Ric Flair net worth
Current Net Worth – $0.5 Million (USD – 5 Lakhs), (Rupees – 3 Crores)
Ric Flair short biography
Net Worth | $0.5 Million |
---|---|
Born | February 25, 1949 (Age – 73) |
Identified as | American Professional Wrestling Manager, Professional Wrestler |
Status | Old Wrestler |
Years active | 1972–present |
Education | Wayland Academy, University of Minnesota |
Nationality | American |
Residence | Minnesota, US State |
Spousal status | Separated (Leslie Goodman M. 1971; Div. 1983), (Elizabeth Harrell M. 1983; Div. 2006), (Tiffany VanDemark M. 2006; Div. 2009), (Jackie Beems M. 2009; Div. 2014), (Wendy Barlow M. 2018; Sep. 2022) |
Children | 4 |
Ric Flair has a net worth of $0.5 Million (Rupees – 3 Crores), an American professional wrestler (retired), actor, and entrepreneur, he was one of the great wrestlers in WWE well known for his incredible fights.
Richard Morgan Fliehr, better known by his ring name Ric Flair, is a retired professional wrestler from the United States.
Flair was regarded by many contemporaries and journalists as the greatest professional wrestler of all time, with a nearly 40-year career.
Flair is officially acknowledged by WWE as a 16-time world champion, despite the amount of world title reigns he has fluctuated from source to source, ranging between 16 and 25.
He boasts of being a 21-time champion.
He held the WCW World Heavyweight Championship and the WCW International World Heavyweight Championship for the first time.
He was the first individual to complete WCW’s Triple Crown as the inaugural World Heavyweight Champion, having previously held the United States Heavyweight and World Tag Team Championships.
After winning the WWF Championship and the World Tag Team Championship, he completed WWE’s version of the Triple Crown by winning the Intercontinental Championship.
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Ric Flair biography
Full Name | Richard Morgan Fliehr |
Birthplace | Memphis, Tennessee, U.S. |
Height | 6.1 feet, 185 cm |
Weight | 110 Kg |
Father | Richard Reid Fliehr |
Mother | Kathleen Fliehr |
Fliehr was born in Memphis, Tennessee, on February 25, 1949.
His original parents were Luther and Olive Phillips, and his birth name is commonly assumed to be Fred Phillips, however, he is also identified as Fred Demaree or Stewart on other records.
Kathleen Kinsmiller Fliehr (1918–2003) and Richard Reid Fliehr (1918–2000) adopted him.
Kathleen was unable to conceive after giving birth to a daughter who died shortly after.
The Fliehrs opted to adopt. His adoptive father was finishing an obstetrics and gynecology residency in Detroit, Michigan at the time of his adoption.
His adopted mother was a reporter for the Minneapolis Star Tribune.
Shortly after, the family relocated to Edina, Minnesota, where the young Fliehr spent his youth.
Ric Flair social media handles:
WOOOOO! @RickRoss @MikeTyson @itstyson20 pic.twitter.com/j8ZNh8toq9
— Ric Flair® (@RicFlairNatrBoy) April 22, 2022
Education
He spent four years after ninth grade at Wayland Academy in Beaver Dam, Wisconsin, where he competed in interscholastic wrestling, football, and track.
Fliehr attended the University of Minnesota for a short time after graduating from high school.
Career
Flair began his professional wrestling career with Verne Gagne after becoming a successful amateur wrestler in his teens. In the winter of 1971, he attended Greg Gagne’s inaugural wrestling camp alongside “Jumpin'” Jim Brunzell, The Iron Sheik, and Ken Patera at Gagne’s farm outside Minneapolis.
On December 10, 1972, he made his professional wrestling debut at Rice Lake, Wisconsin, where he drew a 10-minute match with George “Scrap Iron” Gadaski while assuming the ring name Ric Flair.
Flair departed the AWA in 1974 to join Jim Crockett’s National Wrestling Alliance (NWA) Mid-Atlantic territory, where he won his first singles championship on February 9, 1975, when he defeated Paul Jones for the Mid-Atlantic TV Championship.
Flair won his first NWA World Heavyweight Championship on September 17, 1981, when he defeated Dusty Rhodes.
Arn Anderson and Ole Anderson, a tag team, began assisting Flair (whom they referred to as a “relative”) in attacks against Dusty Rhodes, Magnum T.A., and Sam Houston in late 1985.
Tatsumi Fujinami beat Ric Flair in a match at the WCW/New Japan Supershow in Tokyo on March 21, 1991.
Flair won the Rumble match at the 1992 Royal Rumble to earn the vacant WWF Championship.
In February 1993, Flair triumphantly returned to WCW as a hero.
Flair battled Antonio Inoki in front of 190,000 fans in the May Day Stadium in Pyongyang, North Korea on April 29, 1995, in a losing effort as part of a joint performance between New Japan Pro-Wrestling and World Championship Wrestling.
In October 1996, two events occurred that influenced the Four Horsemen. Jeff Jarrett moved over to WCW from the WWF and proclaimed his desire to join the Horsemen, much to the dismay of the other Horsemen, as he quickly earned a fan in Ric Flair.
Due to a lawsuit filed by Eric Bischoff for not airing a live episode of Thunder on April 16, 1998, in Tallahassee, Florida, Flair disappeared from WCW television in April 1998.
Flair returned to the WWF on November 19, 2001, after an eight-month sabbatical from the sport.
Flair had a feud with Edge that lasted until early 2006, culminating in a WWE Championship Tables, Ladders, and Chairs match on Raw, which Flair lost.
Flair gave his farewell message on March 31, 2008, broadcast of Raw.
Flair made his comeback to the ring as a villain on the “Hulkamania: Let The Battle Begin” tour of Australia on November 21, 2009, losing to Hulk Hogan via brass knuckles in the main event of the first night.
On the May 12, 2011, edition of Impact Wrestling, Flair made a non–wrestling appearance.
Flair became the first individual to be inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame twice, the second time as part of the class of 2012 alongside The Four Horsemen, while still tied to TNA as part of a deal with WWE that enabled Christian Cage to perform at Slammiversary 2012.
WWE honored Flair’s 70th birthday on the February 25, 2019 episode of Raw, when Flair was assaulted by Batista in the closing minutes.
Flair began a storyline with Lacey Evans on the January 4, 2021 episode of Raw, when Evans flirted with Flair during a match against Women’s Tag Team Champions Charlotte Flair and Asuka.
Ric Flair income model
Monthly Income | $3 Thousand+ (Rupees – 2.2 Lakh+) |
Yearly Income | $35 Thousand+ (Rupees – 26 Lakh+) |
Private & early life
On August 28, 1971, Flair married his first wife, Leslie Goodman.
Before separating in 1983 after twelve years of marriage, they had two children, Megan and David.
He married Elizabeth Harrell, his second wife, on August 27, 1983.
Jim Crockett Jr., a promoter, was the best man at the ceremony. Ashley and Reid, their two children, were born to them. Between 1998 and 2000, Beth and their children appeared in WCW on a regular basis.
After nearly 23 years of marriage, Flair and Beth split in 2006.
Flair married his third wife, fitness competitor Tiffany VanDemark, on May 27, 2006. Tiffany filed for divorce from Flair in 2008, and the divorce was completed in 2009.
Flair married his fourth wife, Jacqueline “Jackie” Beems, in Charlotte, North Carolina, on November 11, 2009. Flair divorced Beems in 2012, and the divorce was formalized in 2014.
On September 12, 2018, Flair married Wendy Barlow at a resort in Florida. Flair and Barlow confirmed their separation on January 31, 2022.
David Flair, Ric’s older son, is a retired professional wrestler who competed for WCW from 1999 to 2001 and made two televised appearances in the WWF in the build-up to WrestleMania X8 in 2002.
Reid Flair, who signed a developmental deal with WWE at the end of 2007, was an exceptional high school wrestler who, along with his sister Ashley and half-sister Megan, had multiple appearances on WCW television.
Awards
Year | Award |
---|---|
1983 | Match of the Year |
1984 | Match of the Year |
1986 | Match of the Year |
1989 | Match of the Year |
2008 | Match of the Year |