The Quick Report

The Best Hardcore Wrestlers of All Time

Hardcore wrestling, also called extreme wrestling, is a very different sport than the tights-and-spandex professional wrestling many fans already know. The dark world of hardcore wrestling is filled with barbed wire, broken lightbulbs, and lots of bloodshed. Wrestlers in this arena put their bodies on the line to entertain fans, creating some of the most memorable matches of all time.

Rob Van Dam

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Van Dam grew to prominence in the late 90s due to his role with ECW and his long-term feuds with Jerry Lynn and Sabu. He’s remembered for holding the ECW Television Championship belt for 700 days, making him one of the most successful in-story ECW wrestlers and showcasing his dramatic skills as a hardcore performer.

Tommy Dreamer

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Tommy Dreamer is legendary among fans of intensely brutal matches. He often teamed up with Sandman for tag team matches and would toss opponents casually through tables, onto barbed wire, and over broken lightbulbs. He was also no stranger to rough bumps, and would often be cut and battered by the end of his matches.

The Sandman

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Speaking of the King of Hardcore, let’s talk about Sandman. He was one of the most intense ECW wrestlers in his era, often swinging chairs and chugging beers while getting wrapped up in some of the gnarliest fights ever aired on TV. He’s been wrapped in barbed wire and tossed through tables more than most hardcore wrestlers could ever dream of, and he’s spilled enough blood to write books on the art of getting the audience riled up.

Dred

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“The Judge” Joe Dred is a professional hardcore wrestler who is well-known for his outdoor matches and heroic exploits in the name of withstanding pain. He’s been set on fire, smashed through tables rigged with explosives, and otherwise survived all kinds of punishment in the ring.

New Jack

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New Jack’s brutality is the stuff of legends. He would dive off balconies, moving vehicles, and even basketball backboards in the pursuit of the perfect elbow drop. Jack actually almost died in 2000 when he and Vic Grimes took a nasty fall from a 15 foot scaffolding and Grimes landed on top of him. Thankfully, Jack recovered and returned to the hardcore scene not long after.

Terry Funk

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Terry Funk’s matches with wrestlers like Cactus Jack are the stuff of legend. Funk had an unusually long career in the hardcore scene, continuing to battle against hardcore icons like Sabu and Sandman even after he turned 50. Many fans will tell you that he’s likely lost more blood on the mat than any other pro in hardcore history.

Raven

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The once World Champion Raven is a well-known figure in the world of barbed wire and deathmatches. He tangled with Sandman in the ECW and fought his way to glory in a number of extreme matches that would make most people’s skin crawl. Few have the pain tolerance and work ethic of Raven.

Justice Pain

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The well-known CZW star Justice Pain had a habit of going “ultraviolent” on his opponents throughout the 90s. His signature move involved diving from the balcony in the CZW Arena—directly onto his opponents. In one of his most well-known stunts, he dropped Lobo through a skylight and crashed through multiple flaming tables.

Shlak

Instagram via @shlak187

Shlak is a terrifying mountain of a man who debuted in the hardcore scene in 2016. He’s been the DTU World Extreme Champion and the Horror Slam Deathmatch Champion and is well-known for his extreme performance in deathmatch bookings. Between his towering physique and dominating performance in the ring, he’s an easy wrestler to cheer for.

Abdullah the Butcher

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With his distinctive head scars from a career of excessive blading, Abdullah looks like the dangerous man he really is. He’s one of the most infamous hardcore wrestlers in the history of the sport, often reducing opponents to bloody messes. In several exhibition bouts, he’s sent his opponents to the hospital for blood loss.

Hayabusa

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You can’t overlook the impact of Japanese hardcore wrestling when you discuss the meanest wrestlers to ever step into the ring. The mask-wearing crowd pleaser Hayabusa is among the most influential wrestlers in the history of the sport. His high-flying acrobatics make for a stylish flair in the kinds of brutal barbed wire matches hardcore fans love to see.

Dr. Redacted

Instagram via @drxredacted

Sometimes you gotta give it to a guy with a good gimmick. Dr. Redacted wears a pristine surgical getup into the ring and bills himself as a “murder surgeon” before “operating” on his opponents. His blood-smeared scrubs at the end of his matches certainly make for a striking visual.

Sabu

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The omnicidial maniac himself, Sabu, is one of the most well-regarded hardcore wrestlers to ever step into the ring. He’s been wrapped in barbed wire, broken his ribs, broken his neck, and lost teeth. In a notable botch, he spun three times off the ropes and cracked his mouth on a table, losing multiple teeth. If he’d hit it with his temple or neck, the incident could have been deadly.

Mick Foley

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Cactus Jack, also known as Mankind, and sometimes even called Dude Love, is among the most recognizable hardcore wrestlers in the world. He had a huge career in the 90s and even wrestled with major promotions like the WWE, often changing his persona based on how he wanted to challenge his opponents.

Lobo

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Martin Martz

Another CZW star, Lobo was a menace in the ring. He was known for tossing cactuses and fluorescent bulbs at opponents, though he was more than capable of taking huge bumps. The aforementioned “Pyramid of Hell” drop that Justice Pain hit him with is among the most notorious of hardcore bumps ever televised.

The Sheik

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While his gimmick was later repeated by the Iron Sheik, there’s no denying the strength of Edward Farhat’s wrestling. Interestingly enough, the Original Sheik is the uncle and mentor of Sabu. Late in his long career, he joined FMW and took part in death matches that helped pioneer the hardcore style that later promotions like ECW and CZW would adopt in the 90s.

Yukihiro Kanemura

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An early wrestler with W*ing, one of the most notorious hardcore Japanese promotions, Yukihiro Kanemura is known for an iconic bump involving a flaming power bomb. Kanemura was dropped onto an open flame by Jado, and bad burns taking out around 85% of his shoulder and back muscles.

Nick Gage

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CZW star Nick Gage is basically synonymous with hardcore wrestling, to the point that he’s often introduced as “Hardcore” Nick Gage. His bouts with big names like Justice Pain and Lobo are beloved by fans for their intensity and realism, and Gage is never above taking a huge fall or a fluorescent bulb shot.

Bruiser Brody

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The towering Bruiser Brody was one of the earliest pioneers of the hardcore wrestling style. Part of this was due to his personality in the ring: he would often adopt a “shooter” style, actually harming his opponents despite the typically planned nature of professional wrestling. Brody was famously murdered by fellow wrestler Jose Gonzalez during an event in Puerto Rico.

Atsushi Onita

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Many consider Onita to be the godfather of hardcore in Japan. Some credit him with innovating and expanding on the classic death match format. He’s had a record number of stitches in his life and even once had his throat cut by barbed wire during a match. If that’s not hardcore, I don’t know what is.

Mitsuhiro Matsunaga

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Another legendary Japanese wrestler, Matsunaga has wrestled in matches with scorpions, cactuses, and piranhas. He’s also known for his high-flying dives, often powering his opponents through tables or taking them from the top scaffolding all the way to the ring.

Abyss

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Abyss is a well-known WWE wrestler who also had a career in hardcore circuits. He had a famous match with Judas Mesias at Final Resolution during which Mesias struck Abyss with a steel chair wrapped in barbed wire. This led to a storyline involving Mesias being his long-lost half-brother, and character Father James Mitchell as the pair’s father in the storyline.

Masato Tanaka

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No one could take a steel chair to the noggin like Masato Tanaka. He was beloved among fans for his pain tolerance and his ability to get dinged, burned, blown up, and generally tossed around without ever missing a beat.

Rhyno

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Rhyno joined the ECW in 1999, marking his debut in a hardcore-style promotion. He wrestled against superstars like Rob Van Dam, Dreamer, and Sandman during this era. He feuded with Sandman and participated in some legendarily bloody matches through 2001.

Necro Butcher

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Some wrestlers are so clearly marketed for the hardcore circuit that it’s hard to see them ever going mainstream. That’s the case with Necro Butcher, a shock-style wrestler who worked with Big Japan Pro Wrestling and CZW, among other hardcore promotions. His willingness to get cut, pummeled, and dropped from high platforms made him a legend in his era.

Shoji Nakamaki

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Nakamaki is notable among Japanese hardcore wrestlers for his impressive career achievement of working with every Death Match promotion in Japan throughout his time as a pro wrestler. His matches against westerners like Cactus Jack helped promote Japanese stables in the US among hardcore fans.

Jon Moxley

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Moxley started his career in the independent circuit as a hardcore wrestler. During a match against Jimmy Jacobs during Uprising in Ontario, Moxley was so badly injured that he nearly lost his left nipple. He later went mainstream with the WWE, but hardcore fans haven’t forgotten his contributions to the scene.

Dusty Rhodes

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After a legendary career in mainstream promotions, the iconic Dusty Rhodes participated in independent promotions in the mid-00s. While these weren’t exactly death matches, fans loved seeing Rhodes appear alongside hardcore superstars like Cactus Jack and The Carnage Crew.

Read More: The 10 Highest-Paid WWE Wrestlers in the Ring Today

Jun Kasai

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The Crazy Monkey Jun Kasai is one of the most iconic Japanese hardcore wrestlers. He’s known for his ability to endure absurd amounts of punishment, often self-inflicted, and his extremely technical approach to wrestling. He’s also known for his willingness to participate in extremely risky “razor death matches,” which see the ring littered with razor blades.

Read More: The Many Faces of Mick Foley and His Storied Wrestling Career

Jerry Lynn

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A well-known promoter and coach these days, Jerry Lynn is remembered by old school fans for his iconic years in the ECW promotion. He had a notable feud with Rob Van Dam, culminating in a match at Hardcore Heaven in which Lynn got some assistance from Scotty Anton to win over his rival.

Read More: The Most Iconic Wrestlers in WWE History