Scott Norton

For the professional bowler, see Scott Norton (bowler).
Scott Norton
Born (1961-06-15) June 15, 1961[1][2]
Minneapolis, Minnesota[1][3]
Residence Houston, Texas[4][5]
Professional wrestling career
Ring name(s) Scott Norton[1][2]
Billed height 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m)[1]
Billed weight 360 lb (160 kg; 26 st)[1]
Billed from Minneapolis, Minnesota
Trained by Brad Rheingans[2][6]
Masa Saito[2]
Verne Gagne[1][2]
Debut April 15, 1989[1][2]

Scott Norton[2] (born June 15, 1961) is an American semi-retired professional wrestler. He is best known for his tenures in World Championship Wrestling and New Japan Pro Wrestling.[1]

Early years

Norton started out as a professional arm wrestler.[2] He won over 30 championships during his days as an arm wrestler,[3] including four U.S. National championships,[7] and gained the nickname "Flash" due to his quickness in winning matches.[3] His status in the arm wrestling world earned him a role in Sylvester Stallone's arm wrestling movie, Over the Top.[3][8] While touring the arm wrestling circuit in Japan, Norton was approached by New Japan Pro Wrestling about becoming a professional wrestler, but he turned it down initially.[3][7] In addition to his professional arm wrestling career, Norton also worked as a bodyguard for Prince during the musician's 1999[9] and Purple Rain Tours.[3]

Professional wrestling career

After finally deciding to enter professional wrestling, Norton was trained to wrestle by former Olympic wrestler Brad Rheingans.[6] Despite Norton's inexperience, Verne Gagne decided to debut him before he was totally finished with his training, putting him on television as a regular performer for the American Wrestling Association in 1989.[6][7] He sometimes teamed with John Nord as the Yukon Lumberjacks.[1][6] He challenged then World Champions Hulk Hogan, Ric Flair and Larry Zybisco to an TV arm wrestling match. If any beat him, he would pay them (kayfabe) $1,000,000. Nothing became of the challenge. By the end of 1989, Norton left the AWA and went to the Pacific Northwest territory to further his career. In PNW, Norton started out as a face with a lumberjack gimmick and the nickname "Flapjack".[6] He soon formed a tag team with John Nord once more to reprise their lumberjack gimmick from the AWA.[1][6] In 1990, Norton turned heel and broke away from Nord to become a singles competitor. He won the Pacific Northwest Heavyweight Championship from Brian Adams on May 12, 1990,[10] but was stripped of the title two weeks later after attacking several wrestlers.[10]

New Japan Pro Wrestling (1990–1993)

In 1990, Norton signed with New Japan Pro Wrestling.[6] Upon debuting for the promotion, Norton alternated between tag team and mid-card singles matches. Norton appeared at both the joint NJPW/World Championship Wrestling Starrcade in Egg Dome shows, giving him exposure to WCW executives.[11][12]

The working agreement between NJPW and WCW meant that The Steiner Brothers would tour Japan on a regular basis, often wrestling against Scott Norton alongside a variety of partners. On November 5, 1991 Norton acted as a substitute for the injured Scott Steiner in an IWGP Tag Team Championship match.[13] Norton and Rick Steiner were unsuccessful on the night and lost the tag-team titles to Hiroshi Hase and Keiji Mutoh.[10] About a year after losing the title he never technically held, Norton won the Tag Team Title properly when he and Tony Halme beat the Steiner Brothers for the gold on November 22, 1992.[10] The powerhouse team only held on to the title for a little over three weeks before losing them to the Hell Raisers (Hawk Warrior and Power Warrior).[10]

After splitting up with Halme, Norton started to team with Hercules Hernandez in March 1993.[6] Hercules was a fellow powerhouse wrestler and the two formed The Jurassic Powers,[6][14] a team that won the IWGP Tag Team Championship from the Hell Raisers.[6][10] The Powers held the title for about four months before losing them back to the Hell Raisers at NJPW's January 4 Dome Show.[10] While holding the title, the Jurassic Powers successfully defended against teams such as Keiji Mutoh and Hiroshi Hase,[14] The Nasty Boys,[14] Takayuki Iizuka and Akira Nogami,[15] Jake "The Snake" Roberts and Brutus Beefcake,[16] Masa Saito and Manabu Nakanishi and The Barbarian and Haku in non-title competition. The team also and made it to the finals of the 1993 Super Grade Tag League, where they lost to Keiji Mutoh and Hiroshi Hase.[17]

After breaking up with Hernandez, Norton failed to achieve much notoriety in the singles ranks nor in the tag team division, where he teamed with a variety of partners such as Mike Enos,[18] Ron Simmons,[19] Masahiro Chono,[20] Osamu Kido, and Road Warrior Hawk.[21]

World Championship Wrestling

Norton returned to the U.S. and signed with World Championship Wrestling in 1993. The promoters first tried to get Norton over with the fans as a villain by feuding with Sting, but the feud never captivated the fans and was scrapped without much fanfare.

Norton returned to WCW in September 1995, where he briefly feuded with Shark, after costing Norton to lose to Randy Savage on the September 11 edition of WCW Monday Nitro.

Fire and Ice

During a WCW Saturday Night taping, Norton squared off against Ice Train. The bout ended in a double count out when both men clotheslined the other, knocking each out. After the match, the two shook hands and Norton explained to announcer Gene Okerlund that he felt that they would make a formidable tag team because of their similar wrestling styles.[22][23] The team was quickly named Fire and Ice. At Slamboree, Norton and Ice Train were randomly drawn to be on the same team and easily defeated the makeshift team of Big Bubba Rogers and Stevie Ray.[24] The team advanced to the "Lord of The Ring" battle royal, but neither won the match.[24]

At the Great American Bash, Fire and Ice came head to head with Norton's long-time rivals, the Steiner Brothers. The two teams was engaged in a mini-feud of sorts, as the two teams tried to show who was better powerhouse team. On that night the Steiner Brothers won,[25] but Fire and Ice were not deterred. After a pre-PPV loss to The Rock 'n' Roll Express at Bash at the Beach,[26] dissension started to appear between the two, a dissension that turned into battle as Norton attacked Ice Train after another team loss. Norton defeated the Ice Train at Hog Wild in a submission match,[27] but lost to Ice Train in a rematch a month later.[28]

After Fire and Ice ended, Norton split his time between WCW and NJPW, achieving more success in NJPW than WCW most notably in the tag team division. Norton and Shinya Hashimoto teamed up and won the Super Grade Tag League in 1996 after beating Keiji Mutoh and Rick Steiner in the finals.[29]

New World Order

Main article: Vicious and Delicious

In late 1996, Norton joined the New World Order (nWo), which gave his WCW career some direction after the breakup of Fire and Ice.[22] In the nWo, Norton teamed with Buff Bagwell as Vicious and Delicious.[22] They feuded with the Steiner Brothers,[30][31] but were never able to win the World Tag Team Championship.

During his nWo days, Norton traveled back and forth to NJPW, where he was a member of nWo Japan, and became NJPW's gaijin ace while also becoming one of the few wrestlers to be a regular member of both factions. On September 23, 1998, he won the vacant IWGP Heavyweight Championship by defeating Yuji Nagata.[10] Norton's title win was mentioned only once in America on a broadcast of Nitro while he was seen holding the belt, but Norton's standing in the WCW version of the nWo never changed from this fact mostly due to the nWo's leader being Hollywood Hogan, who was the WCW World Heavyweight Champion. Norton held the IWGP Heavyweight Title for four months[32] before losing the title to Keiji Mutoh.[10] Norton is one of six foreigners who ever held the IWGP Championship, the others being Big Van Vader, Salman Hashimikov, Bob Sapp, Brock Lesnar and AJ Styles.[33]

Norton soon began playing a smaller role in WCW, becoming part of the nWo "B-Team", which often placed him in mid-lower card matches; although he would continue to squash jobbers frequently in singles competition. While in NJPW, however, Norton was seen as a main eventer and constant threat to world champions. He left WCW completely in 1999 after losing a match against Goldberg on the September 30 episode of Thunder and began focusing his efforts on NJPW, where he was part of Masahiro Chono's Team 2000.

Return to NJPW (1999–2006)

On March 17, 2001, Norton defeated Kensuke Sasaki in Nagoya, Japan to capture the IWGP World Heavyweight Championship a second time.[10] His second reign was shorter than his first, and he lost to Kazuyuki Fujita on his first defense.[10] After the loss, Norton started to team with fellow WCW alumnus Rick Steiner whenever Steiner toured Japan, but otherwise he was planted solidly in the mid-card as a test any hopeful world title challenger would have to pass. After briefly retiring in 2004, Norton returned later that year and resumed teaming with Steiner.[34] Following the 2006 New Japan Cup,[35] he left NJPW after 16 years, becoming a freelancer in the process.[22]

Independent circuit and semi-retirement (2006–present)

In mid-2006, Norton started his own independent promotion, Wild West Championship Wrestling,[36] based in the southwest of United States, where he acted as both a booker and wrestler until its closure later that year.[7]

After wrestling for Hustle from mid to late 2007, Norton took a near-year long hiatus before returning on October 24, 2008, where he and Masahiro Chono defeated Don Frye and Yoshihiro Takayama in the first part of the Pro Wrestling Expo.[37] The next day, Norton, Frye and Dick Togo lost to Chono, Eric Young and Kohei Sato.[37] Since then, Norton has been inactive from wrestling.

In an August 2010 interview, Norton revealed that he would be interested in a run with Total Nonstop Action Wrestling. At the time, Norton lived in Brentwood, Tennessee, which is located minutes outside of TNA's headquarters in Nashville, Tennessee and commented that wrestling is, "something I enjoy doing. You miss it. I can still perform at a high level. I’m still a big, strong man. I would like to give it another shot. If I can get a couple-year run, I'll fold up my tent and call it a day."[38]

On October 7, 2012, Norton teamed with Keiji Mutoh to defeat the team of Masanobu Fuchi and Taiyo Kea in a tag team match on the first event of All Japan Pro Wrestling's 40th Anniversary Tour.[39]

He is expected to return to NJPW at Wrestle Kingdom 11 on January 4, 2017 at the Tokyo Dome.[40]

Personal life

Norton is married to his wife Tammy.[4][5] He is also in the process of writing his first book, Scott Norton: Strong Style, with assistance from Adam Randis, who has been a longtime fan of Norton.[4]

Growing up in Minnesota, Norton became friends with a number of future fellow professional wrestlers, including Road Warrior Hawk, Curt Hennig, Rick Rude, John Nord and Wayne Bloom.[3]

In wrestling

Championships and accomplishments

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 "Scott Norton profile". Online World of Wrestling.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 "Cagematch profile".
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Where Are They Now?: Scott Norton, page 1".
  4. 1 2 3 "Where Are They Now?: Scott Norton, page 4".
  5. 1 2 "Scott Norton's twitter".
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 "Where Are They Now?: Scott Norton, page 2".
  7. 1 2 3 4 Greg Oliver (2006-10-26). "Scott Norton gives promoting a try". Retrieved 13 February 2007.
  8. Cast List (13 February 1987). Over the Top (Video). USA: Cannon Group.
  9. "Scott Norton's myspace".
  10. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Royal Duncan & Gary Will (2006). Wrestling Title Histories (4th ed.). Archeus Communications. ISBN 0-9698161-5-4.
  11. prowrestlinghistory.com. "NJPW Tokyo Dome Shows Results (Starrcade in Tokyo Dome 1991)". Retrieved 9 April 2007. Scott Norton pinned The Equalizer (2:23)
  12. prowrestlinghistory.com. "NJPW Tokyo Dome Shows Results (Starrcade in Tokyo Dome 1992)". Retrieved 9 April 2007. Tony Halme pinned Scott Norton (8:41)
  13. Strong Style Spirit. "NJPW Show Results 1991". Archived from the original on 2 April 2007. Retrieved 9 April 2007. Keiji Muto & Hiroshi Hase beat Scott Norton & Rick Steiner (17:53)
  14. 1 2 3 Strong Style Spirit. "The Jurassic Powers (Scott Norton & Hercules Hernandez)". Archived from the original on 19 November 2006. Retrieved 9 April 2007.
  15. Strong Style Spirit. "NJPW Show Results 1993". Archived from the original on 2 April 2007. Retrieved 9 April 2007. Scott Norton & Hercules Hernandez beat Takayuki Iizuka & Akira Nogami (9:26)
  16. Strong Style Spirit. "NJPW Show Results 1993". Archived from the original on 2 April 2007. Retrieved 9 April 2007. Scott Norton & Hercules Hernandez beat Brutus Beefcake & Jake Roberts (12:32
  17. Strong Style Spirit. "NJPW G1 Climax Tag League Results (1993)". Archived from the original on 20 February 2007. Retrieved 9 April 2007. Final: Keiji Muto & Hiroshi Hase beat Scott Norton & Hercules Hernandez (13:46)
  18. Strong Style Spirit. "NJPW Show Results 1994". Archived from the original on 2007-02-23. Retrieved 2007-04-09. Keiji Muto & Masahiro Chono beat Scott Norton & Mike Enos (11:17)
  19. Strong Style Spirit. "NJPW Show Results 1995". Archived from the original on 2007-04-04. Retrieved 2007-04-09. Shinya Hashimoto, Masa Saito & Kensuke Sasaki beat Scott Norton, Ron Simmons & Mike Enos (13:27)
  20. Strong Style Spirit. "NJPW Show Results 1995". Archived from the original on 2007-04-04. Retrieved 2007-04-09. Masahiro Chono & Scott Norton beat Takayuki Iizuka & Akira Nogami (8:40)
  21. Strong Style Spirit. "NJPW Show Results 1995". Archived from the original on 2007-04-04. Retrieved 2007-04-09. Rick Steiner & Scott Steiner beat Scott Norton & Hawk Warrior (18:52)
  22. 1 2 3 4 "Where Are They Now?: Scott Norton, page 3".
  23. Graham Cawthon. "WCW Match Results 1996". Retrieved 9 April 2007. Scott Norton and the Ice-Train went to a double count out. The two shook hands after the match
  24. 1 2 prowrestlinghistory.com. "WCW Slamboree Results (1996)". Retrieved 9 April 2007.
  25. prowrestlinghistory.com. "WCW Great American Bash Results (1996)". Retrieved 9 April 2007.
  26. prowrestlinghistory.com. "WCW Bash at the Beach Results (1996)". Retrieved 9 April 2007.
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  28. prowrestlinghistory.com. "WCW Fall Brawl Results (1996)". Retrieved 9 April 2007.
  29. Strong Style Spirit. "NJPW G1 Climax Tag League Results (1996)". Archived from the original on 20 February 2007. Retrieved 9 April 2007. Final: Shinya Hashimoto & Scott Norton beat Keiji Muto & Rick Steiner (21:54)
  30. Graham Cawthon. "WCW Show results 1997". Retrieved 9 April 2007. September 26, 1997: Rick & Scott Steiner defeated Buff Bagwell & Scott Norton
  31. Graham Cawthon. "WCW Show results 1997". Retrieved 9 April 2007. December 15, 1997: Rick & Scott Steiner defeated Konnan & Scott Norton via disqualification
  32. Strong Style Spirit. "Scott Norton (first reign as IWGP Heavyweight Champion - 9/23/98 to 1/4/99 - 2 defenses)". Archived from the original on 19 November 2006. Retrieved 9 April 2007.
  33. Strong Style Spirit. "IWGP Heavyweight Championship History". Archived from the original on 15 March 2007. Retrieved 9 April 2007.
  34. Shoot with Scott Norton (DVD). RF Video.
  35. Strong Style Spirit. "IWGP New Japan Cup History (2006)". Archived from the original on 11 February 2007. Retrieved 9 April 2007.
  36. "The official website of Wild West Championship Wrestling". Retrieved 9 April 2007.
  37. 1 2 "Cagematch match listings, page 1".
  38. "Scott Norton Would Like a Job in TNA Wrestling". IWHeadlines.com. Retrieved 2011-01-16.
  39. "AJPW 40th Anniversary Tour 2012 - Tag 1".
  40. Ravindran, Renjith (30 October 2016). "Scott Norton returns to NJPW". Wrestlinginc. Retrieved 30 October 2016.
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  47. "WCW WorldWide report on August 31, 1996".
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  66. "Entrance themes".
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  71. Royal Duncan & Gary Will (2000). "Japan: New Japan G-1 (Grade-1) Climax Tag Tournament Champions". Wrestling Title Histories. Archeus Communications. p. 374. ISBN 0-9698161-5-4.
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  74. "Pro Wrestling Illustrated Top 500 - 1993". Wrestling Information Archive. Retrieved 2007-05-03.
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