Early WWF Years – The Undercard Workhorse (1982–1985)
Trained by “Superfly” Jimmy Snuka, Robert Markovich broke into the business in 1982 as Bob Bradley, working for the World Wrestling Federation at a time when the company was exploding into the national spotlight.
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His debut match came on June 1, 1982, in Allentown, PA, where he lost to Larry Sharpe.
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Just weeks later, he picked up his first win against Laurent Soucie in Salisbury, MD.
For the next several years, Bradley was a fixture of WWF television tapings, mostly as an enhancement talent. He wrestled big names like Snuka, Blackjack Mulligan, and Buddy Rose, often making them look good in short matches. Though booked to lose more often than win, he carved out a role as a dependable hand.
In 1986, Bradley experimented with masked gimmicks. On an Australian tour, he performed as The Tiger, and later as The Red Demon, an ominous-looking masked heel. His last match of that initial WWF stint came in early 1988, when he teamed with Van Van Horne against the British Bulldogs.
World Class Championship Wrestling – A Brief Spotlight (1986–1987)
While still dabbling in masked roles in WWF, Bradley made a bigger mark in Texas with World Class Championship Wrestling (WCCW). On Christmas Day 1986, he wrestled The Dingo Warrior (the future Ultimate Warrior) to a double disqualification.
The following month, Bradley enjoyed the biggest win of his career:
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He entered a tournament for the vacant Texas Heavyweight Championship and defeated Roberto Soto, Steve Simpson, Matt Borne, and ultimately The Dingo Warrior to win the belt.
It was a short-lived reign—he dropped the title back to Dingo Warrior three weeks later—but it was the rare moment when Bradley was positioned as a legitimate singles star. By March 1987, he was gone from the territory, finishing his run on a losing streak.
Universal Wrestling Federation (1987)
In spring 1987, Bradley shifted to Bill Watts’ Universal Wrestling Federation. He faced names like Steve Williams, The Super Ninja, and Dick Murdoch, notching a handful of wins but largely staying in the middle of the card. His most notable appearance was a TV match against Sting in August 1987, after which he departed.
WCW – Short Stint (1989)
Bradley resurfaced in World Championship Wrestling in early 1989.
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He debuted at a house show in Philadelphia, losing to Abdullah the Butcher.
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On TV, he fell to Ricky Steamboat at Clash of the Champions V and later to Rick Steiner and Michael Hayes.
His WCW run lasted only a few months, but it marked yet another stop in his journeyman journey.
Return to WWF – From Jobber to Battle Kat (1989–1992)
Markovich returned to the WWF in late 1989, resuming his enhancement talent role. He even lost to his former WCCW rival, now the Intercontinental Champion, The Ultimate Warrior, in January 1990.
But in late 1990, fate handed him an odd twist. Fellow enhancement talent Brady Boone had been given the superhero-style masked gimmick of Battle Kat, designed to highlight his gymnastic agility. Boone soon left the company, and WWF put the gimmick on Bradley instead.
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As Battle Kat, Bradley got his biggest push in WWF, defeating the likes of Buddy Rose, Pez Whatley, and Boris Zhukov.
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His run ended quickly, capped with a loss to The Barbarian on Prime Time Wrestling in December 1990. The gimmick was quietly dropped.
Bradley returned to his old role, working TV matches against stars like Kerry Von Erich, Jim Duggan, and Koko B. Ware. By late 1992, his WWF tenure wound down.
He made a brief one-night return in 1998, losing to Steve Blackman on Shotgun Saturday Night.
Independent Circuit & Later Years (1992–2002)
After leaving WWF, Bradley stayed active across the independents:
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1994: Wrestled on the debut show for the National Wrestling Conference, losing to Sabu.
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1995: Briefly appeared for Smoky Mountain Wrestling.
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1996: Toured Japan with All Japan Pro Wrestling.
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2000–2002: Closed out his career in Empire Wrestling Federation in California before retiring.
Legacy
Robert Markovich’s career is a study in the unsung labor of professional wrestling. He:
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Wrestled in nearly every major U.S. promotion of the 1980s and 1990s.
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Had a brief championship reign in WCCW.
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Carried the quirky Battle Kat gimmick during WWF’s cartoony early ’90s era.
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Worked as a reliable enhancement hand for two decades.
Though never a headline star, Bob Bradley embodied the journeyman ethos: versatile, durable, and always ready to make others shine. His name lives on among fans who remember the undercard heroes that kept wrestling cards moving in the boom years.