King Kong Bundy

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Chris Pallies
Statistics
Ring name(s) Chris Canyon
Big Daddy Bundy
Boom Boom Bundy
King Kong Bundy
Man Mountain Cannon, Jr.
Billed height 6 ft 4 in (193 cm)
Billed weight 420 - 503 lb (190.5 - 228 kg)
Born November 7, 1957 (1957-11-07) (age 50)
Atlantic City, New Jersey
Trained by Larry Sharpe
Debut 1981

Chris Pallies (born November 7, 1957) is an American professional wrestler, better known by his ring name, King Kong Bundy.

Contents

Weighing upwards of 450 pounds (204 kilograms) in his heyday (and sometimes billed as heavy as 503 pounds), King Kong Bundy was an imposing – if somewhat cartoonish – grappler. With pale skin and a completely hairless body, he was often compared to the Michelin Man, and the contrast of his light complexion with his usual jet-black singlet led color commentator Bobby "The Brain" Heenan to dub him "Shamu"; although, play-by-play announcer Gorilla Monsoon preferred to describe Bundy as "a condominium with legs."

Bundy took the King Kong Bundy name during a story line while working with World Class Championship Wrestling. Bundy was discovered and developed as Big Daddy Bundy by the Von Erich family. He wore blue jeans with a rope belt and was a fan favorite. After a dispute with the Von Erich family, Bundy was recruited by manager Gary Hart and dramatically re-introduced as King Kong Bundy, wearing the black singlet for the first time to signify his change. He lost his hair during the feud, adding to his signature look.

While he competed in various territories such as the American Wrestling Association and National Wrestling Alliance, Bundy is best known for his appearances in the World Wrestling Federation in 1986, when he feuded with WWF World Heavyweight Champion Hulk Hogan.

Bundy is remembered for his tendency to ask the referee for a five count (as opposed to the usual three count) for pinfalls whenever he dominated his opponent in a squash match, a gimmick he began while wrestling for Mid-South Wrestling. He is also remembered for winning the shortest match in WrestleMania history, when he mauled S.D. "Special Delivery" Jones in what was announced as only nine seconds at the first WrestleMania. The actual time clocks in at 23 seconds from bell to bell.

In 1985 Bundy feuded extensively with André the Giant, a feud which started during an angle where Bundy interfered in one of André's matches and delivered several splashes, giving the Giant a broken sternum (kayfabe). They would feud for several months, most notably in a pair of tag team matches on Saturday Night's Main Event in late 1985, where Bundy and André's other nemesis, Big John Studd, first faced André and Tony Atlas and then André and Hulk Hogan.

On a nationally televised match on Saturday Night's Main Event, Hogan was wrestling challenger Don Muraco when he was ambushed by Bundy and his then manager, Bobby Heenan, thus setting up a feud between Hogan and Bundy. Hogan "required medical attention" from the beating sustained at the hands of the three attackers (the injury was not legitimate, and served to make Bundy look like a monster heel). The feud culminated with a steel cage matchup for Hogan's WWF Championship as the main event of WrestleMania 2 in Los Angeles, which was won by Hogan.

One year later at WrestleMania III, Bundy bodyslammed midget wrestler Little Beaver, and then delivered a big elbow causing a disqualification in a mixed 6-man and midget tag team match. Bundy would continue to wrestle in WWF until 1988.

In 1994, King Kong Bundy made his return to WWF as a member of Ted DiBiase's stable, the Million Dollar Corporation. Despite a feud with The Undertaker which culminated in a match at WrestleMania XI, Bundy failed to achieve the same amount of success as he did in the 1980s.

Pallies' stage name inspired the name of the sitcom family on the FOX sitcom Married… with Children, and he made several appearances on that show. When asked if the family had actually been named after serial killer Ted Bundy, the producers responded that they had named them after "the good Bundy."

King Kong Bundy currently wrestles for several independent promotions in the United States. In 1999 he won the AWA World Heavyweight Championship from Jon Alan Stewart aka Jonnie Stewart, in a match that Stewart claimed "was the most brutal beating I have ever taken" [1] More recently, Bundy has turned towards a career in stand-up comedy, seemingly with success. [1]

Bundy was born on the same day as veteran WCW announcer Tony Schiavone.

  • Finishing and signature moves
  • Managers
  • Nicknames

  • Top Rope Wrestling
  • TRW Heavyweight Championship (1 time)

  • Married… with Children (1988) in episode "All in the Family" as "Uncle Irwin"
  • Moving (1988) as "Gorgo"
  • Married... with Children (1995) in episode "Flight of the Bumblebee" as himself
  • Weird Science (1996) in episode "Men in Tights" as himself
  • Bill's Seat (2002) as "Big Swede"

  1. ^ awastars.com interview.
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