Jim Duggan
Jim Duggan | |
---|---|
Birth name | James Edward Duggan Jr. |
Born | [1] Glens Falls, New York, U.S.[1][2][3] | January 14, 1954
Spouse(s) |
Debra Duggan (m. 1989) |
Children | 2 |
Professional wrestling career | |
Ring name(s) | Hacksaw Duggan Hacksaw Higgins The Convict[4] Derek Wood[4] Jim Duggan[4] King Duggan[4] |
Billed height | 6 ft 3 in (191 cm)[2] |
Billed weight | 270 lb (122 kg)[2] |
Billed from | Glens Falls, New York[2] |
Trained by | Fritz Von Erich[4][5] |
Debut | 1979[1] |
James Edward Duggan Jr. (born January 14, 1954),
In the World Wrestling Federation (WWF, now known as WWE), Duggan won the first Royal Rumble match in 1988.[6] In World Championship Wrestling (WCW), he was a United States Heavyweight Champion[7] and the final World Television Champion.[8][9] In 2004, he won and promptly vacated the IWA World Heavyweight Championship in Tokyo, making him a one time wrestling world champion.[10] He was inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame in 2011 and is currently signed to WWE on a Legends contract.
Early life and career
Duggan was a
Upon graduating from high school, he was recruited by Ohio State University, but would instead choose to play football at Southern Methodist University (SMU), where he was eventually voted team captain.[12] Duggan earned his bachelor's degree in applied plant biology. After college, Duggan was signed by the Atlanta Falcons of the National Football League, but was released after being plagued by knee injuries.[4]
Professional wrestling career
Early career (1979–1982)
Duggan broke into professional wrestling thanks in large part to wrestler
After a brief stint with the WWF, Duggan began to work regularly for Georgia Championship Wrestling. During this time, Duggan was known by two in-ring aliases: in the Contiguous United States as "Big" Jim Duggan and in Hawaii as The Convict, a masked wrestler. After wrestling for a Birmingham, Alabama-based promotion, Duggan began wrestling in Southwest Championship Wrestling based in San Antonio, Texas where he adopted his well-known "Hacksaw" nickname.[1][3]
Mid-South Wrestling/Universal Wrestling Federation (1982–1986)
In 1982, Duggan made his debut in
As a fan favorite, he won the
New Japan Pro-Wrestling (1981, 1986)
In August 1981, while still wrestling in Georgia, Duggan toured throughout
In January 1986, while he was now working under Bill Watts' Universal Wrestling Federation, Duggan would once again venture overseas to New Japan, now wrestling in their New Year Dash tour, coincidentally facing Inoki once again in the first day of their tour on January 3, this time ending in a double count-out. Duggan, a now more established wrestler, was receiving a lot of good results during the tour, clashing with main eventers such as Fujinami, Sakaguchi, Kimura and Choshu to draws, and dominating young lions such as Tatsutoshi Goto and Yang-Seung Hi. He also wrestled tag-team action during the series, teaming with the likes of Tony St. Clair, Johnny Mantell, Black Tiger, Mike Miller and the twin-team of Madd Maxx (1 & 2), with the majority of them ending in the losing end for Duggan's team. Duggan would tour one last time overseas in September of the same year, wrestling on New Japan's Challenge Spirit tour, resuming his encounters against Inoki, Fujinami, Kimura and Sakaguchi, as well as facing Umanosuke Ueda and George Takano in tag-team matches, teaming once again with Madd Maxx, Jerry Gray and The Angel Of Death. His last match came against Seiji Sakaguchi in a double count-out.
World Wrestling Federation (1987–1993)
Early feuds (1987)
Duggan was signed to the WWF in January 1987, making his first major appearance with the WWF at
On May 26, 1987, Duggan and the Iron Sheik were arrested for DUI in New Jersey. Duggan was released from the company, but was ultimately brought back in a lower spot on roster. Although he did not win any major titles in the promotion, for seven years he was a consistent fan favorite with his patriotic working class everyman gimmick. His character was mainly comical, as he rarely was in major contention for titles. His first major WWF match was at the first-ever Survivor Series pay-per-view in 1987, when he participated in the first Survivor Series match and was a member of the winning team.[1][17]
First Royal Rumble winner (1988–1989)
By the late fall of 1987, Duggan received his first major push since his return, being placed in a feud opposite "King" Harley Race, who was using a "monarch" gimmick; sneering at wrestlers he thought were below him. During a televised confrontation, Duggan took Race's crown and cape, though Race would later get them back.[18] At the 1987 Slammy Awards, where Duggan presented the nominees for "Best Ring Apparel," an on-stage shoving match between him and the winner (Race), sparked a brawl, going backstage and eventually reaching back to the main stage before interrupting another award presentation. Gorilla Monsoon stepped in to separate the two. Duggan eventually defeated Race several times in both televised and non-televised shows.[19]
Duggan participated in the first-ever Royal Rumble match in 1988, where he was the 13th of twenty entrants. He won the match after he last eliminated the One Man Gang.[1][3][6][20]
At
Duggan earned a shot at the Intercontinental Heavyweight Championship against The Honky Tonk Man in July 1988, but Honky Tonk got himself disqualified, thus retaining the title.[23]
Duggan then began displaying traits of an American patriot by feuding with several
King and American patriot (1989–1993)
In mid-1989, he started a feud with
He eventually lost his crown to
In late 1991, he patched up things with Sgt. Slaughter, who had turned babyface, and the pair formed a
In mid-1992, Duggan was moved to undercard status.[3] In early 1993, he was involved in a feud with the then near 600 pound Yokozuna, who was the number one contender to the WWF Championship. Manager Mr. Fuji was bad mouthing America and Duggan challenged his protégé to a match. The match was promoted by claiming that no one had knocked Yokozuna off his feet, even though Yokozuna had fallen off his feet shortly before, during the 1993 Royal Rumble match. The stipulations to the match were if Duggan knocked Yokozuna off his feet, Duggan would win. On the February 6 edition of Superstars, Duggan won the match after knocking Yokozuna down completely, but then was manhandled by the much bigger Yokozuna after the match and fell victim to four Banzai Drops, sidelining Duggan for about four months.[1][3]
Duggan eventually returned to television and started a feud with then-Intercontinental Champion
World Championship Wrestling (1994–2001)
United States Heavyweight Champion (1994)
Duggan signed a contract with
Various feuds (1995–1999)
After he lost the U.S. title to Vader, Duggan moved to the mid-card division and began wrestling on Saturday Night. He defeated Bunkhouse Buck at SuperBrawl V.[1][48] He faced former WWF rival Meng (known as Haku in WWF) in a martial arts match at Uncensored, which Meng won.[49] At The Great American Bash, he defeated Sgt. Craig Pittman by disqualification in Pittman's pay-per-view debut.[50] At Bash at the Beach, Duggan lost to Kamala.[51]
In late 1995, Duggan started a feud with
After being cured of his cancer, Duggan returned to wrestling and replaced
World Television Champion and Team Canada (2000–2001)
During this period, he found the
Near the end of his career in WCW, he became involved in more major storylines, including one that involved him becoming a villain by abandoning the patriotic gimmick for a short time to join
Independent circuit (2001–2005)
After WCW was purchased by the WWF in March 2001, Duggan began wrestling in the independent circuit. On December 5, 2002, Duggan defeated Krusher Kong at LWE Xplosion. On January 17, 2003, Duggan defeated Jim Neidhart for Border City Wrestling in Ottawa, Ontario.
On January 29, 2005, he defeated Kamala (wrestler) at WrestleReunion.
Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (2003)
On the March 12, 2003 pay-per-view of NWA Total Nonstop Action (TNA), Duggan made a surprise appearance and defeated fellow WCW alum Mike Sanders.[1][61] on the March 19 NWATNA, Duggan and Moondog Spot defeated Mike Sanders and Disco Inferno. Duggan made his final appearance in TNA on October 29, where he lost to Jeff Jarrett.[1][62]
Return to WWE (2005–2009)
Teaming with Eugene (2005–2006)
Duggan appeared on the October 3, 2005 edition of Raw, dubbed "The Homecoming" along with several other WWF/E alumni. He and the other legends attacked
After feuding with Edge and Lita, he became mentor and tutor to Eugene and the two feuded with
Various appearances (2007–2009)
At
After months of wrestling on
On December 31, he lost a
In the summer of 2008, Duggan started a short feud with
In 2009, Duggan appeared in the 2009 Royal Rumble match, entering at #29 and setting a record for the most years between Royal Rumble appearances. He was eliminated by Big Show. On the August 10 episode of Raw, he made his final televised WWE appearance, as Sgt. Slaughter had him come out in place of Bret Hart after introducing "the best there is, the best there was and the best there ever will be", antagonizing the crowd of Canadians.
Independent circuit (2009–2017)
He then resumed wrestling on the independent circuit. He recently appeared on Pro Wrestling Ohio's "Wrestlelution 3" where he defeated "The Megastar" Marion Fontaine.
On November 30, 2013, at WrestleCade 2013, Duggan defeated Daivari.[79] He has signed on with Global Force Wrestling as a "legend" to help promote GFW events and tours. To promote the shows, GFW's Jeff Jarrett and Duggan have appeared at Dell Diamond on Thursday, May 28. January 2016, Duggan appeared in an event for Modern Vintage Wrestling in Wilmington, North Carolina.[80] On May 6, 2017, at AWF Head to the Edge, Duggan defeated Josh Price.[81]
Second return to WWE (2011–2012)
On April 2, 2011, Duggan was inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame by fellow inductee "The Million Dollar Man" Ted DiBiase.[82]
Duggan returned to wrestling in WWE with an appearance at the 2012
Other media
It was announced in February 2012 that Duggan would appear on a WWE original reality show called
Duggan appears as himself in the film Pro Wrestlers vs Zombies, in which he battles the undead with his 2x4.[88]
In 1991, Duggan appeared in the Harry and the Henderson's TV series' 16th episode.
In 1999, Duggan was a guest panelist for two episodes of the Nickelodeon children's game show Figure It Out.
Duggan appears in the sixth episode of the second season of GamesMaster in the UK, where he played WWF on the Super Nintendo against a boy he picked from the crowd, Hacksaw played as Macho Man Randy Savage and was beaten.
Duggan also appeared in the season five finale of Duck Dynasty.[89]
Duggan and former WWF announcer Sean Mooney now run a weekly podcast on the MLW Radio Network called "Primetime with Hacksaw Jim Duggan and Sean Mooney". Duggan left the podcast after 18 episodes and Mooney is now hosting by himself.
In 2017, Duggan released the first issue of a biographical comic book miniseries through Squared Circle Comics, titled "Hacksaw Jim Duggan".
In 2022 Rapper Estee Nack released Nacksaw Jim Duggan on the label Griselda Records. Track 1 "NACKMANCOLETRANE" features a snippet of Tucker Carlson reporting on Duggan defending his house from a home invader.[90] Track 4 "ANGELDIOR" features Duggan Himself.
Personal life
Duggan and his wife Debra have two daughters, Celia and Rebecca. He is a close friend of Willie Robertson, who owns the Duck Commanders.[91]
In 1987, Duggan and
In November 2013, Duggan started an
In 2018, Duggan was admitted into the intensive care unit for a heart procedure to treat atrial fibrillation. In 2019, he had a pair of heart surgeries to fight infection. On October 20, 2021, his wife posted on Facebook: “Back where we don't want to be. Please pray for Jim and his doctors as he has emergency surgery this morning. Thank you, Debra.”[99] On October 28, 2021, Duggan announced via Instagram a week later that he was diagnosed with prostate cancer and had been living with it for a couple of months. This led to another surgery on October 29, 2021. "Jim's surgery went as planned. He is resting comfortably now. Thank you for your prayers, good vibes and well wishes. Please continue them as he continues to heal" his wife said.[100] On December 8, 2021, Duggan announced in a video uploaded to his Twitter account that he was cancer-free.[101] On May 15, 2022, he announced in a Facebook video that his cancer treatment continued, he will need hormone shots and radiation treatment for the next eight weeks, five days a week, and that doctors are optimistic for catching it early.[102]
In December 2022, Duggan said he detained a home invader at gunpoint at his house in Kershaw County, South Carolina.[103]
On September 8, 2023, Duggan was doing an autograph signing in his hometown of
Championships and accomplishments
- Heroes And Legends Wrestling
- HLW Midwestern Championship
- Imperial Wrestling Revolution
- Danny Hodge Trophy (2016)
- International Wrestling Association of Japan
- International Wrestling Cartel
- Pro Wrestling Alabama
- PWA Southern Tag Team Championship with Nigel Sherrod
- Pro Wrestling Illustrated
- Pro Wrestling This Week
- Wrestler of the Week (March 22–28, 1987)[109]
- Professional Wrestling Hall of Fame
- Class of 2018[110]
- River City Wrestling
- RCW Legends Championship
- Texas All-Star Wrestling
- TASW Heavyweight Championship[111]
- Mid-South Wrestling Association/Universal Wrestling Federation
- World Championship Wrestling
- World Wrestling Federation/WWE
- Wrestling Observer Newsletter
- Most Improved (1982)
- Feud of the Year (1985) vs. Ted DiBiase
- Most Unimproved (1989)
References
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Hacksaw Jim Duggan def. Hercules
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André the Giant, Dino Bravo, "Ravishing" Rick Rude, Harley Race & Mr. Perfect def. Hacksaw Jim Duggan, Jake "The Snake" Roberts, Scott Casey, Ken Patera & Tito Santana
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Demolition & Hacksaw Jim Duggan def. André the Giant, Akeem & Big Boss Man
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The King's Court: "Macho King" Randy Savage, Dino Bravo, Earthquake & Greg "The Hammer" Valentine def. The 4x4s: Hacksaw Jim Duggan, "Rugged" Ronnie Garvin, Hercules & Bret "Hit Man" Hart
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Randy "Macho Man" Savage def. "Hacksaw" Jim Duggan
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Hacksaw Jim Duggan def. Dino Bravo w/Earthquake
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Nikolai Volkoff & Hacksaw Jim Duggan def. The Orient Express
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WWF TITLE MATCH: Jim Duggan defeated Sgt. Slaughter (champion) w/General Adnan by disqualification
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Hacksaw Jim Duggan, Sgt. Slaughter, The Texas Tornado Kerry Von Erich & Tito Santana def. Col. Mustafa, The Berzerker, Skinner & Hercules
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Sgt. Slaughter & "Hacksaw" Jim Duggan def. the Beverly Brothers
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Hacksaw Jim Duggan, Sgt. Slaughter, Virgil & Big Boss Man def. The Mountie, Repo Man & Nasty Boys w/ Jimmy Hart
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Hacksaw Jim Duggan v. Shawn Michaels for the Intercontinental Title. Shawn makes a hasty escape, and Duggan can't believe he only won by countout.
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Hacksaw Jim Duggan v. Shawn Michaels in a Lumberjack Match, and for the Intercontinental Title. Perfect comes in and wallops Michaels, inviting an instant DQ win for the champ.
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Jim Duggan pinned Steve Austin (0:35) to win the WCW U.S. Title
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WCW U.S. Champ Jim Duggan beat Steve Austin via DQ
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Jim Duggan pinned Bunkhouse Buck
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Jim Duggan beat Loch Ness via DQ
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The Giant won a "three ring battle royal"
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Douglas orders Duggan to denounce the USA, and tear up the US flag. Duggan doesn't want to do it. The Revolution beats up Duggan. Filthy Animals music hits, and Kidman, Konnan, and Rey-Rey (on a crutch) hit the ring. They chase the Revolution from the ring
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Gen. Rection beat Lance Storm & Jim Duggan in a "handicap" match to win the WCW U.S. Title when he pinned Duggan
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Jimmy Snuka and Eugene def. Rob Conway & Tyson Tomko; Final voting results for Eugene's partner: Jimmy Snuka 43% Jim Duggan 40% Kamala 17%
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losing team must split up forever. Johnny pinned Duggan. After the match, however, Eugene seemingly snapped, blindsiding his mentor and attacking the Legend with his own 2x4.
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Eugene defeated former partner and mentor Hacksaw Jim Duggan
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Cryme Tyme (Shad Gaspard & JTG) win the Tag Team Turmoil match!
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The pair then dragged out a bloody "Hacksaw" Jim Duggan and let the Raw locker room know that if anyone else tried to interfere in their match, they would suffer the same fate. Naughty Nick Doehring then landed a ruthless Con-chair-to on Duggan
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"Hacksaw" Jim Duggan failed to break Chris Masters' Master Lock in the Master Lock Challenge
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Umaga pounded Hacksaw to secure a spot at the Rumble
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{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - ^ "The Post-Star Glens Falls, New York, Thursday, May 28, 1987". May 28, 1987. Retrieved March 6, 2023.
- ^ "Hoooooo!! Support an American Hero". Indiegogo. Retrieved January 20, 2018.
- ^ "WWE Hall of Famer 'Hacksaw' Jim Duggan Undergoes Emergency Surgery". comicbook.com. Retrieved October 20, 2021.
- ^ "WWE HOFer 'Hacksaw' Jim Duggan Undergoes Surgery After Prostate Cancer Diagnosis". wbleacherreport.com. Retrieved October 30, 2021.
- ^ "Let's kick off the day with an update from Hacksaw. Hoooooo!". twitter.com. Retrieved December 9, 2021.
- ^ "Bad News !!". facebook.com. Retrieved May 15, 2022.
- ^ DeAngelo, Dominic (December 16, 2022). "'Hacksaw' Jim Duggan Says He Tackled And Detained Home Invader During December Break-In - Exclusive". Wrestling Inc.
- ^ Petrequin, Jay (September 13, 2023). "'Hacksaw' Jim Duggan out of surgery in Glens Falls". MSN.
- ^ Roelfsema, Eric. "IWC Tag Team Championship title history". Solie. Retrieved June 28, 2008.
- ^ "Independent Wrestling Results - May 2002". onlineworldofwrestling.com. Retrieved July 6, 2008.
- ^ "PWI 500 for 1993". The Internet Wrestling Database. Retrieved August 27, 2012.
- ^ "PWI 500 of the PWI Years". Willy Wrestlefest. Retrieved August 27, 2012.
- Atlanta, Georgia. Syndicated. WATL.
- Canadian Online Explorer. Archived from the originalon December 8, 2017. Retrieved December 7, 2017.
- ^ "Independent Wrestling Results - August 2004". onlineworldofwrestling.com. Retrieved July 5, 2008.
- ^ "Mid-South Louisiana Heavyweight Championship history". The Great Hisa's Puroresu Dojo. Retrieved March 29, 2008.
- ^ "WWE profile".
External links
- Official website
- Jim Duggan on WWE.com
- Jim Duggan's profile at Cagematch.net , Wrestlingdata.com , Internet Wrestling Database
- GFW profile
- Jim Duggan at IMDb