Brian Adias

Brian Adidas
Birth name Brian Gower
Born 1 June 1960
Denton, Texas[1]
Resides Texas[1]
Professional wrestling career
Ring name(s) Brian Adias
Brian Adidas[1]
Billed weight 238 lb (108 kg)[1]
Trained by Fritz Von Erich, David Manning[1]
Debut 1979[1]
Retired 2000

Brian Gower, known by the ring names Brian Adias and Brian Adidas, was a professional wrestler best known for his time in World Class Championship Wrestling (WCCW). He was a classmate of Kerry Von Erich in high school and a longtime friend of the Adkisson family.

Career

Adias was a mainstay of the Texas wrestling scene (mainly for the Fritz Von Erich owned WCCW). Adias also had success in Maple Leaf Wrestling, Mid-Atlantic Championship Wrestling, Portland Wrestling, and Joe Pedicino's Global Wrestling Federation.

Adias appeared (using the Adidas name) at Starrcade 84 defeating Mister Ito. Fan magazines like Pro Wrestling Illustrated continued to list him in their regional rankings as Adidas for the next two years, but he was referred to as Adias in WCCW.

Adias continued his alliance with the Von Erich family until the fall of 1986, when he turned heel against Mike Von Erich in a singles match. In an angle very similar to the one used with Chris Adams two years before, Adias declared that he wanted to succeed on his own merits, accused the Von Erichs of holding him back, and formed an alliance sometimes called the "Duo of Doom" with Al Madril. During one incident, Kerry Von Erich, who was Brian's classmate in high school, confronted him regarding his actions. Still in crutches after his 1986 motorcycle accident, Kerry was attacked by Madril with Brian standing and allowing Madril to hit Kerry with the crutch several times before Marc Lowrance managed to get Kerry out of the ring. Afterwards, Kevin Von Erich came in and launched an attack on Madril.

Madril and Adias would go on to win the World Class Tag Team Championship, while continuing to feud with the Von Erichs through the summer of 1987. In one incident, Kevin collapsed during an eight-man tag match involving Adias, which would set up an angle where he would develop his version of the Oriental Spike, a move made famous by Terry Gordy.

Adias would continue his heel run into the Wild West Wrestling group, but reverted to his babyface status a few years later when the Global Wrestling Federation was launched.

Adias later turned to sales work, only wrestling sporadically for the rest of the decade, before resurfacing for a while in the GWF during its run on ESPN in the early 1990s.

Adias retired from wrestling completely in 2000 and is currently selling exercise equipment.[2]

In wrestling

Championships and accomplishments

References

External links