WWE should help ill wrestling legend 'Dynamite Kid' with medical bills: Bruce Hart - Action News
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WWE should help ill wrestling legend 'Dynamite Kid' with medical bills: Bruce Hart

Bruce Hart is trying to raise awareness about the failing health of a longtime friend and fellow Stampede Wrestling alumnus who cant afford home care following a stroke.

I'd certainly like to throw the gauntlet down to Vince McMahon, says Stampede Wrestling alumnus

Dynamite Kid, or Tom Billington, rests his head on his wife Dot's shoulder. He's been in a U.K. care home for the last 13 months. (GoFundMe)

Bruce Hart is trying to raise awareness about the failing health of a longtime friend and fellow Stampede Wrestling alumnuswho can't afford home care following a stroke.

Dynamite Kid, or Tom Billington, has been in a U.K. care home for the last 13 months due to health issues.

Billington'swife, Dot, recently launched aGoFundMecampaignto raise money to cover "full-time care and the facilities to assist with his mobility" so thatBillingtoncan return to his home in England.

"The wrestling businesses has got no real safety nets after you leave it. You know, there's no pension fund nothing. It's kind of feast or famine," Hart told theCalgaryEyeopener.

"I'd certainly like to throw the gauntlet down toVinceMcMahon at the WWE. It would seem to me a fitting gesture for them to do a fundraiser or cut him a cheque."

Bruce Hart is a former wrestler and longtime friend of the Dynamite Kid.

Hart scouted the British wrestler in the 70s at a match in England.

"I remember trying to sell my dad on this skinny English kid, and he was pretty skeptical," said Hart.

"He was about 150 pounds then and over in Calgary then with Stampede wrestling most of the guys were these big, 250 pound-plus Abdullah the Butcher and Mike Shaw-types."

Stu Hart took a chance and brought Billington across the pond to Calgary. He competed across the world on his own and tag teamed with his cousinDavey Boy Smithas the British Bulldogs.

'The wrestling businesses has got no real safety nets after you leave it ... it's kind of feast or famine," says Bruce Hart. (Danielle Nerman/CBC)

Billington has been in wheelchair for nearly two decades due to a career of back and leg injuries.

"His body took a pretty good pounding," said Hart.

"He's kind of like that fictional character in The Wrestler, starringMickeyRourke, where after the roar of the crowd there's not too much left."


With files from the Calgary Eyeopener