Ted Arcidi
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Ted Arcidi | |
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Ring name(s) | Ted Arcidi "The World's Strongest Man" "Mr. 705" "The Boss of the Bench Press" |
Height | 5 ft. 11 in. (180 cm)[1] |
Weight | 295 lb. (134 kg)[1] |
Born | June 16, 1958 Buffalo, NY |
Resides | Manchester, NH |
Ted Arcidi was a professional wrestler and powerlifter. Ted Arcidi was born in Buffalo, New York on June 16, 1958. The son of a nurse and doctor & one of seven children, Ted took a different route from the family's academia tradition. He left Tuft's University dental school to persue the sport of Powerlifting.
Arcidi lifted for several years and eventually was sought by and debuted in Vince McMahon's WWF in late 1985. Massive in size and impressive in strength, Arcidi faced other "strongmen" such as Big John Studd and Hercules Hernandez during his stint and made a single appearance at WrestleMania 2 in the WWF/NFL Battle Royal. He was released upon the return of Ken Patera (who incidentally was instrumental in his signing with Titan Sports-WWF) as Vince McMahon did not want to have issues with having two men billed as the "World's Strongest Man". Strangely though, even with his brief tenure, Arcidi did have an action figure produced by LJN for their Wrestling Superstars toy line.
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[edit] Post WWF Wrestling Career
After his WWF run, he went to Calgary and briefly worked for Stu Hart's Stampede Wrestling. After that, Arcidi moved on the World Class Championship Wrestling in Dallas, Texas, where he was known as "Mr. 705" (referring to his world record bench press). He was managed by Percival Pringle III and was part of a stable of wrestlers including Rick Rude, the Dingo Warrior and Cactus Jack Manson. Arcidi captured that organization's Texas Heavyweight Title on August 31, 1987 and would hold it until he lost to Matt Borne on November 10 that same year.
Arcidi left the organization in 1990 to pursue other endeavors. He made several appearances in the Caribbean but never came back to national stature.
[edit] Business Ventures
Arcidi has several ventures outside of his wrestling and bench press careers. Among these are his ownership of New England's largest women's gym in Manchester, New Hampshire, a supplement company called Arcidi Strength Systems, and a gym equipment company called Weightlifters Warehouse. He is also heavily involved in real estate. He is also focusing on an acting career with parts in such shows as Law and Order and has appeared in several commercials.
He was instrumental in the initial strength coaching of both Paul "Triple H" Levesque and Joanie "Chyna" Laurer and assisted them in contacting Killer Kowalski, who trained them for wrestling.[2][3]
[edit] World's Strongest Man
Arcidi was the first man to bench press 700 pounds in an officially recognized competition.[4] His lifetime best in a contest came on September 14, 1991, when he bench pressed 725 pounds. That attempt was later disqualified after it was revealed that Arcidi had failed to lock out his arms [1] He is sometimes known as "The Boss of the Bench Press". His lift of 705 pounds in 1982 (303 kg) would stand as a world record for eight years.
[edit] In Wrestling
- Finishing and signature moves
- Managers
- Nicknames
- "The World's Strongest Man"
"Mr. 705"
"The Boss of the Bench Press"
- "The World's Strongest Man"
[edit] Championships and Accomplishments
Wrestlecrap Hall of Shame Inductee
[edit] External Links
Ted Arcidi on IMDB
Ted Arcidi at Online World Of Wrestling
[edit] References
- ^ a b c Weis, Dennis B.. Powerlifter Ted Arcidi interview. Power Bobybuilding. Retrieved on 2008-01-01.
- ^ tOa Triple H Biography. the Other arena. Retrieved on 2007-08-19.
- ^ Triple H - a biography of WWE Superstar Triple H. About. Retrieved on 2007-09-26.
- ^ Meltzer, Dave (2004). Tributes II: Remembering More of the World's Greatest Professional Wrestlers. Sports Publishing LLC, 102. ISBN 1582618178.
- ^ Texas Heavyweight Title. Wrestling Titles. Retrieved on 2008-01-30.