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Von Erich Family Real Name: Adkisson Family |
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There have been many wrestling families, both real and fictional, who have entertained fans throughout wrestling's long history. From fabricated wrestling clans such as the Grahams, the Andersons, and the Valiant Brothers, to genuine wrestling dynasties such as the Funks, the Briscos, the Bockwinkles, the Harts, the Windhams, and the Samoan Anoai family (among many others), the love of pro wrestling often just seems to be passed on from generation to generation in the blood of its combatants. But one family above all others transcended the sport and placed their wrestling family into a category all by themselves -- the Von Erichs. The Adkissons, better known as pro wrestling's Von Erich family, were blessed with popularity and success that was virtually unparalleled in pro wrestling history. The young, good looking and athletic "home-grown" superstar brothers, along with their rugged and legendary father, experienced fan love and hysteria not unlike what The Beatles provoked when they first arrived on the shores of America. Everyone in Texas, and eventually the entire country, had heard of the famous Von Erich name, and they were without a doubt Texas' "favorite sons".
It started innocently enough. Jack Adkisson, after a standout college and pro football career, entered the pro wrestling ranks in the mid-1950's. Although he was a respectable, normal family man outside the ring...inside the ring he was Fritz Von Erich, a Nazi sympathist, German Bulldozer, hated villain, and master of the "Iron" Claw. Known by other wrestlers as being especially stiff and heavy-handed inside the ring, Fritz Von Erich was a brawler who relentlessly tore into his opponents. His first years in the sport were lean, but happy, for Adkisson. He had a lovely young wife, two young sons (Jack, Jr. and Kevin), and a promising career. In 1958 we teamed with fellow "nazi" Hans Herman and won the N.W.A. (Minneapolis version) World Tag Team title. He also won the Texas Brass Knuckles title during the same year. But in 1959, a tragedy occured that Adkisson later admitted he never truly recovered from occurred -- something that shattered The Adkisson family's world. Their oldest son, Jack, Jr., who had not yet reached his 7th birthday, was electrocuted in a freak accident while taking a bath. The loss of his firstborn son devastated Jack Adkisson, but even so, Fritz Von Erich had to keep on wrestling. Adkisson later admitted that he took much of his pain and frustration out on his opponents inside the ring during that painful time in his life. Although his personal life was at a depressing new low, his ring career was skyrocketing...
After Jack Jr.'s tragic death, Adkisson's family life slowly healed with the additions of David, Kerry, Mike, and young Chris. In fact, when Fritz moved his family to a ranch outside of Dallas and began promoting as well as competing, Jack Adkisson had it all -- a wonderful family, a beautiful home, a ranch on many acres of land, and a very successful career that provided a high standard of living for his family. Life could not have been better... As soon as his sons graduated from high school, they each followed their father and brothers into the world of wrestling -- and with each new young superstar, the Von Erich aura and legend grew. Unfortunately, that legend eventually helped cause the powerful family's downfall...
David Von Erich soon followed, and the two exciting brothers soon captured their first title together, the N.W.A. Texas Tag Team title in 1978. They won the NWA American Tag Team title later that same year. David, who resembled father Fritz the most, also won the Texas Heavyweight title during his rookie year in 1978. He would go on to win the prestigious championship a total of 6 times. He would also go on to win such "major league" titles such as the NWA Southern Heavyweight title, the North American Tag Team title (as a heel, w/Dory Funk, Jr.), the Florida TV title, the Missouri Heavyweight championship, the NWA World Tag Team title, and many others in the next few years. Nicknamed "The Yellow Rose Of Texas," the 6`5 David Von Erich was a natural, perhaps even better than Kevin, and a superstar almost instantly. The combination of youth and experience possessed by Fritz, Kevin and David was a box-office sensation the likes of which the state of Texas had ever seen. But, to the delight of wrestling fans everywhere (a large portion of which were teenage females) there were more Von Erichs to come...
The trio of young and talented brothers, led by their legendary father, became the biggest wrestling stars the state of Texas had ever known, and eventually that fame spread across the nation, and then the world. Their feuds with Harley Race, Ric Flair, Ken Patera, Dick Murdoch, Bruiser Brody, and especially The Fabulous Freebirds drew record crowds and ratings for the N.W.A.'s World Class Championship Wrestling, and the Adkissons became so popular that they had their own, separate (from the NWA) and highly-rated syndicated (mainly in the southwestern U.S., and Japan) television show, entitled The Von Erichs. Jack Adkisson's World Class Championship Wrestling became so popular that he was able to work out a national cable deal, years before Vince McMahon Jr. began his national expansion. No doubt about it, when it came to the wrestling business, and making money within it, the Von Erichs were about as good as you could get.
While in Japan preparing for a tour of the Orient, David Adkisson was found dead in his Tokyo hotel room on February 10,1984. Officially, David Von Erich died at the age of 27 of intestinal complications, but many reported at the time that drugs were the true cause of his death. Whatever the true cause of death was, the outpouring of grief and sadness at the news of his death was nevertheless overwhelming, and was covered in newspapers worldwide. David Von Erich's funeral procession trailed nearly five miles, and literally tens of thousands mourned the young, fallen warrior.
Chris
Adkisson, the youngest brother, had been born with asthma, and his growth
was stunted as a child. At just 5'5, he was a warrior at heart, but simply
could not cut it in the ring, especially during the 1980's when larger
than life bohemoths ruled the "sport." Texas wrestling, afterall,
had always been the home of some of some of the biggest, baddest, meanest
hombres pro wrestling has ever known. All Chris Adkisson, an undersized
young man born into a family of mighty ring warriors, ever wanted in life
was to carry on his family' legacy as Chris Von Erich, champion pro wrestler. Yet, shockingly, unbelievably, there was still more tragedy in store for the Adkisson family, and as a result, pro wrestling. On February 18,1993 Kerry Adkison, former NWA World Heavyweight, WWF Intercontinental Heavyweight, WCWA World champion, and unquestionably one of the elite names in the sport, shot and killed himself at a quiet spot on the family ranch. Kerry was reportedly despondent at the fact he was facing mandatory jail time after having been convicted for drug possession and forging prescriptions while on probation. Kerry, who had been battling a longtime addiction to painkillers and cocaine, had reportedly become disillusioned with living his life on the road. It has been said that he, understandably, resented missing out on seeing his young daughters grow up, and that in addition to his legal problems, he had also just seen his marriage fall apart shortly prior to his suicide. In was no secret away from the camera that Kerry was a loose cannon, and lived life on the edge.
Then, on September 9,1997 Jack Adkisson aka Fritz Von Erich, with his son Kevin by his side, died in his home after lung cancer had spread to his brain. Adkisson, who was one of pro wrestling's most respected performers, promoters, and businessmen will be sorely missed not only by those who knew Jack Adkisson, the man...but also by those who watched Fritz Von Erich (and his blood-drawing, unbreakable Iron Claw) in the ring for so many years. The Ring Chronicle somberly inducts professional wrestling's tragic dynasty, the gifted and exciting Von Erich Family -- Fritz, Kevin, David, Kerry, Mike & Chris -- into TRC's Pro Wrestling Hall of Fame...
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