Bob Sweetan

Professional

Birthday July 4, 1940

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Goodsoil, Saskatchewan, Canada

DEATH DATE 2017-2-10, Nanaimo, British Columbia, Canada (76 years old)

Nationality Canada

Height 5ft 10in

Weight 271 lb

#55375 Most Popular

1940

Robert Carson (born Robert Beier; July 4, 1940 – February 10, 2017 ), better known by his ring name Bob Sweetan, was a Canadian professional wrestler.

Sweetan was nicknamed "Bruiser" and "Mr. Piledriver", the latter in reference to his finishing maneuver.

Beier was born on a farm near Goodsoil, Saskatchewan, about four hours north of Saskatoon.

He played briefly with the Canadian Football League's Toronto Argonauts, and, after a period of traveling, settled in Calgary, the home of Stu Hart and his Stampede Wrestling promotion.

Beier was introduced to pro wrestling by Gerd Topsnik, a door-to-door cookware salesman who wrestled part-time for Hart.

Beier recalled: "I told [Topsnik], 'All right, I'll buy your pots and pans if you get me started in wrestling.' He started taking me to Stu's."

It is unclear when Beier changed his legal surname to Carson.

Sweetan held numerous titles over his career.

He enjoyed some success with the National Wrestling Alliance and wrestled with Freddie Prosser who went under the name Freddie Sweetan in Canada for Stampede Wrestling.

Sweetan and Terry Gibbs defeated Fabulous Freebirds for the NWA Central States Tag Team Championship.

He also wrestled for the World Wrestling Council in Puerto Rico.

In the WWC he defeated King Tonga for the WWC Puerto Rico Heavyweight Championship.

Sweetan was in the first ever WWC Aniversario.

1969

Sweetan met an Iowa woman, Rebecca Jane Terhune, at a Kansas City club in 1969 and the couple were married in Los Angeles in 1971.

They had four children.

Sweetan also had one child to another woman.

1975

He played himself in the movie The Wrestling Queen in 1975.

Sweetan wrestled many notable wrestlers during his career such as Rufus R. Jones, Buzz Tyler, Randy Rose, Ted Dibiase, Bill Watts, Frank Hoy, Butch Reed, Adrian Adonis, Tully Blanchard, and Jesse Ventura.

"Dr. Death" Steve Williams described him as a "very, very tough man."

Sweetan was known for causing riots in arenas due to his heel antics, and was an influence on Shawn Michaels.

Following his pro wrestling career, Sweetan worked as an air conditioning maintenance supervisor, particularly in large apartment buildings.

1985

Sweetan allegedly deserted his family on October 15, 1985; he had been having an affair with a ring rat who was also a drug dealer.

1986

Rebecca divorced Sweetan in 1986.

1990

In 1990, Sweetan was convicted of the sexual assault of his daughter, Candace.

He also faced a separate charge of non-payment of child support.

2000

Sweetan stopped checking in with police in 2000, after which he was located and deported back to his native Canada.

2009

On WWE's Legends of Wrestling in 2009, longtime industry personality Jim Ross stated that he "didn't like" Sweetan and "didn't want to be around him", describing him as a "miserable human being".

Ross later called him a "bully", and told how Danny Hodge once physically tortured Sweetan as payback for being out of line.

2012

In his 2012 autobiography, Jim Duggan also referred to Sweetan as a "bully", and a "real piece of garbage".

Leo Burke called him "easy to work with" in the ring but "kind of lazy", while Ed "Colonel DeBeers" Wiskoski said of Sweetan: "I wasn't a fan of his... from being a locker-room thief to just among other things, just an asshole."

Sweetan's ex-wife Rebecca commented: "He's a waste of skin as far as I'm concerned... He fried his brain [with drugs], deserted his children, abused them emotionally, physically, sexually, mentally."

2017

Sweetan died at a Nanaimo, British Columbia nursing home on February 10, 2017.

He had been suffering from diabetes, memory problems and mobility issues.