If gravity had a favorite wrestler, it was probably Jerry Blackwell. Standing 5-foot-9 and tipping the scales well past 400 pounds, the man looked like a beer keg grew limbs and demanded main event pay. But don’t let the roly-poly physique fool you. Blackwell could move—really move. Dropkicks? Check. Top rope splashes? Absolutely. A standing dropkick from a human wrecking ball was the kind of physics-defying sorcery that made even Andre the Giant wince in appreciation—or maybe fear.
Blackwell wasn’t your average big man. No, sir. He was a walking contradiction: nimble but mountainous, friendly backstage but a vertebrae-cracker inside the ropes, and billed as a Southern crusher who somehow moonlighted as an Arabian tag team villain in the AWA. Ah, wrestling logic—where a Georgia-born brawler can team up with a faux-sheik and wear robes without anyone raising an eyebrow.
From Stone Mountain to the Spotlight
Born in 1949 in Stone Mountain, Georgia, Blackwell was aptly nicknamed the “Mountain from Stone Mountain,” which sounds less like a wrestling gimmick and more like a rejected National Park slogan. By the mid-1970s, he was flinging brass knuckles in Pennsylvania and steamrolling through the WWWF undercards. He even managed to make Bob Backlund’s perpetually clean-cut image look menacing by comparison.
By 1979, he was testing his limits—literally—as a competitor in the World’s Strongest Man contest. Unfortunately, an injury took him out early, proving that while he might have been strong, World’s Most Durable Man was a different category.
The AWA Years: Feuds, Flames, and Flying Meatballs
Blackwell found his spiritual home in the AWA. There, his mix of agility and density made him a top draw and a fan favorite—or at least a fan fascination. He feuded with the likes of Mad Dog Vachon, Hulk Hogan, and The Crusher, and did it while wearing Arab garb after teaming with Ken Patera and embracing the villainous ways of Sheik Adnan Al-Kaissey. Picture this: a man who looked like he deep-fried his sweatpants now claiming to be a Middle Eastern aristocrat. And people bought it.
The Sheiks, as they were called, were despised and successful, holding the AWA World Tag Team Titles for nearly a year. Then Hulk Hogan left for the bright lights and steroid sheen of WWF in 1983, and Blackwell did what no man that size had ever done before: turned babyface.
In June 1984, after winning a battle royal, he was triple-teamed by Abdullah the Butcher, Bruiser Brody, and his former manager Adnan in a post-match massacre. In wrestling logic, this instantly turned him into a sympathetic hero. What followed was an improbable, almost Shakespearean feud with Brody—though instead of swords, they used chairs, steel posts, and various parts of the arena.
And suddenly, Jerry Blackwell was the AWA’s most unlikely hero: a sweaty, panting, fire-breathing bowling ball of a man, cheered on by Midwesterners who looked just like him. Representation matters.
The Almost-WWF Superstar
Blackwell’s blend of charisma and surprising athleticism could’ve gone national. Vince McMahon saw potential. But then came the straw that broke the workhorse’s back: the promo line. When Blackwell showed up to WWF HQ in 1984 to cut his introductory promo, he saw the mile-long queue of wannabe superstars and decided he wasn’t about to clock in for corporate wrestling. In a moment of pure Southern pride, he reportedly left, muttering that he was a wrestler, not a timecard-puncher.
And just like that, he was gone from Vince’s vision—leaving a path open for other big men with less talent but more willingness to stand in line.
The Slow Fade and Fast Food of Life
By the mid-1980s, years of punishment caught up to Blackwell. His weight ballooned, his knees betrayed him, and his matches slowed down like a VHS tape left in the sun. Despite sporadic appearances through 1989, including a promising angle with Kokina Maximus (the future Yokozuna), Blackwell was physically finished. The match never happened. His knees had become sentient and staged their own retirement tour.
Out of the ring, things were worse. Diabetes, gangrene, and gout were just the opening act. He lost a son, a marriage, and eventually his livelihood. A series of car crashes—the last in December 1994—sealed his fate. On January 22, 1995, he died of complications at just 45. He checked out of the main event far too early.
Legacy: A Big Man in a Small-Minded Industry
Wrestling loves its giants, but it’s often cruel to them. Jerry Blackwell was a big man in every sense—talent, size, heart—but he was caught in an era that prized flash over substance. He didn’t have the glitz of Hogan, the intensity of Savage, or the corporate polish of later superstars. He just had skill, sweat, and the ability to defy gravitational logic. For that, he was both revered and forgotten in equal measure.
Even his signature 2×4 stunt—where he’d launch himself chest-first into a plank of wood and snap it in half—was more memorable than some title runs by his contemporaries. Think about it: the man body-splashed lumber. And people cheered.
The Final Bell
In the end, Jerry “Crusher” Blackwell was the kind of guy who was too real for a fake business. He didn’t care for politics, promo lines, or playing nice in locker rooms filled with sharks. He was a fat man with footwork, a bruiser with ballet slippers on under his boots. He made being a babyface feel authentic, and being a heel look like a bad idea.
He died broken in body but whole in wrestling soul—a man crushed not by opponents, but by time, weight, and the indifference of an industry that moves on faster than a referee’s three-count.
Rest in peace, Mountain from Stone Mountain. You may have left the ring, but you’ll always be remembered—especially every time a big guy tries to throw a dropkick and lands like a couch falling off a moving truck.
