| KroniK | |
|---|---|
| Tag team | |
| Members | Brian Adams Bryan Clark |
| Name(s) | Kronic KroniK |
| Billed heights | 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) - Adams 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) - Clark |
| Combined billed weight | 573 lb (260 kg)[1] |
| Debut | April 16, 2000 |
| Disbanded | January 19, 2003 |
| Years active | 2000–2003 |
KroniK was an Americanprofessional wrestlingtag team inWorld Championship Wrestling (WCW), theWorld Wrestling Federation (WWF) andAll Japan Pro Wrestling (AJPW), composed ofBrian Adams andBryan Clark in the early 2000s.
Adams and Clark first joined together as a duo in April 2000 inWorld Championship Wrestling (WCW). Upon joining together as a tag team, KroniK (originally spelled Kronic) assistedVince Russo in his vision of a clean sweep for hisNew Blood alliance at the2000 Spring Stampedepay-per-view. Adams and Clark interfered in theWCW World Tag Team Championship match, allowing the team ofBuff Bagwell andShane Douglas to win the title.
While in WCW, KroniK moved betweenbabyface andheel roles several times - holding the WCW World Tag Team Championship twice. In the final months of WCW, KroniK became hired muscle, adopting the catchphrase "breakin' necks and cashin' checks", similar to the WWF's popularAPA tag team. Their contracts were not picked up by the WWF when WCW was sold byAOL Time Warner.
In September 2001, Brian Adams and Bryan Clark each made their re-debut as aWorld Wrestling Federation (WWF) tag team. Recruited byStevie Richards, KroniK was called in to settle past differences Richards had withThe Undertaker,[1] stemming from the disbanding of Richards' stable, "Right to Censor" earlier that year. KroniK wrestled their first tag team match defeatingKaientai on the September 20, 2001 episode ofSmackDown! and their last tag team match for the WWF a few days later atUnforgiven, losing to then WCW Tag Team ChampionsThe Brothers of Destruction (Kane and The Undertaker).
After two dark matches, four appearances onRaw andSmackDown! and a pay-per-view appearance, Clark was released from his contract for being unconditioned and unsafe during their PPV match, while Adams began working for theHeartland Wrestling Association, which served as WWF's developmental territory, for conditioning. Adams requested his release from the WWF in November 2001.
Following their WWF departure, KroniK made appearances forWorld Wrestling All-Stars, their debut match with promotion taking place atRevolution, defeating the Navajo Warrior and Ghost Walker in less than five minutes.
KroniK then joinedAll Japan Pro Wrestling in the summer of 2002 during thePro Wrestling Love era, making an immediate impact by defeatingKeiji Mutoh and Taiyo Kea for theAJPW World Tag Team Championship on July 17, 2002.[2]
On the July 20, 2002 edition of AJPW TV, KroniK participated in the Stan Hansen Cup Four Way initiative. KroniK would eliminate the team ofGeorge Hines andJohnny Smith, before being eliminated by"Dr. Death" Steve Williams andMike Rotunda after Williams pinned Adams after delivering the Doctor Bomb.Mike Barton and Jim Steele would go onto win the tournament. Despite KroniK's failure in winning the Stan Hansen Cup, after the match they would cut a confident and rather cocky promo talking about how they were still the AJPW World Tag Team Champions, calling everyone in the initiative "losers", "stupid" and "not smart enough" to be the champions.[3]
KroniK would only make one successful title defense against Barton and Steele on August 30, 2002[2][4] as part of a two day pay-per-view. On the second day of the pay-per-view on August 31, KroniK defeatedTomoaki Honma and Yuto Aijima in a non-title match.[5] KroniK was later stripped of the titles in October as they canceled the rest of their appearances in 2002, as Adams suffered a shoulder injury while training for a boxing career.
They returned for the WRESTLE-1 show on January 19, 2003 in what would be KroniK's last match, losing toKeiji Muto andGoldberg.[6] Along with Goldberg, Steve Williams and Mike Rotunda, KroniK left AJPW during a gaijin exodus, which occurred after Mrs. Baba's last appearance behind the scenes in AJPW. In that match, Adams suffered a spinal injury that forced him into retirement, and Clark decided to leave during the exodus. This was also when AJPW's sale finalized, the company having been in the process of being sold in late 2002.
Adams died on August 13, 2007, after mixing the painkillerbuprenorphine with the muscle relaxantcarisoprodol, as well as the sedativeschlordiazepoxide andalprazolam. Though theHillsborough County medical examiners determined that each drug was found to be at therapeutic levels, the combination of the drugs together were enough to impede Adams' respiratory system and cause his death.