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Heenan and also
There also existed a secondary school named after him in Enfield, in the Northern part of the modern Greater London that is traditionally known as Middlesex, until its closure circa 1980 ; as well as a grammar school for boys in West Derby, Liverpool, until 1983, when it was renamed, instead, after Cardinal Heenan.
Heenan informed the referee of the object and the ref questioned Hogan about this, but the blood on Hogan's face was evidence that the object had also been used on him.
Some of the AWA's other top talent, including announcer " Mean " Gene Okerlund, manager Bobby " The Brain " Heenan, and wrestlers Adrian Adonis, Ken Patera, Jim Brunzell, David Schultz, and Jesse Ventura, also jumped to the WWF.
The Sammartinos also teamed against Paul Orndorff and Bobby Heenan in various arenas.
These two appearances were also met with various WWF / WBF celebrity editions of Family Feud ; Heenan and Combs also struck up a friendship, which Heenan recounted in his autobiography, noting that he believed Combs felt demeaned by being a game show host.
In 1988, Race suffered a hernia injury and during his absence his manager Bobby Heenan awarded the crowd to Haku in July, rechristening him King Haku, even though Randy Savage had won the tournament by that point and Ted DiBiase would also win the tournament during this storyline.
Hall also often featured World Wrestling Federation wrestlers, like Hulk Hogan ( who first denied using steroids on the program ), Ravishing Rick Rude ( who made a special set of tights with Hall's face on the back ) with Bobby Heenan, Randy Savage, Bad News Brown, the Big Bossman and Akeem with Slick, and the Ultimate Warrior.
A Jobber, also known as a journeyman or " ham-n-egger ", is a phrase supposedly first used by Bobby Heenan in Professional Wrestling.
Regular service 91 runs along Harehills Lane, as does 91A on rare journeys. School buses also run through Chapeltown linking to Cardinal Heenan, Carr manor and Boston Spa high schools.
* Bobby Heenan ( born 1944 ), American wrestling manager also known as " the Weasel "
Heenan also had a famous feud with The Ultimate Warrior, who reintroduced Heenan to Weasel Suit matches, which Heenan had during his time in the AWA.
Heenan also had a parody talk show known as The Bobby Heenan Show, which was broadcast in four segments during the second half of WWF's regular weekly program " Prime Time Wrestling ".
He also poked fun at Monsoon saying he ate the bananas that Monsoon brought as a going away gift for Heenan.
Later that year, Heenan made a one-off return to ringside at The Great American Bash, leading Ric Flair and Arn Anderson to victory over Steve McMichael and Kevin Greene and also conspiring with Anderson and Flair to bring McMichael into the fold.
Heenan also appeared in interviews for The Self-Destruction of the Ultimate Warrior DVD in 2005.
The two also formed a real-life friendship which Heenan often recalls fondly.
Studd was also paired with Bobby " the Brain " Heenan, who helped take the Andre-Studd feud to new heights.

Heenan and managed
Late in 1974, Volkoff moved to the AWA where he wrestled under the name of Boris Breznikoff ; managed by Bobby " The Brain " Heenan, he used the same gimmick with a different ring name.
He formed a villainous tag team with Chris Markoff called " The Devil's Duo " in 1966, and they were managed by Bobby Heenan.
Anderson and Blanchard were known as " The Brain Busters " in the WWF, and they were managed by Bobby " the Brain " Heenan.
Rude was managed by Jimmy Hart and later Bobby " The Brain " Heenan.
Perfect and Ric Flair were managed by Heenan, but Perfect turned on Flair and Heenan by agreeing to face them as part of a tag team match at Survivor Series.
Heenan ( left ) managed many of the WWF's top stars, notably leading André the Giant ( right ) in a match against Hulk Hogan at WrestleMania III.
Heenan and the Heenan Family had a monumental feud with wrestling icon Hulk Hogan in the ' 80s, and Heenan managed two WrestleMania challengers to Hogan's title, King Kong Bundy in 1986, and André the Giant in 1987.
Heenan finally managed his first champion in the WWF when " Ravishing " Rick Rude upset the Ultimate Warrior for the Intercontinental title.
In a year and a half, Heenan went from having managed no champions to having managed two tag teams to two World Tag Team championships and two wrestlers to three Intercontinental championships.
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.
They failed to win the titles and were eventually split up in 1990, with the Barbarian being managed by Bobby Heenan, while the Warlord paired up with Slick.
At one point, they were managed by Bobby Heenan who referred to them as " the worst tag team I managed in my life.
In addition, the Japanese military intelligence service had managed to recruit a British officer, Captain Patrick Heenan, an Air Liaison Officer with the Indian Army.
Bobby Heenan, who had managed John Studd, however, disdained Ron in his column on WCW Magazine.
The Heenan Family was a stable of heel wrestlers managed by Bobby " The Brain " Heenan beginning in the 1970s.
Heenan managed wrestlers under the Heenan Family name in the American Wrestling Association ( AWA ), the National Wrestling Alliance's Georgia Championship Wrestling, and the World Wrestling Federation ( WWF ).

Heenan and Ken
Over Heenan's WWF career, the Heenan Family included Studd, Ken Patera, Paul " Mr. Wonderful " Orndorff, King Kong Bundy, André the Giant, High Chief Sivi Afi, The Brain Busters ( former Horsemen members Arn Anderson and Tully Blanchard ), " Ravishing " Rick Rude, Harley Race, The Islanders ( Haku and Tama ), Hercules, The Barbarian, Mr Perfect, Terry Taylor, and The Brooklyn Brawler.
( His last two singles protégés, Valentine and Ken Patera, were paired with Jimmy " Mouth of the South " Hart and Bobby " the Brain " Heenan, respectively, after Albano's face turn.
This happened during a televised tag team match featuring Studd and fellow Heenan Family member Ken Patera against André the Giant and S. D.
That failed, too, so Adnan bought Ken Patera from manager Bobby Heenan to team with Blackwell, and Adnan would act as Blackwell and Patera's manager.
The stable got its newest member, Ken Patera in 1982, but Patera left the group in 1983 when Heenan suffered an injury in Japan.
* In a segment promoting André the Giant's upcoming "$ 15, 000 Bodyslam Challenge " match vs. Big John Studd at WrestleMania, a replay is shown of the " Haircut Match " ( where Studd and Ken Patera beat André into unconsciousness before helping Bobby Heenan cut his hair ).

Heenan and Patera
Patera was an integral part of The Heenan Family in the AWA ( 19821983 ), and later in the WWF ( 1984 – 1985 ).
Patera and Heenan held a debate to air their differences, which naturally turned into a physical confrontation between the two that culminated in Patera swinging Heenan with a belt around his neck, causing Heenan to appear on television with a neck brace for months.
Patera then began feuding with the Heenan Family ( at the time composed of Paul Orndorff, Harley Race, King Kong Bundy and Hercules ).
Some wrestling publications speculated that Patera would reunite with Heenan to face Hulk Hogan in the main event of WrestleMania IV.
Studd officially became the first member of the WWF version of the Heenan Family and wasn't long before Patera joined the fold.
The Heenan Family scored the first major victory in the feud when Heenan helped instigate a 2-on-1 attack on Andre, an incident that resulted in Studd and Patera cutting Andre's famous locks of hair.

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