Scott Norton
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Scott Norton | |
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Statistics | |
Ring name(s) | Scott Norton |
Billed height | 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) |
Billed weight | 360 lb (160 kg/26 st) |
Born | June 15, 1961 Minneapolis, Minnesota |
Resides | Hartford, Connecticut |
Trained by | Verne Gagne |
Debut | 1989 |
Scott Michael Norton (born June 15, 1961[1]) is an American professional wrestler who is best known for working for New Japan Pro Wrestling and World Championship Wrestling.
Contents |
[edit] Career
[edit] Starting
Scott Norton started out as a professional arm wrestler. He won over 30 championships during his days as an arm wrestler including four U.S. National championships.[2] His status in the arm wrestling world earned him a role in Sylvester Stallone's arm wrestling movie, Over the Top.[3] 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.[2]
After finally deciding to go the pro-wrestling route Norton was trained to wrestle by former Olympic wrestler Brad Rheingans. Verne Gagne decided to debut Norton before he was totally finished with his training, putting him on TV as a regular performer for the American Wrestling Association in 1989.[2] He sometimes teamed with John Nord as the "Yukon Lumberjacks".[1] Norton soon earned the nickname “Flash" for the way he would quickly dispatch some of the low card wrestlers. By the end of 1989 Norton left the AWA and went to the Pacific Northwest territory to further his career. In PNW, he started out as a face lumberjack known as “Flapjack" Scott Norton, he would team up with John Nord once more to reprise their Lumberjacks gimmick from the AWA.[1] Norton turned Heel in 1990 as a singles competitor. He won the Pacific Northwest Title from Brian Adams on May 12, 1990,[4] but he was stripped of the title two weeks later after attacking several wrestlers.[4]
[edit] New Japan Pro Wrestling
In 1990, Scott Norton finally signed with the company that first approached him about becoming a pro-wrestler, New Japan Pro Wrestling. Norton’s size and speed helped him establish himself as one of the premiere Gaijins in NJPW.[citation needed] Norton alternated between tagging and working mid card singles matches, not really settling on any permanent tag-team partners early on. Norton appeared at both the joint NJPW/WCW Starrcade in Egg Dome shows giving him exposure to WCW executives.[5][6]
The working agreement between NJPW and WCW mean that The Steiner Brothers would tour Japan on a regular basis, often fighting 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 title match.[7] Norton and Rick Steiner were unsuccessful on the night and lost the tag-team titles to Hiroshi Hase and Keiji Mutoh.[4] About a year after losing a the title he never technically held, Norton won the tag-team titles properly when he and Tony Halme beat the Steiner Brothers for the gold.[4] The power house team only held on to the titles for a little over three weeks before losing them to the Hell Raisers (Hawk Warrior & Power Warrior).[4]
After splitting up with Halme, Norton started to team with “Hercules" Hernandez on a regular basis. Hercules was a fellow power house wrestler and the two formed The Jurassic Powers,[8] a team that won the IWGP Tag Team Championship from back from the Hell Raisers.[4] The Powers held the titles for about 4 months before losing them back to the Hell Raisers at NJPW’s January 4 Dome Show (NJPW’s biggest annual event).[4] While holding the titles, the Jurassic Powers successfully defended against teams such as Keiji Mutoh & Hiroshi Hase[8] and The Nasty Boys[8] and also beat Takayuki Iizuka & Akira Nogami,[9] Jake "The Snake" & Brutus Beefcake,[10] Masa Saito & Manabu Nakanishi and the Barbarian & 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 & Hiroshi Hase.[11]
After breaking up with “Hercules" Hernandez, Norton floundered a bit,[citation needed] failing to achieve much notoriety in the singles ranks nor in the tag-team division where he’d team with a variety of partners such as Mike Enos,[12] Ron Simmons,[13] Masa Chono,[14] and Road Warrior Hawk.[15]
[edit] World Championship Wrestling
Norton returned to the U.S. and signed with WCW in 1995. The promoters first tried to get Norton over as a heel with the fans by feuding with Sting but the feud never captivated the fans and was scrapped without much fanfare.[citation needed]
[edit] Fire and Ice
During a WCW Saturday taping, Norton squared off against the mammoth 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 Tony Schiavone that he felt that they would make a formidable tag team because of their similar powerful approach to the business.[16] The team was quickly named Fire and Ice. The finisher was seen as Norton power bombed his opponent followed by Train's leaping "Train Wreck" splash. The face team easily overpowered a series of low ranking tag-teams as they tried establish themselves as a legitimate team.[citation needed] At Slamboree 1996: Lethal Lottery, 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.[17] The team advanced to the “Lord of The Ring" Battle royal but neither of them won it.[17]
At the 1996 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, two teams of powerhouses trying to show who was best. On that night the Steiner Brothers won,[18] but Fire & Ice were not deterred. After a pre-PPV loss to The Rock 'n' Roll Express at Bash at the Beach 1996,[19] 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,[20] but lost to Ice Train in their return match only a month later.[21]
After Fire & Ice ended, Norton split his time between WCW and NJPW, achieving more success in NJPW than WCW most notably in the tag-team division. Scott Norton and Shinya Hashimoto teamed up and won the Super Grade Tag League VI in 1996 after beating Keiji Mutoh and Rick Steiner in the finals.[22]
[edit] Vicious & Delicious
In late 1996, Norton joined the New World Order (nWo), which gave his WCW career some direction after the break up of Fire and Ice. In the nWo, Norton teamed with Buff Bagwell, creating a team called Vicious & Delicious. They feuded with the Steiner Brothers,[23][24] but were never able to win the tag team titles, always destined to be the #2 tag-team in the nWo behind the Outsiders.
[edit] New Japan Pro Wrestling
During his nWo days, Norton traveled back and forth to NJPW, where he was a member of nWo Japan, and became New Japan's gaijin ace becoming one of the few wrestlers to be a regular member of both factions. On September 23, 1998 Scott Norton won the vacant IWGP Heavyweight Championship by defeating Yuji Nagata.[4] Norton’s title win was mentioned only once in America on a broadcast of WCW Monday Nitro while he was seen holding the belt, but Norton’s standing in the WCW version of the nWo never changed from this fact. Norton held the title for 3 months.[25] before losing the title on Keiji Mutoh.[4] Scott Norton was only the second American to hold the IWGP title at this point (the other being "Big" Van Vader).[26]
Soon Norton began playing a smaller and smaller role in WCW, becoming part of the (unofficial) nWo B-Team which wrestled in low card matches.[citation needed] While in NJPW he was seen as a main eventer and constant threat to world champions. Norton left WCW completely in 1999, focusing all his efforts on NJPW where he was part of Masahiro Chono's "Team 2000".
On March 17, 2001, Norton defeated Kensuke Sasaki in Nagoya, Japan to capture the IWGP World Heavyweight Championship a second time.[4] His second reign was shorter than his first, and he lost to Kazuyuki Fujita on his first defense.[4] After the loss Norton started to team with former WCW foe Rick Steiner whenever Steiner toured Japan, but otherwise be planted solidly in the mid-card as a test any hopeful world title challenger would have to pass. Norton temporarily retired in 2004,[citation needed] but didn't stay away long. When he returned, he once again teamed with Rick Steiner. In 2006, following that year's New Japan Cup,[27] he left NJPW after 16 years, becoming a "freelancer".
[edit] Independent circuit
Later that year, he started his own independent promotion, Wild West Championship Wrestling,[28] based in the southwest of United States, where he acts as a booker as well as an in ring talent.[2]
Currently, Norton is wrestling in the Japanese Promotion HUSTLE, where he is a part of the heel group led by “Generalissimo” Takada.
[edit] Wrestling facts
- Finishing and signature moves
- Nicknames
-
- "Flash"
- "Fire"
- "Flapjack"
- "Crusher"
[edit] Championships and accomplishments
- New Japan Pro Wrestling
- IWGP Heavyweight Championship (2 times)[4]
- IWGP Tag Team Championship (2 times) - with Hercules Hernandez (1) and Tony Halme (1)[4]
- Pacific Northwest Wrestling
- Pro Wrestling Illustrated
[edit] References
- ^ a b c Online World of Wrestling: Scott Norton.
- ^ a b c d Greg Oliver (2006-26-10). Scott Norton gives promoting a try. Retrieved on 13 February, 2007.
- ^ Cast List. Over the Top [Video]. USA: Cannon Group.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Royal Duncan & Gary Will (4th Edition 2006). Wrestling Title Histories. Archeus Communications. ISBN 0-9698161-5-4.
- ^ prowrestlinghistory.com. NJPW Tokyo Dome Shows Results (Starrcade in Tokyo Dome 1991). Retrieved on 9 April, 2007. “Scott Norton pinned The Equalizer (2:23)”
- ^ prowrestlinghistory.com. NJPW Tokyo Dome Shows Results (Starrcade in Tokyo Dome 1992). Retrieved on 9 April, 2007. “Tony Halme pinned Scott Norton (8:41)”
- ^ Strong Style Spirit. NJPW Show Results 1991. Retrieved on 9 April, 2007. “Keiji Muto & Hiroshi Hase beat Scott Norton & Rick Steiner (17:53)”
- ^ a b c Strong Style Spirit. The Jurassic Powers (Scott Norton & Hercules Hernandez). Retrieved on 9 April, 2007.
- ^ Strong Style Spirit. NJPW Show Results 1993. Retrieved on 9 April, 2007. “Scott Norton & Hercules Hernandez beat Takayuki Iizuka & Akira Nogami (9:26)”
- ^ Strong Style Spirit. NJPW Show Results 1993. Retrieved on 9 April, 2007. “Scott Norton & Hercules Hernandez beat Brutus Beefcake & Jake Roberts (12:32”
- ^ Strong Style Spirit. NJPW G1 Climax Tag League Results (1993). Retrieved on 9 April, 2007. “Final: Keiji Muto & Hiroshi Hase beat Scott Norton & Hercules Hernandez (13:46)”
- ^ Strong Style Spirit. NJPW Show Results 1994. Retrieved on 2007-04-09. “Keiji Muto & Masahiro Chono beat Scott Norton & Mike Enos (11:17)”
- ^ Strong Style Spirit. NJPW Show Results 1995. Retrieved on 2007-04-09. “Shinya Hashimoto, Masa Saito & Kensuke Sasaki beat Scott Norton, Ron Simmons & Mike Enos (13:27)”
- ^ Strong Style Spirit. NJPW Show Results 1995. Retrieved on 2007-04-09. “Masahiro Chono & Scott Norton beat Takayuki Iizuka & Akira Nogami (8:40)”
- ^ Strong Style Spirit. NJPW Show Results 1995. Retrieved on 2007-04-09. “Rick Steiner & Scott Steiner beat Scott Norton & Hawk Warrior (18:52)”
- ^ Graham Cawthon. WCW Match Results 1996. Retrieved on 9 April, 2007. “Scott Norton and the Ice-Train went to a double count out. The two shook hands after the match”
- ^ a b prowrestlinghistory.com. WCW Slamboree Results (1996). Retrieved on 9 April, 2007.
- ^ prowrestlinghistory.com. WCW Great American Bash Results (1996). Retrieved on 9 April, 2007.
- ^ prowrestlinghistory.com. WCW Bash at the Beach Results (1996). Retrieved on 9 April, 2007.
- ^ prowrestlinghistory.com. WCW Hog Wild Results (1996). Retrieved on 9 April, 2007.
- ^ prowrestlinghistory.com. WCW Fall Brawl Results (1996). Retrieved on 9 April, 2007.
- ^ Strong Style Spirit. NJPW G1 Climax Tag League Results (1996). Retrieved on 9 April, 2007. “Final: Shinya Hashimoto & Scott Norton beat Keiji Muto & Rick Steiner (21:54)”
- ^ Graham Cawthon. WCW Show results 1997. Retrieved on 9 April, 2007. “September 26, 1997: Rick & Scott Steiner defeated Buff Bagwell & Scott Norton”
- ^ Graham Cawthon. WCW Show results 1997. Retrieved on 9 April, 2007. “December 15, 1997: Rick & Scott Steiner defeated Konnan & Scott Norton via disqualification”
- ^ Strong Style Spirit. Scott Norton (first reign as IWGP Heavyweight Champion - 9/23/98 to 1/4/99 - 2 defenses). Retrieved on 9 April, 2007.
- ^ Strong Style Spirit. IWGP Heavyweight Championship History. Retrieved on 9 April, 2007.
- ^ Strong Style Spirit. IWGP New Japan Cup History (2006). Retrieved on 9 April, 2007.
- ^ The official website of Wild West Championship Wrestling. Retrieved on 9 April, 2007.
- ^ Pro Wrestling Illustrated Top 500 - 1993. Wrestling Information Archive. Retrieved on 2007-05-03.
- ^ Pro Wrestling Illustrated's Top 500 Wrestlers of the PWI Years. Wrestling Information Archive. Retrieved on 2007-05-03.
[edit] External links
- Scott Norton’s Official Website (down as of 07-18-2007)