[7.0] "A great tag worker, particularly in TNA, where he and his partners stood out from AMW and the X-Division guys that populated the early tag division of TNA, yet worked very well with all those guys, and had a fun run, its a shame it didn't last longer."
[5.0] "He is best known for his works in tag teams and stables whether that be PG-13 or Disciples of the New Church. He was solid in the ring and had charisma. Never somebody who stood out as a potential star but a solid guy on a roster."
[7.0] "Great tag team wrestler, if Jamie Dundee wasnt so erratic PG-13 could have been way bigger than they were. Spent a couple years bouncing around the major promotiobs of the time before reinventing himself as Slash and sticking with TNA for a while in the early days."
[9.0] "Wolfie D's rating here is too unfair. I know he isn't THE wrestler people are used to, but for the eras he wrestled, he was a perfect fit. Unlike JC Ice, Wolfie was able to carry himself on his own out of Memphis, and was able to work out his body to become a more believable wrestler. A wrestler fun to watch and tremendous performer while he was active."
[4.0] "Wolfie D has had a plethora of names and gimmicks over the years, and has always had his best success as a tag wrestler. He's best-known under that name as half of the tag team PG-13 with JC Ice, with whom he had runs with all of the major promotions in the late '90s, performed the rap theme for the first WWF version of the Nation of Domination and won the USWA Tag belts a whopping 16 times. His next high-profile run came in TNA in the early 2000s under the name Slash, where, as part of the Disciples of the New Church, he had a run as NWA Tag champs with Brian Lee. Still kicking around the lower-level indies and occasionally pops up in the higher-level ones like HOH and JCW. Though never skilled or charismatic enough to reach the main event in the big leagues, Wolfie is a solid enough performer to fill out the tag or undercard ranks."