Post by Havoc on Mar 15, 2022 0:13:19 GMT -5
Real Name: //unknown// Ring Name: Havoc Nicknames: The Wanderer, The Man Called Havoc, Worldwide Shooter Hometown: Roswell, Georgia Height: 6’ 1” Weight: 201 lbs. Alignment: tweener In-Ring Style: technical Pic Base: Switchblade Jay White Attire: black grunge pants with slash marks; weathered leather jacket to the ring Theme Song: “Ruthless” by Nonpoint Entrance: //soon// Favorite Moves: Boston crab, crossface, dropkick, top-rope dropkick, knife edge chop, lariat, spinning back fist, multiple suplex variations, running death valley driver, running European uppercut, uranage, diving crossbody, various forms of joint manipulation, float-over DDT, lariat, overhead kick, shotgun dropkick, slingblade, spinning headlock elbow drop, suicide somersault senton, jumping corkscrew roundhouse kick, airplane spin into TKO Signature Move: Coastal Slam (swinging reverse STO), diving double foot stomp, high-angle Fujiwara armbar Finisher: DNGR DRVR (outside leghook fisherman driver), DNGR DDT (lifting single underhook DDT) BIOGRAPHY: The man called Havoc was raised by his Waffle House waitress mom in Roswell, Georgia, a short drive from The A. His dad was a trucker who skipped town quicker than the President’s coloring book when the press shows up. Little is known about his upbringing other than it sucked and he did some dumb shit. His juvenile record was sealed by the courts but what happened after was… some fucked up shit. Not long after dude turned eighteen, he and his boys got charged with burglary second degree with a firearm. After spending two years and some change at Coastal State Prison, he had enough of that shit and snitched on some worse motherfuckers to earn his freedom. Out and about… the ex-con headed to the ATL to make it big… doing anything really. It was hard to find a decent job because of his record… so he made some decent scratch in a shady fight club. It wasn’t long before some carny asshole took notice and convinced him to train in the “art of professional wrestling”. He made his debut in October 2013 against his so-called trainer… and he busted that motherfucker’s jaw when dude tried taking liberties on the man called Havoc. Dirt sheets picked it up and he became a sought-after shooter all over the south. Within his first year in the business, he racked up a bunch of title wins. Word traveled and he got his first big break in October 2014 when a promoter in New York City booked him against one of the top stars from Japan… Shigehiro Akuma. Akuma was so impressed with the man called Havoc that he convinced officials at his home promotion to bring him to train at their dojo. He traveled December 2014 overseas to continue his training, under Akuma’s tutelage at the FIGHT-1 Dojo. Over the next three years, he worked steadily for FIGHT-1 in their junior heavyweight and junior heavyweight tag team divisions. During a lengthy excursion to England where he worked primarily for the extension of FIGHT-1 called Fight Union, he put on some size and broadened his horizon as a heavyweight fighter. Once he made his return to Japan as the leader of the mostly gaijin group called DNGR, he surprised the world by winning their United States Championship from a previously undefeated opponent in January 2018. He spent close to six month as champion before losing it back to the former champion. The next six months were spent mostly in tag team matches with his DNGR stablemates until he won a round robin tournament in the fall, which set him on a path to win the F1 World Heavyweight Championship in February 2019. Not only was he the youngest to hold the championship at the age of 26, but he was also the first gaijin in the company’s history to hold the top prize. This did not last long as he lost the championship two months later at a cross-promoted supershow in New York City. Never deterred from amassing an impressive resume, he worked tirelessly and claimed the F1 Intercontinental Championship just five months later. That reign lasted only four months, ending in January 2020. Just as he began to build momentum once again, a global pandemic derailed his career and left him stranded in the country that had become his home. By June 2020, F1 was able to resume operations, albeit small-scale studio tapings for their world-wide streaming platform. The man called Havoc was one of the few gaijins to remain with the promotion, and his dedication was rewarded in October 2020 when he won the F1 Openweight Championship. He defended against both heavyweight and junior heavyweight contenders for a full calendar year before his future became unclear. The promotion had been bought out by a team of investors who wanted to take F1 back to a more traditional time (i.e. no gaijins). He negotiated a hefty sum to buy out his contract, and he traveled back to the states in October 2021, right after his twenty-ninth birthday. Imagine that. A gaijin who held all eight of a company’s championships was sent back to his homeland that was more foreign to him than anything. Ain’t that some shit? Part of his severance from the company was keeping the F1 Openweight Championship in his possession to control how he saw fit. Once he returned to the states, he hit the pavement and got booked all over the damn place. The man called Havoc slimmed down a bit and continued to adapt his style to the new world he was calling his own. He roamed all over the states until March 2022 when the top promotion on the damn planet slid into his DMs to recruit him. That’s right. Action Wrestling has signed the man called Havoc. ACCOMPLISHMENTS: > F1 Junior Heavyweight Champion > F1 Junior Heavyweight Tag Team Champion (2x w/Midori Senshi) > F1 Intercontinental Champion > F1 Openweight Champion *current* > F1 Six Man Tag Team Champion (w/Shigehiro Akuma and Midori Senshi) > F1 Tag Team Champion (w/Shigehero Akuma) > F1 United States Champion > F1 World Heavyweight Champion > FWA Florida Tag Team Champion (w/Dirtbag Darren) > FWA Hardcore Champion (5x) > FU British Heavyweight Champion > FU U30 Champion > GCW Heavyweight Champion > MAWF Junior Heavyweight Champion (2x) > MAWF Tag Team Champion (w/Dirtbag Darren) > MAWF Television Champion > PWX Heritage Champion > PWX X Champion (2x) |