Ron Simmons: Difference between revisions
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Born in [[Perry, Georgia]], Simmons attended [[Warner Robins High School]], where he played American football as a Tight End and Linebacker. In 1976, he was named [[Lineman (football)|lineman]] of the year, and first team All-State by [[The Atlanta Journal-Constitution]]. |
Born in [[Perry, Georgia]], Simmons attended [[Warner Robins High School]], where he played American football as a Tight End and Linebacker. In 1976, he was named [[Lineman (football)|lineman]] of the year, and first team All-State by [[The Atlanta Journal-Constitution]]. |
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Simmons was an All-American football player at [[Florida State University]] from 1977-80 under coach [[Bobby Bowden]] (whom Simmons described as "a second father"), spending four years as a defensive [[nose guard]]. The Seminoles were 39-8 during Simmons' years at the school, finishing in the [[Associated Press]] Top 20 three times ('77,'79 and '80), earning back-to-back [[Orange Bowl]] trips after Simmons' junior and senior seasons[http://grfx.cstv.com/photos/schools/fsu/sports/m-footbl/auto_pdf/FSUYear-By-Year.pdf]. In 1979 Simmons finished ninth in the [[Heisman]] voting[http://www.heisman.com/winners/c-white79.html], behind winner [[Charles White]]. In 1988, Simmons' [[jersey (clothing)|jersey]] (number 50) was retired by Florida State University,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://seminoles.cstv.com/trads/fsu-trads-retired.html|title=Florida State University Official Athletic Site|publisher=seminoles.com|accessdate=2007-10-01}}</ref> the third time a number has been retired in FSU history. In addition, Simmons was inducted into the [[Orange Bowl]] Hall of Fame for his accomplishments while playing at Florida State University. |
Simmons was an All-American football player at [[Florida State University]] from 1977-80 under coach [[Bobby Bowden]] (whom Simmons described as "a second father"), spending four years as a defensive [[nose guard]]. The Seminoles were 39-8 during Simmons' years at the school, finishing in the [[Associated Press]] Top 20 three times ('77,'79 and '80), earning back-to-back [[Orange Bowl]] trips after Simmons' junior and senior seasons[http://grfx.cstv.com/photos/schools/fsu/sports/m-footbl/auto_pdf/FSUYear-By-Year.pdf]. In 1979 Simmons finished ninth in the [[Heisman]] voting[http://www.heisman.com/winners/c-white79.html], behind winner [[Charles White]]. In 1988, Simmons' [[jersey (clothing)|jersey]] (number 50) was retired by Florida State University,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://seminoles.cstv.com/trads/fsu-trads-retired.html|title=Florida State University Official Athletic Site|publisher=seminoles.com|accessdate=2007-10-01}}</ref> the third time a number has been retired in FSU history. In addition, Simmons was inducted into the [[Orange Bowl]] Hall of Fame for his accomplishments while playing at Florida State University. He was elected to the [[College Football Hall of Fame]] in 2008 alongside such greats as [[Troy Aikman]], [[Lou Holtz]] and [[Billy Cannon]] |
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He later had a brief career in the [[National Football League]], selected as pick #160 in the [[1981 NFL Draft]]. He played for the [[Cleveland Browns]], and the [[United States Football League|USFL]]'s [[Tampa Bay Bandits]] in 1984 and the [[Memphis Showboats]] in 1985, but it was in Tampa where he was a teammate of future professional wrester [[Lex Luger]] and [[Dallas Cowboys]] offensive lineman [[Nate Newton]]. |
He later had a brief career in the [[National Football League]], selected as pick #160 in the [[1981 NFL Draft]]. He played for the [[Cleveland Browns]], and the [[United States Football League|USFL]]'s [[Tampa Bay Bandits]] in 1984 and the [[Memphis Showboats]] in 1985, but it was in Tampa where he was a teammate of future professional wrester [[Lex Luger]] and [[Dallas Cowboys]] offensive lineman [[Nate Newton]]. |
Revision as of 20:08, 1 May 2008
This article needs additional citations for verification. (March 2007) |
Ron Simmons | |
---|---|
Born | [1] Perry, Georgia | May 15, 1962
Professional wrestling career | |
Ring name(s) | Ron Simmons[1] Faarooq Asad[1] Faarooq[1] |
Billed height | 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m)[2] |
Billed weight | 270 lb (120 kg; 19 st)[2] |
Trained by | Hiro Matsuda[1] |
Debut | October 1986[1][2] |
Ron Simmons[1] (born May 15, 1958)[1] is an American semi-retired professional wrestler and retired American football player. He was the first of only three African Americans to win the WCW World Heavyweight Championship, with Booker T and The Rock being the other two. He is currently signed to World Wrestling Entertainment where he does public relations work, appears in backstage segments on RAW, known for his catchphrase, "DAMN!" and occasionally wrestling on the RAW brand.
Simmons was a two-time consensus All-American football player[1] at Florida State University, and played for the Cleveland Browns in the National Football League and the Ottawa Rough Riders in the Canadian Football League. He became a professional wrestler in 1986, and went on to wrestle in World Championship Wrestling under his real name and in the World Wrestling Federation under both his real name and the ring names Faarooq Asad and Faarooq (sometimes spelled Farooq).
American football career
Born in Perry, Georgia, Simmons attended Warner Robins High School, where he played American football as a Tight End and Linebacker. In 1976, he was named lineman of the year, and first team All-State by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
Simmons was an All-American football player at Florida State University from 1977-80 under coach Bobby Bowden (whom Simmons described as "a second father"), spending four years as a defensive nose guard. The Seminoles were 39-8 during Simmons' years at the school, finishing in the Associated Press Top 20 three times ('77,'79 and '80), earning back-to-back Orange Bowl trips after Simmons' junior and senior seasons[2]. In 1979 Simmons finished ninth in the Heisman voting[3], behind winner Charles White. In 1988, Simmons' jersey (number 50) was retired by Florida State University,[3] the third time a number has been retired in FSU history. In addition, Simmons was inducted into the Orange Bowl Hall of Fame for his accomplishments while playing at Florida State University. He was elected to the College Football Hall of Fame in 2008 alongside such greats as Troy Aikman, Lou Holtz and Billy Cannon
He later had a brief career in the National Football League, selected as pick #160 in the 1981 NFL Draft. He played for the Cleveland Browns, and the USFL's Tampa Bay Bandits in 1984 and the Memphis Showboats in 1985, but it was in Tampa where he was a teammate of future professional wrester Lex Luger and Dallas Cowboys offensive lineman Nate Newton.
Professional wrestling career
Simmons returned to prominence several years after the end of his football career when he was recruited by Japanese professional wrestler Hiro Matsuda. Simmons trained under Matsuda and debuted in October 1986.
National Wrestling Alliance/World Championship Wrestling (1986-1994)
Ron Simmons teamed up with Butch Reed to form Doom. Doom defeated The Steiner Brothers for the NWA World Tag Team Championship and were recognized as the first holders of the WCW World Tag Team Championship in January 1991.
On August 2, 1992, a scheduled title match between Sting and WCW World Heavyweight Champion Big Van Vader was cancelled after Jake Roberts (kayfabe) injured Sting.[4] WCW President Bill Watts responded by holding a raffle to determine the number one contender.[4] Simmons won the raffle and defeated Vader with a powerslam to win the Championship.[4] By defeating Vader, Simmons became the first ever African American WCW World Heavyweight Champion.[4]
Simmons held the title for five months, during which time he consolidated his reputation as a stiff wrestler. His reign ended on December 30 1992, when Vader defeated him to regain the title.
Extreme Championship Wrestling (1994-1995)
Simmons appeared in Extreme Championship Wrestling from late 1994 to early 1995. During that time he unsuccessfully challenged ECW World Television Champion Shane Douglas at November to Remember 1994 and had matches with Mikey Whipwreck and 911.
World Wrestling Federation/Entertainment (1996-Present)
Simmons joined the World Wrestling Federation and made his WWF debut on the July 22 1996 episode of RAW. His first gimmick was that of 'Faarooq Asad', a gladiator who wore a black and blue gladiator outfit with a misshaped helmet and was managed by Sunny. Simmons briefly feuded with Ahmed Johnson before changing his ring name to simply 'Faarooq'.
Nation of Domination
As Faarooq, Simmons and his new manager, Clarence Mason, formed a stable known as the Nation of Domination. The Nation of Domination was loosely based on the Nation of Islam, although the members of the stable were not exclusively African American. After Simmons threw the White American Crush and the Puerto Rican Savio Vega out of the Nation, Vega and Crush formed their own rival factions, known respectively as the Disciples of Apocalypse and Los Boricuas, and Simmons recruited more African American members for the Nation. The three stables feuded with one another throughout 1997. In early 1998, Simmons's leadership of the Nation of Domination was usurped by The Rock, and he spent several months feuding with his former stablemates.
The Acolytes
After being dumped from the Nation, Simmons teamed briefly with 2 Cold Scorpio. In late 1998, Simmons began teaming with Bradshaw as Hell's Henchmen. They were managed by The Jackyl until he left the WWF, at which point they were repackaged as members of The Undertaker's Ministry of Darkness and were renamed the Acolytes, as they acted like acolytes to the Undertaker. The Acolytes recruited Phineas I. Godwinn and Mabel to the Ministry by kidnapping and brainwashing them (renaming them Mideon and Viscera, respectively), and feuded with the Undertaker's rivals, such as D-Generation X and The Brood, the latter of which later joined the Ministry as well.
After the Undertaker suffered an injury in late 1999, the Ministry of Darkness disbanded. Simmons and Bradshaw continued to team with one another, and eventually adopted the gimmick of two brawlers who enjoyed drinking beer and smoking cigars (much like The Crusher and Dick the Bruiser before them). After Bradshaw began hiring out the services of the Acolytes as mercenaries and bodyguards, the tag team was renamed the Acolytes Protection Agency (APA). Around this time, Simmons would start saying his trademark "DAMN!" catchphrase, though it wouldn't be emphasized as much as it would be later on.
The APA teamed together until 2002, when Simmons was drafted to the SmackDown! brand of World Wrestling Entertainment. Faarooq had a brief heel turn when he teamed with Reverend D-Von until he retired in December 2002, but in June 2003 he returned to WWE with Bradshaw and the APA reunited. One memorable moment during this short return was a joke shared by the two during which they claimed that the Basham Brothers' then-valet Shaniqua was actually Shelton Benjamin in drag.
In his last WWE storyline, he was fired by former SmackDown! General Manager Paul Heyman after he disrespected Heyman (due to the WrestleMania XX issue between Heyman and Stone Cold Steve Austin during that night). It was assumed the APA would be fired, but it turned out to only be Faarooq. Ron retired from his in-ring career, kayfabe accusing Bradshaw of not being a faithful friend. Simmons had decided to retire quietly in this manner due to injury and age. During that event, Heyman told Bradshaw that it was time for him to break out on his own again. Bradshaw went on to win the WWE Championship. Simmons retired from wrestling after this incident but continues to make appearances for WWE in a promotional capacity.
Occasional appearances
In 2006, during a rebroadcast of the 1981 Orange Bowl on Sun Sports, Ron stated that since that time he has retired from wrestling action, but would like to continue or even improve his role with World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE). Starting on October 23 2006, he began making short cameos on RAW under his given name to say his catchphrase of "Damn", often in awe of or shock at odd happenings.
On the November 20 2006 edition of RAW, Simmons was chosen by Ric Flair to replace the injured Roddy Piper at the Survivor Series to take on the Spirit Squad. He was the first to be eliminated, via countout. He was seen in the ring with Chris Masters in the Masterlock Challenge on the January 15, 2007 edition of RAW, a confrontation which ended prematurely after interference from Super Crazy. Although Simmons technically broke the masterlock, it was not officially recognized because of Crazy's interference.
On the July 27, 2007 edition of SmackDown!, Simmons was named the best man for Theodore Long and Kristal's kayfabe wedding.
Ron Simmons also engaged in a feud against Santino Marella. On Monday September 10, 2007 on RAW, Simmons was attacked by Marella. This was the first time that Simmons has been attacked by someone on screen for years.
On the September 24, 2007 edition of RAW, Simmons made a return to the ring and defeated Santino Marella by countout after Marella left the ring and walked out.
A week later, Simmons said, "Damn!" one more time after throwing Steve-O (of Jackass fame) out of a nearby door. After the showing of the event, a short segment was aired, promoting Steve-O's new show, which was premiering after RAW. The segment shown himself and Simmons once again, this time Simmons saying, "Then don't you have somewhere to be?" after Steve-O telling him about his show airing after RAW. This indicated the first time since his return to say a full sentence and not to say "Damn", and/or any word rhyming with it.
Ron Simmons has since been occasionally competing on WWE Heat, taking on unknown wrestlers from the town in which the show is being taped. At the end of each match Ron Simmons holds onto a microphone, pulling it toward and away from his mouth while the crowd cheers then eventually will say "DAMN!"
On December 3 2007 he and Bradshaw (formerly APA) were hired by Hornswoggle to help him in a no DQ handicap match against Jonathan Coachman and Carlito in which they helped him win.
During early 2008 Simmons took up WWE's offer of substance abuse rehabilitation. He entered a center in Atlanta along with Scott Hall and Jake Roberts. [citation needed]
Wrestling facts
- Finishing and signature moves
- With Bradshaw
- Managers
- Nicknames
- The All American
- The Powerhouse
- Catchphrases
- DAMN! - 2000 - Present
- Well I'll be DAMNED! - 2004
Championships and accomplishments
- Ohio Valley Wrestling
- OVW Southern Tag Team Championship (1 time) - with Bradshaw
- World Championship Wrestling
- NWA World Tag Team Championship (Mid-Atlantic version) (1 time) - with Butch Reed (Last)
- WCW United States Tag Team Championship (1 time) - with Big Josh
- WCW World Heavyweight Championship (1 time)
- WCW World Tag Team Championship (1 time) - with Butch Reed (First)
- World Wrestling Federation
- WWF Tag Team Championship (3 times) - with Bradshaw
- Pro Wrestling Illustrated
- PWI Most Inspirational Wrestler of the Year (1992)
- PWI ranked him # 108 of the 500 best singles wrestlers of the PWI Years in 2003.
- PWI ranked him # 91 of the 100 best tag teams of the PWI Years with Butch Reed in 2003.
Footnotes
- ^ a b c d e f g h "OWW Profile". Online World Of Wrestling. Retrieved 2007-09-23.
- ^ a b c d "WWE: Superstars > Raw > Ron Simmons > Bio". WWE.com. Retrieved 2007-10-01.
- ^ "Florida State University Official Athletic Site". seminoles.com. Retrieved 2007-10-01.
- ^ a b c d Foley, Mick. Have A Nice Day: A Tale of Blood and Sweatsocks (p.3)
References
- Mick Foley (2000). Have A Nice Day: A Tale of Blood and Sweatsocks. HarperCollins. p. 511. ISBN 0061031011.
- An interview with Ron Simmons, conducted by Thomas Chamberlin
- WWE Profile
- Ron Simmons at Accelerator3359.com
- Ron Simmons at Canoe.ca
- Ron Simmons at Online World of Wrestling
- Solie's title histories
- Ron Simmons at IMDb
- [4]
- [5]
- [6]
- Articles lacking sources from February 2008
- 1958 births
- American football defensive linemen
- American professional wrestlers
- African American sportspeople
- Cleveland Browns players
- Florida State University alumni
- Florida State Seminoles football players
- Living people
- People from Georgia (U.S. state)
- People from Warner Robins, Georgia