Tony St. Clair

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Tony St. Clair
Ring name(s) Tony St. Clair
Billed height 1.86 m (6 ft 1 in)[1]
Billed weight 111 kg (245 lb)[1]
Born (1947-03-28) March 28, 1947[1][2]
Bolton, Greater Manchester, England[2]
Trained by Roy St. Clair
Terry Downes[1]
Debut 1966[1]
Retired 2006[1]

Tony St. Clair is a retired English professional wrestler. He is well known for his stints in Joint Promotions and All Star Wrestling in the United Kingdom, Catch Wrestling Association in Austria and Germany, and New Japan Pro Wrestling. He is also known as a trainer, with his trainees including "Gentleman" Chris Adams.

Life and career

Early life

Tony St. Clair was born Anthony St. Clair–Gregory in Bolton, Greater Manchester, England, on March 28, 1947. He grew up on professional wrestling, as his father was Francis Gregory. His older brother, Roy St. Clair, alongside Terry Downes, trained Tony, to follow in his father's footsteps.

England

Joint Promotions (1966–1982)

Tony St. Clair made his debut for Joint Promotions in 1966. At the time, he teamed with his brother Roy St. Clair as The Magnificent Saints. When his brother retired in the late 1970s, he moved into singles competition, and in May 1977, he defeated Gwynn Davies to win his first championship, the British Heavyweight Championship. He held the championship for more than a year, until losing it to Giant Haystacks in November 1978. St. Clair would retaliate by regaining the title for the second time, as Giant Haystacks was disqualified. During his second reign as champion, St. Clair transferred to All Star Wrestling with the championship in 1982.

All Star Wrestling (1982–2000)

In 1982, St. Clair moved from Joint Promotions to All Star Wrestling with the British Heavyweight Championship. During that reign, he would win two World Heavyweight Championships between 1982 and 1984, before finally losing the British Heavyweight Championship to Kendo Nagasaki after reigning as champion for nearly a decade. St. Clair regained the title from Nagasaki later that year. In 1989, there were plans to unify All Star Wrestling and Joint Promotions' British Heavyweight titles, pitting St. Clair against Dalbir Singh, but Singh joined All Star Wrestling and renounced his claim to the title, making St. Clair the undisputed British Heavyweight Champion. He reigned as champion until February 1990, when he lost the title to Fit Finlay. During April and May 1991, St. Clair wrestled on the World Wrestling Federation's tour in England. In May 1993, he won the British Heavyweight Championship for the fourth and final time, but vacated the title in 1995. He remained in All Star until 2000.

Germany

Early years (1974–1984)

St. Clair made his debut in Germany in 1974. He spent a decade wrestling for various promotions in Germany, until he met Otto Wanz, who offered him a chance to join his promotion Catch Wrestling Association.

Catch Wrestling Association (1984–1999)

St. Clair debuted for Catch Wrestling Association in June 1984, and toured Germany and Austria with the promotion. In December 1984, he became the first CWA Middleweight Champion, but vacated the title the following year. In November 1988, he and Crotian Mile Zrno defeated Fit Finlay and Mark Rocco to become the first CWA World Tag Team Champions. They reigned for nearly a year and a half, before losing the titles to Finlay and Marty Jones. In October 1992, St. Clair was awarded the CWA British Commonwealth Championship, before losing it that night to Jimmy Snuka. He bounced back and regained the British Commonwealth title back from Snuka in December 1992, in which he held for over a year before losing it to Fit Finlay. In July 1994, he teamed with Steve Casey to defeat Finlay and John Hawk to win the vacant CWA World Tag Team Championship. They lost the championship two weeks later to The Wrecking Crew. In August 1994, St. Clair regained the British Commonwealth Championship from Finlay. He reigned as champion for eleven months before losing the title to Franz Schumann in July 1995, although he regained the title later that year. In December 1995, he teamed with August Smisl to defeated Hawk and Cannonball Grizzly to win the CWA World Tag Team Championship, but they vacated the championship two days later when Smisl suffered an injury. In July 1997, he teamed with Ulf Hermann to win his fourth and final CWA World Tag Team Championship, defeating Robbie Brookside and Mark The Hunter to win the vacant championship. They reigned for more than three months, before losing the belts to Jean-Pierre LaFitte and Rhino Richards. In October 1998, St. Clair won the CWA Submission Shootfighting Championship. After reigning three years on his fourth reign as CWA British Commonwealth Champion, he finally lost the title to Robbie Brookside, although he regained the title from him one week later, as well as winning the CWA Intercontinental Heavyweight Championship. The CWA would fold in December 1999 with St. Clair holding three championship at once.

New Japan Pro Wrestling (1979–1995)

St. Clair made his Japanese debut in January 1979 for New Japan Pro Wrestling (NJPW). He would become one of the top gaijin superstars in Japan. Starting out in their junior heavyweight division, St. Clair had a shot at the WWF Junior Heavyweight Championship in May 1985, but lost to champion Hiro Saito. He also participated in the inaugural Top of the Super Juniors tournament in 1988; he placed in ninth place with 14 points. He wrestled for NJPW until 1995.

Final years and retirement (1997–2006)

In 1997, St. Clair began competing for various promotions throughout Europe, including Verband Der Berufsringer, Independent Wrestling World, European Wrestling Promotion, German Wrestling Alliance, Deutsche Wrestling Allianz, and Professional Wrestling Alliance. In 2001 and 2002, he returned to NJPW as part of Osamu Nishimura's MUGA. In 2006, he was planning to join MUGA as a wrestler and trainer, but suffered a stroke and had to pull out. Shortly afterward, he retired after 40 years in the business.

In wrestling

  • Finishing and signature moves
    • British Suplex (Floatover bridging double underhook suplex)[1]
  • Nicknames
    • "The Best"

Championships and accomplishments

References

External links

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