These courageous pro wrestlers sacrificed their lives for the sake of others, even when it meant putting their own lives in danger.
"I think of a hero as someone who understands the degree of responsibility that comes with his freedom."
โ Bob Dylan
1. Harry Smith, aka Davey Boy Smith Jr. Saves a Woman’s Life
Harry Smith, known in the ring as Davey Boy Smith Jr., is a third-generation wrestler. He has the legacy of his father and grandfather to live up to in the ring.
Many know that after training under his family members, the Harts, Smith developed his craft with WWE alongside his cousin Natalya and friend Tyson Kidd. After competing in WWE from 2006-2011, Smith left for Japan, establishing a name for himself while reinventing the type of competitor he was.
One never knows when they might be faced with a scenario where their will and character will be tested in a life-and-death situation. Well, Smith can also add hero to his list of accolades.
He described an event on Facebook, which was also confirmed by Global News in his native Calgary, and that lands him on our wrestling heroes list.
While merely driving somewhere, Smith saw a woman hanging off a bridge while someone was attempting to talk to her. It was at this time Smith did both a noble and brave thing.
He pulled over and approached the woman on the bridge. As he began to try to speak to her, the young woman threatened to jump. Smith carefully approached her and knew he would have to talk her out of this harrowing predicament calmly.
"With people on the ground waving her not to jump," Smith described, "I decided to grab hold of her and not take any chances. She started to slide, and I grabbed hold of her. Luckily with my years of grappling and self-defense, I knew how to grab her HARD and how to pull her up from hanging off and jumping."
It didnโt matter who he was or what he had achieved in the ring. The focal point of Smithโs attention was this woman, who appeared to be in dire straits. She had put her own life in jeopardy.
As soon as Smith had her safely out of harmโs way, he waited until local authorities were available to ensure that she was taken to a medical facility to assess her. Of course, before he could do any of this, he also needed to ensure that his safety wasnโt in jeopardy.
Smith continued, "She was crying and said she just wanted a hug. But as much as I wanted to hug her, I told her I couldnโt hug her because she said she had a [firearm]. โMiss, youโre not going to move unless I want you to. Iโm an expert grappler, and your [sic] not going to shoot me. We will get you help; life is a precious thing, and Iโm here to help you.โ"
The entire incident was utterly surreal, and the son of the late British Bulldog Davey Boy Smith was willing to put his health and welfare in jeopardy to save this desperate woman. The selfless act generated a great deal of publicity, not only because of whom he is professionally, but because of his selfless act of courage to help de-escalate the situation with this woman in distress.
It was an act his whole family could be proud of. And he wasnโt looking for accolades or thanks; he just showed just how good of a person he is.
"I am really happy with all the messages Iโve gotten even from total strangers who had a friend that took their life similar to the girl I saved yesterday. For me saving someoneโs life is the greatest accomplishment Iโve ever made and meant more than winning any championships in Wrestling."
His courageous and heroic act wasnโt done to garner more significant publicity for his brand, but rather in hopes a stranger would come to realize that there is more to life, that their life has value and their life has worth. Help is always within reach, and a voice is always there. This wrestling heroโs act of bravery will never be forgotten.
"One of the most important things a person can be is of some use."
โ Perry Saturn via Twitter, July 2013
2. Perry Saturn and His Brave Act of Heroism
At times, heroism isnโt without its share of risk. Doing the right thing can involve some sense of sacrifice, whether itโs a physical or emotional risk. The hero doesnโt just put themselves in harmโs way; they run the likelihood that they will never be the same afterward.
Here is another story about an unlikely hero that didnโt make a conscious effort to garner acclaim but made a life and death choice at a particular moment in time.
Former ECW, WCW, and WWE performer Perry Saturn had retired from the ring. He was always known for his fantastic wrestling ability, including a wide array of suplexes.
Many will recall that Saturn was among the last men to switch from WCW to WWE before WWE purchased their competitor. He worked alongside the Radicalz, Chris Benoit, Eddie Guerrero, and Dean Malenko. His heroic acts illustrate that he is willing to take a risk and swim in unchartered waters, much like what lay ahead of him.
Before becoming a professional wrestler, Saturn was a United States Army Ranger, an indicator of his level of bravery, and that giving back to his country was essential to him. This, however, isnโt where the display of heroism we are talking about occurred.
In April 2004, Saturn took his girlfriend to work when he saw something taking place that had alarmed him. He witnessed two men attempting to force themselves upon a woman, so he approached the scene to protect her.
In the process of saving her, he was shot with a firearm in the back of the neck and shoulder. He initially believed it was a punch at the back of his head by one of the men as he was fighting off the assailants. The attackers then fled the scene, leaving Saturn bleeding as a result of the assault.
The risk he took did see him prevent what could have been a nearly fatal result for the woman, but the aftereffects did contribute to a rather difficult period in Saturnโs life.
To cope with the pain that came with the injury sustained, Saturn sought pain relief and became addicted to methamphetamine. He lost his home, was said to be missing for many years, and many of his friends could not locate him.
It wasnโt until 2010 when Saturn got himself clean of his addictions.
Saturnโs actions werenโt met with the same level of praise as others, but the result was years of suffering at the hands of addiction. However, in doing what he did, he showed that all it takes is one moment to make a difference in someoneโs life.
He showed this woman great compassion as he risks his life and his own personal safety. His selfless act, much like that of Harry Smith, was not just to be a bystander and allow something to happen. Saturnโs actions were not in vain and should be celebrated.
Without any need for attention or fanfare, Saturn put his life before that of the woman in distress and demonstrated great courage. There is no way we couldnโt have him as one of our wrestling heroes.
In a Twitter post dating from July 2013, Saturn wrote, "We must accept finite disappointment, but never lose infinite hope."
Saturnโs quote above represents how he has continued to show perseverance after all he has endured.ย He said this three years after he was believed to be missing.
3. Chris Masters Rescues His Mother from House Fire
While stories told of heroism can be filled with triumphs or tragedies, they can also describe a moment of superhuman strength to help another. This was the case for former WWE superstar Chris Mordetzky, then known as โThe Masterpieceโ Chris Masters.
In 2013, Mordetzky demonstrated superhuman strength when his mother and a neighbor were locked in Mrs. Mordetzkyโs home, a nearly tragic incident that occurred because the neighbor deliberately trapped them in the home while it burned down.
After contacting the local authorities to come to the house, Chris took a tree, uprooted it from the ground, and used it to break a window, causing smoke to be released. He did this to save his mother from potential death.
"[The police] broke the window with their club, and I took the hose and shoved it right in the hole where the fire was,” Mordetzky described in a January 2017 interview with Pro Wrestling Post.
"Then I came around the other side, and they were still trying to get this door down, but the guy had it barricaded. So, they finally got it down, and then smoke just came burrowing out, so all the cops couldnโt even advance.
"They started selling backward, and thatโs the moment when adrenaline completely took over, and I realized that my mom could realistically die right then and there. Itโs one thing, youโre thinking, โThe fire!โ but then once you think [about] all the smoke, you realize the smoke would kill her before the fire ever gets to her. Sheโll die of smoke inhalation [unless I do something]."
Mordetzky continued, "I grabbed her, scooped her out, and pulled her away from the whole scene, and got a couple of licks in on the asshole who did it. Thank God my momโs alive. I didnโt set out to be a hero, but I appreciate everybody giving me such positive feedback from that and just all of it. Being on Good Morning America the day after that was pretty cool. Bottom-line, I made sure she came out of there alive."
Mordetzky is still asked about this to this day, as the fear of losing his mother caused a rush of adrenaline that enabled him to do something he would not have thought he could do.
This wasnโt a stranger he had come into contact with or even a close friend that he went to the aid of. It was a son doing all he could to ensure that his mother came out of this situation alive.
By his admission, while he didnโt set out to be a wrestling hero, what he did was overcome adversity to ensure that his mother would live. While the headlines read that a wrestler saved his mother by lifting a reported 10-foot tree from its roots, making it seems like a feat by Superman, it was merely a son risking injury to himself to ensure his motherโs life wasnโt in jeopardy.
"It was the best move I ever did."
– Bam Bam Bigelow
4. Bam Bam Bigelow Rescues 3 Children from Fire
In looking at stories told of wrestling heroes who risked their safety to ensure the lives of others werenโt lost, there is another one that comes to mind: of someone who lived with second-degree burns to 40% of his body after coming to the aid of children.
In the Summer of 2000, Bam Bam Bigelow rescued three children from a brush fire near his home in Florida.
Here is what happened,ย in Bigelowโs own words, from a 2007 interview with Electric City:
"I was coming home from Japan on an ECW trip. It was about 3:30 a.m., and I was turning onto my block when I realized there was a fire. I heard kids crying, and I went through the door, and the whole upstairs was on fire. I had to run through a wall in the house.
"I ran through a built wall — two-by-fours and everything — so I could get to the back way to get up the stairs. I landed right in a ball of fire. It was the best move I made.
"When I finally made it upstairs, I grabbed the three kids and came back through the same fire, and now I was on fire. By the time I came down, the front stairs were down, so we would have died if we went that way.
"The mom had been out drinking and left the kids alone. She was a single mother. The kids were five, eight, and nine. They started a fire somehow. I did what anybody would have tried to do. I burned 40 percent of my body with second-degree burns and spent almost two months in the hospital."
The burns he lived with for the rest of his life werenโt his ultimate concern. His act cost him a few months of in-ring action, but he knew that it was far more important when lives were at stake. This wrestling hero prevented parents from losing their most prized possession, their children.
On January 19th, 2007, nearly seven years after his heroic act, Bigelow passed away only a few months after wrestling his last match in the fall of 2006. Bigelow put a value on the lives of the three children above his own. He made a decision, thinking little of the risks, as saving the children became a necessity.
Through each of the stories shared here on these wrestling heroes, a commonality appears as a selfless act of significance. In the case of Perry Saturn, it took several years to recover from the effects of the assault, and an addiction emerged as a result of coping with the injuries sustained during his heroic act.
In the case of Bam Bam Bigelow, he wore his burns as a badge of honor until he passed away in 2007. Whether it was a case of saving a stranger or saving your own flesh and blood, these selfless acts speak volumes about each of these athletes.
5. Shad Gaspard – A Hero’s Last Act to Save His Son
In 2020, Shad Gaspard died a hero. He was 39 years old.
He was taken under by a rip current on May 17th, 2020, in Venice Beach, California, after motioning for the rescue team first to save his 10-year-old son, who was also in the waters.
Pro Wrestling Stories contributor Joel Eisenberg, a long-time friend of Shad Gaspard, poignantly wrote of his friend’s passing:
“Through all the professional obstacles, Shad had the greatest attitude in the world.
“‘You know me,’ heโd say. ‘Iโm chill. When it happens, it happens.’ He would follow the comment with his usual manic Gaspard laugh.
“Shad would do anything for those he loved.
“When my brother, Mike, had his 50th birthday party in Los Angeles a few years back, I picked up the phone.
“He came early.
“Shad loved his boy and was an amazing father. He took great pride in training and teaching his son and always being there for him. He took immense honor in raising his child to be proud of the family heritage, and just as much in him becoming a role model for future generations.
“He loved his wife, who he spoke of frequently. Family was every last thing for Shad Gaspard.”
In each of these incidents, none of these wrestlers recognized themselves as being heroes. They believed that what they were doing was the right thing to do. If they didnโt step in, the consequences could have been catastrophic for those involved, as well as their friends and loved ones. They werenโt asked to be wrestling heroes; they embraced it when presented with the opportunity of doing the right thing.
These stories may also interest you:
- Charles Robinson โ WWEโs Unsung Hero in Black and White
- Sputnik Monroe | The Rebel Who Changed The Status Quo in Memphis
- Asuka and Her Surprising Life Outside of Wrestling
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