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| Wrestler's Name | "The Legacy" Lennox Mullroix | |||||||
| Real Name | Henry Simms | |||||||
| Alignment |  ,Neutral | |||||||
| Height | 6'5"" |
Weight |
275 lbs. | |||||
| Birthday |  N/A | |||||||
| Hometown | Inner Triangle Of Bermuda | |||||||
| Entrance Music | ""I'm Coming'" by Will Smith | |||||||
| Wrestling Style | Powerhouse/High Flyer | |||||||
| Physical Description | Lennox Mullroix is 275 lbs of pure muscle. His dark skin is usually oiled when he steps into the ring and he has a noticeable tattoo of a spiral on his right shoulder, with the word ‘ABYSS’ inked underneath it. His black hair is shaved into a Mr. T-style Mohawk and his dark brown eyes could almost pass for black in the right lighting. Outside of the ring, he frequently wears sandals, khaki pants or black courderoy, and a personalized tanktop with a heel-length brown leather coat pulled over it. He also has small gold earrings in each ear, and frequently wears a Florida State Seminoles baseball hat backwards. | |||||||
| Ring Attire | Lennox comes to the ring with several gold chains around his neck and colored plastic sunglasses over his eyes. His tights are mid-thigh and are usually bright green, blue, or purple with the word ‘LEGACY’ running down the outside of both legs in another color. His wrists are wrapped in colored tape that match the trunks and his boots match as well. Once in the ring, the glasses and the chains go and then Lennox is all business. | |||||||
| Finisher (1) | “Make You My Bitch” | |||||||
| Finisher Description | Top Rope Brainbuster | |||||||
| Finisher (2) | The Max Out | |||||||
| Finisher Description | Split Legged Moonsault . | |||||||
| Standard Moves | Hurricarana | Senton Bomb | Asai Moonsault | |||||
| Flying Leg Lariat | Springboard Dropkick | |||||||
| 450 Splash | Hotshot | Leaping Piledriver | ||||||
| Frontface DDT (Diamond Cutter) | ||||||||
| Face First Powerbomb | ||||||||
| Biography | The Legacy was born Henry Simms in Tallahassee, Florida on June 18th, 1977. Complications during labor claimed the life of his mother as he was being born, and Simms was raised an only child by his soft-spoken and hardworking father James Simms, who Henry called ‘Pappy’ most of his life. Money was short, and the awkward boy with a speech impediment was often a target by school bullies. Avoiding trouble most of the time, the shy and polite Henry Simms often found solace in coming home from school and watching professional wrestling- dreaming of someday emulating the greats of the ring like Rick Davidson, the original Regulators, Magnum Force, Nick Cyprus, Henri Chartier, Rick Monroe, Akira Yoshi, and many others. While James was a little befuddled by his son’s new past time, he never dissuaded young Henry from watching the weekly matches as long as his school work was done. He often try to watch them with Henry, but a combination of disinterest and long work hours would have him asleep by the time the Main Event rolled around. In high school, Henry was frequently pursued by young ladies because of his good looks, but his shyness ruined his chances at romance. He became very involved in weight lifting and developed a disciplined and rigorous training routine, feeling a strange sense of purpose as he developed his body into a living and breathing work of art. He gave a brief attempt at several sports, and actually did quite well, but they never felt right for him so he’d give them up just as quickly and head back to the gym where his only teammate and only opponent was himself. Life would deal him a terrible blow when his father James died of terminal cancer just three months after Henry graduated from high school. With his life losing focus and with no one to guide him, Henry once again dreamed of amazing a crowd from inside the ring. His dreams began the hard way as he signed up for the wrestling school run by an old wrestling washout named Ron LaDuke. LaDuke was a lousy wrestler, but a decent teacher as he showed Henry the basics of ring maneuvering and psychology. Several schools and numerous indie shows later, Simms got a lucky break by being signed as developmental talent to Gladiator Wrestling International, a major promotion based out of Chicago. Given the lame gimmick of ‘Hammerin’ Hank Simms where he wore a baseball jersey to the ring and named all his moves after baseball metaphors (due to a slight resemblence to Hank Aaron) Henry’s career was going nowhere until a match with Shawn Andrews changed everything. Simms was being decimated but in his one moment of offense, he was able to pull off a perfect Senton Bomb from the top turnbuckle. Although the move missed and he was a beaten man several seconds later, the maneuver caught the eye of GWI legend Nighthawk, who at the time had recently retired from the North American Wrestling Alliance following a severe head injury. Nighthawk took Simms under his proverbial wing and taught him to develop the natural agility he possessed for such a large man. He also helped Simms develop real psychology in the ring and channeled Henry’s never-realized desires of popularity and acceptance into a marketable character named ‘The Legacy’ Lennox Mullroix. Gone was the soft-spoken and polite nature of Henry Simms and in came the fluorescent trunks, pink sunglasses, and playfully arrogant attitude that the crowd became instantly intrigued with upon his arrival into the NAWA with Hawk as his manager. Despite quick success, Mullroix wanted more. Coming with a hair-width of winning gold, he soon became obsessed with it and Nighthawk watched in dismay as his student became the character and started believing his own hype. The situation exploded when a frustrated Mullroix finally snapped and attacked his mentor with a vicious headblow that was thought to take Nighthawk out of commission. On his own for the first time, Mullroix was bound by no rules and he quickly captured gold in the form of the American and North American Championships. As he continued his meteoric rise to the top to the disgust of the fans who had condemned his recent actions, he was suddenly derailed by his former manager, as Nighthawk made a shocking return to the ring in February of 2001 and made Mullroix submit in a Career vs. Career match ‘I Quit’ match for the North American Title. With three cracked vertebrae in his neck resulting from the contest, Mullroix was put on the shelf and was contractually obligated to leave the NAWA. He found work back in the GWI where he used his charisma behind the microphone as a commentator as his injuries healed. He finally returned to the ring in September of 2001 and he immediately set his sites on the GWI World Heavyweight Title. Defeating champion ‘Intimidator’ Ray Jonas a month later at GWI Blood Money, Mullroix engaged in a vicious feud with the Intimidator that finally lost him the strap back to Jonas in December’s GWI Winter Wasteland. Looking for other opportunities to showcase his abilities and seize the spotlight, Lennox Mullroix decided to leave the GWI and set his sites on the National Wrestling Council, where Nighthawk was currently teaming with Adam-X as part of The Fury. When their unlikely group The Unstable lost a member in Shawn Andrews, Mullroix appeared unannounced and uninvited to fill the void. He further distanced himself from Nighthawk and Adam when he brought old nemesis Johnny Storm into the fold and the Unstable seemed on the brink of collapse. In the end, politics got the better of the group and The Unstable disbanded and all left the company, but not before one last little drama for the Legacy. Set to leave the TSW before their next pay-per-view event, Mullroix, along with The Fury and Ripper Longshanks, were asked to stay until the event was over. They all agreed under the condition that they could leave with dignity and Mullroix was booked to face Colby Fairchild. A double-cross ensued after the match when Mullroix was savagely beaten down by members of Fairchild’s stable and humiliated on live pay-per-view television. Not one to accept this under any circumstances, Mullroix got back to his feet and got on the microphone, publicly blasting the company and calling out the people behind the screw job. After he made it back to the dressing room, he got into an altercation with Jake Summers, who was the man behind the political double-cross. After laying out Summers in the parking lot, Mullroix left the NWC for good and went on an international wrestling tour, selling out venues from Tokyo to Mexico City. However, he had accomplish the one goal that had secretly brought him to the NWC in the first place: he wanted to make amends with Nighthawk. Finding out third-hand about Nighthawk’s wedding to longtime fiancé Annie Cole, Mullroix attended the wedding and was finally able to (tentatively) bury the hatchet with him. He continued wrestling internationally and traveling all over the world until he saw an opportunity to once again make up for the wrongs he had committed against his former mentor in the past. Now, the Legacy is in the CSWA and he only has one goal: watch the back of his friend and be the absolute best that this region has ever experienced. . . . . | . , . |
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| Gimmick | Only one word can truly define the man known as the Lennox Mullroix: Talent. Born with natural athletic ability and a raw charisma, Mullroix is as flamboyant as he is gifted. With the awesome size of a heavyweight and the surprising agility of a cruiserweight, Mullroix can mix it up in any number of styles. Known for his muscular physique, handsome good looks, and his arrogant promos where he frequently recites degrading rhymes towards his opponent, Mullroix is unshakable in his own confidence in his abilities and his unique gift to entertain the crowd from bell to bell whether he be a heel or a babyface. Whether they love him or hate him, they will never forget him as The Legacy is one of the most colorful characters and astonishing athletes in professional wrestling today. | |||||||
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