Hometown: Toronto, Ontario
Height & Weight: 6�1� & 225lbs.
Alignment: Heel
Gimmick:
Pathological liar, gambler, cheater. Only looks out for his best interests.
Entrance Music: �Duffle Bag Boy� by Playaz Circle feat. Lil� Wayne
Entrance Description:
The lights in the Thunderdome go out and a pair of dice appear on the EpicTron. They explode and pyro erupts from the stage as �Duffle Bag Boy� by Playaz Circle feat. Lil� Wayne plays with a blue hue over the lights. Dylan Dunn appears on the ramp and looks around into the crowd who are welcoming him with a mix of cheers and boos. He just smiles and walks down the ramp, ignoring the fans like they are beneath him. He enters the ring and mocks throwing dice while grinning as pyro explodes from all four ring posts.
Wrestling Style: Hybrid
Ring Persona:
He cheats as much as possible, but isn�t blatant about it. He doesn�t care about the fans, usually ignores them. When it comes to his opponents, he�ll mock them, spit on them, slap them, whatever he has to do to prove he�s the boss.
Signature Taunt: Throws dice and spits.
Title History
- eWo Champion (1)
- eWo Tag-Team Champion (2; w/ Scott Royal)
- eWo Hall of Famer
- RWA Jr. Heavyweight Champion (1)
- SLAM! World Tag-Team Champion (1; w/ Scott Royal)
- SLAM! Hardcore Champion (1)
- FWL Intercontinental Champion (1)
Superstar History:
Dylan Dunn was born in Toronto, Ontario on January 23rd in 1981. His father was a compulsive gambler, that lead to the split of his parents. In order for Dunn to lead a normal life, his mother left him in the care of his grandparents.
He led a fairly normal childhood, until he started getting into gambling in his early teens, much like his father. Although, the big difference between Dylan and his father was that Dylan was far better at assessing risk. As soon as he was legal age, he was in the casinos all over Ontario stacking chips like a protege.
By 21, he was a self-made millionaire but got the sensation that he was about to take a big fall. So instead of continuing the path that lead him to his riches, he forced himself to find another activity to which he could apply these skills. During a conversation with his uncle, Sid Dunn, the prospect of wrestling was introduced. Sid, who was formerly known as Sid Synergy was a Hall of Famer in many federations, including the Fatal Wrestling League and Strike Fantasy Towers, challenged his nephew, telling him he could never handle the world of wrestling.
Dylan saw this as a new mountain to climb and thus went into training with Sid Synergy and Sid�s longtime tag-team partner, Scott Palmer. After a few years of training and exhibition matches, Dylan signed on with the rebirth of his uncle�s old stomping grounds, FWL. While in FWL he rose to instant success, winning their Intercontinental Championship, but the promotion sadly folded due to lack of funding.
From there he went to SLAM! Wrestling, where in one night he and longtime friend Scott Royal won the Tag-Team titles and also won the Hardcore title. SLAM! quickly closed and Dunn was left again without a place to compete. This was a blessing in disguise, as a scout from RWA quickly contacted him and signed him to a contract. He started off his career there by facing the best they had to offer, people like Amp, Cody Carson, Jeff King and Radiant. During this run he captured their Jr. Heavyweight Championship.
While still competing in RWA, AJ Epic called Dylan Dunn and asked him if he�d be interested in appearing for a new promotion, called the Epic Wrestling Organization. When Dunn asked Epic why he should leave RWA for some brand new promotion, AJ Epic told him that Bill Dynamite had already signed his contract with them. Dunn, wanting to face the best in the world, left his RWA contract and signed with eWo.
Upon signing with eWo, Dunn was thrust into the spotlight. He went through a tournament to crown the first eWo Champion and made it to the finals, against the one man he had come to eWo to face, Bill Dynamite. It was a two out of three falls match with Erin Jacobs serving as the special referee. This match is still considered one of the best in eWo history, but sadly, Dunn was unable to overcome The Idol on this occasion.
From there, Dunn started teaming with Scott Royal once again, as the Featured Attraction. They also included former RWA stars, Cody Carson, Johnny Legend and newcomer Lefty �The Hobo� Jones in the group. Dunn was Jones� mentor, picking him up off the street and made him into a wrestler. Jones had success, winning the Gutz & Glory Champion, all under Dunn�s tuteledge. Dunn and Royal won the eWo Tag-Team Championships on two occasions, before Dunn returned to singles action.
The Featured Attraction began to dissolve as Cody Carson left and joined up with Seth & Jalie Thomas. Johnny Legend went on to win the eWo Championship and left the group, knowing that he now had a target on his back. Dunn chased after the title and defeated Lawrence Jarvis, en route to a title match against Johnny.
The two met at License to Thrill 2004, where Dylan Dunn was able to defeat his friend turned enemy for his first eWo Championship. The victory was short lived, as Johnny Legend demanded a rematch a week later inside a steel cage. With help from Seth Dryden and Jalie Thomas, Legend regained the title.
Dunn then left eWo, his passion for the business gone, and wasn�t heard from for some time.
In late 2004, Dunn tried to come to the aid of his friend, Scott Royal, who had fallen into a pit of drug abuse and self-mutilation. When Dunn attempted to get Royal into rehab, Royal fled, not telling Dunn where he was going. A week later, Dunn was informed that Scott Royal had killed himself and AJ Epic in a warehouse explosion. Supposedly, Royal blamed his drug abuse on Epic, because he fired him from eWo. When the two were killed, Dunn went into exile.
He wasn�t in the media again until 2006, when he returned to wrestling for one night only, to face Cody Clark in the px:w promotion. Clark was trained by Scott Palmer and wanted to face a legend in the ring to get his career back on track. Dunn defeated Clark and once again left the business, having proven his point.
At the age of 27, Dunn has finally put the past to rest. He is no longer blames himself for the deaths of AJ Epic and Scott Royal. He has returned to the business that made him a house hold name, not with his eyes set on titles or awards, but set on his goal of making eWo what it once was. He wants to raise the standard, and show the younger talent what real wrestling is all about. Dunn deal.