Sean Waltman

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Sean Waltman
Waltman in 2007
Birth nameSean Michael Waltman
Born (1972-07-13) July 13, 1972 (age 51)
Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S.
Spouse(s)
Terry Waltman
(m. 1994; div. 2002)
Children2
Professional wrestling career
Ring name(s)The 1–2–3 Kid[1][2]
6-Pac[3]
The Cannonball Kid[1]
The Kamikaze Kid[1]
The Kid
The Lightning Kid[1]
Pac
Sean Waltman
Syxx[1][2]
Syxx-Pac
X
X-Pac[1]
"X-Pac" Sean Waltman
Billed height6 ft 1 in (185 cm)[1]
Billed weight212 lb (96 kg)[1]
Billed fromMinneapolis, Minnesota, U.S.[1]
Trained byEddie Sharkey[4]
Boris Malenko[4]
Debut1989[5]

Sean Michael Waltman (born July 13, 1972) is an American

NWA Total Nonstop Action
(NWA-TNA) as Syxx-Pac and under his real name.

Waltman began his career in the WWF in 1993, where he performed under several monikers as a jobber, until he was branded the 1-2-3 Kid after an upset victory over Razor Ramon on Raw. As 1-2-3 Kid, he held the WWF Tag Team Championship twice and challenged Bret Hart for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship in July 1994 in what was ranked by WWE as the third-best match ever aired on Raw.[6] During this time, he was part of The Kliq, a backstage group that was known for their influence on WWF storylines in the 1990s.

During the Monday Night War, Waltman left the WWF in 1996 to join Kliq members Kevin Nash and Scott Hall (formerly known as Razor Ramon) as Syxx in WCW, and held the WCW World Tag Team Championship with them as part of the New World Order (nWo), as well as becoming a one-time WCW Cruiserweight Champion. After being released from WCW in 1998, he returned to the WWF during its Attitude Era, where he was re-branded as D-Generation X (DX) member X-Pac and held the WWF Light Heavyweight Championship and WWF European Championship twice each, while also holding the WWF Tag Team Championship two more times while paired with Kane. After WCW went out of business in 2001, X-Pac held the WCW Cruiserweight and WWF Light Heavyweight Championships simultaneously during The Invasion, before departing the company after a brief nWo reunion the following year. He subsequently performed sporadically for several promotions, notably TNA (where he became a one-time TNA X Division Champion and was a member of The Band), and on the independent circuit.

Waltman has won a dozen championships between WWE, WCW, and TNA, the majority being cruiserweight and tag team titles. He is the only wrestler to have held the TNA X Division Championship, the WCW Cruiserweight Championship, and the WWF Light Heavyweight Championship. He was the final WWF Light Heavyweight Champion before the title was retired in favor of the Cruiserweight Championship he simultaneously held. He is recognized by WWE as the only wrestler to have been "an active member of both the nWo and DX during their heydays" in the 1990s.[7] Additionally, he is a two-time WWE Hall of Fame inductee and the only inductee to be inducted two years in a row (2019 and 2020) as a member of DX and the nWo respectively.

Early life

Sean Michael Waltman was born in Minneapolis on July 13, 1972.[4] He had a self-described troubled childhood. He was raised by a single mother and has called himself "unsupervised from age five". He claimed he was molested several times as a child. He joined his school wrestling team in ninth grade, but quickly quit when they told him he needed to cut his hair in order to wrestle.[8] He soon dropped out of school entirely. A love of professional wrestling and limited career opportunities led to him working in local wrestling promotions for free, setting up rings and doing other odd jobs before eventually wrestling himself.[8]

Professional wrestling career

Early career (1989–1993)

After training under

suicide dive and landed on Waltman's head, driving it to the concrete and causing a blood clot near his brain. He was hospitalized for three days, could not work for four months, and was advised to give up wrestling completely.[8] He also appeared in New Japan Pro-Wrestling's Top of the Super Juniors in 1993, facing the likes of Chris Benoit, Eddie Guerrero and Jushin Liger
.

World Wrestling Federation (1993–1996)

Early appearances (1993–1995)

Waltman at an event in 1995.

As The Lightning Kid, Waltman had his WWF tryout match in

Razor Ramon on the May 17, 1993, episode of Monday Night Raw, thus becoming "The 1–2–3 Kid".[4][13] Razor challenged him to a rematch, wagering $2,500, then $5,000 and finally $10,000 of his own money. Kid accepted the challenge, but grabbed the money and ran from the arena during the match. Ted DiBiase
, taunted him over losing to a nobody and losing his $10,000.

This angered Kid, and led to a match in which he upset DiBiase as well. Razor who turned face shortly before took Kid under his wing.[4] The 1–2–3 Kid made his pay-per-view debut at SummerSlam, losing to DiBiase's tag partner Irwin R. Schyster after Razor had defeated DiBiase. At Survivor Series, Kid was on Razor's team in a four-on-four elimination match. He and Marty Jannetty were the sole survivors, which led to them forming a tag team and holding the WWF Tag Team Championship for a week in January 1994 after beating The Quebecers.

For the next two years, The 1–2–3 Kid was a natural underdog and fan favorite. He wrestled

The Smoking Gunns
the next day on Raw.

Million Dollar Corporation (1995–1996)

After Kid and Razor failed to win the Tag Team Championship from

Hakushi but won a rematch in November after Ted DiBiase interfered. He was the sole survivor of his team at Survivor Series, besting rival Marty Jannetty with assistance from Psycho Sid. Kid and Jannetty had a singles feud, with the two trading victories over one another. Razor and Marty would team up to beat Kid and Sid at In Your House 5
.

After Survivor Series, Kid joined Ted DiBiase's Million Dollar Corporation faction.[13] He remained with the group until May 1996 when Waltman left the WWF. He lost a "Crybaby match" to Razor Ramon at In Your House 6. The 1–2–3 Kid's final WWF match aired on the May 20 episode of Monday Night Raw; he lost to Savio Vega. Notably, Waltman was the only Kliq member not involved in the infamous "Curtain Call" that took place at Madison Square Garden the night before his final match from his first WWF run aired, as he was in drug rehab at the time.[16]

World Championship Wrestling (1996–1997)

On September 16, 1996, Waltman was shown sitting in the front row for a live episode of

Los Angeles, California, minutes after successfully defending against Rey Mysterio Jr.[4]

During a feud with

During October 1997, a neck injury sidelined Waltman from wrestling, but he continued to appear on television for several weeks after.

Federal Express by WCW President Eric Bischoff. Waltman claims this was a power play aimed at his friends Hall and Nash, whose backstage influence was felt as a threat.[13] Bischoff later said Waltman was a competent performer when sober, but sober periods were "few and far between", and "in many ways, Sean was lucky to even have a job".[20]

World Wrestling Federation / World Wrestling Entertainment (1998–2002)

D-Generation X (1998–2000)

Waltman returned to WWF television on the March 30, 1998, episode of Monday Night Raw, the night after WrestleMania XIV and days after his firing from WCW.[2][13] With Shawn Michaels beginning a four-year retirement after a WWF World Heavyweight Championship loss and back injury, Triple H was now the leader of D-Generation X (DX). He said he was forming a DX army and "when you start an army, you look to your blood... you look to your buddies... you look to your friends... you look to The Kliq."[2] Waltman appeared on the stage with a beard, commented on Bischoff and Hollywood Hogan, and said if they weren't contracted to WCW, Hall and Nash would have also returned to the WWF.[2][13] Bischoff responded on Nitro the next week by telling Waltman to "bite me".[21]

Waltman in a Dumpster match at King of the Ring 2000

Initially called "The Kid" on the WWF website, he became known as "X-Pac" (which originated from his nickname "Syxx-Pac" based on his ring name "Syxx" in WCW)

tag team match pitting X-Pac and Road Dogg against Kane and Rikishi at WrestleMania 2000
.

Following WrestleMania, X-Pac continued to team with Road Dogg, with the duo competing against other tag teams including

cage match at No Mercy. During the feud, X-Pac sustained a neck injury when Jericho gave him a powerbomb, side-lining him for three months.[4]

X-Factor; nWo reunion (2001–2002)

After returning from his neck injury in February 2001, X-Pac briefly feuded with Chris Jericho over the WWF Intercontinental Championship, culminating in a fatal four-way match with Chris Benoit and Eddie Guerrero at No Way Out in February, which Jericho won to retain the title. In February, X-Pac formed a new stable called

X-Pac heat
", was acknowledged on-screen by both Alliance member Billy Kidman and, later by WWF member Edge.

When Credible joined the ECW/WCW Alliance X-Factor broke up. At SummerSlam, X-Pac defeated Tajiri to win the WWF Light Heavyweight Championship for the second time while WCW Cruiserweight Champion at the same time. X-Pac then feuded with Kidman and Tajiri. After losing the WCW Cruiserweight title to Kidman, he took time off for another injury.[4] The WWF Light Heavyweight Championship was abandoned upon his return to television in March 2002, though he defended it at several house shows shortly prior.

Hall, Nash and Hogan returned to the WWF in 2002 as the

Goldust a botched spinebuster injured him and kept him from participating in the feud.[26] On the July 8, 2002, episode of Raw, Waltman wrestled in his last WWE match, a ten-man tag. This match was also the end of the nWo angle, as Nash tore his quadriceps, and Vince McMahon disbanded the group a week later. At SummerSlam, Raw commentator Jim Ross announced WWE and Waltman had parted ways.[4]

NWA Total Nonstop Action (2002, 2003)

After WWE, Waltman, as "Syxx-Pac", debuted for

NWA World Heavyweight Championship number one contender tournament on November 6.[28]

Waltman, as Syxx-Pac, returned to TNA for a single night on June 18, 2003, at their first anniversary pay-per-view, as

A.J. Styles's mystery partner in a loss to Jeff Jarrett and Sting.[13]

Independent circuit (2002–2005)

In between during his time in TNA, X-Pac worked in the independent circuit. His first match in the indies as Syxx-Pac was when he defeated

3PW in Philadelphia on September 21, 2002. Afterwards, he feuded with Sabu. On November 23, 2002, he lost to Sabu for the 3PW Heavyweight title.[29] On November 30, 2002, Syxx-Pac defeated Curt Hennig
at IPW Hardcore/NWA Florida Independent Armageddon event in Pinellas Parks, Florida.

On April 16, 2004, X-Pac lost to American Dragon at NJPW Inoki Dojo Best Of American Super Juniors 2004 tournament in the first Round in Santa Monica, California.

In 2005, he worked for

IWA Puerto Rico
.

Xtreme Pro Wrestling (2003)

Waltman, as "X", debuted in Xtreme Pro Wrestling on February 28, 2003, winning the XPW Television Championship from Kaos.[13][30] He retained the title in a bout with Juventud Guerrera on March 1, and held it until the promotion closed in March 2003.

NWA Total Nonstop Action (2005, 2006)

Under his real name, Waltman returned to TNA on February 13, 2005, at

The Outlaw and Monty Brown) and at Lockdown, Waltman, B.G. James and Diamond Dallas Page defeated Planet Jarrett in a Lethal Lockdown match
. Nash and Page left TNA to focus on acting afterwards.

At

Final Resolution on January 15, 2006, brought in by Larry Zbyszko
to defeat his rival, Raven.

Wrestling Society X (2006)

In February 2006, Waltman joined

Matt Sydal), though WSX folded before the angle could go on any further.[13]

Return to Independent circuit (2006–2010)

NWA Heritage Champion
in 2007.

Waltman, under his real name, defeated

NWA World Heavyweight Championship
. The match ended prematurely after Waltman legitimately injured his knee five minutes in. He was attacked by The Real American Heroes and Pearce, so won by disqualification. As wrestling titles can generally only change hands by pinfall or submission, Pearce retained the belt.

In June 2007, Waltman, as X-Pac, began working regularly for

AAA, initially a member of Konnan's La Legión Extranjera (Foreign Legion) and managed by girlfriend Alicia Webb.[13] He usually used the D-Generation X entrance music. After leaving for rehab in mid-2008, he returned at Verano de Escándalo (Summer of Scandal) that September, turning on the Foreign Legion and forming D-Generation Mex, a parody of D-Generation X, with Rocky Romero and Alex Koslov. He later feuded with one of AAA's top stars, El Zorro
.

On August 8, 2009, at GLCW Slamfest, X-Pac became the new GLCW Heavyweight Champion by defeating Skull Crusher, who had replaced champion Al Snow when he failed to show.

Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (2010)

On a special live, three-hour

Team 3D found Syxx-Pac on a backstage floor in a pool of blood;[42] Eric Young took his place in The Band.[43] In June 2010, TNA released Waltman and Hall.[44]

Late career (2010–2019)

On February 26, 2011, Waltman was inducted into the Legends Pro Wrestling Hall of Fame in

Long Island, New York. A week later, X-Pac defeated UIW Lightweight Champion Stupid in a non-title match.[45]

On April 2, 2011, Waltman returned to WWE television to celebrate, with Kevin Nash and Triple H, their longtime friend Shawn Michaels' induction into the 2011 WWE Hall of Fame. He later worked backstage as a scout and evaluator in Florida Championship Wrestling, the WWE developmental territory.

El Generico after their match at King of Trios
on April 17, 2011

On April 15, 2011, Waltman, as The 1–2–3 Kid, debuted for

El Generico.[50] After the match, Waltman said he believed 2011 would be his last year in professional wrestling, praising Chikara as the "future of wrestling" and thanking them for a memorable weekend.[51][52]

In October 2011, X-Pac teamed with Billy Gunn wrestled the Full Blooded Italians in the main event on a Caribbean Pro Wrestling show in Aguadilla, Puerto Rico.

In March 2012, Waltman attended the Hall of Fame again, with The Kliq. On July 23, he, Billy Gunn and Road Dogg returned to join Shawn Michaels and Triple H for a D-Generation X reunion on the 1000th episode of Raw.

In September 2012, the 1–2–3 Kid returned to Chikara for the

gauntlet match.[54][57]

On October 8 and 9, 2012, he wrestled in a Bad Boys of Wrestling Federation tournament to crown the BBWF Caribbean Champion. He defeated Krimson in the semi-final[58] and Daivari in the final, winning the title.[59]

On November 18, 2012, The 1–2–3 Kid returned to Chikara, when he and Marty Jannetty defeated The Heart Throbs (

Antonio Thomas and Romeo Roselli) to earn their third point (for three consecutive wins) and a shot at the Chikara Campeonatos de Parejas.[54] They lost the title match on December 2, at the Under the Hood internet pay-per-view, to defending champions The Young Bucks (Matt and Nick Jackson).[54]

In early 2013, The Kliq/DX reunited for an episode of

NXT. In March 2013, Waltman signed a WWE Legends contract (a long-term contract which gives WWE merchandising rights to a wrestler's name and likeness, requires occasional appearances and prevents them from working for competing major promotions, but allows for independent appearances).[60]

Waltman in April 2014

Waltman, under his real name, returned to Chikara on March 8, 2013, losing to

Bronco Buster onto the exposed turnbuckle. Afterward, he went back to his hotel room, where he discovered a lot of blood coming out of his clothes and went to the hospital.[61] He underwent a sphincteroplasty and was released the following morning.[62] On November 9, 2013, X-Pac and Lance Storm lost to Tommy Dreamer and Terry Funk in the main event of House of Hardcore 3.[63]

On April 5, 2014, the night before WrestleMania XXX, Waltman joined Shawn Michaels, Triple H, and Kevin Nash at Scott Hall's WWE Hall of Fame induction, reuniting The Kliq.

On June 14, 2014, X-Pac and Rikishi defeated Gangrel and Matt Striker at House of Hardcore 6. In September 2014, Waltman returned to Chikara to do commentary during the first round of the 2014 King of Trios.[64]

On the January 19, 2015, episode of Raw, labelled Raw Reunion,

The New Age Outlaws in fending off The Ascension. At WrestleMania 31, X-Pac along with the New Age Outlaws and Shawn Michaels helped Triple H win his match against Sting. They were backstage at NXT TakeOver: Brooklyn
in August 2015.

On 22 July 2016, Waltman, as X-Pac reunited with Billy Gunn in the Scotland,

BT Gunn) for the first night of Pro Wrestling Elite's anniversary weekend (PWE: Five Year Anniversary: Break It Down!).[66][65] The following night, Waltman teamed with Grado and Kenny Williams in a winning effort over Joe Hendry, Andy Wild and Stevie Xavier.[67][68]

On September 4, 2016, Waltman made a surprise return to Chikara, again representing DX alongside Billy Gunn in a tag team gauntlet match. The two entered the match as the final team and scored the win over Prakash Sabar and The Proletariat Boar of Moldova.[69]

In January 2018, Waltman returned at WWE Raw 25 Years and reunited with DX and Scott Hall. In November 2018, he attended NXT TakeOver: WarGames.[70]

Retirement (2019–2022)

In

class of 2020, this time as a member of the New World Order, together with fellow former nWo stablemates Hulk Hogan, Kevin Nash, and Scott Hall; this made him the first person to be inducted two years in a row, and the first to be inducted twice as part of teams or groups.[73] The 2020 Hall of Fame ceremony was delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States
, it eventually took place a year later.

Game Changer Wrestling (2022)

Waltman came out of retirement in February 2022, debuting in Game Changer Wrestling on its "Welcome to Heartbreak" pay-per-view in Los Angeles as the tag team partner of Joey Janela. The following month at the "Joey Janela's Spring Break 6" pay-per-view, Waltman lost to Janela.

Other media

In 2004, Waltman co-starred with then-girlfriend

Chyna in the now-infamous amateur adult film 1 Night in China.[74]

Waltman has been a playable character in video games including

.

Starting in 2016, Waltman began hosting the weekly

The Steve Austin Show, Talk Is Jericho, and The Ross Report.[76][77][78]

Personal life

In the mid-2000s, Waltman was in a relationship with Joanie Laurer, who competed as Chyna in the WWF.[13] They were engaged but later split up. In March 2005, Waltman appeared on the VH1 reality show The Surreal Life, in which he visited Laurer in an attempt to reconcile with her. After Laurer refused to reconcile, he was eventually ejected from the house by the other guests. On The Tomorrow Show with Keven Undergaro, he recounted the last time he saw Chyna.[79] He has been open about past substance abuse issues; during his relationship with Laurer, he struggled with an addiction to methamphetamine and narcotics such as cocaine and prescription pain medication.[80]

In 2008, Waltman attempted suicide in his Mexico City apartment. He later said he was so overcome with shame and guilt after a physical altercation with his then-girlfriend Alicia Webb that he consumed a mixture of pills and alcohol and hanged himself from his apartment balcony. Webb supposedly found him hanging and was able to get him down, reviving him until an ambulance arrived. Following this incident, he was placed in WWE-sponsored rehab and began his recovery.[81]

On April 30, 2017, Waltman was arrested at the Los Angeles International Airport after allegedly being found in possession of methamphetamines. On May 26, however, it was announced that the charges had been dropped after lab results determined the pills he possessed were not methamphetamines nor any form of narcotic.[82]

On September 24, 2018, Waltman announced the death of his ex-wife and the mother of his two children, Terry Waltman, to whom he was married from 1994 to 2002. He said she had "lost her battle with mental illness and addiction".[83] He began dating author Angela Nissel in 2018.[84][85] In 2022, Waltman became a grandfather.[citation needed]

Filmography

Year Title Role Notes
1992 Crossing the Bridge High School Senior #3
2004 1 Night in China Himself
2016 The Chris Gethard Show Himself 1 episode
2016
Table for 3
Himself 1 episode
2017 Movie Trivia Schmoedown Himself 1 episode
2017 The Swerve Himself 2 episodes
2019 Verotika Counter Person Segment: "Change of Face"

Championships and accomplishments

Waltman is a two-time inductee into the WWE Hall of Fame, having been inducted in 2019 as a member of D-Generation X and in 2021 as part of the nWo

1Following an injury to Nash, the nWo invoked

"Wolfpac Rules" and named Syxx as co-champion[19]

Luchas de Apuestas record

Winner (wager) Loser (wager) Location Event Date Notes
X-Pac (hair) Jeff Jarrett (hair) New York, New York SummerSlam (1998) August 30, 1998 [100]

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