After his football career ended, Bruggers was introduced to professional wrestling by
Wahoo McDaniel, a fellow former Miami Dolphin. Bruggers became a professional wrestler and competed under his normal name Bob Bruggers. Bruggers was trained as a professional wrestler by
Verne Gagne and
Billy Robinson, making his debut in 1972 for Gagne's
Minneapolis,
Minnesota-based
American Wrestling Association. In 1973, he began wrestling for
Championship Wrestling from Florida. Reflecting his football past, he used a
football tackle as his finishing move. In September 1973, he made a brief tour of Japan with
International Wrestling Enterprise. Bruggers' career came to abrupt end on October 4, 1975. With Bruggers needing to drive from his home in
Kingstree, South Carolina, to
Wilmington, North Carolina, for an event,
promoter Jim Crockett Jr., who was ill with
influenza, invited him to instead take his place on a
Cessna 310 that he had chartered. Bruggers took a seat on the plane along with Crockett's brother
David and fellow wrestlers
Ric Flair,
Johnny Valentine, and
Tim Woods. Shortly before reaching its destination, the plane ran out of fuel and
crashed. The pilot, Mike Farkas, sustained ultimately fatal injuries and all five passengers were injured, with Bruggers suffering
spinal fractures and a broken ankle. After having steel rods inserted into his spinal column, Bruggers was able to walk out of hospital three weeks after the crash, but decided not to return to wrestling. == Retirement ==