Michael John Lockwood (August 25, 1971 – November 6, 2003) was an American professional wrestler. He was best known for his appearances with the World Wrestling Federation (WWF) / World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) from 1999 to 2003 under the ring namesCrash Holly or simply Crash.[2][5]
Lockwood debuted in 1989 and spent a decade wrestling on the independent circuit before signing with the World Wrestling Federation in 1998, debuting the following year as Crash Holly. He formed a tag team with his kayfabe cousin Hardcore Holly, with whom he won the WWF World Tag Team Championship. The Holly Cousins was expanded into a stable with the addition of Molly Holly in 2000. During his WWF/WWE career, Holly established himself in the hardcore division by winning the WWF Hardcore Championship on 22 occasions, with many of his reigns coming during a period when the title was defended "24/7". After being released from WWE in June 2003, Holly joined NWA Total Nonstop Action as Mad Mikey, where he remained until his death later that year.
Lockwood debuted in 1989, as "Johnny Pearson" in Bay Area Wrestling for Woody Farmer, where he wrestled until 1994.[2] He dislocated his shoulder about five times and took 18 months off to recover.[4] He then wrestled on the independent circuit as "'Irish' Erin O'Grady". In 1995, he appeared in Mexico with Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre as "Super Diablo". In 1996, he joined All Pro Wrestling (APW), where he became known as "'The Leprechaun' Erin O'Grady"[4] and had several matches with Vic Grimes.[citation needed]
Lockwood debuted on WWF television as "Crash Holly", the storyline cousin of Bob "Hardcore" Holly, on the August 16, 1999, episode of Raw is War[4] They became known as the Holly Cousins. Their relationship was a strained one, and Hardcore frequently threatened Crash.[2] When they took the gimmick of claiming to be "super heavyweights", over 400 lb each, Crash would carry a scale to ringside to "weigh in" before matches.[2]
At Survivor Series on November 14, the Holly Cousins teamed with Too Cool to defeat Edge & Christian and the Hardy Boyz in a survivor series match. Later that month, the Holly Cousins began a short feud with Too Cool and Rikishi Phatu. At Armageddon on December 12, 1999, they defeated Phatu and Viscera. The feud continued into February 2000. At the Royal Rumble on January 23, 2000, both Hollys took part in the titular Royal Rumble match, with Crash Holly being eliminated by The Rock.[citation needed]
Championship reigns (2000–2001)
In February 2000, Crash Holly joined the hardcore division. On the February 24 episode of SmackDown!, he defeated Test to begin his first of 22 Hardcore Championship reigns.[21] He decreed that he must defend the championship twenty four hours a day, seven days a week, which later became known as the "24/7 Rule".[2] This meant that the title was permanently contested, not just in sanctioned matches, and could change hands anywhere, anytime anyone pinned the champion, so long as a WWF referee counted the fall. Holly was frequently attacked by other wrestlers in unlikely locations, including an airport, a funhouse, a circus, and his hotel room.[4] Although he was often pinned, he usually immediately regained the title.[21] His most common tactic was to sneak a pin, often after the champion had been beaten down by someone else, and quickly run backstage, away from possible challengers.[21] This turned him into a crowd favorite and earned him the nickname "The Houdini of Hardcore".[22] He frequently defended the championship against non-wrestlers, including referees and road agents, like Gerald Brisco and Pat Patterson.[2] He had a long feud with The Mean Street Posse (Pete Gas, Rodney and Joey Abs) over the title.[21] He even lost, and quickly regained, the title against one of the Godfather's hos.[citation needed]
At Rebellion, Crash defeated William Regal to win the European Championship.[7] He lost the title to Regal two days later.[7] In late 2000, another of Crash's storyline cousins, Molly Holly, was introduced. In 2001, The Holly Cousins feuded with The Dudley Boyz.[23] In the course of this feud, Molly began a romantic relationship with Spike Dudley, leading to internal disputes within each family, as well as a Romeo and Juliet-style angle between the six of them.[23] On the March 18, 2001, episode of Heat, Crash defeated Dean Malenko to win the Light Heavyweight Championship. He defended it on two episodes of Heat, against Funaki and Grandmaster Sexay, before dropping it to the debuting Jerry Lynn on the April 29 episode.[8] In April 2001, Holly and Hardcore briefly reunited as a lower card team until December of that year.[17]
When the WWF was renamed World Wrestling Entertainment and divided into two Raw and SmackDown! brands, Holly was assigned to the Raw roster, where he had little success.[24] He jumped ship to SmackDown! on the September 2, 2002, episode of Raw during a match with Jeff Hardy. Earlier, Raw General Manager Eric Bischoff was informed that a Raw wrestler would leave to reunite with a relative on SmackDown!, and ordered a beatdown by 3-Minute Warning on Hardy, who he wrongly suspected of planning to join his brother, Matt Hardy, until Crash revealed that he was the one who was leaving, planning to join his cousin Hardcore Holly on SmackDown!.[25] In his first SmackDown! match, on September 5, he defeated The Hurricane.[26] He then feuded with Cruiserweight ChampionJamie Noble. On the October 3 SmackDown!, Noble defeated Holly to retain the title.[27]
On the December 19 SmackDown!, Holly teamed with Bill DeMott to defeat Noble and Nunzio.[28] After the match, DeMott turned on Holly and attacked him.[28] This led to a match on the next SmackDown!, which DeMott won.[29] After being sidelined for three months, Holly returned on the April 24, 2003, episode of SmackDown!.[30] He soon joined Matt Hardy and Shannon Moore in the Mattitude Followers (abbreviated "MF'er") stable. As Crash was Moore's alleged apprentice, Hardy also referred to him as a "Moore-on".[30] His last several matches with the company were tag matches with Moore, as well as house show matches against newcomer Orlando Jordan.[31] On June 30, 2003, Lockwood was released from WWE.[2]
NWA Total Nonstop Action; independent circuit (2003)
Lockwood signed a contract with NWA Total Nonstop Action in July 2003 and debuted as "Mad Mikey" on July 23,[32] accepting an open challenge from Elix Skipper and losing the match.[32] Mad Mikey was angry at many things, on which he elaborated in promos. He wrestled on nine NWA-TNA weekly PPVs, lastly on October 1.[33] He briefly wrestled for Pro Wrestling Iron in Hayward, California. On November 1, 2003, Mad Mikey and Rory Fox defeated Quiten Lee and The Human Time Bomb with Ricky Steamboat as the special guest referee for the Heartland Wrestling Association in what turned out to be Lockwood's final match.[citation needed]
Lockwood died on November 6, 2003, at his friend and fellow wrestler Stevie Richards' house in Florida.[2] He was 32 years old. He was found partially clothed with a pool of vomit around his face.[35] Empty bottles of the prescription drug carisoprodol and a partially consumed bottle of alcohol were found nearby.[35] He had recently received divorce papers from his wife.[36] His death, caused by choking on his own vomit, was officially ruled a suicide.[3] He was buried in China Grove in Rowan County, North Carolina.
In August 2005, Nora Greenwald, who performed alongside Lockwood as Molly Holly, released an autobiographical DVD titled "Nora Greenwald: Shootin' the Shi Crap", and a portion of the profits from the sale of the DVD went to Lockwood's daughter's education fund. In March 2005, the New Breed Wrestling Association held the "Mike Lockwood Memorial Tournament", which was won by Michael Modest.[37] At ECW One Night Stand in 2005, Lockwood was one of the deceased former ECW wrestlers honored in a video package.[38]
^ abFeatherstone, Chris (April 23, 2012). "In Memory: Professional Wrestlers Who Died Under 40". Bleacher Report. Archived from the original on April 26, 2012. Retrieved March 2, 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)NOTE: The original publication date of this article is given in an archived version of it at the Internet Archive:
^ abcdefg"Statistics for Professional wrestlers". PWI Presents: 2002 Wrestling Almanac and Book of Facts (2000 ed.). Kappa Publications. pp. 62–74.