- David Flair
-
David Flair Ring name(s) David Flair[1] Billed height 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)[1] Billed weight 177 lb (80 kg)[1] Born March 6, 1979 [1]
Minneapolis, MinnesotaResides Shelby, North Carolina[1] Billed from Charlotte, North Carolina[1] Trained by Ric Flair
WCW Power Plant[1]Debut January 17, 1999 David Richard Fliehr (born March 6, 1979) better known by his ring name David Flair is a professional wrestler [1] best known for his time in World Championship Wrestling (WCW), where he held the United States and World Tag Team championships. He is the son of former wrestling world champion Ric Flair and the older half brother of Reid Flair.
Contents
Professional wrestling career
Early days
Growing up, Flair never wanted to become a wrestler; he always wanted to be a state trooper. He appeared on camera backstage with his father at Starrcade 1993 in World Championship Wrestling. In the storyline, his father was going to have to "retire" if he lost his match, so his family appeared to increase the emotion. In late 1998, David was back on WCW TV sitting front row and getting involved in some skirmishes with Eric Bischoff and the nWo.
World Championship Wrestling (1998-2001)
He eventually decided to become a wrestler and teamed with his father in his debut match at WCW/nWo Souled Out on January 17, 1999. They wrestled Curt Hennig and Barry Windham and won the match. After the match, the entire nWo came out, and Hulk Hogan lashed David with his belt until David's back (and stomach where the belt whipped around and struck) was full of welts while his father was handcuffed to the ring ropes. In his autobiography, Ric Flair alleges that Hogan took liberties with his son by whipping him far more times than agreed upon and that he would never forgive Hogan for this. To his credit, David took the punishment without complaint; both in the ring and backstage.
On February 21 at SuperBrawl IX, David turned on his father and joined the nWo Wolfpac. He used a taser on his father to help Hogan win their WCW World Title match. He did not wrestle for a while but did appear in vignettes with Samantha (Torrie Wilson) while he was training at the WCW Power Plant.[1]
Flair started to wrestle a regular schedule in May 1999. He made up with his father who then had the Four Horsemen help Flair win matches. Ric, being the on-screen WCW President, stripped WCW United States Champion Scott Steiner of his title and awarded it to Flair. On July 11, Flair defeated Dean Malenko, with the help of Ric and Arn Anderson, to keep the title in his first defense on pay-per-view.
In August, Ric had real-life problems with Eric Bischoff backstage and was removed from television. Flair was left on his own and lost his US Title to Chris Benoit on August 9. During a storyline in September, Wilson left Flair for Billy Kidman. Ric and Anderson returned to TV and tried to help David. In October, Diamond Dallas Page and his wife Kimberly started a feud with the Flairs. Kimberly kept Flair distracted while Page, in storyline, injured Ric. In response, Flair went insane after seeing his injured father. Flair injured Page in the WCW World Title Tournament that was being held on WCW Monday Nitro. He used the crowbar and only stopped when Kimberly got in between him and her husband. This led to a storyline where Flair stalked Kimberly. She got one of her husband's teammates Bam Bam Bigelow to help her, but Flair used the crowbar on him too. Vince Russo finally scheduled a match between Flair and Kimberly for WCW Mayhem on November 21. Kimberly tried to seduce Flair and then "hit him low", but he had a cup on. Page and his friend Chris Kanyon came to her rescue and laid Flair out. Anderson arrived again but got laid out by Flair, who ran off into the fans.
Flair was joined by Daffney at Starrcade in 1999. He was joined a little later by Crowbar. They formed a team called the New Hardcore Revolution and won the vacant WCW World Tag Team Titles in a tournament final on January 3, 2000 over Kevin Nash and Scott Steiner with Anderson as the special referee.[1] They lost the titles to Big Vito and Johnny the Bull, "The Mamalukes," on January 19. Flair soon split with Crowbar and in May 2000, joined Vince Russo's New Blood. He dumped Daffney and took Miss Hancock (Stacy Keibler) as his valet. He also turned on his father again which led to a match against him at The Great American Bash. Flair lost, but the next night, he won a match against his father to retire him and shave his father's head.
Near the end of 2000, Flair and Keibler were going to have an on-air wedding as a part of a new storyline. Before that could happen though, it was revealed that Stacy was pregnant and that David was not the father. This led to Flair trying to figure out who the father was with the help of Ric, whom he had made up with, and Anderson. He even had a match with Buff Bagwell to get Bagwell's DNA. This storyline ended abruptly with Miss Hancock returning to television with Shawn "The Star" Stasiak in the ring with a baby carriage. Instead of a baby, however, it was revealed that there was 8x10s of Shawn in the carriage. After this angle, Flair was no longer seen in WCW. On the February 12, 2001 edition of Nitro, as on-screen CEO Ric Flair and the Magnificent Seven were trying to discuss things inside the ring, Kevin Nash appeared on the Turnertron and told Ric that he has his son David in his locker room, Nash told Ric that his number-one priority is to become number-one contender to the WCW World Heavyweight Championship against Scott Steiner at Superbrawl Revenge, his number two-priority is that if Dustin Rhodes beats Rick Steiner who WCW U.S. Champion at the time in a non-tile match, Nash would get his title shot against Scott Steiner for the WCW World Heavyweight Championship later that night, Rhodes pinned Steiner after a DDT as a result, Nash got his title shot against Scott Steiner for the WCW World Heavyweight Championship that night, Later that night, Nash came into the ring with Ric's son David, as they started coming to the ring, Nash gave a punch to David, Ric Flair and WCW security came out and Ric begged Nash to stop assaulting his son, Nash did not listen and gave David a Jackknife Powerbomb, Ric and WCW security started coming to the ring to pull David out of the ring as the champion Scott Steiner was coming to the ring alongside Midajah too to start his WCW World Heavyweight title match with Nash.
NWA and WWF/E (2001-2002)
Flair toured in the independent circuit for the first part of 2001. He teamed with Don Factor to win the NWA World Tag Team Championship on March 21. They lost them on March 23. He then teamed with Romeo Bliss to win the NWA Georgia Tag Team Championship on March 24. They lost them on April 21.
In May 2001, the WWF picked up Flair's WCW contract and sent him to Ohio Valley Wrestling. He stayed there and feuded with Val Venis and had a brief tag team with Mark Jindrak until late 2002, when they dropped his development contract. He did make two appearances on WWE TV during 2002 as he was beaten up by The Undertaker on March 4 and wrestled the Undertaker on March 14 as part of the build-up for his father's match against Undertaker at WrestleMania X8.
Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (2002-2003)
Flair joined Total Nonstop Action Wrestling in December 2002. He joined Vince Russo's Sports Entertainment Xtreme (S.E.X.) group. He had a brief feud with Curt Hennig and then left S.E.X. to form Next Generation with Brian Lawler and Erik Watts. Together, they feuded with Dusty Rhodes and mocked him with an old NWA World Title belt. David left TNA in early 2003.
Independents and beyond
After TNA, David toured the independent circuit, winning the IWA Intercontinental Title from Ray Gonzalez on November 28, 2003. He lost it back to Gonzalez two days later. David Flair quit IWA after problems with IWA promoter Victor Quinones.
David was in a dark match before an episode of WWE SmackDown in the spring of 2006, which he lost to William Regal. He also competes for the Hermie Sadler-owned UWF Live organization, based primarily in the Carolinas and Virginia.[citation needed]
David was on hand when his father, Ric, was inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame on March 29, 2008, when he had his final match in the WWE to date against Shawn Michaels at WrestleMania XXIV, and at Ric's Farewell Ceremony the following night on Raw.[citation needed]
On December 6, 2008, he wrestled a match with his brother, Reid, who was making his professional wrestling debut, defeating The Nasty Boys via submission in Charlotte, North Carolina, with Hulk Hogan as the special guest referee.[2][3]
Personal life
Flair previously dated Stacy Keibler during their time together in WCW.[1][4] He now has a wife named Robin and they reside in Shelby, North Carolina.[5][6]
In wrestling
- Finishing moves
- Signature moves
- Nicknames
- "The New and Improved Space Mountain"
- Managers and valets
- Entrance themes
- "Spin Spin Spin" by Julian Emery & Ruppert Lyddon
Championships and accomplishments
-
- NWA World Tag Team Championship (1 time) - with Dan Factor[1]
- Regional
- NWA Wildside Tag Team Championship (1 time) - with Romeo Bliss[1]
- Tojo Yamamoto Memorial Cup (2002)
- Other titles
-
- AFE Heavyweight Championship (1 time)
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r "David Flair profile". Online World of Wrestling. http://www.onlineworldofwrestling.com/profiles/d/david-flair.html. Retrieved 2009-08-10.
- ^ Andrews, Kenai (2008-12-05). "Reid Flair about to strut into the spotlight; Charlotte supershow has big names, young and old". SLAM! Sports. http://slam.canoe.ca/Slam/Wrestling/2008/12/05/7645426.html. Retrieved 2008-12-05.
- ^ "Full Reid Flair debut show results with Nature Boy and Hulkster doing spots in the match". WrestlingObserver/Figure Four Online. 2008-12-08. http://www.f4wonline.com/content/view/7674/. Retrieved 2008-12-08.
- ^ Ryan Clark (2005-07-26). "Revealing Stacy Keibler Interview". wrestlingINC.com. http://www.wrestlinginc.com/news/2005/726/stacy_keibler_824.shtml. Retrieved 2008-03-14.
- ^ Cawthon, Graham. "Flairs fall in defeat at wrestling fundraiser". The Star. http://www.shelbystar.com/news/police-38863-flair-shelby.html. Retrieved 2009-07-12.
- ^ WWE: Superstars > Hall of Fame > Articles > Flair of emotion
- ^ a b c "El Dandy Vs. David Flair /w Torrie Wilson, Ric Flair & Arn Anderson". World Championship Wrestling, TNT. WCW Monday Nitro. 1999-05-24.
- ^ a b c "Ric & David Flair /w Arn Anderson Vs. Barry Windham & Curt Hennig". World Championship Wrestling. WCW Souled Out. 1999-01-17.
- ^ a b c d e "David Flair VS Crowbar". World Championship Wrestling. WCW Thunder. 2000-06-14.
- ^ a b c d "3 Count Vs. Crowbar & David Flair". World Championship Wrestling, TNT. WCW Monday Nitro. 2000-01-17.
- ^ "Asya Vs Kimberly (w/ Torrie Wilson as referee)". World Championship Wrestling, TNT. WCW Monday Nitro. 1999-11-15.
External links
NWA World Tag Team Champions Steve Williams and Terry Gordy · Barry Windham and Dustin Rhodes · Ricky Steamboat and Shane Douglas · The Hollywood Blonds (Brian Pillman and Steve Austin) · Four Horsemen (Arn Anderson and Paul Roma) · The Rock 'n' Roll Express (Ricky Morton and Robert Gibson) · Mr. Gannosuke and Tarzan Goto · C.W. Anderson and Pat Anderson · The Headbangers (Mosh and Thrasher) · The New Midnight Express (Bart Gunn and Bob Holly) · The Border Patrol (Agent Gunn and Agent Maxx) · Barry Windham and Tully Blanchard · The Brotherhood (Eric Sbraccia and Knuckles Nelson) · The Brotherhood (Knuckles Nelson and Rick Fuller) · The Public Enemy (Johnny Grunge and Rocco Rock) · The Brotherhood (Dukes Dalton and Knuckles Nelson) · Team Extreme (Khris Germany and Kit Carson) · Murder, Inc. (Jimmy James and Kevin Northcutt) · xXx (Curtis Thompson and Drake Dawson) · The Main Event (Reno Riggins and Steven Dunn) · Big Bubba Pain and L.A. Stephens · Bad Attitude (David Young and Rick Michaels) · The Bad Street Boys (Christian York and Joey Matthews) · Dan Factor and David Flair · The New Heavenly Bodies (Chris Nelson and Vito DeNucci) · Glacier and Jason Sugarman · Disturbing Behavior (Jeff Daniels and Tim Renesto) · The Shane Twins (Mike Shane and Todd Shane) · A.J. Styles and Jerry Lynn · America's Most Wanted (Chris Harris and James Storm) · The Disciples of the New Church (Brian Lee and Slash) · Triple X (Christopher Daniels, Elix Skipper, and Low Ki) · Amazing Red and Jerry Lynn · Johnny Swinger and Simon Diamond · 3Live Kru (B.G. James, Konnan, and Ron Killings) · The Red Shirt Security (Joe Legend and Kevin Northcutt) · Abyss and A.J. Styles · Dallas and Kid Kash · D'Lo Brown and El Gran Apolo · The Naturals (Andy Douglas and Chase Stevens) · Chris Harris and Elix Skipper · Christopher Daniels and James Storm · Team Canada (Bobby Roode and Eric Young) · A.J. Styles and Christopher Daniels · The Latin American Exchange (Hernandez and Homicide) · Team 3D (Brother Devon and Brother Ray) · The Real American Heroes (Joey Ryan and Karl Anderson) · Los Luchas (Phoenix Star and Zokre) · The Skullkrushers (Keith Walker and Rasche Brown) · Dark City Fight Club (Jon Davis and Kory Chavis) (current) · The Usual Suspects (A.J. Steele and Murder One)Categories:- 1979 births
- Living people
- American professional wrestlers
- New World Order (professional wrestling) members
- Sportspeople from Minneapolis, Minnesota
- Four Horsemen (professional wrestling) members
- The Alliance (professional wrestling) members
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