48-1030: Professional wrestling tag team championship [REDACTED] This article does not cite any sources . Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources . Unsourced material may be challenged and removed . Find sources: "Canadian International Tag Team Championship" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR ( May 2019 ) ( Learn how and when to remove this message ) Canadian International Tag Team Championship Details Promotion Lutte Internationale Date established September 1976 Date retired 1987 Statistics First champion(s) Dominic DeNucci and Nick DeCarlo Final champion(s) Richard Charland and Chuck Simms Most reigns Gino Brito and Tony Parisi Raymond Rougeau and Jacques Rougeau Jr. (4 reigns) The Canadian International Tag Team Championship
96-498: A No Holds Barred match . When Patterson's film did not develop properly, Kane turned on the Faction. On June 19, 2000, Patterson helped Brisco win the perpetually contested WWF Hardcore Championship from Crash Holly but during the victory celebration turned on his ally, blinding him with champagne and then breaking a second bottle over Brisco's head, and pinning the (kayfabe) unconscious champion. Brisco pursued Patterson into
144-422: A cyst from his coronary artery . In October, Patterson recovered from his operation and was released from the hospital. He legally changed his name to Pat Patterson in 2008. Patterson died of liver failure caused by a blood clot at a Miami, Florida , hospital on December 2, 2020. He was 79 years old. Many figures in the wrestling world paid their respects to Patterson, as both an in-ring performer and as
192-762: A tag team with Ray Stevens , the Blond Bombers . The duo won the NWA World Tag Team Championship in 1965 and again in 1967. The Blonde Bombers were described by Bret Hart as "considered by many to be the best tag team of the 1970s". In 1968, Patterson wrestled for NWA Western States Wrestling in Amarillo, Texas as Lord Patrick Patterson, winning the NWA North American Heavyweight Championship and NWA Brass Knuckles Championship . In
240-844: A battle royal in Montreal on February 24, 1987. He also appeared in a battle royal at a house show in Buffalo, New York on December 27. Patterson made a handful of additional appearances in Montreal in 1987, wrestling as a heel (while remaining a face or neutral backstage official in the United States and elsewhere in Canada). His most notable appearance was a win over the up-and-coming Brutus Beefcake on August 10 in Montreal His final match would come three weeks later again in Montreal as he fell in defeat to Beefcake and subsequently received
288-564: A face commentator when partnered with Gorilla Monsoon and Vince McMahon , he hosted a heel interview segment for French WWF broadcasts known as "Le Brunch de Pat", where he would politely ask questions in English but furtively mock his face guests in French . Patterson was on commentary with Monsoon when The Iron Sheik defeated Bob Backlund for the world heavyweight championship, as well as for when Hulk Hogan defeated The Iron Sheik about
336-497: A green card in 1971, the journalist's dossier of Freedom of Information responses showed nothing further until his successful naturalization in 2002. Patterson's longtime partner was Louie Dondero. Patterson said on WWE Legends' House he and Dondero were together for 40 years. Dondero died of a heart attack on June 28, 1998, the same night as King of the Ring . In August 2006, Patterson underwent emergency heart surgery to remove
384-462: A haircut with Mr. T as the referee. He began working backstage as a road agent and right-hand man to WWF promoter Vince McMahon, and is credited with inventing and booking the Royal Rumble match. In the late 1990s, he also worked in the talent-relations department. After his retirement, Patterson also worked as a WWF referee. He was selected as the in-ring referee for the main event at
432-1668: A match that involved his brother Bill and Danny “Bull” Johnson facing Tom Zenk and Dan Kroffat. The titles would be held up pending rematch. 29 Dan Kroffat and Tom Zenk August 12, 1986 IW show N/A 1 62 Defeat Bill Irwin and Danny Johnson in a rematch. 30 Richard Charland and Sheik Ali October 13, 1986 IW show Montreal, QC 1 118 31 Dan Kroffat and Armand Rougeau February 8, 1987 IW show Montreal, QC 1 64 32 Richard Charland and Chuck Simms April 13, 1987 IW show Montreal, QC 1 N/A — Deactivated 1987 — — — — Promotion closes External links [ edit ] Canadian International Tag Team title history Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Canadian_International_Tag_Team_Championship&oldid=1214850158 " Categories : Tag team wrestling championships Canadian professional wrestling championships Professional wrestling in Montreal Hidden categories: Articles with short description Short description matches Wikidata Articles lacking sources from May 2019 All articles lacking sources Lutte Internationale Too Many Requests If you report this error to
480-549: A month later. Patterson was also calling the action when Jimmy Snuka jumped off the steel cage and splashed Don Muraco in Madison Square Garden in 1983. Patterson retired from wrestling in 1985. Although retired, Patterson continued to occasionally wrestle. On January 26, 1985, he wrestled Nikolai Volkoff in a losing effort in a house show in Cincinnati, Ohio. The following month, he teamed with Andre
528-722: A pair of brass knuckles to knock out DiBiase. Patterson was unsuccessful, however, in winning the WWF Heavyweight Championship from Backlund. In September 1979, the WWF would introduce the WWF Intercontinental Championship , a secondary championship for its midcard wrestlers. Patterson was crowned the company's first Intercontinental Heavyweight Champion after an alleged tournament held in Rio de Janeiro . While Patterson's tournament "victory"
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#1732783944492576-582: A result of Freedom of Information Act requests show that, as a part of a Portland Police Bureau Morals Division investigation into the Portland gay community, PPB had reported Patterson's presence at " 'gay' parties" and gay bars in the city and that Patterson was known to pick up male prostitutes in Portland. The documents also describe interviewees' suspicions that Louie Dondero was Patterson's romantic partner, as well as his agent, and that they had an open relationship . The same documents reveal that
624-902: A singles match and chooses Lefebvre as a new partner 13 Raymond Rougeau and Jacques Rougeau, Jr. 1982 IW show N/A 1 N/A 14 Pierre Lefebvre and Pat Patterson 1982 IW show N/A 2 N/A 15 Gino Brito and Tony Parisi January 1983 IW show Montreal, QC 2 N/A 16 Pierre Lefebvre and Billy Robinson May 23, 1983 IW show Montreal, QC 1 28 17 Gino Brito and Tony Parisi June 20, 1983 IW show Montreal, QC 3 N/A Championship history
672-1353: Is unrecorded from June 2, 1980 to 1981 . 5 Richard Charland and Len Shelley N/A IW show N/A 1 N/A 6 Swede Hansen and Le Bourreau/The Hangman April 25, 1981 IW show Sherbrooke, QC 1 N/A 7 Gino Brito and Rick McGraw December 1982 (NLT) IW show N/A 1 N/A 8 Gilles Poisson and Sailor White 1982 IW show N/A 1 N/A 9 Gino Brito and Tony Parisi 1982 IW show N/A 1 N/A 10 Pierre Lefebvre and Michel Dubois 1982 IW show N/A 1 N/A 11 Pat Patterson and Raymond Rougeau 1982 IW show N/A 2 N/A 12 Pierre Lefebvre and Pat Patterson October 1982 (NLT) IW show Sherbrooke, QC 1 N/A Patterson and Rougeau break up; Patterson defeats Rougeau in
720-1504: Is unrecorded from June 20, 1983 to August 1983 . 18 Raymond Rougeau and Jacques Rougeau Jr. August 1983 (NLT) IW show N/A 2 N/A 19 Pierre Lefebvre and Pat Patterson September 1983 IW show N/A 3 N/A 20 Gino Brito and Tony Parisi December 12, 1983 IW show Montreal, QC 4 N/A 21 Pierre Lefebvre and Frenchy Martin January 16, 1984 (NLT) IW show N/A 1 N/A 22 Dino Bravo and Tony Parisi February 20, 1984 IW show N/A 1 N/A 23 Pierre Lefebvre and Frenchy Martin June 1984 (NLT) IW show N/A 2 N/A 24 Raymond Rougeau and Jacques Rougeau Jr. July 2, 1984 IW show Montreal, QC 3 43 25 Sailor White and Rick Valentine August 14, 1984 IW show Quebec City, QC 1 N/A — Vacated November 1984 (NLT) — — — — Valentine leaves
768-573: Is unrecorded from September 21, 1976 to February 1978 . 3 Edouard Carpentier and Mad Dog Vachon February 1978 (NLT) IW show N/A 1 N/A Defeat The Scorpions Championship history is unrecorded from February 1978 to June 2, 1980 . 4 Pat Patterson and Raymond Rougeau June 2, 1980 IW show Montreal, QC 1 N/A Defeat Gilles Poisson and Serge Dumont Championship history
816-510: Is widely listed in wrestling title and match histories, the tournament itself never actually took place. Patterson's apocryphal title victory would later become something of an inside joke during Patterson's on-screen tenure as one of Vince McMahon 's "stooges". The fictional tournament was also later profiled in-depth on WWE.com as an April Fool's joke. On November 8, Patterson dropped the North American title to Seiji Sakaguchi . It
864-597: The Raw Reunion episode, Patterson won the WWE 24/7 Championship by pinning Drake Maverick backstage. He would lose the title to Gerald Brisco off-screen later that same night. At 78 years old, he became the oldest person ever to win a title in WWE history, beating The Fabulous Moolah 's fourth reign with the original WWF Women's Championship at 76 years old. It was also Patterson's first title reign since June 19, 2000, with
912-705: The NWA Pacific Northwest Tag Team Championship on two occasions that year. On October 2, 1964, Patterson defeated Pepper Martin for the NWA Pacific Northwest Heavyweight Championship . He held the championship for six weeks before losing to Martin. Patterson won the championship again in 1965 and 1966. In January 1965, Patterson was hired by Roy Shire for his San Francisco , California -based Big Time Wrestling promotion. At Shire's request, Patterson dyed his hair blond to form
960-543: The United States Air Force Office of Special Investigations were investigating another wrestler suspected of being gay, with a view to discharging him; this wrestler subsequently denounced Patterson to INS before retracting. In November 1966, the INS initiated deportation proceedings against Patterson, leading to an interview where he was asked about his effeminacy , dyed hair , about whether he
1008-487: The WWE 24/7 Championship at age 78. He was described by journalist Dave Meltzer as " Vince McMahon 's right-hand man" and "one of the chief architects of the WWE , playing an integral role in helping it become a global phenomenon ". Patterson was born into an impoverished French-speaking family in the Ville-Marie borough of Montreal , Quebec , Canada on January 19, 1941. He began training to wrestle at
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#17327839444921056-535: The WWF 28 The Long Riders ( Scott and Bill Irwin ) March 6, 1986 IW show Sudbury, ON 1 159 Defeat Dan Kroffat and Alofa . During this reign, Scott Irwin disappeared for several weeks around May or June with no explanation. In reality he was suffering in real life from a brain tumor and had to start chemotherapy. He would return in July, during
1104-622: The World Wrestling Federation (WWF), working as a heel , under the tutelage of manager The Grand Wizard . As a villain, Patterson's primary feuds were with then WWF North American Champion Ted DiBiase and WWF Heavyweight Champion Bob Backlund . During a television taping on June 19 in Allentown, Pennsylvania , Patterson defeated DiBiase for the WWF North American Championship by using
1152-519: The professional wrestling promotion WWE , first as a wrestler, then as a creative consultant and producer ("booker"). He is recognized by the company as their first Intercontinental Champion and creator of the Royal Rumble match. He was inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame as part of the class of 1996 . In 2019, Patterson became the oldest person to win a title in WWE history, after winning
1200-583: The Giant at a pair of house shows in Canada and defeated Ken Patera and Big John Studd. He took the spot of Mad Dog Vachon on the WWF skit show Le Brunch on WWF Superstars in Canada until late summer in 1987. Several wrestlers like the Rougeau Brothers and Dino Bravo replaced him, and Frenchie Martin hosted Le Studio as a replacement of Le Brunch . Before that he made another appearance, this time in
1248-467: The May 8 episode of Raw, Patterson, Road Dogg and X-Pac faced Rikishi in a 3 on 1 handicap match and were disqualified after Patterson hit Rikishi with a chair. Afterwards, Patterson lowered his drawers to deliver a Stink Face to Rikishi with brown-stained underwear , which commentator Jim Ross described as a "tractor-sized skidmark". Patterson began to use the soiled underwear as part of his gimmick in
1296-636: The McMahon-Helmsley Faction. On the December 16, 1999 episode of SmackDown , Patterson and Brisco helped Test , who had been injured by D-Generation X . Triple H and Stephanie McMahon then forced Patterson and Brisco to compete for the WWF Tag Team Championship against The New Age Outlaws or be fired. Patterson and Brisco lost the match. In 2000, Patterson and Brisco joined Triple H and Stephanie McMahon. On
1344-544: The United States to pursue his professional wrestling career. He eventually became a U.S. citizen . Patterson initially worked for Tony Santos's Big Time Wrestling promotion in Boston, Massachusetts . While living and working in Boston, Patterson met his long-term partner, Louie Dondero. In 1962, Patterson was recruited by Mad Dog Vachon for Don Owen's Portland, Oregon -based Pacific Northwest Wrestling promotion. At
1392-538: The Wikimedia System Administrators, please include the details below. Request from 172.68.168.132 via cp1112 cp1112, Varnish XID 943780814 Upstream caches: cp1112 int Error: 429, Too Many Requests at Thu, 28 Nov 2024 08:52:24 GMT Pat Patterson (wrestler) Pat Patterson (born Pierre Clermont ; January 19, 1941 – December 2, 2020) was a Canadian-American professional wrestler and producer, widely known for his long tenure in
1440-596: The age of 14 at Loisirs Saint Jean Baptiste. He was raised Roman Catholic , and was an altar boy . He expressed an interest to a priest in becoming one himself, but was advised it would not have worked, because he was "too adventurous". Patterson debuted in Montreal, Quebec in 1958, wrestling at the Palais des Sports for promoter Sylvio Samson. Early in his career, he performed as "Killer" Pat Patterson. In 1961, Patterson - despite speaking no English - immigrated to
1488-481: The coming weeks, attempting to rub the soiled underwear into the faces of opponents. As a result, WWE commentators began to refer to Patterson as “Poopstain Patterson” during the broadcasts. On June 12, 2000, when the Faction unmasked Kane , Patterson photographed Kane's "hideously scarred" face, and threatened to "expose him to the world" if he did not comply. Kane was forced to wrestle The Rock (then his ally) in
Canadian International Tag Team Championship - Misplaced Pages Continue
1536-473: The company. After Murray Hodgson rescinded the allegations, he was rehired, while Garvin was fired, later reaching a settlement with WWF. Over the years he made appearances on pay-per-views or TV programming breaking up fights. In 1997, Patterson, along with Gerald Brisco , became comedy heels as the on-screen stooges of Vince McMahon, assisting their boss in his rivalries with Stone Cold Steve Austin , Mankind and The Rock . Patterson and Brisco were among
1584-721: The duo winning the AWA World Tag Team Championship later that year. Patterson performed intermittently for the AWA until 1983. In 1979, Patterson toured Japan with New Japan Pro-Wrestling . Patterson made his professional return to Quebec in 1980, wrestling a number of bouts for the Montreal, Quebec-based Lutte Internationale promotion. He held the Canadian International Tag Team Championship on five occasions between 1980 and 1983. In 1979, Patterson debuted in
1632-502: The encouragement of PNW promoter Harry Elliot, who was aware of Patterson's homosexuality, Patterson developed the character of "Pretty Boy" Pat Patterson, an effeminate wrestler who wore lipstick, sunglasses, and a beret and carried a cigarette holder . In 1963, Patterson wrestled for promotions in Texas, Arizona and Oklahoma as part of a talent exchange organized by Owen. Patterson returned to Pacific Northwest Wrestling in 1964. He held
1680-648: The finale of WWE Legends' House , which aired June 12, 2014. NBC News described Patterson as "the first openly gay pro wrestling star." People magazine described him as the "First Gay Wrestling Star." In the 1960s, after the end of the main part of the Lavender scare , the Justice Department's Immigration and Naturalization Service spent several years, from the end of 1964 onwards, looking for evidence of "homosexual activity" in order to have Patterson deported back to Canada. Documents disclosed as
1728-418: The first WrestleMania at Madison Square Garden on March 31, 1985 , as well as the main event of WrestleMania XI . In 1992, Patterson, along with Terry Garvin , were accused of sexual harassment of underage ring boys by former announcer Murray Hodgson, and former ring boy Tom Cole, who alleged that Patterson groped him and engaged in sexual harassment when he was 14. Both he and Garvin resigned from
1776-424: The founding members of The Corporation . In order to mock Hulk Hogan , they used "Real American" as their entrance music and parodied Hogan's flexing routine as they approached the ring. On the May 18, 1998 episode of Raw, Patterson and Brisco competed in a 2 on 1 Street Fight against Austin that ended in a no contest when Vince McMahon and Dude Love attacked Austin. Later in 1999, the two became entangled with
1824-544: The match to Christian. In October 2004, Patterson retired from World Wrestling Entertainment. Patterson returned to WWE in a limited capacity in May 2005. While retired as a producer for WWE, he still acted as a creative consultant. At Breaking Point , Patterson made an appearance in his hometown of Montreal in an in-ring segment with Dolph Ziggler . Patterson was a regular cast member on the WWE Network original reality show Legends' House . On July 22, 2019, during
1872-522: The promotion 26 King Tonga and Richard Charland May 27, 1985 IW show Quebec City, QC 1 15 Defeat Jos Leduc and Leo Burke in tournament final 27 Raymond Rougeau and Jacques Rougeau Jr. June 11, 1985 IW show Quebec City, QC 4 N/A — Vacated January 1986 — — — — The Rougeaus jump to
1920-535: The ropes just before the three count was made. On May 4, 1981, Patterson's feud with Sgt. Slaughter culminated in an alley street fight match in Madison Square Garden . The match was voted Match of the Year by the Wrestling Observer Newsletter . Patterson began doing color commentary in 1980 with Vince McMahon, calling WWF Championship Wrestling from 1980 to 1984. While Patterson was
1968-508: The same year, he undertook a six-week tour of Japan, facing Antonio Inoki in a series of bouts. After Stevens turned face in the late 1960s, he had a feud with the heel Patterson, culminating in a Texas Death match , in which Stevens won the title from Patterson. In 1970 and 1971, Patterson wore a mask during his matches, and would cheat by placing a foreign object under the mask to add power to his headbutts . In 1972, Patterson turned face again, after feuding with Lars Anderson , who
Canadian International Tag Team Championship - Misplaced Pages Continue
2016-399: The similarly introduced WWF Hardcore Championship , which also used the " 24/7 rule ". He was only the second person ever to win both the 24/7 and Hardcore Championships, after R-Truth . He was working backstage as a WWE official from 2005 until his death in 2020. Patterson was openly gay , having come out in the early 1970s. It was not acknowledged publicly or in WWE storylines until
2064-591: The women's locker room, where Patterson was hiding in drag. Subsequently, Vince McMahon scheduled them to fight over the Hardcore Championship in an Evening Gown match at King of the Ring 2000 ; in the course of the match, Crash Holly attacked both men and pinned Patterson to become Hardcore Champion. The Intercontinental Championship, unified with the World Heavyweight Championship at No Mercy on October 20, 2002,
2112-512: Was a homosexual and whether "he molested little boys". In December 1966, Patterson was served with a deportation notice, requiring him to leave the United States on or before January 10, possibly as an attempt to dupe Patterson into leaving with an expectation of an easy green card but with the intention of excluding him through psychological exam ; however Patterson was fighting again in Arizona 4 days later. After Patterson's application for
2160-786: Was during Patterson's reign as champion that he turned face, after a botched attempt by the Grand Wizard to "sell" Patterson's contract to "Captain" Lou Albano for $ 100,000; Albano's protégés, the Wild Samoans, attacked Patterson after he cut a promo insulting Albano. Patterson held the Intercontinental Heavyweight Championship until April 21, 1980, when he was defeated by Ken Patera in New York City, New York . The match ended in controversial fashion after Patterson placed his right leg on
2208-955: Was managed by Dr. Ken Ramey. Later that year, he teamed with Rocky Johnson and won the tag team championship. In 1975 and 1981, Patterson won the Cow Palace Battle Royal in San Francisco. In 1977, Patterson wrestled for Eddie Graham 's Tampa , Florida -based Championship Wrestling from Florida promotion. During his run, he won the NWA Florida Television Championship and the NWA Florida Tag Team Championship , as well as briefly serving as booker . In 1978, Patterson joined Verne Gagne 's Minneapolis , Minnesota -based American Wrestling Association . He reformed The Blond Bombers with Ray Stevens, with
2256-544: Was resurrected on May 18, 2003, at Judgment Day in a battle royal. Patterson, as the first Intercontinental Champion, was at ringside to present the belt to the victor. Booker T eliminated Christian for the win, but the referee was unconscious. As Patterson attempted to give the championship belt to Booker T, Christian attacked him, stole the Intercontinental Championship belt and used it to knock out Booker T. The referee then recovered and awarded
2304-901: Was the tag team title in the Montreal -based wrestling promotion Lutte Internationale (International Wrestling). The title lasted from 1976 until Lutte Internationale closed in 1987. Title history [ edit ] Key No. Overall reign number Reign Reign number for the specific champion Days Number of days held No. Champion Championship change Reign statistics Notes Ref. Date Event Location Reign Days 1 Dominic DeNucci and Nick DeCarlo September 1976 (NLT) IW show N/A 1 N/A The first champions 2 Sailor White and Serge Dumont September 21, 1976 IW show Montreal, QC 1 N/A Championship history
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