Tiger Ali Singh

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Tiger Ali Singh
File:Tiger Ali Singh.jpg
Tiger Ali Singh in 2012.
Birth name Gurjit Singh Hans
Born (1973-03-07) March 7, 1973 (age 51)
Toronto, Ontario, Canada[1]
Professional wrestling career
Ring name(s) Mick Hans[1]
Tiger Ali Singh[1]
Tiger Jeet Singh, Jr.[1]
Billed height 1.96 m (6 ft 5 in)[1]
Billed weight 274 lb (124 kg)[1]
Billed from India
Trained by New Japan Pro Wrestling Dojo, Sweet Daddy Siki[1]
Ron Hutchinson[1]
Debut 1992[1]

Gurjit Singh Hans (born March 7, 1973)[2] is an Indo-Canadian professional wrestler, best known for his time in the World Wrestling Federation (WWF) under the ring name Tiger Ali Singh. He is the son of wrestler Tiger Jeet Singh.

Professional wrestling career

Singh trained to be a wrestler in the New Japan Pro Wrestling dojo for six months. He spent time with Sweet Daddy Siki and Ron Hutchinson at Sully's Gym in Toronto, and learned kickboxing in Thailand and Bangkok. Upon completing his training, Singh made his in-ring debut as he teamed with his father, Tiger Jeet Singh, against Atsushi Onita and Tarzan Goto in Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling (FMW).

World Wrestling Federation (1997–2002)

Singh signed with the World Wrestling Federation in January 1997, with the signing announced at a press conference at SkyDome in Toronto. Singh's most notable accomplishment in the company occurred in 1997, when he won the second WWF Kuwait Cup Tournament, held on April 9, 1997 in Kuwait City. He defeated Owen Hart in the finals to become the second and final WWF Kuwait Cup winner.[3] He would also participate and be managed by his father at the WWF's United Kingdom-exclusive pay-per-view event One Night Only on September 20, 1997, facing off against and defeating Leif Cassidy.[4][5]

He made his official WWF debut on the April 21, 1997 episode of Raw.[3] He would disappear from WWF television until they had fully submerged into the Attitude Era. His gimmick was that of a rich and arrogant heir to a fortune (similar to Ted DiBiase's character).[1] He came to the ring accompanied by a manservant named Babu, and would pay random people in the audience each week to perform humiliating stunts.[3]

Singh was later sent to Puerto Rico to work on his in-ring skills. He returned in late 2000 as the manager of Lo Down (D'Lo Brown and Chaz).[1] Lo Down and Singh were eventually sent to International Wrestling Association in Puerto Rico, removing them from WWF programming as The Invasion of 2001 started. Down in IWA, Singh became a two-time tag team champion.[6] He eventually suffered what he claimed was a career-ending injury and was sent home to Toronto to recover. He was later released from his contract in July 2002.[1]

Retirement and lawsuit against the WWE

The next month, Singh filed a $7 million lawsuit against the World Wrestling Entertainment. Among his claims were that his career-ending injury was the result of being forced to wrestle in the rain while in Puerto Rico. He also accused other WWE wrestlers of frequently calling him "taxi driver", and that he was the victim of a stunt in 1999 where his turban was stuffed with garbage.[1] WWE attorney Jerry McDevitt countered by noting that the company was not responsible for any injuries occurring in a different organization, and that Singh's contract could legally be ended if he suffered an injury.[1]

Return to wrestling

In late 2008, Singh, under the new ring name Tiger Jeet Singh, Jr. (in honor of his father), returned to wrestling as a part of the HUSTLE promotion in Japan. He made his return by teaming up with his father in a tag team match against Genichiro Tenryu and Shiro Koshinaka.[7]

In wrestling

Tiger Ali Singh (in orange) performing the Tiger Bomb against Viscera

Championships and accomplishments

References

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  5. Martin, Fin. "The Complete History of Wrestling On Pay-Per-View". Power Slam. Issue 223/March 2013. p. 16/17.
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External links