Marc Mero is a former amateur boxing standout who transitioned into professional wrestling in the early 1990s, ultimately becoming one of WCW’s most colorful midcard attractions. Trained by the Malenko family in Florida, he debuted in Sun Coast Professional Wrestling (SPW) before quickly being signed by WCW, where he was repackaged as Johnny B. Badd, a flamboyant, Little Richard–inspired character managed by Teddy Long.
With his confetti “Badd Blaster” and high‑energy offense, he rose from undercard novelty to credible television champion, winning the WCW World Television Championship three times and working with the likes of Arn Anderson and Diamond Dallas Page.
In 1996, creative disagreements over a planned storyline involving Kimberly Page led Mero to leave WCW and sign a significant guaranteed contract with the WWF, where he debuted at WrestleMania XII as “Wildman” Marc Mero alongside Sable.
Blending aerial moves like the Shooting Star Press (Marvelocity/Wild Thing) with boxing‑influenced striking, he captured the WWF Intercontinental Championship by winning a tournament final over Faarooq Asad in September 1996. However, injuries, character tweaks toward a jealous, bitter heel, and Sable’s rising popularity gradually pushed him down the card, and he wrestled his final WWF matches in late 1998 before quietly exiting in 1999.
Mero returned to wrestling with the short-lived XWF (X Wrestling Federation) and later joined TNA. In TNA, he briefly brought back his Johnny B. Badd character. He then had a final run focused on nostalgia, which ended with his last match in a tag team match for World Wrestling Legends in 2006.
That year, he officially retired from in‑ring competition and shifted focus to inspirational speaking, founding the Champion of Choices nonprofit and becoming a school and youth presenter.
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