A Boy Named Greggie Born Gregory Marasciulo on March 30, 1987, in Mount Sinai, New York, he didn’t come into this world with a six-pack or a destiny. But somewhere between learning how to hold a headlock and surviving the horrors of Long Island traffic, Greggie decided he was meant for ring ropes and brainbusters. … Read More “Greggie’s World: The Unfiltered Odyssey of Trent Beretta” »
🏆 Early Years & Amateur Roots Benjamin enjoyed great success in high school athletics in South Carolina, earning back‑to‑back state heavyweight titles and a remarkable 122–10 record by graduation . He continued at Lassen Community College (NJCAA) and later the University of Minnesota, where he also assisted in coaching future WWE star Brock Lesnar . … Read More “Shelton Benjamin” »
In a world of flying chairs, masked mystics, and figure-four leg locks, there are wrestlers who leave their mark in Madison Square Garden, and then there’s Jeff Bearden — a man who left his mark everywhere else. From the sands of South Africa to the neon lunacy of Mexico, the Bavarian backrooms of Germany to … Read More “Giant of the World: The Long, Winding, Occasionally Stabbed Odyssey of Jeff Bearden” »
Before there was high-flying Will Ospreay, before Ricochet backflipped his way into the Twitterverse, and before AEW fans started clapping for anything more aerial than a sneeze, there was one man with wings on his boots and a dropkick that could split atoms: Red Bastien, the original acrobat of agony. Born Rolland Bastien in Bottineau, … Read More “Red Bastien: The Flying Fargo of Fargo” »
There are wrestlers who chase gold, and then there are wrestlers who chase heat. Don Bass was unapologetically the latter. With a thick Tennessee drawl, a rotating wardrobe of masks, and a mother who weaponized her purse, Bass wasn’t just a character—he was a full-blown southern wrestling fever dream. If the likes of Ric Flair … Read More “Don Bass: Wrestling’s Gruff Southern Gimmick King and the Man Behind the Mask” »
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 … Read More “Doug Basham: The Last Secretary of Defense” »
In a business known for broken promises, broken bodies, and promoters with pockets deeper than their souls, Sandy Barr was the oddball exception: a guy who actually cared about the boys. He wasn’t just another cigar-chomping carny. He was the man who could referee your match, promote your booking, train your green kid, and then … Read More “Sandy Barr: The Promoter with a Heart, a Whistle, and a Flea Market” »
In wrestling, there are men who become legends because of their championships, and there are men who become legends because they left scars. Art Barr was both—a man who could make you laugh, make you rage, and make you believe that sometimes the most hated man in the building is the one holding the whole … Read More “Art Barr: The Love Machine Who Burned Out Too Fast” »
Wrestling is full of cartoon villains, but Ox Baker was a walking nightmare. With his bald head, monstrous mustache, and eyebrows like black lightning bolts carved onto his face, he didn’t just play a heel—he was a heel, the kind of man who made children cry and grown men shuffle nervously in their seats. He … Read More “Ox Baker: “I Love to Hurt People”” »
If WCW were a Greek tragedy, Buff Bagwell would be its Narcissus: a man in love with his own reflection, flexing into cameras while the empire burned around him. He wasn’t the best worker, he wasn’t the sharpest promo, but he was Buff, and for a while in the ’90s, that was enough to make … Read More “Buff Bagwell: The Last Flex” »