| The Machines |
|---|
| Stable |
|---|
| Members | Super Machine Big Machine Giant Machine Hulk Machine Piper Machine Animal Machine Crusher Machine[1] Capt. Lou Albano (Manager) |
|---|
| Billed from | 'The Orient' |
|---|
| Debut | 1986 |
|---|
| Disbanded | 1987 |
|---|
| Years active | 1986-1987 |
|---|
- Blackjack Mulligan Death
- Blackjack Mulligan Attacks Andre The Giant
- Blackjack Mulligan Prison
- Blackjack Mulligan Vs Andre The Giant
Andre the Giant was big, but so were Dick Murdoch and Blackjack Mulligan. Both men had billed heights of over 6'0, and supposedly weighed a combined 595 pounds. RELATED: 15 Epic Real Life Andre The Giant Stories. Andre was actually driven to school by legendary playwright, Samuel Beckett, which is a fun story that certainly would have been good to add into the documentary to take things out of just wrestling and the other serious topics. 4 Attempting To Drown Wrestlers.

The Machines were a professional wrestlingstable that performed in the World Wrestling Federation in 1986 and 1987. The team consisted of well-known WWF wrestlers working under masks which strongly resembled that worn by Super Strong Machine in New Japan Pro Wrestling at the time; leader André the Giant had faced Hirata and two other Strong Machines during tours of NJPW in 1984, getting the idea for the masks. The gimmick was very much tongue-in-cheek, as the identities of the masked men were obvious to the fans but frustrating to heels when they were unable to prove them. The Machines was the last tag teamCapt. Lou Albano managed in the WWF until he returned in 1994 to manage The Headshrinkers.
Story[edit]
Blackjack Mulligan was a West Texas roughneck who was known to take no nonsense from anybody. He even once stood his ground against Andre the Giant and Ole Anderson!But on one fateful night in Boston, Massachusetts, in 1971, he was not able to protect himself.
After feuding intensely with André for more than a year, Bobby Heenan's Heenan Family challenged André and a partner of his choice to face King Kong Bundy and Big John Studd in a tag team match on April 26, 1986.[2] When André did not show and was replaced by Ted Arcidi,[3] Bobby Heenan launched a campaign to get him suspended from the WWF.[4] After deliberating on the matter, WWF President Jack Tunney was forced to suspend him for missing the tag team match and subsequent matches against the Heenan Family.[5] This was part of a wrestling storyline, to allow André time off for production of the film The Princess Bride which was being filmed in the UK and also to allow him to fulfill a contracted tour of Japan. He was also beginning to develop health problems from the gigantism that caused his size that led him to having major back surgery and limited his wrestling ability at that time.
Blackjack Mulligan Death
Less than two months after the suspension was announced, vignettes appeared on WWF Television hailing the debut of a masked tag team from the Orient, known as 'The Machines': Giant Machine and Super Machine. The team announced that they were coming to America soon with their manager Lou Albano[6] and that their only mission was to prove that they were the number one tag team in the world.[5] Super Machine was portrayed by Bill Eadie. His ring name was a play on his previous gimmick 'Masked Superstar'. Though it was clear that Giant Machine was none other than André the Giant, commentators sold that Giant Machine might be Giant Baba, and not André, under the mask.[7]

In the following weeks, Bobby Heenan made repeated claims that Giant Machine was André the Giant attempting to circumvent his suspension. To illustrate the obviousness of the ruse, Heenan went so far as to introduce his 'new team from Korea' on an episode of Jesse Ventura’s Body Shop. The team was merely King Kong Bundy and Big John Studd wearing paper bags over their heads.[8] Heenan's claims led to Jack Tunney decreeing that if the Giant Machine was revealed to be André, André's suspension would become permanent.[9]
Blackjack Mulligan Attacks Andre The Giant
On August 5 (shown August 23), The Machines made their WWF debut with Super Machine wrestling in a singles match while Albano and Giant Machine were at ringside.[10] Later that night, Bobby Heenan sneaked around at ringside taking pictures of the Giant Machine to try to prove his true identity.[11] One week later, Albano introduced a third Machine to the WWF: Big Machine, who was played by Blackjack Mulligan. André had been suffering from (legitimate) severe back injuries, and the introduction of the Big Machine character was meant to reduce André's wrestling role.[12] 'The Machines' angle was designed to put him in a lighter tag-team role. Due to the severity of the back injury, Mulligan was brought in to reduce André's wrestling role even further, thereby keeping the popular superstar on TV.[12] In televised interviews with Studd and Bundy, Studd would question the two smaller Machines being Japanese as one had a West Texas accent (Big Machine/Mulligan) and the other had a 'New York accent' (Super Machine/Eadie). On the WWF show Tuesday Night Titans, Heenan claimed he knew of no Japanese wrestler who was 7'4' tall, weighed over 500 lbs and spoke with a French accent.
Big Machine and Super Machine wrestled the majority of the matches against Bobby Heenan's cronies, occasionally with Lou Albano joining them to face Bundy, Studd and Heenan in six man tag-team action.[13] Soon, other masked wrestlers (whose identities were generally obvious) appeared and temporarily teamed with The Machines. On September 10, Big and Super Machine were joined by Animal Machine to defeat King Kong Bundy, Big John Studd and Bobby Heenan.[14] On September 16, The Machines were joined by Hulk Machine as the trio defeated the Heenan Family.[15] The Hulk Machine returned on September 22 and helped the Machines win in the main event at the Madison Square Garden.[16] A few weeks later the Machines received help from the kilt-wearing Piper Machine.[17] On a house show in St. Paul, Minnesota the Machines even got the help of Crusher Machine, pinning John Studd to gain the victory for his team.[18] On October 28, The Machines wrestled their last match under that gimmick, a loss to Bundy and Studd. This also marked the last appearance as a manager in the WWF for Lou Albano for several years.[19]
After the Machines last match was shown on November 23, the angle was ended and André was announced as being reinstated on November 29.[20] In the following weeks the mystery of why André the Giant was reinstated built up until it was revealed that Bobby Heenan had arranged for the suspension to end so he could turn on Hulk Hogan in the buildup to WrestleMania III. After the angle ended Eadie (Super Machine) was repackaged as Ax, one half of Demolition while Big Machine worked for the WWF as Blackjack Mulligan (Windham's best-known wrestling identity) in late 1986 and the first half of 1987 before leaving the promotion.
Blackjack Mulligan Prison
References[edit]
- ^The Machines: Andre the Giant puts on a hood and becomes the Giant Machine, and no one can figure out who he is. And um...yeah.
- ^Graham Cawthon (March 31, 1986). 'WWF Show Results 1986'. Retrieved 2007-07-01.
(Shown: April 19, 1986) Big John Studd & King Kong Bundy as guests of the Piper's Pit in which they challenge André the Giant and a partner of his choice to face them the following week
- ^Graham Cawthon (March 31, 1986). 'WWF Show Results 1986'. Retrieved 2007-07-01.
(Shown: April 26, 1986) Hillbilly Jim & Ted Arcidi (sub. for André the Giant) defeated Big John Studd & King Kong Bundy via disqualification at 2:33 when Studd & Bundy illegally double teamed their opponents and attacked referee Gilberto Roman
- ^Graham Cawthon (April 21, 1986). 'WWF Show Results 1986'. Retrieved 2007-07-01.
(Shown: May 3) during the bout, Bobby Heenan did guest commentary and mentioned he was meeting with WWF President Jack Tunney in an attempt to have André the Giant suspended
- ^ abBrian Shields (2006). Main event – WWE in the raging 80s (4th ed.). Pocket Books. pp. 56–57. ISBN978-1-4165-3257-6.
- ^Graham Cawthon (June 24, 1986). 'WWF Show Results 1986'. Retrieved 2007-07-01.
(Shown: July 5) featured Vince McMahon interviewing Bobby Heenan in which he showed Heenan footage of Gene Okerlund finding the Machines in Japan, with the Machines saying they were coming to the WWF and would have Capt. Lou Albano as their manager
- ^Graham Cawthon (June 24, 1986). 'WWF Show Results 1986'. Retrieved 2007-07-01.
(Shown: July 5) Heenan was irate after seeing the footage and claimed that Giant Machine was André the Giant; during the closing moments of the show, McMahon & Bruno Sammartino speculated that Giant Machine was Giant Baba
- ^Graham Cawthon (July 7, 1986). 'WWF Show Results 1986'. Retrieved 2007-07-01.
(Shown: August 2) Heenan introduced two new wrestlers from Korea - King Kong Bundy & Big John Studd wearing paper bags over their heads; it was an attempt by Heenan to show how obvious it is that Giant Machine is really André the Giant.
- ^Graham Cawthon (July 15, 1986). 'WWF Show Results 1986'. Retrieved 2007-07-01.
(Shown: July 26) Bobby Heenan then came in and said that André was obviously one of the Machines, with Tunney responding that if André was proven to be one of the Machines he would be suspended for life
- ^Graham Cawthon (August 5, 1986). 'WWF Show Results 1986'. Retrieved 2007-07-01.
(Shown: August 23) Super Machine (w/ Capt. Lou Albano & Giant Machine) pinned Tiger Chung Lee at 2:30 with a swinging neckbreaker
- ^Graham Cawthon (August 5, 1986). 'WWF Show Results 1986'. Retrieved 2007-07-01.
Bobby Heenan was shown at ringside taking photographs of the Giant Machine, in hope of trying to prove that it was actually André the Giant
- ^ ab'André the Giant'. Biography. 1999-01-13. A&E Network.
- ^Graham Cawthon (August 28, 1986). 'WWF Show Results 1986'. Retrieved 2007-07-01.
(Shown: September 16) Big John Studd, King Kong Bundy, & Bobby Heenan defeated Big & Super Machine, & Capt. Lou Albano (w/ Giant Machine) via disqualification at 7:49 when Giant Machine interfered, as Studd was in the ring illegally, and single-handedly beat down and cleared the ring of the opposition
- ^Graham Cawthon (September 10, 1986). 'WWF Show Results 1986'. Retrieved 2007-07-01.
The Machines & George Steele (as the Animal Machine) (sub. for Capt. Lou Albano) defeated Big John Studd, King Kong Bundy, & Bobby Heenan
- ^Graham Cawthon (September 16, 1986). 'WWF Show Results 1986'. Retrieved 2007-07-01.
WWF World Champion Hulk Hogan (as Hulk Machine), Big & Super Machine defeated King Kong Bundy, Big John Studd, & Bobby Heenan
- ^Hulkamania 2 (VHS). Hartford, Connecticut: Coliseum Video. 1986. Retrieved 2007-07-01.
- ^Best of the WWF Vol. 12 (VHS). Hartford, Connecticut: Coliseum Video. 1987. Retrieved 2007-07-01.
- ^Graham Cawthon (October 5, 1986). 'WWF Show Results 1986'. Retrieved 2007-07-01.
Big, Super, & Crusher Machine defeated Big John Studd, King Kong Bundy, & Bobby Heenan when Crusher pinned Studd with a bolo punch
- ^Graham Cawthon (October 28, 1986). 'WWF Show Results 1986'. Retrieved 2007-07-01.
(shown November 23: King Kong Bundy & Big John Studd (w/Bobby Heenan) defeated Big & Super Machine (w/ Capt. Lou Albano) at 3:01 when Bundy scored the pin after Studd came off the top with a forearm blow (Albano's last match as a manager until returning in the early 1990s to manage the Head Shrinkers)
- ^Graham Cawthon (November 19, 1986). 'WWF Show Results 1986'. Retrieved 2007-07-01.
(shown November 29: included footage, via satellite from London, England of Gary Davie interviewing André the Giant, where it was announced that André had been reinstated
Blackjack Mulligan Vs Andre The Giant
External links[edit]
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_Machines_(professional_wrestling)&oldid=967256971'
Super Machine
Real Name
Bill Eadie
Birthday
December 27, 1947
Hometown
Originally Brownsville, PA
Moved to Georgia
Height
6'3'
Weight
291 lbs
Marital Status
Trained by
Geeto Mongol (Tony Newberry)
Debut
1973
Previous Names
Bolo Mongol
Masked Superstar
Super Machine (WWF)
Axe (WWF)
Axis The Demolisher (Indys)
Demilition Ax (Indys)
Finishing Move(s)
Decapitation Elbow
Favorite Move(s)
Double Ax Hammer
Notable Feuds
Gene Anderson
The Mighty Igor
Tommy Rich
Jimmy Snuka
Ray Stevens
Bob Backlund
Blackjack Mulligan
Andre The Giant (WWWF)
Bobby Heenan
Big John Studd
King Kong Bundy
Strike Force
British Bulldogs
Hart Foundation
Powers of Pain
Brain Busters
Collosal Connection
Legion of Doom
Title History
NWA (Alabama) Southeastern Heavyweight title defeating ????????? (1978);
NWA Georgia Heavyweight title defeating Mr. Wrestling II (January 6, 1979);
NWA Georgia Heavyweight title defeating Wahoo McDaniel (July 30, 1979);
NWA Georgia Heavyweight title defeating Tommy Rich (December 7, 1979);
NWA Georgia Tag Team titles w/Austin Idol defeating Tommy Rich & The Crusher (November 25, 1979);
NWA Mid Atlantic Television title defeating Blackjack Mulligan in a Tournament Final (April 1980);
NWA (Mid Atlantic) World Tag Team titles w/Paul Jones defeated Ray Stevens & Jimmy Snuka (November 27, 1980);
NWA (Mid Atlantic) World Tag Team titles w/Paul Jones defeated Ray Stevens & Ivan Koloff
(March 22, 1981);
NWA National Heavyweight title defeating Steve Olsonoski (May 29, 1981);
NWA (Texas) American Heavyweight title defeating Ken Patera (1981 [Possibly Unrecognized]);
NWA Georgia Heavyweight title defeating Tommy Rich (August 12, 1981);
NWA National Heavyweight title defeating Tommy Rich (November 25, 1981)
NWA National Tag Team titles w/Super Destroyer (Scott Irwin) defeating Bob & Brad Armstrong
(January 22, 1982);
NWA National Heavyweight title defeating Paul Orndorff (October 17, 1982)
NWA National Tag Team titles w/King Kong Bundy defeating The Road Warriors (May 6, 1984);
NWA (Florida) Southern Heavyweight title defeating Lex Luger (July 22, 1986);
WWF World Tag Team titles w/Smash (Barry Darsow) defeating Strike Force
(March 27, 1988 at Wrestlemania 4);
WWF World Tag Team titles w/Smash (Barry Darsow) defeating Arn Anderson & Tully Blanchard (October 2, 1989 on SNME);
WWF World Tag Team titles w/Smash (Barry Darsow) defeating Andre The Giant & Haku
(April 1, 1990 at Wrestlemania 6);
WCCW (West Carolina Championship Wrestling) Mid Atlantic Heritage title defeating Greg Valentine (June 2, 2007);
Professional wrestling career
National Wrestling Alliance and World Wide / World Wrestling Federation (1973–1984)
Eadie started wrestling in 1973, making his debut in the Detroit territory of the Sheik (Ed Farhat). He wrestled under a mask as the tag team 'Para-Medics'. He then wrestled in Pittsburgh, Detroit, WWWF, and the IWA as Bolo Mongol, the new partner of his trainer, Geeto Mongol. He soon entered the Mid-Atlantic Championship Wrestling territory under the management of Boris Malenko and donned a mask as The Masked Superstar, given the character at the advice of matchmaker George Scott. It was stated that he was an Olympic champion by various wrestling promoters. He challenged opponents with a $10,000 reward to whoever could break his 'cobra clutch', as well as utilizing the 'swinging clothesline'. The Masked Superstar was 6' 3', weighed 300 lbs and created many mismatches due to his size, strength and quickness. He had many bouts with Mighty Igor, Paul Jones, Blackjack Mulligan, Wahoo McDaniel, Mr. Wrestling II, Stan Hansen and 'Wildfire' Tommy Rich, and Dick Murdoch. He was the first wrestler (along with Blackjack Mulligan) to have one-hour cage matches, then have a series of '12' ninety minute cage matches against Mulligan. It is believed that neither feat of hour or hour and a half cage matches has since been performed by any wrestlers. He was one of the first wrestlers to body slam André the Giant. Among other accomplishments, he won four Georgia Heavyweight titles and unified that title with the NWA National Heavyweight Championship. He also competed in the World Wrestling Federation against many top wrestlers in 1983-84. He fought against many top level opponents, including then WWF champion Bob Backlund, Hulk Hogan and Sgt. Slaughter, and Jimmy Snuka.
Return to WWF (1986–1990)
In 1986, he returned to the World Wrestling Federation and became Super Machine with André the Giant as Giant Machine and Blackjack Mulligan as Big Machine. The three Machines were introduced as rivals of Bobby Heenan and his massive tag team of Big John Studd and King Kong Bundy. (The Machines' masks and gimmick were copied from New Japan Pro Wrestling character 'Super Strong Machine', played by Japanese wrestler Junji Hirata). Eadie later dropped the Machine gimmick and left the WWF to head to Florida for a run as the Masked Superstar, upending Lex Luger to win the NWA Southern title. He held the title for two weeks before Luger regained it.
In January 1987, Eadie returned to the WWF and formed the tag team Demolition with former Moondog Randy Colley, who wrestled as Smash while Eadie wrestled as Ax. Colley was later replaced by Barry Darsow as Smash, after it was discovered that too many people remembered him as Moondog Rex, the character he previously portrayed. Though they began as heels, their unique brawling style and charisma made them so popular that they became faces in November 1988. They won the WWF Tag Team Championship three times as a team of two, but lost the belts at SummerSlam 1990 after they turned heel by forming a threesome with Crush. The trio concept was precipitated by a mutual decision to phase out the Ax character and for Eadie to take a backstage role in the company. Popular rumor at the time cited heart problems on Eadie's part, which have been discredited in recent years. An allergic reaction to shellfish while in Japan after WrestleMania VI was the real cause of his temporary heart problem. Eadie confirmed this in a shoot interview in 2007. Before Eadie was medically cleared, Crush had been recruited as a temporary replacement. Eadie's new position eventually fell through and his final WWF appearance was at Survivor Series 1990. This event also marked the last time that he and Smash worked together for sixteen years.
In the midst of this time period, Eadie also played opposite Hulk Hogan as 'Jake Bullet' in the movie No Holds Barred. He and Smash appeared in several Pizza Hut commercials for the 'Kids Night Out' promotion widely seen on national television.
'New' Demolition; Independent circuit (1991–1999)
Around 1991, Ax formed a new tag team, using the Demolition name, and pairing up with a 6 ft 10 in (2.08 m) Canadian wrestler, dubbed 'Canadian Giant' or 'Demolition Hux.' They toured with New Japan Pro Wrestling, facing established stars such as Masa Saito, Riki Choshu and Tatsumi Fujinami, at the same time that Smash and Crush were still wrestling under the name for the then WWF and on Japanese tours with Super World of Sports. Eadie would then go on to form a third Demolition team with partner Blast (Carmine Azzato). They competed on a few independent shows, then went their separate ways.
Return to the independent circuit (1999–present)
Demolition Ax in the ring in 2006
As of 2013, Eadie still wrestles occasionally for independent promotions and makes signing appearances in 'legends' shows across the United States, Canada,and Europe. The Masked Superstar defeated Greg Valentine for the Mid-Atlantic Heritage Championship. The title changed hands at the Carolina Wrestling Classic on Saturday, June 2, 2007 at the L.P. Frans Stadium in Hickory, North Carolina. The Millennium Wrestling Federation reunited Ax and Smash of Demolition at the Wrestling's Living Legends reunion April 1, 2007, prior to WrestleMania 23 in Windsor, Ontario. They began regularly competing as Ax and Smash for the first time in 16 years. Alongside One Man Gang, Demolition competed in the Chikara King of the Trios Tournament in 2008, but were eliminated in the second round by 'The Fabulous Three' (Larry Sweeney, Mitch Ryder and Shayne Hawke). On March 28, 2009, Demolition Ax was inducted into the Keystone State Wrestling Alliance (KSWA) Hall of Fame in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Ax was inducted because of his success, and the fact that he is a native of Brownsville, PA, also in Western Pennsylvania.
On October 2, 2010 Ax made his third appearance for the Dynamic Wrestling Alliance based in Middletown, Ohio.
On May 21, 2011, Demolition reunited at Full Impact Pro's debut iPPV In Full Force. Their match against Tony DeVito and Ralph Mosco went to a no contest when local commentator and manager Larry Dallas came out and said his men wanted revenge. The ring was stormed by Manu, Sami Callihan, Blain Rage and Joey Attel. Demolition, Devito and Mosco managed to clear the ring and beat Dallas to end the show.
Demolition returned to Chikara on September 16, 2012, taking part in a tag team gauntlet match, from which they eliminated The Devastation Corporation (Blaster McMassive and Max Smashmaster), before being eliminated themselves by their old WWF rivals, the Powers of Pain (The Barbarian and Warlord).