The sad ending of Magnum T.A.
A career crashes to a halt
By CHRIS SCHRAMM -- For SLAM! Wrestling
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Magnum T.A.
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Twenty thousand screaming fans, $500,000 a year salary, $53,000 Porsche and
then it ended.
On October 14, 1986, Magnum T.A., who always heard thousands cheer his name,
sat for over an hour alone waiting for someone to save his life. When he
needed one of those fans, they were not there.
Magnum T.A. whose real name is Terry Wayne Allen, was one of the most
popular wrestlers of the early '80s. He was a young shining star for the National Wrestling Association when a car accident ended his career. He was a certain future World champion, and quite possibly the man who was to help the NWA compete against the WWF's Hulk Hogan.
When news got out, thousands headed to the hospital where Allen occupied.
Flowers, letters, cards were sent to the hospital
during his stay. A man who was known for his belly-to-belly suplex could not
even move his arms.
The man, for whom thousands once screamed for, could not talk to thank them.
The man, who had it all, now struggled to survive.
HIS CAREER
Allen grew up in Tidewater, Virginia. He attended college at Old Dominion
University, but never got past his second year. He was a walk-on to the
wrestling team where he was only able to manage a 1-4-1 record.
Pete Robinson coached Allen at Old Dominion. He remembered Allen as "very
nice, a pleasant, friendly-attitude type, maybe too nice for wrestling."
Following his ill success in college, Allen made his way, at the age of 19,
to Portland. There he took on Chris Colt in his first professional wrestling
match.
It was not until years later that he took the name Magnum T.A.
He journeyed all over the country trying to find a home. In 1984, Jim Crockett Promotions signed the young Magnum T.A. to a
contract. He finally found his role in wrestling.
Within the year, he would win the United States title from
Wahoo McDaniel and
wrestle the infamous "I Quit Match" with
Tully Blanchard.
In the summer of 1986, Magnum lost a best-of-seven series with Nikita Koloff. His matches with Koloff were a mix of athleticism, charisma and rivalry.
There was nothing like them at that time.
They were the matches that Magnum T.A. is best remembered for.
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Magnum T.A. - courtesy Chris Swisher
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THE ACCIDENT
Allen wrestled the night of his accident in Greenville, SC, in front of a
packed house. Little did anyone known that his win over
Jimmy Garvin would
be his last. He left the arena and headed to a popular hangout place for
the wrestlers in Charlotte, a town where he and most wrestlers lived.
He was not there to party, eat or drink. He was there to drop off his friend
and fellow wrestler Dick Murdoch.
"I went in and made sure his ride was there -- he was supposed to meet
somebody -- and left. I wanted to go home," Allen said months after the
accident. "I was driving down Sardis Road. It was raining, and there was
some water collected on the road. I started to hydroplane and the car,
because the engine is in the rear, reacted differently. I backed off the gas
and continued sliding.
"Then I remembered you're supposed to give a Porsche gas. I hit the gas and
it was like a shot -- it just took off. It cut across the road diagonally,
across the oncoming lane of traffic -- I'm lucky nobody was coming -- and hit
a pole near the driver's door."
On a dark Sardis Street at night, no one around, no way to move, Allen sat
for an hour before someone found him. It took another hour to pry the
230-pound wrestler out of the car. He was talking at the time, but his
condition was critical. Sardis now is the home of one of the Ric Flair-owned Gold's Gym, just a mile from where Allen wrecked.
He told workers that he could not move most of his body. His body was
awkwardly slanted to the right, and so workers worked carefully in getting
him out. On his arrival to the hospital, he was immediately rushed to surgery.
Surgery lasted over three hours as doctors tried to repair damage in Allen's
vertebra and nerve system.
Hospital spokesperson Cecily Newton was optimistic to reporters following
the surgery, saying "There are good signs that he will walk again, but it
is still very early in the game at this point."
Many questioned Allen's future. Most believed he would not be able to
wrestle again. Others had hope.
Ivan Koloff, who had feuded with Allen in the ring over the past year, was
quoted following the accident. "We definitely have a lot of hope for him,
and I hope he gets back in the ring again. He gave us a lot of good
battles."
Thousands of calls, letters and flowers were sent to the hospital where
Allen would stay clinging to possibilities. In the end, some 75,000 letters
were sent in support of Allen. They did not want to face a wrestling card
without the face of Magnum T.A., in the ring.
AFTER WRESTLING
The NWA tried to go on. The following Saturday, Nikita Koloff made a
shocking face turn to join Dusty Rhodes in Dusty's battles with the Four
Horsemen. It was not the same. The crowd was half the size it was just weeks
before.
Allen lied in the hospital slowly recovering. A body that had lied days
without movement on the right side was now beginning movement all around.
His mother said during his recovery, "He seems so encouraged."
And he was. Allen did not want to be known this way, though. He wanted to be
known for making $500,000 a year, a world champion, the top of the world.
Dusty Rhodes was there to help, saying he would "carry him back (to the
ring) if I had to."
Magnum T.A. walked into a ring again, but it was not the same vision that
many saw it. He had a cane, was not in his regular red trunks and was there
for support, not action.
Wrestling journalist Bill Apter remembered the return of Magnum T.A. "When
he came back for several waving appearances, it was nice, it was applauded
that he was back, but it wasn't the same thing. It's almost like people
didn't want that Magnum T.A., they wanted the other guy."
Magnum T.A. was used on a few occasions as an announcer, and stayed behind
the scenes as a booker into the early 1990s, but has since disappeared from
the wrestling world. It was hard when all he wanted to do is wrestle.
"That's still my ultimate goal," Allen told reporters a year following the
accident. He was still walking with a cane at the time, and being inside the
ropes is all he wanted to do.
Mick Foley, in his book Have a Nice Day, remembered Allen's days before the accident, calling Magnum T.A. "a definite, future world champion."
It just did not work out that way although Allen can now walk without the
use of a cane or crutch.
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Magnum T.A. and the Incredible Jade in Mocksville, NC in April 2001.
- courtesy Randy Hedrick, Indepedent Insider
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PROBLEMS
Allen lives a quiet life in Charlotte. He occasionally makes independent
wrestling appearances, and is scheduled to be at the Cauliflower Alley Club convention in Las Vegas in February, but his life is pretty much a mystery.
He did not reply to calls made by SLAM! Wrestling.
Fans know him when they see him. His hair is still long, and he still sports
the mustache on his face that he wore in 1986.
Following the accident, two hospitals sued Allen for money that he owed for
health care. Expenses ran over $100,000, far past the $25,000 worth of
health insurance coverage Allen had.
It was eventually paid off.
Tamara, Allen's wife who had supported him throughout the whole accident, is
no longer with Allen. They filed for divorce years later.
The man who once had thousands of fans chanting his name, now had very few
to turn to. Fans had long forgotten Magnum T.A. He had become just another
name in the history book of professional wrestling.
It was not the way it was supposed to be.