Tito Santana
Tito Santana

Height: 6'2" 
Weight: 234 lbs.
Real name: Merced Solis
Hometown: Tocula, Mexico
Pro debut: 1976
Finishing move: The Flying Forearm Smash, Figure Four Leglock, Dropkick
Other aliases: Richard Blood (Debut), "El Matador" (WWE), "Latin Lightning", "Chico"
Career highlights: NWA (Amarillo) Western States Tag Team Champion (w/Ted DiBiase), WWE World Tag Team Champion (2), WWE Intercontinental Champion (2), ECW Heavyweight Champion, AWF Heavyweight Champion (2), ICCW Heavyweight Champion, ICW Heavyweight Champion (2), NWC Heavyweight Champion, UCW Heavyweight Champion, USA Pro Heavyweight Champion, UWF (Herb Abrams) America's Champion, NSWA Heavyweight Champion, EWA (Empire) Heavyweight Champion, (New Jersey) USA Heavyweight Champion, RWA Heavyweight Champion, UWS (New York) Tag Team Champion, IAW TV Champion, IWA Heavyweight Champion  

WWE profile:

Few Superstars have ever enjoyed the kind of lengthy tenure in WWE that Tito Santana did. From the late 1970s to the early 1990s, Santana was one of the company’s top competitors. No matter how times changed, he always found a way to keep himself in the mix. He first made his name by winning the World Tag Team Championship with Hall of Famer Ivan Putski in 1979, but that was just the beginning. During WWE’s mainstream renaissance in the mid-1980s, Santana was right there as one of the company’s most popular Intercontinental Champions ever. In January 1984, he ended the yearlong reign of Don Muraco, and even managed to regain the gold from Greg Valentine after being dethroned later in the year.

Santana and Hogan are the only individuals to have competed at each of the first nine WrestleManias, and his battles included wars with the likes of the Funk Brothers, the Hart Foundation, Demolition, “The Mountie” Jacques Rougeau and Shawn Michaels. In 1987, he and Rick Martel teamed up to form Strike Force and win the World Tag Team Championship. At the beginning of the 1990s, he would breathe new life into his career by adopting the persona of “El Matador,” entertaining a whole new generation of WWE fans. Whether it was WWE’s regional days in the Northeast, the “Rock ‘n’ Wrestling Era,” or the ’90s “New Generation,” Tito Santana was there.