Est. 3/29/2016
Steve Austin (born Steven James Anderson on December 18, 1964, later Steven James Williams),
[4] better known by his
ring name "Stone Cold" Steve Austin, is an American actor, media personality, producer, and retired
professional wrestler who is signed to a legends contract for
WWE.
He gained significant mainstream popularity in the WWE (then known as the World Wrestling Federation) in the late 1990s as "Stone Cold" Steve Austin, a disrespectful, beer-drinking
antihero who routinely
defied the establishment and his boss, company chairman
Mr. McMahon;
[5][6] this persona of Austin's has been described as the "poster boy" of the
Attitude Era,
[7] a
boom period in WWF business in the late 1990s and early 2000s and was one of the biggest factors in helping the WWE win the ratings war against their competition World Championship Wrestling (WCW).
Addressing his box office drawing power, McMahon
[8] and former WWE executives
Jim Ross[9] and
Paul Heyman[10] have declared Austin to be the most profitable wrestler in the history of the organization. Ross asserted: "Nobody touches Austin... No-one generated more cash in the length of their WWE career".
[9] Industry veterans and multiple-time WWE Champions Ric Flair,
[11] John Cena
[12] and CM Punk
[13] have each named Austin as the biggest star in WWE history, and, along with McMahon,
[8] have stressed that he surpassed the popularity of
Hulk Hogan. Austin also devised the long-standing "What?" chant in pro wrestling.
[14]
Austin held 19
championships throughout his wrestling career; he is a
six-timeWWF Champion, a
two-timeWWF Intercontinental Champion, and a
four-timeWWF Tag Team Champion, thus making him the fifth
Triple Crown Champion in WWE history. He was also the winner of the
1996King of the Ring tournament, as well as the
1997,
1998, and
2001Royal Rumbles, making him the only three-time winner of the event. Furthermore, under The Ringmaster moniker, he was awarded the unsanctioned
Million Dollar Championship by the "Million Dollar Man"
Ted DiBiase.
He has headlined multiple
pay-per-view events for the WWF, including three
WrestleManias (
XIV,
XV, and
X-Seven). He was forced to retire from in-ring competition in 2003 due to a series of knee injuries and a serious neck injury. Throughout the rest of 2003 and 2004, he was featured as the
Co-General Manager and "Sheriff" of
Raw. Since 2005, he has continued to make occasional appearances, and was inducted into the
WWE Hall of Fame in 2009 by Vince McMahon. In 2011, Austin returned to WWE to host the reboot of the reality series
Tough Enough.