In the summer of 1999, the then reigning SCW Tag Team Champions, The Serial Thrillaz, broke up when Shane Helms left SCW for World Championship Wrestling[6] and saw Helms give his half of the title to Happer. He and Mike Maverick defended the titles together for a short time before changing their names to Bo and Jack Dupp respectively.[citation needed]
It was during this period that Happer, along with Maverick and Cham Pain, sent a tape to Extreme Championship Wrestling which introduced themselves as "a family of rednecks from Lizard Lick, North Carolina, named 'The Dupps'". They received a call from Tommy Dreamer who invited them to the ECW Arena for a tryout match. Dreamer later told them that their video was "one of the funniest, most original tapes they had ever received".[7] On October 29, 1999, The Dupps wrestled David "Kid" Cash and Super Nova at the Packard Music Hall in Warren, Ohio.[8] The trio eventually forfeited the SCW tag team belts, and Happer the heavyweight title, and left for ECW a month later.[9][10]
Extreme Championship Wrestling (1999–2000)
The Dupps made their official ECW debut on November 27, 1999, at the ECW Arena[11] again wrestling Kid Kash and Super Nova.[12] Bo and Jack Dupp were wrestling while Puck Dupp acted as manager. The following night, they appeared on the November 28 edition of Hardcore TV against Danny Doring and Roadkill.[13][14] A month later, The Dupps wrestled both teams in a three-way dance which aired on ECW on TNN[11] on January 7, 2000.[15]
Despite being promised contracts with ECW, Happer and Maverick instead decided to accept a contract offer with the World Wrestling Federation in March 2000.[11] The Dupps mainly wrestled in dark matches on WWF television feuding with the Mean Street Posse[17] while the majority of their time was spent in the WWF's developmental territories, Memphis and Ohio Valley Wrestling.
One of their first matches for the WWF was against Rob Conway and Danny Dominion, who they defeated, at the sold-out All-State Arena in Chicago on March 20, 2000. They returned to the All-State Arena six months later where they defeated the Texas Hangmen.[18] They had matches against Kai En Tai, Just Joe, Joey Abs and the APA.[19]
Memphis Championship Wrestling (2000–2001)
The Dupps were sent to Memphis Championship Wrestling in late 2000. On October 14, 2000, they teamed with Joey Abs in a 6-man tag team match against K-Krush and the Mean Street Posse. Two weeks later they won the MCW Southern Tag Team Championship from the Mean Street Posse in Jonesboro, Arkansas. They defended the titles for three weeks before losing the belts to The Triad (Seven and Thrash) in a no-disqualification match. Happer was unable to appear for the show, held in Newbern, Tennessee, and was substituted by Joey Abs. That same year, The Dupps became the first tag team champions for Carolinas Wrestling Federation, however, the titles were vacated when they left the promotion in 2001.[20][21]
The Dupps also faced teams such as Spellbinder and Bulldog Raines, Alan Steel and Blade Boudreaux, and Joey Abs and Lance Cade. They briefly regained the tag titles from Spanky and Shooter Schultz, the latter taking the place of The American Dragon, in Corinth, Mississippi, on January 13, 2001. The following night, they appeared at a WWF house show in Madison, Wisconsin, against The Acolytes (Bradshaw and Faarooq). They dropped the belts to The Haas Brothers (Charlie Haas and Russ Haas) on February 21, 2001, in Jonesboro.[10][22]
Later career (2001)
After the breakup of the Dupps, Maverick changed his name to Mike Hard in Ohio Valley Wrestling which was a WWF developmental territory. Mike Hard was a member of the Revolution stable. His last match was on August 15, 2001 when he lost to Nick Dinsmore in a Loser Leaves OVW match.[23] After the match, he retired from wrestling.
^"Profile". Wrestlingdata. Retrieved February 22, 2024.
^"1989". Thehistoryofwwe.com. Retrieved December 31, 2016.
^"1990". Thehistoryofwwe.com. Retrieved December 31, 2016.
^"1991". Thehistoryofwwe.com. Retrieved December 31, 2016.
^ abMilner, John M. (March 11, 2012). "The Hurricane". SLAM! Wrestling Bios. SLAM! Sports. Archived from the original on July 24, 2012. Retrieved January 10, 2012.