Kevin Von Erich

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Kevin Von Erich
Statistics
Ring name(s) Kevin Von Erich
Cosmic Cowboy #1
Billed height 6 ft 2 in (188 cm)
Billed weight 235 lb (108 kg)
Born May 15, 1957 (1957-05-15) (age 50)
Belleville, Illinois
Trained by Fritz Von Erich
Debut 1976
Retired 1995

Kevin Ross Adkisson (born May 15, 1957) is a retired professional wrestler under the ring name Kevin Von Erich of the Von Erich Family. He is the last surviving son of wrestler Fritz Von Erich and had four brothers that wrestled, David, Kerry, Mike and Chris, as well as an older brother, Jack, Jr., who died in 1959.

Contents

Kevin Adkisson played football at North Texas State University as a fullback, second string to Garry Smith, until an injury ended his football career and dream of playing in the National Football League.

Kevin started wrestling as Kevin Von Erich in 1976. He spent most of his career wrestling for his father's promotion, World Class Championship Wrestling. He teamed with his brothers and had a huge feud against the Fabulous Freebirds (Michael Hayes, Terry Gordy and Buddy Roberts), where they had many six-man tag matches.

Kevin also had a long feud with Chris Adams that lasted for months and had many violent matches. Kevin would also tag-team with Adams on numerous occasions before and after their feud. Away from the ring, Kevin and Chris were close friends; Kevin served as a pallbearer during Adams' funeral in 2001 and traveled to England to visit Adams' family afterwards.

Kevin was also known for wrestling barefoot, highly unusual in a sport where almost all wrestlers wear high-topped boots. Kevin later admitted in an interview that he never set out to wrestle barefoot, but that before his debut match, someone hid his boots as a rib, and he wasn't able to find them before his match, so just went out barefoot to wrestle, and it later became his trademark. Kevin was also a huge fan of Jimmy Snuka, who also wrestled barefoot, and like Snuka, Kevin often performed a flying body splash from the top rope, which Snuka calls The Superfly.

Kevin had several close matches with NWA World Champ Ric Flair, including the main event of the 2nd Memorial show at Texas Stadium, but never won the title.

On October 3, 2005, Kevin made an appearance on the WWE Homecoming show alongside many WWE Hall of Famers. Later that night, as Dusty Rhodes and the WWE Hall of Famers were gathered in the ring, Rob Conway came out and interrupted Rhodes. This eventually led to Conway's beatdown by several Hall of Famers, in which Kevin used the Iron Claw on Conway, to the raves of the partisan Dallas, Texas crowd. Announcer Jim Ross said afterwards that he never thought he would live to see the iron claw again.

On January 20, 2006, Kevin and his son Ross Adkisson (billed as Ross Von Erich) appeared on a local wrestling card in Longview, Texas as guests of Roddy Piper's Piper's Pit. During the segment, in which Kevin and Piper talked about going to the Sportatorium as teenagers, Skandor Akbar interrupted the interview to berate both Kevin and Ross. At one point, Akbar pushed Ross, which prompted Kevin to apply the iron claw on Akbar. Greg Valentine then pulled Akbar away, with Kevin, Ross, Piper and The Grappler taking in the cheers of the crowd.

  • Finishing and signature moves
    • Iron Claw
    • Standing drop kick
    • Body Scissors
  • Nicknames
    • "The Golden Warrior"

  • Other Titles
  • TWF Texas Heavyweight Championship (1 time)

Kevin was very close to his brothers David and Kerry and was deeply affected when each of them died. He semi-retired after Kerry committed suicide in 1993 and permanently retired in 1995.

Kevin and his wife of over 25 years live in Hawaii and run a family investment business together. Kevin also dabbles in commercial real estate. Together they have four children; Kristen, Jill, Ross, and Marshall, and one grandchild, Adeline Clair.[1]

In October 2006, he sold the rights to the (pre-1991) World Class Canadian Wrestling (WCCW) name and tape archives to World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE).[2] Since then WWE has been broadcasting WCCW's syndicated programming on their subscription video on demand service WWE 24/7 with Kevin and Michael "P.S." Hayes acting as hosts. WWE has also created The Triumph and Tragedy of World Class, a retrospective DVD on the defunct territory.[3] He was also featured in the 2007 DVD The Most Powerful Families in Wrestling in a segment on the Von Erich family.

  1. ^ Kevin Von Erich. Bios. VonErich.com. Retrieved on 2007-11-25.
  2. ^ WCCW FAQ. World Class Memories. Retrieved on 2007-11-25.
  3. ^ The Triumph and Tragedy of World Class product information page. WWEShop.com. Retrieved on 2007-11-25.

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