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Doug Basham: The Last Secretary of Defense

Posted on July 29, 2025 By admin No Comments on Doug Basham: The Last Secretary of Defense
Present Day Wrestlers (Male)

Professional wrestling is littered with forgotten names, gimmicks that made no sense, and guys who got saddled with leather vests and shiny wool pants while trying to make a living on Velocity. Doug Basham is one of those names, but to reduce him to a trivia answer—“Who were JBL’s Co-Secretaries of Defense?”—is to miss the stranger, funnier, and oddly respectable path of a man who lived about five wrestling lives in one career.


The Nephew in the Family Business

Born Lyle Douglas Basham Jr. in Louisville, Kentucky in 1971, Doug had wrestling in his bloodline—or at least in the family business. His uncle was “Nightmare” Danny Davis, the founder of Ohio Valley Wrestling, the developmental heartbeat that fed WWE a generation of stars. Doug trained under his uncle, but being family only got him so far. Nepotism in wrestling can either rocket you to the top or condemn you to spend years proving you aren’t just “the boss’s kid.” Basham wrestled his way up the OVW ladder the old-fashioned way: by bleeding, bumping, and cutting promos to half-full houses in Kentucky.

By the mid-1990s, he was a top babyface in OVW. Fans loved him. He was young, athletic, and could wrestle rings around most guys on the card. But wrestling is cruel, and babyfaces don’t stay clean forever. Basham turned heel, put on a mask, and reinvented himself as “The Machine.” Inspired by the grimy Nicolas Cage film 8mm, The Machine was part horror movie, part stalker gimmick. It was OVW’s weirdest storyline of the era: Doug turned on his uncle Danny Davis in a kayfabe family feud, hiding under a mask to ruin the chances of Davis’s prized students like Nick Dinsmore and Rob Conway. When The Machine was finally unmasked in a Retirement vs. Mask match, it revealed… Doug Basham. To absolutely nobody’s surprise.

Still, the angle worked. The Machine made Basham interesting. It proved he could be more than just Danny Davis’s nephew. And it got him noticed by WWE.


The Basham Brothers: S&M and Sacrifice

In May 2003, Doug Basham hit the big time, debuting on SmackDown as one half of The Basham Brothers alongside Danny Basham (no relation, but you’d never know by the name). Managed by Shaniqua, the team was packaged with an S&M bondage gimmick. Yes, you read that correctly. Black leather, collars, whips. Nothing says “prime time cable television” quite like two Midwestern grapplers pretending they moonlighted at a dungeon in Orlando.

To their credit, the Bashams leaned into it. They won the WWE Tag Team Titles from Los Guerreros in October 2003, proving that whips and chains could beat Frog Splashes and Three Amigos if the booking called for it. They lost the belts a few months later to Rikishi and Scotty 2 Hotty—because nothing kills your leather-and-latex aura faster than losing to a man who dances with his butt and a guy whose finisher is called the Worm.

By 2005, the gimmick was gone, Shaniqua was out, and The Basham Brothers were recruited into John “Bradshaw” Layfield’s Cabinet as the Co-Secretaries of Defense. Their job? Take beatings for JBL, throw themselves in front of bullets, and generally serve as wrestling’s equivalent of crash test dummies. They did it well. So well, in fact, they won the WWE Tag Team Titles again in January 2005.

But just like any real-life political aide, they eventually realized they were expendable. On SmackDown in June 2005, the Bashams quit JBL’s Cabinet, saying they were tired of being disrespected. It was the most relatable thing they’d ever done.


Velocity, Shiny Pants, and the End of the Line

After splitting from JBL, Doug was left drifting in WWE. Danny got traded to Raw. Doug was left on Velocity, where careers went to die. WWE gave him a new gimmick: The Bash Man.

The Bash Man wore sunglasses, a shiny leather vest, and pants that looked like they were stolen from a Vegas lounge act. No explanation was given. He came to the ring, flexed, squashed some enhancement talent, and went home. The fans were confused, the announcers were confused, and Doug Basham himself probably wondered why he was dressed like a rejected extra from Saturday Night Fever.

By 2006, WWE didn’t know what to do with him. They reunited the Bashams briefly in the rebooted ECW, hiding them under masks as Paul Heyman’s security guards. They got beaten up by Bobby Lashley. Then they disappeared. In January 2007, Doug Basham was released, ending his WWE run with two tag team title reigns, a bondage gimmick, and a pair of shiny pants.


TNA and the Road Out

For a brief moment, Basham popped up in Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA) alongside his old partner, now wrestling as Damaja. Aligned with Christy Hemme, they even scored a win at Sacrifice over Kip James and Lance Hoyt. It looked like a fresh start. But TNA moved on quickly, as they tended to do. By August 2007, the Bashams were gone again.

Doug spent the next couple years wrestling in Europe, Ireland, and England, before quietly retiring in 2009. It wasn’t glamorous. But then again, few wrestling careers end in fireworks and confetti.


The Teacher Returns

The thing about wrestling is that nobody really retires. In 2020, Doug Basham resurfaced as an advanced wrestling instructor for the Al Snow Wrestling Academy in Louisville. He was back in OVW, full circle, teaching kids the same bumps and holds his uncle taught him decades earlier.

In 2022, he even laced up the boots again, teaming with Al Snow himself at OVW’s The Big One pay-per-view. It was a nostalgic, feel-good moment. By the end of 2023, he hung up the boots for the second time, this time for good. Maybe. (It’s wrestling. Never say never.)


Legacy of a Secretary

Doug Basham won’t be remembered like Hulk Hogan or The Rock. He won’t headline Hall of Fame ceremonies or have his catchphrases plastered on t-shirts. But he will be remembered by a generation of OVW kids as the guy who helped them learn the ropes, by WWE fans who recall a strange S&M tag team on Thursday nights, and by JBL fans as the poor schmuck who dove in front of chair shots to protect the Wrestling God.

Wrestling is a business of larger-than-life personas. But behind the masks, whips, and leather pants are guys like Doug Basham—professionals who bump, sell, and sacrifice for the show. He may not have been a star, but he was the kind of steady hand every locker room needs.

And if you ever wonder what his career really meant, just remember this: he was once billed as “The Superstar of Superstars,” then dressed like a Vegas lounge act, then became Paul Heyman’s anonymous enforcer. That’s wrestling in a nutshell—equal parts ridiculous, tragic, and noble.


Doug Basham: Secretary of Defense, masked Machine, Bash Man in shiny pants. A career as confusing as it was entertaining—and exactly the kind of story wrestling was built on.

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