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Dr Death Steve Williams der im Maerz dieses Jahres an Kehlkopfkrebs erkrankt ist trat nun vom aktiven Wrestling zurueck.Williams trat im Maerz bei K-1 Beast 2004 an wo er gegen Alexey Ignashov in 22 Sekunden verlor.Kurz danach wurde bei ihm Kehlkopfkrebs diagnostiziert,trotzdem stieg er in Japan wieder in den Ring.Nun aber, da die Chemotheraphie keine verbesserungen zeigte muss sich Steve Williams operieren lassen woraufhin er danach nichtmehr sprechen kann.Diese Operation sollte eigentlich im April stattfinden,Williams lehnte es damals ab,und wollte nach Alternativen suchen.Nun soll die OP jedoch unumgaenglich sein.
Steve Williams begann seine beeindruckende Karriere als Footballer und Amateur Wrestler wo er 4 facher NCAA Champion wurde und fast bei Olympia 1984 teilnahm,1982 wurde er All American,dem selben Jahr indem er zum Pro Wrestling kam.Bill Watts brachte ihn zum Pro Wrestling wo Williams bald fuer die UWF antrat und dort auf sich aufmerksam machte im Tag Team mit Ted DiBiase.Spaeter dann noch ua in der WWE,WCW,NWA,NJPW und zuletzt bei der MLW an.Seine groessten Erfolge feierte er jedoch in Japan bei AJPW wo er 1994 Triple Crown Champion wurde und mehrfacher All Japan Tag Team Champion,1996 gewann er fast den AJPW Champions Carnival.Zuletzt noch dieses Jahr trat Dr Death fuer IWA Japan an.
Offizielle Website- http://www.oklastamped.com/
Title die Dr Death Steve Williams gewann in seiner Karriere:
-WCW Tag-Team Title (mit Terry Gordy)
-NWA Tag-Team Title (mit Mike Rotunda)
-NWA United States Tag-Team Title (mit Kevin Sullivan)
-NWA Mid-Atlantic Title
-AJPW Triple Crown
-AJPW Tag-Team Title (8 mal) (ua mit Vader und Terry Gordy)
-UWF World Heavyweight Title (2 mal)
-UWF Tag-Team Title (mit Ted DiBiase)
-Mid South Tag Team Title (2 mal)(mit Ted DiBiase)
-1992 PWI Tag-Team Of The Year (Terry Gordy)
-1985 PWI Most Improved Wrestler Of The Year
[Bild: http://www.oklastamped.com/images/steve106.jpg]
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WWE hat auf ihrer Seite eine E-Mail Adresse eingerichtet wo man Steve Williams seine besten gresse ausrichten kann.
wellwishes@wwe.com
Ausserdem hat man folgenden Artikel online gestellt.
http://www.wwe.com/news/headlines/1275711
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Jeffrey Williams der Bruder von Steve hat nun folgenden Mail an 1wrestling.com geschrieben.
Dear Family/Friends,
I trust this finds you and yours well!! I hope you don't mind an email of this sort, but I thought, as many of you know or have heard of the Doc (our youngest brother, the professional wrestler) and perhaps know what he has been going through, you'd like to know what is up with him. Well, the Doc is not well and has been undergoing chemo and radiation treatments for throat cancer, of which has been unsuccessful, thus he is scheduled for a laryngectomy (removal of the voice box) on this Tuesday, September 7, 2004 at MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. He has as good of an attitude as you could ask for, belief that all will be well, along with a great faith.
However, as you can imagine, there is a great bit of emotion and anxiety that he is dealing with and will for a good number of moons to come and will need all the support he can get due to this life changing disease!
Note, some good news is that (1) the chest scan of Steve's lung shows no sign of cancer (2) he is in the best place and being handled by the best Cancer fighting team in the world!! He WILL beat this cancer!! Additionally, please note his surgeon is Dr. Erich Sturgis.
If I may, please join me and others in saying a prayer or two for Steve, his family and all those that will have a hand in this surgery and recovery. Thank you!
Best Regards Always!
Jeffrey S. Williams
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Mike Mooneyham hat gestern folgenden sehr guten Artikel ueber Steve Williams verfasst,der sich lohnt durchzulesen da man viel erfaehrt ueber Steve Williams.
'Dr. Death' Fighting For His Life
By Mike Mooneyham
Sept. 5, 2004
A few years ago "Dr. Death" Steve Williams told me that he wasn't going to be one of those wrestlers who hung around long past his glory days had ended. He had done well in the business, made plenty of money and saved well. He wanted to enjoy life without the constant pressures that revolved around pro wrestling.
"One day I'm going to have my own fishing show," he chuckled.
Doc enjoyed a well-deserved reputation as being one of the toughest guys in the wrestling ring as well as on the football field. An All-Big Eight selection while playing for Barry Switzer at the University of Oklahoma and a four-time All-American as an NCAA wrestler (the only pro since Dick Hutton to accomplish the feat), Williams parlayed his collegiate success into a lucrative 20-year career in pro wrestling.
More than two decades after turning pro, however, the 44-year-old wrestler will need to muster all that toughness and more as he faces his most formidable foe to date. Diagnosed with throat cancer, the former UWF world champion is fighting for his life. Radiation and chemotherapy treatments have not worked, and the ongoing chemo sessions have taken a physical toll on Williams, whose fighting weight of 285 has dropped to 214.
According to former Mid-South promoter Cowboy Bill Watts, who recruited Williams into the wrestling business 22 years ago, Williams has had a difficult time merely breathing, necessitating an emergency tracheotomy. Doctors are now recommending a surgical removal of the larynx in an attempt to eradicate the cancer there.
But anyone who knows him knows Doc's a fighter, and giving up has never been an option.
BOOMER SOONER
The Lakewood, Colo., native was one of the country's most recruited football stars coming out of high school in 1978. It was during his prep days that he earned the nickname "Dr. Death" for his toughness on the football field, and the moniker stuck with him throughout his career.
An All-American selection at offensive guard in football his senior year at Oklahoma and a four-time All-American in wrestling, Williams led the Sooners to two Big 8 titles in both wrestling and football, competing in three Orange Bowls, one Fiesta Bowl and one Sun Bowl.
Watts offered Williams a pro wrestling contract in 1982, even though many still felt that his future was in pro football. After trying out with the New Jersey Generals and the Denver Gold of the United States Football League and wrestling part-time during the summer, he returned to the Mid-South promotion and became one of the company's top stars.
In addition to winning Watts' Universal Wrestling Federation world title, Williams formed successful teams with such stars as Ted DiBiase (with whom he won the Mid-South tag-team title from The Rock 'N Roll Express in 1985 and became the first UWF world tag-team champs in 1986) and Hacksaw Jim Duggan, and later in Japan with Johnny Ace, Gary Albright and Vader.
Williams was a perfect fit for Watts, another ex-OU football player and wrestler, who respected legitimate athletes and toughness even more. Wiliams had a reputation as a street fighter, and along with his strong amateur credentials, was a feared opponent inside the ring.
Williams' wrestling coach at OU, Stan Abel, was a college teammate of Watts and alerted the promoter to the fact that he had a great pro prospect on his squad.
If there was an ultimate litmus test for Watts, Williams passed with flying colors when he needed 108 stitches after taking an elbow in the eye during a match with Brad Armstrong, yet insisted on wrestling the next night. At 6-1 and 285 pounds of brute force, Williams was regarded as one of the most rugged of the rugged. And he had the scars to prove it.
"I always had the greatest respect for Doc," Watts said Friday. "He was a tough kid with an amazing heart to match."
To this day, says Watts, Williams has an "indomitable spirit." It will hold him in good stead now more than ever.
LIVING HARD
There were days when Williams acted like there was no tomorrow. He and Terry "Bam Bam" Gordy, whom he met while working in the World Class territory, were as legendary for their late-night partying as they were for their run as one of wrestling's greatest tag teams. Williams immediately took a liking to Gordy, he said, because he had "a smile of a Southern boy and the look of a redneck."
The former Freebird was his running buddy, and the two held numerous tag-team crowns, including titles in Japan along with NWA and WCW championships. Their bruising, stiff style of wrestling was tailor-made for Giant Baba's hard-hitting All Japan promotion where Williams would achieve legendary status.
In 1990 and 1991, Gordy and Williams become the first Americans to win the All Japan tag-team title tournament in consecutive years. In 1992, Gordy and Williams captured the NWA/WCW world tag-team titles. Williams later would win All Japan's coveted Triple Crown. To Williams, it was like winning the gold medal in the Olympics.
The "Freebird life," though, would have a tragic end for Gordy, who broke into the business at the age of 15, burning the candle at both ends. His career came to a virtual standstill in 1993 when, at the age of 32 and already a 17-year veteran in the business, he suffered a drug-induced stroke during a flight to Japan that left him in a coma. Unable to exorcise his demons, Gordy was never the same wrestler again, a series of strokes having rendered him a shell of the dynamic performer he had once been. In 2001, the 40-year-old Gordy died of heart problems exacerbated by too many years of fast living.
Williams had his own drug issues, including arrests at airports in Texas and Michigan, and another when he was detained at a Japanese airport in 1994. In one of the low points of his career, he was banned from Japan for one year before being reinstated with the assistance of longtime friend and boss Baba.
While Williams seemed to age quickly - the result of a hard-living lifestyle - his toughness never seemed to go away. Just three years ago he broke seven ribs and punctured a lung. He didn't miss a tour.
A NEW BEGINNING
For a period during the early '90s, Williams was considered by many to be one of the top 10 wrestlers in the world. What he lacked in technique and finesse, he more than made up for with amazing toughness and determination.
"He could break through people," recalls Watts. "He wouldn't necessarily use great technique in the amateurs. He could just tie up and take a guy all the way to his back and pin him. He was so damn tough. He wasn't like a Danny Hodge, someone just so overpoweringly strong, he just had a sense of himself. It was a force of will."
Williams had become a changed man in recent years. Crediting God with pulling him out of his lifestyle and taking him off his dead-end road, he turned his efforts to talking to youth and giving inspirational speeches at local schools. Williams also had operated a couple of businesses, a tanning salon in Hawaii and a health drink shop called Doctor Smoothies in his hometown of Shreveport, La.
Still working occasional independent shows, Williams competed as recently as March, where he took part in a highly publicized shoot fight and one of his biggest paydays against Alexey Ignashov at a K-1 event in Japan. On Dec. 30, 2003, in Guangzhou, China, Williams defeated Terry Taylor to capture the NWA Mid-Atlantic title. But for Williams, an old-school traditionalist, wrestling had lost most of its allure. Indeed, the business was much different when he debuted in the pro ranks in 1982 as one of the most heralded grapplers to come down the pike in years. In his senior season at Oklahoma, he was narrowly beaten, 4-3, by future Olympic gold medal winner Bruce Baumgartner.
"Doc had beaten the returning national champion that year," recalls Watts. "He had injured his sternum in the Nebraska game and hadn't been able to work much at all on the mat. For a heavyweight, though, he liked to run and do the road work, and he kept himself in shape. He had Baumgartner so tightened up that the referee started calling him for stalling on top. Doc could have just as easily won that one as well."
Steve Williams never forgot his alma mater. He would still get chills just listening to the Oklahoma fight song. He fondly remembers his last year at OU going up the Texas ramp after beating the hated Longhorns
"It was just such a high to go out there, with 85,000-plus in all red and white, and go down that ramp. And you look up at that board and see 'Oklahoma - National Champion.' It's a heck of a feeling."
"I went down to OU a number of years ago and presented him an award at halftime," says Watts. "OU already was 40 or 50 points up on Missouri, and Barry asked Doc and I to give the team a 'pep talk' at halftime 'to get them going.' Barry just loved Doc. You couldn't help but not like the kid." His old friend noted the "silver lining" was that Williams has been a practicing Christian for some time now.
"He found the Lord. He knows where he will spend eternity - forever with his Lord and Savior," says Watts. "What an additional empowerment to encourage him in this fight for his life here."
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Steve Williams hat sich am letzten Dienstag der Operation nun unterzogen.Ihm soll es soweit gut gehen auch wenn er noch in Texas im Hospital liegt und da noch einige zeit bleiben muss.
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Morgen muss sich Steve Williams einer erneuten Operation unterziehen muessen,die aerzte hoffen mit der Operation die Stimme von Steve Williams retten zu koennen
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