Bam Bam Bigelow

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Bam Bam Bigelow
Bigelow in 1994
Birth nameScott Charles Bigelow
Born(1961-09-01)September 1, 1961
Mount Laurel, New Jersey, United States
DiedJanuary 19, 2007(2007-01-19) (aged 45)
Hudson, Florida, United States
Cause of deathDrug overdose
Spouse(s)
Dana Fisher
(m. 1987; div. 2000)
Children3
Professional wrestling career
Ring name(s)
  • Bam Bam Bigelow
  • Crusher Bam Bam Bigelow
  • Crusher Yurkov
Billed height6 ft 4 in (193 cm)[1][2]
Billed weight390 lb (177 kg)[1][2]
Billed from
Trained byLarry Sharpe
DebutAugust 23, 1985

Scott Charles Bigelow (September 1, 1961 – January 19, 2007) was an American

professional wrestler, better known by the ring name Bam Bam Bigelow. Recognizable by his close to 400-pound frame and the distinctive flame tattoo that spanned most of his bald head, Bigelow was hailed by Ryan Murphy (a writer for Bigelow's former employer WWE) as "the most natural, agile and physically remarkable big man of the past quarter century",[3] while former co-worker Bret Hart described him as "possibly the best working big man in the business."[4]

Bigelow is best known for his appearances with promotions

.

Early life

Bigelow was born on September 1, 1961, in Mount Laurel, New Jersey, United States.[5] He attended Neptune High School in Neptune Township, New Jersey.[6] While he did not graduate, he earned varsity letters in football and wrestling. He placed third in the 1979 New Jersey state wrestling tournament in his sophomore year, but missed his senior season due to a cyst in his lower back.[7][8][9][10] In his late teens, Bigelow competed in arm wrestling tournaments.[11] After dropping out of high school, Bigelow held various jobs including a bodyguard, a bouncer, and a bounty hunter.[7][12][13] Bigelow stated that while working as a bounty hunter in Mexico, he was shot in the back by a fugitive[12][14] and imprisoned for six months in Mexico City.[8]

Professional wrestling career

Early career (1985–1987)

After being released from prison in Mexico, Bigelow decided to train as a professional wrestler, reasoning "there wasn't much else I was qualified for."[8] In May 1985, he began training at Larry Sharpe's Monster Factory wrestling school in Clementon, New Jersey,[15][16] with Sharpe regarding him as his prize student.[14][17] He made his professional wrestling debut on August 23, 1985,[18] at a show held at the Studio 54 nightclub that was promoted by Paul Heyman.[17][19]

In mid-1986, Bigelow began wrestling for the

Texas Death Match.[22] Following the loss, Bigelow departed the CWA for several months before returning to form a tag team with Lawler and feud with Austin Idol and Tommy Rich.[23][24] Bigelow continued regularly appearing with the CWA until March 1987.[20] He made brief returns to the CWA and its successor, the United States Wrestling Association, in 1989, 1990, 1991, and 1994.[25]

In late 1986, Bigelow wrestled for the Texas-based World Class Championship Wrestling promotion using the ring name "Crusher Yurkov", portraying a Russian.[26][27][28] During his run, he won the WCWA Television Championship.[29] Readers of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter voted Bigelow "Rookie of the Year" for 1986.[30]

New Japan Pro-Wrestling (1987–1992)

Beginning in January 1987, Bigelow began making lengthy tours of Japan with New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW) under the ring name "Crusher Bam Bam Bigelow", with Larry Sharpe again serving as his manager, reuniting the trainer with Bigelow.[31] During NJPW's "New Year Dash", "Blazing Cherry Blossoms", and "Summer Big Fight Series" events in 1987, Bigelow repeatedly faced Antonio Inoki in a series of matches, including unsuccessfully challenging him for the IWGP Heavyweight Championship in the Ryōgoku Kokugikan in Tokyo in August 1987.[32]

In January 1989, Bigelow formed a

"Dr. Death" Steve Williams, Terry Gordy, Toshiaki Kawada, and Kenta Kobashi.[33]

In March 1991, Bigelow and Vader defeated

Keiji Muto for the IWGP Tag Team Championship. Their reign lasted until June 1992, when they were defeated by the Steiner Brothers. Bigelow made his final appearances with NJPW in October 1992, participating in the Super Grade Tag League with Keiji Muto, before leaving Japan to return to the WWF.[32][34] Bigelow was unable to return to NJPW later in his career due to an exclusivity agreement signed between NJPW and World Championship Wrestling (WCW).[19]

World Wrestling Federation (1987–1988)

Bigelow (right) wrestling André the Giant, c. 1988

Bigelow debuted in the

dark matches and on house shows before making his televised debut.[35] Upon his debut, Bigelow featured in a storyline in which various heel managers such as Bobby Heenan, Jimmy Hart, and Slick vied to have him as their client in what was dubbed "the Battle for Bam Bam". The storyline culminated in August 1987 when Bigelow denounced the heel managers and announced that his manager would be Oliver Humperdink, establishing him as a face.[9][19][36]

In September and October 1987, Bigelow won a series of

WWF World Heavyweight Championship, losing to One Man Gang in the first round. Bigelow went on to face One Man Gang in a further series of matches throughout mid-1988.[35]

In June 1988, Bigelow lost to André the Giant in a

stiff due to tension between them;[4] immediately following the match, Bigelow returned to the locker room, collected his bag, and left the Garden.[40] Bigelow left the WWF in July 1988 due to a combination of knee injuries (tears to both anterior cruciate ligaments)[41] and heat from other members of the roster resentful of the push he had received despite being a rookie.[42][21][43]

World Championship Wrestling (1988–1989, 1990)

Bigelow, c. 1988

Bigelow debuted in

dark match in the Charlotte Coliseum. In late 1988, he began challenging Horseman Barry Windham over the NWA United States Heavyweight Championship; he lost to Windham by count-out at Starrcade '88: True Gritt in December 1988 after being attacked by the Horsemen's manager, J. J. Dillon.[19][43][44] Bigelow was unwilling to sign an exclusive contract with WCW due to his touring commitments with New Japan Pro-Wrestling, and he left the company in January 1989.[42]

Bigelow returned to WCW in April 1990, once again reuniting with Oliver Humperdink. During this stint he wrestled primarily on

Clash of the Champions XI: Coastal Crush, he lost to Tommy Rich via disqualification after refusing to break a choke. Bigelow's second stint with WCW lasted until August 1990 when he once again returned to New Japan Pro-Wrestling.[44]

Universal Wrestling Federation (1991)

Bigelow joined the fledgling

Universal Wrestling Association (1992)

In February 1992, Bigelow began wrestling in Mexico for the

El Canek, Fishman, and Villanos III, IV, and V.[52][53] He was one of a series of foreign challengers to face El Canek.[54] Bigelow did not enjoy working in Mexico,[42] and he left the UWA in May 1992.[52]

World Wrestling Federation (1992–1995)

Alliance with Luna Vachon (1992–1994)

Bigelow returned to the World Wrestling Federation in October 1992, scoring a series of wins on

Typhoon on the May 10 episode of Monday Night Raw to qualify for the first-ever televised King of the Ring tournament; at the King of the Ring pay-per-view on June 13, Bigelow defeated Jim Duggan in the quarter-finals and received a bye in the semi-finals, but lost to Bret Hart in the tournament final in what was his third pay-per-view main event.[35][58]

Following King of the Ring, Bigelow began feuding with

Mabel.[35][62] The match was poorly critically received, being named "Worst Worked Match of the Year" by the Wrestling Observer Newsletter
.

In January 1994, Bigelow had a short feud with Bastion Booger after Booger kissed Vachon.

Million Dollar Corporation (1994–1995)

Bigelow in the WWF in 1995

On the June 27, 1994, episode of

The Smoking Gunns).[35][74]

In November 1994, Bigelow and fellow Million Dollar Corporation member Tatanka entered a

The World Wrestling Federation had approached former New York Giants All-Pro linebacker Lawrence Taylor about performing at WrestleMania XI in an attempt to generate interest. After Taylor agreed to wrestle a match, Bigelow was selected as his opponent.[78] The storyline saw Taylor introduced at the Royal Rumble, where he was sitting in the audience at ringside. After Bigelow was pinned by The 1-2-3 Kid, Bigelow took umbrage after noticing Taylor laughing. Upon Bigelow confronting Taylor at ringside, he offered Bigelow a handshake, but Bigelow instead shoved him to the ground. On the following episode of Monday Night Raw, it was announced that Bigelow had been temporarily suspended. During an interview segment with Vince McMahon, Bigelow declined to apologize to Taylor, instead challenging him to a match "any time, anyplace." Taylor initially declined the match, but after repeated insults from Bigelow, he accepted the challenge on February 27, 1995, at the WrestleMania XI press conference. The buildup to the match included Taylor staging a public workout in a ring that had been erected in Times Square in New York City at which he was confronted by Bigelow, resulting in a brawl.[79][80][81] On April 2, 1995, Taylor defeated Bigelow in the main event of WrestleMania XI.[82][83] The storyline garnered significant media coverage, with outlets such as Sports Illustrated, SportsCenter, and USA Today featuring it.[84] Bigelow was credited as having carried the inexperienced Taylor.[85]

Following WrestleMania, Bigelow participated in the "WWF in High Gear" tour of Europe.

Goldust.[35][86]

United States independent circuit; Japanese tours (1995–1998)

After leaving the World Wrestling Federation in late 1995, Bigelow began working on the United States independent circuit. In March 1996, Bigelow became the inaugural

three way dance.[92] In April 1998, Bigelow wrestled two bouts for the Japanese promotion Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling, participating in the "Fighting Creation" event.[93]

Extreme Championship Wrestling (1996, 1997–1998)

Initial appearances (1996)

Bigelow debuted in the

Taz.[94] Later that month at Just Another Night he defeated Cactus Jack in an impromptu match after Jack mocked him for his loss to Lawrence Taylor. In March 1996 at Big Ass Extreme Bash he again confronted Taz. Bigelow made a further appearance in October 1996, defeating Terry "Bam Bam" Gordy at Ultimate Jeopardy in what was dubbed the "Battle of the Bam Bams".[19][95][96]

The Triple Threat (1997–1998)

Bigelow in Extreme Championship Wrestling in 1998

Bigelow began appearing regularly with ECW in May 1997. He was reintroduced at

ECW Arena audience.[99] Bigelow went on to defeat Dudley in a series of further matches over the following months.[95]

On the October 20, 1997, episode of

gorilla press slam on her.[100] In the main event of November to Remember on November 30, 1997, Douglas defeated Bigelow to regain the Championship.[101][102][103]

Bigelow continued feuding with Douglas and the rest of The Triple Threat, allying with

Taz. At Hostile City Showdown in January 1998, Bigelow and Taz faced The Triple Threat in a handicap match; during the match, Bigelow betrayed Taz, rejoining The Triple Threat. At Living Dangerously on March 1, 1998, Bigelow defeated Taz for the ECW World Television Championship in the Asbury Park Convention Hall in his adopted hometown.[104][105][106] During the match, Bigelow collapsed backwards while Taz was applying his Tazmission hold, driving both men through the ring canvas.[107][108][109] Bigelow's reign lasted until the April 4, 1998, episode of ECW Hardcore TV where he lost the Championship to Rob Van Dam.[95][110][111]

After defeating

six-man tag team match in the main event of November to Remember, in which Sabu pinned Douglas.[95][114] This marked Bigelow's final appearance with ECW as he left the promotion to rejoin World Championship Wrestling immediately thereafter.[95]

World Championship Wrestling (1998–2001)

Early appearances (1998–1999)

Bigelow in World Championship Wrestling in 1999

In November 1998, Bigelow abruptly left ECW after experiencing

Wrath at Souled Out in January 1999, Bigelow lost to Goldberg at SuperBrawl IX the following month.[44]

In March 1999, Bigelow lost to

Hugh Morrus on Monday Nitro,[44] and a hardcore match against Brian Knobbs at Slamboree.[124]

Jersey Triad (1999)

On the May 31, 1999, episode of Monday Nitro, Bigelow and

Road Wild in August 1999, when they lost to Harlem Heat.[9][125][127]
The Jersey Triad disbanded the following month.

Hardcore division; final appearances (1999–2001)

After a short absence, Bigelow returned to WCW television on the October 25 episode of Monday Nitro, losing to

SuperBrawl X.[128] In March 2000, Bigelow participated in WCW's "Millennium Tour" of the United Kingdom. Later that month, he began feuding with The Wall after he developed a sadistic streak and attacked various younger wrestlers, including David Flair and Crowbar. The feud culminated in a bout at Uncensored which Bigelow won by disqualification.[129][130] In June 2000, Bigelow briefly reunited with his former Triple Threat stablemates Shane Douglas and Chris Candido,[18] after which he was inactive for several months[44] due to severe burns he had sustained in a fire.[131][132]

Bigelow returned to WCW television once more in October 2000. In November, he was paired with

Starrcade in December which was won by Awesome after Bigelow fell through the roof of the ambulance.[134] Over the following months, Bigelow primarily wrestled on Thunder. In early 2001, Bigelow began feuding with Shawn Stasiak, losing to him at WCW's final pay-per-view, Greed. The feud culminated in a match on the final episode of Monday Nitro on March 26 in which Stasiak defeated Bigelow.[44][135]

Late career (2001–2006)

After World Championship Wrestling was purchased by the World Wrestling Federation in March 2001, Bigelow opted not to accept a buy-out on his contract with

chair shots for fear of exacerbating his health problems.[140] He wrestled his final match on November 7, 2006 (10 weeks before his death) for the Florida-based American Combat Wrestling promotion, teaming with Ralph Mosca as "The Syndicate" to defeat Overkill (Legion Cage and Marcus Hall) for the ACW Tag Team Championship; the titles were vacated later that month.[141][142]

Professional wrestling style and persona

Bigelow was noted for what Michael McAvennie described as "uncanny nimbleness" given his height and weight.[143] Capable of executing cartwheels, forward rolls, and dropkicks,[21] he was described by Jake Black as "a powerful giant who could move like a cruiserweight".[144] Journalist Dave Meltzer commented "Bigelow was something of a phenomenon when he came into pro wrestling in 1986."[145] He was nicknamed "the Beast from the East".[41] His character was described by Michael Ball as a "punk".[146]

Bigelow had a distinctive appearance, with a large frame,

World Wrestling Federation in 1987 he began wearing clothes illustrated with flames, a theme he continued throughout the remainder of his career.[36][149]

At the outset of his career, Bigelow used the Nuclear Splash (a

Mixed martial arts career

Bigelow before his sole mixed martial arts match at a U-Japan MMA event in 1996

On November 17, 1996, Bigelow faced Kimo Leopoldo in a mixed martial arts bout promoted by U-Japan in Tokyo.[152] Bigelow was dominated through the bout, submitting to a rear naked choke in the first round.[148] In a 1998 interview, Bigelow claimed that he had been asked to throw the fight and that he had been paid $100,000 (equivalent to $194,271 in 2023) for the fight.[40][42]

Mixed martial arts record

Professional record breakdown
1 match 0 wins 1 loss
By knockout 0 0
By submission 0 1
By decision 0 0
Res. Record Opponent Method Event Date Round Time Location Notes
Loss 0-1 United States Kimo Leopoldo Submission (rear naked choke) U-Japan November 17, 1996 1 2:15 Tokyo, Japan [153]

Acting career

During his professional wrestling career, Bigelow took on a number of acting roles, generally playing menacing villainous characters. He also appeared in a commercial for Slim Jim beef jerky. He was a member of the Screen Actors Guild.[41][154]

Filmography
Year[155] Title[155] Role[155]
1992 Snake Eater III: His Law Goose
1995 Major Payne Huge Biker
1996 Joe's Apartment Boss Construction
2000 Icebreaker SWAT Team
2000 Ready to Rumble Himself

Personal life

As a young man, Bigelow was repeatedly arrested on charges including

drug possession, robbery, and sexual assault. He spent nine months in the Albert C. Wagner Youth Correctional Facility as a teenager, and was later imprisoned for six months in Mexico City for illegally acting as a bounty hunter in Mexico.[8][156]

Bigelow married Asbury Park native Dana Fisher in 1987. The couple had three children before divorcing in 2000.[8][157][158] Following the divorce, Fisher sued Bigelow for non-payment of child support.[159]

On July 4, 2000, Bigelow received second degree burns on 40% of his body while rescuing three children from a fire in Wayside, New Jersey. He spent 10 days in a hospital after the incident.[131][132]

In 2004, Bigelow opened a deli in Hamlin, Wayne County, Pennsylvania, that sold a two pound "Beast Burger". The restaurant later folded. Bigelow later relocated to Florida in hope that the warm weather would help with his chronic pain.[157][145][140][9]

In May 2004, Bigelow was charged with endangering the welfare of a child through reckless driving. He attributed the incident to a seizure he had suffered, and the charges were dropped two months later.[159] In August 2004, Bigelow was convicted of possession of marijuana.[159]

On October 2, 2005, Bigelow was hospitalized with a broken nose and several lacerations after crashing his Harley-Davidson motorcycle on Florida State Road 50 in Hernando County, Florida. Bigelow's girlfriend was his passenger at the time of the crash; she suffered severe injuries, but eventually made a complete recovery and remained with Bigelow until his death.[159][157]

For much of his professional wrestling career, Bigelow suffered from an addiction to

OxyContin.[157] By the end of his life, Bigelow was suffering from multiple health issues and receiving Social Security Disability Benefits.[159] He had atherosclerosis,[160] diabetes, and a persistent infection.[161] He also had severe back problems; back surgeries had reduced his height by 2 inches (5.1 cm).[7][21]

Death

Bigelow's girlfriend found him dead in his home in

benzodiazepines. A contributing factor to Bigelow's death was atherosclerosis. His death was ruled an accident by the Pasco-Pinellas Medical Examiner.[160]

Championships and accomplishments

  1. Freebird Rule
    " for this reign.

See also

References

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