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American professional wrestler, road amanuensis, and author

Arn Anderson
Arn Anderson (48481801426).jpg

Anderson in July 2019

Nativity name Martin Anthony Lunde
Born (1958-09-20) September twenty, 1958 (age 64)
Rome, Georgia, United States
Spouse(s)

Erin Lunde

(k. 1985)

Children 2, including Brock
Professional wrestling career
Band name(due south) Arn Anderson
Super Olympia[one]
Marty Lunde[i]
Jim Vertaroso[ii]
Billed height 6 ft ane in (185 cm)[1]
Billed weight 255 lb (116 kg)[1]
Billed from Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States
Trained by Ted Allen
Debut February one, 1982
Retired May 2000

Martin Anthony Lunde (born September 20, 1958), better known by the ring proper name Arn Anderson,[1] is an American professional wrestling route amanuensis, author, and retired professional person wrestler. He is currently signed to All Elite Wrestling (AEW) equally manager of Wardlow. Although he is widely regarded as 1 of the finest tag squad wrestlers in history, he also had a successful singles career and became a four-time NWA/WCW World Tv set Champion, which he frequently called his "world title".

Anderson's career was highlighted past his alliances with Ric Flair and various members of the wrestling stable The Four Horsemen in the National Wrestling Alliance (NWA) and Globe Championship Wrestling (WCW). After his retirement, he worked as a producer for WWE until 2019, when he joined AEW. On March 31, 2012, Anderson was inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame every bit a member of the Iv Horsemen. His son, Brock Anderson also pursued a career in professional wrestling, performing for AEW.[3]

Early life [edit]

Martin Anthony Lunde was born in Rome, Georgia, on September 20, 1958.[4]

Professional wrestling career [edit]

Early on career (1982–1984) [edit]

Lunde began his career on January 2, 1982 in Georgia Championship Wrestling going past the ring name Jim Vertaroso,[2] having been trained by Ted Lipscomb (Allen). He spent much of the year wrestling in various independent wrestling companies across the United states, including a minor run in Mid South Wrestling for Pecker Watts from 1982 to 1983.[five] By the middle of 1983, he made his way to Southeastern Championship Wrestling, an NWA affiliated promotion operating out of Tennessee and Alabama. Taking the proper name of "Super Olympia", Lunde presently became a member of Ron Fuller's Stud Stable earlier the twelvemonth was out. Lunde saw success in the tag team ranks past winning the NWA Southeastern Tag Team Title three times with Mr. Olympia and once with Pat Rose throughout 1984. It was also here in this promotion that Lunde met and began what would become a lifelong friendship with Ric Flair. By the end of the yr, all the same, Lunde left the company and joined Mid South Wrestling based out of Shreveport. Lunde'due south time in Mid Southward was coming to an end, and during a TV taping the Junk Yard Canis familiaris mentioned to Nib Watts, the owner of Mid South Wrestling, that Lunde looked like an Anderson. Watts called Jim Crockett and convinced him to volume Lunde.[6]

Jim Crockett Promotions / World Championship Wrestling (1984–1988) [edit]

Minnesota Wrecking Crew (1984–1985) [edit]

Lunde made his way to Jim Crockett, Jr.'south Mid-Atlantic Championship Wrestling, based in the Virginias and the Carolinas. Past this time, the company extended its range into Georgia after rival promoter Vince McMahon purchased Georgia Title Wrestling. There was a strong physical resemblance between Lunde and Ole Anderson, who had achieved legendary status in the Georgia and Mid-Atlantic territories every bit a tag team wrestler. Ole noticed that Lunde's way was a no nonsense approach in the ring and specialized in working over a part of an opponent'southward body throughout the match, much similar Ole himself. Anderson agreed to piece of work with Lunde, helping to hone his capabilities, and re-formed the Minnesota Wrecking Coiffure with Lunde replacing Gene Anderson and taking on the proper noun of "Arn Anderson", Ole's kayfabe nephew. The squad quickly became a force in the territory past capturing the NWA National Tag Team Championship in March 1985.[5] Arn and Ole defended the titles throughout the year, with their highest profile match being office of the bill of fare for Starrcade 1985 on Thanksgiving dark. The Crew successfully defended the titles confronting Wahoo McDaniel and Billy Jack Haynes.[vii]

The 4 Horsemen (1985–1988) [edit]

In the latter half of 1985, the Andersons formed a loose knit alliance with fellow heels Tully Blanchard and Ric Flair, as they began to take common enemies. The foursome frequently teamed together in six-man, and sometimes, eight-man tag matches or interfered in each other'south matches to help score a victory or, at least, to prevent each other from losing their titles. The alliance quickly became a force within the territory, working in feuds confronting some of the biggest stars in the visitor like Dusty Rhodes, Magnum T. A., The Road Warriors and the Rock 'due north' Scroll Express. Anderson also saw success as a singles wrestler on January 4, 1986, by winning the vacant NWA Television Championship.[five] Simultaneously, Anderson was still ane half of the NWA National Tag Team Champions and, even though Crockett promotions abandoned the National Tag titles in March, Anderson's success as a dual champion elevated his status within the territory. It was also during this time (in 1986) that the Andersons, Blanchard, and Flair began calling themselves The Four Horsemen with J. J. Dillon serving as the group'southward manager.[five] Anderson also had a tremendous ability to do interviews to farther the storylines he participated in. His ability to improvise in interviews allowed him to coin the "4 Horsemen" moniker for the stable, every bit he likened their coming to wrestle at an event and the aftermath of their wrath as being alike to the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, and the proper name stuck. Anderson continued his reign as NWA Television Champion for most of the twelvemonth, holding the title for just over 9 months before losing it to Dusty Rhodes on September 9, 1986.[eight]

The first real setback with the Horsemen occurred at Starrcade 1986 subsequently Anderson and Ole lost a Steel Cage friction match to The Stone 'n' Roll Express, with Ole getting pinned. The subsequent storyline positioned Ole equally the weak link within the squad, possibly attributed to his age. Ole's position with the group was only farther weakened later on he decided to take two months off later Starrcade. After Ole's return in February 1987, the other Horsemen turned on him and threw him out of the grouping, resulting in Ole incurring numerous attacks over the next several months. After, Ole was replaced with Lex Luger and the Horsemen resumed their dominance of the company.[ix]

Equally a member of the Horsemen, Anderson continued to exist involved in high-profile angles within the visitor. Past mid-1987, Anderson and swain Horsemen Tully Blanchard began regularly competing as a tag squad and rose quickly through the tag team ranks.[5] The duo faced the Stone 'northward' Curl Express for the NWA World Tag Team Title on September 29, 1987, and were victorious.[v] This win further solidified the group's dominance in the company as Lex Luger was the reigning NWA U.s. Heavyweight Champion and Ric Flair spent nearly of 1987 as the NWA World Heavyweight Champion, losing it to Ron Garvin in September, just to regain it at Starrcade 1987 on Thanksgiving dark. Anderson and Tully connected to feud throughout the rest of the year and first few months of 1988 with the Route Warriors, the Rock 'due north' Roll Express and the Midnight Express beingness their most frequent rivals.[10] [11] [12]

By Dec 1987, Luger had defected from the Horsemen and began a heated feud with the group, with Ric Flair particularly. In early 1988, Luger formed a tag squad with Barry Windham and began challenging Anderson and Blanchard for the NWA Earth Tag Squad Title. The bigger, stronger team of Windham and Luger were eventually successful, winning the titles on March 27, 1988. The reign would exist short lived, withal, as Anderson and Blanchard regained the titles less than a calendar month after after Barry Windham turned on Luger during their friction match and joined the Horsemen. Though Anderson and Blanchard were two of the biggest stars in Crockett's company, they were frequently in dispute with Crockett over their pay. Despite the fact that the two, forth with the Horsemen, were helping to generate millions of dollars in revenue for the company, they considered themselves to exist underpaid. Their last contracted match with the visitor took place on September 10, 1988, when they dropped the NWA Earth Tag Team Championship to the Midnight Express before leaving for the WWF.[thirteen]

World Wrestling Federation (1988–1989) [edit]

Anderson and Blanchard left Crockett'south company to join Vince McMahon's Globe Wrestling Federation. Upon being named the Brain Busters, the team took Bobby "The Brain" Heenan as their managing director and quickly began rise through the tag team ranks, eventually coming to challenge Demolition for the WWF Tag Team Title. On July eighteen, 1989, the Brain Busters won the titles, ending Demolition's historic reign of 478 days; the friction match would air on the July 29 edition of Saturday Night's Main Event XXII.[14] Although they would lose the titles back to Demolition on an episode of WWF Superstars just over three months subsequently, the Encephalon Busters continued to exist a force in the WWF's tag team partition.[5]

Earth Title Wrestling (1989–2001) [edit]

World Telly Champion (1990–1991) [edit]

In Dec 1989, Anderson left the WWF and went back to WCW.[5] Blanchard was slated to render as well but WWF accused him of testing positive for cocaine. Crockett's company was now called World Championship Wrestling and was under the ownership of billionaire mogul Ted Turner. Anderson helped to reform the Horsemen and he chop-chop found success in the company, winning the NWA Globe Idiot box Championship on January two, 1990.[5] Anderson remained the champion almost the entire year before dropping it to Tom Zenk. Zenk's reign would be short lived, however, as Anderson regained the title, having been renamed the WCW World Television Championship on Jan xiv, 1991.[5] His third reign with the title was too considered successful as he held the title a footling more than than 5 months before dropping it to "Cute" Bobby Eaton on May 19, 1991. Afterwards, with Horsemen members Ric Flair and Sid Barbarous gone to the WWF and Barry Windham having turned face, Anderson entered the tag squad ranks of WCW.[xv]

World Tag Squad Champion (1991–1992) [edit]

In the summertime of 1991, Anderson formed a tag team with Larry Zbyszko and they chosen themselves the Enforcers. Later competing for several months and moving upward in the tag team ranks, they successfully captured the WCW World Tag Team Championship on September 2, 1991. The reign would be brusk lived, however, as they lost the titles roughly two and a half months afterward to Ricky Steamboat and Dustin Rhodes. Anderson and Zbyszko wrestled their final friction match as a tag squad in Dec 1991 as part of WCW's "Roar Power" tour of Europe.

Later on in Dec 1991, Anderson joined Paul E. Dangerously's new stable the Unsafe Brotherhood, where he formed a new tag squad with "Beautiful" Bobby Eaton. They rapidly moved upwardly the tag team sectionalization and were soon a threat to Steamboat and Rhodes. Anderson and Eaton chop-chop won the titles on January 16, 1992, and dedicated the titles against all comers for the next four and a half months earlier losing the titles to the Steiner Brothers in May 1992.[5] The Dangerous Alliance disbanded in November 1992 post-obit Clash of the Champions XXI, following which Anderson took a short hiatus from WCW.

The Four Horsemen reunion (1993) [edit]

While still under WCW contract, Anderson wrestled a scattering of matches for Smoky Mountain Wrestling in March and April 1993, teaming with the Rock 'n' Roll Express. At Slamboree '93: A Legends' Reunion in May 1993, Anderson unsuccessfully challenged Barry Windham for the NWA World Heavyweight Championship.

In May 1993, Anderson joined Ole Anderson and Ric Flair to once more reform the Four Horsemen. The Horsemen introduced Paul Roma as their newest member. Although able-bodied and a skilled in-band competitor, Roma had spent much of his career equally a jobber in the WWF. As part of an interview segment for the Ric Flair and the Four Horsemen DVD, Triple H stated that he thought the add-on of Roma made the membership the weakest in the history of the group, and Arn himself referred to Roma every bit "a glorified gym rat". Although Anderson and Roma won the WCW Globe Tag Squad Championship in August, the group was seen as a failure by WCW.[16] The stable disbanded in October 1993 after Anderson was legitimately injured in an altercation with Sid Savage.[17]

Anderson returned to the band in December 1993, facing his one-time stablemate Paul Roma in a series of matches. In February 1994, he formed a short-lived tag squad with Ricky Steamboat. In May 1994, Anderson wrestled at the Eastern Championship Wrestling outcome When Worlds Collide as function of a talent substitution between WCW and ECW. At the event, Anderson teamed with Terry Funk in an unsuccessful challenge to Sabu and Bobby Eaton.[18]

Stud Stable; Globe Television Champion (1994–1995) [edit]

In May 1994, Anderson formed another new tag team, this ane with Dustin Rhodes. At Bash at the Embankment 1994, Anderson and Rhodes faced Col. Rob Parker'due south Stud Stable; during the match, Anderson betrayed Rhodes and cost him them lucifer, subsequently joining the Stud Stable alongside Terry Funk, Bunkhouse Buck, "Stunning" Steve Austin and Meng. The Stud Stable feuded with Dusty and Dustin Rhodes until tardily 1994 when Funk left.[xix]

Anderson's last championship run began on January 8, 1995, later on winning the Earth Idiot box Championship from Johnny B. Badd. Anderson helped restore the prestige of the title, which he held for just over vi months before dropping it to The Renegade at Peachy American Fustigate 1995. He briefly feuded with long-time friend Flair, and was assisted by Brian Pillman in his efforts.

The 4 Horsemen reunion (1995–1997) [edit]

In 1995, Anderson reformed the Four Horsemen yet once more with Flair, Anderson, Pillman, and a partner to be named afterward (who concluded upwardly existence Chris Benoit).[xx]

By the end of 1996, Anderson rarely competed in the band as years of article of clothing and tear on his body finally started to grab upward with him. On the November 25 edition of Nitro, Anderson fought Luger to a double count-out in a quarter-final tournament match for the vacant WCW United States Championship.[21]

Semi-retirement (1997–2001) [edit]

On the August 25, 1997, episode of Monday Nitro, Anderson formally announced his retirement from the band.[5] While standing in the band, surrounded by Ric Flair and newest Horsemen members Steve McMichael and Benoit, Anderson declared that his last official human action as the "Enforcer" for the Four Horsemen was to offer his "spot" in the group to Curt Hennig, as he was forced to retire due to extensive neck and upper back injuries. He worked a couple tag matches afterward, including teaming with David Flair on an episode of WCW Thunder, but his physical involvement was extremely limited in those bouts.[22]

On the September 14, 1998, edition of Nitro, aslope Steve McMichael, Dean Malenko, and Chris Benoit, Anderson ceremoniously reintroduced Ric Flair to WCW after his 12-calendar month hiatus. In doing and then, they reformed the Horsemen who so feuded with WCW President Eric Bischoff. Flair won the presidency of WCW from Bischoff on the Dec 28, 1998, episode of Nitro followed by winning the WCW Earth Heavyweight Championship at Uncensored 1999 and turn heel in the process. Anderson remained Flair'southward right-hand man during this fourth dimension equally he attempted to keep Flair's delusional hunger for power at bay.[23]

In 2000, Anderson was a member of the short-lived Old Age Outlaws. Led by Terry Funk, the group of veteran wrestlers battled the revived New World Order.[ane] On May 9, Anderson wrestled in two matches losing to David Flair and a week later teaming with Ric to defeat David Flair and Crowbar.[22]

WCW was purchased by the World Wrestling Federation in 2001, ending Anderson's tenure at that place.[24]

World Wrestling Federation / Earth Wrestling Amusement / WWE (2001–2019) [edit]

Not long afterward the endmost of WCW, Anderson became a road agent for WWF, renamed World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) in May 2002.[5] He occasionally appeared on WWE tv set trying to, with the help of other WWE direction, pull apart (kayfabe) backstage brawls. Before the WCW/ECW Invasion storyline, Anderson took upward color commentary for a WCW World Heavyweight Championship friction match between Booker T and Buff Bagwell, WCW Cruiserweight Championship match with Billy Kidman and Gregory Helms besides as another WCW Championship match between Diamond Dallas Page and Booker T, which would be his merely appearances every bit a commentator in WWE. He fabricated an appearance on Raw in 2002 delivering a video to Triple H before he was supposed to renew his wedding vows to then-heel, Stephanie McMahon. Anderson was as well assaulted on Raw past The Undertaker leading upwardly the Undertaker vs. then-babyface, Ric Flair match at WrestleMania X8. During that bout, Anderson fabricated a cursory in-ring appearance, delivering his signature spinebuster to The Undertaker. He would subsequently plough heel over again by helping Ric Flair in his feud with Stone Cold Steve Austin, leading to Austin (kayfabe) urinating on him. Several months later he became a confront once again and attempted to help a then-babyface Flair gain (kayfabe) sole ownership of WWE during a friction match with Vince McMahon, only backed downwardly from a confrontation with Brock Lesnar, who entered the ring to assist McMahon.[25]

Anderson fabricated a special appearance at the October 2006 Raw Family Reunion special, in which he was in Ric Flair's corner for his friction match against Mitch of the Spirit Team. Anderson was in the corner of Flair, Sgt. Slaughter, Dusty Rhodes, and Ron Simmons at Survivor Series 2006, where the iv faced the Spirit Squad, simply was ejected from the loonshit during the friction match. On the March 31, 2008 Raw, Anderson came out to say his terminal goodbye to Ric Flair and thank him for his career. At No Mercy, he was backstage congratulating Triple H for retaining the WWE Championship against Jeff Hardy.[26]

On an episode of Smackdown Live in Baronial 2016, Anderson made an appearance as one of the people asked by Heath Slater to be his tag team partner for the tournament to determine the inaugural winners of the WWE SmackDown Tag Team Championship. Anderson refused to help Slater upon learning that he was not Slater's first pick as a tag team partner. On the Baronial 8, 2017, episode of Smackdown Alive, Anderson made a guest appearance on Fashion Police, revealing himself to exist the i who destroyed Breezango's toy horse, Tully, and boasting he was the all-time equus caballus from the Iv Horsemen, and that "Tully" should have been named "Arn".[27]

On Feb 22, 2019, it was reported Anderson had been released from the WWE.[28] [29] Information technology was afterwards reported this was due to Anderson allowing an intoxicated Alicia Fox to wrestle a match at a WWE Live Consequence on February 10.[xxx] At Starcast II, Anderson spoke briefly about his release saying he didn't want to be somewhere he was not wanted and the hours had become too much for him. He couldn't say much due to being bound by a non-disclosure agreement.[31]

All Elite Wrestling (2019–nowadays) [edit]

On Baronial 31, 2019, Anderson fabricated a surprise appearance at the All Elite Wrestling (AEW) pay-per-view upshot, All Out, assisting Cody in his lucifer against Shawn Spears by striking Spears with a spinebuster. On November 6, 2019, Anderson would be a guest commentator on AEW Nighttime.[32]

On December 30, 2019, AEW announced that Arn Anderson had signed a contract with the company equally Cody's personal advisor and caput motorcoach.[33] He would brand his AEW Dynamite debut on the January 1, 2020, episode, assisting Cody to win his lucifer against Darby Allin.[34] On June 3, 2020, Anderson appear that he had signed a new multi-year contract with AEW.[35]

On the June 11, 2021 episode of Dynamite, in an interview with Tony Schiavone, Anderson (alongside his son Brock and Cody Rhodes) announced that Brock would exist wrestling with AEW and would join the Nightmare Family. The interview was interrupted by QT Marshall and a fight ensued.[36] [37] [38] On the June eighteen episode of Dynamite, Anderson accompanied Brock to the ring for his debut friction match. Brock, teaming with Cody Rhodes defeated QT Marshall & Aaron Solow. Subsequently the match Anderson hugged Brock and raised his hand.[39] [38] [40]

On the September 29 episode of Dynamite, Anderson dumped Rhodes, who was on a losing streak, and left the ring with Lee Johnson, who had just successfully scored a winning pinfall while teaming with Rhodes.[41] [42] During the promo when he dumped Rhodes, Anderson (a real-life gun enthusiast) told him that Rhodes would let a carjacker to steal his auto while Anderson would "pull out the Glock, put it on his forehead, and spill his brains all over the physical". The promo, which received approval in advance from both Tony Khan and TNT,[43] received universal critical praise from fans and other wrestlers, as the quote got Anderson trending on Twitter; AEW promptly released a T-shirt featuring the quote due to the reaction.[44] [45] All the same, Anderson would later on resume coaching Rhodes, who would later go on to have some other reign as AEW TNT Champion.[46] [47]

Personal life [edit]

Although he was billed equally such at diverse times, Anderson is non related to the Anderson family or Ric Flair. He was given the "Anderson" name and was originally billed equally Ole Anderson's brother, and then after billed every bit Ole's nephew, because of his resemblance to Ole in advent and wrestling style. He was as well billed as Flair's cousin. Flair is not related to any of the Andersons, only he is a longtime friend of Anderson.[half-dozen]

Anderson married Erin Lunde in 1985. They reside in Charlotte, N Carolina, and have two sons named Brock and Barrett. Brock followed in his father's footsteps and became a professional wrestler. Anderson stated on an episode of his podcast The Arn Show that the simply reason he had stayed in the business organization for and so long was to brand sure Brock was able to get his start in it.[38] [48]

During a WCW tour of Europe, Anderson and Sid Eudy (better known as Sid Roughshod or Sycho Sid) were involved in an argument at a hotel bar in the English town of Blackburn on October 27, 1993. Anderson threatened Eudy with a broken canteen; after being sent to their rooms by security chief Doug Dillinger, Eudy later came to Anderson'due south room and attacked him with a chair leg, and Anderson retaliated with scissors. Eudy received four stab wounds and Anderson received 20, losing a pint and a one-half of claret in the process. The fight was broken upward by fellow wrestler 2 Cold Scorpio, who was credited with saving Anderson's life. Neither man pressed charges against the other, and British police declined to practise so since both men would before long be leaving the country. Eudy was later fired over the incident.[49]

As stated in his biography, Anderson was thrown into the band ropes during a match in 1994. The top rope broke from the turnbuckle, but he was able to land on his feet. Six months later, the aforementioned event happened again, but this fourth dimension he landed full-forcefulness on to the concrete and hit his head, cervix, and upper dorsum. He never took time off to heal. As fourth dimension passed, with no downwards fourth dimension, the injuries worsened. In his biography, Anderson states that the first sign of issues was his left arm suddenly going numb and unresponsive during a lucifer. Doctors found that a rib, possibly torn away from the spine during the blow, was popping in and out of the joint and causing shoulder discomfort and weakness.[50] Upon seeing his chiropractor in Charlotte, Due north Carolina, and consulting medical experts in Atlanta, Georgia, the damage to Anderson's body was found to be much more than severe than previously thought and surgery was deemed the only choice to keep his left arm functioning at all. Surgery occurred in Atlanta in belatedly 1996 (resulting in a left posterior laminectomy of the 3rd, 4th, and 5th cervical bones and a fusion of the seventh cervical and 1st thoracic bones) and was successful in repairing most of the damage, merely Anderson nonetheless has some muscle weakness, loss of fine motor command, and loss of muscle mass in his left arm. He spent many weeks in the hospital during that time, crediting his recovery to his wife, his physical therapist, and the fact he did not desire his children to be fatherless. He would be readmitted in March 1997 with symptoms akin to cardiac arrest and pulmonary failure, but was released soon afterward.[fifty]

On March 11, 2023, Anderson announced on Twitter that his son Barrett had passed away the night earlier at age 37. [51]

Other media [edit]

Anderson'due south autobiography, Arn Anderson iv Ever, was released on April thirty, 2000.[52]

Anderson has appeared in the video games WWE Legends of WrestleMania, WWE '12, WWE 2K16 (as DLC), and WWE 2K17 as a fellow member of The Enforcers with Larry Zbyszko.[53]

Anderson's podcast, The Arn Show with Conrad Thompson (and hosted by Paul Bromwell since 2021), debuted in 2019.[31]

Anderson appeared on the reality show Rhodes to the Acme.

Championships and accomplishments [edit]

  • Cauliflower Alley Club
    • Art Abrams Lifetime Accomplishment/Lou Thesz Award (2016)[54]
  • Jim Crockett Promotions / World Title Wrestling
    • NWA/WCW World Television Championship (four times)[55]
    • NWA World Tag Team Title (i fourth dimension) – with Paul Roma[56]
    • NWA National Tag Team Championship (1 time) – with Ole Anderson[57]
    • NWA (Mid-Atlantic)/WCW Globe Tag Squad Championship (5 times) – with Tully Blanchard (two), Larry Zbyszko (1), Bobby Eaton (i), and Paul Roma (one)[58]
  • Pro Wrestling Illustrated
    • Ranked No. ix of the 500 best wrestlers in the PWI 500 in 1991
    • PWI Feud of the Year (1987) – Four Horsemen vs. The Super Powers and The Road Warriors
    • PWI Tag Team of the Year (1989) – with Tully Blanchard
    • PWI Tag Team of the Year (1991) – with Larry Zbyszko
    • PWI Stanley Weston Laurels (1997)
    • Ranked No. 62 of the top 500 singles wrestlers of the "PWI Years" in 2003[59]
  • Southeastern Championship Wrestling
    • NWA Southeastern Tag Squad Championship (4 times) – with Jerry Stubbs (3)[lx] and Pat Rose (1)[61]
  • Southern States Wrestling
    • Kingsport Wrestling Hall of Fame (Course of 2001)
  • World Wrestling Federation / Globe Wrestling Entertainment
    • WWF Tag Team Championship (1 time) – with Tully Blanchard[62]
    • WWE Hall of Fame (Class of 2012) equally a member of The 4 Horsemen[63]
  • Wrestling Observer Newsletter
    • All-time on Interviews (1990)
    • Worst Worked Match of the Year (1996) – with Ric Flair, Meng, The Barbarian, Lex Luger, Kevin Sullivan, Z-Gangsta, and The Ultimate Solution vs. Blob Hogan and Randy Savage in a Towers of Doom friction match at Uncensored

References [edit]

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  52. ^ "Arn Anderson's a Look Behind the Curtain Reviewed in Wrestling Perspective".
  53. ^ "Arn Anderson". IMDb.
  54. ^ "ARN ANDERSON, PAUL ORNDORFF, TRISH STRATUS AND More TO Exist HONORED BY CAULIFLOWER Aisle Social club - PWInsider.com". world wide web.pwinsider.com.
  55. ^ "NWA/WCW World Television receiver Title". at wrestling-titles.com
  56. ^ "NWA World Tag Team Championship history".
  57. ^ "NWA National Tag Team Title". Archived from the original on Dec 18, 2007. Retrieved March 10, 2008. at wrestling-titles.com
  58. ^ "WCW Globe Tag Team Championship". at wrestling-titles.com
  59. ^ "Pro Wrestling Illustrated'south Top 500 Wrestlers of the PWI Years". Wrestling Information Archive. Archived from the original on July 7, 2011. Retrieved 2010-09-15 .
  60. ^ Hoops, Brian (January fifteen, 2019). "Pro wrestling history (01/15): Big John Studd wins 1989 Royal Rumble". Wrestling Observer Effigy Four Online . Retrieved Jan eighteen, 2019.
  61. ^ "NWA Southeastern Tag Squad Championship". at wrestling-titles.com
  62. ^ "World Tag Team Title - Brain Busters". WWE. Archived from the original on December 10, 2013. Retrieved Oct 1, 2013.
  63. ^ "The Iv Horsemen". Globe Wrestling Entertainment. Retrieved January 9, 2012.

Further reading [edit]

Autobiography: Anderson, Arn. Arn Anderson 4 Ever: A Expect Backside the Curtain. Kayfabe Pub Group, 1998

External links [edit]

  • Arn Anderson at IMDbEdit this at Wikidata
  • Official website at the Wayback Machine (archived March 2, 2001)
  • ARN on Westwood Ane Podcast Network
  • Arn Anderson Tribute Site
  • WWE profile at the Wayback Motorcar (archived March 7, 2012)
  • Arn Anderson's profile at Cagematch.net, Wrestlingdata.com, Net Wrestling Database

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arn_Anderson

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