September 6, 2004 Observer Newsletter: Steve Williams cancer worsens, history of Olympians in pro wrestling

Steve Williams had a reputation in the 80s of being one of the physically toughest men ever in pro wrestling. His background included being an honorable mention All-American as a football player and a four-time place-winner at the NCAA heavyweight tournament during a very strong era for heavyweights.

As a pro wrestler, he became a headliner in Mid South Wrestling, parlaying his college sports stardom into the idea that in a business of tough guys, he was the real deal. After the company folded, he became an even bigger star with All Japan Pro Wrestling.

Between wrestling a match the night after taking more than 100 stitches in his eye on an afternoon show in his Mid-South days, or even this year, doing a shoot match just shy of 44 years old against K-1 star Alexey Ignashov, while secretly suffering from throat cancer, there is no question of his guts. While he lost his last and most real high profile match on 3/14 in Nagoya in just 22 seconds, almost nobody except for his close friends, were aware of his predicament. 

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April 19, 2004 Observer Newsletter: Rumored TNA TV deal, Steve Williams cancer treatment, more

The New York Post ran a gossip column item talking about TNA’s potential Fox Sports Net television deal. They quoted an unnamed FSN spokesperson as saying no deal was done, but that if a deal is to get done, they are looking at a June start and an afternoon time slot.

There have been many different time slots being talked about of late, including 11 a.m. on Sundays, as well as a weekday afternoon slot. Fox Sports Net is very different from USA, TBS, Spike and other cable networks. It isn’t one cable station, but an affiliation of regional stations, based around the concept of providing local sports coverage. There is also a national feed that is in many time slots to use as filler programming between the local sports. Most of the FSN stations only do good ratings when broadcasting major local sports events, and the national shows rarely do well.

The originally talked about Sunday night slot, after boxing, had its positives, because boxing provides better than usual ratings. 

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DragonKingKarl Classic Wrestling Marathon: “Dr. Death” Steve Williams

Photo Credit: Jim Beckel, The Oklahoman

On today’s July Classic Wrestling Marathon Show, host Karl Stern takes a look at another of his personal favorite wrestlers in “Dr. Death” Steve Williams.

As far as tough guys go, Williams certainly had the reputation for being just that. A standout football player and wrestler at the University of Oklahoma, Williams started wrestling during college breaks as a personal favorite of Bill Watts in the Mid-South area. Though Williams had runs in WCW and WWF, he was far and away most successful in All-Japan Pro Wrestling during an era when AJPW had the best wrestling in the world.

Williams was part of multiple top tag teams with partners like Ted DiBiase and Terry Gordy. Williams and Gordy dominated the Japanese tag team division during the early 1990s, and had a memorable run against the Steiner Brothers in WCW. His health took a turn for the worse while Doc was in his mid-40s as he fought cancer on multiple occassions.

In this latest edition of the July Classic Wrestling Marathon, Karl Stern takes a look at one of Jim Ross’ favorite pro wrestlers: Steve Williams. Click below to play or right click to save to your computer.

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Reminder: This is the last week to order the Super Stern Stick 16gb flash drive full of pro wrestling history featuring over 500 podcasts and over 500 documents on one USB drive dealing with the history of professional wrestling from the pioneer days until today.  You can order it here for just $20 with free shipping worldwide.