Texarkana Gazette

Wrestling’s ‘Superstar’ Billy Graham, the template for Hulk Hogan, dies at 79

- HOUSTON MITCHELL

“I lift barbell plates. I eat T-bone steaks. I’m sweeter than a German chocolate cake. How much more of me can you take?”

When you discuss the hyperboliz­ed figures in pro wrestling history, “Superstar” Billy Graham has to be in the conversati­on. He was supposed to be a reviled rulebreake­r, but after hearing him talk, fans never truly reviled him. At the height of his popularity in the 1970s, Graham sold out Madison Square Garden, the original mecca of pro wrestling, 19 times.

If you are a current pro wrestling fan and never heard of Graham, well, you actually have and just aren’t aware of it. Hulk Hogan, probably the biggest wrestling star of all time, copied a lot of his persona from Graham. The blond goatee. Walking to the ring wrapped in a feather boa. The emphasis on physique. Using the word “brother” liberally in his interviews. If you closed your eyes and listened to prime Graham and prime Hogan, you could barely tell them apart.

“What you gonna do when the Superstar comes down on you?” — Superstar Billy Graham

“Whatcha gonna do when Hulkamania runs wild on you?”— Hulk Hogan

Graham’s influence can be seen in the greatest of all time — Hogan, Ric Flair, Dusty Rhodes and Jesse Ventura — as well as countless others who never reached superstar level.

“Billy was the most influentia­l wrestler of the 1970s,” wrestling journalist and historian Dave Meltzer, author of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter, said. “Obviously, he was the prototype of the Hulk Hogan character, the Jesse Ventura character, but so many others like Dusty Rhodes copied his interview style and colorful dress, and they were the guys who carried the business. Even Chael Sonnen in MMA would directly copy his interviews.”

Graham died Wednesday at age 79, WWE said.

He gained his greatest fame with the then-world Wide Wrestling Federation (WWWF), now known as WWE. Graham, who wrestled for the promotion briefly in 1975, returned in April 1977 and defeated heavyweigh­t champion Bruno Sammartino. He traveled around the world as champion, wrestling such notables as Jack Brisco, Pedro Morales, Rhodes and Mil Mascaras. “He was a prototype of what Vince Mcmahon saw as a top wrestling attraction going forward,” Meltzer said. “Billy was neither the first wrestler to use steroids nor the biggest abuser of them, but he was as associated with them as [much as] almost anyone, and later became a very vocal speaker against their use, and sometimes that wavered as he went through different periods of life.”

Graham talked openly about steroid use among wrestling’s biggest stars in a story published by The Los Angeles Times in 1992, catapultin­g it into the mainstream media for the first time. “It was sad for a figure, one who made so many people become fans in the first place, to see his life after wrestling, with his health problems, financial problems and mood swings,” Meltzer said. “So many people owe so much of their success to him.”

Graham held the title until February 1978, losing to Bob Backlund. Graham was a heel, but fans reacted positively to him, so much so that Graham asked WWWF owner Vincent J. Mcmahon, who preceeded his son Vince, to make him a good guy. Mcmahon refused, unable to see him as anything other than a bad guy.

Disappoint­ed, Graham left the WWWF and wrestled for other organizati­ons, such as the AWA and NWA, before returning to the then-wwf in 1982.

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