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[Deathwatch] Ray Traylor, pro wrestler "Big Bossman", 41



"Big Bossman" Ray Traylor Found Dead
September 23, 2004

http://www.onlineonslaught.com/columns/oo/20040923.shtml

by Rick Scaia
Exclusive to OnlineOnslaught.com

Following completion of this column, I have gotten word that Atlanta
media outlets are reporting that that cause of Ray Traylor's death is a
heart attack. Purely natural causes, and any word on underlying causes
of the heart attack are the details we'll now have to wait for.

On Wednesday evening, Ray Traylor was found unconscious by his wife in
their Dallas, GA, home; paramedics rushed to the scene but were unable
to revive Traylor, who was pronounced dead at the scene.

I have conflicting data in my records, but Traylor was either 41 or 42,
and in either case, is gone far too soon.
 
 
The cause of his death is unknown at this time, and will probably
remain so for several weeks, at least. Though suffering a perpetually
bad knee that was last operated on in 2000, all reports are that he
felt fine otherwise, and was even booked on a major indie show
(reprising perhaps his second-most infamous wrestling role as the
bodyguard of the Midnight Express) in October, and remained on very
good terms with WWE, as well.  
At only a shade over 40, with a well-earned reputation for being about
as good a worker as you'll see for a big man (though, commendably LESS
big than he was when he broke into the business at well over 400 lbs.),
and owner of a unique "enforcer" gimmick that enhanced his value
outside the ring (in case age or injury would limit him inside it),
Traylor may well have had another WWE comeback in him.

Sadly, now we'll never know.

I actually consider it sad for a couple of reasons: first, anytime a
guy (especially a good, conscientious citizen and family man like
Traylor seemed to be) leaves this world as young as 41 or 42, that's
just not right.  Nobody's ready to deal with that, least of all
Traylor's wife and two young daughters, who of course will feel the
brunt of this in a way we wrestling fans never will.

But hey, we mostly knew Ray Traylor as "The Big Bossman," as a
wrestler. And this story sucks on another level, because it's entirely
possible that an entire generation of wrestling fans has the wrong idea
about the Bossman; not only what he was capable of in the ring, but
also the caliber and importance of storylines he was a part of.  Let's
just say that one more comeback for the Bossman might not have restored
his legacy to its early 90's sheen; but one more run for Traylor in WWE
might have gone a long way towards making the current flock of Attitude
Era fans forget about some of the nonsense he'd been booked into during
his final major WWF exposure.

Perhaps I'm getting ahead of myself, though... to understand just how
Ray Traylor was underrated and how it might be best to remember him,
let's just start at the top, OK, kids?

Because for as much of an impact as Traylor eventually made on the
wrestling business during the very peak of the Hogan Era, and the way
he came back to the WWF just in time to ride the wave of Attitude Era
popularity, his early days and breaking into the business were anything
but traditional.

Traylor grew up in Dallas, GA, and although his cool-in-a-late-80s-way,
Jimmy-Hart-scribed theme song famously declared that Bossman was from
"Cobb County, Georgia" (which was then Bossman's announced hometown for
the rest of his career), I just so happen to have recently been on a
Cross Country Road Trip and have an atlas handy... and Dallas, GA, is
in Paulding County.  Which just doesn't have the same kind of ring to
it, I guess.

But it must have been a pleasant enough place, since Traylor was born
there, grew up there (where he was a stand-out football player at
Paulding High School, and received an athletic scholarship to the
University of Tennessee-Chattanooga as a result), and returned there to
live after college.  And as far as I know, he continued to live there
till the time of his death.

Traylor's was not a wrestling family. Nor did he have any particular
interest in wrestling himself. So after college, he returned to his
hometown just outside Atlanta, and needed to find a job. At 6'4" and
over 300 lbs. in 1984, a few opportunities might have been available to
Traylor that wouldn't have been available to an average joe.

One of those opportunities?  As a prison guard.  About 20 minutes up
the road in Marietta, GA -- in more importantly, we've now crossed an
imaginary line into Cobb County -- Traylor was put to work as a screw
in the county jail.  However, for as important as the prison guard job
would be to his later character development, it didn't really suit
Traylor, and he was constantly on the look-out for other work and other
things to try.

And again: being 6'4" and now inching closer to 400 lbs. means a few
unique doors might be opened to you.  Being right in the heart of
Georgia Championship Wrestling's territory as it was exploding in terms
of its dominance over the NWA thanks to Ted Turner's Atlanta-based
"SuperStation 17-WTBS," it wouldn't have been uncommon to have someone
in the business spot the massive prison guard walking the
suburban-Atlanta streets where he lived and worked, found out the guy
was a stand-out high school and college athlete, and then gotten the
idea that the guy should be a pro wrestler.

Which is pretty much exactly how it happened.  An acquaintance of
Traylor's put him in touch with an ex-wrestler in the area, and thus
began the process of molding the the big man into a pro wrestler. In
the age before reputable wrestling schools and refined training
programs, Bossman's scattershot training was still enough to get him
familiar with a few basics.  Even with what would today might be
considered a "late start" on his wrestling career (Traylor never set
foot in a ring until he was 23), his size combined with his surprising
athleticism did the rest and did it fast.

Because essentially, Traylor caught the eye of Dusty Rhodes (already a
big power broker in the Crockett/Georgia territories) just months into
his training, and found himself on TV, on the recently-unGeorgia-tized
"World Championship Wrestling" program (which would eventually become
the promotion's name when it split from the NWA).  His NWA debut came
in early 1986, when he showed up as Jim Cornette's suit-wearing
bodyguard for himself and his Midnight Express.
 
Of course, as green as he was, Traylor was NOT rushed into wrestling
matches.  Massive and more than a little mysterious, the newly renamed
"Big Bubba Rogers," would administer beatings outside of the confines
of a bell-to-bell wrestling match.  While he was doing his thing as a
non-wrestling "bodyguard," his training also ramped up, and instead of
random sessions with some forgotten ex-wrestler, Traylor started
training and picking up tips from the NWA's best at the time, and
working week-in and week-out with the likes of the Midnight Express and
the Rock 'n' Roll Express probably helped even further accelerate
Traylor's development.
 
I know this personally, because this is pretty much where Traylor was
introduced to me during my nascent fandom. As you're all aware,
sometimes I have trouble with 80's NWA history, simply because I lived
too far north to really fall into the Crockett/Georgia sphere of
influence, and even with TBS on my cable system, I always thought those
Saturday Night shows from Center Stage Theater looked cramped, tiny,
and bush league compared to the WWF's programs at the time.  And yet,
Traylor is one of those guys I VIVIDLY remember knowing about well
before he got to the WWF.

As "Big Bubba Rogers," Traylor was quickly splashed all over the pages
of the PWI family of magazines right at the time when I was starting to
read them to feed my Wrestling Jones.  By the time he stepped into the
ring and became a full-time wrestler (late in 1986, at Starrcade, I
believe), it already seemed like Big Bubba was the next big thing in
wrestling.  This might be a mis-remembrance, but I'm PRETTY sure that
Bubba was also named either PWI's Rookie Of The Year or the runner-up
for that award within a year of his debut.

It was also around the time of his move towards full-time wrestling and
not just bodyguarding that Traylor decided maybe he should quit the job
at the prison. In a funny story I remember from an interview a year or
so ago, Traylor says he continued prison guard work even after he was
on TV, just because he wasn't sure the wrestling thing was gonna work
out. When he was finally being booked for full road tours, he STILL
tried to keep both jobs by asking for time off from the prison; they
essentially told him to pick one job, Wrestler or Prison Guard, and
stick to that.	Traylor chose Wrestler.

By mid-1987, Traylor took advantage of ties between Crockett/Georgia
and the new UWF (a Bill Watts-run promotion that was absorbed into the
NWA/WCW by the end of 1987) to move to that territory and win the UWF
Heavyweight Title.  Less than 18 months into his wrestling career, and
Traylor was holding the top belt of what could have been reasonably
considered the #3 wrestling company (even ahead of the AWA, which is
more standardly thought of as part of the "Big Three" of the 80s) at
the time.

His reign was short-lived, but his work was well-received. He was
already moving in the ring in a way uncommon for men his size, and he
was still learning. After starting out as Silent Muscle for Cornette,
his development on the microphone was maybe a bit behind, but it was
coming along, too.  So would you be at all surprised to find out that
Vince McMahon started sniffing around and showing an interest in
Traylor by the end of 1987?
 
Of course you wouldn't. And when Traylor couldn't get Crockett to match
Vince's money offer, he decided to relocate to the WWF.  I think he
last appeared in the NWA in the autumn of 1987, and then Traylor and
the WWF took their sweet time coming up with a new package for "Big
Bubba Rogers," as he didn't debut on WWF TV until at least 6 months
later.	I remember the seemingly interminible lay-off very clearly: as
I said, I'd known to keep an eye on this "Big Bubba Rogers," and when
PWI said he'd signed with the WWF, I kept waiting.  And waiting....

But the wait was worth it. Traylor's new package took advantage of
Traylor's real life work as a prison guard, but significantly gussied
it up. Shortly after WrestleMania 4, vignettes featuring an enormous,
foul-spirited, mean, buzzcut prison guard started airing. The "Big
Bossman," as he was called, strutted around the Cobb County Prison yard
talking about the joy he derived from plastering people with his
nightstick and other heelish stuff.

When the Bossman finally started showing up in the arenas and in the
ring, instead of in vignettes, he quickly adopted "The Doctor of Style"
Slick as his manager. And he also debuted a unique character hook:
after he'd win a match over a jobber, he'd handcuff the poor guy to the
ring ropes and then beat him with his nightstick for a bit.

And I gotta tell you something, kids: maybe it was just a phase I was
in (precocious kid exiting childhood and entering teenager-ness), but
it didn't take long before Bossman joined Mr. Perfect on my list of
newly-debuted heels I kinda liked.  What is it about the very first
heels I had the balls to cheer for dying like flies, man?  I can't
remember if I was early enough to cheer them as heels or if I was just
coming around when the WWF finally turned them, but if I was Roddy
Piper or Jake Roberts, I'd be REAL careful taking care of myself....

Anyway, my point: between the cool theme song ("Hard Times") and the
ass-whomping he put on chumps and the general "don't cross me" vibe,
there was something compelling about this Big Bossman.	I even remember
filling out some silly survey thing for the WWF during the fall of
1988; on it, they asked you to list your three favorite wrestlers.  I'm
sure they LOVED hearing from the punk kid 8th grader who'd later
develop into a REAL thorn in their side when I listed (in order): Mr.
Perfect (heel), Randy Savage (who they were about to turn heel), and
the Big Bossman (heel).
 
Bossman made his PPV debut at SummerSlam's debut in 1988, squashing Ko
Ko B. Ware.  But as was the WWF's custom at the time, they basically
built up heels so they could feed them to Hulk Hogan.  So over the
course of the fall of '88, Bossman kept on doing his evil deeds until
finally he crossed paths with the righteous Hulkster.  Bossman took out
Hogan on the "Brother Love Show" with a nightstick attack to jumpstart
the feud, and by that point, was probably the WWF's lead heel.	At the
very least, he was the equal of Ted DiBiase, whose star had begun
waning after never made an inch of headway in a World Title Feud
against Randy Savage.

As tended to happen around November in the 80's WWF, alliances started
forming.  Hogan and Savage gravitated towards each other, as they were
the "MegaPowers," while that brought the Bossman (and his stablemate,
Akeem) together with Ted DiBiase for a 5-on-5 Survivor Series match. 
I'm sorry, kids, but I honestly do not remember the other members of
each team at this point; but that's OK, none of them mattered.	What
mattered was that in the match, Bossman and Akeem began a feud with
Hogan and Savage when Bossman decided to turn the tide in his team's
favor by handcuffing Hogan to the ring ropes in the middle of the
match.	This forced Savage to wrestle the match alone for a good 10
minutes and against 2 men; actually, against 3, as Slick got involved
copiously. In fact, it was Slick getting KO'ed by Savage that set up
the finish, as the manager bump meant the Lovely Miss Elizabeth could
go into Slick's pocket, get the handcuff key, and release Hogan from
the ropes.  Then, in an Orton-like moment, Hogan FINALLY tagged himself
into the match after Savage had done all the work, and finally
eliminated the last member of the other team (I want to say Haku,
actually).

On the surface, this big match had the effect of setting up a huge
MegaPowers (Savage/Hogan) vs. Twin Towers (Bossman/Akeem) match on a
live Prime Time NBC special. But beneath the surface, it was setting
things up for an even more memorable subtext to that match, as it was
the match where Randy Savage finally and violently turned on Hulk
Hogan. When Savage accidentally collided with Elizabeth, sending her
sprawling to the floor, it was Hogan who scooped her up and carried her
to the back; and for the second time in 3 months, Savage was left all
by himself against the Twin Towers.  And he didn't like it.  So when
Hogan returned and graciously offered to tag back into the match,
Savage slapped him in the face, and walked off to leave Hogan to do all
the work. Of course, Hogan being Hogan, it was no problem: he
dispatched two giants in about 5 minutes, and went back to do a big
show-closing angle with Savage and Liz that cemented them as the WM5
main event. So hey: Bossman may not have ever headlined a WrestleMania,
but WM5 couldn't have happened without him.

After about six months as the top (or #2) heel in the company, Bossman
was about to get a demotion. He and Akeem started teaming together full
time, and at WM5, they beat the Rockers, and seemed like they might be
headed for tag gold.  Bossman also briefly diverted his attention
towards a throw-away mini-feud with Hulk Hogan; Hogan had regained the
WWF Title from Savage, and needed a disposable challenger or two to get
his reign underway in style. His old foe, the Bossman, was tapped for
the job.  And actually, he did it in style; the climax of the
mini-program was a late-Spring Saturday Night's Main Event cage match
that probably rates among the better Hulk Hogan matches you'll ever
see.  If nothing else, I remember the two guys (probably about 13' and
700 lbs. between them) doing a superplex off the cage and being
absolutely amazed. Back then, 400 lbs. men didn't do stuff like that;
and even back then, I was sharp enough to catch onto the fact that
Hogan didn't normally do much of anything risky, either.  Good stuff.

As promising as the Twin Towers tag team may have seemed on paper, I'm
not entirely sure they ever really mounted a serious challenge for the
tag titles. I didn't understand the concept then, but I'm thinking
maybe it was because they would have been "division killers."  So
although they continued working as a team, there was no carrot at the
end of the stick, and so Bossman ALSO maintained a singles agenda,
which for much of 1989 revolved around feuding with the man who
"discovered" him and who'd recently arrived in the WWF himself, Dusty
Rhodes.  Even without any title on the line, both men played their
roles well, and this was probably the #2 or #3 feud for the WWF for the
entire second half of the year.  I don't recall, but I'm pretty sure
that Bossman got the last laugh in their rivalry (Dusty may have won
the blow-off match, but I remember a big part of the feud was Dusty
stealing Bossman's handcuffs/nightstick, and I *know* things ended with
Bossman getting those things back; and probably using them on Dusty).

By now, we're up the start of 1990.  And even as a pimply faced geek
just starting to make his mark in the high school band, it turns out I
was an trailblazer as the year started: because the WWF couldn't keep
Bossman a heel any longer.  The bad-assery combined with the charisma
and surprising ringwork were being noticed by others.  So right around
the time of the Royal Rumble, Bossman was part of an angle where he was
commissioned by Ted DiBiase to attack Jake "the Snake" Roberts
(DiBiase's foe at the time).  But when Bossman found out that his
manager, Slick, had taken some ridiculous percentage of the fee for
himself, the Bossman got upset.

So the Bossman helped out Roberts or otherwise un-did whatever his
dirty deed was... and Slick didn't like that.  The two split, and
Bossman rapidly found himself under attack from his former Twin Tower
partner, Akeem.  The two wound up signing for a match at WrestleMania
6, and I remember thinking it'd be a Titanic Struggle and being kind of
into the story.  And then the match lasted 90 seconds, and Bossman won.
 Huh.  Well, didn't matter so much to me: I was happy the right guy
won.

And Bossman caught on pretty well with the audience, too.  Even as he
treaded water, establishing himself as a babyface with wins over
jobbers, now that Akeem was dispatched (and out of the company), fans
warmed to him enough that when the WWF made a major misstep and needed
somebody to bail them out, they came to the Bossman.

Many fans remember "The Shockmaster," but what's often forgotten is
that Fred Ottman was actually involved in TWO of the worst-executed,
WrestleCrap-worthy debuts in wrestling history.  In the spring of 1990,
Ottman was brought in as a personal friend of Hulk Hogan's named
"Tugboat."  What the WWF apparently never stopped to think about is
that as much as fans would lap up whatever Hogan served them, they just
did NOT want their hero showing up on TV and claiming that some
candy-striped, borderline-retarded-seemming, TOOOT-TOOOT'ing moron is
his best friend in the world. But it didn't stop them from trying.
 
So after Hulk Hogan sufferened one of his bi-annual Super Beatdowns
(designed to give him time off to make movies after even-numbered
WrestleManias) at the hands of Earthquake, this "Tugboat" guy stepped
in and launched a Hulk Hogan Friendship Campaign in which he asked all
of the Hulkster's OTHER super-best friends out there in TV land to send
Hulk get well letters, because otherwise, the Hulkster might never come
back to the WWF.  I'm not sure if there was a donation involved, but
this is also the way you could, if you were a complete blithering ass,
get your hands on the precious "Hulk Hogan Friendship Bracelet."  The
angle, to the best of my retroactive knowledge, tanked badly, and the
WWF mail room was not exactly inundated with letters.  The WWF had set
things up so that Hogan would finally make his return at SummerSlam,
and that his Good Friend Tugboat would be in his corner for a match
against Earthquake (who would have Dino Bravo in his corner).  The plan
was to have Hogan get the win over Quake, maybe do some tag matches,
but ultimately give Tugboat (promising superstar that he was) a feud
with the hated Quake himself.

The plan was ditched just weeks before SummerSlam, as the WWF did an
injury angle with Tugboat, because they FINALLY realized what a drag a
clown-who-thinks-he's-a-sea-faring-vessel might be on Hogan's
popularity.  Tugboat would not be heard from again in any substantive
way until he ditched that gimmick, and became the slightly-less-silly
"Typhoon," forming the Natural Disasters tag team with his one time
foe, Earthquake.

But in the interim, Hogan needed a new corner man for SummerSlam. And
of all the upper-mid-card babyfaces he could have picked from, who'd he
take?  The Big Bossman.  Quickly inserted into that spot (he'd
previously been mucking around in the middle of a throw-away
Roberts/Bad News Brown feud that was predicated partially on who had
the more disgusting pets), Bossman's stock soared again. Hogan overcame
Quake in the SummerSlam match, Hogan and Bossman started teaming up
around the country against Quake and Bravo, and Bossman got singles
wins over both guys on house shows and whatnot.  Bossman was also part
of Hogan's team at Survivor Series that fall, where an amusing footnote
had Big Bossman's mother coming into play: opposing team member Rick
Rude and his manager Bobby Heenan allegedly made "inappropriate
comments" about Bossman's mother, and Rude was suspended from the WWF
as a result; it remains on of the dumbest, flimsiest excuses for a
suspension of all times, and only becomes funnier when you get to
Bossman's antics of 1998.  But anyway, the message that was getting
across: Bossman is ALMOST as awesome as Hulk Hogan.

And when you're ALMOST as awesome as Hogan, that means one thing:
you're set to be the top babyface challenger to the InterContinental
Title.	So that's where Bossman was positioned as 1991 got underway,
setting his sights on the IC belt held by (d'oh!) Mr. Perfect (who,
conveniently enough, was managed by Bossman's-mother-mocking Bobby
Heenan, which is how they hooked it up). So two of my favorites locked
up for the first half of 1991, and somehow, they BOTH managed to win
the feud.  I think their most famous match was probably WM7, where
Perfect lost the match via DQ.	So Bossman wins the match, but Perfect
retains the title!  I was happy.  It was a move that probably kept the
title on the right guy (Hennig was a bit smaller than usual WWF main
event size at that point, and an actual WRESTLER, so the belt did him
more good than it would have Bossman), but protected Bossman as he
headed into his next big feud.

And logically enough, said feud was against a newly arrived heel custom
made to clash with Bossman. Most fans probably never stopped to think
how dumb it was, but the WWF managed to convince us that American Law
Enforcement Officers HATE Canadian Law Enforcement Officers when "The
Mountie" (Jacques Rougeau in a nice RCMP outfit and luckily still
MONTHS away from having a theme song even cooler than the Bossman's)
debuted and crossed paths with Bossman.  How'd it play out?  Well,
Bossman might have walloped a perp or three with his nightstick, but
the Mountie was WAAAAY more evil, because when he debuted, his
post-match schtick was using a shock-stick to tazer his beaten
opponent's into unconsciousness.  Jerk.  So Bossman simply HAD to step
in and insist that there's a right way and a wrong way to take
advantage of an alleged criminal.  And the shock stick just took things
too far.

So the two feuded for the summer of 1991, and I think they paid it off
at SummerSlam, where Bossman beat the Mountie in a match where the
loser had to spend a night in jail. But in an odd twist, the Mountie
came out of the match in better shape; he was soon poking about the IC
Title picture, while the man who jailed him was spinning his wheels.
Left with no singular foe, Bossman slid down the card during the autumn
of 1991 and winter of 1992.  His first WWF stint hit bottom at
WrestleMania 8, where he was tossed into a pointless 8-man tag match
that might as well have not been on the card at all.

But shortly after WM8, the WWF did it's usual spring cleaning and
resetting for 1992, and that meant debuting a new character, one who
was coming for the Bossman and who would once again give Bossman a
high-level feud.  Vignettes featuring the same prison as Bossman walked
when he debuted 4 years previous started airing with cryptic
voice-overs.  Somebody from Bossman's past, some psychotic criminal who
believed he'd been abused by the Bossman while in the Cobb County Jail
was on the brink of being released back into society. And he was coming
to the WWF, and he was gonna make the Bossman pay.

I remember thinking it was actually a pretty cool little storyline, and
when "Nailz," a 6'8" psycho wearing his orange prison jump suit,
debuted, I was looking forward to the big feud and the big showdown
between him and Bossman.  Of course, at that point, I was still young
enough to have NO idea how the wrestling business worked and that Nailz
was gonna squash the Bossman, but hey... the internet hadn't been
invented yet as far as I knew.

When Nailz finally arrived on the scene after months of vignettes, he
did so with a splash, taking out Bossman with a brutal attack during
the summer.  Bossman sold the attack by taking 2 months off from TV,
during which time Nailz decimated the entire babyface roster (well, the
curtain-jerkers, anyway).  Bossman returned with a vengeance in the
fall, and it didn't take long before he and Nailz were signed to a
special "Nightstick Match" at the Survivor Series.  In my heart of
hearts, I was sure this was where Bossman got his revenge.  Little did
I know I know that Big Man Fetishist Vince McMahon had huge plans for
Nailz that included polishing off Bossman and then moving into a huge
feud against the Undertaker....

BUT WAIT: little did Vince McMahon know that Kevin Wacholz (the man who
played Nailz) was not quite right in the head.	After a backstage
confrontation between the two (in which Vince may or may not have been
choked or punched), it was NAILZ whose WWF tenure was about to be
shortened.  So Bossman actually did get the win over Nailz at Survivor
Series that year, and Nailz disappeared from the scene shortly there
after.

But though he got the "blow off" win over his hated rival, it was only
by accident, and there was nothing left for Bossman to do.  He stuck
around, and I think he put over the returning Bam Bam Bigelow at the
1993 Royal Rumble.  And then he was gone from the WWF before
WrestleMania 9.

This almost exactly 5-year-long run contains a TON of cool and
important stuff, and Bossman's value to the Hogan Era WWF is probably
under-estimated by most fans.  From being a headlining heel during his
initial 18 months to developing into a surprisingly effective
upper-card babyface for his last 3 years, Bossman challenged for
titles, was both a main event foe and main event partner of Hulk
Hogan's, and was integral to the set-up of a WrestleMania main event. 
There are a lot of guys who probably won more titles or have higher
visibility with fans who can't boast the resume of the Big Bossman
during this run.

Of course, the story takes a bit of a turn, here, as Ray Traylor had to
leave the "Big Bossman" gimmick at the door when he parted ways with
the WWF.  The entirety of the next five years can be summed up in one
word: underwhelming.

Immediately following his WWF departure, Traylor split his time between
Japan and SMW, but by the autumn of 1993, Eric Bischoff was firmly
entrenched at WCW, and was on the cusp of getting Ted Turner to open up
his bottomless checkbook.  Seeing a former WWF headliner on the open
market, Bischoff signed Traylor to WCW in time for (I think) Halloween
Havoc.	Traylor debuted as babyface ally of Sting's, even got to
challenge for Rick Rude's "International Title" at one point shortly
after his debut, and I can't recall vividly, but I think WCW even
idiotically tried to bring in Kevin Wacholz at some point early in
Traylor's WCW run in an attempt to rekindle a feud that was probably
best left dead (and to re-employ a guy who was probably best left
unemployed).

But although WCW had big ideas for Traylor, they had a huge problem:
they didn't know what to call him on TV.  He showed up, and they
thought maybe just "Bossman" would be OK, but obviously, it wasn't. 
They tried just "The Boss," but the WWF legal team jumped on that, too,
and by early 1994, WCW couldn't use that name.	Their hands tied, they
quickly de-pushed Traylor until they could figure out what to do with
him.  By mid-1994, WCW was in full-on Spend Mode, and had signed Hulk
Hogan.	Hogan liked surrounding himself with guys he'd worked with in
the past and trusted, including Traylor, so WCW finally got around to
repackaging the guy: he became "The Guardian Angel," a take-off on the
organization of the same name (in which regular citizens are ever
vigilant and fight crime when they see it; and also, apparently you
have to wear a goofy-ass red beret while doing it).  

This time, I think the actual Guardian Angels gave the gimmick their
sanction, so that wasn't the problem. The problem was that it was a
really silly outfit and gimmick for a business that was just finally
starting to inch towards slightly cooler and more real personalities.
So "The Guardian Angel" flopped with fans despite being re-pushed into
a near-the-top-of-the-card role as an ally of Sting and Hulk's. So WCW
decided on a heel turn, and Traylor ditched the red beret and started
calling himself "Big Bubba Rogers" again.  There, see, was that so
hard, WCW?

Unfortunately, as soon as Big Bubba returned and got rid of his silly
gimmick, he fell in with a bunch of dudes who couldn't say the same
thing. As part of the "Dungeon of Doom," Bubba was surrounded by
idiocy, and as such, his own stock dropped.  By the end of 1995 and
into 1996, Bubba was reduced to Dungeon of Doom in-fighting, as his old
foe Earthquake had come to WCW and joined the group (as "Avalanche"). 
And them two hosses, they had a history!  So even though they couldn't
mention it, and even though their names weren't the same, Bossman and
Quake rekindled their old feud for a bit in WCW!

As the nWo rapidly expanded in 1996, Big Bubba was one of the many
former WWF wrestlers to join the group. But at that point, he was lucky
to be considered a member of the "b-team."  The nWo got THAT bloated. 
Traylor stuck with the nWo for maybe a year, but then after an injury
hiatus, he returned and found out the nWo didn't want him any more.  So
he tried to lead an attack against the nWo...  I think he had one
showdown against the nWo in which he got the Steiners to be his
partners, but for the most part, Bubba was leading other c-teamers, and
obviously, he was NOT the one who got to take down the mighty nWo.

It also didn't help that, for some unknown reason, WCW decided that
"Big Bubba" wasn't an adequate name. They had Traylor go on TV and
reveal that his name is "Ray Traylor," and that's the name he wanted to
wrestle under.	And Ray Traylor is a nice name and all, but anyone who
thought it'd catch on like "Big Bubba" must have been smoking something
funny....

So this is how Ray Traylor's WCW run ended with a whimper in either
late 1997 or 1998.  He spent almost the entirety of 1998 on the
sidelines, the first time since 1985 when his visibility dropped that
low in the wrestling world.  But continuing a trend that he'd begun
during his Japan/SMW/WCW years, Bossman aggressively whipped himself
into the best shape of his career in 1998, and in October, he returned
to the company and the persona that made him: he returned as the Big
Bossman in the WWF.

Well, not at first; at first, he was a mysterious masked assailant on
the payroll of Mr. McMahon. His identity was known to most internet
fans, but when a suddenly-svelte Bossman unmasked that fall, it might
have been a suprise to a lot of fans.  As a henchman for McMahon's
Corporation, Bossman was immediately sacrificed to Steve Austin, and
then found himself feuding with Vince's lesser adversary: Mankind. 
Mankind and the Bossman traded the newly-created Hardcore Title at
least once or twice in late '98 or into '99, marking Bossman's first
taste of gold since the UWF Title 11 years previous.

Although Bossman was decidedly stuck on the mid-card, it didn't take
long for him to add ANOTHER title, as he and Corporation-mate Ken
Shamrock enjoyed a few months as tag champions.  But then, Bossman was
back on his own in time for WM15.  In fact, he was feuding with the
Undertaker (as the Corporation at the time had no love for the
Undertaker or his newly formed "Ministry").

This led to what seemed like the nadir of the Hell in the Cell
tradition, as Taker beat Bossman inside the Cell at WM15, including an
unconvincing "hanging" of Bossman by Edge and Christian at the end of
the match.  Not good at all, folks.  But luckily, hanging is NOT fatal
in pro wrestling, so Bossman was back in action in a matter of weeks. 
However, he quickly became a man without a country when, against all
logic, Vince McMahon's Corporation fused with the Undertaker's
Ministry.  Don't ask me, folks; I didn't write it, I just remember it. 
So not only was the "Corporate Ministry" now one entity with about
half-as-many spots to be filled.... but Bossman just got done violently
feuding with Taker, anyway, so it'd be weird to have him still around
the group.  But they also didn't want to turn Bossman face, I guess, so
they just sort of had him wander away on his own.  And sadly, if you
thought Hell in the Cell against Taker was bad, well.... you ain't seen
nothing yet!

Bossman decided to go back after the Hardcore Title, which was now held
by Al Snow. And that wasn't the only thing in Snow's possession, as
he'd also taken a shine to a puppydog named "Pepper."  I think they
traded the title a couple of times over the summer and fall, but along
the way, they did a really lame skit in which Bossman tried to make his
peace with Snow by inviting him over to dinner (three camera set-up,
naturally, in purest Crash TV Hollywood-ization).  The two had a nice
dinner, seemed to put their differences aside, until Bossman revealed
that the main course had been.... oh, come on, even if you DIDN'T see
it, you know what's coming... it was PEPPER STEAK.  GET IT?!?  

That led to one of the most demoralizingly bad matches of 1999, in
which Bossman and Snow battled inside a "Kennel From Hell" (they fight
inside a regular cage, but then that cage is enclosed in a Hell in the
Cell, and between the two cages are RABID DOGS.  That'll learn the
Bossman to cook puppies!  The brawling was tepid, the dogs were
uncooperative, and this just sucked folks.  For the second time in less
than 8 months, Bossman was a party to befouling the
previously-thought-bulletproof Hell in the Cell concept....  anyway,
Snow won the match, and the feud, but apparently, somebody was a big
fan of Bossman's heel work, because his Year of Suck was just getting
started....

Shortly after the Kennel From Hell, the WWF found out that Steve
Austin's neck was in really bad shape and that he'd have to be written
off TV for a year.  His role in the WWF Title picture meant severely
shaking things up.  So, in a surprise move, the WWF changed gears in
mid-stream at Survivor Series '99, and put the title on The Big Show (a
babyface, defeating the heel Triple H).  But HHH needed to take a few
months to focus on his new marriage to Stephanie McMahon and a feud
with Vince, so who to face the Big Show in the interim?  The WWF tapped
the Big Bossman.

Bossman, who once got Rick Rude fired from the WWF for comments Rude
made about his mom, suddenly bit into Big Show with an attack based
almost exclusively on Big Show's dad.  As I recall, it went like this:
Show's dad was diagnosed with cancer just as Show was starting his
title reign, and a week later, SOMEbody faked a note to Big Show
claiming his dad had died.  Bossman later took credit.	Big Show
no-likey.  Then, a few weeks later, Big Show's dad died "for real" (in
a fake storyline), and Big Show was sad.  But Bossman showed up at the
funeral in the Blues Mobile, and started mocking Show and his dad over
the loudspeaker.  And then he hooked the casket up to the back of his
car and dragged it around. And for the coup de grace, Bossman made a
visit to Show's mom; emotionally distraught, Show's mom admitted that
she'd had an affair and that her now-dead husband was NOT Show's
biological dad or something.  Of course, Bossman had "secretly filmed"
the meeting, and showed the footage on TV, and began calling Show a
"bastard."

Now, all this might sound "so bad it's good" to some of you. And if
it'd been a throw-away angle low on the card, maybe it would have been.
 Still WrestleCrap at its finest, but maybe funny enough that you look
back on it fondly in a way.  But this was your WWF Title feud for 3
months, and rarely, if ever, was the title mentioned or a was it a
driving force behind the animosity.  Just annoying and dumb as hell. 
And of course, once they finally hooked it up in a PPV match, Show
decimated Bossman, and that was that.  All that work for a one-off
disposible challenger.

As 2000 started, Bossman's days as an important player in the WWF were
numbered.  Dispatched by Show, Bossman tried out a series of tag
partners, most notably Albert (now "A-Train") and then Bull Buchanan. 
It was with Buchanan that Bossman had some mild success, and the duo
even made it onto the WM2000 card together.  But later in 2000, any
chances the duo had of making it to the top of the tag ranks was
short-circuited when Bossman needed knee surgery.

Bossman was off TV for an entire year, and when he returned in the fall
of 2001, it was only briefly. Returning as a heel, his career had also
come full-circle; perhaps not likely to be taken seriously as an active
wrestler, Bossman's last run with the WWF was as a bodyguard (to Booker
T).  I think his only PPV appearance (and his last one ever) came as an
also-ran in the 2002 Royal Rumble.  Before winter 2002 was up, Bossman
was off TV entirely.  During the summer of 2002, he was reassigned to
Ohio Valley Wrestling, where he was an assistant trainer for the WWF's
developmental territory.

I believe his contract with the WWF and his duties in OVW ended late in
2002, although he remained on very good terms with the company.  In the
last 2 years, he's remained out of the wrestling spotlight almost
entirely, making only sporadic appearances on the indie scene (and also
appearing once or twice in Japan for All Japan Pro Wrestling).	I know
he had become very involved in fundraising and local politics in his
hometown in Paulding County, Georgia, where he was living comfortably
off the money he had made and wisely saved during his peak years.

And again, though we might not know what aspirations Traylor had in
terms of returning to the business to finalize his legacy, I do hope
that in some small way I've been able to clue some of you in on how
talented and important a performer Traylor was. The occasion for doing
so is a sad one, but any chance to point out that the Big Bossman was
about so much more than HitC-ruining, puppy-cooking, and
funeral-crashing is one I feel compelled to take advantage of.

The Bossman of the 1988-1993 WWF not only played a huge role in key
storylines and matches for the company, he was also a remarkable
performer and one of the first super-heavyweights to start raising the
bar for how athletically gifted Big Men needed to be inside the squared
circle.  Let's not forget about that, folks.

Ray "Big Bossman" Traylor is dead, too soon, at 42.  Our sincere
condolences go out to all his family, friends, and fans.