Real Name - Scott Casey
Birthdate - 3/19/47
6’ 253 lbs. - Las Vegas, NV
Athletic Background - Football (West Texas State)
Teacher(s) - The Funks
Professional Background - Amarillo(`76), Texas(`77), Kansas City(`77), SWCW(`83), GCW(`83), WCCW(`84-`86), TASW(`85), WWF(`87-`89)
Aliases - none
Groups - none
Peak Years - `83-`86
Finisher(s) -
- Sleeper
- Bulldog
Favorites -
- Shoulderbreaker
- Sunset Flip
- Bodyslam
- Drop Toe Hold
- Bionic Elbow
Ringwork Rating -
Intangibles Rating -
Place in History - West Texas State's football program might not have produced many NFL caliber football players, but it certainly produced a number of big names in pro-wrestling. Dory and Terry Funk both went there and they recruited and trained them all: Ted DiBiase, Tito Santana, Stan Hansen, Tully Blanchard, Manny Fernandez, Bobby Duncum and others. Scott Casey can be added to that elite group and they turned him into a good regional talent. Casey was a great athlete, whose rugged good looks and cowboy persona made him perfect for pro-wrestling. When Joe Blanchard’s SWCW group was running strong, Scott Casey was a top face. He had some runs in other Texas territories, but never duplicated the same success he had in San Antonio. When he wasn't a cowboy in the ring, Scott Casey was a hairdresser, a security guard and allegedly a gigolo in Las Vegas. Scott Casey spent most of his career as a supporting player when he had all the ability to go further. Since retiring, Casey has had little to do with pro-wrestling other than briefly running a training camp with Nick Bockwinkel. One of the forgotten regional stars of the 1980s, Scott Casey was a good worker, a classic babyface, who was a casualty of the death of territories.