Harley Race

Harley Race

Harley Race

Race in 2007
Birth name Harley Leland Race
Born April 11, 1943
Quitman, Missouri, U.S.
Died August 1, 2019 (aged 76)
St. Charles, Missouri, U.S.
Cause of death Lung cancer
Spouse(s)
  • Vivian Jones

    (m. 1960; died 1960)

  • Sandra Jones

    (m. 1960div. 1961)

  • Evon Race

    (m. 1962; div. 1993)

  • Beverly Race

    (m. 1995; died 2009)

Children 2
Professional wrestling career
Ring name(s) The Great Mortimer[1]
Harley Race[1]
Jack Long[1]
The King[1]
Handsome Harley Race[1]
King Harley Race
Billed height 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)[2]
Billed weight 253 lb (115 kg)[2]
Billed from Kansas City, Missouri, U.S.
Trained by Buddy Austin[1]
Ray Hrstich[1]
Stanislaus Zbyszko
Wladek Zbyszko
Debut 1959[1]
Retired December 1990

Harley Leland Race (April 11, 1943 – August 1, 2019) was an American professional wrestlerpromoter, and trainer.[1]

Race wrestled in the National Wrestling Alliance (NWA), the American Wrestling Association (AWA), the World Wrestling Federation (WWF, now WWE), and World Championship Wrestling (WCW). He was an eight time world champion, having won the WWA World Heavyweight Championship once and the NWA World Heavyweight Championship seven times and was the first NWA United States Heavyweight Champion (now WWE United States Championship).

Race is one of six men to have been inducted into each of the WWE Hall of Fame, the NWA Hall of Fame, the WCW Hall of Fame, the Professional Wrestling Hall of Fame and the Wrestling Observer Newsletter Hall of Fame. He is widely considered as one of the greatest professional wrestlers of all time.

Early life[edit | edit source]

Race was born in Quitman, Missouri, on April 11, 1943.[1][3] Race was an early fan of professional wrestling, watching programming from the nearby Chicago territory on the DuMont Television Network. After overcoming polio as a child,[4] he began training as a professional wrestler as a teen under former world champions Stanislaus and Wladek Zbyszko, who operated a farm in his native Missouri. While in high school, an altercation with a classmate led to the principal kneeing Race in the back of the head as he tried to break up the fight.[3] Enraged, Race attacked him, resulting in his expulsion. Already 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m) and 225 lb (102 kg), Race decided to get his start in professional wrestling. Race then became the driver of Happy Humphrey who was too large to drive at the time.[3]

Professional wrestling career[edit | edit source]

Early career (1959–1965)[edit | edit source]

Race was recruited by St. Joseph wrestling promoter Gust Karras who hired Race to do odd jobs for his promotion, including chauffeuring the 800 lb (360 kg) Happy Humphrey. Eventually, Race started wrestling on some of his shows and some of Karras’ veteran wrestlers helped further Race’s training. At the age of 18, he moved to Nashville and began wrestling under the ring name of Jack Long, forming a tag team with storyline brother John Long. The duo quickly captured the Southern Tag Team Championship. Race was seen as a rising star in the business until a car accident put him out of action, with his leg nearly being amputated. His pregnant wife, Vivian Louise Jones, died instantly; they had been married just over a month. Karras heard about his employee’s condition, went rushing into the hospital, and blocked the planned amputation, declaring it “over my dead body”. In doing so, he saved Race’s leg. Although he recovered, doctors told Race that he might never walk again, and his wrestling career was over. Undaunted, Race endured grueling physical therapy for several months and made a full recovery. Race next went on to work for Jack Pfefer and Tony Santos in the Boston territory as the Great Mortimer in 1963.

He returned to the ring in 1964, wrestling for Dory Funk‘s Amarillo, Texas, territory. This time, he wrestled as Harley Race, after his father told him that he should not work to make anyone else’s name famous. Race never again used a different ring name. In Amarillo, Race met fellow up-and-coming wrestler Larry Hennig (later Larry “the Axe” Hennig and father of “Mr. Perfect” Curt Hennig). The two formed a tag team and moved to the American Wrestling Association (AWA).

American Wrestling Association (1963–1971, 1984–1986, 1990)[edit | edit source]

“Handsome” Harley Race

In the AWA, Race and Hennig branded themselves as “Handsome” Harley Race (which was actually a moniker given to him by fans in Japan[3]) and “Pretty Boy” Larry Hennig, portraying a cocky heel (villain) tag team with a penchant for breaking the rules to win matches. They quickly became top contenders, and in January 1965, they defeated Dick the Bruiser and the Crusher in the sold-out Minneapolis Auditorium to win the AWA World Tag Team Championship. Clips from the match aired on WCCO TV.[5]

Two weeks after winning the titles, Race was involved in an altercation at The Chestnut Tree, a restaurant in Minneapolis, Minnesota. After Race confronted a man who was harassing a woman in the restaurant, knocking him unconscious, the man’s friend, John Morton, stabbed Race in the back. Race was hospitalized and Morton was arrested.[5][6]

Race and Hennig were designated to feud with the Bruiser and Crusher and other top teams for the next several years, and were given three title reigns. Verne Gagne, in particular, was promoted as a hated rival of the team, partnering with several other wrestlers in matches, against Race and Hennig during their AWA run. In October 1967, Gagne was credited with “breaking” one of Hennig’s legs, thus giving him some much needed time off from the ring. Race (as the storyline went) was allowed to choose a new partner and retain the AWA World Tag Team Championship. Race’s choice was Chris Markoff, but the duo was defeated in their first title defense match against the team of Pat O’Connor and Wilbur Snyder in November 1967. For the next several months, Race teamed with Hard Boiled Haggerty (Don Stansauk) who over the years presented Gagne with some of his greatest matches. Together, Race and Haggerty often were cast against Gagne and “Cowboy” Bill Watts. In March 1968, after Hennig’s return to the ring, he and Race were back together, though the two never again won the AWA World Tag Team Championship. Despite his tag team success, Race left the AWA after several years at the top of the division to pursue a singles career in the National Wrestling Alliance (NWA).

Race returned to the AWA in 1984 to wrestle Curt Hennig. The confrontation was fueled by Larry Hennig confronting his former tag team partner at the end of the match. Race also wrestled former AWA World Heavyweight Champion Rick Martel as part of WrestleRock in April 1986. Toward the end of his in-ring career, he returned to the AWA, most notably cast against Larry Zbyszko for an AWA World Heavyweight Championship match in August 1990, which was featured as the main event of an AWA broadcast on ESPN making it the final AWA television taping. The match ended in a double countout. AWA folded after the match.

National Wrestling Alliance (1962–1986)[edit | edit source]

Dusty Rhodes prepares to face Race (in the background) in 1979

Race jumped between National Wrestling Alliance territories in the early 1970s, renewing his rivalry with Funk in Amarillo, Texas and winning a regional title. He was seen as a gifted territorial wrestler, not quite ready for the worldwide spotlight, until 1973. In Kansas City, he did very well teaming with Roger “Nature Boy” Kirby. As a singles wrestler, he held the NWA Missouri Heavyweight Championship as well as the Mid-Atlantic version of the NWA United States Heavyweight Championship. He also started what would be many tours to Japan in All Japan Pro Wrestling where he faced Giant Baba. He worked with All Japan from 1973 to 1989. He frequently wrestled for the Kansas City-based Central States Wrestling.

In 1973, Race took the nickname “Mad Dog” and faced NWA World Heavyweight Champion Dory Funk Jr. in Kansas City. Race emerged from the battle as the new world champion in what was perceived by fans as a stunning upset. Behind the scenes, Funk had pulled out of losing the title to Jack Brisco, citing injuries in a truck accident; in truth, Amarillo promoter Dory Funk Sr. did not want his son losing the title to a fellow babyface (a fan favorite). Race, a known tough street fighter, was under orders from the NWA not to let Funk leave the ring as champion that night.[7] The ending was a “work” with Funk dropping the title in a third fall as planned and TV announcer Bill Kersten dropping the “Mad Dog” nickname during the match.

A televised title defense from this first reign, held in Calgary against Klondike Bill, aired as the main event on an episode of the promotion’s eponymous Stampede Wrestling program (where Race successfully defended his title), resurfaced during the 21st century as part of the WWE Video Library. Most of his televised matches of this era were squash matches held in television studios. Though Race held the title for only a few months, losing it to Brisco in Houston, Texas, in July, he became a worldwide superstar and perennial championship contender.

Race was determined to eventually regain the NWA World Heavyweight Championship, often moving between territories and collecting several regional titles, including eight Central States Heavyweight Championships, seven Missouri Heavyweight Championships, the Georgia Heavyweight Championship, the Stampede North American Heavyweight Championship in Canada, the Japan-based NWA United National Heavyweight and PWF World Heavyweight Championships, and becoming the first holder of the Mid-Atlantic United States Heavyweight Championship, still defended today as the WWE United States Championship. This kept Race in contention for the NWA World Heavyweight Championship, and Race vowed that he would only need one chance against the champion to regain it.[3]

Race finally got his wish in 1977, facing familiar rival Terry Funk, who had become the champion since their previous encounters, in Toronto. Race won the title by submission with the Indian death lock, a rarely used submission move but one that put great pressure on Funk’s injured leg. The NWA World Heavyweight Champion once again, Race this time established his dominance, defending the title up to six times a week and holding it for almost five years (excluding extremely short reigns by Tommy Rich, Dusty Rhodes, and Giant Baba). Race feuded with many of the legends of the NWA including Dory Funk, Dusty Rhodes, Dick the Bruiser, Pat Patterson and Angelo Poffo. In 1978, he had a series of violent matches throughout the Midwest with the Sheik, culminating in a bloody “2×4 with a nail in it” match in front of 12,313 at Cobo Hall. The NWA, AWA and WWF were on good terms, and Race engaged in title versus title matches with WWF Heavyweight champions Superstar Billy Graham and Bob Backlund, as well as AWA World Heavyweight Champion Nick Bockwinkel. Race toured extensively all over the country and the world, including Australia, New Zealand, Singapore and many stints in Japan, where he was already well known from his visits with Larry Hennig. On October 13, 1978, Race body slammed André the Giant. Race would repeat the feat on January 7, 1979, though it was outside the ring during the match.

Race battles longtime rival Dusty Rhodes

Race, after many victories over Dusty Rhodes and other great wrestlers, lost the title to Rhodes in 1981. Rhodes lost the title to up-and-coming star Ric Flair, though Race was able to defeat Flair in St. Louis in 1983 for his seventh reign as champion, breaking the record previously held by Lou Thesz. What followed was one of the classic angles of the 1980s, which led to the first NWA Starrcade event.

Determined not to lose the title again, Race offered a $25,000 bounty to anyone who could eliminate Flair from the NWA. Bob Orton Jr. and Dick Slater attacked Flair, inflicting what appeared to be a career-ending neck injury, and collecting the bounty from Race after Flair announced his retirement. Flair’s retirement was a ruse, however, and he eventually returned to action, much to Race’s surprise. NWA officials set up a championship rematch, to be titled “Starrcade: A Flare for the Gold”. The match was to be held in Flair’s hometown of Greensboro, North Carolina, which enraged Race.

Shortly before the event, rival WWF promotor Vince McMahon offered Race $250,000 to no-show the event. After considering the offer to sabotage the event, Race declined and the match went ahead.[8]

Race with the NWA Worlds Heavyweight Championshipc. 1980s

Race lost the title to Flair in the bloody and memorable Starcade steel cage match (with Gene Kiniski as the special referee.) Flair jumped on top of Race from the top rope and pinned him to become champion.

Race regained the NWA World Heavyweight Championship for a two-day reign in New Zealand in 1984; after many years, it is now a recognized title change with Harley as an eight-time NWA World Heavyweight Champion. However, his loss to Flair at Starcade was largely seen as the torch-passing from Race to Flair. Flair would go on to credit Race for igniting his career. Later, Race left the NWA because NWA president Sam Muchnick was “losing his capabilities”.[9]

World Wrestling Federation (1986–1989)[edit | edit source]

In May 1986, Race entered the WWF managed by longtime friend Bobby “the Brain” Heenan, bleaching his hair blond and billing himself again as “Handsome” Harley Race. He made his debut on May 31, 1986, at Superstars of Wrestling taping in Toronto, Canada, defeating SD Jones. Race was undefeated that summer in competition against George WellsLanny PoffoTony GareaCousin Luke, and Tony Atlas.[10]

“King” Harley Race, circa 1987

During a time when the WWF did not recognize the existence of other promotions and the accomplishments a wrestler made there, WWF officials came up with a solution to recognize his wrestling pedigree by having him win the King of the Ring tournament on July 14, 1986. After this Race had a “coronation ceremony”, as he then had referred to himself as “King” Harley Race,[11] coming to the ring in a royal crown and cape, to the ceremonial accompaniment of the tenth movement (known as “Great Gate of Kiev”) of Pictures at an Exhibition by Modest Mussorgsky. After winning a match, Race would make his defeated opponent “bow and kneel” before him. Usually Heenan would assist the defeated opponent to “bow and kneel” by grabbing their hair and forcing them to bow before Race.

He participated in a notable feud with the Junkyard Dog, culminating in a match at WrestleMania III at the Pontiac Silverdome, in which Race cleanly pinned JYD after a belly-to-belly suplex. JYD was required to bow to Race as the winner, but after he bowed and Race got up, JYD attacked Race before leaving with The King’s cape to a standing ovation. Race would spend 1987 feuding with Hulk Hogan and Jim Duggan, who during a televised confrontation took Race’s crown and robe, though Race later attacked Duggan and took them back.[11] His feud with Duggan was highlighted by an extended brawl at the 1987 Slammy Awards. In early 1988, he suffered an abdominal injury in a match against Hogan in which he tried to hit Hogan, prone on a table at ringside, with a swan dive headbutt. Hogan moved out of the way and Race impacted the table inwards. The metal edge forced its way up into Race’s abdomen giving him a hernia. Race continued to work with the injury through WrestleMania IV on March 27, 1988, where he participated in the event’s battle royal.

Following this incident and during his recovery, the WWF ran an angle where they acknowledged his injury, and his manager Heenan vowed to crown a new king. Race was absent for six months, finally returning on October 15 to defeat B. Brian Blair in Milan, Italy. He rejoined The Heenan Family, participating with Bobby Heenan’s team at Survivor Series. On Dec 3, 1988, on WWF Superstars he defeated Jim Gorman; after the match Race declared that he desired to regain the crown from Haku and complained that Bobby Heenan never visited him in the hospital. On December 17, 1988, at Philadelphia he defeated Danny Davis. After the victory he got onto the microphone and challenged Heenan to bring out Haku to face him. As the month drew to a close Race began to face King Haku on the house show circuit.[12]

Despite Race’s anger at his manager, Bobby Heenan came to the Royal Rumble match and cheered both Haku and the former king. Haku was victorious, and Harley Race departed from the WWF.[13]

Post-WWF endeavors (1989–1990)[edit | edit source]

After leaving the WWF, Race continued to wrestle until the spring of 1991, most notably with World Wrestling Council (WWC) in Puerto Rico, Stampede Wrestling in Calgary, Alberta, the NWA, All Japan and the AWA. He defeated Miguel Perez Jr. for the WWC Caribbean Heavyweight Championship on January 6, 1990, in Puerto Rico making it his last title reign until dropping it to José González on March 4. After his appearance in AWA he briefly retired from wrestling.

World Championship Wrestling (1990–1995, 1999)[edit | edit source]

Race made his return to the promotion at The Great American Bash on July 7, 1990, when he defeated former NWA World Heavyweight Champion Tommy Rich. He began making appearances on house shows and immediately would fill in for Ric Flair in several tag team matches, pairing up with Barry Windham against Lex Luger and Sting.[14] Race would continue a program with Rich through the rest of the summer, as well as facing Brian Pillman and Wendell Cooley. In September, he received several United States Heavyweight Championship title shots against then champion Lex Luger. In October, Race renewed his rivalry with the Junkyard Dog in two matches on the WCW house show circuit and finished the year facing Michael Wallstreet. During a house show match in St. Joseph, Missouri on December 7, 1990, Race sustained a shoulder injury and would ultimately retire from active competition.

Race made his first subsequent appearance six months later as a guest referee during a house show on June 14, 1991, in St. Louis, Missouri. One year after making his initial return on The Great American Bash in 1990, Race returned at the 1991 The Great American Bash to become the adviser/manager to Luger. Excelling as a manager as he had as a wrestler, he immediately led Luger to the WCW World Heavyweight Championship.[15] He managed Luger throughout his title run, as well as acquiring the contract for Mr. Hughes from Alexandra York.

In 1992, Race began to add other wrestlers to a stable that would include Big Van VaderSuper Invader and Vinnie Vegas. The stable was short-lived, and after Vader defeated Sting for the world championship on July 12, 1992, he became Race’s primary charge. During his management of Vader, Race met with racial controversy when Vader was feuding with WCW wrestler Ron Simmons when saying during a promo, “When I was world champion, I had a boy like you to carry my bags!”. This was actually part of the booking strategy of then-WCW head Bill Watts to build support for Simmons, whom he would eventually make champion. The wily veteran was popular among the young WCW talent, and developed close friendships with Mick Foley and Steve Austin, among others. On June 9, 1993, at a TV taping in Lake Charles, Louisiana, Race began managing The Colossal Kongs, and on July 7 at the WorldWide tapings in Orlando, FloridaYoshi Kwan joined the stable.

Race returned to the ring a final time on a trio of Florida house shows (November 26, 1993, in Davie, Florida, November 27 in Orlando, Florida and November 28 in Jacksonville, Florida), when he substituted for an injured Vader to face Flair. His former rival would come out victorious on each occasion.[16] These would be the last wrestling matches of his career.[17]

After losing the title at Starrcade in December 1993, Vader quickly became Race’s sole stable member again. Race continued to manage Vader in the following months in rematches against Flair, and on May 22, 1994, he was inducted into the WCW Hall of Fame during the Slamboree PPV.[14] He continued to appear at Vader’s side through the rest of the year.

As his early wrestling career had been nearly derailed due to a car accident, another car accident in January 1995 forced Race out of the wrestling business altogether. Race required hip replacement surgery, which, along with injuries accumulated after years in the ring, prevented him from even being a manager. Race would make a few independent appearances against Flair, but his inability to work was just too great. Race would make one last return to WCW television in October 1999 as the ring announcer for the Bret Hart vs. Chris Benoit tribute to Owen Hart match in his hometown of Kansas City.

Later career (2004–2019)[edit | edit source]

Race returned to WWE television in 2004 shortly after being inducted into their Hall of Fame. On an episode of RawRandy Orton confronted Race and spat in his face, to go with Orton’s “Legend Killer” persona. Race returned again for RawWWE Homecoming episode in October 2005, marking the show’s return to the USA Network.

In 2004, Race was recruited to be a part of Total Nonstop Action Wrestling as a member of their NWA Championship Committee. Despite reportedly being an authority figure as a member of the committee, he never made any official decisions and only made the occasional on-screen appearance for the company.

At the WWE Hall of Fame class of 2007 ceremony on March 31, 2007, Race and Dusty Rhodes were “inducted” into the Four Horsemen by Ric Flair and Arn Anderson. On the August 8, 2008, episode of Monday Night Raw, Race sat in the front row and was acknowledged by commentators Michael Cole and Jerry “The King” Lawler. Before the show, Race accompanied then-GHC Heavyweight Champion Takeshi Morishima to the ring for a dark match against Charlie Haas.[18]

Race also made an appearance at Total Nonstop Action Wrestling‘s Lockdown pay-per-view in 2007 as the special guest gatekeeper for the main event. Race made a special guest appearance at the second night of Ring of Honor‘s Glory by Honor VI: Night Two at the Manhattan Center on November 3, 2007, in New York City.[19] On January 4, 2014, Race took part in New Japan Pro-Wrestling‘s Wrestle Kingdom 8 in Tokyo Dome event, participating in the title presentation before a match for the NWA World Heavyweight Championship and punching out defending champion Rob Conway‘s manager Bruce Tharpe.[20]

Promoting career[edit | edit source]

Heart of America Sports Attractions (1973–1986)[edit | edit source]

Earlier in his career, Race became involved in the ownership side of wrestling, buying a portion of the Kansas City and later St. Louis territories known as Heart of America Sports Attractions. St. Louis was a stronghold of the NWA, and around this time in 1984, WWF owner Vince McMahon began his invasion of NWA territories, including St. Louis, in his ambition to build a truly national wrestling promotion.[3] Race was enraged, famously confronting Hulk Hogan and the Funk brothers at a WWF event in Kansas City. Race lost over $500,000 as an owner of the Kansas City territory, and despite his championship years being at an end and wishing to retire from active competition, was forced to rely on continuing to wrestle to make a living. He continued to travel in the United States and abroad, and signed with McMahon’s WWF in 1986.[3]

World League Wrestling (1999–2019)[edit | edit source]

Race spent several years away from the business, working briefly as a process server before retiring with his wife in small-town Missouri. In 1999, he started World League Wrestling (originally called World Legion Wrestling, but the name was changed a year later), an independent promotion which runs shows near Race’s hometown of Eldon, Missouri, and other cities in Missouri including Kansas City.[3] A year later, he started Harley Race’s Wrestling Academy, which seeks to train up-and-coming wrestlers who could benefit from Race’s unique experience and perspective on the wrestling business. Race’s events are family-oriented, and usually raise funds for local charities. As well as featuring his students, legends like Mick FoleyTerry FunkBret Hart, and even Mitsuharu Misawa have made guest appearances. WLW had a working agreement with Misawa’s Japanese promotion, Pro Wrestling NOAH and had NOAH star Takeshi Morishima as a former heavyweight champion.[21] He is credited with training Trevor Murdoch who was then known as Trevor Rhodes, and NOAH veterans Ace Steel, Superstar Steve, Brian Breaker, Jon Webb, Jason Jones, Curtis Deierling,Tommaso Ciampa, and Jack Gamble.[22]

In 2014, Race and World League Wrestling relocated to Troy, Missouri. Along with relocating his wrestling academy and promotion, Race also built the Race Wrestling Arena – where events are put on once a month.[23]

Personal life[edit | edit source]

Race was born to sharecroppers Jay Allen Race and Mary Race in 1943.[3] Race married his first wife, Vivian Jones, in 1960. She died five weeks after their wedding in the same car crash in which Race nearly lost a leg. Shortly after Vivian’s death, Race married Sandra Jones, who he briefly mentioned in his 2004 autobiography King of the Ring. This second marriage produced a daughter, Candice Marie, and ended in divorce.[3] His third wife, Evon, divorced him in the early 1990s after over 30 years of marriage.[3] Together they had a son, Justin, who was an amateur wrestler but never participated in professional wrestling. His fourth wife, Beverly (B.J.) was vice president of the Commerce Bank of Kansas City. They married in late 1995, shortly after Race’s career-ending car crash. She often traveled with Race until she died of pneumonia. Race had five grandchildren.[24]

Race continued running World League Wrestling (WLW) and his wrestling camp in Eldon, Missouri.[23] He later moved the businesses to Troy. Many of his trainees were sent to the NOAH promotion in Japan for extra experience. Over the years he needed surgery to his neck, hip replacements, knee replacements and had five vertebra in his back fused together due to the years of taking hard bumps. In May 2017, he broke both legs in a fall at his home, one in several places. He needed four blood transfusions during surgery. Race would continue to promote WLW until his death whilst in rehab.

Illness and death[edit | edit source]

On March 1, 2019, Race’s close friend Ric Flair announced that Race was diagnosed with terminal lung cancer.[25][26] On August 1, 2019, it was revealed by long time friend Dustin Rhodes that Race had died from lung cancer at the age of 76.[26][27][24] He was buried next to his parents and one brother at Quitman Cemetery along Highway 113 in Quitman, Missouri.

Other media[edit | edit source]

Race participated in the 1998 NBC special, Exposed! Pro Wrestling’s Greatest Secrets. His face was covered to conceal his identity as he broke kayfabe and discussed the inner workings of the business.

Race’s autobiography, King of the Ring: the Harley Race Story (ISBN 1-58261-818-6), was released on November 19, 2004. Along with Ricky Steamboat and Les Thatcher, Race is author of The Professional Wrestler’s Workout and Instructional Guide.

Race played himself as the distinguished ring announcer for a tag team match involving Mil Mascaras and El Hijo del Santo in the 2007 film Mil Mascaras vs. the Aztec Mummy.[28][29]

The career of Harley Race, became the subject of Vice TV‘s fifth season of the Dark Side of the Ring.

In wrestling

Championship and accomplishments[edit | edit source]

Race was an eight-time NWA World Heavyweight Champion.

Notes[edit | edit source]

  1. Jump up to:abcdefghij “Harley Race”. Online World of Wrestling. Archived from the original on September 17, 2009. Retrieved September 11, 2009.
  2. Jump up to:ab “Harley Race”WWEArchived from the original on April 23, 2019. Retrieved June 16, 2019.
  3. Jump up to:abcdefghijk Race, Harley. “King of the Ring: The Harley Race Story”. Sports Publishing. p. 2.
  4. ^ Foley, Mick. Have A Nice Day: A Tale of Blood and Sweatsocks (p.234)
  5. Jump up to:ab Elliot, Mark (August 15, 2019). “The toughest pro wrestler of all time has just left the ring”The Reader. Retrieved November 18, 2020.
  6. ^ Long, Mark (February 7, 2020). “Harley Race stabbed outside a Minneapolis restaurant”HistoryOfWrestling.com. Retrieved November 18, 2020.
  7. ^ Meltzer, Dave (February 17, 2010). “A Definitive Look At Jack Brisco; his life and times”. Wrestling Observer Newsletter.
  8. ^ Kaye, Griffin (2023) “How Vince McMahon Tried To Sabotage Starrcade ’83”Pro Wrestling Stories (retrieved February 3, 2024)
  9. ^ “Harley Race Talks Leaving NWA For WWF, Why He Left, Hulk Hogan, The ‘King’ Gimmick, Vince, More – WrestlingInc.com”WrestlingInc.comArchived from the original on January 10, 2018. Retrieved January 10, 2018.
  10. ^ “WWF – 1986 Results”. January 16, 2023.
  11. Jump up to:ab WWF King Coronations of Harley Race, Haku, Jim Duggan, and Randy Savage includes bonus, retrieved October 16, 2021
  12. ^ “WWF – 1988 Results”. January 16, 2023.
  13. ^ “WWF – 1989 Results”. January 16, 2023.
  14. Jump up to:ab WWE History – 1990Archived 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine thehistoryofwwe Retrieved October 16, 2018
  15. ^ Stone Cold Steve Austin. The Stone Cold Truth (p. 102).
  16. ^ “Archived copy”Archived from the original on September 24, 2018. Retrieved November 18, 2018.
  17. ^ “Matches « Harley Race « Wrestlers Database « CAGEMATCH – the Internet Wrestling Database”Archived from the original on February 24, 2015. Retrieved November 18, 2018.
  18. ^ “CANOE — SLAM! Sports – Wrestling – Wrestlemania 23 : Emotions run high at WWE HOF”slam.canoe.com. Archived from the original on November 17, 2015. Retrieved August 1, 2019.
  19. ^ “Ring of Honor NYC 11.02.07 Report”411mania.com. November 4, 2007.
  20. ^ Caldwell, James (January 4, 2014). “Caldwell’s NJPW Tokyo Dome results 1/4: Complete “virtual-time” coverage of New Japan’s biggest show of the year – four title changes, former WWE/TNA stars featured, more”Pro Wrestling TorchArchived from the original on January 4, 2014. Retrieved January 5, 2014.
  21. ^ “Takeshi Morishima – New WLW World Champion”. Archived from the original on February 28, 2007. Retrieved February 26, 2007.
  22. ^ “WWE Hall of Famer reunites with NXT Superstar”Archived from the original on February 24, 2019. Retrieved February 24, 2019.
  23. Jump up to:ab “World League Wrestling”harleyrace.com. Retrieved August 1, 2019.
  24. Jump up to:ab “WWE Hall of Famer Harley Race Dead at 76”ComicBook.com. August 1, 2019.
  25. ^ “Ric Flair revela que Harley Race padece cáncer terminal” [Ric Flair reveals that Harley Race suffers from terminal cancer]. Solowrestling (in Spanish). March 2, 2019. Archived from the original on March 6, 2019. Retrieved March 2, 2019.
  26. Jump up to:ab “WWE Superstars and Legends mourn the passing of Harley Race”WWE. Retrieved August 1, 2019.
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  32. Jump up to:abcdefg NWA World Heavyweight Title historyArchived 2015-06-26 at the Wayback Machine At wrestling-titles.com
  33. ^ AWA World Tag Team Title historyArchived 2010-12-10 at the Wayback Machine At wrestling-titles.com
  34. ^ NWA Central States Heavyweight Title historyArchived 2008-08-28 at the Wayback Machine At wrestling-titles.com
  35. ^ Royal Duncan and Gary Will (2006). “(Kansas and Western Missouri) West Missouri: North American Tag Team Title”. Wrestling Title Histories. Archeus Communications. p. 253. ISBN0-9698161-5-4.
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  38. ^ NWA Southern Heavyweight Title (Florida) historyArchived 2013-05-12 at the Wayback Machine At wrestling-titles.com
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  40. ^ “WWE United States Championship”. Retrieved May 25, 2020.
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  45. ^ Martin, Adam (December 1, 2012). “Harley Race inducted into 2013 Missouri Hall of Fame”WrestleViewArchived from the original on December 9, 2012. Retrieved December 2, 2012.
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  47. ^ “Los Angeles Territory”www.prowrestlinghistory.comArchived from the original on August 19, 2016. Retrieved March 27, 2018.
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  54. ^ IWA World Tag Team Title historyArchived 2008-10-12 at the Wayback Machine At wrestling-titles.com
  55. ^ WCW Hall of Fame InducteesArchived 2008-02-26 at the Wayback Machine At wrestling-titles.com
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  57. ^ WWC Caribbean Heavyweight Title historyArchived 2014-04-11 at the Wayback Machine At wrestling-titles.com
  58. ^ WWF/WWE Hall of Fame InducteesArchived 2013-12-14 at the Wayback Machine At wrestling-titles.com

References[edit | edit source]

External links[edit | edit source]

Preceded by

King of the Ring tournament winner
1986
Succeeded by

 

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