John "Bradshaw" Layfield |
John "Bradshaw" Layfield Height: 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) Weight: 290 lb (130 kg) Real name: John Charles Layfield Hometown: New York City, (born in Sweetwater, Texas) Pro debut: September 23, 1992 Finishing move: Clothesline from Hell, JBL Bomb Other aliases: JBL, Vampiro Americano, Death Mask, Johnny Hawk, Justin "Hawk" Bradshaw, Blackjack Bradshaw, Bradshaw Career highlights: WWE Heavyweight Champion, WWE United States Champion, WWE European Champion, WWE Hardcore Champion (18), WWE World Tag Team Champion (3) (w/Faarooq), GWF Tag Team Champion (2), MCW Tag Team Champion (w/Faarooq), OVW Southern Tag Team Champion (w/Faarooq), NWA North American Heavyweight Champion, Catch Wrestling Tag Team Champion (2), Korean Wrestling Champion Trained by: Brad Rheingans WWE profile: Never challenge John Bradshaw Layfield to a street fight—especially on Wall Street, or when he’s offering valuable investment pointers to help bulk up your portfolio. SmackDown fans listening to JBL’s color commentary think he’s more “bull” than “bull market,” but consider the following: he didn’t clothesline his way to a senior vice-president position at a major investment bank. Analysts respect his appearances on Fox News Channel, CNN, CNNfn, MSNBC, CNBC, and C-SPAN as a financial advisor, not a “wrestling god.” He didn’t need a degree in Finance to line people’s pockets with cash, or provide common-sense management tips in his bestselling book Have More Money Now. And “The John Bradshaw Layfield Show,” a weekly radio program in which he champions his views on politics, sports, and entertainment, is now syndicated in more than 150 radio stations across America. Face it: JBL is saying something the people want to hear. Not bad for a banker’s son from Sweetwater, a Texas town that JBL claims is renown for its annual “Rattlesnake Roundup.” (He still laughs at the time the Humane Society picketed the event—“We weren’t cruel to the snakes. We just caught ’em and killed ’em.”) Snakeskin, however, is no match for pigskin in Sweetwater; football is the town’s prime pastime, and the sport that fueled two of JBL’s three teenage aspirations (“playing football at Abilene Christian University, going pro, and becoming rich”). He’d earn impressive All-American honors as an offensive tackle at Abilene, though lingering knee problems would limit his second dream to less than a year with the NFL’s then-Los Angeles Raiders, and two seasons as part of the World League’s San Antonio Riders. JBL was down to a 1980 Chevrolet step-side pickup truck and $27 in his bank account when he invested his energies toward a career in wrestling—and not opponents like the eight-foot, 800-pound brown bear he faced at a local cowboy bar on a college dare. More important, he realized that he needed to wrest control of his financial future; as he states in his book, “I decided that being poor ain’t fun, and staying that way is stupid.” Getting physical in the ring has netted JBL a career wealth of championships, while his “fiscal” approach to the stock market has made him a very bankable resource in shareholders’ eyes. Perhaps the one drawback from his economic success is that it affords him the luxury of saying whatever’s on his mind on SmackDown—mainly because he can put his money where his mouth is. |
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