Danny Havoc

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Danny Havoc
Havoc in June 2013
Birth nameGrant Amos Berkland
Born(1986-05-19)May 19, 1986
Cylinder, Iowa, U.S.
DiedMay 31, 2020(2020-05-31) (aged 34)
Barrington, New Jersey, U.S.
Spouse(s)
Brianne Morrow
(m. 2018)
Professional wrestling career
Ring name(s)Daniel T. Havoc
Daniel Tiberius Ulysses Horatio Hornblower Havoc
Danny Havoc
Billed height6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)
Billed weight190 lb (86 kg)
Billed from"The Unacknowledged Capital of Hardcore" Cylinder, Iowa[1]
Trained byMike Quackenbush
Chris Hero
D. J. Hyde
DebutJuly 30, 2005

Grant Amos Berkland (May 19, 1986 – May 31, 2020),[2] better known by his ring name Danny Havoc, was an American professional wrestler. He was best known for his work in Combat Zone Wrestling (CZW), and was noted for mixing his technical style with hardcore wrestling.

In CZW, he was a two-time World Tag Team Champion (with Devon Moore and Lucky 13), two-time Ultraviolent Underground Champion, a one-time World Junior Heavyweight Champion and won Tournament of Death on two occasions. He announced his retirement at Tournament of Death 16, and wrestled his final match on September 9, 2017, which was covered on an episode of The Wrestlers. He also wrestled for Game Changer Wrestling (GCW), Westside Xtreme Wrestling (wXw), Big Japan Pro Wrestling (BJW), IWA Mid-South, IWA East Coast, and IWA Deep-South.

Two years after his final match, Havoc came out of retirement for a benefit show hosted by Matt Tremont's H2O Wrestling,[3] and returned to Game Changer Wrestling for their Tokyo tour in February 2020.

Professional wrestling career[edit]

Combat Zone Wrestling (2005–2017)[edit]

Havoc was born Grant Berkland on May 19, 1986, in Cylinder, Iowa,[4] and started wrestling in his family's barn with his friends after school.[5] After watching many wrestling tapes and specifically after attending Combat Zone Wrestling's Cage of Death 6 event, Havoc traveled to Philadelphia to try out for CZW. After training for a few months, Havoc made his debut in the student battle royal at Tournament of Death 4 on July 30, 2005. At one point during the match, Havoc was set on fire by Whacks.[6]

He made his singles debut at the first annual Chri$ Ca$h memorial show on September 10, 2005.[7] He defeated fellow CZW Academy graduate Andy Sumner with a Death Valley driver off the ring apron through a barbed-wire board propped up on two chairs outside the ring. He started a long feud with D. J. Hyde that included matches on CZW shows as well as STF (Stars of the Future) and NEXT shows. Havoc finally defeated Hyde at CZW's April 2006 show Any Questions? and, post-match, Hyde threw Havoc off of a balcony through a table.[8]

Havoc won the World Junior Heavyweight Championship at the third annual Chri$ Ca$h memorial show on September 8 by defeating Joker, Scotty Vortekz, "Diehard" Dustin Lee, and Drake Younger in a five-way match.[9] On December 1, Havoc made it to the finals of IWA Deep South's "Carnage Cup" tournament before falling to Freakshow.[10] A week later, on December 8, at CZW's flagship show, Cage of Death, Havoc was the last member of Team CZW left standing on the top of the cage at the end of the big Cage of Death match.[11]

Havoc won the seventh annual Tournament of Death on May 17, 2008. In the first round, Havoc advanced by beating the Ram in a light tube bundles match. In the semi-finals, Havoc and Nick Gage advanced by beating Pinkie Sanchez and Greg Excellent in a fans bring the weapons match. In the finals, Havoc was pitted against Drake Younger, Scotty Vortekz, and Nick Gage in a no rope barbed wire 200 light tubes match to a single pinfall.[12] During the match Havoc was chokeslammed on two chairs by Necro Butcher and was dropped out of the ring by Nick Gage, but his arm caught the barbed wire and was badly cut from his triceps to his armpit.[13] The same year, he also won the IWA Deep South Carnage Cup, advancing over the Juggulator, WHACKS, and beating Nick Gage, Freakshow, and Corey Shaddix in the finals. He was awarded the Ultraviolent Underground Championship at Decision '08, after then-Champion Drake Younger, who also held the World Heavyweight Championship gave him the title, following a four-way match.[12]

Havoc at CZW Tournament of Death 9 in 2010

Havoc made it to the finals of wXw's Gorefest II tournament in Germany, losing to Thumbtack Jack in a lighttubes and barbed-wire pits match. Havoc had defeated Thumbtack Jack the month before in the United States to retain his Ultraviolent Underground Title, which was covered on G4 Underground.

During 2009, Havoc was embroiled in a bitter feud with Switchblade Conspiracy founder Sami Callihan. This culminated in the 11th annual Cage of Death match, with Callihan winning and attempting to cut Havoc with a knife, only to be cut off by the returning Necro Butcher.

The following year, a feud erupted between Billy Gram's CULT FICTION faction (originally composed of MASADA, tHURTeen, Brain Damage, and JC Bailey) and Havoc's babyface faction, which came to be known as The Suicide Kings (originally Havoc, Eddie Kingston, Drake Younger, and Scotty Vortekz). During this feud, JC Bailey died, Eddie Kingston defected from the company, and Drake Younger turned on his friends, proclaiming himself "The Golden Boy" and aligning with CF. Devon Moore took the spot of Younger in the Suicide Kings, and toward the conclusion of the feud, occasional CZW participant and midwestern hardcore mainstay, Dysfunction, filled Kingston's spot, to bring the main event for Cage of Death 12 to an even four-on-four match. The Suicide Kings came out of the match victorious, and CF disbanded shortly thereafter. In the midst of that same year, at CZW Best of the Best X, Havoc defeated Jun Kasai to win the Ultraviolent Underground Championship for the second time.[14][15] Havoc subsequently dropped the UVU belt to MASADA four months later, and the title has since been retired.

From the remains of the Suicide Kings faction, Havoc declared that a new group was to be recognized, which he proclaimed to be "The Nation of Intoxication." This group initially consisted of Havoc, Moore, and Vortekz, who quickly invited Lucky 13 (formerly CULT FICTION's "tHURTeen") to join them. Vortekz departed the group and the company shortly thereafter, but the Nation continued to prosper, eventually winning the World Tag Team Championship on two occasions, trading them back and forth with heel group, 4LOKO. The Nation became known almost as much for their drunken shenanigans and comical antics as for their trademark daredevil style, punctuated by the core members' ability to combine exciting high-flying maneuvers with the hard-hitting, risk-taking ultraviolent style that CZW has made its name with.

Havoc subsequently become a semi-regular mainstay in Big Japan Pro Wrestling, as one of the most consistent representatives of CZW to compete in the legendary deathmatch promotion. On a 2012 tour, Havoc and his frequent travel partner, Drake Younger, represented CZW as participants in BJW's Round Robin Deathmatch Survivor League, the winner of which was to earn a shot at the BJW Deathmatch title. While both men had respectable showings, neither managed to advance far enough to be in title contention. Toward the end of the tour, Havoc and Younger — longtime friends — had a very public falling out at the BJW Dojo, in which they came to blows and had to be pulled apart by BJW Dojo members. This sparked a feud between the two that saw the return of long-missing CZW favorite, Scotty Vortekz, who had at different times been tag partners with both men. Vortekz made his allegiances known by siding with Younger to defeat Havoc and fellow Nation of Intoxication member, Lucky 13.

In 2013, Havoc came out the victor in CZW's annual Tournament of Death, advancing over the likes of Rory Mondo and Big Japan Wrestling's young deathmatch prospect, Takumi Tsukamoto, then finally defeating his former friend and partner, Scotty Vortekz, in a 444 Lighttubes Death Match, in which eight-foot fluorescent bulbs were attached to the ropes on all four sides and scattered across the floor of the ring. Despite taking a great deal of punishment in the match, Havoc managed to reverse a top rope maneuver into his patented finisher, the General Order 24, onto a massive pile of bulbs for the pin. This makes Havoc one of only three two-time Tournament of Death champions in its fourteen-year history.

Havoc lost to Rickey Shane Page in an Ultraviolent Hardcore Match at Cage of Death 18. Page pinned Havoc after giving him a top rope powerbomb through a plate of glass. During that event, the Nation of Intoxication dissolved and Havoc went his own way, getting into a feud with Alex Colon. During Tournament of Death 16, Havoc announced his retirement and that he would face off against Alex Colon at Down With The Sickness. At Once In A Lifetime, Havoc took part in a match against Atsushi Onita and his men from FMW.

Havoc lost his match against Alex Colon to a standing ovation as D. J. Hyde and the locker room cheered for him. It was then confirmed by CZW officials that Havoc had officially retired from professional wrestling.

Return to Wrestling (2019-2020)[edit]

Having come out of retirement at a benefit show for Matt Tremont's H2O Wrestling on October 6, 2019, Havoc was named as part of a Tokyo tour promoted by Game Changer Wrestling (GCW), where he was involved in tag team deathmatches. On February 3, at Live Fast Die Young, Havoc teamed with Tremont and Isami Kodaka against Drew Parker, Jimmy Lloyd and Toshiyuki Sakuda, where Parker missed a 450 splash but Havoc hit him with a death valley driver for the win.[16] On February 4, at Ready to Die, Havoc teamed with Alex Colon against Kodaka and Sakuda, in which Havoc performed a around the world slam, followed by a death valley driver (called a General Order 24) on Kodaka for the win.[17] On February 5, at Art of War, Havoc teamed with Colon and Tremont against Kodaka, Kenji Fukimoto and Takashi Sasaki. Havoc took the pin after Team Japan performed the super double knees off a ladder onto a bundle of light tubes of which Havoc was underneath.[18] On February 15, at Run Rickey Run, Havoc faced SHLAK in a death match, replacing the injured Masashi Takeda. Towards the end, Havoc went for a death valley driver but missed the moonsault follow up, allowing SHLAK to hit him with two piledrivers on lighttubes and gusset boards for the win.[19]

Personal life[edit]

Havoc was married to Brianne Morrow from 2018 until her death from heart failure on April 4, 2020.[20][21] Less than two months later, on May 31, 2020, Havoc died at the age of 34 from heart failure.[22][23]

Championships and accomplishments[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Danny Havoc". Combat Zone Wrestling. Archived from the original on January 22, 2013. Retrieved April 14, 2011.
  2. ^ "Grant A. Berkland (May 19, 1986 - May 31, 2020)". LeRoy P. Wooster Funeral Home & Crematory. Retrieved June 11, 2020.
  3. ^ "Deathmatch Icon Danny Havoc Returning to Ring for Charity". lastwordonprowrestling.com. September 24, 2019. Retrieved April 30, 2020.
  4. ^ "Official : Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)". Archived from the original on July 17, 2011. Retrieved January 5, 2010.
  5. ^ Havoc, Daniel Tiberius (September 2005). "Home". Danny Havoc Official Website. Archived from the original on May 7, 2008. Retrieved February 25, 2023.
  6. ^ "30 July 2005". Archived from the original on April 14, 2008. Retrieved June 20, 2008.
  7. ^ "CZW Database – Wrestler Info". Archived from the original on April 20, 2008. Retrieved June 19, 2008.
  8. ^ "Combat Zone Wrestling – 2006 – Online World of Wrestling".
  9. ^ Online World of Wrestling
  10. ^ December 1st 'IWA Deep South Carnage Cup Death Match Tournament'
  11. ^ Combat Zone Wrestling (2007) | Online World of Wrestling
  12. ^ a b Combat Zone Wrestling 2008
  13. ^ CZW Results: 5-18-08, Smyrna, DE: Tournament of Death VII
  14. ^ a b "Ultraviolent Underground Champions". Combat Zone Wrestling. Archived from the original on December 22, 2010. Retrieved April 14, 2011.
  15. ^ "'Best of the Best X'; April 9th 2011; Philadelphia, PA". Combat Zone Wrestling. April 9, 2011. Archived from the original on November 30, 2012. Retrieved April 14, 2011.
  16. ^ Dinsdale, John (February 6, 2020). "GCW "Live Fast, Die Young"- Results and Review". wrestlingsc.com. Retrieved April 30, 2020.
  17. ^ Dinsdale, John (February 8, 2020). "GCW "Ready to Die" – Results and Review". wrestlingsc.com. Retrieved April 30, 2020.
  18. ^ Dinsdale, John (February 9, 2020). "GCW "The Art of War" – Results and Review". wrestlingsc.com. Retrieved April 30, 2020.
  19. ^ McMillian, Matthew (February 22, 2020). "GCW 'Run Rickey Run' (2.15.20) Results & Review". fightboothpw.com. Retrieved March 5, 2020.
  20. ^ "Brianne Elizabeth Morrow (March 27, 1993 - April 4, 2020)". LeRoy P. Wooster Funeral Home & Crematory. Retrieved April 30, 2020.
  21. ^ Viking, Deathmatch (May 11, 2020). "A message from Danny. Please RT". Twitter. Retrieved June 1, 2020.
  22. ^ Game Changer Wrestling [@GCWrestling_] (June 1, 2020). "With a broken heart, the GCW family mourns the loss of Grant Berkland aka Danny Havoc. Danny was an incredibly talented, intelligent, caring & genuine person. He was also an elite performer that entertained a generation of fans & inspired a generation of aspiring performers" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  23. ^ "Danny Havoc: From Wreaking Havoc in the CZW to Dying at 34!". SportsDiet365. May 15, 2021. Retrieved May 31, 2020.
  24. ^ "CZW Jr. Heavyweight Champions". Combat Zone Wrestling. Archived from the original on December 22, 2010. Retrieved April 14, 2011.
  25. ^ "Tournament of Death Winners". Combat Zone Wrestling. Archived from the original on December 22, 2010. Retrieved April 14, 2011.
  26. ^ "GCW Zandig's Tournament Of Survival « Events Database « CAGEMATCH - The Internet Wrestling Database". Archived from the original on August 8, 2016.

External links[edit]