Lionheart | |
---|---|
Birth name | Adrian McCallum |
Born | Coventry, England | 17 December 1982
Died | 19 June 2019 Ayr, Scotland | (aged 36)
Professional wrestling career | |
Billed height | 6 ft 1 in (185 cm) |
Billed weight | 15 st 5 lb (215 lb; 98 kg) |
Trained by | Colin McKay |
Debut | 2002 |
Adrian McCallum (17 December 1982 – 19 June 2019)[1] was a British professional wrestler, professional wrestling promoter and actor, better known by his ring name Lionheart.[2][3] He wrestled for numerous promotions in the British Independent wrestling circuit including Insane Championship Wrestling, in which he reigned as the ICW World Heavyweight Champion until his death, and Preston City Wrestling.[4] He was also the owner of Ayrshire-based wrestling promotion Pro Wrestling Elite.[3][5]
On 11 February 2007 Lionheart made his Insane Championship Wrestling debut, losing to James Wallace.[6] On 3 April 2016, Lionheart captured the Insane Championship Wrestling Zero-G Championship from Davey Boy in a 6-way match at ICW Barramania II. He then proceeded to lose the title to Kenny Williams in a 7 Man Stairway to Heaven Match with Aaron Echo, Andy Wild, Iestyn Rees, Liam Thomson and Zack Gibson on 20 November at Fear & Loathing IX.[7] On 2 December 2018 he won the ICW World Heavyweight Championship for the first time in his career, defeating former champion Jackie Polo in a Career vs. Title Match at Fear and Loathing XI. He wrestled his final match on June 16 2019 at ICW: Fight Club, he defeated Alexander Dean to retain the ICW World Heavyweight Championship and to win the European Heavyweight Championship. Both titles were vacated after his death.[8][9]
Lionheart was posthumously inducted into the ICW Hall of Fame in 2023.[10]
On 23 September 2011, Lionheart made his Preston City Wrestling debut on their "Road to Glory" show, defeating Jack Gallagher.[11] In March 2014, at a Preston City Wrestling show, McCallum's neck was broken in two places after receiving the Styles Clash following a match against AJ Styles.[12] As a result of the injury doctors warned McCallum that he may never walk again.[12] Just over a year later, McCallum defied doctors' orders and returned to in-ring competition in March 2015.[4]
In 2008, McCallum competed for the ROH World Championship against then-champion Nigel McGuinness at a One Pro Wrestling show in a triple threat match also involving Keith Myatt.[13] In January 2011, McCallum competed for Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA), losing to Jeff Jarrett at a houseshow in Glasgow, Scotland.[14] Later that year he also competed for WWE, losing to Justin Gabriel in a dark match on SmackDown in Liverpool, England.[15]
On 19 June 2019, McCallum's death was announced on Twitter by ICW. It was ruled he ended his own life.[16]
McCallum had last tweeted the previous evening, in which he quoted the TV series After Life: "One day you will eat your last meal, you will smell your last flower, you will hug your friend for the last time. You might not know it's the last time, that's why you must do everything you love with passion."[17]
Numerous tributes would be paid to Lionheart after his death, including from Drew McIntyre and The Rock.[18] The final scheduled Pro Wrestling Elite event went ahead weeks after his death in tribute to him.[19][20] This event featured Grado, Jack Jester, BT Gunn, Leyton Buzzard and saw Andy Wild win the UEWA European Heavyweight Championship which Lionheart's death had left vacant.[21][22]
Insane Championship Wrestling hosted the Lionheart League tournament on the WWE Network between 28 November 2020 and 6 February 2021.[23] The finals saw Sha Samuels defeat Stevie Boy.[24][25][26]
Lionheart was inducted into the ICW Hall of Fame on 18 June 2023 by The Kinky Party (Jack Jester and Sha Samuels).[10]