Ole Anderson, a professional wrestler, manager and promoter noted for his blunt, tough-guy persona and a founding member of the “Four Horsemen,” died Monday. He was 81.
No cause of death was given, and it was unclear where Anderson died.
Anderson was born Alan Rogowski on Sept. 22, 1942, in Minneapolis, CBS Sports reported. Friends and family members shared the news of the wrestler’s death on social media.
The “Four Horsemen,” who as heels ran roughshod in wrestling promotions throughout Southeast promotions, originally consisted of Anderson, Arn Anderson, Tully Blanchard and Ric Flair and were managed by J.J. Dillon. Arn Anderson (real name Martin Lunde), who bore a resemblance to the older Ole Anderson, was his tag team partner as part of the Minnesota Wrecking Crew.
Ole Anderson originally teamed with Gene Anderson as part of the Minnesota Wrecking Crew.
Ole Anderson had few peers in wrestling. He was tough as nails, could handle himself in any situation. Brutally honest, which offended some. Endeared him to others. An incredible mind for the wrestling business. I'm proud to say he was my friend, and I loved him for all the… pic.twitter.com/FjPhFFngPj
— NWALegends.com (@NWALegends) February 26, 2024
After a stint in Florida, Ole Anderson wrestled from 1972 to the 1990s with the Georgia Championship Wrestling promotion and World Championship Wrestling.
That was where the Four Horsemen became notorious; other members of the group included Sting, Barry Windham and Lex Luger. Anderson was a master on the microphone during interviews, touting the Horsemen’s ability and belittling opponents.
WWE is saddened to learn that Ole Anderson has passed away.
— WWE (@WWE) February 27, 2024
WWE extends its condolences to Anderson's family, friends, and fans. pic.twitter.com/LmG4sCKu3y
A common target of his invective was babyface Dusty “The American Dream” Rhodes.
After retiring, Anderson served as an occasional manager for the Horsemen.
Flair paid tribute to Anderson on X, formerly known as Twitter. The Nature Boy, who turned 75 on Sunday, saying he was “forever thankful” to Ole and Gene Anderson for bringing him aboard as a “cousin” in the Crockett promotion.
I Am Forever Thankful To Ole And Gene For Bringing Me In To Crockett Promotions As A Cousin. It Launched My Career. I Will Be Grateful Forever For You Giving Me The Opportunity To Become Who I Am Today. We Didn’t Always Agree With Each Other, But The Honest To God Truth Is You &… pic.twitter.com/bYinfeWhKp
— Ric Flair® (@RicFlairNatrBoy) February 26, 2024
Fellow wrestler Ricky Morton, was the first to announce Anderson’s death on his Instagram account, calling him “tough as nails.”
In 2003, Anderson published a book, “Inside Out: How Corporate America Destroyed Professional Wrestling.”
The original Four Horsemen were inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame in 2012.
RIP Ole Anderson. #NWA #prowrestling #CrockettPromotions pic.twitter.com/lJakVnl2xN
— Baby Doll the Perfect 10 (@nicklaroberts) February 27, 2024
The story of Ole Anderson being stabbed in #Greenville, told by Ole himself, is the opening for the Mid-Atlantic Memories documentary we put together a few years ago. pic.twitter.com/kROyAZSuqO
— NWALegends.com (@NWALegends) December 14, 2021
Ole Anderson was a staple of GCW and was the link that kicked off the Jim Crockett NWA era in April 85 & a big part of the start of greatest faction ever. He was a pod favorite in our 60 show run of NWA Crock & Roll! #RIPOlehttps://t.co/WgtVfphOXO pic.twitter.com/sHmDTQiyz0
— Territorial (@ShawnECuerto) February 27, 2024
RIP Ole Anderson, a complex man with a complex legacy in wrestling. An original member of the Four Horsemen, Anderson is someone I rank high on the all time underrated promo list. pic.twitter.com/LFEGwMbj7B
— Old Wrestling Pics (@OldWrestlingPic) February 27, 2024
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