Guest JJW Report post Posted December 4, 2004 Ken Timbs, a Georgia native who gained his most fame as a headliner in Mexico in the late 80s, passed away on 8/1 after a lengthy battle with cardiomyopathy and congestive heart failure. He was 53. Timbs was never a major star in the U.S., although he held the tag team titles twice for Southwest Championship Wrestling with Eric Embry as the Fabulous Blonds in 1983-84. He went to Mexico in 1988, under the name Fabuloso Blondy, and immediately got involved in what turned out to be his most famous feud with Hall of Famer Lizmark Sr. The program lasted three years, and included two reigns as NWA world light heavyweight champion. He was during that period among the country's top heels, as he'd wave the U.S. flag and come out to the song, "Born in the USA" by Bruce Springsteen, and take a page out of the Nikolai Volkoff repertoire by singing the U.S. national anthem before his matches. In 1991, he added coming to the ring while riding a motorcycle while waving the U.S. flag, years before Undertaker started doing the gimmick. It was kind of funny at the time, since Timbs had never been a major singles star in the U.S., but was suddenly a money drawing headliner in Mexico during the beginnings of a wrestling boom. He also weighed 235 pounds, so he was hardly a light heavyweight. EMLL booker Antonio Pena nicknamed him, "El Gringo Loco," paving the way for the later Gringos Locos group of Love Machine & Eddy Guerrero (and later Louie Spicolli and Konnan). The NWA light heavyweight belt was popularized first by Gori Guerrero, the father of Eddie, and later by Ray Mendoza. Blondy won the title on June 24, 1988, in Mexico City, from Lizmark. At the time, he was the first American to hold the title since Chavo Guerrero Sr. in 1977. He dropped it back on December 9, 1988, at the Arena Mexico year-end spectacular. He regained the title on February 14, 1990, from Pirata Morgan, before dropping it on March 21, 1990, in Lizmark's home city of Acapulco. He also defeated Popitekus in 1988 at Arena Mexico in a hair vs. hair match, and in 1989 formed a foreign trio with Rick Patterson & Mike Stone to feud with the original Infernales of El Satanico & Masakre & MS 1. Aside from his title win, the highest profile match of his career would have been when he beat Satanico on April 7, 1989 in a hair vs. hair match. In 1990, he formed a heel trio with the Power Twins, who wearing doing a Los Angeles Police Department gimmick, building to a match against all three of the famed Rodriguez Brothers, Mil Mascaras & Dos Caras & El Sicodelico. He dropped his hair on December 7, 1990, to Ringo Mendoza. He also won the hair of El Brazo on February 12, 1993. He was also FILL light heavyweight champion in Monterrey, where he feuded with Latin Lover and Hector Garza. He left Mexico in 1993. He also wrestled in South America, and was at one time the heavyweight champion of Guatemala. His shtick was borrowed from Nikolai Volkoff in WWF, in that he would sing the U.S. national anthem before his matches to enrage the fans in Mexico and South America. He was brought back for a PPV by the short-lived OCESA promotion in Mexico in 1998 where he teamed joined other former foreign headliners from the glory days, The Head Hunters & Solomon Grundy, losing a cage match to Cien Caras & Tinieblas Jr. & Rayo de Jalisco Jr. & Pierroth Jr. He started wrestling in 1978 as a job guy on Georgia Championship Wrestling along with brother Ed. He also worked television jobs for Jim Crockett Promotions before getting his break as a pushed commodity in San Antonio. He and Embry worked as The Blondes, a takeoff on the 70s tag team the Hollywood Blondes. They were a fast moving and crisp combination. Timbs came in a few months before the Blondes formed, first teaming with Bob Sweetan when Southwest Championship Wrestling was still on the USA Network in the time slot that Vince McMahon grabbed a few months later for All-American Wrestling, his first national weekly TV show. On August 29, 1983, in San Antonio, he and Sweetan lost in the finals of a tournament for the vacant Southwest tag team titles to Bobby Jaggers & Buddy Moreno (Omar Atlas). He and Embry formed the top heel team in the territory, beating Moreno & Scott Casey (Jaggers was legitimately suspended for fighting in the crowd by the Texas Department of Labor and Standards, which regulated wrestling at the time) on September 26, 1983. They feuded with the Rock & Roll Express, just before Ricky Morton & Robert Gibson hit it big working for Bill Watts. They lost the titles in April, 1984, to Al Perez & Manny Fernandez, but regained them on June 13, 1984, in San Antonio. However, Timbs left the territory the next month for Memphis, and Embry began teaming with Dan Greer, who passed away a few months back. Timbs, who had nine children, eight sons and one daughter, ranging in age from 27 to 4, left the road in the mid-90s. He wrestled independent shows in the Georgia area for several years. In recent years, he had spent a lot of time on the Internet, often getting into message board wars with people, often claiming that I killed pro wrestling. He had been battling high blood pressure for some time. He was diagnosed with congestive heart failure last year and was given six months to live. He was in major pain for the past several months. He was so into Internet posting that long after he was too weak to even type, he had his wife of 28 years, Juanita Timbs, post for him using his name. He lapsed into a coma on 7/30 and passed away at 5:10 a.m. on 8/1. *************************************************************** WWE's experiment of doing three PPV shows in six weeks is now over, the results of the final card, Vengeance on 7/11 in Hartford, headlined by Chris Benoit vs. HHH, were disappointing. The preliminary estimates are 220,000 buys and a 0.41 buy rate, and this is for the stronger Raw brand. It was down 39% from the Smackdown brand Vengeance from 2003 headlined by Vince McMahon vs. Zach Gowen, although that was an unusual feud that was a huge television success. It would be ahead of only the May PPV with the first JBL vs. Eddie Guerrero match (205,000 buys) for the lowest company buy rate in more than seven years. All told, the three shows in six weeks did about 715,000 buys, compared to 750,000 buys for the two shows during the same period last year. With late buys, the three show number will likely end up closer to 800,000. From a profit standpoint, figuring in costs of doing the extra show, last year would have been better. However, that's not the answer to whether the experiment worked, because this year wasn't going to do as well as last year under any circumstances. Last year's June show featured the return of Mick Foley, that did huge, and the July show featured the freak show match that drew. This year, the three shows were HHH vs. Shawn Michaels in a Hell in a Cell, which really should have done better; JBL vs. Eddie Guerrero in a bullrope match, which did shockingly well; and HHH vs. Benoit. **************************************************************** Sean O'Haire (real name Sean Haire, 33) was arrested on 7/27 on charges of assault and battery as well as violation of conditions of a bond and was taken into the Beaufort County Detention Center. He was later released, and wrestled over the weekend for UPW in Anaheim. The arrest stemmed from a 6/12 incident involving two women at about 2:30 a.m. that night at Club Hypnotic in his hometown of Hilton Head Island, SC. Haire was accused of punching Ivy Rowland with an uppercut to the face that knocked her hat off her head, and then shoving her to the floor. Haire was also accused of punching Deidre Clancy in her face, knocking her to the ground, and kicking her both in the head and the back when she was down. The 6-6, 265-pound Haire told the Carolina Morning News that he was acting in self-defense. He said he was in the club's VIP room when one of the women started dancing with him, and he blew her off. He said she then pushed him, and he told a bouncer to "Get this stupid bitch away from me," and flicked off her hat. He claimed three man and the other woman all started throwing punches at him. He said his shirt was ripped and one of the punches by one of the women split his lip. "I'm a professional fighter," said Haire, who had a kickboxing background before going into pro wrestling. "If I was going to assault these people, they'd be in the hospital." Clancy was taken to the emergency room of a local hospital after the incident. The violation of bond was from a prior assault and battery charge with another woman, Tamara Coleman, 26, stemming from an alleged incident at Club Insomnia in Hilton Head. The condition of his bond on that charge was that he would have no contact with her. According to the police report, on 7/24, at 4:15 p.m., Coleman received a phone call from Haire's cell phone, the number of which came up on her caller ID. She recognized the number and he didn't leave a message. Coleman was with Tara Norman, who was an ex-girlfriend of Haire's, when the call came in, and she also recognized the number as his current cell phone number. Deputy Shane Clevenger of the Beaufort County Sheriff's Office was called, and then dialed the number Coleman gave him. Haire answered. He denied making the call and said he was in Charlotte. Haire is well known to law enforcement officials in Buford County with a series of similar incidents. He's described as someone whose name is well known, is never in big trouble, but is constantly in little trouble, frequently getting into problems that someone with a cooler head would be able to avoid. He has a reputation in the city of having anger management issues, although a Sheriff's department spokesperson downplayed his recent troubles, saying that if he wasn't a pro wrestler, the recent arrest would be something that nobody would be talking about. Under his wrestling name, Sean O'Haire, he will make his MMA debut on a 9/18 show in Long Beach, which will also include MMA matches for Tom Howard and Matt Tyler (a 6-10, 335 pounder from UPW who I believe did one Zero-One tour as the giant Apocalypse). O'Haire is also going to Las Vegas this weekend to meet with officials from both K-1 and UFC. O'Haire was a product of the Power Plant in Atlanta, and began wrestling in 1999 for WCW. He got a good push as WCW tag team champion with current WWE wrestler Mark Jindrak on two occasions in the dying days of the company. He and Chuck Palumbo were the last WCW tag team champions when the organization folded, beating Kevin Nash & Diamond Dallas Page on the January 14, 2001, PPV show in Indianapolis. Eric Bischoff, who loved his size, look, agility and martial arts background, was planning to make him into a singles superstar with a Bill Goldberg-like push when he expected to take over WCW that year. When it fell through and WCW folded, O'Haire was picked up by WWF. WWF officials were impressed with O'Haire's physique and look, and at first were planning on making him a major player. As WCW tag team champion, he and Palumbo came into WWF recognized as the champs. He was ostracized at first when the WWF was burying all things, including a real-life gang beatdown with many WWF guys on the two ex-WCW guys on a live Raw episode orchestrated by John Layfield as a painful initiation. Quickly, he was given the label by WWF wrestlers as somebody who didn't know how to work. After dropping the belts on August 7, 2001, in Los Angeles, to Undertaker & Kane, he was soon sent to the Heartland Wrestling Association, as due to his Power Plant training of learning all high spots to work the short action matches that Eric Bischoff believed is what the TV audience wanted, he didn't adapt well when WWF officials tried to slow him down and do more mat based wrestling. He was brought back with a unique devil-like gimmick in some strong vignettes in 2003, and then given the role of Roddy Piper's bodyguard, which even included getting a television count out win over Hulk Hogan. When Piper was fired, O'Haire's role disappeared. Eventually he was sent to OVW, where he actually got over strong as Jim Ross' personal babyface enforcer, to feud with Inspector Impact (now Luther Reigns). But the company felt he wasn't progressing and he was cut after doing an injury angle on a WWE house show in Louisville on 3/29. He was given a shot with New Japan Pro Wrestling, doing a high profile match on New Japan's 5/3 Tokyo Dome show, losing to Hiroshi Tanahashi, but the match was a disappointment and he wasn't brought back. ****************************************************************** The only details we've got at press time is the 8/2 Raw show did a 3.8 rating. We should have a complete rundown next week. Smackdown on 7/29 drew a 3.12 rating (3.55 realistic rating; est. 4.74 million viewers). The show did a 4.3 in New York, 4.0 in Los Angeles, 3.9 in Chicago, 2.3 in Philadelphia, 4.1 in San Francisco (which may be a season high), 2.7 in Boston, 3.6 in Dallas, 2.0 in DC, 2.6 in Detroit, 3.3 in Atlanta and 6.4 in Houston. In the segment rundowns, Mysterio's title loss to Spike gained 66,000 viewers, which isn't good for early in the show. The Angle-Teddy Long skit gained 62,000 viewers, which also isn't good for early in the show. Kidman & London vs. Dudleys gained 6,000 viewers. The Guerrero promo with Angle coming out in the low rider was the star segment of the show, gaining 498,000 viewers. The JBL political package gained 157,000 viewers. The 8-man elimination main event with Haas vs. Dupree vs Suzuki vs. Gunn vs. Reigns vs. Cena vs. RVD vs. Booker, gained 6,000 viewers, which is terrible for a main event that went 23:23, peaking at 3.40. The show was up 11% from last week among teenagers, but offset by a 17% decline by those over 35. TNA Impact on 7/23 did a 0.26 rating, leaving the average since its inception at 0.27.. Galavision Lucha Libre on 7/24 did a 1.06 rating among Hispanic homes in the Galavision universe, and the 7/25 show did a 1.25. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites