Shannon Hall

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Shannon Hall
Born (1970-04-18) April 18, 1970 (age 51)
Jonesboro, Arkansas[1]
ResidenceNew Smyrna Beach, Florida
Professional wrestling career
Ring name(s)Shannon Hall
Billed height5 ft 9 in (1.75 m)[2]
Billed weight165 lb (75 kg)[2]
Trained byWWE
Debut1998

Shannon Rachelle Hall (born April 18, 1970) is an American professional boxer, wrestler, bodybuilder, martial artist, and actress. She was the first ever Toughwoman Champion and competed on American Gladiators as Dallas. She has also worked as a professional boxer in the IFBA Boxing League. She has competed on ESPN, starred in two pay-per-views, and featured in Sports Illustrated, Muscle & Fitness and USA Today.

Career[]

In 1993, Hall was selected out of thousands of contestants across the United States to star as "Dallas" on the syndicated television show, The American Gladiators (1993–1994), in Los Angeles. She went on to win the "Alumni Special" on the series, defeating fellow gladiator ZAP for the Alumni title. Hall continued playing "Dallas" in the American Gladiators's Orlando Live Dinner Show from 1995–1998 in Kissimmee, Florida.

Hall was also a fitness competitor, winning the Fitness America California Pageant in 1993, then placing fourth in the Nationals on ESPN.

In 1996, in Detroit, Michigan, a "Toughwoman" contest was added to the Toughman Contest circuit. Hall entered upon invitation and won the $10,000 Boxing Grand Prize, a professional boxing contract and the Toughwoman World Championship title.

In 1998, Hall successfully defended her Toughwoman title on pay-per-view, winning the IFBA Pro. Platinum Division belt against three other professional women boxers. Hall went undefeated in ten fights in Toughwoman contests.

In February 1998, Hall and Fernandez became the first women to box professionally in Madison Square Garden. (Hall) Under Dore Management, (Fernandez) Top Rank Boxing, they was in a match on a Buster Douglas undercard, by technical knock out, Tera "The Hot Tamale" Fernandez in the first round.

In addition, as a Martial Artist, Hall entered the Wushu Unlimited Martial Arts Tournament in Orlando, Florida, winning Women's San Shou Competition. Men's San Shou Champion, Kung Lee, taught Shannon briefly before the competition, the rules of San Shou, including punching, kicking and taking down your opponent. Hall learned quickly and dominated her opponent to win the tournament.

Hall trained with professional boxing trainers Murray Sutherland, Jeff Gibson, and Frank Pezzulo, and studied kickboxing with Mosama Ruben Morales and Muy Thai under Sifu David Krapes. She was a stable-mate and training partners with Former Boxing World Champion Hector "Macho" Camacho and Pro. Lightweight Boxer Earnest "M16" Mateen.

In her third boxing title attempt in 1999 for the IBA Super-Middleweight Belt, Hall faced off against Suzy Taylor. Hall lost to Taylor in the 9th round via referee stoppage, and soon after retired from Boxing. Shortly thereafter, she signed with the World Wrestling Federation and toured with them for one year.

She then retired from Pro. Wrestling after one year with the show when she became pregnant with her son in 2000.

Personal life[]

Shannon attended Arkansas State University where she joined Delta Zeta (Omicron Epsilon chapter).

In 2001, Shannon gave birth to her son. In 2005, she had a daughter.

Accomplishments[]

  • Miss Fitness America finalist (California Winner)
  • Toughwoman World Champion
  • IFBA Platinum Boxing Champion
  • Wushu San Shou Women's Champion
  • American Gladiator Television Alumni Champion

References[]

  1. ^ "Shannon Dallas TV". tv.com. Retrieved 2007-10-29.
  2. ^ a b "Shannon Dallas Stats". Leanladies.com. Retrieved 2007-10-29.
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