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Carlos Colon |
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Carlos
Colon
Even before the creation of Capitol Sports Promotions (a.k.a. the World Wrestling Council) in the early seventies, Puerto Rico has traditionally been one of professional wrestling's major hotbeds. And, while he cannot be soley credited with wrestling's consistently high rate of popularity on the island, Carlos Colon, Puerto Rico's most famous and beloved wrestler (and the founder/co-owner of the WWC) has certainly been the catalyst behind the long-running creative and financial success of Capitol Sports and, by extension, the "sport" of wrestling. It is by no means an overstatement to say that Carlos Colon is perhaps the most important figure in the history of pro wrestling in Puerto Rico, and his influence in that region of the world cannot be questioned... Beginning in the sixties, pro wrestling on the island had been promoted primarily by Florida match-maker Clarence Luttrell. Luttrell's L&G Promotions ran shows throughout Puerto Rico that featured top NWA stars, including the NWA World Heavyweight champion. However, what Luttrell's cards didn't feature were local Puerto Rican wrestlers, many of whom were very talented and marketable. A void was created that Colon, along with business partners Victor Jovica and World Wide Wrestling Federation promoter Gorilla Monsoon, felt could be filled through the creation of a new promotion. In 1973, Colon, Jovica and Monsoon formed Capitol Sports Promotions, which is better known now as the World Wrestling Council. Capitol Sports featured the best of the region's local grapplers, as well as many well-known American workers, and the exciting new promotion soon became a legitimate threat to L&G Promotions' position as the number one wrestling company in the Caribbean.
Regarding the North American title, which was the promotion's top championship until the WWC World Heavyweight title was established in 1982, Colon carried the championship belt on eight separate occasions between 1974 through 1981. Along the way, the popular Colon defeated such noted "foreign" ring villians as Ladd, Gorilla Monsoon, Killer Karl Krupp and Eric the Red, among others. Additionally, Colon won another very prestigious singles championship, the Puerto Rican Heavyweight title, on nine different occasions from 1977 through 1999. As the Puerto Rican champion, Colon had many heated title defenses against foes such as Pampero Firpo, The Mongolian Stomper and his the man who was unquestionably Colon's archnemisis, the bloodthirsty Abdullah the Butcher... The infamous feud between Carlos Colon and Abdullah the Butcher (pictured) has gone down in wrestling history as one of the bloodiest and most barbaric ever...and with good reason. Their ongoing war began in the late seventies and would go on to last throughout the eighties and into the nineties, growing in intensity with each new blood-soaked encounter. Through proper booking, the gruesome Colon-Butcher bouts consistently translated into some of the biggest gates in the WWC's history, match after match, year after year, and their bloody battles and creative angles always left the fans wanting more.
Colon and Abdullah squared off against each other in some of the most sadistic "hardcore" matches ever witnessed, even though no one had yet come up with that term to describe the intense and brutal action taking place in the ring. Over the years, Colon and The Butcher truly perfected the art of destroying each other, with their specialty being pro wrestling's most feared event during the early eighties, the Barbed Wire Match. Yet, while the two seemingly enjoyed working this dangerous type of 'specialty' match, they were certainly not confined to it. In addition to the Barbed Wire Matches, Colon and Abdullah also engaged in countless Chain Matches, Lumberjack Matches, Puerto Rican Death Matches and, of course, a traditional steel cage was often employed in order to keep the violence at a maximum. In terms of storyline, over the fifteen years that they tore into each other, there were certainly many twists and turns along the way, to say the least. Yet, in the end, the world-famous feud between Carlos Colon and Abdullah the Butcher finally (after lasting through portions of three separate decades) ended in friendship between the two. Several years after Abdullah had lost a monumental 1997 Loser Leaves Town match, Colon had his hands full with a new rival and was in the midst of a feud nearly as heated as the Colon-Butcher wars. Having been viciously attacked repeatedly by his former friend Ray Gonzales, Colon turned to the one man he knew was ruthless and barbaric enough to truly help him destroy Gonzales...his vanquished archenemy, Abdullah the Butcher. With no other options available to him, Colon traveled to Atlanta, GA., the site of Abdullah's popular restaurant, and had a meeting with The Butcher, which was documented by a WWC camera crew. After hearing Colon out, Abdullah agreed to return to Puerto Rico and help fight the turncoat Gonzales & his cronies. When he finally made his triumphant return to Puerto Rican rings in 1999, the once despised Butcher (with his former archenemy Colon by his side) was greeted with roars of approval by the nostalgic sold-out crowds.
Between 1974 and 1981, he won the prestigious North American Tag Team title nine different times with a variety of partners, including Gino Caruso, Jose Perez, Bob Ellis, Jose Rivera, Victor Jovica, Hurrican Castillo, The Invader and others. In addition to his nine North American Tag Team victories, Colon also captured the even more prestigious WWC World Tag Team title three times; in 1977 with Jose Rivera, in 1983 with Pedro Morales and in 1989 with Invader #1. By the early eighties, Capitol Sports Promotions was clearly the most dominant, profitable promotion in the Carribean and Colon was eventually contacted by representatives of the National Wrestling Alliance about joining the NWA. Teaming the WWC with the Alliance, the largest and most powerful wrestling organization in the world, created a plethora of exciting new match-ups and moneymaking opportunites. Additionally, when Capitol Sports became a member of the NWA, Carlos Colon was given a chair on the NWA Board of Directors, a very powerful position which guarenteed Colon that the WWC would be well represented when it came to important Alliance decisions. Soon after the WWC entered into its partnership with the NWA, Colon's group benefited greatly from an influx of fresh, top-level talent. Not that the World Wrestling Council had been lacking in big name wrestlers before, but following its entry into the NWA, the promotion's popularity reached even greater, previously unforeseen heights. In fact, at one point, the WWC was one of the three most successful and profitable of the National Wrestling Alliance's numerous member promotions. Speaking of the WWC Universal championship, Colon wore the prized title belt on an incredible twenty-five separate occasions between 1982-1999, defeating WWC champions such as Abdullah the Butcher, Ox Baker, Dory Funk, Jr., Hercules Ayala, Steve Strong, Ron Garvin, Invader I (Jose Gonzales), Dick Murdoch, Dutch Mantel (pictured) and many others in order to gain the promotion's primary championship.
During the three decades he spent as Puerto Rico's top wrestler and preeminent champion, the fiery-tempered Carlos Colon became involved in bitter, intense and bloody rivalries with dozens of the biggest names in pro wrestling. Of course, his famous matches with Abdullah, Flair, Monsoon, The Invader and Race are well documented. However, Puerto Rico's most famous wrestler also engaged in classic, highly memorable programs with the formidable likes of Bruiser Brody, Stan Hansen, The Funk Brothers, The Wild Samoans, Randy Savage, Hercules Ayala, Ron Garvin, Steve Strong, Ernie Ladd, The Spoiler, Ray Gonzales, Ox Baker, The Mongolian Stomper, Pampero Firpo, TNT (Savio Vega), Bobby Jaggers and countless others.
There is no doubt that without the talent and leadership of Carlos Colon, the fate of pro wrestling in Puerto Rico would surely have been radically different. Over the course of his thirty years in wrestling, Colon left an indelible thumbprint on the business in his native land, forever changing the "sport" in the Carribean. At the same time, by hiring local Puerto Rican wrestlers when other promoters would not, Colon was more than partially responsible for creating & providing a bounty of opportunities that had not previously existed for the majority of the indigenous talent. HistoryofWrestling.com is proud to induct Puerto Rico's favorite wrestler, one of the most important figures in the annals of the wrestling business, the legendary Carlos Colon, into the H.O.W. Pro Wrestling Hall of Fame......
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