Early career (1984) Zenk was introduced to professional wrestling by
Road Warrior Animal, who he met at a bodybuilding contest. The rookie then traveled to
Houston Wrestling, where he pinned
John King in his debut. On April 7th, he defeated Grey once more at the
MSW Superdome Extravaganza - The Last Stampede event.
American Wrestling Association (1984 - 1985) In July 1984, Zenk joined the
Minneapolis, Minnesota-based
American Wrestling Association, making his debut on July 22, 1984. In a televised match, he teamed with
Rick Gantner in a loss to
Bobby Heenan &
Mr. Saito. Zenk absorbed losses to "Mr. Electricity"
Steve Regal and the
Road Warriors before defeating Bruce Dean on August 18, 1984 at a house show. On September 22, 1984 he teamed with
Curt Hennig to challenge
AWA World Tag-Team Champions the Road Warriors, but were unsuccessful. As the fall began, the young Zenk continued to perform as an undercard talent and faced
Jimmy Garvin in a series of house show encounters. Zenk was winless against the veteran, but did pick up wins over
Rick Renslow. Zenk was named
Rookie of the Year for 1984 by the
Wrestling Observer Newsletter, tying with
Jushin Liger. The new year brought little change for Zenk's AWA's, as he absorbed losses to Regal, the
Masked Superstar,
Butch Reed,
Billy Robinson, and
King Tonga (Haku). Winless on television, Zenk competed at the
AWA StarCage 1985 event on April 21, 1985 in Minneapolis. Teaming with
Steve Olsonoski, the duo defeated The Alaskans (
Dave Wagner & Rick Renslow). Zenk scored an unexpected draw against
Nick Bockwinkle on a televised AWA show on August 21, 1985. The same night, he secured his first televised victory when he pinned the newly arrived Rob Rechsteiner (
Rick Steiner), then defeated
Brian Jewel and Steve Regal. His final match with the AWA came on September 22, 1985 when he teamed with Curt Hennig to defeat Drew Tossel & Jim Starr.
Pacific Northwest Wrestling, Lutte Internationale (1985 - 1986) In October 1985, Zenk joined the
Portland, Oregon-based
Pacific Northwest Wrestling promotion, where he received a
push.
World Wrestling Federation (1986–1987) In October 1986, Zenk was signed by the
World Wrestling Federation. He
teamed with Rick Martel as The
Can-Am Connection. The duo made their debut on the November 15, 1986 edition of
WWF Superstars of Wrestling, where they defeated
Steve Lombardi &
Moondog Spot in a match pretaped on October 28th. On November 14th, the new team received their first tag-team title opportunity when they faced
The British Bulldogs in Montreal, Quebec. The WWF Tag-Team Champions lost via disqualification, working as heels for this one night. The team then travelled to All Japan Pro Wrestling for the
AJPW Real World Tag League 1986 event, losing their opening match to The Funks (
Dory Funk Jr. &
Terry Funk on November 19, 1986 at Korakuen Hall. Following the loss the Can-Am Connection was dominant, defeating Kokusai Ketsumeigun (
Goro Tsurumi &
Rusher Kimura),
Mighty Inoue &
Tiger Mask,
Haru Sonoda &
Toshiaki Kawada, and others. Their final match of the tour came on December 12, 1986, where they were defeated by
Giant Baba &
Hiroshi Wajima in Mito, Ibaraki. The Can-Am Connection opened 1987 with their first significant televised match, facing
Don Muraco &
Bob Orton on the January 24th episode of
WWF Superstars of Wrestling. The match went to a double disqualification when all four wrestlers began fighting in the ring. They began a house show series with former
WWF Tag-Team Champions the
Dream team (
Greg Valentine &
Brutus Beefcake), dominating them in numerous matches. On February 8, 1987 on
All American Wrestling, the Can-Ams defeated the Dream Team. On February 10th they faced another newly arrived tag-team in
Demolition, battling the future Hall of Fame team to a draw. On February 28th on
WWF Superstars, Zenk & Martell teamed with
Lanny Poffo to upset the Dream Team &
Adrian Adonis, with the climax of the match seeing Adonis accidentally cutting the hair of Brutus Beefcake in an angle that would lead to his eventual face turn and "Barber" gimmick. On February 27, 1987, Tom Zenk entered singles competition for the first time in his WWF career, battling Canadian superstar
Dino Bravo at a house show in Montreal, a match Bravo won. On March 8th in East Rutherford, NJ, the Can-Am Connection entered a tournament to earn a shot at the WWF Tag-Team Champions the
Hart Foundation. Zenk & Martell advanced past the quarterfinals after defeating
King Kong Bundy &
Paul Orndorff via countout, then passed the semifinals after defeating the
Killer Bees. The Hart Foundation then handed the Can-Ams their first WWF loss after former referee
Danny Davis interfered. On March 15th they entered the
Frank Tunney Sr. Memorial Tag-Team Tournament, defeating
Jerry Allen &
Dan Spivey in the quarterfinals before losing to Demolition in the semifinals by countout. In the opening bout of
WrestleMania III on March 29, 1987, The Can-Am Connection defeated
Don Muraco and
Bob Orton, Jr. Martell & Zenk continued their feud with Orton & Muraco on the house show circuit, dominating their opponents around the country. On May 3rd, on
Wrestling Challenge, the Can-Ams defeated
Kamala &
Sika. Four days later on
Prime Time Wrestling, Zenk entered singles competition defeated former
Intercontinental Champion Greg Valentine after he was dropped crotch first onto the ring ropes. Two weeks later on Prime Time Wrestling, the Can-Ams defeated the Iron Shiek & Nikolai Volkoff. On May 30, 1987 on
WWF Superstars, the Can-Ams were sloted to face the
Islanders in a rare face vs face match. However, during the match
Bobby Heenan arrived to stand in the corner of
Haku &
Tama. The Islanders turned heel and defeated the Can-Am Connection via countout, igniting a feud between the two teams. The loss was a mere speedbump for the ascending Connection, who swept Kamala & Sika on the house show circuit. On June 29th on
Prime Time, Zenk & Martell pinned Demolition. They then moved on to their house show feud with the Islanders, dominating Bobby Heenan's new charges. On July 9, 1987 in Hartford, CT, the Can-Am Connection defeated the Islanders once more; the team was planned to become the WWF's top
face tag team and to win the
WWF World Tag Team Championship, but Tom Zenk resigned from the WWF due to a pay dispute.
All Japan Pro Wrestling (1986–1989) In November and December 1986, Zenk and
Rick Martel toured Japan with
All Japan Pro Wrestling, competing in the annual
Real World Tag League. Zenk left the AWA once more later that month. He challenged Zbyszko in several return matches before moving to WCW.
World Championship Wrestling (1989–1994) While touring with All Japan Pro Wrestling in 1989, Zenk was signed to a two-year contract with
World Championship Wrestling by president
Jim Herd. Zenk and Pillman opened 1990 with a win over
The State Patrol, defeating the tandem on the January 6th episode of
World Championship Wrestling, then followed it up with a victory over
The Galaxians. While teaming full-time, Zenk was awarded a match against
NWA World Heavyweight Champion Ric Flair on
The Power Hour on February 2nd, where he was defeated. The following day Zenk & Pillman entered a tournament to crown the vacant
NWA United States Tag Team Championship, defeating
The New Zealand Militia in the quarterfinals on
NWA Worldwide. On February 6 in Corpus Christi, they defeated
The MOD Squad on
Clash of the Champions X “Texas Shootout”. On the February 17th episode of NWA Worldwide, Pillman & Zenk defeated
The Midnight Express in the semifinals of the tournament, and a week later on the program they beat The Freebirds to win the United States tag-team championship. The team had their first PPV match as a duo at
Wrestle War 90: Wild Thing on February 25, 1990 in Greensboro, SC, where they defeated The Freebirds in a rematch. On March 10th on WCW Pro they defeated The Royal Family, and on the same day on
World Championship Wrestling they beat The Midnight Express in a rematch. On March 31st on
Worldwide, Pillman & Zenk defeated
The New Samoans, and then successfully defended their championship in multiple house show rematches against the Midnight Express during April 1990. On the April 15th episode of
The Main Event, the champions defeated The Minnesota Wrecking Crew II (the masked
Destruction Crew). Five days later on the April 20th episode of
The Power Hour, Zenk & Pillman sustained their first loss when they were defeated by The Midnight Express in a non-title match. On May 12th, the champions successfully defended their titles against
The Samoan Swat Team in Detroit, MI; however, during the match Zenk sustained an injury. A week later at the
Capital Combat PPV, they were defeated by
The Midnight Express, for the championship. New WCW booker
Ole Anderson decided to de-emphasize the team immediately afterwards, and Zenk was programmed into a house show series with Mean Mark Callous (the future
Undertaker) where he was winless. When teaming with Pillman, the former champions were unsuccessful in their continued feud with the Midnight Express in numerous rematches. On June 13th, he teamed with former opponent Mike Rotundo to face The New Samoans at
Clash of the Champions XI “Coastal Crush”, where they were defeated. His losing streak continued on June 23rd on
Worldwide, Zenk faced
NWA World Television Champion Arn Anderson and was defeated. He then faced the returning
Buddy Landell in numerous house show matches, and was winless. He was also beaten by
Sid Vicious in several house show matches. His descent reached its nadir on July 28, 1990 at the
Great American Bash 90 PPV, where he was squashed by
Big Van Vader in the latter's debut. Zenk was finally able to halt the downward slide on the July 15th edition of
The Main Event, defeating TV champion Arn Anderson via disqualification. Meanwhile, he kept his tandem with Pillman going, defeating preliminary opposition on WCW television as the summer progressed. On the August 18th episode of
World Championship Wrestling, Zenk & Pillman earned another shot at the United States Tag-Team Championship and defeated The Midnight Express, albeit by disqualification when Sid Vicious interfered on behalf of Eaton & Lane. The two teams would continue to face each other on the house show circuit as the summer concluded and the fall began. On September 5, 1990, Zenk was inserted in place of a departing
Paul Orndorff to face the newly arrived
Stan Hansen at the
Clash of the Champions XII “Fall Brawl: Mountain Madness”, and was defeated. However, on September 22 on
WCW Pro he and Pillman defeated Ric Flair & Arn Anderson via disqualification. On September 29th in Nassau, Bahamas, Zenk defeated Bobby Eaton in a stadium show. On October 13th on
WCW Pro, he defeated the newly arrived
JW Storm via disqualification. Zenk began to also team with
Tim Horner, participating in a series of unsuccessful encounters with
The Master Blasters. However, Zenk's downward trajectory came to an abrupt halt at the end of October; he defeated JW Storm in multiple encounters and began to wrestle predominantly in singles competition for the first time in almost a year. On the November 17th episode of
The Main Event he defeated
Barry Horowitz, and then defeated
Brian Lee on November 20th at
Clash of the Champions XIII “Thanksgiving Thunder”. Four days later, Zenk pinned
Rip Rogers a week later on
Worldwide. The same day he pinned
Bill Irwin on
World Championship Wrestling. On December 2nd, he pinned
The Motor City Madman on
The Main Event, and a week later defeated him again in a rematch. By this point WCW announcers were making note of Zenk's burgeoning win streak, and on December 4th, Zenk won his first singles titles when he defeated Arn Anderson to win the WCW Television title. He faced Bobby Eaton on December 16th at the
Starrcade 90 PPV. When the promotion changed its name to World Championship Wrestling in 1991, Z-Man officially became the final NWA World Television Champion and the first WCW World Television Champion. After defeating Bobby Eaton in several house show encounters, Zenk pinned Master Blaster Blade (
Al Greene) on the January 20, 1991 edition of
World Championship Wrestling but was then attacked by Eaton. The two faced off on the January 26th edition of
WCW Pro, with Zenk successfully retaining his title. They would face off again at
Clash of the Champions XIV “Dixie Dynamite” on January 30th in Gainesville, GA, with Zenk again pinning Eaton. During the event
Missy Hyatt also announced that he had been awarded the title "WCW's Sexiest Wrestler" contest. Tom Zenk would then face Arn Anderson in a rematch on the February 2, 1991 edition of
WCW Worldwide. Anderson pinned Zenk with his feet on the ropes, regaining the Television championship. A day later, Zenk had the first match in what would turn into a lengthy feud with
Terry Taylor. Facing off on
WCW Main Event, the two went to a time limit draw. The stipulation was that the winner would get a shot at the WCW Television title; Zenk immediately asked for a rematch, and a week later defeated Taylor via disqualification after being thrown over the top rope. They faced off again, this time on the February 17th edition of
Main Event, with Taylor winning via disqualification after Zenk pushed the referee out of the way. Six days later on
WCW Worldwide, they faced off once more with Taylor - now a heel aligned with the
York Foundation again winning via disqualification. Their feud carried over to the
WrestleWar 91 PPV, where Taylor pinned Zenk in a no disqualification encounter. On March 3, 1991 on
WCW Pro, Zenk gained a measure of revenge by pinning Terrance Taylor in a rematch. On March 9th on Pro, former foe Bobby Eaton was in the midst of a face turn and faced York Foundation candidate
Buddy Landell; after Taylor came out to attack Eaton, Zenk emerged to make the save. The same day on
World Championship Wrestling it would be Zenk facing Landell with Taylor again attacking. This time, Eaton came out to make the save. On March 24th, he teamed with Bobby Eaton to defeat Taylor and Landell on
WCW Main Event. On March 30th on
WCW Pro, Zenk again faced Taylor and was pinned after York Foundation bodyguard
Mr. Hughes interfered. Zenk then interfered himself, during an April 13 match between Eaton and Taylor on
Pro; during the match he temporarily stole the match-determining computer of
Alexandra York. Terrance Taylor and Tom Zenk continued their feud on the WCW house show circuit that spring, with many of their matches ending in draws. On March 21, 1991 he took a temporary break from his war with the York Foundation to compete at
WCW / New Japan Starrcade 91, a supershow that featured the combined talents of WCW and
New Japan Pro Wrestling. There he teamed with old partner Brian Pillman as well as Tim Horner in a losing effort against
Shiro Koshinaka,
Kuniaki Kobayashi, &
Takayuki Iizuka. The feud continued on April 6th on
World Championship Wrestling when Terrance Taylor teamed with another York Foundation candidate in
Larry Zybysko to defeat Zenk and Eaton via disqualification. Shortly thereafter, Zenk tore a biceps while weightlifting and then injured it further during a house show match in Atlanta, GA at the
Omni where he pinned Larry Zybysko. He took several months off to recover. When he returned in June 1991 he appeared more slender, and in his first match back was pinned by Oz (
Kevin Nash) at a house show in Hammond, IN on June 5th. Working himself back into ring shape, he defeated
Mike Graham in numerous house show encounters, and then returned to television on June 12, 1991 at
Clash of the Chamions XV “Knoxville Knockout” where he teamed with
The Young Pistols to defeat The Fabulous Freebirds & Badstreet (a masked
Brad Armstrong). He then moved to a house show series with the Diamond Studd (
Scott Hall), where he defeated the new arrival in several house show matches. However the Studd was able to pin Zenk on July 14th at the
Great American Bash 91 PPV after manager
Diamond Dallas Page interfered. On the July 20, 1991 of
WCW Pro, Zenk teamed with the mysterious masked Yellow Dog (former partner Brian Pillman) to defeat
Steve Austin and the Diamond Studd via disqualification. On the August 3rd edition of
WCW Pro, Zenk earned another shot at the WCW Television title but lost to champion Steve Austin via reversed decision after the referee determined that Zenk had used an international object. As the month progressed, Zenk began teaming with
Robert Gibson, who had been abandoned by former
Rock n Roll Express partner
Ricky Morton when the latter joined the York Foundation. On the August 10th edition of
WCW Worldwide the new team of
The Enforcers defeated Gibson & Zenk. On the August 17th edition of
WCW Pro, Zenk & Gibson joined forces with
Dustin Rhodes to battle The York Foundation (Terrance Taylor, Richard Morton, and Thomas Rich) to a ten-minute, time limit draw. One week later on
Worldwide, the Z-Man, Z-Man,
Dustin Rhodes and
Big Josh defeated The Fabulous Freebirds & Badstreet to capture the
World Six-Man Tag Team Championship. Around this time, Zenk signed a new contract with World Championship Wrestling. On August 25th at the Omni in Atlanta, Ga, on the final night of that year's Great American Bash house show tour, Zenk competed in a tournament to crown a new
United States Heavyweight Champion after the title was vacated by Lex Luger following the latter's capture of the World Championship the previous month. The Z-Man was defeated by Steve Austin by disqualification in the quarterfinals. On August 31, 1991 he teamed with Big Josh to defeat Oz & Diamond Studd on
WCW Main Event, and on the house show circuit he had a lengthy winning streak in matches against the Diamond Studd. Zenk competed in an opening card battle royal on
Clash of the Champions XVI “Fall Brawl” on September 5th. Later that night he challenged Steve Austin once more for the WCW Television championship, but this time was pinned. Two days later on
World Championship Wrestling, the Z-Man was interviewed by
Jim Ross and expressed his desire for a shot at the
WCW World Heavyweight Championship, at that point being held by Lex Luger. Meanwhile, his lengthy feud with the York Foundation continued; on September 14, 1991 on
WCW Pro he faced Mr. Hughes in a match that never started after Lex Luger came out. The WCW World Champion offered Zenk the chance to recant his recent criticism, and when the Z-Man refused he attacked him. Two weeks later on
WCW Worldwide, Zenk was attacked by Mr. Hughes and the newly returned
Cactus Jack on orders from Luger. The Z-Man rebounded on the house show circuit, defeating Oz in numerous encounters. On October 14, 1991, Zenk faced Luger for the world title for the first time, at a house show in Birmingham, AL but was defeated. At
Halloween Havoc 1991, Zenk lost to the debuting WCW Phantom (who was revealed after the match to be
Rick Rude). On September 21, 1991, Zenk, Rhodes, and Big Josh successfully defended the WCW Six Man Championship against The York Foundation. The champions were again victorious on the November 3rd edition of
WCW Main Event against the York Foundation, but a week later Taylor, Morton, and Rich finally captured the titles. On the November 16th episode of
WCW Pro, the trio received a rematch in a steel cage and were victorious, but did not capture the championship due to the match being a non-title bout. A week later on
World Championship Wrestling the trio defeated the York Foundation in another non-title encounter, and did so again on November 28th at a house show at the Omni. Zenk received numerous shots at Lex Luger's WCW World Championship in various November 1991 house shows but failed to capture the title. On the November 16th
Clash of the Champions XVII, Zenk defeated the Diamond Studd to end their feud. On the November 30th edition of
WCW Worldwide, Zenk teamed with
WCW Light Heavyweight Champion Brian Pillman and Mike Graham in an unsuccessful effort against the Dangerous Alliance (The Enforcers and the newly turned heel Bobby Eaton). On the December 14th edition of
The Power Hour, Pillman & Zenk challenged Steve Austin & Bobby Eaton but were again defeated. The same day on
WCW Pro, the Z-Man defeated assailant Cactus Jack. On December 22nd, Zenk teamed with
PN News for the first time to defeat
Johnny B Badd & the Diamond Studd on
WCW Main Event. After winning several singles matches against Larry Zybysko on the house show circuit in December, he closed out the year on December 29, 1991 at the
Starrcade 91 PPV that saw him team with long-time rival Terrance Taylor in a randomize tag-team match in a defeat to Lex Luger & Arn Anderson. He opened 1992 by resuming his partnership with Pillman. The long-time allies wrestled on the January 11, 1992 edition of
World Championship Wrestling where they were defeated by Cactus Jack &
Abdullah the Butcher. Two weeks later on
World Wide, the team challenged
The Young Pistols for a shot at the WCW United States Tag-Team Championship. A match took place later that night, with the Pistols victorious after they used one of their title belts to hit Zenk. On the February 1, 1992 episode of
World Championship Wrestling, Zenk challenged Rick Rude for the United States title but was defeated. Later that month, Zenk began teaming with
Marcus Alexander Bagwell. The duo challenged United States Tag-Team Champions Terrance Taylor &
Greg Valentine on several occasions but were unsuccessful. On February 29, 1992, Zenk teamed with
Van Hammer to defeat Vinnie Vegas (Kevin Nash) & Richard Morton at the
SuperBrawl II PPV. On the March 7th episode of
World Championship Wrestling, Zenk teamed with both Pillman & Bagwell in a loss to the Dangerous Alliance (Steve Austin, Bobby Eaton, and Arn Anderson). On the March 4th episode of
WCW Pro, Bagwell & Zenk defeated Taylor & Valentine in a non-title match. On March 22nd on
WCW Main Event, the Z-Man pinned Greg Valentine in single competition. On March 28th on
World Championship Wrestling, he faced Terrance Taylor in another singles match and this time was defeated. That set up a rematch for the United States tag-team titles on the March 29th episode of
Main Event; once more Taylor & Valentine were victorious. On the April 4th episode of
WCW Saturday Night, Zenk challenged Steve Austin once again for the WCW Television title and was defeated in a 2 out of 3 falls match. He rebounded on April 26th to defeat
Johnny Flamingo via disqualification on
WCW Main Event after
JT Southern interfered. This in turn led to a May 3rd match on
Main Event that saw Bagwell & Zenk defeat Flamingo & Southern. On May 10th on the
Main Event, Bagwell & Zenk teamed with Brad Armstrong in a losing effort to the Dangerous Alliance (Steve Austin, Arn Anderson, Rick Rude). One week later at the
Wrestle War 92 PPV, Zenk challenged long-time partner Brian Pillman for the Light Heavyweight Championship but was pinned. On June 16, 1992 at
Clash of the Champions XIX, Bagwell & Zenk were defeated by Rick Rude & Steve Austin. On June 20th, he teamed with
The Junkyard Dog & Big Josh to defeat
Tracy Smothers, Richard Morton, & Dallas Page in the dark match of the
Beach Blast 92 PPV. On the June 28th episode of
WCW Main Event, Bagwell & Zenk challenged new United States Tag-Team Champions The Fabulous Freebirds in a bout that went to a ten-minute draw. The Z-Man then began to team with Brian Pillman once more on a semi-regular basis, but began to slide down the card. On the July 4th episode of
WCW Worldwide, Zenk was pinned by
Dick Slater. Slater & Valentine then defeated Pillman & Zenk a week later on the program. On July 19th on
WCW Main Event, the duo rebounded to beat Slater & Valentine by disqualification; on the August 1st episode of
WCW Saturday Night, they defeated Slater & Valentine outright. On the August 1, 1992 episode of
WCW Worldwide, the Z-Man received yet another shot at Steve Austin's WCW Television title, but once more was defeated. He rebounded on the August 22nd episode of
Worldwide to pin Tracy Smothers. The same day on
WCW Pro, Zenk teamed with Bagwell once more to lose to Slater & Valentine. Later in the month he began a house show series with The Super Invader (a masked
Hercules Hernandez) and dominated, winning most of their encounters. On August 29th on
WCW Saturday Night, Zenk wrestled
Ricky Steamboat in a comparatively rare face vs face match and was defeated. On September 12th on
WCW Pro, the Z-Man faced former partner Bobby Eaton and was pinned. The same day on
WCW Worldwide, Slater & Valentine defeated Tom Zenk & Jimmy Garvin in what would be the latter's final WCW match for over a year. On the October 10th episode of
WCW Saturday Night Zenk pinned Scotty Flamingo in a rematch. He then traveled to
New Japan Pro-Wrestling while under contract with WCW, competing in the
New Japan Super Grade Tag League II. He teamed with
Jim Neidhart in a loss to
Bam Bam Bigelow &
Super Strong Machine on October 8, 1992 in Makuhari, Japan. Zenk would in eight matches on the tour and would face
Manabu Nakanishi,
Osamu Kido &
Tatsumi Fujinami, amongst others. His final match of the tour came on October 21, 1992 in Shizouka, where he teamed with Neidhart & Pegasus Kid (
Chris Benoit) in a loss to
Raging Staff (
Hiro Saito, Super Strong Machine &
Tatsutoshi Goto). When he returned to WCW, Executive Vice President
Bill Watts had Zenk placed into a new tag-team with fresh arrival
Johnny Gunn. The duo made their debut on October 25, 1992 at the
Halloween Havoc 92 PPV. Teaming with a returning
Shane Douglas, they defeated Arn Anderson, Bobby Eaton, and
Michael Hayes. The duo next made an appearance on November 6th at a house show in Dalton, GA, defeating the
Vegas Connection (Dallas Page &
Vinnie Vegas). At the
Clash of the Champions XXI special on November 18th, a music vignette was shown with Zenk & Gunn buying clothes. On November 25th in Baltimore, Gunn & Zenk faced The Texicans (
Tex Slazenger &
Shanghi Pierce) and battled the new team to a draw. The presaged a feud between the two teams; on the December 5th episode of
WCW Saturday Night the Texicans made derogatory remarks about Gunn & Zenk. A week later on the program, Zenk & Gunn defeated the Texicans via disqualification; after the match their opponents tried to put a dress on Zenk. The duo sustained their first loss on December 26, 1992 on
WCW Saturday Night when they were defeated by
Barry Windham & Brian Pillman. Tom Zenk & Johnny Gunn began 1993 with another loss, this time falling to Cactus Jack &
The Barbarian on the January 3rd episode of
WCW Saturday Night. The televised losing streak continued, as Gunn & Zenk would fall to the newly arrived
Wrecking Crew on the January 13th
Clash of the Champions XXII. On the January 16th episode of
WCW Worldwide, they were beaten by the
Hollywood Blonds (Steve Austin & Brian Pillman). Then on January 23, Big Van Vader teamed with the newly returned Paul Orndorff to defeat Gunn & the Z-Man on
WCW Saturday Night. The slide continued on January 30, 1993 when Zenk returned briefly to singles competition; he was defeated by Paul Orndorff on
Worldwide and
Chris Benoit on
WCW Saturday Night. The losing streak finally ended on February 6th on
Saturday Night when Gunn & Zenk defeated the Texicans, once more via disqualification. However the same day they would fall once more to the Hollywood Blonds, this time on
WCW Pro. Now having sunk to the bottom of WCW's tag-team division, their status was reinforced with yet another loss, this time once more to the Wrecking Crew on February 20th on
WCW Saturday Night. A day later, Tom Zenk entered a tournament to crown a new WCW Television Champion but was defeated by Cactus Jack on
WCW Main Event in the opening round. The Hollywood Blonds again defeated Zenk & Gunn on the February 27th edition of
WCW Saturday Night. On March 13th on
The Power Hour, the Texicans defeated Gunn & Zenk in a no disqualification match to end their feud. The same day the duo was beaten by Vinnie Vegas &
Big Sky on
WCW Worldwide. On April 10th on
WCW Saturday Night they were beaten by yet another new team, this time by Bobby Eaton & Chris Benoit. The two teams would have a house show series that month, with Eaton & Benoit emerging victorious in each encounter. On April 4th, Tom Zenk faced
NWA World Heavyweight Champion Barry Windham on the
WCW Main Event in an unsuccessful challenge. He was again defeated in singles action, this time by the newly arrived
Scott Norton on the May 1st
WCW Saturday Night. On May 23, 1993, Zenk subbed for
Shane Douglas in the team "Dos Hombres" with
Ricky Steamboat at the
Slamboree 93 PPV, but was not acknowledged by announcers. His next appearance would come at
Clash of the Champions XXIII, where he intervened to help Johnny B. Badd after he was shot in the face with his own Bad Blaster by
Maxx Payne. Zenk then Johnny B. Badd &
2 Cold Scorpio to defeat
Maxx Payne, Big Sky, and
Lord Steven Regal on
WCW Saturday Night on July 24th. A day later, Zenk and Gunn teamed again for the first time in months, only to be defeated by the Texicans once more. On July 31st on
WCW Saturday Night they were beaten by the
Collosal Kongs in what would be the final match for the tandem. Zenk stayed off television for the remainder of the year, wrestling exclusively on house shows and occasionally appearing as a veteran hand in WCW's developmental shows at the
Crystal Chandelier in Keneshaw, GA. He defeated old foe Terry Taylor on October 5, 1993, then lost to Michael Hayes on October 22nd in Johnson City, TN. On December 7, 1993 he was beaten by
Bryant Anderson at a Chandalier event, and lost to Tommy Rich a week later at the same location. Zenk finally returned to television after a five-month absence on the January 9, 1994 episode of
WCW Main Event, defeating Bryant Anderson. Zenk was attacked by Dallas Page after the match, and following the conclusion of their brawl he was interviewed by
Tony Schiavone and said he would face Page anywhere. The would face off on the January 23rd episode of the same program, where Page was victorious. The Z-Man wrestled Ron Simmons on the March 5, 1994 episode of
WCW Saturday Night, losing to the former WCW World Champion. He rebounded to defeat
Sgt. Buddy Lee Parker on the following week's episode. On March 26th on
Saturday Night he was pinned by
Bunkhouse Buck in what would be his final match with WCW.
All Japan Pro Wrestling (1994) After Zenk's release from WCW in May 1994, he participated in
All Japan Pro Wrestling's (AJPW) Summer Action tour that July, making his first appearance on June 30, 1994 in Korakuen Hall in Tokyo. Teaming with
Johnny Ace, they were defeated by The Can-Am Express (
Danny Kroffat &
Doug Furnas). He gained his first victory on the
AJPW Summer Action Series 1994 event on July 3rd, teaming with
Stan Hansen to defeat the Can-Am Express. The tour concluded on July 28th in Tokyo, where he teamed with
Johnny Smith & The Eagle (
Jackie Fulton) in a loss to
Kurt Beyer,
Richard Slinger &
Terry Gordy. Two months later, Tom Zenk returned for All Japan's
Giant Series tour. He teamed with
Takao Omori in the opening night of the tour in a loss to the Can-Am Express. On October 1st, he teamed with
Danny Spivey to defeat The Eagle & The Falcon (
Steve Armstrong). After wrestling numerous opponents that included
Chris Candido and
Masao Inoue, his final match of the tour came when the series concluded on October 22 when he teamed with The Eagle &
Johnny Smith to face
Dory Funk Jr.,
Giant Baba, and
Jumbo Tsuruta. and their Giant Series tour in September.
Late career (1994–1996) After WCW and All Japan, Zenk joined the
American Wrestling Federation (AWF). He competed against The Bounty Hunter in season one of the AWF's
Warriors of Wrestling show in the spring of 1995. In between seasons, he worked in his home state
Minnesota where he competed on the
independent circuit. On November 11, 1995 he teamed with
Mike Enos on a
PWA event in Rosemount, beating
Blacktop Bully &
Nailz. On December 4, 1995 he teamed with
Charlie Norris to defeat
JB Trask &
Lenny Lane at an
NPW event in Lindstrom. In August 1996, the AWF's second season began to air Zenk joined the
American Wrestling Federation (AWF), where he defeated The Terrorist on
Warriors of Wrestling. After defeating The Blacktop Bully and Nailz in singles competition, his final match came on October 16, 1996 when he teamed with
Billy Blaze to defeat Number 14 & The Hater. == Death ==