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Crusher Blackwell Real Name: Jerry Blackwell Stats: 5' 10" 450 lbs. Hometown: Stone Mountain, GA. |
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"Crusher"
Blackwell
Yet, with each generation, a few select, talented and innovative goliaths prove themselves to be true trendsetters by expanding the parameters of what can be done inside the ring by larger performers. Crusher Blackwell was undoubtedly one of those few, special giants of the ring, and during his time in the wrestling business, the incredibly agile four-hundred pounder performed manuevers that had never before been seen from one so large. At the same time, he helped pave the way for similar future superstars such as King Kong Bundy, Bam Bam Bigelow, Yokozuna, Vader and many other huge yet very mobile pro wrestlers...
While many of his large, plodding contemporaries were content to punch, kick and/or slap a headlock on for extended periods, the mammoth, hated Crusher raised his stock immediately by going out of his way to impress the audience with his skill, speed and wrestling ability. Clearly, Blackwell was not your run-of-the-mill super-heavyweight... His first major run as a main-event level performer came shortly after he broke into the business, while he wrestling in the Central States territory. As a key member of Col. Buck Robely's 'army', along with other top Central States heels such as Bobby Jaggers and "Bruiser" Bob Sweetan, the young Blackwell had the opportunity to wrestle at the top of the card, against longtime promotion favorites such as Rufus R. Jones and "Bulldog" Bob Brown. Then, in 1977 Crusher Blackwell teamed with his manager Robely to win the Central States Tag Team championship. Although they eventually lost their belts to the team of Mike George & Scott Casey on December 1, 1977 in Kansas City, KS., Blackwell learned a great deal as a champion and he continued to improve with each match.
By 1979, Blackwell had made his way to Ron Fuller's NWA Southeast promotion, which was based in Knoxville, TN., and success once again soon came his way. In January of 1979, he teamed with The Masked Invader (Bob Orton, Jr.) to win the National Wrestling Alliance's Southeastern Tag Team title by defeating the popular team of Ken Lucas & Kevin Sullivan. Then, after losing the belts to the duo of Ken Lucas & Bob Armstrong five weeks later, Blackwell recaptured the NWA Southeastern Tag Team championship on May 24, 1979 when he teamed with Dick Slater. As the eighties began, Crusher Blackwell continued traveling, learning and improving while his name became more and more familiar to wrestling fans throughout the world. In addition to wrestling for major league promotions such as the WW(W)F, Verne Gagne's AWA and the NWA's prestigious St. Louis territory, Blackwell also performed in several smaller midwestern and southern promotions as well as traveling overseas to compete in Japan, always giving 100% of his efforts no matter where he was competing. Having gained championship experience by winning two major tag team titles, the time eventually came for his first run as a singles champion and, on April 15, 1984, Crusher Blackwell defeated "The Modern Day Warrior" Kerry Von Erich to become the NWA Missouri Heavyweight champion. During his seven-month run with the Missiouri title (which was often referred to as the "stepping stone to the World championship" because of the many former Missouri titleholders who went on to become the NWA World champion) Blackwell finally established himself once and for all as a top-level talent, a genuine drawing card, and one of the fastest rising young stars in the business.
Other noteworthy AWA opponents of Blackwell's include the legendary Mad Dog Vachon, and, not surprisingly, The Crusher. In fact, it was against "The Man Who Made Milwaukee Famous" that Blackwell fought for the right to use the name "Crusher." Following a lengthy, bloody feud, "Crusher" Lisowski defeated "Crusher" Blackwell, and the super-heavyweight was 'forced' by the AWA to abstain from using the nickname. Yet, despite the loss of his "Crusher" moniker in the AWA, Jerry Blackwell continued on as both one of the promotion's main players as well as one of its most hated. That position was cemented when Blackwell took on the services of the promotion's top manager, the loathed Sheik Adnan Al-Kassie...
For eleven months, the controversial Sheiks enjoyed an iron-clad grip on the prestigious AWA World Tag Team belts and they defeated (often with the 'illegal' assistance of their manager, Al-Kassie) the best the American Wrestling Association had to offer. Eventually though, their lengthy championship reign came to an end on May 6, 1984 against the veteran combo of The Crusher & Baron Von Raschke in Green Bay, WI.
Back home, Blackwell continued to enjoy his position as one of the top men in the business and a major drawing card for promoters, particularly in the southern and midwestern portions of the country. While the American Wrestling Association remained his main base of operations, Blackwell also occasionally traveled outside the region, particularly to face the reigning NWA World champion "Nature Boy" Ric Flair. Additionally, Blackwell also formed yet another very successful (but short-lived) tag team...this time with the gargantuan 6'10" three-hundred pound "Big" John Studd. However, by the mid-eighties, Blackwell and the AWA promoters felt a change was needed, and they decided to do the impossible...turn Jerry Blackwell into a 'good guy'. Ironically enough, it was his Japanese tag team partner Bruiser Brody who eventually helped Jerry Blackwell become an unlikely babyface hero back in the States when, with Sheik Adnan's approval, Brody unexpectedly turned on his rotund partner, viciously attacking the unsuspecting and defenseless Blackwell. The two then went on to engage in a brief yet intense (and very profitable) feud that further established the career-long heel as a popular new fan favorite.
In fact, it was against the flamboyant Freebird leader that Blackwell had his last major AWA storyline. The two diametrically opposed individuals formed natural rivals, and their upper mid-card feud drew large crowds to major AWA cities such as Chicago, Minneapolis, San Francisco, Denver & Milwaukee. While they did not have traditional four-star scientific marathons, the Blackwell vs. Hayes feud (which concluded with a series of bloody Steel Cages matches throughout the large AWA territory) was a very emotionally intense and exciting program that was also an unquestioned financial success. However, after years of physical punishment, the obese Blackwell -- known for his extraordinary speed and agility -- finally began to noticably slow down in the ring. Additionally, his great stamina, once a trademark of Blackwell's, also began to decline markedly. Understandably, his massive girth had finally begun to take its toll on the veteran, and rather than continuing to risk both his health and professional reputation, Jerry Blackwell basically stopped competing. Although he would accept an occasional independent booking, the innovative big man had essentially retired from the wrestling business by the late eighties, following a decade and a half in the profession. Then, on January 22. 1995, the wrestling world was saddened to learn of the unexpected and untimely passing of Jerry Blackwell following complications stemming a case of pneumonia. Blackwell was just 45 years old when he died.
HistoryOfWrestling.com is proud to posthumasely induct the mammoth high-flyer, one of the most talented and important ring giants of the past, "Crusher" Jerry Blackwell, into the H.O.W. Pro Wrestling Hall of Fame......
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