Born and raised in Tioga, Louisiana, Quentin Bell was the youngest of Sputnik Monroe's three children. He was trained primarily by his father[4][5] and made his pro debut in 1981. Monroe began competing in Memphis territory, his father's old stomping ground, in the fall of 1986.[6] With wins over William Thompson[7][8] and Davey Haskins,[9][10] he was "officially" introduced by the elder Monroe during a television interview at the Mid-South Coliseum on October 18, 1986; Monroe defeated Jim Jamison later on in the show with his father as his cornerman.[7] The following week, he and Big Bubba defeated Excitement Inc. (Ric McCord & John Paul) when Monroe pinned John Paul.[9]
On November 1, 1986, Monroe teamed with The Memphis Vice (Jerry Bryant & Lou Winston) in a 6-man tag team match against Jerry "The King" Lawler, The Giant Hillbilly and David Haskins. After Monroe was pinned by Haskins, in what was viewed as a controversial finish, his partners Bryant and Winston demanded the match continue as a two-out-of-three falls match. Their request was granted but turned into a 6-way brawl within a few minutes. Outside interference from Don Bass and Larry Wright would disqualify Monroe's team and, after Lawler hit Bass with a trash can, all five men fled back to the locker room.[11] He challenged Jerry Lawler in a singles match on November 8, 1986, but was pinned in 22 seconds.[12][13][14] This was his final appearance for the promotion. His brief time with the promotion may be explained by his inexperience at the time, especially while being pushed as a main eventer, as well as bookers promoting him as a "heel" despite his father being a longtime favorite in the area.[15] Sputnik Monroe would continue to be involved in his career, occasionally joining him in father-son tag team matches, up until the late 1990s.[1][4]
Tour of the East Coast independents
Monroe also had a brief stint on the East Coast independent circuit during the 1990s. In early-1991, he wrestled Sledgehammer McGill[16][17] and Morgus the Maniac[18][19] for promoter Lou Martin and the Mid-Atlantic Wrestling Association. He eventually won the promotion's heavyweight championship following a battle royal which he won after eliminating Agony of The Lords of Darkness.[20]
Monroe returned to the MEWF at the end of the year where, on December 1, 1991, he agreed to help The Lords of Darkness defend the MEWF Tag Team Championship by taking the place of an injured Pain. He and Agony were unsuccessful in defeating their opponents, Cream Team (Dave Casanova and Rip Sawyer), losing the tag titles in Dunbolt, Maryland that night.[20][31]
Global Wrestling Federation
By 1992, Monroe had returned to the Southern United States. While working for Tugboat Taylor's Texas All-Pro Wrestling, he won the TAPW Light Heavyweight Championship from Wichita Willie in Pasadena, Texas, on August 28, 1992, and re-lost the title to him at the same event.[20] Monroe would continue wrestling on the Texas "indy circuit", specifically in the Houston-area,[3] for the rest of the decade.[1][4]
Later that year, Monroe joined the Global Wrestling Federation where he had mixed success as a singles and tag team wrestler. He made his GWF debut on November 13, 1992, wrestling to a time-limit draw with Calvin Knapp and later defeating Tribal Nation (Brave Sky & Nocona) in a tag team match with Mike Davis; he also teamed with The Metal Maniac against Tribal Nation later that month. In singles competition, Monroe was able to defeat Rainbow Brown on November 20 but was disqualified in his match against GWF Television Champion Manny Villalobos at the Dallas Sportatorium a few weeks later.[32]
Budget cutbacks resulted in the GWF dropping much of its talent and Monroe found work with Danny Davis' Associated Wrestlers of the Universe in Houston.[33] He won the AWU Heavyweight Championship from American Warrior in Houston on July 31, 1993, and held the title until the promotion's close the next year. At an independent show held at Brazoswood High School on March 11, 1995, a bout between him and The Gladiator was part of the semi-main event in addition to a championship match between "Gentleman" Chris Adams and Iceman King Parsons.[34]
Confederate Wrestling Alliance
Monroe returned to the Dallas Sportatorium with the Confederate Wrestling Alliance in the fall of 1995. On September 1, 1995, he lost to Action Jackson in one of his first matches for the promotion. He also formed tag teams with The Secret and Butch Malone, mostly in matches against Scott Putski & Konnan, wrestling under the name "Bubba Malone" with the latter. He and Butch Malone received a title shot against CWA Tag Team Champions Bo Vegas & Devon Michaels on December 15, 1995, but came up short.[35]
During his second year with the promotion, Monroe wrestled in both the singles and tag team division. In April 1996, he and Dapper Dan fought to a time-limit draw while a rematch against Action Jackson ended in a no-contest. Forming a tag team with Dan, the two spent the next few months wrestling Action & Al Jackson, Sam Houston & Charlie Norris, and Bo Vegas & Devon Michaels. His last appearance was at a CWA television taping at the Sportatorium where he wrestled former tag team partner Mike Davis.[36]
Final years on the Texas "indy circuit"
That same year, Monroe wrestled for Donny Valentine's Iron Fist Wrestling Federation. On January 11, 1996, he became the promotion's first heavyweight champion after eliminating Bullman Downs in a battle royal held in Dallas, Texas. He lost the belt to Tarzan Tyler in Baytown six months later. On May 15, 1998, he wrestled Texas independent wrestler The Gravedigger in his debut match in front of a 1,200–1,500 crowd in Alexandria, Louisiana.[37] Monroe also spent time in Texas All-Star Wrestling and became one of its earliest champions when he won the TASW Heavyweight Championship from The Gladiator in Humble, Texas, on August 17, 1996. The title was vacated after he left the area in September 1996.[20]
Although never competing for the original World Class Championship Wrestling under the Von Erich family, Monroe took part in the several revival attempts in the years following it close. The Global Wrestling Federation and the Confederate Wrestling Alliance were examples of these later efforts to bring wrestling back to the Sportatorium. In the late-1990s, Monroe joined Mark Von Erich's version of WCCW and participated in its shows to raise money for local charities.[38] He later wrestled Von Erich for the WCCW Heavyweight Championship at Brazoswood High School on November 14, 1998.[39] Elsewhere on the Texas independent circuit that month, Monroe wrestled Bill Dundee at the University of Houston's Hofheinz Pavilion.[40]
In one of his last matches as an active wrestler, Monroe wrestled "Mr. USA" Tony Atlas for the United States Heavyweight Championship at "Slamfest 2000", a benefit show for Bridgewood Farms, at Houston's Montgomery County Fairgrounds.[41]
Recent years
A year or two later, Monroe retired from the sport to open his own training facility, the "Too Bad School of Professional Wrestling", in Pineville, Louisiana.[42] He did, however, continue to make occasional appearances for local promoters. In November 2002, he made an appearance with fellow Global Wrestling Federation alumni Mark Von Erich, One Man Gang, and manager Skandor Akbar along with tag team partner and friend Dapper Dan at a Red River Wrestling show held at the Rapides Coliseum in Alexandria, Louisiana.[43] Two years later, on February 7, 2004, he and his father were among those in attendance at Red Bastien's annual "Texas Shootout" luncheon in Arlington, Texas, along with other Texas wrestling legends including James Beard, Ivan and Scott Putski, Killer Tim Brooks, Ric Manning, Kit Carson, Tom Jones, Nick Kozak, Johnny Mantell, Tom Renesto Jr., Ken Ramey, Karl Kox, Khris Germany, Jackie Goldman, Silento Rodriguez, Tank Gilbert, Bill Colvils, Marc Lowrance, Doug Johnson, Nikla Roberts, Bullman Downs, Chico Caballo, Jason Kettner, Chris Morrow, Clifford Hory, Bill Mercer, Tadd Murphy, Fred Urban, Wallace Evans, Chris Youngblood, Jonah, and Robert Player.[44]
Later years hadn't been good for Monroe as he had had many run-ins with the law with multiple drug charges and parole violations.[45]
^"CWA Memphis". Corey's Wrestling Video Archives. CoreysTapes.com. Retrieved 28 October 2011.
^"CWA 1986 Television". Professional Wrestling Territories (Pre-1990s). PWChronicles.com. Archived from the original on 2 April 2012. Retrieved 28 October 2011.
^Mid-Atlantic Wrestling Association (Producer) (11 January 1991). 01/11/1991 MAWA: PASADENA, MD (VHS). Pasadena, Maryland: TCTapes.net. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 28 October 2011.
^Mid-Eastern Wrestling Federation (Producer) (16 March 1991). 03/16/1991 MAWA: BROOKLYN, MD (VHS). Brooklyn, Maryland: TCTapes.net. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 28 October 2011.
^ abcdefgRoyal Duncan & Gary Will (2000). Wrestling Title Histories (4th ed.). Archeus Communications. ISBN0-9698161-5-4.
^Mid-Eastern Wrestling Federation (Producer) (2 August 1991). 08/02/1991 MEWF: ODENTON, MD (VHS). Odenton, Maryland: TCTapes.net. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 28 October 2011.
^"OTW Opens The Monster Factory Video Vault." DeclarationofIndependents.net. Ed. Sean McCaffrey. N.p., Mar. 2004. Web. 5 Oct. 2011. <www.declarationofindependents.net/doi/pages/pressreleases/otw.html>.
^Cawthon, Graham. "NWA/WCW Power Hour 1991". NWA/WCW Power Hour. TheHistoryofWWE.com. Retrieved 28 October 2011.
^Royal Duncan; Gary Will; Brian Westcott & Eric Roelfsema (2004). "MEWF Tag Team Title History". Solie's Title Histories. Solie.org. Retrieved 5 October 2011.
^Dwyer, Larry (2004). "Texas Shootout 2004". Guest Columnists. 1WrestlingLegends.com. Archived from the original on 6 September 2011. Retrieved 28 October 2011.