May 1st 2026 06:43am

Sign Up / Sign In|Help

 

Wrestling Great “Hacksaw” Butch Reed Was A True “Natural”

Wrestling Great “Hacksaw” Butch Reed Was A True “Natural”

Posted: Feb 16th 2021 By: Mike Mooneyham

There was a reason Butch Reed was nicknamed “The Natural.”

Whether as “Hacksaw” Butch Reed, “The “Natural” Butch Reed, or one half of Doom with Ron Simmons, Bruce Franklin Reed was a force to be reckoned with in the world of professional wrestling.

Reed, who had suffered two massive heart attacks earlier this year, passed away Feb. 5 at the age of 66. Reed’s family initially announced that he had died due to heart complications. His family told the local Fox affiliate in Kansas City this past week that he had tested positive for COVID-19 around Jan. 12.

“He’s going to be missed. He’s much-loved. I’m just glad I had him as long as I did,” Reed’s son, Bryan Reed said.

“I had recently reconnected with Butch a little over a month ago (and) he was in good spirits as well as health,” WWE Hall of Famer Don Muraco posted on social media. “Life so fragile … a delicate yet ever-enduring spirit.”

Equipped with the athletic tools that enabled him to succeed in any sport he chose, the massively muscled Reed was a rare talent who stumbled into the wrestling profession when a veteran grappler spotted the impressive physical specimen in a Kansas City, Mo., bar and recruited him for a career in the ring.

Reed, who played football at Central Missouri State from 1973-75, had excelled in basketball, track and field, and power lifting. Pro wrestling would pose a different challenge.

Ronnie Etchison, a seasoned vet and longtime Central States champion, saw Reed’s potential and sent him to the training school of longtime midget wrestling star Lord Littlebrook (Eric Tovey) in St. Joseph, Mo., where Littlebrook served as booker and, along with Little Tokyo (Shigeri Akabane), trained a mostly midget wrestling troupe.

“It took me over a year to show him I could make it in the business,” Reed told the Kansas City Kansan in 2004. “It was hard. I trained over a year. I dedicated myself to being a professional athlete.”

Oozing charisma and swag along with a combination of power, speed and agility, Reed enjoyed a period in which he was considered one of the top wrestlers in the business, posing a serious threat to Ric Flair’s NWA world title in territories from Florida to New Orleans to St. Louis.

Reed fought to a number of hour broadways with Flair and even scored several non-title wins. His talent wasn’t lost on some industry insiders who believed he should have been given a run with the NWA strap.

“I was fortunate enough to be one of the guys that could compete with Flair,” Reed said in a 2019 interview on the Illegal Foreign Object website. “With my athleticism and his athleticism, we clicked.”

“So sorry to hear about the passing of my friend Butch Reed! We spent ‘hours’ in the ring together. Rest in peace!” Flair posted on Twitter.

Mid-South glory

It was in Cowboy Bill Watts’ Oklahoma-based Mid-South Wrestling promotion where “Hacksaw” Butch Reed would emerge as a legitimate drawing card as both a babyface and heel during the early 1980s, headlining New Orleans’ Superdome against Flair and Junkyard Dog, with whom he engaged in a series of brutal “Ghetto Street Fight” matches.

Uber-talented with a great presence and legitimately tough, Reed was Watts’ cup of tea in a territory made up of believable bruisers.

Reed and JYD, Mid-South’s biggest star at the time, also formed a top babyface duo, doing battle with The Rat Pack trio of Ted DiBiase, Hacksaw Jim Duggan and Matt Borne. Reed was clearly a natural heel, though, which would lead to the eventual turn and big-money feud with his former partner.

At Mid-South, Reed won the North American heavyweight championship, the Mid-South tag-team championship and the Mid-South TV championship. At one point he was North American heavyweight champion and Mid-South tag-team champs with Jim Neidhart. He would also enjoy lucrative programs with the likes of Ted DiBiase, Steve Williams, Dick Murdoch, Buddy Landel, Terry Taylor and Magnum TA.

When Vince McMahon swooped up JYD as part of his national expansion, Watts cast Reed in the top babyface spot, but the magic was never replicated.

Reed had also enjoyed great success in Florida, where he and Sweet Brown Sugar (Skip Young) were booked as the top tag team in the territory, capturing the North American tag-team title, and in Georgia where he and partner Pez Whatley won the 1983 Thanksgiving night tag-team tournament.

A WWE stint from 1986-88 as “The Natural” Butch Reed, a bleached-blond copy of Sweet Daddy Siki from an earlier generation, would see him compete in the main event of the first Survivor Series (Reed, Andre The Giant, One Man Gang, King Kong Brody and Rick Rude vs. Hulk Hogan, Paul Orndorff, Don Muraco, Ken Patera and Bam Bam Bigelow), the first Royal Rumble and WrestleMania III. Reed made history as the first-ever wrestler to be eliminated from a Royal Rumble when he was tossed in the inaugural event by Jake “The Snake” Roberts.

Considered a potential successor to Ricky Steamboat as Intercontinental champion, the nod would instead go to Honky Tonk Man when Reed, worn down by the travel schedule, blew off a series of dates. With his time coming to a close in the WWF, there would be one more big run in Reed’s future.

Record tag reign

Reed may have enjoyed his greatest national success teaming with Ron Simmons as “Doom.” The monster duo held the NWA/WCW tag-team title for 281 days – the longest reign in the title’s history – after winning the belts from Rick and Scott Steiner at the 1990 Capital Combat pay-per-view in Washington, D.C.

The two initially had worn masks and were managed by Woman (Nancy Sullivan), who dropped the team to manage The Four Horsemen and was replaced by “The Godfather” Teddy Long.

Their hard-hitting, smash-mouth style earned the team strong reviews, and their run was highlighted by a series of bloody brawls with Ric Flair and Arn Anderson.

Simmons, a college All-American football player at Florida State, had been in the business less than three years when he hooked up with Reed.

“I followed his lead on most everything, and from my standpoint, I think it went on to be pretty successful,” Simmons said of the team.

The duo would split with Simmons turning face shortly before Reed left WCW in 1992. A short feud between the two culminated at Super Brawl I where Simmons defeated Reed in a steel cage match. Reed would leave the company after the match, enjoying one final run with a major title when he won the USWA Unified world heavyweight championship in 1992.

Reed, who would compete sparingly on the independents until 2011, worked as a rodeo cowboy out of the Kansas City area following his wrestling career.

Reed “was prototype athlete. Had it all … work skills, promo, body, charisma. One great man outside ring,” tweeted WWE Hall of Famer Jerry Brisco.

“I am extremely saddened to hear of the passing of ‘Hacksaw’ Butch Reed,” posted Michael Hayes. “Butch was a tremendous performer, great talker and good draw. More than that, Butch was a great guy, and funny son of a gun!”

“The team of Doom with Ron was my favorite team in WCW at a time where WCW was stacked with great teams,” added Shane “Hurricane” Helms.

“One hundred percent badass,” former WWE champion John Layfield said of Reed. “My first night in the wrestling business (almost 30 years ago) was spent with Butch Reed. I asked him about the story about him riding a horse into a bar … it’s true. What a good time.”

 

Printable version Email to a friend

Supplemental Information

Latest News

1
The Scoop

The Scoop

NEWS A&E starts back on Sundays with a WWE block. From 7-9pm will be part one of a two part biography series on the Von Erichs, followed by “LFG”... Read More

All Columns

Upcoming Events

There are currently no upcoming appearences.

Complete Calendar

1

Spotlight in History

  • 1981 Super Destroyer def. Jim Garvin for the MSW Louisiana Title
  • 2016 Skylar Slice def. Nikki Knight for the MSWA Ladies Title
  • 2021 Fuel def. Derek James for the UWE Heavyweight Title

Week of Sun 04-26 to Sat: 05-02

  • 04-26 2008 Jerry Bostic def. Joshua Smith for the 3DW Violent Division Title
  • 04-26 2008 Shane Rawls def. Ky-Ote for the 3DW Heavyweight Title
  • 04-26 2014 Buster Cherry def. Bud Barnes for the SWCW All-American Title
  • 04-26 2014 Chaz Sharpe def. Kevin James Sanchez for the SWCW Heavyweight Title
  • 04-26 2014 Sam Stackhouse def. Warhammer for the SRPW Heavyweight Title
  • 04-26 2024 Miranda Gordy def. Sgt. Slice for the CPW Women’s Title
  • 04-26 2025 Deacon Hendrix became the RWE Heavyweight Champion
  • 04-26 2025 Family Affiliated (Athan Sorrow & Rika Wildlee) became the RWE Tag Team Champions
  • 04-26 2025 Gluttony became the RWE United States Champion
  • 04-26 2025 Bishop Simon became the RWE Light Heavyweight Champion
  • 04-26 2025 For God And Country (Pastor Brent & Corporal Punishment) def. The Main Characters (Sean Ryan & Daniel Aaron Michalles) for the WAH Tag Team Titles
  • 04-27 1978 The Assassin became the TSW Louisiana Champion
  • 04-27 1981 Junkyard Dog & Dick Murdoch def. The Grappler & The Super Destroyer for the MSW Mid-South Tag Team Titles
  • 04-27 2003 The Sharpe Brothers (Chaz Sharpe & Rich Sharpe) def. John O'Malley & All-American Aaron for the ACW Tag Team Titles
  • 04-27 2003 Se7en def. Aaron Neil for the ACW Hardcore Title
  • 04-27 2008 Tyrone def. Jerry Bostic for the 3DW Violent Division Title
  • 04-27 2019 Brandon Groom def. Brian Dixon for the BPW Lion Heart Title
  • 04-27 2019 Doc Black became the BCW Heritage Rivalry Champion
  • 04-28 1954 Red Berry def. Whitey Whittler for the TSW Tri-State Title
  • 04-28 1976 Ted DiBiase & Dick Murdoch def. Buck Robley & Bob Slaughter for the TSW United States Tag Team Titles
  • 04-28 1980 Kevin Von Erich def. Toru Tanaka for the WCCW American Heavyweight Title
  • 04-28 1989 The Simpson Brothers (Steve Simpson & Shaun Simpson) def. Beauty & The Beast (Terrance M. Garvin & The Beast [2nd]) for the WCCW Texas Tag Team Titles
  • 04-28 2000 Heather Savage def. Jenna Love for the OPW Oklahoma Womens Title
  • 04-28 2002 Summer Rain became the OCW Oklahoma Womens Champion
  • 04-28 2007 Eric Rose def. Jersey Devil for the UWF06 Light Heavyweight Title
  • 04-28 2007 Joe Herell became the UWF06 Violent Division Champion
  • 04-28 2017 Brandon Groom def. Sam Stackhouse for the BPPW Oklahoma Title
  • 04-28 2018 Dusty Gold def. Wesley Crane for the UWE United States Title
  • 04-29 2006 AWOL def. Michael York for the TPW Heavyweight Title
  • 04-29 2006 Natural Born Sinners (Appolyon & El Lotus) def. Pretty Young Things (Cade Sydal & Mitch Carter) for the ACW Tag Team Titles
  • 04-29 2006 Rexx Reed def. Carnage for the ACW Hardcore Title
  • 04-29 2006 Carnage def. Rexx Reed for the ACW Hardcore Title
  • 04-29 2007 Aaron Neil def. Tyler Bateman for the MSWA Oklahoma Title
  • 04-29 2007 Brad Michaels def. Ryan Davidson for the MSWA Mid-South Heavyweight Title
  • 04-29 2007 Bad Boy & Outlaw became the MSWA Mid-South Tag Team Champions
  • 04-29 2011 The Unknown & Johnny USA def. Michael H & Mr. Big for the NCW Tag Team Titles
  • 04-29 2011 Mr. Big became the NCW Heavyweight Champion
  • 04-29 2012 Sam Stackhouse def. Prophet for the BYEW Heavyweight Title
  • 04-29 2012 Rage Logan became the MSWA Mid-South Heavyweight Champion
  • 04-29 2012 Nemesis (Damien Morte & Damon Windsor) became the MSWA Mid-South Tag Team Champions
  • 04-29 2017 Aaron Anders became the ComPro Oklahoma X Division Champion
  • 04-30 1954 Frenchy Roy became the TSW Oklahoma Junior Heavyweight Champion
  • 04-30 1971 Toru Tanaka def. Johnny Valentine for the WCCW Texas Brass Knuckles Title
  • 04-30 2004 Shadow of Death def. Terry Montana for the TPW Hardcore Title
  • 04-30 2011 Ryan Reed def. Rolling Thunder for the UWE United States Title
  • 04-30 2011 Ray Martinez def. Ryan Reed for the UWE United States Title
  • 04-30 2016 Ray Martinez became the SRPW Heavyweight Champion
  • 04-30 2022 Clayton Bloodstone def. Ky-Ote for the NCWO Choctaw Nation Title
  • 04-30 2023 El Gallardo/El Vaquero def. Cappuccino Jones for the BPW Lion Heart Title
  • 04-30 2023 Heavyweight Grappling (Dan Webber & Morrison) def. Subject To Death (Cade Fite & Leo Fox) for the BPW Oklahoma Tag Team Titles
  • 05-01 1981 Super Destroyer def. Jim Garvin for the MSW Louisiana Title
  • 05-01 2016 Skylar Slice def. Nikki Knight for the MSWA Ladies Title
  • 05-01 2021 Fuel def. Derek James for the UWE Heavyweight Title
  • 05-02 1969 Johnny Valentine def. Fritz Von Erich for the WCCW American Heavyweight Title
  • 05-02 1975 Mad Dog Vachon def. Billy Graham for the WCCW Texas Brass Knuckles Title
  • 05-02 1977 Stan Hansen def. Dick Murdoch for the TSW North American Title
  • 05-02 1984 Krusher Khrushchev became the MSW Television Champion
  • 05-02 1984 The Rock-N-Roll Express (Ricky Morton & Robert Gibson) def. The Midnight Express (Bobby Eaton & Dennis Condrey) for the MSW Mid-South Tag Team Titles
  • 05-02 2009 Ozzy Hendrix def. Shank for the SWCW Luchadore Title
  • 05-02 2015 Gail Kim became the IWR Diamonds Champion
  • 05-02 2015 Kareem Sadat became the BCW Independent Hardcore Champion
  • 05-02 2021 Drake Gallows def. Blade [2nd] for the AIWF National Title
05-01
  • Prince Maivia May 1st Today!
  • Americos May 2nd
  • Kari Wright May 2nd
  • Barrett Brown May 2nd
  • Don Fields May 2nd
  • Big Bossman May 2nd
  • Nightmare [1st] May 2nd
  • Lily McKenzie May 3rd
  • Lester Welch May 3rd
  • Johnny Humble May 3rd
  • Malik Mayfield May 4th
  • El Hijo del Mascara Sagrada May 4th
  • Bull Schmitt May 4th
  • Dory Funk May 4th
  • Jay Hazzard May 4th
  • Miss Diss Lexia May 5th
  • Princess Victoria May 5th
  • Pat O'Dowdy May 5th
  • El Matador Dos May 5th
  • Maria Brigitte May 5th
  • Bill Watts May 5th
  • Olivier Vegos May 5th
  • Zane Morris May 5th
  • El Gallardo May 5th
  • Claire Watson May 6th
  • Hercules May 7th
  • Richie Adams May 8th
  • Jake Danielsson May 9th
  • Billy Brown May 10th
  • Tito Santana May 10th
  • Sunny War Cloud May 10th
  • Jerry Brown May 10th
  • Rook Tyler May 10th
  • Psycho May 11th
  • Charming Charles May 11th
  • Big J May 11th
  • Sensei Jamo May 12th
  • Bill Howard May 12th
  • Brock Baker May 12th
  • Sol Yang May 12th
  • Dave Ryda May 13th
  • Little Boy Blue May 13th
  • Prince Mahalli May 13th
  • Maggie Rae May 13th
  • Karl Krupp May 13th
  • Lars Manderson May 13th
  • Pete Maguire May 13th
  • Stan Kowalski May 13th
  • Danny Hodge May 13th
  • Payton Scott May 13th
  • Shawn Bragan May 14th
  • C. M. Burnham May 14th
  • Robert Fuller May 14th
  • Tommy Rogers May 14th
  • Scott Irwin May 14th
  • Steve Williams May 14th
  • Big Van Vader May 14th

More Look Back In History

Card Results

1