 2021 Father Padge def. Revan for the BCW Buzzsaw Champion
  • 05-22 2021 Paul Puertorico became the XDWF New GenX Champion
  • 05-23 1984 The Midnight Express (Dennis Condrey & Bobby Eaton) def. The Rock-N-Roll Express (Ricky Morton & Robert Gibson) for the MSW Mid-South Tag Team Champion
  • 05-23 2004 Se7en & Li'l Joe def. Bernie Donderwitz & Mr. Brown for the ACW Tag Team Champions
  • 05-23 2004 Li'l Joe def. Bernie Donderwitz for the ACW Hardcore Champion
  • 05-23 2009 Maniac Mike def. Kareem Sadat for the SWCW Hardcore Champion
  • 05-23 2009 Sage def. Rage Logan for the SWCW Cruiserweight Champion
  • 05-23 2010 Damien Morte def. Crisstopher Crow for the SWCW Cruiserweight Champion
  • 05-23 2015 Brad Michaels def. Jermaine Johnson for the IZW Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-23 2020 Cody Burns def. Drake Gallows for the BCW Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-23 2021 Luke Savage def. Garcia for the ASP Mid-American Champion
  • 05-23 2021 Malik Mayfield became the ASP Livestream Champion
  • 05-24 1954 Rocco Perez def. Frenchy Roy for the TSW Oklahoma Junior Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-24 2020 Shawn Sanders became the ASP Mid-American Champion
  • 05-25 1986 Terry Taylor def. Buzz Sawyer for the UWF Television Champion
  • 05-25 2013 Brock Landers became the SWCW All-American Champion
  • 05-25 2013 The American Pitbulls (Craig Stevens & Jason Jaxon) def. The Investment (Jason Noal & Jay Sinn) for the ACW Tag Team Champions
  • 05-25 2019 Zakk Sinizter def. Anarchy [2nd] for the UWE Apex Champion
  • 05-25 2019 Simply the Future (Alex Royal & J. D.) became the UWE Tag Team Champions
  • 05-25 2019 Proclamation (Ethan Cole & Reed) def. Simply the Future (Alex Royal & J. D.) for the UWE Tag Team Champions
05-22
  • Babyface D'Amanti May 23rd
  • Santana Jackson May 23rd
  • Slash May 23rd
  • Donna Christanello May 23rd
  • Gemini [2nd] May 24th
  • Lucas May 24th
  • Ricky Romero May 24th
  • Shane Rawls May 24th
  • Guy Atticus May 25th
  • Michael York May 25th
  • Dark Journey May 25th
  • Quarky Storm May 25th
  • Dominique Lereaux May 25th
  • Reggie Lincoln May 26th
  • Justin Adams May 26th
  • Michael Duplanti May 26th
  • Tank Bryson May 26th
  • Kelly Kiniski May 27th
  • Crucifer May 27th
  • Maria Star May 28th
  • Dean Lambert May 28th
  • Edge Stone May 28th
  • Jim Thorpe May 28th
  • Kamala May 28th
  • Max McGuirk May 29th
  • Samu May 29th
  • Jimmy Kane May 29th
  • Psycho Mike May 29th
  • Jake Roberts May 30th
  • Jesse Storm May 30th
  • Boss Hardzog May 30th
  • Fuel May 31st
  • Mascara Purpura May 31st
  • James Storm Jun 1st
  • Violet Payne Jun 1st
  • Ross Von Erich Jun 1st
  • Bobby Burns Jun 1st
  • Anna Jackson Jun 1st
  • Tornado Gomez Jun 2nd
  • Brandon Groom Jun 2nd
  • Killista Jun 2nd
  • Leo Voss Jun 2nd
  • A. J. Styles Jun 2nd
  • Thomas Knight Jun 3rd
  • Jeff Exotic Jun 3rd
  • Tarzan Baxter Jun 4th
  • Duke Clemons Jun 4th

More Look Back In History