Curious Hair wrote:
He was a huge deal in the AWA and a couple of the territories and would wrestle fairly often, and when he did, he would take absurd levels of punishment: enough to screw up his neck and eventually ask Brian Pillman what the fuck he was doing on live TV.
"Greatest talent in wrestling history" is tough to reckon with because you look at how Hogan and the Rock transcended the show-business ghetto of professional wrestling, or how Ric Flair was the best pure performer in the business, but he certainly deserves some superlatives.
It's amazing how much eye-popping talent came out of Minnesota and/or the AWA: Ric Flair, Scott Hall, Rick Rude, Curt Hennig, Bobby Heenan, Eric Bischoff, and of course Hogan, to name a few. I was thinking the other day about ECW and the notion of a "Big Three" in the '90s: how would a third promotion have fared if it had been based in the Midwest instead of Philadelphia? The WWF owned the Northeast and WCW owned the Southeast, but our neck of the woods was kind of divided between the two.
I think it's meant to show how great he was as an in-ring performer, manager, and announcer. He excelled at all three areas, which is an accomplishment few, if any, achieved.