| Personal information | |
|---|---|
| Born | Jason Anderson (1965-12-16)16 December 1965 (age 59) |
| Professional wrestling career | |
| Ring name(s) | Blackheart Destruction Jason Anderson Jason Neidhart Jason the Rebel Jud Jeet Singh Sledge Hammer Super Bat |
| Billed height | 5 ft 10 in (178 cm) |
| Billed weight | 242 ln |
| Trained by | Gama Singh |
| Debut | 1988 |
| Retired | 2016 |
Jason Anderson (born 16 December 1965) is a Canadian professional wrestler. He is best known for his work inStampede Wrestling,[1] where he was known under the ring namesBlackheart Destruction andJason Neidhart, being portrayed as the cousin of wrestlerJim Neidhart.[2][3] He would wrestle internationally.
Neidhart started his pro wrestling career in 1988 in Calgary forStampede Wrestling as Jason Anderson. In 1989, he became Blackheart Destruction teaming with Blackheart Apocalypse (Tom Nash) as the Blackhearts. They feuded withChris Benoit andBiff Wellington in Stampede.
On 8 July 1991 he wrestled for WWF "Wrestling Challenge" losing toTed DiBiase which aired on 4 August.[4]
In 1993, Neidhart was Jud Jeet Singh, billed from India in the independent promotions in Calgary. In 1994, he wrestled in South Africa as Jason the Rebel for Maharaj Promotion. In 1996, he became Jason Neidhart and grew a longgoatee portraying Jim Neidhart. In 1997, he made his debut in Germany forCatch Wrestling Association (CWA) teaming withCannonball Grizzly andRobbie Brookside.
He lost toDuke Droese on 18 January 1998 in Mombasa, Kenya.
Neidhart appeared onWorld Championship Wrestling's WCW Worldwide taping on 30 March 1999 losing toScott Norton in Kitchener, Ontario.[5] That same year he returned to both Germany and Calgary.
In 2001, he worked forNew Japan Pro Wrestling as Sledgehammer.[6][7] During Neidhart's career he travelled to England, Philippines, Hungary, Austria, Lebanon, Abu Dhabi and Saudi Arabia.[1]
In 2009, he worked in Egypt where he lost toAl Snow andGangrel. From 2013 to 2015, Neidhart wrestled in Qatar. In 2016, he wrestled in Sudan. That same year, he returned to Edmonton and retired from wrestling.[8]