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General Data
Current gimmick:
Jim Duggan
Age:
72 years
Brand:
Legend

Personal Data
Birthday:
14.01.1954
Birthplace:
Glens Falls, New York, USA
Gender:
male
Height:
6' 3" (191 cm)
Weight:
264 lbs (120 kg)
Background in sports:
Basketball, Football, Leichtathletik, Ringen

Career Data
Alter egos:
Convict
Jim Duggan
    a.k.a.  Crazy Duggan
    a.k.a.  King Duggan
Roles:
Singles Wrestler (1979 - 2019)
Tag Team Wrestler (1982 - 2001)
Beginning of in-ring career:
1979
End of in-ring career:
2019
In-ring experience:
40 years
Wrestling style:
Brawler, Powerhouse
Trainer:
Nicknames:
"Big"
"Hacksaw"
Signature moves:
Old Glory
Three Point Stance Clothesline
Atomic Drop

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4.45
Current Total Rating (?)
Valid votes: 375
Number of comments: 156
10.0 1x
9.0 5x
8.0 25x
7.0 17x
6.0 85x
5.0 43x
4.0 78x
3.0 53x
2.0 44x
1.0 11x
0.0 13x
Average rating: 4.45  [375]
Average rating in 2026: 4.50  [2]
Average rating in 2025: 5.00  [28]
Average rating in 2024: 4.73  [22]
Average rating in 2023: 5.04  [25]
Average rating in 2022: 4.31  [16]
Average rating in 2021: 3.87  [15]
Average rating in 2020: 3.71  [7]
Average rating in 2019: 4.38  [8]
Average rating in 2018: 5.07  [14]
Average rating in 2017: 5.10  [10]
Average rating in 2016: 3.47  [19]
Average rating in 2015: 5.18  [11]
Average rating in 2014: 3.90  [10]
Average rating in 2013: 4.00  [8]
Average rating in 2012: 5.00  [6]
Average rating in 2011: 3.00  [9]
Average rating in 2010: 4.60  [10]
Average rating in 2009: 4.32  [22]
Average rating in 2008: 4.88  [43]
Average rating in 2007: 4.20  [90]
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Other:
Mikeymikeddd1 wrote on 01.01.2026:
[6.0] "He was a decent midcard, gimmick, comedy wrestler. His best stuff was probably in Mid South. He never got a huge push in WCW or WWF but this guy was a former football player, good size and a powerfully built body. He was a legit big man who was a little above average in terms of his work. He was mostly used lower down the card because he was good at hearing up the crowd. Had a pretty good career in the independents after his run with the big promotions was over. Kept a job for so long because of his professionalism."
Slikkrikk wrote on 30.12.2025:
[6.0] "Hacksaw was a brawler and had a charismatic personality. I know he must have giant hands but it just seemed like his hands were just massive! His ability to work a crowd was impressive. As a young boy, I always gravitated toward heels but Duggan was one of the few faces that I cheered for. He had that great ability to get you into the match and believe. There's always going to be a place in wrestling for guys like Duggan. I'm super happy with his role in his WWF times, and while I have no interest in watching his matches again, my memories of him are secure and that's worth something."
OnAPole wrote on 24.10.2025:
[5.0] "Good 'ol Duggan was interesting case. He is everything that internet makes you believe Hogan was. Big guy that waves American flag around, can't work and milks the crowd. Well, as a worker... he sucked. But he had that simple, unbreakable bond with live audience. Patriotism is a handy thing isn't it? Screaming USA in America is bound to get reaction and whoever booked Duggan knew it. I've seen his work in Mid-South, primarily with DiBiase and I wasn't blown away but he did it well and took most out of it, which is a theme for his whole career. Surprisingly nice match catalogue there, thanks to stipulations and great opponents. In WWF there was to me always impression that he is backup for Hogan and well, he existed in that role. WCW run was to me most interesting, he had that big push before NWO turned world around. That push was what you'd imagine it being. I believe he did best as Nitro mainstay that beats up jobbers and fires up crowd among the sea of NWO mindfuck segments. I liked his promos when he actually talked tho. His work and booking in dying days of WCW were, I refuse to say anything. Go listen Nash doing commentary in 1999 on Thunder and enjoy the greatness of Old Glory, highly recommended. Everything after that was hanging on that, if you will, old glory and somehow still existing in the biz and fans scratching their head asking themselves how is it possible. He is still somewhat involved and pops up now and then. Him calling Lita a HOOOOOO was childishly funny and you know he meant it. I can't consider myself a Duggan fan but he draws my attention successfully. It's like a town's drunken fool that you don't really care about but can't help but look at sometimes and laugh and wish him the best. He is a draw brother. HOOOOOO"
bherbert1980 wrote on 17.07.2025:
[6.0] "Jim Duggan was never the most technical wrestler, but he didn't need to be. He had a ton of heart, an all-American gimmick that connected with fans, and that iconic "Hooo! " and 2x4 that made him instantly recognizable. He played his role perfectly during the 80s and early 90s, delivering solid midcard moments and big reactions. While he wasn't a top guy, his charisma and crowd connection gave him staying power"
Moranjeboom wrote on 15.07.2025:
[8.0] "Yep, so no 5 star classics out of Jim Duggan (at least not down to him) but he was first and foremost an entertainer. Someone who could be relied on and someone to make the audience laugh. the guy smacked people about with a bit of wood and waved a flag about, so he was in pretty unique comedy spot company. overall he was someone who brought smiles and laughs when necessary. also he won the first rumble"
KyleEnjoysWrestling wrote on 14.05.2025:
[6.0] "Through character alone, he is someone who is recognizable even to people who know nothing about wrestling. He's synonymous with 80s wrestling. He wasn't someone who was looking for match-of-the-night accolades, but he didn't need to for him to build a legacy."
CommisarRobe wrote on 08.05.2025:
[4.0] "Jim Duggan was mega over in the 1980s and is a Royal Rumble winner however his overness was more due to his patriotic gimmick rather than his Wrestling ability. A great character who deserved to go over, however his work was often lacking and not up to the standards of the other top talent of the time."
TripleCrown wrote on 23.02.2025:
[4.0] "Wrestling legend, but in-ring wise he's absolutely abysmal. Wouldn't have been so bad in a tag team, but as a singles guy he just didn't have the ability to be a good professional wrestler. Is only really iconic because of his gimmick and the fact he won the first Royal Rumble. Aside from that, as an actual wrestler, he's very bad."
perconflncns wrote on 21.12.2024:
[8.0] "Jim duggan served as a good character for wwf during his time, but i truly think jim duggan was one of the toughest wrestlers in the business at one point. After going through some of his territorial matches and the dude was a straight up brawler, one of my personal favorite wrestlers to watch."
JTI wrote on 08.12.2024:
[8.0] "All Jim Duggan could do was punch and take a punch and shout one syllable and swing a 2x4 around but god dammit, he did those things very well. Big fuckin' refrigerator of a man who could connect with the audience in a way only a slight few ever could or ever will, fueled by the rabid patriotism of the post-Miracle, Cold War Reagan/Bush era. Perfect example of right place and right time. I would argue that aside from Hogan, Dusty, and Savage he was the top babyface of the 1980s. When you're that good at getting yourself insanely over you don't need to be a technical wizard or an aerial assassin. Just march around and shout "Ho! " with your thumb up in the air and whack foreign people with a piece of wood and call it a night. Bottom line is dude was exceptional at what he did so he deserves a high rating."
Shadow Explosion wrote on 27.11.2024:
[8.0] "I've completely 180'd on Jim Duggan in the last few years. I definitely was in the wrong with the IWC zeitgeist that thought he was terrible worker who always had pisspoor matches, and to be fair a lot of those are from the more famous part of his career from WWF & WCW. However, if you go back aways to a wonderful time in the early-mid 80s, you will see one of the best brawlers the United States had to offer at that point. Hacksaw Jim Duggan beat the fuck outta dudes, he wasn't just Captain Caveman who shouted out a catchphrase, he was a man of the people ready to punch out the rich and wealthy. This was a blue collar man who may have had one of the best punches in America at that point save for Terry Funk & Ted DiBiase. Speaking of which go watch Duggan vs. DiBiase in their Steel Cage Coal Miner's Glove on a Pole Tuxedo Loser Leaves Town for Thirty Days Match, that may seem like a lot but it's actually pretty simple, and kicks ass."
face painted legend wrote on 13.02.2024:
[8.0] "If you were looking for a take down or a go behind in a wrestling match, you aren't gonna find it with this guy. That's not what Hacksaw's character was about. He was a brawler who was all about punching, kicking, and just all out fighting with whoever he was in the ring with. To me though, his background as a football player, and his physical attributes were never his strongest suit, despite the fact that he was a legitimate tough guy. His strong suit was his charisma, his ability to keep a crowd up, keep them going, and on their feet the entire match. That and his ability to make chicken salad out of a lot of the ideas presented to him were the key to his longevity and why he was always one of the most over acts in any company he was apart of without having to have a title around his waist."
rntsdl03 wrote on 12.01.2024:
[1.0] "Jim Duggan is one of the worst wrestlers I've ever seen and, worse than that, he was around for a inexplicably long time. He's a prime example of someone who was only over because of the rabid patriotism in the US. The dude couldn't work a match, he couldn't cut a promo and he had no charisma or gimmick but he waved the stars and stripes so that was good enough for fans at the time which I cannot understand."
crs285 wrote on 21.11.2023:
[6.0] "Duggan was a good character. He had the charisma and the crowd loved him. Mic skills were good as well. In the ring for the time he was alright but in the modern era he lacks abilities with his limited move set. He got ridiculous in WCW and he did not have the same aura when he returned to WWE in the 2000s."
Itayboi wrote on 02.11.2023:
[1.0] "The worst big act of the wwf in the hulkmina era a man who canot wretel and wont lose who has no good matches in his time ar the fed. Yes he was over but it was all cheap pop after cheap pop. His gimik at times steped into being just mean spirted. The less said about his time in wcw the better, all i will say is that he foud a belt in a trash can. Atleast he was over tho thats more of a mark down for the dans of the comppnys he was in. Never disliked a wretler more"
Akatsuki wrote on 11.10.2023:
[7.0] "Duggan was always able to win the crowd over even if his in-ring ability was subpar. He will most notably be known for being the 1st royal rumble winner in WWE history but what some people overlook about him was the fact that he had an impressive showing against Ted DiBiase in Houston Wrestling in a steel cage street fight match. I've never seen a match more gimmicky lol, but honestly it was an entertaining match and he showed that if the WWF gave him a chance, he could put on better matches, particularly no disqualification type of matches which at the time was not popular."
andytuga86 wrote on 25.09.2023:
[4.0] "Duggan is a legit tough guy and a nice person, but that gimmick was always too goofy for me. Never liked his in-ring style, very poor skills and lame moves. He had a nice physique though specially in the 1980s, and could work a crowd. He shouldn't have exposed himself in WWE in the 2000s."
CMFunk007 wrote on 11.07.2023:
[4.0] "Jim Duggan was a good example of how to get over without much talent. His run in MId-South was his best, his feud with Ted DiBiase being outstanding. When he came to the WWF, little kid me in the '80s loved him feuding with the Iron Sheik and Nikolai Volkoff and yelling HOOOOOO! all the time. But he wasn't fun to watch in the ring outside of his DiBiase feud. He followed Hogan into WCW and showed up on Nitro occasionally until that stupid storyline when he joined Team Canada and decided he hated the USA. Vince Russo pretty much ended his career with that nonsense."
mizzysha wrote on 15.06.2023:
[7.0] "I actually like Jim a lot, though it is easy to see why some can't stand him. Good brawler and crowd pleaser, I don't think people appreciate just how amazingly he works as a mid-carder. The lamest thing about him is usually his weak finishes."
Giantfan1980 wrote on 09.04.2023:
[5.0] "Charisma through the roof, the textbook image of a brawler with those big fists and while his best stuff was in Mid South, he still was fine by the cartoony WWF standards. Had some junky matches in WCW in later years but I really dug his match with Vader at Starrcade 94, the best match on the card by far!"
xjasondagx wrote on 28.02.2023:
"I see a lot of people rating Duggan based on his late WWF run and his WCW run. Which I get was seen by more people, but you are sleeping on a heck of a brawler by not checking out his stuff in Mid South. He was one of the elite level brawlers of that era. His feud with DiBiase, and Buzz Sawyer were really good. Him and Sawyer had a great pull apart that went backstage on Mid-South. If all you know is the USA! USA! and HOOOOOO! than you don't know that much about Jim Duggan as a worker."
WhatIsLooveee wrote on 01.01.2023:
[3.0] "To be honest, I never liked Jim Duggan. He had a good contact with the audience, but it was rather the specifics of his patriotic gimmick. He made faces and screamed "Hooo" for most of the match. At the same time, he had a more serious persona before and he has a number of good matches on his account, including the famous battle with Ted DiBiasi in a steel cage. In WWF, WCW and later on the indie scene, he became a hostage to his new gimmick, a boring very limited brawler who causes a reaction juat by waving the flag and screaming."
benny5bellys wrote on 21.10.2022:
[8.0] "Some real fun stuff in his early career and consistently over once he got to WWF and WCW. Kind of guy you send out to get the crowd going. I have a sneaky soft spot for him. On a Mid South watch and he is actually really entertaining."
Leth99 wrote on 22.07.2022:
[4.0] "Very generic pro-USA wrestler that can either be bad or mediocre. He never really tried because once he got the american gimmick he was always gonna get cheered. Respect for wrestling in WWE full time at 52-53 yrs old and being acceptable"
Tomas Cunha wrote on 22.04.2022:
[2.0] "One of my least favorite characters ever. Sure, he was popular and that's what earns him a couple of points from me. However, I have never ever found myself interested in watching a Jim Duggan match or program, and I've rarely (if ever) been entertained by one. 95% of his matches follow the same lame-ass formula of "early stalling/USA chants - Duggan controls early on - heel cheats - Duggan cheats back - comeback routine - finish" ... most times a disqualification or some kind of inconclusive ending. Not a fan."
Conquistador37 wrote on 10.03.2022:
[5.0] "If you've ever been to a live WWF event in the late 80's/early 90's you "got it" because only there does the gimmick truly show it's POWER. having the WHOLE CROWD bellow "Hoooo" and chant "YOUUU EEHHSSS AAAAAY" was the pinnacle of crowd participation for years stacked upon years. His ring work began to decline as early as '88 so by '93 things were already horrifically dire, but even ol' Hacksaw had his working boots on when employed by Watts, so some solid points earned for those early years. The WCW material is a quick dash for "FAST FORWARD" or a trip to the kitchen for a snack. Can I really recommend any Jim Duggan match beyond Midsouth? Uhm. Royal Rumble 1988? 4.5 rounded up, the child in me still likes some of that early stuff."
Pandevmonium wrote on 11.12.2021:
[1.0] "One of the most useless and annoying gimmick ever. He was also a total disaster in ring, so I don't really know how he could survive so long in the pro wrestling business and even win the first Royal Rumble match ever."
juiceisloose wrote on 22.07.2021:
[0.0] "My god, what can i say about a guy who had the most annoying gimmick ever. Hogan had a bullshit patriotic gimmick too and couldn't wrestle either but this guy was somehow worse than him. While this guy didn't even bother getting in shape (even when he did in a rare occasion he still looked bad), his braindead gimmick somehow got over and i seriously cannot wrap my head around that. All he ever did was shouting annoyingly, carrying a flag while looking like a damn potato. Also considering his awful and limited in ring skills, this guy should've been kept 100 feet away from a wrestling ring."
Daigotsu wrote on 24.05.2021:
[2.0] "He was terrible in the ring and got over based on the most mindlessly crowd-pleasing gimmick possible ("USA! USA! ). His mannerisms were like a cartoon character. Not much to grab hold of here."
AnB wrote on 21.04.2021:
[4.0] "The oldest era of wrestling I've seen was in the early to mid 90s, when Hacksaw Jim Duggan was still a regular in the WWF. Honestly, he was never over with me. Matches were slow and dull, and the whole gimmick seemed pretty tame and annoying to me. I never looked him up because I didn't care much, but I always imagined he'd probaby already had a pretty solid career at that point, struck me as part of the "old" industry. I never understood why the WCW decided to pick him up after he already had an abysmal time in the WWF."
Brett1980 wrote on 25.01.2021:
[5.0] "He was good in Mid South but the WWF version of him was at times dire. Matches used to end in dq majority of the time. They would just involve headlocks and shouting Hooooo! He was then used as the guy to put over top heels moving towards the main event and in this role is where he had some of the worst matches in WWF history. He then went to WCW and was at first put over like he was a big star but he was even worse in the ring there than he was in WWF. The 5 is all for Mid South."
Khalid Ace wrote on 27.10.2020:
[2.0] "Jim Duggan knows how to work the crowd & he was charismatic but other than that he's terrible in the ring."
joshjackal wrote on 18.05.2020:
[0.0] "Duggan is probably my least favorite wrestler of all time. I could never stand him, even as a kid. He in-ring work was awful and repetitive and every promo he ever gave was the same. Shouting "HOOOOOOOO! , " carrying a 2x4, waving a flag, and carrying a flag might get you cheap heat, but it doesn't actually make a character. Oh, and remember when he was in WCW in the nWo era, and his finishing move was to pull tape out of his crotch, wildly fling it around to tape his fist, and then just punch his opponent? Worst finishing move ever. I mean, there are other terrible finishing moves out there, but none of them involved Jim Duggan's crotch sweat. Nobody needs that."
Zo-Zu wrote on 09.09.2019:
[2.0] "His easy going and personable shoot personality is at total odds with his baffling and (at times) disgusting refusal to sell for people or put people over. Possibly generous wrestler of all time, which would make him a flawed but respectable worker a la Austin Aries or Bruiser Brody, but since he's so fundamentally lacking everything else it beggars belief. I know he's nostalgic for a lot of people, but since I never watched him growing up I feel no obligation towards protecting him. Horrible."
ElPolloLoco wrote on 08.09.2019:
[6.0] "Make no mistake about it: Jim Duggan in his heydays was a huge star in the sense that people were literally lining up to buy tickets and see him. Duggan was very basic in the ring and to be honest even in his Mid South glory days he was nothing to write home about when it came to promos, but people were 100% behind him because he played the part of the common man ultimately triumphing through sheer perseverance with such sincerity you could really believe he was just being himself with the volume turned up. Like it happened with Big Daddy it wasn't supposed to happen, but it did and Duggan was smart enough to run with it. WWF hired him in 1987 not to make him a clown, but to help them break into what was once Bill Watts' territory: he was bound to be a top star. But something happened (a few versions exist) and he was turned into some sort of joke character who somehow managed to get over anyway: Jim Duggan was simply too huge to fail in those years. The end came with his WCW stint: while his booking usually ranged from bad to abysmal, his health was greatly declining and contributed to his extremely poor showing in Atlanta. He's yet another great overachiever who had a single opportunity and grabbed it to run with it until he could."
RatingsMachine wrote on 06.10.2018:
[7.0] "Overall, taking into account his entire career and not just the dreadful run he had in the waning years of WCW, Duggan is a 7. Duggan was a top babyface in the Mid-South/UWF. and was a step below that status in the WWF. He best days in terms of ability and work were in the Mid-South/UWF, but his biggest stardom came in the WWF. His run in WCW wasn't that great, and it got awful by the end, but that shouldn't detract from Duggan being one of the bigger stars of 80s wrestling."
Gauntlet84 wrote on 16.04.2018:
[9.0] "Apparently my opinion of Jim Duggan is very different from the average voter. He has always been one of the memorable wrestlers that I grew up with and his gimmick has always stuck with me. He ranks in my second tier (the good but not great) of wrestlers from this era."
Kas wrote on 31.03.2018:
[8.0] "Fantastic babyface brawler in Mid-South Wrestling, and his feud with Ted Dibiase is absolutely legendary. Was an entertaining character in his WWF career but didn't have any memorable moments aside from winning the first Royal Rumble, which is a shame, he could have been a great midcard babyface."
Squared Circle wrote on 30.05.2017:
[8.0] "A credible pre WWE career. He had a confounding connection with the fans, but he played it perfectly. The everyman, who would sloppily but with determination, compete with the biggest stars of the day. The Trademark HOOOOOOO! , is memorable and upon rewatching the first Royal Rumble, very well done in that match. He had a major run at Sgt. Slaughter, but could not quite get the championship. His WCW career was unremarkable. Painful janitor gimmick offset by the US and TV Titles. Was still quite popular when he left the WWE, after an unsuccessful run at Yokozuna's title, I got the sense the ending was too sudden. His career suffered after that but his incredible longevity, adds a point."
Blood Pump wrote on 24.04.2017:
[7.0] "His Mid-South days are absolutely worth watching, they're more telling of how good he was at his best then his work in the WWE. He had a weird charisma about him but it was magnetic. Unfortunately most only know him for his work in Vinces company."
Lee Vilenski wrote on 15.03.2017:
[9.0] "Legit one of the nicest guys in wrestling, still wrestling well into his 60s, and with no signs of stopping. People can say what they like about the incident with the Iron Shiek, this man has had a career lasting 40 years, and if you ever go to a live event with this guy on, you will hear a pop that is bigger than anything else on the card. Seriously knows how the business works, and how to get a reaction. First Rumble winner - And he deserved it that night too."
JEK 1991 wrote on 28.12.2016:
[5.0] "He is a hit and miss wrestler. Had some good clotheslines and punches that was all he had, nothing else. Somehow I never really was interested in him. Maybe it was his in ring performance or something. The biggest peak he had was in Mid-South. WWE he was overrated. WCW he did not go anywhere. Had some crappy gimmicks there like the Janitor and Team Canada ugh! Sometimes he would make the odd appearance in WWE but it's just all hype. Nice guy mind you."
jtsilver101 wrote on 22.12.2016:
[10.0] "Entertaining legend of the business, always good for a pop now, and was a good draw back in the day. Nice guy and enough charisma to get whoever he's in the ring with over. Very underrated worker and deserves not only his hall of fame status, but the occasional cameo back in the ring"
Mizzle Assault Ant wrote on 10.10.2016:
[0.0] "I can't get the appeal at all. Never a good wrestler that I have seen, some say his Mid South work is great but the vast majority of his career is horrible. A Hogan hanger-on, he managed to stay relevant mostly due to this connection. His gimmick is mostly nonsense with a hint of jingoism. One of my all time least favorite people to watch."
Devitciiu wrote on 03.10.2016:
[2.0] "So he made a lot of wood puns. I didn't see Duggan during his peak but I saw him in the decades that followed and he just was terrible to watch. The ring work was one thing but his promos in WCW were terrible."
SweetestThing2 wrote on 13.08.2016:
[1.0] "Oh Hacksaw Jim Duggan, What can i say about you. I mean my mother likes you but that is not really a good thing considering she is the most casual of all wrestling fans. You have very little in the way of wrestling ability. Your mic skills were as basic as it gets with cheap pops and a lot of HOOOOOOOOOOO's and your 2x4 had more charisma. Your gimmick was the lamest of the lame being im American and proud of it and your attire was so basic it hurts me. The best i can say for Hacksaw is that he flew under my radar and i am okay with that and yes this guy was popular i guess?"
TheGoat wrote on 01.07.2016:
[3.0] "I didn't realize how awful Jim Duggan was in the ring, until many years ago when I had to created a CAW. His move set was limited to punches, clothesline, and on the big shows a body slam. I give him some points for charisma, but his in-ring work was laughably bad."
jcb9 wrote on 10.04.2016:
[2.0] "Duggan was always over, but only through the cheapest of all possible cheap heat. His schtick was tiresome, he barely had a move in the ring other than endless clotheslines, and he looked live a caveman. In his entire career, I was only entertained by Duggan once: when he turned heel by renouncing the US in favor of Canada, I laughed and laughed because the whole thing was just so hilariously stupid."
mdkarl wrote on 30.10.2015:
[9.0] "Jim Duggan was headed to the top when he made a huge mistake and got busted for pot in the same car as the Iron Sheik. His punishment was to be booked as a comedy act for the remainder of his career. People need to remember wrestling is a work and the promoter will ultimately decide your fate. Prior to this political mistake, Duggan was a headliner in a very popular UWF selling out major arena's. He was a premium talent acquisition for the WWE and was being positioned as one of the top 2 baby face in the company before his mistake. The guy reeked of charisma and was a massive fan favorite. He was a huge draw. This is what wrestling really is all about. It was absolutely not important whether he could execute 10 high spot manuvers in a 2 min display of athletics. I wish some people here doing these gradings could understand history and context a bit better and remember that wrestling is very political. If Duggan was in any independent promotion during his 10 year prime of his career, he would have been the headliner. Even in the WWE with all his political baggage, he was still a well established upper mid card talent"
ShooterMcShoot wrote on 28.09.2015:
[3.0] "Nice guy, but a terrible worker. Had a ton of charisma though and was fine for what he was, which was mostly a comedy act. Always over."