gold star for USAHOF
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Dory Funk Sr.

Although both of his sons (Dory Jr. & Terry) far eclipsed his in ring accomplishments, Dory Funk Sr. was a decent wrestler in his own right.  Dory became a very effective promoter in the Amarillo area and made that region a hotbed for Texas wrestling.  His sons are already in the WWE Hall of Fame, and Dory Sr. would not be out of place with them.

Should Dory Funk Sr. be in the Hall of Fame?

Definitely put him in! - 60%
Maybe, but others deserve it first. - 0%
Probably not, but it wouldn't be the end of the world. - 20%
No opinion. - 0%
No way! - 20%

243. Don Owen

Don Owen took over the Portland territory in 1952 and for a four decade time frame made it a reputable area for wrestlers.   Owen would become known as a great payoff man and develop the area accordingly and if Wrestlemania was ever in Oregon would have a shot.   Since it won’t, this is not likely to happen.

152. Dick Hutton

Former three time NCAA Champion, Dick Hutton became the NWA World Heavyweight Champion defeating the great Lou Thesz in 1957.  Dick Hutton was a technical master but in the televised age of wrestling was ill equipped to deal with the personalities that came with it.  He may have been World Champion, but remains one of the most forgotten ones ever. 

114. Dick Ebersol

A huge NBC executive best known for his work in the Sports and Late Night divisions, Dick Ebersol was the producer for the Saturday Night’s Main Event series that became an unexpected smash hit for both the WWE and NBC.  Ebersol was not a “paper” producer and by bringing professional wrestling back to network television proved to be a huge boom for the business.  His bigwig status in network television and recent Hall of Fame appearance inducting Bob Uecker may mean that Ebersol is not as much of a fringe candidate as one would think.