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Terry Funk Brought Texas Everywhere He Wrestled

Terry Funk Brought Texas Everywhere He Wrestled

Posted: Sep 1st 2023 By: Nadine Smith - TexasMonthly.com

Over half a century in professional wrestling, Terry Funk built a legacy that stretches from Amarillo to Tokyo.

There are few people who embodied what it means to be a professional wrestler—and what it means to be a Texan—as deeply as Terry Funk, who died last week. He was 79. From the dusty old Tri-State Fairgrounds in his hometown of Amarillo to the blockbuster spectacle of WrestleMania, from the wrestling halls of Japan to the Gathering of the Juggalos, the “Texas Bronco” spent half a century bringing the Lone Star State to the rest of the world. Other wrestlers have been richer or more infamous, but in a business known for massive egos and difficult personalities, Terry Funk was uniquely respected by peers and fans alike.

From the end of World War II until the ascendance of Vince McMahon’s WWF in the 1980s, wrestling in the United States was governed by the National Wrestling Alliance (NWA), with regional fiefdoms controlled by individual promoters. Not every territory was a family dynasty, but in Texas, the majority were: the Guerreros in El Paso, the Von Erichs in Dallas, and the Blanchards in San Antonio. But in many ways, the legacy of the Funks in Amarillo towers above them all.

Terry’s father, Dory Funk, was the Amarillo territory’s top star in the 1960s, the undisputed king of a particularly brutal kind of bout he dubbed the “Texas Death Match.” In 1967, Dory would start running the show behind the scenes as a promoter, building up his two sons, Terry and Dory Jr., as the new main eventers. Dory’s kids had cut their teeth on the football team at West Texas A&M, a program that produced countless wrestling legends, such as Ted DiBiase, Stan Hansen, and Bruiser Brody.

Under the NWA, championships were chosen by committee instead of actually “won,” but a selection as champion was a sign of confidence in a wrestler’s abilities—as long as you held the title, you were required to endlessly travel the country and defend against local challengers. When Dory Jr. won the NWA World’s Heavyweight title in 1969, Terry toured alongside him as the more rascally and unruly younger brother; where Dory played the serious and respectable athlete, Terry’s ring persona was that of a down and dirty troublemaker who would break rules and bones in equal measure. Watching the two brothers cut promos together, it’s almost comical how soft-spoken and genteel Dory Jr. comes off by comparison.

It’s often said that to be a great wrestler, you need to be a great actor, but what made Terry Funk so compelling is that he never seemed like he was acting. Sure, he appeared in movies like Road House and Paradise Alley—if only to get his SAG card for the health-care benefits—and he could emote with the best of them, but Funk was an orator more than anything. His promos were like the unhinged jeremiads of a fire-and-brimstone preacher, stoking the audience’s passions. He could be venomous, castigating his enemies as “perverts” and “egg-sucking dogs” in a rumbling baritone from somewhere deeper than hell. Everything he did felt instinctive and alive.

In 1975, Funk made history by capturing the NWA World’s Heavyweight Championship, about two and a half years after the end of Dory Jr.’s title reign, marking the first time the golden belt had been held by brothers. Even after dropping the strap to Harley Race in 1977, Funk was a constant traveling challenger, going from one territory to another like the lone gunslinger riding into town. Because Funk was so adept at riling up crowds, he was endlessly valuable to promoters who needed challengers for their top baby faces; after all, what’s a superhero without a villain?

In the mid-eighties, when Vince McMahon needed a foe to solidify the credibility of his rising superstar Hulk Hogan, he called up Terry Funk. When World Championship Wrestling decided to turn the arrogant Ric Flair into a playboy hero, it brought in Terry Funk to beat his ass and make fans feel for a character they once hated. At that time, the major promotions were already beginning to view Funk as too old and washed-up, but as he would do throughout his career, Funk kept fighting and proved he had more to give. Ahead of his deliciously bloody 1989 “I Quit” match with Flair, Funk swaggered to the ring to the unsettling wail of Ennio Morricone’s “Man With a Harmonica,” menacing the crowd with his trademark branding iron.

As hated as Funk often was in the United States, he was just as revered in Japan, where he became an unexpected pop culture icon and even something of an adopted national hero. Just like in American wrestling, in which patriotic heroes often squared off with stereotypical, treacherous foreigners, importing foreign bad guys was foundational to Japanese wrestling. Over time, though, audiences’ appreciation for wrestlers’ craft deepened, and non-Japanese wrestlers increasingly earned the respect of Japanese fans. More than almost any other American of his time, Funk was brimming with the “fighting spirit” that Japanese crowds adored. Whether it was a chop to the chest or barbed wire cracking his back, Funk withstood the most devastating of punishments.

Eventually Funk would earn a similar reverence from American fans. As a mentor to the rising stars of the ultraviolent nineties outfit Extreme Championship Wrestling (ECW), Funk was no longer the despised and dangerous outlaw, but a weathered cowboy out for one last ride. As he reached an age when most wrestlers start to slow down, Funk somehow became more prolific, retiring and unretiring so many times it became a punch line.

Many wrestlers struggle to stay retired, but there was something almost distinctly Texan about Funk’s restless inability to quit working, like an old rancher who insists on digging postholes himself just because he’s got nothing better to do. It’s this self-described “middle-aged and crazy” period of Funk’s career that is perhaps best remembered today, as he embraced the role of an insane and extremely dangerous old man. Funk willingly shed buckets of blood to become one of the foremost innovators of the weapons-based style that became known as hardcore or “deathmatch” wrestling. Rings draped in barbed wire, thunderous explosives and pyrotechnics, neckbreaking dives off ladders—if your doctor would advise you against it, fiftysomething Terry Funk would gladly do it.

Funk’s brawls in Japan and at American indie wrestling shows—like a 1990 match in New Jersey at which Stan Hansen got disqualified for kicking Funk into a river—circulated on grainy VHS tapes like folktales, pushing the envelope like his father had done decades earlier with the Texas Death Match. No-holds-barred street fights with dumpsters and trash cans and kendo sticks would become common by the end of the decade on Monday Night Raw and ECW Hardcore TV, but in 1990, most fans had never seen anything like a wrestler knocking his opponent into a body of water.

In wrestling, they say the best gimmicks don’t come from completely invented characters, but from a single part of a performer’s personality turned up to eleven. Without a doubt, there was a wild man inside Terry Funk, but a wild man was far from all he was. For all the violence he inflicted in public, Funk lived a more ordinary and gentle private life than most professional wrestlers, ever a hardworking small-town boy with good manners and a loving family.

Like so many Texas originals, Funk traveled the world over, but the Lone Star remained his guiding light, and he would always come home to his Double Cross Ranch. The 1999 documentary Beyond the Mat interspersed Funk playing the loving father of the bride at his daughter’s wedding with footage of some of his bloodiest moments. In the film, Funk reflects on the strange fraternity of violence: “The worse you hurt each other, the more money you make, and the more money you make, the better friends you are.” Even at his bloodiest, most disturbing extremes, that spirit of collaboration is what kept Funk coming back.

Almost like the rascally, silver-haired Augustus McCrae of Lonesome Dove, Terry Funk never knew when to quit, and that stubborn persistence made him such a legend. His refusal to leave the business was never self-serving—he stuck around to give back to the industry that had put food on his family’s table and to pass his knowledge to future generations. After a 1977 battle with Harley Race, Funk cut a promo about his career aspirations: “I don’t intend on being the Arnold Palmer of professional wrestling. In other words, I don’t intend on being known as what I have done in the past.” That restless pioneer spirit defined Terry Funk, who reinvented himself at every turn while always holding true to his roots.

 

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Spotlight in History

  • 1959 The Zebra Kid def. The Golden Giant for the WCCW Texas Brass Knuckles Title
  • 1970 Johnny Valentine def. Killer Kowalski for the WCCW Texas Brass Knuckles Title
  • 1984 Terry Taylor def. Krusher Khrushchev for the MSW Television Title
  • 1986 Buzz Sawyer def. Chris Adams for the WCCW Television Title
  • 2006 Bobby Burns def. Shane Morbid for the SRPW Heavyweight Title
  • 2006 Beau Dalton became the SRPW X Division Champion
  • 2006 Ray Martinez became the SRPW X Division Champion
  • 2012 Big Business (Kevin Morgan & Damon Windsor) def. The Old School Suckas (Gary Tool & Randy Price) for the IZW Tag Team Titles
  • 2017 Saints of Pro Wrestling (Scott Sanders & Shawn Sanders & Chaz Sharpe) def. Cursed (Kuda & Blade [2nd]) for the MSWA Mid-South Tag Team Titles
  • 2017 Nytronis A'Teo def. Saints of Pro Wrestling (Scott Sanders, Shawn Sanders, & Chaz Sharpe) for the MSWA Mid-South Tag Team Titles
  • 2023 Jason Simon became the MajCW Native American Champion
  • 2023 Dan Webber def. Cappuccino Jones for the UWE Heavyweight 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
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  • 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
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  • 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
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  • 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
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  • 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
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  • Jef Tiger Jun 16th Today!
  • Chuck Hinds Jun 16th Today!
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