Jun 17th 2026 09:50am

Sign Up / Sign In|Help

 

Dory Funk, Jr. Talks His Wrestling School, Why He Left WWF, Training Kurt Angle, Wrestling Terry

Dory Funk, Jr. Talks His Wrestling School, Why He Left WWF, Training Kurt Angle, Wrestling Terry

Posted: Nov 9th 2013 By: CMBurnham

I recently spoke to WWE Hall of Famer about his time in the business, singing with WWF in the 80s, his his new Funking Conservatory Wrestling School and more. You can get more information about the Funking Conservatory Wrestling School at this link. Here is the interview, in its entirety:

Wrestling Inc.: Your father was a legendary pro wrestler. You started wrestling right after college. Did you know growing up that this is what you were going to be doing?

Dory: Maybe I did, but I guess I did. As a kid, I always dreamed of being a professional wrestler. I watched my father wrestle. I loved what he did. I thought a lot about doing it. As I went through college, I was always playing football and working for a construction company at the same time I was going to school. It came upon me that in those days, you couldn't be a professional athlete, a wrestler and a collegiate football player at the same time. So when our season was over, we won our last game against Ohio University, our season was over, the local promoter, Doc Sarpolis, wanted to have me wrestle for him. I signed a contract on the wheels of a TWA airplane when we landed in Amarillo after the game, the Sun Bowl. I never looked back. My career started in 1963.

Wrestling Inc.: You said you signed your first contract right after a college football career. Had you even trained at all until then?

Dory: Yes I had. It's kind of strange but the trainer was, well a couple of em. My father, one, Dory Funk Sr. Ricky Romero. And a guy named Johnny Como, was very young. He was 18 years old, wrestling in the Amarillo territory. And Johnny Como went on to become Pedro Morales, the WWE/F World Champion. He was one of my trainers.

Wrestling Inc.: Did you ever have the opportunity to team with your father or work with him on any level?

Dory: Oh, yes. We were a six man tag team, my brother, myself and my father in St. Louis, Greensboro, North Carolina, the Amarillo territory. I also had the opportunity to work with him in Japan. He was in my corner, probably the most famous match I had was for the NWA Championship in Japan against Antonio Inoki. My father was in my corner that night. He was quite active and quite a great wrestler.

Wrestling Inc.: You defeated Gene Kiniski for the NWA World Championship in 1969. Back then, title changes were a big deal and didn't happen that often. What was your reaction when you learned that you would be winning the title?

Dory: Well my reaction when I won the title, it's still there on video tapes on YouTube. It was Tampa, Florida. My father and my brother put a whole lot of work into training me and getting me into shape and getting me ready for the big match in Tampa. Actually it was the very words from my father after I won the match, he came over, put his arm around me and said, "I just want you to know you did a hell of a job. If you do nothing else, I'm very, very proud of you." I never forgot those words. He and my brother, Terry Funk, did a tremendous amount of preparation work with training me and getting me ready for the match.

Wrestling Inc.: You held it, I think you had the second longest reign ever for that title, correct?

Dory: Yeah. Four and a half years. That was an unbelievable trip. First class everywhere you go. We traveled to 30 different territories and we had the opportunity to work with the very best in each territory. It was every night a different opponent. It was just a fabulous experience.

Wrestling Inc.: You've mentioned Jack Brisco as being one of your favorite opponents, I think he had mentioned in an interview since that you were supposed to lose the title to him, but you ended up losing to Harley Race.

Dory: I had a pickup truck wreck accident and there was no way I could have been used to wrestle Jack Brisco. That's the truth. Yeah. I was just unable to [wrestle]. I was in the hospital. I wasn't able to go to Houston and wrestle Jack.

Wrestling Inc.: Yeah. You wrestled a lot in Japan in the 80s with the WWF when it really took off. You saw kind of the style that the business changed. In Japan, did you see the style change as much as it changed over here and continues to change over here?

Dory: In Japan it was my brother and myself, because when I first went there they was lining up Japanese wrestlers against three American wrestlers. The Japanese wrestlers were the good guys and the American wrestlers were the bad guys. Very fortunate for me, I had the opportunity to wrestle a match with Antonio Inoki that lasted one hour and supposedly, one of the most famous matches in the history of Japanese wrestling. What happened was the people accepted my wrestling and his wrestling, and they accepted both of us as a couple of athletes competing with each other. All of a sudden in Japan I wasn't the bad guy, I was the good guy. The same thing happened with Terry. It was shortly thereafter that the Butcher and the Sheik were in Japan. Terry and I were the ones that battled those two guys in some bloody, violent matches and the people picked our side in Japan. It became a situation where we were considered one of the Japanese. We dressed in the Japanese dressing room. We came out for the ceremonies on their side. Everybody else was in the other dressing room. It was a unique experience and it's still to this day, we were not heels in Japan. We were very well liked and very appreciative of the Japanese fans. They're some of the greatest in the world and they never forget. If you're their favorite one time, you're their favorite forever. I'm very grateful for, like you said, the two big things in my career was my acceptance in Japan as a professional wrestler and a superstar over there, and came over here and was NWA World Champion. There were other really tremendous highlights too, one of them being going through the WWF with Terry Funk as my partner and given the opportunity to train up in Stamford, Connecticut with WWE, but it was WWF at the time. Given the opportunity right now to run the Funking Conservatory Wrestling School and being able to work with some of these really great kids that are coming up. We've had a lot of stars in the past that have gone to be superstars in the WWE and we've got a lot of future stars that will be coming up. They always say in this business there are no guarantees, but we've got a lot of kids that really have some talent and you will hear from them.

Wrestling Inc.: I want to talk more about your school. I did want to ask you first about your WWF run when you signed. You guys wrestled at Wrestlemania 2. Did you have any idea at the time that it would become this big juggernaut that it has?

Dory: Yeah. Wrestlemania was big. The production of WWE, back then and to the present, is the best that there is in professional wrestling and in just about anything.

Wrestling Inc.: What made you decide to leave WWF shortly after that?

Dory: It was commitment to Japan. It was one that I had made earlier and had to continue on with.

Wrestling Inc.: And what made you start the Funking Conservatory School?

Dory: There was so many wrestlers that I had trained just because I knew them, including Jumbo Tsuruta in Japan. Oh heck, going back to the West Texas kids, Stan Hansen. I had always been interested in training and teaching. It was many years ago, probably about 1996 or 97 I got a call from WWE and they wanted me to come up there and train their talent and exclusively work for them. That's when I went up there. Wrestlers like Kurt Angle, the Hardy brothers, Christian, Mark Henry, Edge? just a tremendous crew that I had the opportunity to work with. [They] went on to become superstars.

Wrestling Inc.: Yeah. I remember back then when you were training Kurt Angle, and hearing about just how, what a prodigy he was, just how quickly he picked up the business. Was that pretty unique, or do you see that every now and then?

Dory: Kurt was unique. He was still with us for a good period of time before WWE felt he was ready to go on the road with the company. But yeah, Kurt was unique because he had such great amateur wrestling skills and the first thing I told Kurt was, "Whatever you did in amateur wrestling you should do in professional wrestling, but you just have to adapt your style to what we do and what we're trying to do in the professional wrestling business." He did a tremendous job. So did Christian. So did the Hardy brothers. So did Edge. Mark Henry is still going and doing a terrific job.

Wrestling Inc.: How has your training style changed over the years, because wrestling obviously in ring, back in the day, used to be a bit more snug, a lot closer? Now it's a lot more high spots and building to false finishes before the finish. How has your training style adapted and how did you adapt it?

Dory: Okay it's a mixture. There's several things we do. One thing we do is we take care of our people. We don't want them hurt. So we have a safety program which includes many of the things that WWE does. Basically blows to the head whatsoever, they don't allow. We have a calisthenics program that conditions your body, to strengthen your knees and your neck. We work very hard on television because television is the heart and soul of professional wrestling. We use video almost every day in our training. We also train very hard on technical performance. Technical performance begins with the basics. For someone to walk and in and want to try backflips, flying off the top rope, they need to show that they know and understand the basics of wrestling first. There are WWE agents and WWE personnel and TNA personnel and Japanese personnel, but the first thing they want to know is do you know the basics? They can tell if a wrestler is good or not. They just want you to walk in the ring. So we start with their entrances. We teach them the basics. Then we take them as far with the spectacular as they can show they're able to go and still have a safety factor to it. We don't want any crazy things like somebody flying out of the ring and a serious injury. We pride ourselves very much on our safety program.

Wrestling Inc.: When someone signs up, can anyone sign up? Or do you pick and choose who gets in? Or how does that work?

Dory: We have a screening system. We like to know what their athletic background is, what their goals are, what they would like to achieve. It is important to us, amateur wrestling is a real plus. Judo is a real plus. Football is a real plus. We've had baseball players that have come in and did a tremendous job. A good athletic background is necessary. A good attitude towards the wrestling business is necessary.

Wrestling Inc.: WWE recently opened the Performance Center. I know there are some people that are concerned this will cause wrestlers to only learn one style and only one way to work. What are your thoughts on that?

Dory: I think they've done a tremendous job with it. I think it's, yeah WWE has to look for different styles. I mean my gosh, look at the talent roster. They have so many characters on RAW. It's mind boggling. I don't think everybody's going to work the same, with the same style. I think a wrestling match is something that, it takes a lot of skill, it takes a lot of, you have to see with the audience. More than anything, you've got to listen too. You've got to hear the audience and know what they want, know what they'll react to. Listening is one of the most important things of being a good worker, and we teach that too. We have the opportunity to put our kids in front of 100 people here in FC, that's what our studio will hold. They get the same reaction out of these people as if you were working in front of 10,000.

Wrestling Inc.: I wanted to ask you also about being inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame in 2009 alongside your brother Terry. What was that experience like?

Dory: It was a fabulous honor. I really, really appreciate it because the bulk of my career was not with WWE, even though I was a trainer for them and I did work with them for almost a year. I thought it was just a tremendous honor and I thank the McMahon family and everybody involved with WWE and the selection. I just couldn't believe it. I was very, very grateful. It's right along with winning the NWA World Heavyweight Championship. Being in the WWE Hall of Fame is my highest honor.

Wrestling Inc.: You actually once wrestled Terry, right?

Dory: Yes. I wrestled him once in Japan.

Wrestling Inc.: And you won that match?

Dory: Yes, I was fortunate

Wrestling Inc.: If you could have one last match, one last retirement?

Dory: Triple H!

Wrestling Inc.: Triple H?

Dory: Yes. I would like to challenge Triple H [laughter] Texas Death Match, inside a steel cage.

Wrestling Inc.: Thanks again for your time. Do you have any last comments for the readers of our website?

Dory: Just I would like to thank them so much for the support and for being wrestling fans. If they like what I do I appreciate it very, very much. And thank you so much for the interview and for the opportunity for me to have the interview for your website. Again, just I appreciate it and look forward to everything that comes in the future. Japan to WWE to TNA to the Internet [laughter] to whatever it is, the Funking Conservatory wrestling school. I just keep looking forward to a bright future in all directions.

 

Printable version Email to a friend

Supplemental Information

Upcoming Events

Complete Calendar

1

Spotlight in History

  • 1957 Billy Raborn became the TSW Oklahoma Junior Heavyweight Champion
  • 1958 Bull Curry def. Fritz Von Erich for the WCCW Texas Brass Knuckles Title
  • 1983 Jimmy Garvin def. David Von Erich for the WCCW Texas Heavyweight Title
  • 1983 Kerry Von Erich & Bruiser Brody def. The Fabulous Freebirds (Terry Gordy & Michael Hayes) for the WCCW American Tag Team Titles
  • 2005 Kenny Campbell def. Shane Morbid for the SRPW X Division Title
  • 2006 The Party Express (Mitch Carter & Cade Sydal) def. Impact Inc. (John Zorthos & Bernie Donderwitz) for the IZW Tag Team Titles
  • 2008 Kunna Keyoh def. El Culo Intruso for the 3DW Violent Division Title
  • 2017 Prince Mahalli def. Paul Puertorico for the WFC Hometown Heroes Title
  • 2017 Michael Wolf def. Aaron Anders for the ComPro Oklahoma X Division Title
  • 2017 Randy Price def. Double D for the IZW Impact Division Title
  • 2023 Alex Royal def. Justin Lee for the WFC Hometown Heroes Title

Week of Sun 06-14 to Sat: 06-20

  • 06-14 1970 Fritz Von Erich def. Boris Malenko for the WCCW American Heavyweight Title
  • 06-14 1982 Fritz Von Erich def. King Kong Bundy for the WCCW American Heavyweight Title
  • 06-14 2004 Team Shenanigans (Tyler Bateman & Kenny Campbell) def. Li'l Joe & Al Farat (substituting for Se7en) for the ACW Tag Team Titles
  • 06-14 2008 Kenny Campbell became the IZW Impact Division Champion
  • 06-14 2008 Nathan Sensation & Striker def. The New Age Syndicate (Shawn Sanders & Scott Sanders) for the IZW Tag Team Titles
  • 06-14 2008 Anarchy [2nd] def. The Enforcer for the SECW Tri-State Title
  • 06-14 2008 Dane Griffin def. Mo'Body Gillespie for the 3DW Violent Division Title
  • 06-14 2009 El Super Colibri became the TAP Adrenaline Champion
  • 06-14 2009 Reckless def. The Canadian Red Devil for the TAP Heavyweight Title
  • 06-14 2009 Shane Morbid def. Jon Cross for the TAP Oklahoma Heritage Title
  • 06-14 2013 Clint Cox became the BPPW Heavyweight Champion
  • 06-14 2014 The Rising (Justin Riker & Abel) def. Psycho Sawyer & Diamond for the SRPW Tag Team Titles
  • 06-14 2014 Omega X (Brett Stopp & X-Static) def. The K. C. Wolves (Graham Bell & Luke Langley) for the UWE Tag Team Titles
  • 06-14 2025 Pastor Brent def. Dr. Corvus for the WAH Living Hope Title
  • 06-14 2025 Skylar Slice became the WAH Womens Champion
  • 06-14 2025 Military Express (Sgt. Todd & Sgt. Hartman) def. Speeding Bullet (Mike Gunnz & Stephen Nitro) for the NAW Tag Team Titles
  • 06-14 2025 Scotty Rose def. Floyd Maystorm for the WAH Hunger Dojo Title
  • 06-14 2025 Floyd Maystorm def. Scotty Rose for the WAH Hunger Dojo Title
  • 06-15 1982 King Kong Bundy became the WCCW American Heavyweight Champion
  • 06-15 2003 Tyler Bateman def. Jef Tiger for the ACW Hardcore Title
  • 06-15 2003 John O'Malley def. Tyler Bateman for the ACW Hardcore Title
  • 06-15 2008 El Culo Intruso def. Dane Griffin for the 3DW Violent Division Title
  • 06-15 2018 Sam Stackhouse def. Abyss for the BCW Buzzsaw Title
  • 06-15 2019 Double D became the WFC Heavyweight Champion
  • 06-15 2019 Prince Mahalli def. Damon Windsor for the WCR Revolutionary Title
  • 06-15 2024 Cade Fite became the TIW No Pressure Champion
  • 06-15 2024 Ozzy Hendrix & Adrian Vega def. The Voiceless Society (Tyler Watts & E-Bone) for the CAPW Tag Team Titles
  • 06-15 2024 The Gatekeeper def. Rick Russo for the EPW All-American Title
  • 06-15 2024 Trench Blythe became the EPW International Champion
  • 06-15 2024 Malachi def. Kevin James Sanchez for the EPW Heavyweight Title
  • 06-16 1959 The Zebra Kid def. The Golden Giant for the WCCW Texas Brass Knuckles Title
  • 06-16 1970 Johnny Valentine def. Killer Kowalski for the WCCW Texas Brass Knuckles Title
  • 06-16 1984 Terry Taylor def. Krusher Khrushchev for the MSW Television Title
  • 06-16 1986 Buzz Sawyer def. Chris Adams for the WCCW Television Title
  • 06-16 2006 Bobby Burns def. Shane Morbid for the SRPW Heavyweight Title
  • 06-16 2006 Beau Dalton became the SRPW X Division Champion
  • 06-16 2006 Ray Martinez became the SRPW X Division Champion
  • 06-16 2012 Big Business (Kevin Morgan & Damon Windsor) def. The Old School Suckas (Gary Tool & Randy Price) for the IZW Tag Team Titles
  • 06-16 2017 Saints of Pro Wrestling (Scott Sanders & Shawn Sanders & Chaz Sharpe) def. Cursed (Kuda & Blade [2nd]) for the MSWA Mid-South Tag Team Titles
  • 06-16 2017 Nytronis A'Teo def. Saints of Pro Wrestling (Scott Sanders, Shawn Sanders, & Chaz Sharpe) for the MSWA Mid-South Tag Team Titles
  • 06-16 2023 Jason Simon became the MajCW Native American Champion
  • 06-16 2023 Dan Webber def. Cappuccino Jones for the UWE Heavyweight Title
  • 06-17 1957 Billy Raborn became the TSW Oklahoma Junior Heavyweight Champion
  • 06-17 1958 Bull Curry def. Fritz Von Erich for the WCCW Texas Brass Knuckles Title
  • 06-17 1983 Jimmy Garvin def. David Von Erich for the WCCW Texas Heavyweight Title
  • 06-17 1983 Kerry Von Erich & Bruiser Brody def. The Fabulous Freebirds (Terry Gordy & Michael Hayes) for the WCCW American Tag Team Titles
  • 06-17 2005 Kenny Campbell def. Shane Morbid for the SRPW X Division Title
  • 06-17 2006 The Party Express (Mitch Carter & Cade Sydal) def. Impact Inc. (John Zorthos & Bernie Donderwitz) for the IZW Tag Team Titles
  • 06-17 2008 Kunna Keyoh def. El Culo Intruso for the 3DW Violent Division Title
  • 06-17 2017 Prince Mahalli def. Paul Puertorico for the WFC Hometown Heroes Title
  • 06-17 2017 Michael Wolf def. Aaron Anders for the ComPro Oklahoma X Division Title
  • 06-17 2017 Randy Price def. Double D for the IZW Impact Division Title
  • 06-17 2023 Alex Royal def. Justin Lee for the WFC Hometown Heroes Title
  • 06-18 1964 Karl Kox def. Louie Tillet for the WCCW Texas Brass Knuckles Title
  • 06-18 2004 Shane Morbid def. Dirty Harry Sanchez for the SRPW Hardcore Title
  • 06-18 2004 Codie Mullins def. Shane Morbid for the SRPW Hardcore Title
  • 06-18 2004 Dexter Hardaway def. Codie Mullins for the SRPW Hardcore Title
  • 06-18 2004 Pork Chop def. Dexter Hardaway for the SRPW Hardcore Title
  • 06-18 2004 Dexter Hardaway def. Pork Chop for the SRPW Hardcore Title
  • 06-18 2004 S.K. Fulton def. Dexter Hardaway for the SRPW Hardcore Title
  • 06-18 2004 Dirty Harry Sanchez def. S.K. Fulton for the SRPW Hardcore Title
  • 06-18 2006 Ryan Davidson def. Angel Williams for the MSWA Mid-South Heavyweight Title
  • 06-18 2011 Michael Barry def. Kenny Campbell for the IZW Impact Division Title
  • 06-18 2016 Spyder became the SRPW United States Champion
  • 06-18 2016 Skylar Slice became the IZW Womens Champion
  • 06-18 2021 Lady Sensacion became the FIW Women’s Champion
  • 06-18 2021 Rodeo (Chandler Hopkins & Malico) def. Cam Cole & Johnny Bedlam for the TexPro Tag Team Titles
  • 06-18 2022 Duke Cornell def. Blue Bolt for the WFC Prime Title
  • 06-18 2022 Maddox Jones def. Striker for the EPW Heavyweight Title
  • 06-18 2022 Mike Gunns def. Jake Danielsson for the NAW Heavyweight Title
  • 06-19 1977 Fritz Von Erich def. Bruiser Brody for the WCCW Texas Brass Knuckles Title
  • 06-19 2010 Aaron Neil def. John O'Malley for the IZW Heavyweight Title
  • 06-19 2015 Bree Ann def. Claudia for the NWA-TXO Rose Title
  • 06-20 1972 The Continental Warriors (Bobby Hart & Lorenzo Parente) def. Tom Jones & Ivan Putski for the TSW United States Tag Team Titles
  • 06-20 1977 Bill Watts became the TSW North American Champion
  • 06-20 1987 Barry Windham became the UWF Western States Heritage Champion
  • 06-20 2004 X-Cal def. John O'Malley for the ACW Heavyweight Title
  • 06-20 2009 Dustin Heritage def. Dane Griffin for the IZW Impact Division Title
  • 06-20 2009 BLK-OUT (Montego Seeka & Jermaine Johnson) def. Impact, Inc, (Johnny Z & Bernie D) for the IZW Tag Team Titles
  • 06-20 2014 Bree Ann def. Miss Diss Lexia for the NWA-TXO Rose Title
  • 06-20 2021 DNR (Drake Gallows & Revan) def. Malik Mayfield & Maui Mike for the ASP Tag Team Titles
06-17
  • Ray Martinez Jun 17th Today!
  • Talos Jun 17th Today!
  • Rob Justice Jun 17th Today!
  • Mario Galento Jun 17th Today!
  • Sashimi Deluxe Jun 18th
  • Johnny Angel Jun 18th
  • Cam the CODA Jun 18th
  • Bruiser Brody Jun 18th
  • Andy Dalton Jun 18th
  • Bad Boy Jun 18th
  • Abe Jacobs Jun 18th
  • Canadian Red Devil Jun 19th
  • Kodi Ocean Jun 19th
  • Billy the Kid Jun 19th
  • Top Dollar Bill Jun 19th
  • Miguel Padilla Jun 19th
  • Wahoo McDaniel Jun 19th
  • Mike Two Jun 19th
  • Jon Cross Jun 20th
  • David Kyzer Jun 20th
  • Koko B. Ware Jun 20th
  • Professor Ito Jun 20th
  • Milton Winkelman Jun 21st
  • Super Star Jun 21st
  • Jeff the Ref Jun 21st
  • Rick Russo Jun 21st
  • Phantom Star Jun 21st
  • Athena Jun 23rd
  • Don Kent Jun 24th
  • Gabe Wilder Jun 24th
  • Juan Sebastian Jun 24th
  • X-Storms Jun 25th
  • Kody Lane Jun 25th
  • D. K. Bradley Jun 26th
  • Jax Samuel Jun 26th
  • Sylvia Richmond Jun 26th
  • Paul Rodriguez Jun 26th
  • Dan Barnhart Jun 27th
  • Jason Kirby Jun 27th
  • Reckless Jun 27th
  • Ignition Jun 27th
  • Kuda Jun 27th
  • Doc Hearon Jun 28th
  • John Tidwell Jun 28th
  • Claire Jun 28th
  • J. J. Blake Jun 28th
  • Malico Jun 28th
  • Kenny Mack Jun 28th
  • Damian Kincaid Jun 28th
  • Boris Malenko Jun 28th
  • Bill Dromo Jun 28th
  • Voltio Santiago Jun 29th
  • Barbara Galento Jun 29th
  • Kenneth Caine Jun 30th
  • Terry Funk Jun 30th
  • Ed Lewis Jun 30th

More Look Back In History

Most Active Members

  • Striker
  • Michael York
  • The Mayne Event
  • cphs_sweethearts
  • Talon