Dean Simon (born August 4 1960 in Tampa, Florida) is a professional wrestler best known under the ring name Dean Malenko. He currently works for World Wrestling Entertainment as senior road agent for the ECW brand . During his career, his technical skill earned him the nickname "The Man of A Thousand Holds". Malenko was born into a wrestling family, and his father Boris Malenko was a prominent wrestling figure in his own right.
Career
Malenko has wrestled all over the world and has spent much time wrestling in
Mexico and
Japan. He wrestled along with his brother Joe, forming a
tag team, until his brother retired. On
January 24 1992, Malenko defeated "the Superstar" for the Suncoast Pro Wrestling (SPW) Southern title in
Palmetto, Florida. Malenko defeated Jimmy Backlund for the ICWA Light Heavyweight title on
March 12 1992, in Tampa.
Extreme Championship Wrestling
In
Extreme Championship Wrestling (ECW), Malenko was known as "The Shooter" Dean Malenko and was given a gimmick similar to a UFC fighter. (Due to his uncanny resemblence to
Royce Gracie) Malenko won the ECW Television title on
November 4,
1994, the same night
2 Cold Scorpio had won the title from Jason.
Chris Benoit and Malenko won the ECW tag team titles on
February 25,
1995 from
Sabu and the
Tasmaniac in
Philadelphia. Malenko, Benoit and Shane Douglas were the first
Triple Threat faction in ECW. Malenko won the Television title for a second time on
July 21 1995, by defeating
Eddie Guerrero. He and Guerrero feuded over the Television Title and fought a series of what most ECW fans consider to be five-star classics. His matches earned him a WCW contract, which he did not hesitate to sign. His last ECW match was against Guerrero in a Two-out-of-Three Falls match, which ended with a draw as the last fall had both men's shoulders on the mat.
World Championship Wrestling
In September 1995, Malenko and Benoit joined
World Championship Wrestling. Malenko had a decorated career in WCW, winning many championships. On
May 2 1996, Malenko defeated Shinjiro Ohtani for the
WCW Cruiserweight title in
Orlando. Malenko would soon be known in WCW as
"The Iceman" Dean Malenko due to his cold, caculating demeanor and was also given the nickname of
The Man Of 1,000 Holds (borrowed from the Dynamite Kid who had the nickname originally whilst wrestling in the UK). Malenko won his second Cruiserweight title on
October 27 1996, beating
Rey Mysterio, Jr. in the process.
Último Dragón relieved Malenko of the title two months later. Malenko won the Cruiserweight title back from the Último Dragón on
January 22,
1997, in
Milwaukee. To show his versatility Dean won the
WCW United States Championship on
March 16 1997, defeating his former ECW foe
Eddie Guerrero. Along with Chris Benoit, Malenko defeated
Barry Windham and
Curt Hennig for the WCW World tag team titles.
During his stay in WCW, Malenko engaged in a heated feud with Chris Jericho as well. The Cruiserwieght champion of the time, Jericho boasted that he was "The Man of 1,004 Holds" and had a final showdown with Malenko at 1998's pay-per-view, WCW/nWo Uncensored. After a long match, Jericho came out on top, leaving Malenko in an unusual fit of frustration. Gene Okerlund would come to the ring and interview Malenko, stating that he's lost the last three PPV matches in a row, calling him a loser, and asking "Where does Dean Malenko go from here?" Malenko simply replied "home." He would not be seen again in WCW for months but would return at Slamboree '98, disguised as masked wrestler Ciclope, and win a Battle Royal for a #1 contender spot for the Cruiserweight Championship.
Malenko became the first wrestler to win the WCW Cruiserweight title four times. He also became a part of the newest incarnation of Ric Flair's Four Horsemen faction. Near the end of his WCW career, Malenko joined up with Ric Flair's real-life rival Shane Douglas and his faction "The Revolution." In 2000, Malenko had his last match in WCW; an infamous match with Billy Kidman. The match was a "catch-as-catch-can" match at the WCW Souled Out pay-per-view event. Early on, Malenko instinctively left the ring to regroup and lost the match when his feet hit the arena floor. After the match was over, Malenko got back in the ring, apparently unaware that one of the match's stipulations provided that a wrestler could lose by being sent out of the ring.
World Wrestling Federation
After being granted his release from WCW the night after his last WCW match, Malenko signed with the
WWF debuted on
WWF RAW on
January 31 2000. Malenko first appeared in the crowd with the infamous "WCW Four" - himself,
Chris Benoit,
Perry Saturn and
Eddie Guerrero - who all made exits from WCW at around the same time. While not having as much success in the WWF, Malenko was a force in the
promotion's light heavyweight division. Along with Benoit, Saturn and Guerrero, he had some measure of success as part of
The Radicalz faction. On
March 13 2000, Malenko pinned
Essa Rios for the
WWF Light Heavyweight Championship in
East Rutherford, New Jersey. After dropping the Light Heavyweight title to
Scotty 2 Hotty, Malenko regained it on
April 25 2000.
After a brief absence from TV, Malenko returned to reform the Radicalz with Benoit, Guerrero, and Perry Saturn. Around this time, Malenko briefly became known as Double Ho Seven, a parody of the fictional character James Bond, special agent 007. The gimmick was born out of a match with The Godfather, who offered Malenko one of his female escorts to Malenko instead of the two wrestling a match. Malenko gladly accepted his opponent's offer. As Double Ho Seven, Malenko competed for the affections of Lita and feuded with her tag team The Hardy Boyz. The feud culminated with Lita pinning Malenko (with some assistance from Matt Hardy) in a match on the February 19, 2001 edition of RAW.
Malenko dropped the WWF Light Heavyweight Championship after holding it for nearly twelve months to Crash Holly on an edition of Sunday Night HEAT. After both Benoit and Guerrero drifted away from the Radicalz, Malenko teamed with Saturn for several months before quietly disappearing off television as the WCW/ECW Invasion storyline began.
Retirement and WWE appearances
Malenko announced his retirement from the ring at the
2001 Brian Pillman Memorial show. The WWE character
Simon Dean was named after Malenko's actual name, Dean Simon. Malenko appeared in the ring along with legendary wrestlers such as
Dusty Rhodes,
Jimmy Snuka,
Ted Dibiase, and
Kevin Von Erich during a segment of the
Homecoming edition of RAW on
October 3rd,
2005. His good friend, Eddie Guerrero died on
November 13,
2005. Malenko then made a special appearance on the
November 14 edition of
RAW alongside good friend Chris Benoit, speaking about Eddie's death and talking about the memories they had shared together. The following Friday on
SmackDown!, Malenko once again appeared after a match between
Chris Benoit and
Triple H, and the three embraced. After the Royal Rumble in 2006, he was seen congratulating
Rey Mysterio after Rey had just won the Royal Rumble.
Simon Dean, a health nut character, is a parody on Malenko's real name and lifestyle.
Finishing and signature moves
Dean Simon is credited as being the inventor of the Crippler Crossface Goldberg's Jackhammer Dudley Boyz' Dudley Death Drop [http://everything2.com/index.pl?node=3D" target="_blank" >*.
Manager(s)
Championships and accomplishments
- 1-Time ICWA Junior Heavyweight Champion
- PWI ranked him # 161 of the 500 best singles wrestlers during the "PWI Years" in 2003.
- PWI ranked him # 1 in the 1997 PWI 500.
- 1995 Feud of the Year (vs Eddie Guerrero)
- 1996 Best Technical Wrestler
- 1997 Best Technical Wrestler
Job title
External links
1960 births | American professional wrestlers | ECW alumni | The Four Horsemen | Jewish-American professional wrestlers | Living people | Tampans
Dean Malenko