McManus was one of the most notorious
heels in British wrestling history. Like
Mark Rocco and
Kendo Nagasaki, he bent the rules as far as they could go without being disqualified, much to the fury of the crowd. He was also well known for using
short range forearm jabs in matches. He became famous for his trademark black trunks and cropped black hair and for his dislike of having his cauliflowered ears attacked by opponents, resulting in the catchphrase "Not the ears, not the ears". McManus made more television appearances than any other wrestler in a career which spanned more than 20 years. Losing to Peter Preston by disqualification during his later years, he lost the European Middleweight title on television to a younger wrestler Mal Sanders. McManus won his first wrestling title, the
British Welterweight Championship, in 1949 by defeating Eddie Capelli for the vacant championship. He
dropped the title to
Jack Dempsey in 1957 but regained it from Dempsey. He dropped the title to him the following year, however. His 1963 bout against
Jackie Pallo was watched by over 20 million people on British television. On 13 November 1967, McManus won the
British Middleweight Championship with a victory over Clayton Thomson. Thomson regained the title in a rematch two months later. McManus also won the European Middleweight Championship in June 1968 by defeating Vic Faulkner. Faulkner regained the title belt in September, but McManus won it back in April 1971. He held the championship for almost seven years before losing it to Mal Sanders. McManus and Sanders traded the belt back and forth in matches that year and into the following year, with McManus holding the title a total of four times. Concurrently with his career in the wrestling ring, McManus ran the London office of professional wrestling promotion firm
Dale Martin as a booker, determining the matches and their results. ==Later life==