Haystacks Calhoun was a true giant in the wrestling business
Posted: May 1st 2017 By: Mike Mooneyham
WWE recently presented a match between two of the largest performers in the wrestling business, or any other business for that matter, when Big Show locked horns with Braun Strowman in the main event of Monday Night Raw.
The colossal collision between these two superheavyweights produced a memorable moment and highlight reel footage when the ring collapsed at the conclusion of their bout. While the 800 pounds packed by these two gargantuan grapplers is no small matter, the ring was rigged as Strowman delivered a superplex from the top rope, with the impact of both men crashing to the mat supposedly prompting the ring’s collapse.
It made for a great visual, and both behemoths sold the ring implosion perfectly. An official on the other end of the ring was tossed out of it and onto the floor below in the process.
Despite the announcing team’s feigned amazement over the spectacle, it wasn’t the first time WWE had utilized the stunt. In fact, it has been done twice before in recent years, with all involving Big Show.
Mark Henry, billed as “the world’s strongest man,” executed a superplex on Show, billed as “the world’s largest athlete,” at the Vengeance pay-per-view in 2011.
The ring collapsed during a recent Monday Night Raw match between Big Show and Braun Strowman.
It was Big Show and Brock Lesnar who broke the ring on an episode of Smackdown in 2003 when Lesnar superplexed Show from the top rope.
Show would later come clean about the spot a dozen years later.
“This is the first time I’ve admitted the truth that that was a rigged angle,” the South Carolina native said in a 2015 interview. “On hundreds of interviews, I have lied right through my teeth and said it’s a shoot. But if you get a chance to suspend people’s reality just for an instant, for a second, it’s good for them.”
Requiem for a heavyweight
While Show and Strowman represent two of the best big men in the business, there have been many other giants over the years, most notably Andre The Giant, the first man inducted into WWE’s Hall of Fame in 1993. One of pro wrestling’s biggest draws and highest-paid performers during the 1970s and early ‘80s, the near-seven-foot tall, 500-pound Andre was larger than life in terms of both his physical stature and his personality.
But before Andre, a plowboy by the name of Haystacks Calhoun (real name Bill Calhoun) toured the country as a special attraction. Billed at 601 pounds from Morgan’s Corner, Ark. (although he grew up on a farm in Texas), “Stacks” was one of the most popular “rasslers” on the circuit from the
mid-‘50s through the early ‘70s.
Sporting his signature white T-shirt, blue bib overalls and a lucky horseshoe strung around his neck, his enormous size and physical strength established the barefooted “Country Boy” Calhoun as a major attraction in numerous territories around the country.
While most of today’s fans might not be familiar with Calhoun, it’s interesting to note that he was posthumously inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame as part of the Legacy wing last month. WWE also has honored him among its 50 all-time greatest wrestlers.
He was a favorite of the late Vince McMahon Sr., who booked Calhoun on many shows at Madison Square Garden, including a famous match with Bruno Sammartino, whose strongman legend grew with the claim that he was the only man to lift Haystacks off his feet, dumping him so hard that the center
of the ring caved in. Despite his program with fan favorite Sammartino, Calhoun went on to form a popular team with Bruno, as well as other stars such as Bobo Brazil and a young Tony Garea, with whom he captured the WWWF tag-team title from Mr. Fuji and Prof. Tanaka in 1973.
The mountainous man would also hold the NWA U.S. tag-team title with Jack Brisco and the NWA International tag-team title with Abe Jacobs. Like Andre, though, he was a special attraction and big enough draw without ever having to chase a championship. He never really needed a belt to be a star.
Routinely eating a dozen eggs for breakfast and weighing 300 pounds by the time he was 14, Calhoun was more than a mere novelty act in the wrestling business. He utilized a variety of moves in the ring, with his finishing maneuver aptly called the “big splash.” The super heavyweight even challenged NWA world champions Lou Thesz, Buddy Rogers, Pat O’Connor and Gene Kiniski.
For years, Stacks was as well known as anyone in the wrestling business. After appearing on the nationally broadcast Art Linkletter’s House Party showing off his strength by tossing bales of hay into a loft, the moniker “Haystacks” stuck for good. “It fit,” he would say, “and, anyway, a name like Bill would have meant death at the box office.”
Game show host Groucho Marx booked him on “You Bet Your Life.” He was a guest on television talk shows hosted by Jack Paar and Merv Griffin. A company selling king-size beds featured Haystacks and actress Jayne Mansfield endorsing extra-firm mattresses.
Stacks even appeared on the big screen, in a 1962 bit part at the end of Rod Serling’s critically acclaimed masterpiece “Requiem for a Heavyweight.” Anthony Quinn starred in the gritty, hard-boiled melodrama as washed-up, punch-drunk prize fighter Mountain Rivera. His conniving and unscrupulous manager, played by Jackie Gleason, finds a way to squeeze a few more bucks from his career by lining him up for a professional wrestling match. The poignant closing scene features Rivera, amidst jeering ridicule, climbing into the ring across from the 601-pound Calhoun.
One of Stacks’ favorite territories was the Carolinas and Virginia, where with partner Johnny Weaver he established himself as a top player in the tag-team division. While the clean-shaven and athletic Weaver was the workhorse of the duo, the bushy-bearded, mammoth Calhoun provided the brawn.
A grueling series of matches pitting Calhoun and Weaver against The Bolos (Tom Renesto and Joe Hamilton) set attendance records throughout the territory. Six-man matches with The Bolos and The Missouri Mauler (Larry “Rocky” Hamilton) against Calhoun and The Kentuckians (Big Boy Brown
and Tiny Anderson) established attendance records in such venues as the Charlotte Coliseum, Dorton Arena in Raleigh and the Greenville Memorial Auditorium.
One of the late Andre The Giant’s favorite stories was about the time he and Haystacks went to a diner.
“There was a place next to the arena which was one of those all-you-can-eat-for-two-dollars joints,” Andre said in a 1973 interview. “When Haystacks and I walked in you could see the waitress almost faint. About 30 seconds later the manager comes out, takes a peek at us, and shakes his head
and goes back to the kitchen.
“Haystacks and I decided to tie on a real big feed that night and the waitresses were hysterical. They told us the manager was tearing his hair out and practically in tears. But we felt badly, since we must’ve eaten about $25 worth of food for $4. So after it was over we told him we’d pay for the regular price instead of the all-you-can-eat price. He thanked us for that and told us two more like us could put
him out of business.”
While there were heavier grapplers over the years, including the 800-pound Happy Humphrey (William J. Cobb) and Billy and Benny McGuire (McCrary), few reached the level of success in the business that Calhoun attained. His friendliness, down- to-earth personality and hillbilly gimmick got him over with
fans, especially children, most of whom had never seen such a gigantic specimen.
Calhoun, who fought Humphrey in a series of highly hyped matches at Madison Square Garden during the early ‘60s, was the superior of the two athletes.
“When I wrestled Happy he weighed about 700 pounds, but I could see as soon as we squared off that he was a fat 700 pounds,” Calhoun once observed. “He had very poor balance, was easy to get around and easy to handle. I slammed him easier than the average-size fellow. When I learned he was up to 800 pounds I warned him that it wasn’t healthy.”
Sadly, though, that same prognosis would befall the likable country boy Calhoun in later years. By the late ‘70s, the wrestling grind had taken a toll on Haystacks. His weight and declining health eventually forced him into retirement, and he was ultimately confined to a double-wide trailer after losing his left leg to diabetes in 1986.
His bib overalls and lucky horseshoe, among the few souvenirs he had saved from his wrestling days, were tucked away in a suitcase in his mobile home.
“The horseshoe’s back there,” the wheelchair-bound Stacks told an interviewer. “But it looks like all the luck done ran out the wrong end.”
Destitute and despondent, his ticket to fame having long been cashed, William Dee Calhoun was just 55 years old when he died on Dec. 7, 1989.
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