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Barry Darsow: Happy to be done wrestling Reflecting on a long list of characters
By GREG OLIVER -- SLAM! Wrestling
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Demolition: Axe (Bill Eadie), and Smash (Barry Darsow), right.
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Despite his appearance in the WrestleMania XVII gimmick battle royale,
Barry Darsow, aka Repo Man, considers himself out of the wrestling
business.
More than six months ago, his career in WCW non-existent, coming off a
less-than-successful tour with a small Japanese promotion and the
failure of the XWO promotion, it was simply time for the 41-year-old
Darsow to get out of wrestling for good.
"The last four or five years have just been a big letdown. Everything
that has gone on just isn't the same as what the old days were," Darsow
explained to SLAM! Wrestling.
He's an executive at a printing and copy company now in his home state
of Minnesota. With his wife of 15 years, Darsow has a 13-year-old son
who he coaches in both hockey and football. "It's just nice to be home,"
he said. "It's nice to be off the road."
His 20-year career began when he was 21, and he graduated from Eddie
Sharkey's wrestling school in Minneapolis. "I called up Stu Hart in
Calgary, Canada to go up there, and it ended up being one of the sons
that I talked to, and he talked me into going to Hawaii."
So Darsow made his debut in Hawaii for Leia Maivia, then went New
Zealand for Steve Rickard, then to Hawaii again. Stints in Florida, and
Mid-South followed, as did a long series of characters and pseudonyms.
Besides the aforementioned Repo Man, Darsow wrestled as:
Krusher Krushchev, NWA, Mid South, UWF
Demolition Smash, WWF
Repo Man, WWF
Crusher Darsow, Mid South
Man Mountain Darsow
Barry Darsow, WCW, Mid South
Blacktop Bully, WCW
"Big" Barry Darsow WCW
He enjoyed them all, but his three big characters -- Krushchev, Repo Man
and Demolition Smash really stand out.
Crusher Krushchev was easily his favourite. "Ivan Koloff was the
greatest partner in the world to have, and Nikita [Koloff] was probably
the nicest partner to have. But with Ivan Koloff is where I learned the
most about wrestling. We wrestled hour a matches a couple of times a day
for two or three months with the Rock'n'Roll Express and all these other
people. That's when it was the real deal -- people believed it, you
worked hard, you told a story in the ring. That was when I learned how
to wrestle." Krushchev, Ivan Koloff and Nikita Koloff held the NWA
World titles in the mid-'80s in a special deal where any one of the
three could defend the belts.
Repo Man in the mid-'90s WWF was a different character altogether. "I
kind of enjoyed it because the kids loved it. It didn't go as far as I
wanted it to go, but you've got to do whatever they want you to do. But
I made some good money and it was fun. Autograph sessions, kind of like
a Bushwacker gimmick kind of deal."
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Krusher Krushchev.
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As a part of Demolition, Darsow achieved tremendous heights in the WWF,
claiming the WWF tag team titles. Many knocked the team (which initially
had Randy Colley as Bill Eadie's partner) as being knock-offs of the
ultra-popular Road Warriors. Darsow didn't see it.
"When I first did it, I didn't think of the Road Warriors at all because
we worked and they didn't work," he said. "They just went out and beat
people up. We actually had matches with smaller people, bigger people,
medium
people, everybody. So to me, it wasn't like we were any Road Warriors or
anything."
Beating Andre the Giant and Haku, The Colossal Connection, for the WWF
tag titles at WrestleMania VI in Toronto was definitely a career
highlight. "To wrestle Andre at SkyDome with that many people and
everything, and then beat those guys, that was pretty big."
At the peak of his WWF career, Darsow can remember being on the road for
52 days, with three days off, then back on the road for 42 days.
Yet home was always the best place to be, whether wrestling or just
working on his place up on the lake that he built from scratch, and put
the
road in.
"My favourite place was probably here in Minnesota. I shouldn't say
that," he laughed. "I really like going to Florida, it was nice. I think
Hawaii was really nice if we got to stay there for a while. But I think
my
favourite place ever to wrestle would probably have been Madison Square
Gardens."
Canada rates mention too. "Toronto was nice, but I always had a good
time in Montreal. ... good food, good people, good everything."
Looking back on his career, Darsow can see that he was a valuable role
player, never the star of the area, but one of the important pieces of
any puzzle, just doing his part.
"I always did whatever anybody else wanted me to do. I'm not like a lot
of other people that just could say whatever they wanted to say and do
whatever they wanted to do. I could never do that, so I just kind of
went along with the system," he explained.
And he claims to have no lingering bitterness or animosity towards
anyone. "In this business, I really can't say anything bad about
anybody. I've
enjoyed 20 years of wrestling, loved everybody. I hope everybody liked
me too. It's hard to be out of the business, and you don't hear from a
lot of people. You know who your real good friends are. The people you
thought were your good friends aren't."
Darsow keeps in touch with a number of old friends, including Arn
Anderson, Brian Adams ("a super, super guy"), Barry Horowitz, David
Sierra, Bill Irwin, Brad Rheingans, Curt Hennig ("a lot Minnesota
guys").
If he's honest with himself, he can admit that he misses the wrestling.
But he especially misses his friends.
"You just don't spend that much time with all these people [without
missing them]," he said. "One day I was with Wayne Bloom, and we counted
50-some people who have died who have been very good friends of mine who
were in the business.
"Rick Rude, one of my best friends, talked to him the night before he
died. Brady Boone ... Dino Bravo..."
"Out of the 50-some people that we remembered, I think I wrestled every
one of them."
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