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P R E S S R O O M |
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RESULTS Ricky Steamboat Jr. defeated Mr. Florida to win the EWA Florida Heavyweight Championship Bobo Brazil Jr. defeated Jack Funk "Young Lion" Jason Jones defeated George South Jr. to win the EWA Jr. Heavyweight Championship "Asian Sensation" Mike Lee defeated Ethan Cage Special Guests: Ricky Steamboat, Jim Nelson, and Mr. #1 George South Ring Announcer: Ralph Harkey
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Ricky Steamboat Jr., son of the legendary Ricky Steamboat (Richard Blood), will compete in his first pro wrestling main event when he meets the masked Mr. Florida on an independent show Aug. 9 in Charlotte, N.C. Young Steamboat, last seen by wrestling fans as a youngster accompanying his dad to the ring a number of years ago, is being trained by George South — who, coincidentally, looks a lot like Mr. Florida. Steamboat has been drawing rave reviews for his ring work and looks like a possible addition to the WWE ranks within the next couple of years. The elder Steamboat, now a producer with WWE, also will make an appearance on the Mooresville show. - Mike Mooneyham 7/27/08 CHARLESTON.NET
At least 10,000 cardboard boxes are crammed around the ring at George South's wrestling school on Latrobe Drive. In them are relics of pro wrestling's past such as Sting masks, Rowdy Roddy Piper dolls and Ricky Steamboat action figures. Outside the ring is Ricky Steamboat, 55. The action figure has long dark hair. Steamboat's is close-cropped and gray. The action figure is six inches tall. Ricky is?
“I'm 6 feet,” he says. “I was 6 feet. I got
dropped on my head too many times.”
“You want me to make him look even taller?”
Ricky asks, slumping toward the floor.
Richie falls to the hard ring again and
again, the impact crackling through the humid little room. His T-shirt
is soaked with sweat. Trainer South makes him repeat a move he has
repeated three times.
In the 1980s, professional wrestling ruled
Charlotte and Ricky “The Dragon” Steamboat was one of the rulers. When Richie misbehaved, his mom, Bonnie, would often tell him to wait until his dad got home. Many of us heard a similar message. But our dads weren't named The Dragon. “There was a wrestling joke that if you gave Ricky a chain saw and a machete people would still cheer him,” South says. The Dragon was always the good guy. South, 44, says Richie also is.
“He's such a good kid I almost wish he
wouldn't get into wrestling,” South says.
At national events, fans who cheered the
father didn't necessarily cheer the son. He's motivated. After South, the plan is to head to the Midwest to work with another famous former wrestler, Harley Race, and then compete in Japan and Europe. “If everything works out he'll have an audition with the WWE,” says The Dragon, a WWE producer. On Thursday, it is Charlie Dreamer, a smooth wrestler with shoulder-length blond hair, with whom Richie must contend. “Reverse!” South shouts. “Headlock! Monkey jump! Reverse!”
Enter The Dragon. There are two spectators.
He tells his son to apply every hold as if there are 10,000. The Dragon still has an amazing presence, and he's in shape speaking of what was old being new again. “I wouldn't mind getting back in the ring,” he says. He worries about not living up to his legend. But if he's convinced he's worthy, he'd especially love to join his son in a tag team match. Why not? The Dragon is one of the great wrestlers of all time. The world is ready for a gray-haired action figure. |
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