Time to Be a Hero Again

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What's that you say? Wrestling is imitation? Sure information technology is, just that has never stopped wrestling fans from embracing the unrivaled theater of it all. And what'due south more, some wrestlers take things to the next level. They've left an indelible mark on wrestling, and they should be recognized.

Whether their trademark of choice was bravado, intimidation, or sheer flair, these legends of wrestling did what needed to be washed to put on a show.

Andre The Giant

André René Roussimoff wasn't a man who had to seek out wrestling, as his giantism left him few career options. Born in a French town called Coulommiers, Andre was nearly seven anxiety, though he was usually listed equally 7 feet, iv inches.

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Andre the Giant is one of the well-nigh recognizable wrestlers today in part considering of his role outside the ring in the pic The Princess Bride. His size fabricated him beloved and then notorious as a wrestler, and he weighed over 500 pounds when he died.

Randy Barbarous

Randy "Macho Man" Savage was of the brash, bodacious schoolhouse of wrestling popularized by Ric Flair and afterwards The Stone. Later on he died, Pecker Simmons called him "one of the greatest pro wrestlers who ever lived."

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His father, Angelo Poffo, wrestled in the 1950s nether the name "The Masked Miser." And so when Savage, whose real proper name is Randall Poffo, called quits on his career afterwards stalling equally a catcher in the St. Louis Cardinals' subcontract organisation, wrestling was a natural fallback.

The Stone

Before Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson was the world's foremost action pic star, he was just …The Rock. Once a college football player at the Academy of Miami, The Stone parlayed his family unit history in wrestling as well as his vi feet v inches and 260-pound frame into a legendary wrestling career.

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You could say that destiny gave Johnson no pick — his dad and grandfather were both wrestlers, and his grandmother Lia Maivia was 1 of the beginning women to promote professional wrestling. So did The Rock choose wrestling, or did wrestling cull The Rock?

Bruno Sammartino

Bruno Sammartino may exist a proper noun unknown to casual wrestling fans. Nonetheless, if yous're a wrestling purist who followed the sport during the Kennedy White Firm era, there is no manner that yous don't recall Bruno Sammartino.

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He holds the record for longest-reigning WWE champion, contributing to the legitimacy of his nickname: The Italian Superman. Now, we won't say that Clark Kent necessarily wasn't Italian, only he certainly wasn't Bruno Sammartino, who spent his babyhood dodging Nazis in his Italian hometown of Pizzoferrato, Italian republic.

Ric Flair

Ric Flair was a clever play on the wrestler'southward existent name: Richard Morgan Fliehr. He debuted in 1972, just nobody could take known that his trademark bravado and catchphrase ("Wooo!") would catapult him into the pro wrestling pantheon.

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Flair was known equally Nature Male child, a cash-spending, girl-getting macho-man who to this solar day wears his confidence on his sleeve. At the age of 39, executives in charge of the WCW urged him to drib the Nature Boy schtick and get … a Roman gladiator. That never happened.

Bret Hart

Bret Hart is 1 of the few wrestlers who hail from Calgary, Canada. Hart comes from a lineage of Hart family wrestlers, and while he in one case wanted to exist a cartoonist or filmmaker, it seems that wrestling was always in the cards for the homo known as "Hitman."

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Hart is on this list for many reasons, 1 being that he became the first wrestler to fight in x or more consecutive WrestleMania events. Hart performed in 12 straight, a true attestation to his work ethic, toughness and loyalty.

Chyna

While wrestling was originally a game by men and for men, it evolved to include the gentler sex activity. The greatest female wrestlers are anything but gentle, however, and Chyna tops the list of the almost well-respected females to always grace pro wrestling.

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Her nickname was "The Ninth Wonder of the World," and she was the rare female person wrestler that was able to compete against the boys. Built-in Joan Marie Laurer, most fans know her only equally Chyna. The wrestling community mourned her untimely decease in 2016 due to a drug overdose.

Lita

Speaking of iconic female wrestlers, the stunning Lita was one of the trailblazers of the sport. Born Amy Christine Dumas, she loved Pee-Wee Herman and engaged her thrill-seeking side by imitating a stunt from ane of his movies.

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That thrill-seeking streak led her to pro wrestling, and she was willing to exercise annihilation to pursue the dream. She flew to Mexico to begin her climb up the pro circuit despite no guarantee that she would brand information technology. She did — she was inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame in 2014.

John Cena

In any sport, old schoolhouse fans may be hesitant to bestow praise on new school fans. Still, nobody could deny that John Cena is not simply an iconic pro wrestler, merely one of the all-time crossover talents always to grace the sport.

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He transcended the wrestling platform past starring in movies like Blockers, Trainwreck, Daddy's Home, and Fast and Furious 9. He waded into the musical sphere with some success equally well, all while maintaining a loyal following purely as a wrestler. Cena is a no-doubt, sure-fire future WWE Hall of Famer.

Hulk Hogan

Hulkster is a existent American, every bit the song goes, and you tin contend that he is the most iconic wrestler of all time. His blonde mane gave way to a bandana await that lives onto this solar day, but some things never changed: the bravado … and the guns.

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You lot knew when you stepped in the band against the Hulk that you were the heel, bound to be made the bad guy. You tin't debate with the numbers: Hulk has 12 total titles, half dozen with the WCW and six with the WWE.

The Iron Sheik

Just as the adversary in a book is as as important as the protagonist, for every Hulk Hogan, in that location must be an Iron Sheik. This wrestler played the bad guy throughout his career, though he had the opposite personality outside of the ring.

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As a native Iranian proud of his roots, the Sheik became a natural foil for Hogan, who wrapped himself in the American flag in every performance ("He is a real A-mer-i-tin can!"). Whether you loved or hated the Sheik, you feared his signature Camel Clutch motion.

Trish Stratus

Trish Stratus made her debut in 2000, serving as part of a duo not-then-subtly acronymized equally T&A. But Stratus was much more than T or A, as she was a seven-time WWE Women's Champion, making her one of the almost successful wrestlers of whatsoever gender.

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Her primary rival was Lita, and they became the outset female friction match to headline a main event during 2004 RAW. Stratus retired in 2006 later on winning her final title, fittingly over Lita, who she'd battled many times throughout her career.

The Undertaker

The Undertaker is still going strong as a pro wrestler due to his amazing, freakish shape. He doesn't simply accept one of the about intimidating acts; he is one of the largest, ripped-est, most intimidating man beings in wrestling history.

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Casual fans may not know that The Undertaker didn't settle on his iconic proper noun on the kickoff try. He'south been through eight dissimilar wrestling names, including The Punisher, Punisher Dice Morgan, Mean Mark Draconian, and Texas Scarlet, to name a few. Good thing he found The Undertaker, which finally stuck.

Tripe H

Triple H started every bit a wrestler, but he is at present upper management within the WWE empire. He also married the daughter of the founder of the league, Vince McMahon. However, it seems Triple H was destined to spread his wings thank you to an unrivaled work ethic and vision.

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Triple H was not ever Triple H, equally he had to go through less-lasting names similar Terra Ryzing and Jean-Paul Levesque before settling on the name that stuck fast. Just he may prefer that you simply call him King of Kings.

The Fabulous Moolah

Let's take information technology back, way dorsum, to the sometime school for a moment. The Fabulous Moolah, an iconic figure in female wrestling, made her debut in 1949. She had 4 split up title reigns, each lasting a substantial amount of time.

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Perchance most impressive, she retired at the ripe age of…76! And by the looks of her, she had at least a few more years of gas left in the tank. Moolah entered the WWE Hall of Fame in 1995 and passed abroad in 2007 at the age of 84.

Charlotte Flair

Charlotte Flair came from a lineage of pros, equally her dad is an icon: Ric Flair. Known for her notable athleticism, Charlotte carved her own lane in the wrestling game, becoming i of the most pop female wrestlers in today's version of the sport.

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Flair is the simply female wrestler to accept won four titles, nevertheless some fans may not realize that her birth proper name is not Charlotte, but rather Ashley Elizabeth Fliehr. Similar her dad, she knows how to spin a narrative to become the fans worked upwards.

Batista

Batista has clearly taken cues from the likes of The Rock and John Cena in beginning to get his proper name out beyond wrestling circles. Dave Batista has a consummate trunk for wrestling at 6 feet six inches and 290 pounds, but he's also turning out to be something of a film star.

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The wrestler known as The Animal broke into moving-picture show through the Guardians of the Milky way franchise and has continued his run of success in films similar Blade Runner 2049 and Stuber. He's also a six-time world champion — not besides shabby.

Brock Lesnar

Brock Lesnar keeps trying to follow his centre to the UFC, but a combination of poor workout and a penchant for using performance-enhancing drugs keeps bringing him back to the league that made him a star: the WWE. Lesnar is a country boy from Webster, South Dakota, and he's attracted a loyal fanbase.

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The results speak for themselves: he's a five-time world champion, including Rex of the Ring in 2002 and Royal Rumble Champion in 2003. Not everyone is a Lesnar fan, but he appears to exist headed for the WWE Hall of Fame.

AJ Lee

AJ Lee commencement appeared alongside the likes of John Cena in a supporting role — arm processed, if yous volition. But Lee made the jump to true wrestling status, mastering the moves and schtick necessary to make her a four-time WWI Divas Champion.

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She held onto the title for 296 days, a tape at the time. Her career highlights include a title defense force where she fended off 14 other contenders. When she retired at 28 years old in 2015, it came as a surprise.

Sting

Steve Borden, better known by his phase name of Sting, became an icon of WWE during the 2000s for, among other things, having a terrifyingly made-upward face. His signature move was the Stinger Splash, just fifty-fifty his moves didn't measure upwardly to the terror his brand-upward artist imposed on the audience.

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Most impressive of all is Sting's wins. He is a 12-time champion and four-time Tag Team Champion. He besides owns the record for the almost Pay-Per-View appearances in the WCW, a metric that speaks to his popularity among fans of wrestling.

Kane

Kane is another wrestler who perfected the art of menace. His penchant for wearing a red mask fabricated him appear more fitting for a horror flick than the a wrestling ring, but information technology worked during a fourth dimension when fearfulness sold as far as WWE was concerned.

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His real name is Glenn Jacobs, but Kane was a more intimidating monicker, so he understandably stuck with it. His nearly impressive statistic is that he won the Tag Squad Championship twelve times, and he largely avoided injury or absence during a 22-twelvemonth career.

Sasha Banks

While the ladies don't always get global recognition, we'll make sure they become some smoothen. Sasha Banks may not be a name you hear in discussions about wrestling's best greats, but information technology probably should. Her nickname is "The Boss," after all!

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She was one of the trailblazers in what was dubbed the Women'due south Revolution in wrestling spanning the past few years, and she emerged every bit Charlotte Flair's primary championship-quotient rival during that menstruation. The two accept headlined the RAW master event multiple times, a huge step for women's wrestling.

Goldberg

Goldberg is one of only a few wrestlers who used their existent proper name (William "Bill" Scott Goldberg) equally a wrestling moniker. He had a 6-foot-4 inch, 270-pound trunk that was ideal for wrestling domination.

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Likewise known as The Myth and The Iconic, he became a 3-time World Champion, one-time Tag Team Champion, and quondam U.S. Champion. He would often ask his catchphrase, "Who's Next?," right before dealing out more than penalisation.

Vince McMahon

Vince McMahon is most known as the creator of the WWE, a master businessman and fifty-fifty every bit the listen behind the failed (but before long-to-be revived) XFL. All the same, he's also thrown downwardly in the ring at times. Wrestling fans certainly noticed when Vince transformed into Buff Vince.

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The blurring of the lines between reality and fantasy is a necessity in wrestling, and nobody has done it better than Vince himself, who only adds to his semi-villainous perception amongst wrestling fans whenever he chooses to insert himself into the storyline.

Wendi Richter

Wendi Richter is an iconic female wrestler that fans of 80s wrestling will never forget. She was a key figure in the Stone 'N Wrestling era, and she was involved in a storyline that included Cindy Lauper of all people.

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Female person wrestlers who followed in her footsteps are judged by wrestling purists co-ordinate to the Richter scale, from Sasha Banks to Chyna and those still to be discovered. She put an stop to The Fabulous Moolah'southward 28-year championship reign, defeating her in the Brawl to Stop Information technology All in 1984.

Mick Foley

Mick Foley played a big role in the growth of so-chosen backyard wrestling. Unregulated, dangerous takes on the pro sport are certainly not appropriate, only being a lawn wrestler cemented Mick's reputation every bit i of the most real men in the game.

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Foley was known for bankroll upwards his wild-eyed gaze with interviews that were brimming-full of memorable quotes and headline material. Foley is the blueish-collar wrestling fan'due south icon, and he was willing to have more than shots than nearly anybody else on the wrestling circuit.

Sensational Sherri

Sensational Sherri truly was sensational when it came to being a trailblazer and legend in the sport of wrestling. Built-in Sherri Martel, she was the rare talent that was both an in-ring wrestler and a director of some of male wrestling's almost iconic figures.

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When she wasn't guiding the careers of wrestlers like Ric Flair, Randy Brutal and "The One thousand thousand Dollar Homo," Sensational Sherri was also bang-up skulls and taking the names of whatsoever female person wrestlers who would dare claiming her. She was unique in her range of skills.

Eddie Guerrero

Born in El Paso, TX in 1967, Eddie Guerrero became a favorite of many wrestling fans because of his ability to manipulate the oversupply'south emotional scale in a good manner. At five-foot-viii, he was also i of the most atomic wrestlers effectually.

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He was a natural athlete, having attended the Academy of New United mexican states on an athletic scholarship, and his fable only grew because of his tragic death. At only 38 years one-time, Guerrero was establish in his hotel room in Minneapolis, having died due to centre failure brought on by atherosclerosis.

Shawn Michaels

Michael Shawn Hickenbottom is known to almost wrestling fans as Shawn Michaels, and he is considered by most to be among the greatest showmen that the sport has ever known. Michaels had a plan to wrestle from a young age and began his grooming for the sport when he was only 19 years onetime.

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He's likewise a living story of resilience, as he was fired from the WWE simply ii weeks afterward making his debut. He would continue to work for his shot and eventually became one of wrestling's biggest stars and somewhen a WWE Hall of Famer.

"Stone Common cold" Steve Austin

"Stone Common cold" Steve Austin, The Texas Rattlesnake, was an integral actor in defining the then-called Attitude Era in professional wrestling. He grew up in Edna, Texas and claims to have had his first beer at the ripe historic period of xiv.

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Stone Cold oftentimes croaky cans of beer together and ingest the suds as they poured all over him. He has had many iterations in pro wrestling afterwards having been fired from the WCW, migrating to the WWF, and at present acting as an icon of the WWE.

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