Brock Lesnar: Bio
Glory to The Conqueror, The Beast Incarnate, The Anomaly or whatever
godlike title you choose to bestow upon Brock Lesnar. Surely, this
creature fits each and every one of them.
Possessing the type of staggering strength and scary intensity seen
only among Superman villains, this 6-foot-3, 266-pound freak of nature
from Minneapolis, Minn., has forced his way to the top of every major
combat sport. He won the NCAA Division I collegiate wrestling
championship as a senior at the University of Minnesota, the WWE
Championship within six months of his debut and the UFC Heavyweight
Title in his fourth professional MMA fight. He’s also The One in 22-1.
Plain and simple, the man was built to destroy.
First scouted by WWE officials while smashing his way through the
college wrestling ranks, Lesnar debuted on Raw March 18, 2002, and
singlehandedly destroyed a ring full of unfortunate Superstars. From
that night on, the domination was unrepentant. With the sinister Paul
Heyman guiding his career, “The Next Big Thing” won the King of the Ring
tournament and beat The Rock to win the WWE Title — becoming the
youngest WWE Champion in history at that time, and the fastest rising
star sports-entertainment had ever seen.
The freight-train momentum of Lesnar didn’t even stall one bit after a layoff of nearly 10 years; when The Beast’s sojourn in UFC ended, he returned to WWE in 2012 firing on all cylinders, battling the very best WWE has to offer and achieving the impossible at WrestleMania 30: Becoming the first (and only) Superstar to defeat The Undertaker on The Grandest Stage of Them All. Lesnar returned to UFC to fight Mark Hunt at UFC 200, defeating the heavyweight by decision, then followed up with a TKO victory against Randy Orton at SummerSlam.
As if the pure ability of Lesnar isn’t enough to make him the most imposing Superstar in WWE history, the presence of Paul Heyman singing his praises (sometimes literally) builds the myth of The Beast Incarnate even as he writes it. Perhaps, to you, Heyman’s orations are exaggerated. But the results speak for themselves. His client, Brock Lesnar, conquered The Streak. And John Cena. And Triple H. And many, many more to come.
The freight-train momentum of Lesnar didn’t even stall one bit after a layoff of nearly 10 years; when The Beast’s sojourn in UFC ended, he returned to WWE in 2012 firing on all cylinders, battling the very best WWE has to offer and achieving the impossible at WrestleMania 30: Becoming the first (and only) Superstar to defeat The Undertaker on The Grandest Stage of Them All. Lesnar returned to UFC to fight Mark Hunt at UFC 200, defeating the heavyweight by decision, then followed up with a TKO victory against Randy Orton at SummerSlam.
As if the pure ability of Lesnar isn’t enough to make him the most imposing Superstar in WWE history, the presence of Paul Heyman singing his praises (sometimes literally) builds the myth of The Beast Incarnate even as he writes it. Perhaps, to you, Heyman’s orations are exaggerated. But the results speak for themselves. His client, Brock Lesnar, conquered The Streak. And John Cena. And Triple H. And many, many more to come.
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