Pro wrestling is full of strange gimmicks, but few enter the ring blowing “Taps” on a trumpet like David Sheldon. He was billed as The Angel of Death, and for a few wild years in the 1980s, he looked the part: 6’5”, terrifying, a bodyguard for the Freebirds, one-half of The Russian Assassins, the first man to don the mask of WCW’s notorious “Black Scorpion.”
And yet, like most journeymen of his era, Sheldon’s career was a mix of near-misses, cruel timing, and backstage whispers that never led to the big time. He was wrestling’s grim reaper in name only—a man who haunted the fringes of fame, showing up in big angles only to vanish back into the shadows.
Calgary and the Trumpet of Doom
Sheldon broke in late—he debuted in 1985, already in his 30s, and dove headfirst into Stu Hart’s Stampede Wrestling in Calgary. There he faced Owen Hart, Bruce Hart, Johnny Smith, and the other Calgary stalwarts. His gimmick? He was “The Angel of Death,” complete with a trumpet. Before matches, he’d play Taps, that somber military dirge reserved for funerals.
It was bizarre, chilling, and a little funny—like a funeral home marching band had wandered into the ring. Crowds didn’t know whether to boo him or call the cops. But in the era of cocaine, mullets, and face paint, blowing a trumpet before beating someone’s ass wasn’t even the weirdest thing happening.
UWF and The Freebirds’ Heavy
By 1986, Sheldon was working for Bill Watts in the Universal Wrestling Federation. Watts had a gift for finding bruisers, and The Angel of Death fit the mold. He stood beside The Fabulous Freebirds as their bodyguard, which meant he got the occasional spotlight but mostly soaked up beatings intended for Michael Hayes.
He appeared on Superdome supercards, fought Ken Massey, teamed in six-mans, and lost to The Freebirds themselves when Watts booked him as cannon fodder. Such was the life of a journeyman: one night you’re the muscle, the next night you’re the victim.
Jim Crockett Promotions and the Russian Mask
By 1987, Sheldon slid into Jim Crockett Promotions, teaming with Big Bubba Rogers and hanging around Skandor Akbar’s orbit. Then came his first brush with infamy: The Russian Assassins.
Paired with Jack Victory under hoods, Sheldon became Russian Assassin #1. The pair feuded with Ivan Koloff, who had broken from Paul Jones’ Army. They even scored a big Starrcade ’88 win over Koloff and Junkyard Dog. But nobody really cared who was under the masks. The Russians were a midcard distraction, placeholders while the Horsemen drew money.
Sheldon was big, scary, and serviceable. But he was never the guy the company strapped a rocket to. He was the guy you sent out there to fill time, eat a pin, or wear a mask when you needed to confuse the crowd.
The Black Scorpion
Case in point: The Black Scorpion.
In 1990, WCW booked one of the most infamously botched storylines in wrestling history. Sting, the blond, neon hero, was stalked by a mysterious masked figure from his past—the Black Scorpion. The announcers hyped him up as a childhood friend or old training partner. Fans speculated endlessly.
Who was behind the mask? At one point, it was David Sheldon. He wrestled house shows as the Scorpion, playing the role of Sting’s ghostly nemesis. But the gimmick was passed around like a Halloween costume—Al Perez wore it, too, and at Starrcade ’90 the hood came off to reveal Ric Flair.
Sheldon was erased from the history books, but for a moment, he was the guy haunting Sting’s nightmares. He was the Black Scorpion before anyone knew—or cared—that the storyline had no actual ending.
Titles, Tag Partners, and Bruises
Sheldon’s career after 1990 reads like a catalog of “almost.” He was awarded the WCCW Texas Heavyweight Title by forfeit when Kerry Von Erich couldn’t defend. He lost it to Kevin Von Erich months later. He won the TWF Tag Titles with Abdullah the Butcher, then dropped them to a young Steve Austin and Rod Price. He teamed with Eddie Gilbert in the Global Wrestling Federation, then turned on him and lost the feud.
He was everywhere and nowhere—Texas indies, WCW undercards, Stampede returns, Global TV tapings. He teamed with giants like One Man Gang, fought stars like Ron Simmons, and was rumored to wrestle Bruiser Brody and Kerry Von Erich before their untimely deaths.
Then fate caught up with him. In the early ’90s, he suffered a devastating leg injury in a match with P.N. News. The injury was so severe that WCW quietly benched News, effectively ending Sheldon’s chances of a real push. He wrestled sporadically until retiring in 1995.
The Couch, the Remote, the End
David Sheldon died the way most wrestlers don’t—quietly, at home. On November 25, 2007, he was found dead on his couch in Bedford, Texas, TV remote still in hand. He was 54.
There was no scandal, no overdose, no fiery car crash. Just a man whose heart finally gave out. He had no close family nearby. A longtime friend, Missy Evans, claimed his body. His ashes were buried in Bear Creek Cemetery. Wrestlers like Terry Taylor and Cowboy Johnny Mantell attended his memorial.
It wasn’t a headline-grabbing death, but it was fitting. The Angel of Death wasn’t a superstar. He was a shadow, a journeyman who lived on the margins of fame.
Legacy of a Trumpet
So what do we make of The Angel of Death? He wasn’t a Hall of Famer, wasn’t a household name. His legacy is scattered:
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The trumpet gimmick in Calgary, equal parts eerie and ridiculous.
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The Freebirds’ hired muscle.
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One half of The Russian Assassins.
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The “original” Black Scorpion, though few remember.
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A brief Texas Heavyweight reign by forfeit.
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A tag run with Abdullah the Butcher.
He was the guy you call when you need size, menace, and someone to put on a mask. He was a wrestling ghost—appearing, vanishing, always there in the background, rarely in the spotlight.
The Angel of Death never main-evented WrestleMania, never held a world title, never got the pyro or confetti. But he gave wrestling what it needs as much as stars: atmosphere. A man with a trumpet, blowing Taps for his opponents, even if the funeral was really his own career.
Final Word
David Sheldon’s career is a reminder that wrestling isn’t built just on champions—it’s built on the shadows around them. For every Ric Flair, there’s an Ole Anderson. For every Sting, there’s a Black Scorpion. And sometimes, that Scorpion is a man named David Sheldon, blowing a horn and playing Angel of Death until the music stops.
He was never a legend. But he was unforgettable, if only because he carried his own funeral march into the ring.
And in wrestling, that counts.
