The long time voice of the NWA and WCW, Tony Schiavone was beloved by some and hated by others but heard by millions. He was on the flagship broadcast of the number two (at times number one) company in a timeline that seemingly stretched to forever and that has to be worth something. Or maybe not.
Best known to the fans in America as the Spanish Announce Team who constantly watched their announce table get destroyed on 3,000 consecutive WWE pay per views, Hugo Savinovitch and Carlos Cabrera have been the Spanish voice of the WWE for years. Cabrera was a former newscaster and Savinovitch a former wrestler and in their brief intro at every event they showcase an exuberance that makes English only speakers wish they could understand them.
Another great early Light Heavyweight, Danny McShain was a multi time NWA Light Heavyweight Champion and one of the best natural heels of his day. His tough guy exterior was matched with a cocky attitude and he was hated, though respected, everywhere he performed.
It seems unfathomable that Chris Benoit is in this category instead of being on the page as a lock for the Hall of Fame as his wrestling career would suggest. Currently persona non grata within the WWE, it is extremely doubtful that this status will change, and due to his heinous actions, they probably shouldn’t. Regardless, his wrestling skills had few peers (if any) even though these will likely never be shown on WWE programming again.
Before the days of cable TV and National wrestling promotions, Bill Apter’s series of magazines (Pro Wrestling Illustrated, Inside Wrestling and The Wrestler) were often the best way for fans to know what was going on in the wrestling world outside of their territory. Even today in the era of globalization and the internet, the PWI 500 issue remains an anticipated issue for the magazine. Wrestling fans may not know Apter’s name, but many know the publications he created.