YBefore he became Stone Cold, Steve Austin was “Stunning” Steve — a talented but underused WCW mid-card heel, often paired with managers like Paul Heyman or Col. Rob Parker to do most of the talking. In 1995, while sidelined with injury, Eric Bischoff fired him.
A short, three-month stop in ECW followed — but it wasn’t just a layover. In those few weeks, Austin found his voice, reshaped his persona, and planted the seeds for everything that would make him a WWF megastar.
Fired, Injured, and Reborn in ECW
After his WCW firing, Austin’s former Dangerous Alliance manager Paul Heyman brought him into ECW in September 1995. Austin was injured and couldn’t wrestle right away, but Heyman was convinced he could be a star.
Heyman gave him one simple instruction:
Total creative freedom on the microphone. Target whoever you want. No scripts.
What followed were some of the most entertaining promos of Austin’s career — and a glimpse of what was to come in the WWF.
Lampooning Hogan, Bischoff… and Everyone Else
In ECW, Austin cut loose. He appeared in a ripped yellow tee and bandana, mocking Hulk Hogan. He donned a fluffy black wig to impersonate Bischoff, hosting “Monday NyQuil” where “the big boys play with themselves” and advertising a “bottle of Geritol on a pole match.”
Heyman later said this was the first time Austin had the freedom to cut unscripted promos, something WCW rarely allowed unless you were already a top star. Austin demanded to go last during promo tapings, determined to top everyone else — a mindset that would carry him into superstardom.
Two Matches, Two Lessons
Austin wrestled only twice in ECW, both for the world title, both involving Mikey Whipwreck.
- The Whipper Snapper – Whipwreck’s finisher would later become the Stone Cold Stunner.
- Beer Swilling Inspiration – In a three-way match with The Sandman, Austin saw the massive crowd reaction when Sandman drank beer during his entrance. Austin filed that away for later use.
Heyman wanted to put the ECW title on him, but Austin insisted he’d be more over chasing the belt — and likely had one eye on a WWF move.
From The Ringmaster to Stone Cold
When Austin joined the WWF as “The Ringmaster” under Ted DiBiase’s management, commentators still called him “Steve Austin” on-air. It didn’t take long for the company to see he didn’t need a mouthpiece.
With DiBiase leaving for WCW’s nWo angle, Austin gained creative control over his gimmick. He asked to drop “The Ringmaster” name — and WWF agreed.
They gave him a list of suggested names (Iceman, Otto von Ruthless, Fang McFrost), all of which he rejected. Inspired by his wife’s comment about a cup of tea going cold, Austin pitched “Stone Cold” — and WWF approved it.
The ECW DNA in the WWF’s Biggest Star
Austin’s most famous WWF storyline — Austin vs. McMahon — was built on the same foundation as his ECW promos: a rebellious anti-hero taking shots at corporate authority. In ECW, he channelled his real-life anger towards Bischoff. In WWF, he simply swapped the name for Vince McMahon.
The Stunner, the beer swilling, the confident swagger, and the ability to own the mic without a script — all of it was honed in that three-month ECW run.
Why It Worked Then… and Why It Wouldn’t Now
In today’s WWE, detailed scripts leave little room for the kind of raw, unscripted personality Austin displayed in ECW. Back in 1995, that authenticity was exactly what got him over — because it wasn’t just a promo, it was a man genuinely venting his frustrations at the industry.
Thank goodness Paul Heyman saw the potential. Thank goodness WWF didn’t smother it. Because that “brief” ECW stint in 1995 gave us Stone Cold — and changed wrestling forever.