Diana Hart responds to Bret Hart’s claims about British Bulldog at SummerSlam 1992

Diana Hart has posted a statement regarding comments her older brother Bret Hart has made about SummerSlam 1992.

Bret Hart’s match against Diana’s then-husband, the British Bulldog, in the main event of the show was named by WWE as the greatest SummerSlam match of all time last year.

While it’s unclear whether Bret has made any recent comments about the match, he has said in past interviews and in his 2007 autobiography that he had to carry Bulldog through it step-by-step, as Bulldog was in poor condition that day due to drugs and/or alcohol.

Diana Hart posted the following message on Tuesday:

“Bret does not present his statements as opinions; he states them as facts. That distinction matters, because many of his claims—specifically about Davey’s physical or mental state at SummerSlam’92 are simply not true. It is my opinion that Bret’s current misrepresentation of events at SS92 may be influenced by the stroke he suffered in the summer of 2002.

What cannot be ignored is the timing, that Davey died prior to that, in May 2002. There was a full decade (1992-2002) when Bret could have raised his claims directly with Davey, if they were legitimate. He never did. Not once. The absurd and hurtful accusations began after Davey was no longer alive to respond.

Instead, Bret now frames, over and over, despite my appeals to him with facts, proof/records and critical reasoning to please restrain and refrain his slander, but he refuses. Bret now cites this incredible match as great solely because of his own alleged brilliance, assigning himself all credit while diminishing Davey’s invaluable role. Bret’s narrative is not supported by history, by documentation, or by what audiences can plainly see when they watch the match itself, without Bret’s overlapping slandering words.

Davey’s performance shows no evidence of impairment. On the contrary, it reflects Davey’s professionalism, strength and focus-despite the FACT that he was recovering from necrotizing fasciitis, a serious and life-threatening flesh-eating infection (we have proof). Davey did not complain, seek sympathy,or disclose his condition to the public. He simply did the work. It is difficult to reconcile these FACTS with Bret’s retroactive claims, except to note a long-standing pattern of self-aggrandizement.

IMO, and I’m very clear that this is opinion, Bret’s tendency toward ego, bullying & exaggeration predates both his stroke and the match in question. I base that on my lived experience growing up with him as my older brother and on decades of observed behaviour towards family members and colleagues. What I will not accept is history being rewritten after the fact, especially when the person, (Davey)being totally discredited is no longer alive to defend himself. Davey was so good and loyal to Bret.”

Diana Hart played a significant role in the story leading up to Bulldog vs. Bret at SummerSlam 92. After Bulldog won the Intercontinental Championship, Diana entered the ring and embraced both her brother and her husband, seemingly to show the family was united once again.

In 2001, Diana co-wrote “Under the Mat: Inside Wrestling’s Greatest Family” with Kirstie McLellan about her life as a member of the Hart family. In the book, Diana accused several Hart family members of criminal activity. The book was eventually pulled from the shelves due to a lawsuit filed by the widow of Owen Hart, and Diana’s sister-in-law, Martha Hart.

Diana officially sold the rights to The British Bulldog’s legacy to her son Harry Smith in 2015.

WWE confirms British Bulldog induction into Hall of Fame

The British Bulldog is officially entering the WWE Hall of Fame.

On today’s episode of After the Bell with Corey Graves, it was announced that Davey Boy Smith would be entering the WWE Hall of Fame this year. This was originally reported by Dave Meltzer on Wrestling Observer Radio last month.

“I’ve had to be quiet for over a month… It’s been confirmed and official… Now I can shout it to the world!!!!,” Smith’s daughter Georgia wrote on Twitter.”MY DAD IS BEING INDUCTED INTO THE @WWE HALL OF FAME! I LOVE YOU DAVEY!!!”

Smith started his career in 1978. He, along with tag team partner Dynamite Kid (Tom Billington) soon moved to Canada to work for Stu Hart’s Stampede Wrestling. When Hart sold the company to Vince McMahon in 1984, the tag team joined the promotion, holding the World Tag Team titles on one occasion.

The duo left the promotion at the end of 1988, but Smith returned as a singles wrestler in 1990. His most famous match during this run has his Intercontinental title win, defeating Bret Hart in Wembley Stadium at SummerSlam 1992. He was fired from the promotion months later after he, along with the Ultimate Warrior, were caught receiving HGH shipments.

He later returned in 1994 and had another singles run before forming a successful team with brother-in-law Owen Hart. He left the company in 1997 following Survivor Series 1997, but returned in 1999 for one final run before leaving the promotion in 2000. He died on May 18, 2002 after suffering a heart attack.

This year’s Hall of Fame ceremony is scheduled to take place on April 2, 2020 at the Amalie Arena in Tampa, Florida.

‘British Bulldog’ Davey Boy Smith going into WWE Hall of Fame

On the Tuesday edition of Wrestling Observer Radio (subscription needed), Dave Meltzer reported that Davey Boy Smith will be inducted into this year’s WWE Hall of Fame class.

Meltzer said the Hart family has been pushing for his inclusion for years. Smith died in 2002 at just 39 years old due to a heart attack suffered while on vacation in British Columbia.

While not formally announced by WWE yet, he will join Dave Batista, the NWO, Jushin Thunder Liger, and the Bella Twins in this year’s class which will officially be inducted during WrestleMania weekend in Tampa, FL.

Smith was best known for his three runs in WWE with short stints in WCW in between.

Born David Smith, the England native began his pro wrestling career in 1978, eventually making his way to Canada and Stu Hart along with longtime tag team partner Tom Billington (aka the Dynamite Kid). The two were signed by the then-WWF in 1984 and spent four years there in the tag team division as the British Bulldogs, winning the WWF tag titles before leaving after backstage incidents over ribbing.

After working back in Hart’s Stampede Wrestling and Japan, Smith went back to WWF as a singles wrestler for nearly three years, culminating in him defeating Bret Hart for the Intercontinental title at England’s Wembley Stadium at SummerSlam 1992. WWF released he and the Ultimate Warrior after they were caught getting HGH shipments from an England pharmacy.

He eventually returned to WWF for a three year run which included being part of the legendary Steve Austin-Bret Hart rivalry. He left with Hart and Jim Neidhart for WCW following the Montreal Screwjob at the 1997 Survivor Series.

Smith hurt his back in a 1998 match after taking a bad bump on a trapdoor that was part of the mat, leading to him being out of action and eventually released. He would re-sign with WWF before leaving the company in 2002.

Smith was a two-time WWF tag team champion with Billington and Owen Hart, an Intercontinental champion, a European champion twice, and a Hardcore champion twice. He also held a variety of Stampede Wrestling championships.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xIwLnCkaFXM

MLW Fusion results: Davey Boy Smith Jr. vs. Timothy Thatcher

The Big Takeaways —

  • Davey Boy Smith Jr. submitted Timothy Thatcher in Thatcher’s first MLW appearance and then challenged Openweight Champion Alex Hammerstone.
  • Contra Unit accepted Tom Lawlor’s challenge to a War Chamber (War Games) match and debuted a new member who took out Marshall Von Erich.

Full Recap —

Low Ki defeated Jimmy Yuta by referee stoppage due to knockout (:31)

After a quick recap video of last week’s action, we opened with another quick Low Ki squash. Yuta hoped to last longer than his predecessors but ultimately succumbed to a very familiar KO outcome via a Low Ki big boot.

Replays showed Ki’s big boot was more of a soccer kick and as his boot was still rising, the instep connected with Yuta’s jaw and knocked him right out.

– Contra Unit’s propaganda video this week was them accepting Tom Lawlor and the Von Erich brothers’ challenge to a War Chamber match, but said it would be four-on-four, meaning both sides have one spot to fill.

– We were shown a confrontation between Konnan and Salina de la Renta from earlier in the day. Jimmy Havoc accompanied de la Renta and was not too happy when Konnan made her agree to book him vs. LA Park at a later date. Konnan is in possession of de la Renta’s phone and is blackmailing her to comply to his demands or he will let her secrets out.

– Dynasty debuted their new segment: “Lifestyles of the Rich and Dynastic.” This week, they were at a Porsche dealership waiting on their new purchase. They laughed and joked about Teddy Hart failing the wellness policy and therefore the Hart Foundation would not be able to cash in their rematch clause for the Tag Team titles.

Marshall and Ross Von Erich defeated The Spirit Squad (Kenn Doane & Mike Mondo) (1:56)

Doane got on the mic and said all the New York sports teams suck and that they were not here because of their last names. They issued an open challenge that was accepted by the Von Erich brothers.

The brothers came out guns blazing and beat down the Spirit Squad with fists and a pair of double dropkicks. As well as their entrance music, their dominance continued throughout including a gigantic moonsault from Marshall and a claw assisted back suplex from Ross. Marshall picked up the win after pinning Doane following the suplex.

Josef Samael and Simon Gotch from Contra Unit attacked the Von Erichs after the bell. They brawled briefly before Contra were joined by a masked assailant, who unmasked and spat mist into Marshall’s eyes. EMTs and officials entered the ring to help Marshall, but Contra put the boots to them as well. They eventually left as we saw Marshall was bleeding from the eyes.

Gringo Loco defeated Zenshi (3:55)

This was a bonus due to the two short matches on the show.

We got a very athletic opening from both as cartwheels, headscissors, and backflips filled the opening minutes. Myron Reed and Jordan Oliver were seen in the crowd calling for “justice”. Back at ringside, Zenshi hit a nice handstand hurricanrana from the apron to the outside. He then hit a slingshot corkscrew senton back into the ring for a close two count.

Zenshi hit a 450 from the bottom rope for another near fall. But he went to the well once too often as Loco caught him after a handspring and planted him with a tombstone piledriver to pick up the win.

– Kaci Lennox was backstage with Davey Boy Smith Jr. He didn’t want to talk about the rumored relationship between his sister, Georgia, and Alexander Hammerstone. He did want to talk about his opponent tonight: Timothy Thatcher. He said they have trained together and knows how tough he is, but when he locks him in a submission, there will be no escape.

Lennox didn’t let up about the Georgia/Hammerstone issue possibly causing a distraction, but Smith didn’t get to answer as Brian Pillman Jr. barged in saying “Girls will be girls…and boys will be boys” before walking off with Lennox.

Davey Boy Smith Jr. defeated Timothy Thatcher by submission (14:46)

A scientific master class that turned into a strong style battle was our main event this week. Smith had an early hammerlock, using his legs instead of his arms — but Thatcher then applied a standing heel hook while Smith was lying on his back. Thatcher focused on Smith’s legs during the early exchange of holds.

Thatcher tried to keep Smith on the mat as much as he could and kept going back to the heel hook at every opportunity. He hit a belly-to-belly to keep the big man down and keep his focus on the lower limbs of his opponent.

Smith blocked a second belly-to-belly into a cross armbreaker, but Thatcher transitioned back into the heel hook again. Smith was able to reverse the hook into a Sharpshooter that Thatcher broke with a rope break.

They then started a forearm and uppercut exchange with both keeping their hands down and letting the shots come straight in. Smith ducked and went for a backslide and then a small package, but Thatcher kicked out both times.

They exchanged forearms again, but it soon escalated to open hand chops before Smith hit a German suplex for a two count. Thatcher switched and hit a release version of his own. Smith hit another two Germans, followed by a Tiger suplex, but Thatcher kicked out at the last moment.

Thatcher fought and locked in a cross armbreaker, but Smith powered off his back. Thatcher transitioned into a triangle choke, but Smith powered up again and slammed Thatcher down to break the submission. Smith then slid seamlessly into a crossface that made Thatcher tap for the submission win.

Georgia came out to the stage to interview Davey after the match. He thanked the fans but quickly turned the interview onto Hammerstone. He shot Georgia a look before saying that it doesn’t matter if Georgia wants to stay silent, the more important thing is Hammerstone is hiding from him. He said it wont be long before he gets him in the ring and locks in the crossface chicken wing.

He left by telling Georgia, “I won’t be light on your boyfriend.”

Next week —

  • Alexander Hammerstone will defend the MLW Openweight title against the debuting Savio Vega.
  • Rey Horus vs. Bestia 666

June 3, 2002 Observer Newsletter: More on the life and career of Davey Boy Smith

The death of Davey Boy Smith on the late evening of 5/17 while on vacation was a lot of different things to different people.

Within the world of wrestling, it was something people have become numbed to because of the frequency of such stories. When the word reached many of the former WCW wrestlers who worked with him in the past at a major indie show in Kearny, NE, it was, sadly, almost a humdrum reaction, with many talking about it as being something almost expected from seeing him during his darkest days. To many of his friends and even those in his former family, it was by no means a welcome relief. But in reflection, they looked on the bright side, that their friend’s five years of pure hell in battling drug addictions which changed him from the person they wanted to remember him as was over.

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May 27, 2002 Observer Newsletter: Death of Davey Boy Smith

The death of Davey Boy Smith on 5/17 while on vacation in Fairmont, BC with girlfriend Andrea Hart has taken both the saga of the Hart family and of pro wrestling in 2002 to levels far beyond just tragic.

Results of the autopsy were pending at press time, but the death was believed to have come a heart attack stemming from a drug overdose.

Smith was no longer a legal member of the Hart family, having divorced Stu’s daughter Diana and taken up with Bruce’s wife Andrea. Davey and Diana were married for almost 17 years and have two children, one of whom, Harry, 16, has been wrestling for years and even teamed with his father on 5/10 and 5/11 in Brandon and Winnipeg (contrary to a lot of stories, the first time the two teamed was last year in Calgary). Even with all the bad blood and even threats, arrests and problems far too numerous to mention, he was considered by most a family member.

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