Ron Starr
Ron Starr, born Bobby Eugene Nutt on April 3, 1950, in Atlanta, Georgia, was an American professional wrestler who performed under various ring names including "Rotten" Ron Starr, Mr. Wrestling, and Spoiler #2.[1][2][3] He debuted in 1972 and wrestled for 25 years across multiple countries and promotions until retiring in 1997, becoming a mainstay in regional territories during the 1970s and 1980s.[4][1] Standing at 5'11" (180 cm) and weighing approximately 240–242 lbs (109–110 kg), Starr was known for his rugged style, frequent use of the figure-four leglock, and memorable feuds with wrestlers like Owen Hart, Harley Race, and Roddy Piper.[1][3] He passed away on June 8, 2017, at the age of 67 from a collapsed lung while sleeping at his home in Opp, Alabama, survived by his wife Jackie, known in wrestling as valet Miss Peaches, who passed away in 2024.[2][4][3][5] Starr's career spanned numerous North American territories, including NWA affiliates in the Central States (Kansas/Missouri), Gulf Coast (Alabama/Florida/Louisiana/Mississippi), Hollywood (California), and Southeast Championship Wrestling, as well as international stints in Canada (Stampede Wrestling), Puerto Rico (World Wrestling Council), Japan, South Africa, and China.[4][3] He gained prominence as a junior heavyweight competitor, capturing the prestigious NWA World Junior Heavyweight Championship twice—first defeating Pat Barrett in 1976 and later Les Thornton in 1980—while also holding the San Francisco U.S. Championship three times under promoter Roy Shire.[4] In Puerto Rico, where he was particularly popular, Starr teamed extensively with Chicky Starr to win the WWC World Tag Team Championship multiple times between 1986 and 1992, and he also secured the WWC Junior Heavyweight Championship on two occasions.[2][3] Beyond singles success, Starr excelled in tag team wrestling, partnering with figures like Wayne Farris (later the Honky Tonk Man) in Stampede Wrestling during the mid-1980s and capturing various regional tag titles, including in Atlantic Grand Prix Wrestling (AGPW International Championship, 4x) and the United States Wrestling Association (USWA).[2][3] His career included notable battles, such as a 1979 San Francisco Battle Royal victory over Harley Race and multi-man matches against teams featuring Buddy Rose, Ed Wiskoski, and Roddy Piper.[4] After suffering health setbacks—including four strokes and a heart attack in 2013—Starr remained connected to the wrestling community until his death, remembered for his resilience and contributions to the territorial era.[3]Early life
Birth and upbringing
Bobby Eugene Nutt, better known professionally as Ron Starr, was born on April 3, 1950, in Atlanta, Georgia, to parents Oscar Eugene Nutt and Betty Louise Collins Nutt.[6] He was the eldest child with five sisters, growing up in a Southern working-class household amid the post-World War II economic landscape of mid-20th-century Atlanta.[7] Nutt's early years were spent in Atlanta, where his family's modest circumstances shaped a childhood centered on community and local traditions. His mother, Betty, played a pivotal role in his formative influences, as she developed a strong affinity for professional wrestling and regularly attended live events at the Atlanta City Auditorium on Friday nights.[7] This exposure instilled in young Nutt an early fascination with the sport as a viewer, sparking his interest through stories and shared enthusiasm from his mother's outings.[8] During his adolescence, Nutt remained in the Atlanta area, navigating typical teenage experiences in Georgia's urban South, though specific relocations within the state are not documented in available records. His upbringing emphasized resilience and physical activity, reflective of the era's regional culture, laying the groundwork for his later athletic pursuits without formal training at that stage.[7]Military service
In 1970, Bobby Eugene Nutt, who would later become known as professional wrestler Ron Starr, enlisted in the United States Army, anticipating the draft amid the escalating Vietnam War.[7] He served two tours of duty in Vietnam from 1970 to 1972, enduring a total of approximately 18 months of intense combat deployment.[6][9] Starr's experiences in Vietnam were marked by the brutal realities of jungle warfare, where he navigated dense, treacherous terrain amid constant threats from enemy forces.[9] In his autobiography, Bad to the Bone: 25 Years of Riots and Wrestling, he recounts witnessing profound horrors of combat—events described as "things no man should see"—that left lasting personal traumas, including the psychological toll of violence and loss in a hostile environment.[9] These ordeals tested his endurance, exposing him to the chaos of firefights and the relentless humidity and dangers of the Vietnamese jungles, which he later reflected upon as "eighteen months in hell."[7] Upon returning to the United States in 1972, Starr faced significant challenges readjusting to civilian life, a common struggle for Vietnam veterans who encountered limited job opportunities and public derision from anti-war sentiments.[8] He experienced immediate psychological effects, including difficulty reintegrating into society after the isolation and intensity of wartime service, compounded by physical exhaustion from his deployments.[7] The military discipline Starr acquired during his service profoundly shaped his resilience, fostering a rigorous approach to physical training and an unyielding perseverance that would prove essential in the demanding world of professional wrestling.[9] This background provided the foundational toughness that propelled him toward pursuing a career in wrestling as a means of channeling his experiences and finding purpose post-service.[7]Professional wrestling career
Training and debut
Following his military service in Vietnam, Ron Starr sought an outlet for his resilience and physicality, drawing him toward professional wrestling.[8] Starr was first spotted at a local YMCA gym in Mobile, Alabama, by wrestlers Buddy Colt and Billy Spears, who encouraged him to consider a career in the ring. He subsequently trained under Al Velasco, brother of renowned Mexican trainer Diablo Velasco, in the early 1970s, honing fundamental skills in a demanding environment that emphasized endurance and technique.[8] Starr made his professional debut in 1972, initially competing under the ring name Bobby Starr—or occasionally Mr. Wrestling—in independent promotions across the southeastern United States, including territories in Alabama, Florida, and Georgia.[3] His early bookings featured him in the junior heavyweight division, where he faced journeyman opponents in preliminary matches to build experience. These initial appearances often involved straightforward brawling exchanges, as Starr adapted his raw athleticism and learned to incorporate stiff strikes and chain wrestling under Velasco's guidance.[8]North American territories
During the mid-1970s, Ron Starr adopted the "Rotten" Ron Starr moniker and developed a notorious heel persona characterized by his bruiser style, short fuse, and rough in-ring tactics, which helped him gain infamy across various NWA-affiliated territories in the United States and Canada.[1] This gimmick emphasized his role as a hardcore antagonist, often inciting crowd unrest through provocative behavior and intense brawling.[10] In the Gulf Coast territory, Starr built his reputation starting around 1975, where he worked as a masked performer under the "Mr. Wrestling" alias before being unmasked, transitioning fully into his "Rotten" heel character.[10] His matches frequently incorporated hardcore elements, contributing to the era's volatile atmosphere, including post-match riots that highlighted the territorial fans' passionate responses to his villainous antics.[8] He also captured the NWA Gulf Coast Tag Team Championship during this period, teaming with Terry Lathan to solidify his presence in the promotion.[3] Starr's tenure in Stampede Wrestling during the early 1980s marked one of his most notable runs in Canadian territories, where he teamed with Wayne Farris (later known as the Honky Tonk Man) as part of the "Memphis Mafia" stable, a loud and arrogant heel faction that dominated the tag division.[11] The duo won the Stampede International Tag Team Championship twice, first on October 25, 1985, and again on February 21, 1986, defending against top teams like the British Bulldogs in high-stakes matches that amplified their heel heat.[10] Additionally, Starr secured the Stampede British Commonwealth Mid-Heavyweight Championship on March 2, 1984, by defeating Sonny Two Rivers, further establishing his singles credibility in the promotion.[10] Throughout the late 1970s and early 1980s, Starr engaged in heated feuds with territorial stars, often escalating into riots due to his hardcore style and provocative persona, as detailed in his autobiography recounting 25 years of such chaotic events.[8] One representative rivalry involved local favorites in promotions like Central States Wrestling, where he won the NWA Central States Heavyweight Championship on September 17, 1979, and tag titles with Tom Andrews on July 27, 1978, using dirty tactics to draw intense crowd reactions.[3] Starr frequently shifted between promotions to maintain momentum, moving from NWA Hollywood—where he captured the NWA World Junior Heavyweight Championship on December 2, 1976, defeating Pat Barrett[4]—and the NWA Americas Heavyweight title on April 18, 1980[10], to Florida Championship Wrestling, winning the NWA Southeastern Tag Team titles with Wayne Farris in November 1983.[10] During these transitions, he incorporated kayfabe family ties to Chicky Starr, portraying them as brothers to enhance storyline depth in U.S. territories before their collaborations extended elsewhere.[10]International excursions
Ron Starr began his international wrestling endeavors with multiple tours in Japan for New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW) spanning from 1976 to 1980, leveraging his established reputation from North American territories to secure these high-profile bookings.[12] His debut tour in 1976 featured matches that highlighted his aggressive brawling style against Japanese competitors. These early excursions exposed Starr to the demanding Japanese wrestling environment, characterized by rigorous schedules and matches emphasizing technical proficiency and endurance. Throughout 1978 and 1980, Starr returned for additional NJPW tours, competing primarily as himself rather than under his Spoiler #2 mask, though elements of the gimmick's menacing persona carried over in his ring work. A key highlight was his series of encounters with rising star Tatsumi Fujinami, including a singles match on March 10, 1978, and a WWF Junior Heavyweight Championship challenge on September 30, 1980, at Budokan Hall, where Fujinami retained the title after a 21-minute battle.[13] During the 1980 tour, Starr also teamed with emerging American talent Hulk Hogan in tag team matches, notably facing Inoki and Fujinami in an October event where the American duo delivered stiff offense to the Japanese champions, showcasing Starr's versatility in multi-man formats.[14] Starr's NJPW appearances, documented across at least five major events in this period, allowed him to adapt to the promotion's emphasis on realistic, high-impact wrestling while drawing crowds through his reputation as a tough territorial heel.[15] These tours concluded by 1980, marking a pivotal phase in his career before shifting focus to other regions, with no verified records of significant European or additional Caribbean outings during this timeframe beyond his later World Wrestling Council commitments.[16]World Wrestling Council run
Ron Starr relocated to Puerto Rico in 1987 to join the World Wrestling Council (WWC), where he established himself as a prominent heel amid the promotion's intense, riot-prone environment.[10] Leveraging his experience from prior international tours, he quickly adapted to the local style, emphasizing brawling and crowd provocation to draw massive reactions from fans.[17] A central element of Starr's WWC tenure was the family storyline portraying him as the brother of manager Chicky Starr, leading to numerous tag team partnerships that fueled heated rivalries.[10] The duo often clashed with top babyfaces, including multi-man bouts alongside Abdullah the Butcher against Carlos Colón and the Invaders, which escalated into chaotic spectacles involving weapons and fan interference.[17] Starr also engaged in direct, brutal feuds with Colón, highlighted by steel cage matches in 1988 that showcased his aggressive heel persona and drew significant attendance.[1] Later, he tagged with partners such as Doug Masters, continuing to contribute to WWC's tag division through high-stakes encounters into the mid-1990s.[1] As the decade progressed, Starr evolved into a semi-retired veteran role, appearing in select high-profile events while guiding younger performers through in-ring examples of territorial wrestling grit.[10] His final full-time appearances occurred in 1997, including tag matches with Chicky Starr, after which he retired from active competition, concluding a decade-long run that solidified his status as a WWC staple.[1]Championships and accomplishments
Major singles titles
Ron Starr's most prominent singles achievements centered on the junior heavyweight division, where he captured the NWA World Junior Heavyweight Championship on two occasions during the 1970s and early 1980s. His initial reign began on December 2, 1976, in New Orleans, Louisiana, when he defeated Pat Barrett to claim the title. This victory marked a breakthrough in his career within the National Wrestling Alliance territories, though the reign proved short-lived.[18][19] Starr reclaimed the NWA World Junior Heavyweight Championship for his second reign on February 11, 1980, defeating Les Thornton in the finals of a tournament held in Tulsa, Oklahoma, under the Mid-South Wrestling banner. This title win solidified his status as a top junior heavyweight competitor, with defenses against notable opponents showcasing his agile, high-flying style in regional promotions. The reign highlighted his adaptability across NWA-affiliated territories like Mid-South, where he engaged in intense matches that elevated the division's profile.[18][3] In Puerto Rico with the World Wrestling Council (WWC), Starr secured the WWC World Junior Heavyweight Championship twice during the early 1990s, contributing to his legacy in international wrestling. His first reign started on August 25, 1990, in Caguas, when he defeated Huracán Castillo Jr. to win the title. Just weeks later, after a brief loss, he captured the championship again on September 26, 1990, in San Juan, by defeating Invader IV. These quick, successive reigns in 1990 demonstrated Starr's resilience and popularity in WWC, where the title often featured stipulation matches adding drama to defenses.[20] Beyond world-level accolades, Starr held key regional singles titles that underscored his territorial dominance. He won the NWA Central States Heavyweight Championship on September 17, 1979, by defeating Bob Sweetan in Kansas City, Missouri, transitioning effectively from junior to heavyweight competition. Additional regional successes included the NWA Americas Heavyweight Championship, captured from Chavo Guerrero on April 18, 1980, in Los Angeles, and multiple reigns with the NWA United States Heavyweight Championship (San Francisco version) between 1979 and 1980, defeating opponents such as Roddy Piper, Johnny Mantell, and Ed Wiskoski. These victories emphasized his versatility and impact in North American promotions during the territorial era.[10]Tag team titles
Ron Starr achieved significant success in tag team wrestling across various North American promotions, often partnering with established heels to form dominant duos that emphasized ruthless tactics and high-impact brawling. His collaborations highlighted his versatility as a mid-card enforcer, contributing to multiple territorial reigns that bolstered his reputation in the 1970s and 1980s. These partnerships frequently involved intense rivalries with fan-favorite teams, leading to memorable defenses that showcased Starr's technical prowess alongside his partners' aggressive styles.[10] In the NWA territories, Starr captured the NWA Central States World Tag Team Championship on July 27, 1978, teaming with Tom Andrews after defeating Blue Yankee and Buck Robley, and the NWA San Francisco World Tag Team Championship on September 20, 1978, with Dean Ho via a tournament victory. These reigns, recognized under the NWA's territorial structure, involved defenses against top regional competitors, solidifying Starr's role in elevating the division's intensity. He also held the NWA San Francisco World Tag Team Championship a second time with Enrique Vera on November 23, 1978, defeating Ed Wiskoski and Buddy Rose in a hard-fought match that exemplified the era's stiff, athletic tag style. Additionally, Starr won the NWA Los Angeles World Tag Team Championship with The Hood in 1980, further extending his territorial impact.[10][3] Starr's tag team prowess peaked in World Wrestling Council (WWC) during the 1980s and 1990s, where he secured the WWC World Tag Team Championship five times. He first claimed the titles with longtime partner Chicky Starr on October 4, 1986, defeating Mike Davis and Tommy Lane in a match that kicked off a heated feud with the Invaders; they recaptured them on October 16, 1988, against the Batten Twins, relying on Chicky's cunning interference to maintain their villainous dominance. Later, Starr partnered with Cuban Assassin to win the belts on February 4, 1990, overcoming Chris and Mark Youngblood in a bout marked by international flair and brutal exchanges. His final WWC World Tag Team reigns came with Doug Masters, first defeating Ciclon Silvadoreno and Bronco on April 11, 1992, followed by another title win via forfeit against Ricky Santana and Rex King on May 24, 1992 after a title hold-up—the duo's physicality made them a formidable pair in Puerto Rico's passionate crowds. These victories, often defended in grueling multi-man matches, underscored Starr's adaptability in WWC's high-stakes environment.[10][3] In Stampede Wrestling, Starr twice won the International Tag Team Championship with Wayne Ferris (better known as the Honky Tonk Man) in the mid-1980s, first on October 25, 1985, by defeating Hubert Gallant and Kerry Brown in a tournament final that highlighted their synchronized offense. They reclaimed the titles on February 21, 1986, against Ron Ritchie and Leo Burke, with defenses emphasizing Ferris's showmanship complemented by Starr's hard-hitting reliability in Calgary's rugged scene.[10][3] Starr's other notable tag team accomplishments included the NWA Gulf Coast Tag Team Titles with Terry Lathan on March 7, 1975, defeating the Hells Angels in a match that launched their brief but aggressive run; the NWA Pacific Northwest Tag Team Titles with Adrian Adonis on April 3, 1979, overcoming Tim Brooks and Roddy Piper; and the NWA Southeastern Tag Team Titles with Wayne Ferris in November 1983 against the Armstrong brothers. Later, he captured the USWA World Tag Team Titles with Sheik Braddock on September 15, 1989, beating Matt Borne and Jeff Jarrett in a chaotic encounter. These regional wins, while shorter, demonstrated Starr's consistency in forming effective heel teams across promotions.[10][3]| Promotion | Title | Partner(s) | Date Won | Key Defeat/Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NWA Central States | NWA Central States World Tag Team Championship | Tom Andrews | July 27, 1978 | Def. Blue Yankee & Buck Robley |
| NWA San Francisco | NWA San Francisco World Tag Team Championship | Dean Ho | September 20, 1978 | Tournament win |
| NWA San Francisco | NWA San Francisco World Tag Team Championship | Enrique Vera | November 23, 1978 | Def. Ed Wiskoski & Buddy Rose |
| WWC | World Tag Team Championship | Chicky Starr | October 4, 1986 | Def. Mike Davis & Tommy Lane |
| WWC | World Tag Team Championship | Chicky Starr | October 16, 1988 | Def. Batten Twins |
| WWC | World Tag Team Championship | Cuban Assassin | February 4, 1990 | Def. Chris & Mark Youngblood |
| WWC | World Tag Team Championship | Doug Masters | April 11, 1992 | Def. Ciclon Silvadoreno & Bronco |
| Stampede Wrestling | International Tag Team Championship | Wayne Ferris | October 25, 1985 | Tournament final vs. Gallant & Brown |
| Stampede Wrestling | International Tag Team Championship | Wayne Ferris | February 21, 1986 | Def. Ron Ritchie & Leo Burke |
| NWA Gulf Coast | Tag Team Championship | Terry Lathan | March 7, 1975 | Def. Hells Angels |
Luchas de Apuestas record
Ron Starr's involvement in Luchas de Apuestas, the high-stakes Puerto Rican wrestling tradition where competitors wager their hair or masks, was most notable during his return to the World Wrestling Council in the late 1990s. These matches emphasized personal risk and dramatic consequences, aligning with WWC's style of intense, storyline-driven encounters that captivated local audiences. Starr's participation in such bouts reinforced his role as a resilient heel, often escalating feuds with local talent and contributing to the cultural tapestry of Puerto Rican lucha libre, where Apuestas outcomes symbolized honor and defeat.[21] After suffering a loss that sidelined him from wrestling for a year, Starr made a comeback in 1997 under the masked persona of Golden Boy. In one key Apuestas match, Golden Boy defeated La Ley in a hair vs. hair stipulation, leading to La Ley's head being shaved in a public ceremony—a common post-match ritual to enforce the bet's consequence. This victory showcased Starr's adaptability and heel cunning, as he used the disguise to rebuild momentum in WWC storylines. However, the persona's run ended when Starr lost a rematch to Ray González, wagering his mask and being unmasked, thus revealing his identity and ending the angle. This loss carried emotional weight, tying into broader narratives of betrayal and redemption in his career.[21]| Opponent | Stipulation | Date | Outcome | Consequence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| La Ley | Hair vs. Hair | 1997 (exact date undocumented) | Win | La Ley shaved bald[21] |
| Ray González | Mask vs. Hair/Identity | Late 1997 (rematch, exact date undocumented) | Loss | Starr unmasked, identity revealed[21] |