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・ Héctor Franco López
・ Héctor Freschi
・ Héctor Fresina
・ Héctor Fáver
・ Héctor Félix Miranda
・ Héctor Gabriel Morales
・ Héctor Gaitán
・ Héctor García
・ Héctor García (diver)
・ Héctor García Cobo
・ Héctor García García
・ Héctor García Otero
・ Héctor García Ribeyro
・ Héctor García-Godoy
・ Héctor García-Molina
Héctor Garza
・ Héctor Germán Oesterheld
・ Héctor Giménez
・ Héctor Giménez (baseball)
・ Héctor Giménez (footballer)
・ Héctor Giorgetti
・ Héctor González
・ Héctor González (Venezuelan footballer)
・ Héctor González Baeza
・ Héctor González Garzón
・ Héctor Gradassi
・ Héctor Gramajo
・ Héctor Granado Gómez
・ Héctor Grauert
・ Héctor Gros Espiell


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Héctor Garza : ウィキペディア英語版
Héctor Garza

Héctor Solano Segura (June 12, 1969 – May 26, 2013) was a Mexican professional wrestler, known by his ring name Héctor Garza, who last worked for Asistencia Asesoría y Administración (AAA). He was in his second reign as Mexican National Heavyweight Champion when he died, having won it in Perros del Mal Producciones. He also worked for Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre (CMLL) in Mexico, and World Championship Wrestling (WCW), the World Wrestling Federation (WWF) and Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA) in the United States.
==Professional wrestling career==
Solano began wrestling as Héctor Garza in 1992 after being trained by his two uncles for the ''Federacion Internacional de Lucha Libre'' (FILL) promotion in Monterrey. In 1995, he brought to Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre (CMLL) on the técnico (face) side as part of CMLL's rebuilding after the split with Asistencia Asesoría y Administración. He was put over veteran rudos (heels) like Bestia Salvaje and Satánico in hair matches and Garza quickly became one of the top técnicos in the company. In the following year, he teamed with Dos Caras and La Fiera to win the CMLL World Tríos Title and lost to Emilio Charles Jr. in the final of the La Copa Junior, a tournament for the sons of wrestlers.〔 However, after being a part of the surprising El Hijo del Santo heel turn, he jumped to rival promotion Asistencia Asesoría y Administración (AAA).
His stay in AAA was short although he did wrestle at least 1 match on WWF Superstars defeating TL Hopper and participated in a match on the 1997 World Wrestling Federation Royal Rumble pay-per-view when the WWF and AAA had a working agreement. He went to World Championship Wrestling (WCW) later in the year as part of the large contingent of ''Luchadors'' that began working for the company. He was best known in WCW for his twirling turnbuckle to floor plancha called the corkscrew plancha. Other than a victory over Scott Hall, he did not receive any push, mostly wrestling on WCW's minor shows, even when he became part of the Latino World Order.〔 Later in 1999, he returned to AAA and became part of a multi-man feud with other younger wrestlers like Heavy Metal, Latin Lover and Perro Aguayo, Jr.. Different combinations of the four battled in various gimmick matches with Garza winning Metal's hair in 2001. In 2002, the focus of the feud became Latin Lover and Héctor Garza. In 2003, the two faced each other in a hair vs. hair match and, for the first time in Garza's career, he lost.
In 2004, he returned to the United States for Total Nonstop Action Wrestling during AAA's working agreement with the company. Along with Abismo Negro, Juventud Guerrera, Mr. Águila and later Heavy Metal, "Team Mexico" was successful in winning the America's X-Cup.〔 After Team Canada was repackaged, Team Mexico became faces, with Garza getting particularly good reactions from the crowd. In June, he jumped back to CMLL, claiming that AAA owner Antonio Peña owed him money for Garza's dates in TNA.
While the AAA-TNA deal was still in effect, Garza wrestled exclusively in Mexico. In CMLL, he helped Perro Aguayo, Jr. turn heel and became involved in Aguayo's feud with El Hijo del Santo. Eventually, he would help found La Furia del Norte with El Terrible and Tarzan Boy. Teaming with Tarzan and Terrible, La Furia chased after and defeated the CMLL Tríos champions Black Warrior, Canek and Rayo de Jalisco, Jr.〔 Meanwhile in the United States, the AAA-TNA deal was dead so TNA decided to bring Garza back. He returned for TNA Victory Road 2004, TNA's first three-hour pay-per-view when he won a Twenty Man X-Division Gauntlet. The push continued with a match against NWA World Heavyweight Champion Jeff Jarrett on TNA's weekly TV show. In 2005, he was set to wrestle Scott Hall at TNA Final Resolution 2005 but was arrested in Houston, Texas with steroids that were legal in Mexico but illegal in the United States; he was replaced by Jeff Hardy in the match. Garza was deported, effectively ending his career in the United States. Garza claimed that he did not know the steroids were illegal in the United States and that he was humiliated by the guards.〔 Garza would later sell T-shirts that read "If Pepe el Toro is innocent, so is Héctor Garza", alluding to the story of an old movie where a carpenter is incriminated on a murder and goes to jail where he finds the true assassins and fights with them and pops out the eye of the mastermind to make him confess "Pepe el Toro es inocente".

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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