Paul ‘The Butcher’ Vachon Passes Away At The Age Of 86

Paul “The Butcher” Vachon has passed away at the age of 86. Pat LePrade announced on Friday that Vachon passed away on Thursday night.

Vachon was one of a number of members of the Vachon wrestling family that included his brother Maurice “Mad Dog” Vachon, his sister Vivian, and his adopted daughter Luna Vachon.

For the last number of years, he lived in a retirement home just over the Quebec-Vermont border, with his wife, Dee.

More recently, he had lost his voice and could not speak in more than a whisper.

Through the years, he had numerous ailments, including throat cancer.

Vachon was born on October 7, 1937, in Ville Emard, on a farm outside of Montreal, one of 12 children — he was the seventh born.

“Traditionally the French-Canadians were rural people, uneducated, so they did manual work,” Vachon once explained. “My father had the record for the one-arm lift when he was 19 years old. It was 190 pounds he could lift over his head with one arm.” Their father was a police officer.

His older brother, Maurice, was an accomplished amateur wrestler, and competed in the 1948 Olympic Games in London.

Maurice, eight years old, was Paul’s idol.

“At the time Maurice went to the 1948 Olympics, it thrilled me so much that he could leave the family farm to wrestle and travel around the world; I decided at nine or ten years of age that I was going to be a wrestler and travel, too,” said Vachon. “In 1948, we only had a battery-powered radio on the farm. When Maurice was wrestling in the Olympics, the battery died. We had to walk to the general store in town and listen to their radio for the match results. It was exciting to hear my brother’s results from so far away.”

Following in Maurice’s footsteps, Paul trained as an amateur and competed in the Canadian championships. The Tragos/Thesz Hall of Fame in Waterloo, Iowa, recognized Vachon’s accomplishments as an amateur with induction in 2010.

Bulking up from 190 pounds to 240, Paul turned pro.

From there, it’s a blur.

Butcher Vachon was one of the true world travelers in pro wrestling history. In fact, he once said, “My priority was to travel.” In 1961, Maurice backed out of a tour of Australia for promoter Dick Raines, but his brother took his place. They didn’t see each other again for seven years.

“The contract I signed called for me to be in Australia for two months in 1961,” recalled Paul. “I came back in 1966. From Australia, I went to New Zealand, Pakistan, India, Africa, and Asia. I really enjoyed my stay. During that time span, I wrestled in 33 different countries.”

Paul actually debuted in Northern Ontario.

“For me, it’s great memories, because I had my first and second professional matches there. I had gone up there with my brother. I was only 17 years old. I got to work with Dory Funk Sr. in my first match, and someone else in North Bay. What was cool about it was, of course, the beautiful country around there. Lake Nippissing, that’s where the wrestling office was, owned then by Larry Kasaboski. It was called then a junior heavyweight territory, smaller guys,” Paul recalled. “My brother brought me there just on the off chance that they might break me in.”

Right from the start, there was action. “My first match in North Bay, I got thrown out of the ring. I was getting back in the ring. Somebody had torn a 2×4 off of the ice rink and hit me over the head with a 2×4. It was just a fan. Mad Dog said, ‘How did that feel? If you can take that, you can take anything in this business. It’ll teach you. Never turn your back on the fans.’”

Another early territory on his own was around Detroit-Windsor, where Paul was known as Nikita Zolotoff. (Elsewhere, he was sometimes Nikolai Zolotoff, and various other spellings.) “He told me it was a Bert Ruby creation. Ruby was a Hungarian Jew and just as Paul arrived in Detroit the Hungarian Revolution started. It only lasted a few days but Bert was enraged at the Russians. Decided to make a Communist Russian heel to get booed at. He made Paul shave his head,” said Windsor historian Jamie Greer. “Maurice told him to go train with Ruby because he’d helped Maurice get his proper training. Maurice was here very early under a mask.”

But it’s as a tag team, especially in the AWA, that the Vachon brothers became well known, and in The Pro Wrestling Hall of Fame: The Tag Teams, the Vachons are ranked in the Top 25 teams of all time.

Paul and Mad Dog Vachon

Paul and Mad Dog Vachon

It just seemed right when they teamed together, whether it was their successful runs in Calgary, Texas, Georgia or their two-year-long run as AWA tag champs. “We were like a hand and a glove. It was such a natural,” said Mad Dog. “We looked so much alike, even though he was so much bigger than me.” (The Dog is 5-foot-7, Butcher 6-foot-4.)

Butcher found that his brother was protective and wanted to be the ring general. “Once the pecking order was established, we never had any problems. In tag matches, he depended on me,” Butcher said.

Their opponents often saw them as amusing—but violent—battling brothers. “They cussed each other in French,” laughed Bill Watts. “Mad Dog would be on Paul’s case. It used to be so funny. Paul would be madder than hell at Mad Dog. They’d be cussing and I wouldn’t know what the hell they were saying!”

So many memories, said Butcher. “Yeah, that’s true. That means that nobody else but us knew what the hell we were talking about,” he said. “The thing is with Mad Dog, when you’re in a tag match and you call to communicate with each other, it’s hard because of the crowd noises and everything. It always is. With Mad Dog, it was difficult because he couldn’t whisper because of his throat injury. … So we would up shouting at one another so we could hear one another.”

When it was time for Paul to come home from Europe, Maurice reintroduced him to North American promoters. Butcher was in Kansas City when he got the invite to come to Georgia to work as a singles star. He established himself quickly, and booker Leo Garibaldi asked about having another Vachon in the territory to battle the incoming Torres Brothers. Enter Stan Vachon, a Newfoundlander named Eric Pomeroy, who learned wrestling in Toronto and had been working as Stan Pulaski, the Mad Russian.

“We wrestled as brothers for a long time. As a matter of fact, I feel that he is my brother. We wrestled for so long, and became such good friends that I feel that way about Paul,” Pomeroy said. This new Vachon duo dominated Georgia from 1966 to 1968, claiming the NWA Southern tag belts, the NWA Georgia belts and the Georgia version of the NWA World tag titles.

Mad Dog was brought in on occasion to help his brothers. “We had a run with the Torres Brothers, and they called it the Battle of the Century in Atlanta,” Mad Dog said. “There were so many people, it took me an hour to get into the building. Thousands and thousands of people. People with hundred dollar bills. ‘Hey Butcher, can you let me in?’ I couldn’t get in myself.”

When the Georgia run ended, the true brothers started teaming again, both in the ring and in business. In 1971, they partnered with Yvon Robert Jr. and a few other investors to start up Grand Prix Wrestling in Montreal, in competition to Johnny Rougeau‘s established promotion.

But it is the Vachons’ AWA World tag run from 1969-71 that established their credentials that earned them entry into the Pro Wrestling Hall of Fame in Schenectady, NY in 2004. “We made a lot of money with them around Minneapolis. Made a lot of money and drew a lot of big houses,” recalled Billy Red Lyons, who teamed with Red Bastien and others against the Vachons.

For all the wrestling, Paul Vachon is also remembered as the promoter of Grand Prix Wrestling in Montreal, beginning in 1972, where he and Maurice each owned 20%, and the other owners were Yvon Robert Sr., Lucien Gregoire, and an old promoter Jerry LeGault. The shares and partners changed through the years, but Paul was the front and center promoter.

It was the legendary Robert who suggested the Vachons promote, and he wanted to give his son, Yvon Robert Jr., a place to wrestle. Eventually Robert Jr. paired with Edouard Carpentier to buy out the Vachons.

“They came up with the money. They gave Mad Dog and I each $50,000. Our investment had been $4,000 a piece. I just put a number on it. They said, ‘How much do you want for your end?’ I said, ‘I want out and my brother wants out.’ They said, ‘How much do you want?’ I said, ‘Fifty thousand a piece.’ They said okay. And they found the money, gave it to us, and they lost it all,” recalled Butcher, who briefly promoted under the Celebrity Wrestling banner after.

Much of the money was invested in a television production company; “That’s really what sunk us, because I really didn’t know what I was doing,” he said.

Grand Prix is looked upon fondly, with shows in both French and English and wide distribution (including in France). “I was happy for the success we did have. It was short-lived. It was one of the most successful wrestling promotions ever up until then.”

Butcher Vachon headlocks Bruno Sammartino during a WWWF match. Photo by John Arezzi

Paul Vachon’s career in-ring petered out in 1986, his final few years marred by job duty in the expanding WWF.

Post-wrestling, he travelled to fairs and wrestling shows peddling memorabilia and therapeutic magnets.

He also self-published his memoirs, first as three separate books, and then in a tighter-edited single volume.

He and his wife, Dee, settled in a retirement home in Mansonville, on the border between Quebec and Vermont. Butcher was happy to play shuffleboard, or go on trips organized by the facility. Every Christmas, he would dress up as Santa Claus — even during the pandemic when he had to perform virtually.

The aches and pains from wrestling, compounded with cancer and heart issues, slowed Butcher down to the point he needed a walker to get around. His voice faded and finally left him with little more than a whisper.

Still, he always looked ahead.

He and Dee had plans for this weekend to head to Montreal to visit with Paul Leduc. Instead, he passed away on the evening of February 29, 2024.

Paul Vachon was proud of all of his family.

He was married twice and fathered seven children.

His sister, Diane, became the wrestling star Vivian Vachon (and Paul was her godfather, given their 13-year difference in age). His stepdaughter, Gertrude, became the unforgettable Luna Vachon. In his final on-the-record conversation with this writer, he lamented that he was the last of the family left, after the death of Guy Vachon. Guy was the only one in the whole family that went higher than high school. “He worked nights to become a civil engineer. He’s built things all over the world, including the big celestial telescope in Hawaii and everything. He’s the smartest guy,” raved Paul.

In that same conversation, Butcher summed up his life: “I enjoyed what I did.”

Vachon held a number of Tag Team Championships with his brother Maurice, including the Stampede International Tag Team Championships and Calgary Canadian Tag Team Championships in Stampede Wrestling. He and Maurice also won the NWA World Tag Team Championships in 1967. Paul would later team with his storyline brother Stan Vachon to win the titles again in 1968.

Sources: eWn and SlamWrestling

Rey Mysterio Returns To WWE On SmackDown

Rey Mysterio has returned to WWE following knee surgery.

During this week’s episode of WWE SmackDown, Mysterio made his return during Santos Escobar’s Street Fight match against Carlito.

As Escobar got the upper hand in the match, Mysterio came out to the ring on crutches. Mysterio wound up throwing down the crutches and took out Angel and Humberto Carrillo. This allowed Carlito to get the win over a distracted Escobar following a Backstabber, a 619 from Mysterio and then a slam through a table.

Prior to Friday night, Mysterio hadn’t been seen since the November 10th, 2023 episode of WWE SmackDown.

Source: eWn

Fox Blacks Out WWE SmackDown Bloodline Segment In Reported Effort To Avoid Crowd Sign

The Bloodline were once again the focal point of “WWE SmackDown” this week, as The Rock declined Cody Rhodes’ recent challenge for a match at WrestleMania. Instead, Rock thought it would be a better idea to have himself and Roman Reigns face Rhodes and Seth Rollins in a tag team match as one of WrestleMania 40’s main events. “The Great One” has been playing up his heelish antics as of late, so much so that Fox had to work around the crowd who weren’t happy to see Rock on “SmackDown.”

PWInsider reports that the random blackouts fans in the United States kept experiencing on the March 1 “Smackdown” wasn’t a technical problem, but was Fox themselves trying to censor a sign in the crowd that read “Die Rocky Die.” The fans also chanted “Die Rocky Die” at the former WWE Champion, causing the crowd to be dubbed over, and in some cases, completely muted due to the hostility of the chant.

The “Die Rocky Die” chant became infamous not too long after Rock’s 1996 WWE debut, as the fans didn’t respond well to the bland Rocky Maivia character being forced upon them. The chant would eventually lead to Dwayne Johnson shedding his babyface persona of Rocky Maivia and evolving into The Rock. He would join The Nation of Domination in 1997 to revolt against the WWE fans who booed him, deciding to forge his own path of not caring about anyone but himself. However, his natural charisma and attitude proved too much for the fans to remain against, and his entertaining villainy launched him into WWE’s main event scene and eventually becoming one of the most popular stars of all time.

Source: Wrestling Inc.

The Rock Acknowledges Roman Reigns, Lays Out WrestleMania Challenge On WWE SmackDown

Cody Rhodes, World Heavyweight Champion Seth Rollins, and Undisputed WWE Universal Champion Roman Reigns may be pulling double duty WrestleMania 40 weekend, following Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson issuing a challenge with set stipulations during the opening of Friday’s “WWE SmackDown.” The Rock also acknowledged his cousin, Reigns, as his Tribal Chief during the segment after Reigns interrupted Rock’s iconic “if you smell” catchphrase.

Rhodes had previously challenged the Rock to a one-on-one match during “The Grayson Waller Effect” at Elimination Chamber. Rollins did him one better and said he would team with Rhodes to take on the Rock and Reigns. On “SmackDown,” Rock said he wouldn’t be facing Rhodes one-on-one because everyone wants to challenge “The Great One.” He did challenge both Rhodes and Rollins to the tag team match the World Heavyweight Champion previously suggested at the premium live event, but with added stipulations.

Rock said that if Rhodes and Rollins win on WrestleMania Night One, the Bloodline would be barred from ringside during Rhodes’ match for Reigns’ title on Night Two. However, if the babyface team loses, Rock said the title match would be a “Bloodline Rules” match where anything goes. Rock said he was giving Rhodes the option to accept the challenge, but if he doesn’t, he said he is going to make sure Rhodes does not win the title.

There’s currently no word on if Rollins and Rhodes will acknowledge the challenge on “WWE Raw” on Monday, but Rhodes is scheduled to appear on the next three episodes of “SmackDown” alongside the Rock on the “Road to WrestleMania.”

Source: Wrestling Inc.

WWE SmackDown Preview 3/1/2024

WWE SmackDown will air live tonight on FOX from the sold out Desert Diamond Arena in Glendale, Arizona.

  • Fallout from Elimination Chamber
  • The Bloodline to appear with The Rock and Roman Reigns
  • Cody Rhodes to appear
  • Non-Title Match: Women’s Tag Team Champions The Kabuki Warriors ((Kairi Sane and Asuka) vs. Bayley and Dakota Kai
  • Street Fight: Santos Escobar vs. Carlito
  • I would expect LA Knight retaliate against AJ Styles for his assault on Knight at Elimination Chamber

Former WWE Star Billy Jack Haynes Arrested, Charged With Second Degree Murder

Earlier this month, news broke that former pro wrestler Billy Jack Haynes was arrested in Oregon in connection to the murder of his wife, but authorities were waiting to charge the former WWE star until he was released from the hospital for an unrelated matter.

According to CBS affiliate “KOIN,” Haynes has been released from the hospital and officially charged with second-degree murder. Haynes’s wife was murdered in a shooting on February 8 which led to a standoff between Haynes and authorities. Haynes was soon taken into custody and then hospitalized for an unrelated matter. Upon Haynes’s release, he was booked into Multnomah County Detention Center for charges of second-degree murder and unlawful use of a weapon.

Haynes’s contemporary WWE Hall of Fame Jake “The Snake” Roberts recently said that he wasn’t surprised by the arrest, as he always felt that Haynes was an unbalanced individual. Haynes retired from professional wrestling in 1996 and was one of the many wrestlers named in the massive class action lawsuit that was leveled against WWE in the 2000s regarding issues of the company’s negligence regarding the brain health of the wrestlers. The case was dismissed in 2016.

In 2018, Haynes admitted to witnessing the murders of three boys in rural Arkansas, an infamous case that has not been solved, which occurred in 1987, not long after Haynes had wrestled for WWE at WrestleMania III. Haynes said that he had been involved in drug trafficking at the time, which is why he was hesitant to come forward.

Source: Wrestling Inc.

Shawn Spears Returns To WWE On NXT, Backstage Update On His Return

A familiar face returned to “WWE NXT” on Tuesday night, albeit, with a new name from the last time he was in the promotion. 

Shawn Spears, formerly known in the company as “The Perfect 10” Tye Dillinger, made his return on the show after he left AEW at the end of 2023. Spears appeared after the phrase “Truth will ultimately prevail but there is pain bringing it to light” appeared on the video screens while Ridge Holland was in the ring addressing the fans. He appeared behind Holland and bashed him with a chair before pulling back his hood to reveal his identity.

Spears announced in December that his time with AEW had come to an end, due to an amicable split between him and the company. Prior to the announcement, he hadn’t been seen on TV since the Over Budget Charity Battle Royale during the pre-show for All Out. He had, however, according to Dave Meltzer, been portraying one of The Devil’s masked henchmen before his departure. Spears put out a statement thanking AEW for his five years of growth and development and said it was a personal choice for him. He took time to focus on life away from the ring, as he and his wife, Cassie Lee (the former Peyton Royce in WWE) announced they were expecting their second child.

Backstage Update On Shawn Spears’ WWE NXT Return

Fightful Select has some additional details on how the deal came together, including confirmation that he’s keeping the Spears moniker.

Most talent was unaware of Spears’ return and, during rehearsals for last night’s show, Shawn Michaels served the role that Spears would later fulfill. Additionally, Spears’ name was kept off rundowns of the show and he remained hidden backstage until the big moment.

The report cited AEW sources that said Spears asked for his release last year. Spears announced in December that he was leaving AEW following more than four years with the company after the veteran hadn’t been used since August. There were reports that he was one of the masked attackers in the “Devil” storyline from last year, but he never wound up being involved in the storyline. Spears was said to have signed with WWE before the “Three Faces” vignettes began airing in recent weeks.

Spears initially signed with WWE in 2006, spending a few years in the promotion’s developmental system. He later began making appearances on “ECW” but was released in 2009. Spears then returned to WWE in 2013, gaining some traction as the Dillinger character on “NXT” before getting lost in the shuffle on the main roster. After asking for his release, the company let Spears go in 2019, and he would later join AEW starting with the company’s inaugural pay-per-view.

In addition to his name, another aspect of the Spears character seems to have been carried over from his time in AEW: an affinity for steel chairs. Spears was known as “The Chairman” for some time in AEW, and he appropriately attacked Ridge Holland with one of the “foreign objects” upon his return.

Source: Wrestling Inc.

Former WWE Star Virgil (Michael Jones) Reportedly Dies Peacefully At Age 61

Former WWE star Michael Jones, known to fans as Virgil, has reportedly died at the age of 61. Wrestling referee Mark Charles III, known as THe Count, announced news of Jones’ death in a Facebook post.

“My dear friends, it is with great sorrow that I bring news from the Jones family of the passing of our beloved Michael Jones, whom we know and loved as Virgil, Vincent, Soul Train Jones and more,” the post reads. “Virgil passed peacefully at the hospital this morning and I ask that you pray for him and for his family. May his memory be eternal!”

Jones’ health had deteriorated over the years. In 2022, he suffered two strokes and was diagnosed with dementia. Earlier in the year, Jones had announced he’d been diagnosed with stage II colon cancer. Late last year, Jones set up a GoFundMe, seeking aid for minor expenses.

Born on June 13, 1962, in Wilkinsburg, Pennsylvania, Jones debuted in wrestling in 1985 under the name Soul Train Jones, primarily working for Jerry Jarrett’s Continental Wrestling Association in Tennessee. He would join WWE in 1986, first working under the name Lucius Brown, before being repackaged as Virgil, Ted Dibiase’s manservant, in the summer of 1987. The repackaging would launch Jones’ career and also begin the trend of him being named after other figures in wrestling, with him taking the Virgil moniker as a rib towards Dusty Rhodes, whose real name was Virgil Runnels.

Jones would serve as Dibiase’s servant for nearly four years before turning on him following a tag match against Dusty and Dustin Rhodes at the 1991 Royal Rumble. The duo would have a lengthy feud throughout the rest of 1991, with Jones arguably achieving his pinnacle at the 1991 SummerSlam, where he defeated Dibiase to win the Million Dollar Championship. Following the end of the feud, Jones was relegated down the card, and eventually left WWE in 1994, though he briefly worked live events for the promotion again in 1995.

After two years on the independent scene, Jones re-emerged in the national spotlight when he joined WCW in 1996 as a member of the nWo, reuniting with Dibiase and serving as the group’s bodyguard. Taking the name Vincent, a shot at WWE Chairman Vince McMahon, Jones generally served the role of the nWo’s jobber until the group’s initial incarnation dissolved in 1999. From there, Jones would have run with the West Texas Rednecks as Curly Bill, the bodyguard for Creative Control as Shane, a knock at Shane McMahon, and bodyguard for Ernest “The Cat” Miller as Mr. Jones, before departing WCW in late 2000.

Jones retired from wrestling after his WCW departure, though he continued to make occasional independent appearances, and even briefly returned to WWE as Virgil in 2010 to serve as Ted Dibiase Jr.’s bodyguard. In his later years, Jones became best known for his colorful personality on the convention circuit, leading to him being the subject of several memes. Jones’ last notable appearances in wrestling came for AEW in 2019 and 2020 under his original name, Soul Train Jones, where he aligned with Chris Jericho’s Inner Circle stable.

Source: Wrestling Inc.

WWE NXT Preview 2/27/2024

Here is the lineup for tonight’s episode of WWE NXT in Orlando, Florida at the Performance Center on the USA Network: 

  • NXT Champion Ilja Dragunov & Carmelo Hayes face-to-face
  • Heritage Cup Championship: Noam Dar (C) vs. member of No Quarter Catch Crew (Drew Gulak, Damon Kemp, Charlie Dempsey, or Myles Borne)
  • Luke Gallows & Karl Anderson vs. Andre Chase & Duke Hudson
  • Von Wagner vs. Lexis King
  • Kiana James vs. Kelani Jordan
  • Dijak vs. Luca Crusifino
  • Ridge Holland speaks

Ole Anderson, founding Member of The Four Horseman, Passed Away at Age 81

A founding member of The Four Horsemen and one of the biggest heels from the territory area of wrestling, Ole Anderson, has died. Ricky Morton shared the news of Anderson’s death via his Instagram account last night.

“Rest in Paradise, Ole Anderson,” Morton wrote. “You taught me so much in professional wrestling. You were tough as nails. You will be missed, my friend.”

During last night’s “WWE RAW,” Michael Cole acknowledged Anderson’s death on air before a graphic was shown. Anderson famously hated Vince McMahon (and vice versa) after he took over GCW in 1984.

Anderson, whose real name was Alan Robert Rogowski, was 81 years old. Following his wrestling career, Anderson worked as a booker for Georgia Championship Wrestling and Jim Crockett Promotions, notably beefing with Vince McMahon over the takeover of GCW in 1984. 

Eventually, Anderson would wind up as part of WCW’s executive team but kept to his word as far as McMahon goes, reportedly refusing to agree to participate in documentaries and WWE Hall of Fame presentations, still hanging on to the animosity stemming from McMahon’s territory takeover. 

Anderson’s spot as an original Horseman next to Ric Flair, Tully Blanchard, and Arn Anderson, managed by J.J. Dillon, was ultimately ceded to Lex Luger in 1987. He was also part of the Minnesota Wrecking Crew, alongside his kayfabe brother Gene Anderson, replacing Lars Anderson (also not related) in the group upon his departure from the territory. In 2007, it was reported that Anderson had been diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis although there is no word as of yet as to an exact cause of death.

At the same time, WWE posted about Anderson’s death, as did AEW and NWA.

AEW and the wrestling world mourn the passing of the legendary Ole Anderson. Our thoughts are with his family, his friends and his fans.

Fellow Horsemen, Ric Flair said that he was “forever grateful for giving me the opportunity to become who I am today.” Veteran journalist Dave Melzter commented on the impact of Anderson on the pro wrestling industry.

Sorry to hear about the death of Ole Anderson. One of the major characters in pro wrestling of the 70s and 80s. Excellent talker and great heel.

Source: Wrestling Inc.