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4[[quoteright:300:[[Wrestling/HulkHogan https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/wwe2k14_render_hulkhogan_hollywood_12529_512.png]]]]
5[[caption-width-right:300:''"As far as I'm concerned, all this crap in the ring represents the fans out here!"'']]
6%%
7->''"I'm the kinda guy, right now, if I needed to sneeze I'd use ''your'' hand. That's the kinda guy I am. So it doesn't matter to me if I'm gonna be wrestling Wrestling/GeorgeSteele, or I wouldn't even mind crossing the fence, because I have '''no friends''' in this business."''
8-->-- '''[[Wrestling/JakeRoberts Jake "The Snake" Roberts]]''' [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c4Pz9RGuJ3k addresses]] Wrestling/RandySavage
9
10'''[[MemeticMutation You're the heel, BOO!]]'''
11
12A Heel is a bad guy in {{professional wrestling}}. He's a HateSink and a JerkJock, existing to make the crowd angry and menace their favorites. They are typically the antagonist of a pro wrestling storyline or "angle." The opposite of a heel is a {{Face}}.
13
14Note that hate comes from a desire to see the heel punished and set back, distinct from XPacHeat, which skips that step and simply wants someone gone entirely, which is itself distinct from a heat vacuum, where the crowd neither pops nor boos, they just sit absolutely silent for their entrances. At this point, he/she should just hang up the boots because they don't even elicit a response.
15
16The Lucha Libre equivalent is known as a ''rudo''. In theory, rudo is more an "attitude" about Lucha Libre as a whole, but in practice rudos are almost always interchangeable with heels.
17
18Just as fans will only root for a strong or resourceful babyface, they won't boo a heel unless he has certain qualities. Common heel types:
19
201. The '''[[DirtyCoward Chickenshit]]'''. Bog standard heel from the golden age. (You know the type, the ones who kept [[Wrestling/FreddieBlassie Fred Blassie]] in business.) They [[CombatPragmatist cheat]] [[DickDastardlyStopsToCheat a ton]], exaggerate about everything, [[MovingTheGoalposts change the rules each time they lose]], use [[HumanShield bystanders as shields]], and win on [[DisqualificationInducedVictory technicalities]]. Plus, they have that punchable face which is damn-near a blueprint for CheapHeat.
21
22->''The Wrestling/HonkyTonkMan made a career out of being a cowardly heel. Wrestling/SethRollins following his heel turn has really brought that old-school feel back.''\
23
242. The '''[[TheFightingNarcissist Narcissist]]'''. Overinflated, good-looking heel. [[ArrogantKungFuGuy They know they are better]] than anyone else on the roster, and that adds to the ego, which gives them great heat. They talk shit constantly, and fans actually pay money with the hopes of seeing them lose. (Which is a win/win for the company.) But instead of running away, [[ChairmanOfTheBrawl using steel chairs]], or [[JustYouAndMeAndMyGUARDS calling for interference]], they back up their words with action. They take on the #1 contender and either demolish them or go down swinging. For examples outside of wrestling, see Tito Ortiz or Conor [=McGregor=] in [[UsefulNotes/UltimateFightingChampionship UFC]]. If they were pro wrestlers, they would be heels in this mold.
25
26->''Wrestling/RickRude was probably the best vain heel of recent history, but you could make a good case for Wrestling/TheMiz.''\
27
283. '''GorgeousGeorge'''. The spiritual father of all polyamorous wrestlers, Wrestling/GeorgeWagner invented the modern concept of the heel and pro wrestling itself, in addition to having a big influence on sports in general (see "Real Life" entry). The stuff he did was pioneering, from having the ring and the referee "purified" with disinfectant to that time when he stopped a match just so that he could have "Florida Air" imported to him via air canister. In Lucha Libre, there is a similar gimmick known as ''[[https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/discussion.php?id=q90qoprevzur2tmeetneu70a "Exóticos"]]'', but they are more likely to be babyfaces.
29
30->''Every wrestler who wore feather boas to the ring or played up their sexual ambiguity, from Creator/HardGay to Wrestling/JoeyRyan, was inspired by Wagner. [[{{Wrestling/Goldust}} But you will remember the name of (deep breath)...]]''\
31
324. The '''{{Foreign|WrestlingHeel}}er'''. Foreign accents signal to the audience that you won't be getting much mic time. So why not make it work for you? Just keep bringing up local differences and claiming that your country's better. "Your local sports team is unsatisfactory!" "The inhabitants of this city have a higher level of body odor than average!" "I almost forgot to mention that all your local women are overweight and unattractive!" The natural predator and [[TheRival rival]] of the AllAmericanFace, or the local equivalent thereof.
33
34->''[[Wrestling/TheIronSheik PUTCHOO EEN DE CAMEL CLUTCH MEHK YOU HUMBEL *belch*]]. It's also how a lot of gaijin get over in Japan; just look at Wrestling/BulletClub.''\
35
365. The '''[[AxCrazy Psycho]]'''. Often more a danger to themselves than to others, nevertheless capable of going great lengths to prove no one is tougher than them. Several wrestlers created the prototype for a particular type of heel. Incidentally, this was the pre-steroid age; by the '80s, everyone was pretty gassed up working for Wrestling/{{Vince|McMahon}}, but in the territories, heels still looked like ordinary tough guys. [[Wrestling/DrDeathSteveWilliams Dr. Death]], "Dirty" Dick Slater, Ray "The Crippler" Stephens, and Wrestling/BrayWyatt today--those guys don't look like male models who watch what they eat. They look like hard-drinking men who you wouldn't want to meet in a dark alley.
37
38->''[[Wrestling/JakeRoberts Jake "the Snake"]] could teach a class on the art of being a psycho heel. Apparently there's a good reason to call [[Wrestling/JonMoxley Dean Ambrose]] "The Lunatic Fringe".''\
39
406. The '''{{Bitch|Alert}}'''. Female heels used to fulfill one of two roles: scary hag or big bruiser. (See TheGiant, BrawnHilda, or "Psycho" above.) A good female babyface is a potential role model for young girls, so her clothes are meant to convey tradition and athleticism. Everything about the bitch is [[MsFanservice alluring]]: provocative entrance poses, boob zippers, illusion netting simulating nudity, and so on. They lean toward the 'woman of loose morals' stereotype ([[PsychoLesbian homoeroticism]] included), [[AlphaBitch pompous attitude]], and an obsession with shiny things.
41
42->''Wrestling/{{Sherri|Martel}} was as much of a threat on the outside of the ring as inside, and really seemed to delight in watching the wrestlers she managed hurt people. Wrestling/AJLee is an anomaly because, though she was a jealous bitch in-character, she got over without focusing on her looks.''\
43
447. The '''[[WrestlingMonster Monster]]'''. ''"From PartsUnknown...",'' a menace capable of demolishing top stars, modern heroes, and legends of the industry. [[TheQuietOne Usually doesn't talk much]]. The idea is to sell them as a threat without having to compete to be "the best" in the main event scene. They mainly fight against guys [[EvilIsBigger below their height/weight class]], whether it be in tag team or singles action. Having a 'small' guy who can defeat the big guy on an even playing field is a great way to build them up. Note that the Monster has considerable overlap with The Giant and the WildSamoan.
45
46->''It was just so easy for kids to hate [[Wrestling/JohnTenta Earthquake]]. He steamrolled face after face, squished Damien (Jake's [[KickTheDog pet snake]]), and didn't really get his comeuppance until Hogan came back from injury. {{Wrestling/Kane}} has wrestled under eight or nine "Monster" gimmicks.''\
47
488. The '''[[RepulsiveRingmaster Authority Figure]]'''. A rich asshole with their own federation. These people hold positions of power (often real, sometimes {{kayfabe}}) in the promotion itself. They can pull off the "I have an entire Wall Street investment firm backing me" vibe, along with some very-serious suited men who accompany them because they have to keep tabs on their investment.
49
50->''Wrestling/TheCorporation was the gold standard of authority figures in the 1990s. And ever since, it seems like every wrestling company has to have one. Dario Cueto is atypical in that he's a professional actor who gets paid to promote ''Wrestling/LuchaUnderground'', and thus is considered one of the best.''\
51
529. The '''[[TheBrute Enforcer]]'''. More often then not, a bodyguard/powerhouse in a [[PowerStable wrestling faction]], usually implied to be tweener or anti-hero. It's similar to when the cops radio for some backup muscle for when things get too out of control. They can lure their opponents into a trap and let their bodyguards do some wreckage.
53
54->''Wrestling/ArnAnderson dealt punishment and protected the other [[Wrestling/TheFourHorsemen Horsemen]], earning the nickname "The Enforcer". He was efficient and brutal in the ring, but it was all professional. {{Wrestling/Chyna}} was Wrestling/TripleH's personal henchwoman who rarely talked but would twist you into a pretzel if Trips told her to.''\
55
56Special mention can be made for '''[[BrainsAndBrawn Managers]]''' (sometimes known as valets). It's implied that they're handling the business side of their client's career. And let's face it, most people in the world who can cut great promos are not good athletes. (And some of the best in-ring workers are terrible on the mic!) Managers can also have stories and be compelling characters in their own right. When Wrestling/{{Rusev|AndLana}} made his debut, Lana spoke for him, and Rusev looked to her when he was getting beat by a tough opponent. Lana also offered sex appeal, and became involved in two different love triangles (in kayfabe) with Rusev, first with Wrestling/DolphZiggler and later with Wrestling/BobbyLashley.
57
58Virtually all the heel managers, from Wrestling/MrFuji to [[Wrestling/JamesMitchell Father Mitchell]], are chickenshit. That's because most of them went to wrestling school but were too small, or didn't have the right look. Same with a lot of referees. Of course, you have photographers like Wrestling/JimCornette and Wrestling/PaulHeyman, who hung around it for so long that they got roped in.[[note]]There are only a few babyface managers, and most of the time they came across as a hype man/cheerleader. But some of them are iconic such as Arnold Skaaland (who managed Wrestling/BrunoSammartino), Wrestling/BobBacklund, Cousin Slim of The Scufflin' Hillbillies, and Wrestling/PreciousPaulEllering of Wrestling/TheRoadWarriors.[[/note]]
59
60The [[CombatCommentator Color Commentator]] is often a former wrestler providing his expert opinions. Heel announcers usually end up taking the side of the bad guy, to better egg the fans on. Wrestling/JesseVentura, Wrestling/JerryLawler, the Honky Tonk Man, and Wrestling/RandySavage are all former heels turned color commentators.
61
62----
63Heel champions didn't draw in Madison Square Garden the same way face champions do. The main examples of this are Wrestling/BuddyRogers and [[Wrestling/SuperstarBillyGraham "Superstar" Graham]]. Even Randy Savage, fairly or not, was running out of steam, and (for that matter) Wrestling/RicFlair never took off in [[{{Wrestling/WWE}} WWF]], either. The only heel they ever pushed long and hard was Wrestling/TripleH, and it seems they've learned their lesson since then. Because while there's money in a babyface [[OneManArmy fighting off a swarm of heels]], there's very little draw in a heel champion [[TheBadGuyWins gobbling up faces]] the same way. Considering how many hours of television they have to fill, they need a constant stream of fresh challengers, and the best way to sort through them ''and'' draw money is with a babyface on top. It's a proven formula since [[Wrestling/HulkHogan January 1984]].
64
65When a heel goes particularly over with fans, he may undergo a HeelFaceTurn. The HeelFaceIndex has some more variations. See also the [[HeelFaceRevolvingDoor Tweener]]: a wrestler who flip-flops between Face and Heel status. (E.g. Triple H would regularly call out other heels for their reprehensible acts [[note]]JBL's racism[[/note]], without becoming a babyface himself).
66
67If there are a team of Heels, they are generally an OpposingSportsTeam.
68
69----
70!!Examples:
71[[foldercontrol]]
72
73[[folder:Professional Wrestling]]
74* Wrestling/AbdullahTheButcher is possibly one of the most interesting cases in pro wrestling history, he's one of the earlier examples of a CompositeCharacter blending the foreign and monster heel tropes. His career spanned over 5 decades with a very limited set of moves, relying only in cheating, the use of foreign objects and a very, very slow work pace.
75* Wrestling/AndreTheGiant would tour the world as "guest heel", to prevent VillainDecay, and then return for another short run. Contrary to popular belief, he was a {{face}} for most of his career before this.
76* [[Wrestling/LuchaUnderground Dario Cueto]] was a heel authority figure who put the heroes through hell, but he did it in a way which he knows the fans (or 'believers') will enjoy. Example: ''"Sorry, Son of Havoc, in order to get that title shot you need to go through another hurdle with even more VIOOOOLLLENCE and Dario hates waiting so it's now!!"'' Dario was also sympathetic in a way that most heel bosses aren't. The way he interacted with Sexy Star was particularly interesting. Because Sexy Star is a purely heroic character, the old standby of villain-hates-hero would normally be in effect, but here it wasn't. Dario gave her a pep talk before her No Más match about standing up to abusers and overcoming evil people. True, it was from his own pro-violence perspective but he did seem to honestly want to help her succeed. The fact their characters are both abuse survivors is touched on here as Dario's mother used to beat him.
77** He's much the same in MLW as [[Wrestling/AztecaUnderground Cesar Duran]].
78* By 1986, the [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wcUkd07cr9U Fab Five]] had taken over manager duties in the WWF, the notable ones being Wrestling/BobbyHeenan and Wrestling/JimmyHart. Blassie bequeathed half of his stable (Sheiky, Volkoff and Hercules) to the debuting Slick, though Hercules later switched to "The Heenan Family".
79** Heenan was like Rita Repulsa or Finster from ''Power Rangers''. They themselves were often the butt of jokes, but the monsters they introduced were legit threatening. Managers don't work like this anymore. At best they have ''one'' person or team they represent, and they become synonymous with each other. Like Wrestling/MariaKanellis with Mike Bennett, Lana with Rusev, or Wrestling/LioRush with Wrestling/BobbyLashley.
80* Wrestling/CurtHennig played the narcissist with elements of TheAce. His "West Texas Redneck" persona was a blend of country singer and 'black hat' cowboy.
81* Wrestling/BrockLesnar doesn't have a menacing voice [[VocalDissonance to match his size]], but Wrestling/PaulHeyman is so good at it he can hype a match for someone who's not even booked for that night e.g. CM Punk v. Chris Jericho, or any match with Lesnar.
82* The trope image is of "Hollywood" Wrestling/HulkHogan, who remains the most famous babyface of all time. When Hogan's face act got old and the fans turned on him (and his longest WCW Championship reign of all time despite joining in '94, to give it some sort of perspective), he just turned his back on them and aligned with the Wrestling/NewWorldOrder at ''Bash at the Beach '96'', resulting in the crowd throwing trash at him and even one fan leaping up to attack Hogan.
83** He transitioned into a heel boss on ''[[Wrestling/ImpactWrestling TNA]] Impact'', and makes sporadic appearances in his heroic red and gold regalia. He appeared at ''Wrestling/{{WrestleMania}} 31'' in his [=nWo=] attire, but "Hollywood" Hogan for all intents and purposes turned face by rescuing {{Wrestling/Sting}}, his old enemy.
84* Wrestling/TheMiz is such a [[MilesGloriosus natural]] [[TheFightingNarcissist heel]] that it helped sabotage [[GoodIsBoring every]] [[BadassDecay attempt]] at a {{face}} run he ever had.
85* The Great Kabuki created many of the tropes for the evil Japanese, such as scary masks, a sumo-based origin story, and ninja-style cheating techniques like blowing dust or the green mist/spit. (Technically he was preceded by the Filipino Rey Urbano, but evil Filipino never really took off.)
86* Wrestling/JohnBradshawLayfield (formerly only ''Bradshaw'' of Wrestling/TheAPA, and nephew to "Blackjack" Lanza) turned heel in 2004 and never looked back. His transformation from trailer-trash Texan to conniving stockbroker was inspired in part by his [[RealLifeWritesThePlot actual exploits on Wall Street]], for which he became eminently known in the world of finance. Throughout that period, he was hardly ever seen without his trademark white Stetson hat and matching limousine, which his opponents had the pleasure of wrecking! (Wrestling/TheUndertaker once chokeslammed Bradshaw through the limo.)
87** He portrayed himself as a crooked politician throughout 2004 and 2005 (complete with a "cabinet" of henchmen wrestlers) who handed out American flags to spectators. In late 2005 and early 2006, he transformed into a [[PoliticallyIncorrectVillain xenophobic redneck]] who taunted Wrestling/{{Rey Mysterio|Jr}} (he did this to Wrestling/EddieGuerrero, too, in 2004.)
88** Since the latter half of 2006, he's a color commentator with Wrestling/MichaelCole on ''[[Wrestling/{{WWESmackDown}} WWE SmackDown!]]''. He toned down his heelish traits a bit but still invariably roots for the heel wrestlers. He returned to ring action in December 2007 to feud with Wrestling/ChrisJericho, during which time he reverted to his roots (attacking the midget {{Wrestling/Hornswoggle}}) before finally retiring for good in 2009.
89* Wrestling/LexLuger and "Mr. Wonderful" Wrestling/PaulOrndorff looked like living He-Man action figures, and they were weeeeell aware of the fact.
90* Wrestling/ShawnMichaels was just another long-haired blond in a federation stacked with long-haired blonds, so he had to turn the heat somehow. By the mid-nineties and the incident known as the Wrestling/MontrealScrewjob, he was already hated for what he did to his former tag partner, Wrestling/MartyJannetty.
91* The Wild Samoans (Afa & Sika) were the prototype of the afro and bare feet eastern heels followed by the likes of Wrestling/{{Meng}}.
92* Former WWE Diva [[Wrestling/KarleePerez Maxine]] played 'The Bitch' so well that in her entire career, she was never a face. Most talent get tested out in different roles but she was always a heel on television, only getting to be a face in a dark tag team match alongside two other long established faces. Since she was the General Manager of FCW, she got to be Wrestling/TheAuthority, too. She also appeared as a heel in ''Lucha Underground''.
93* Heels can also be managers (as Vince and Paul have shown) as well as commentators, and--in the cases of Nick Patrick and "Dangerous" Danny Davis--even ''referees''!
94* A low-down, foul-mouthed cheat who is also accompanied by bagpipes? Look no further, Wrestling/RoddyPiper's got you covered!
95* If you are managing a Monster Heel and your name happens to be Wrestling/HarleyRace... your opponents should think twice before get in the ring!
96* Wrestling/WilliamRegal played the EvilBrit with aplomb. These days he remains a firm, but fair neutral party, whether on ''[[{{Wrestling/WWENXT}} NXT]]'' or in [[Wrestling/AllEliteWrestling AEW]]--unless he's pushed too far by a wrestler. He’s like a British Dario Cueto minus the outright murder boner.
97* Wrestling/JakeRoberts was unfortunate in that steroids didn't have the desired muscle-building effect on his body, and he just got fatter. But he still looked the part, and he had WrestlingPsychology down to a science.
98* Wrestling/BuddyRogers broke onto the scene as a babyface, but it wasn't until he adopted his "Nature Boy" heel persona—a cocky, arrogant, overtly-confident character—that he really began to shine.
99* Wrestling/SgtSlaughter was a big-name wrestler in his day. He was doing Coke commercials and became an on-screen character in ''[[WesternAnimation/GIJoeARealAmericanHero G.I. Joe]]''. (He helped stop Golobulus from exposing the world to his mutagenic spores.) When the Gulf War was turned into a WWF storyline, [[TheQuisling he defected to Saddam Hussein]] and was teamed with a longtime foe (albeit, playing a different character). Slaughter received real-life death threats from viewers over this. Forming the Triangle of Terror with Col. Mustafa and General Adnan might have been ridiculous, but man, did it work in terms of getting Slaughter over as a heel and promoting Hogan as the hero of the United States. Actually, the worst part of the Gulf War storyline was repackaging Wrestling/TheIronSheik, Iranian legend, into Iraqi sympathizer "Colonel Mustafa". [[{{Qurac}} Totally ignoring]] [[UsefulNotes/IranIraqWar the acrimonious history between the two Middle East nations]].
100* "The Sheik" is a character played by a number of performers throughout history, but [[Wrestling/EdFarhat The Original One]] is noteworthy not just as one of the first performers owning a promotion, but for knowing how to be a CheapHeat cauldron better than nobody. His antics would take him to retain a title more time that he should, fight dirty on every turn and having his way either the audience wanted or not.
101** The Iron Sheik innovated many of the tropes used by the foreign heels: Carrying foreign flags, wearing ethnic clothing and the evil mustache. He's also worth of notice for he went over as a great in-ring technician, and not just for his villainy.
102* Jake Hager even had it when he worked in WWE as Wrestling/JackSwagger. He represented the dark side byproduct of America's two halves, a proud [[WhiteAngloSaxonProtestant Anglo-Saxon]] and jingoistic jerk. In [[Wrestling/AllEliteWrestling AEW]], Hager has been the enforcer for Chris Jericho's Wrestling/InnerCircle, which started out as heels but later turned face, and its retooled form, the indisputably heel Wrestling/JerichoAppreciationSociety.
103* The biggest heel in AEW nowadays is Wrestling/{{MJF}}. On the women's side, Wrestling/BrittBaker was this for a time; in 2023, it looks like the alliance of [[Wrestling/{{Paige}} Saraya]], Wrestling/ToniStorm, and [[Wrestling/RubyRiott Ruby Soho]] has this status.
104* Managers are almost always older people who have been in the business for a while. They were used back in the territorial days and early 80s as heat magnets. The more entertaining they were, the better. (And in an era where promos were recorded backstage instead of the ring, wrestlers weren't given much chance to express their heelishness.) The "Triumvirate of Terror" is mostly forgotten today, but they helped WWF make a name for itself back east. The Grand Wizard (so named for his oh-so-stylish turban) died in '83. Both Blassie and [[Wrestling/CaptainLouAlbano Albano]] ended their WWF stints in '86.
105* {{Wrestling/Vader}} would tour as a "heel for hire" for a few months mostly in the States, then very regularly in Japan, Germany and even Mexico.
106* Wrestling/NikolaiVolkoff was a Cold War-era villain, even singing the Soviet anthem. When that got stale, he teamed up with Wrestling/TheIronSheik and they both sang their national anthems.
107* The SickeninglySweethearts pseudo TagTeam is a fairly popular heel archetype with several variations. Where Wrestling/ExoticAdrianStreet and obvious imitators like Wrestling/RicoConstantino or Paredyse were {{Gorgeous George}}s who only had touchy feely females like Miss Linda, Miss Wrestling/{{Jackie|Gayda}} and CJ Lane around [[AmbiguouslyGay to confuse fans about their sexuality]], Wrestling/ChrisCandido and Wrestling/TammyLynnSytch were both totally straight, and managed to be among the most hated people in Wrestling/{{SMW}} precisely because they were ''always'' all over each other. Other examples include Tarzan Goto and Despina Montagas, Wrestling/StevieRichards and [[Wrestling/LisaMarieVaron Victoria]], Jamie Noble and Wrestling/{{Nidia}}, Mike Bennett and Wrestling/MariaKanellis, The Savage Gentlemen and Lady Frost, each with their own spin on it.
108* Wrestling/TheUndertaker started his career as a Heel, but had [[HeelFaceRevolvingDoor multiple Heel and Face periods]] over the course of his career.
109[[/folder]]
110
111[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
112* In ''Manga/{{Bleach}}'', [[MaskedLuchador Mask de Masculine]] insists on viewing himself as the "[[{{face}} hero]]", and decries all of his opponents as "villains", evoking this trope. When they meet during the Wandenreich's second invasion of Soul Society, Renji introduces himself as "a villain" in a way that is meant to make fun of Mask's [[WrestlerInAllOfUs wrestler gimmick]]. [[TookALevelInBadass Having taken a few levels in badass while training in the Soul King's Palace]], Renji ends up [[CurbStompBattle curbstomping]] Mask so hard that the latter [[SoreLoser becomes enraged]] and breaks character.
113* Bartolomeo from ''Manga/OnePiece'' adores angering the crowd and pulling dangerous jokes on them.
114* The Tiger's Den from ''Manga/TigerMask'' is basically a criminal organization who specializes in training heel wrestlers. This included Tiger Mask who was a brutal ForeignWrestlingHeel back when he was wrestling in the US. He turned face though to help support the orphanage he grew up in (as Wrestlers from the Tiger's Den had to give half their income to them.)
115* Several characters in ''Manga/WannaBeTheStrongestInTheWorld'', as it's an anime about female pro-wrestling. The heels usually wear masks and usually utilizes underhanded tactics like using a shinai for a submission hold, or having their assistants hamper their opponent.
116* The pro wrestling-themed manga ''Welcome to the El-Paracio'' discusses the concept through El-Paracio's Mariko--a prime example of MeanCharacterNiceActor if ever there was one. Inside the ring, "Mary the Kid" is a cold, brutal cowgirl but the rest of the time, Mariko is sweet and caring ([[BerserkButton as long as you don't call her old]]). Everyone except the main character Tadasuke takes this in stride, regarding Mariko and Mary as two separate people, while he's upset at the idea of people treating such a kind person as if she were a monster. There's a similar situation for the Death Carpenter, a Heel from another promotion, who's shown to be a relatively normal woman outside the ring.
117** A discussion of Heels is what brings the other promotion into focus in the first place. The female lead Ouka gets pissed off when she ranks #1 (tied with the Carpenter) in a magazine's list of Heels, and challenges the Carpenter to a match in order to try to put herself over as a Babyface. The problem is that Heel-ish behavior is her default personality [[note]]Tadasuke's response to her outrage was "You mean you're ''not'' a Heel?"[[/note]], so her attempt utterly fails; when she descends into the ring in a harness with fake angel wings on her back, the audience immediately starts muttering "FallenAngel?"
118[[/folder]]
119
120[[folder:Comic Books]]
121* Discussed in one issue of ''ComicBook/ArchieComics''. Reggie spends half the issue heckling and booing a wrestler who in turn is spitting threats and insults at him. Later on Reggie gets a flat tire and ''[[BullyingADragon that same wrestler]]'' pulls over to help. Reggie's terrified until the wrestler reveals he's a MeanCharacterNiceActor and explains that, as the heel, he's ''supposed'' to be hated by the audience and that it's all part of the act. Then he replaces Reggie's tire and asks him to keep up the heckling at the next match.
122* "Xochitl la Terible" in ''ComicBook/LoveAndRockets''.
123[[/folder]]
124
125[[folder:Fan Works]]
126* ''[[https://archiveofourown.org/works/11672454/chapters/26268801 Common Hazards of the Penumbra Sector]]'': The Black Moon Gang are one of the Ewok tribes who emigrated to Coruscant following the Empire's fall and, like most others such, have taken to competing in semi-legal swoop races in the city's lower levels. They rarely win races, so, in order to keep the audience's attention, they've taken to deliberately portraying themselves as summy villains to play against the bombastic gimmicks of the other tribes. They've named themselves after the Death Star, head to the races carrying long pikes adorned with animal skulls and crude replicas of the feared battle stations, and hiss and growl at the spectators who cheerfully boo them back.
127* ''Fanfic/TheMostEvilTrainer'': Main Character Max starts off the story ''genuinely'' despised by audiences (and some fellow trainers, and the Pokemon League itself) for his CombatPragmatist style going against the HonorBeforeReason style of Kalos; after some successes, however, as well as finding appeal amongst counter-culture groups for the same reason, he starts leaning into this as a kind of stage persona as "Blackguard" a BlackKnight set up in direct opposition to his FriendlyRival [[KnightInShiningArmor Roland]].
128[[/folder]]
129
130[[folder:Film]]
131* ''Franchise/{{Rocky}}''
132** Invoked in ''Film/RockyII''. Apollo Creed starts a harassment campaign to draw Rocky into a rematch, but his PR guy warns him that by picking on the underdog “People’s Champion”, he’s setting himself up as the bad guy.
133** In ''Film/RockyIII'', Rocky has a “Boxer vs Wrestler” match with Thunderlips (a pre-stardom Hulk Hogan), a literal wrestling Heel playing a [[TheFightingNarcissist Narcissist]] gimmick.
134[[/folder]]
135
136[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
137* ''Gladiators'':
138** Wolf (played by Michael Van Wijk) from the original ITV ''Series/{{Gladiators}}''. Which leads to a subversion, as he was easily the most popular Gladiator, although his attitude never changed throughout the show's run (due to his [[BadBadActing deliberately-poor acting]]). This carried into the Sky revival when he returned, though somewhat toned down in his role.
139** ''Series/Gladiators2024'': The first season quickly establishes Viper and Legend as heels for this version of the show. Viper's portrayed as a mostly silent brute with anger issues, willing to cheat and demolish contenders, whereas Legend is vain, dim and [[ItsAllAboutMe self-obsessed]].
140* Pro wrestler Wrestling/HanaKimura starred in the Japanese RealityTV series ''Series/TerraceHouse'', where she was asked to play this role. Sadly, after a scripted incident where she blew up at another housemate over a misunderstanding, she was [[{{cyberbullying}} cyberbullied]] by fans of the show on Website/{{Twitter}} [[DrivenToSuicide to the point of suicide]]. This, along with revelations of the show's scripted nature, led to its eventual cancellation. Several of the perpetrators were tracked down and fined... [[ComicallySmallDemand the equivalent of $10-$100]].
141[[/folder]]
142
143[[folder:Martial Arts]]
144* UsefulNotes/MixedMartialArts has its share of heels.
145** The Diaz brothers play ever heel card in the deck: swearing constantly, disrespecting their opponents, giving combative interviews, and getting caught with weed, but the fans seem to love them all the more for being irreverent, genuine personalities.
146** Josh Koscheck is perhaps the most successful at playing the heel. His arrogant personality was put on display in the first season of Series/TheUltimateFighter'' and he rode it into a long and successful career in the UFC.
147** Wrestling/BrockLesnar was surprisingly media-shy for his run in MMA, but after his victory at the record-setting UFC 100 event, he suddenly had a heel meltdown, during which he trash talked the already-defeated Frank Mir, swore and spat at the camera, announced he was going to "get on top of" his wife, and insulted the UFC's biggest sponsor.
148** Chael Sonnen was a largely forgettable wrestling specialist who was only known for ''almost'' becoming the WEC Welterweight Champion until he suddenly discovered his virtuoso skill on the mike. His newfound ability to trash-talk gave his languishing MMA career a second wind and earned him a regular commentating job.
149** Creator/RondaRousey brought this trope into women's MMA by bringing over the time-honored tradition of hyping your fights by talking as much shit about your opponents as possible. So when she finally lost, there were understandably a fair amount of people celebrating it.
150** UsefulNotes/ConorMcGregor turned himself into UFC's top draw by being a trash-talking money heel a la Wrestling/RicFlair. Whether you love him or hate him depends on whether you find his RefugeInAudacity stunts funny or just obnoxious.
151** Jon Jones, apart from his various legal troubles and steroid busts, is infamous for his constant use of {{eye poke}}s in fights. Why is this such a heel move? Because he literally posted a video on Instagram where he [[TakeThatAudience made fun of the fans for complaining about it]].
152** Photographer turned fighter Mike Jackson got a lot of heat for unnecessarily prolonging his fight with Wrestling/CMPunk at UFC 225, choosing to repeatedly strike his largely helpless opponent rather than just submitting him. After the fight he was fired and banned from the promotion for his unsportsmanlike conduct.
153** Colby Covington became one of UFC's top draws in the late 2010s by playing himself up as the promotion's "super villain", regularly trash-talking opponents. In one particularly notorious example, during his post-fight interview after defeating Demian Maia in Maia's homeland of Brazil, he called the country "a dump" and the crowd "filthy animals". On top of that, he greatly plays up his stance as a staunch [[UsefulNotes/AmericanPoliticalSystem Republican]] [[UsefulNotes/DonaldTrump Trump]] supporter to draw heel heat. Before his 2019 fight with Robbie Lawler, he made his ring entrance to Wrestling/KurtAngle's WWE theme music. Yes, the crowd chanted [[MemeticMutation "You suck!"]] right on cue. And he's still going at it in the 2020s, regularly calling former stablemate Dustin Poirier "Louisiana swamp trash" and also occasionally referring to Poirier's "Jezebel of a wife", and after defeating [[WeUsedToBeFriends former friend and stablemate]] Jorge Masvidal in 2022, called him "Miami street trash" in the post-fight interview.
154* Many of the MMA examples listed above take inspiration from UsefulNotes/MuhammadAli, who, after meeting pro wrestling's original hated heel, [[Wrestling/GeorgeWagner Gorgeous George]], decided to take a page from George's book and become such an obnoxious trash-talker that people would pay to watch him fight in the hopes that Ali would get his ass kicked. Not only did this tactic make Ali into a star, it created the basic template that fighters in all manner of combat sports use to promote their matches to this day.
155[[/folder]]
156
157[[folder:Music]]
158* Music/BeastieBoys' early BarbaricBully image was heavily influenced by the Heel role, according to then-manager Rick Rubin, a huge WWE fan.
159* Early in their career, Music/{{The Rolling Stones|Band}} were strategically marketed as the Heels to [[Music/TheBeatles the Beatles]]' {{Face}}s. Their manager and producer Andrew Loog Oldham was responsible for lines such as ''Melody Maker's'' headline "Would You Let Your Sister Go With a Rolling Stone?" and the memorable press announcement for their first New York visit: "The Rolling Stones, [[UncleanlinessIsNextToUngodliness who haven't bathed in a week]], arrived here yesterday."
160* Music/FiftyCent climbed through the ranks in hip-hop by dissing other, more popular rappers and [[BatmanGambit banking on them to respond and call him out by name, thereby raising his profile]]. This strategy got him all the way to the top, but it ultimately backfired in 2007 when he tried it on Music/KanyeWest. They were both releasing their third album on the same day, but Fiddy was so sure he would have better first-week sales than Kanye that he [[TemptingFate pledged to retire if Kanye outsold him]]. Kanye did, 50 reneged, and his status as the top guy in rap was officially shattered.
161* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lWuJRRCTHrg This]] Music/{{Vocaloid}} music video, "Seraphim On the Ring", portrays Luka Megurine and MEIKO as this, being AxCrazy[[note]]Just look at those {{Slasher Smile}}s![[/note]], devil-themed bad girls clad in black in contrast to Miku and Rin, who are portrayed as {{Face}}s and wear white, angel-themed outfits. Antics they get up to include [[GlassJawReferee smacking the referee (Len) aside with a folding chair]], grabbing the announcer (KAITO) by the hair and [[GrievousHarmWithABody throwing him at their opponents]]...
162[[/folder]]
163
164[[folder:Stand-up Comedy]]
165* Creator/AndyKaufman was an actor and comedian who loved to prank his audience so much that he went into professional wrestling just for the opportunity to play a heel. He characterized himself as a cowardly Hollywood elite who liked to wrestle women to show how tough he was. This led to a feud with [[Wrestling/JerryLawler Jerry "The King" Lawler]] that famously spilled onto the set of the ''David Letterman Show''.
166[[/folder]]
167
168[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
169* ''TabletopGame/BattleTech'': The 'Mech fights in the arenas of Solaris VII are the setting's rough equivalent to professional wrestling, as such certain stables of [=MechWarriors=] are set up as Heels and Faces, often relating to their nation of origin. Solaris VII is in the Lyran Commonwealth, so fighters from the Lyran's typical enemies (the Free Worlds League and Draconis Combine) are often treated as Heels. However, since the fights are distributed throughout the Inner Sphere, this isn't precise: a Combine fighter might be regarded as the Heel when his fight is played in the Lyran Commonwealth or Federated Suns, but be seen as the Face when the fight is viewed in the Combine. Helping the Solaris exhibitors with their marketing is that fighters who really want to make a name for themselves will behave in a way conforming to nationalist stereotypes, so a Capellan fighter being sneaky and underhanded is the despicable coward in the Federated Suns, a cunning and pragmatic warrior to the Capellan Confederation. Notably, as part of a plot to embed him as TheMole within the Capellan Confederation's intelligence service, Justin Xiang Allard made a name for himself on Solaris by playing up the image of the sneaky, dishonorable Capellan and scoring lots of wins against noble, heroic jocks from the Federated Suns.
170[[/folder]]
171
172[[folder:Video Games]]
173* In "Mister Torgue's Campaign of Carnage," the DLC for ''VideoGame/Borderlands2'', the whole storyline is written like a pro wrestling arc, with the player character as the Face and Piston as the cheating, cowardly Heel.
174* ''VideoGame/EldenRing'''s Grave Warden enemies are gladiators, with the description of their gear noting that the snake motifs were meant to make them seem villainous so audiences would cheer on them being beaten up.
175* In ''VideoGame/MegaManBattleNetwork'', the model of Navi typically employed by -- or found operating autonomously as -- criminals is called a [=HeelNavi=]. They have a more intimidating appearance than regular Navis, and usually a mean, thuggish personality to match. In the [[BlindIdiotTranslation poorly-translated]] [[VideoGame/MegaManBattleNetwork4RedSunAndBlueMoon fourth game]] they were referred to as "[=HealNavis=]" instead.
176* ''Franchise/{{Pokemon}}''
177** Hawlucha, a Franchise/{{Pokemon}} introduced in ''VideoGame/PokemonXAndY'', is interesting in that its shiny form makes it look the Heel to its default form's {{Face}}.
178** Incineroar, the final form of ''[[VideoGame/PokemonSunAndMoon Sun and Moon's]]'' Fire starter, is explicitly categorized as the "Heel Pokémon", is part [[CombatPragmatist Dark]] rather than Fighting, and is described as being a dirty enough fighter to even attack non-combatants like the opposing Pokémon's Trainer. Incineroar represents ''puroresu'', the Japanese take of the American-based professional wrestling (similar to characters like [[Franchise/StreetFighter R. Mika]]). One thing that defines this is despite his heel status, he is still cheered by the audience, as heels in ''puroresu'' operate in a slightly different way. [[FriendToAllChildren They're also said to especially enjoy the cheers of young Pokémon and children,]] and will even go out of their way to help them out.
179** In ''Videogame/PokemonScarletAndViolet'', Eri of [[{{Delinquents}} Team Star]] puts on a Heel persona, complete with scary facepaint and elaborate stances. Despite this [[FaceOfAThug she's actually a very good-natured young woman]].
180* Super Macho Man in nearly all versions of ''VideoGame/PunchOut''. He's a rich, sun-tanned bastard who knocks the referee over and showboats like there's no tomorrow, and in the Wii version, the audience boos him when he makes his appearance in the ring. If he wins, though, the audience loves him again.
181** Aran Ryan. Whenever he uses one of his (''many'') illegal moves, such as a headbutt, the audience boos. As with most opponents, if he's Star Punched out of one of these moves, [[HoistByTheirOwnPetard it's an instant KO]]. In his rematch, he's even the victim of ProducePelting between rounds.
182** Many of the recurring boxers, such as Bald Bull, Great Tiger, or Vodka Drunkenski/Soda Popinski fit the "Monster"/"Foreign" trope nicely. Bear Hugger represents literally [[MooseAndMapleSyrup every single stereotype of his country]] at once, although he's more of a NatureHero than your typical heel. (The best part is that [[Creator/NextLevelGames the studio who made the Wii game]] is Canadian.)
183** Narcis Prince, a one-shot opponent from ''Super Punch-Out!!'' He's a pretty-boy, English pugilist who [[TurnsRed goes nuclear]] if you damage his face.
184* Idra of the ''VideoGame/StarCraft'' MetaGame is one, in large part thanks to his bad sportsmanship and many a RageQuit on his part.
185* The Strong Bads from ''Tag Team Wrestling'' (1983), one of whom who was later recycled as one of the stars of ''WebAnimation/HomestarRunner''.
186* Zigzagged with the Glitz Pit champion Rawk Hawk from ''VideoGame/PaperMarioTheThousandYearDoor''. On one hand he's a clear case of The Narcissist who fights dirty, trash-talks, and cheats. On the other hand he ''is'' immensely popular with the fans and when put in the ring can deliver a pretty decent fair-and-square beating. [[spoiler:After defeating Macho Grubba it turns out he's not such a bad guy beneath it all: while he doesn't drop the trash talk he swears off cheating in favor of winning the belt fair and square, and during the final boss battle he's one of the characters seen cheering on Mario.]]
187* The BigBad of ''VideoGame/Guacamelee2'', Salvador, is this, serving as the EvilCounterpart to [[TheHero Juan]].
188* Kai Lan the Serpent from ''VideoGame/JadeEmpire'', though he's also a genuine villain and crime boss. While competing in the Arena, he deliberately built up a reputation as a douchebag so the crowd would love to hate him, and he continues to play this up now that he's the boss. This backfires on him in the most direct way possible: when the PC climbs into the Gold Division, he can't stop them from challenging for the championship because the crowd ''will'' be rooting for a {{Face}} to defeat his invincible champion.
189[[/folder]]
190
191[[folder:Western Animation]]
192* ''WesternAnimation/AvatarTheLastAirbender'' has Fire Nation Man, an Earth Kingdom professional bender who dresses like a Fire Nation soldier, waves their flag, preaches their greatness, and bends sand to resemble fire. Naturally, he's also corpulent, unattractive, and stupid. Unsurprisingly, and intentionally so, he's the resident HateSink among the fans who gets easily taken down by popular benders like The Boulder while the fans cheer on his defeat.
193* The Rumble for Ragnarok in the ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales2017'' episode of the same name works like a pro wrestling match, and Earth being the away team makes the Ducks {{Foreign Wrestling Heel}}s by default, so Scrooge encourages them to play heel:
194** Scrooge as the "Millionaire Miser", a RichBastard who demands the audience pay back taxes and is ([[MeanCharacterNiceActor as far the audience knows]]) willing to backstab his own family for the belt.
195** Dewey's attempts to become the {{Face}} "[=ChamPopular=]" backfires, as him constantly telling the crowd how much they love him makes him come of as a Narcissist heel ''by accident''.
196** Mrs Beakley as the "Shield Maiden" acts as an Enforcer, getting heat for fighting alongside Scrooge against the champ, but not really bothering to work the crowd up (she's more focused [[ProWrestlingIsReal on the actual fight]]).
197* ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}'':
198** Bender becomes this in ''[[Recap/FuturamaS2E8RagingBender Raging Bender]]'' when he joins the Ultimate Robot Fighting League. At first his Bender The Offender personality is ''extremely'' well-liked, but as his popularity begins to wane [[GorgeousGeorge they put him in a pink tutu,]] call him ''The Gender Bender'', and [[{{Jobber}} declare that he's going to lose the next match.]]
199--> You loved him as Bender the Offender! Now get ready to hate him as he threatens your sexuality in his new persona... The Gender Bender!
200** Bender also goes through a checklist of other heel types in his bouts:
201*** The Authority Figure type is represented by Billionaire-Bot, whose Gimmick is banker-themed.
202*** The Foreigner is represented by a robot with the same name. His Gimmick is that he's [[CultureClash got his own, strange customs]] and dresses in a way that goes against local fashion. Also his passport is "crazy."
203*** The Psycho/Monster type is represented by Destructor, a hilking KillerRobot who's Gimmick is that he's always ready to "DESTROY YOU AGRAGAGRAGAG!"
204* [[WesternAnimation/HowTheGrinchStoleChristmas You're a mean one, Mr. Grinch. You really are a heel.]]
205* In ''WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfKorra'', the White Falls Wolfbats are a pro-bending team who have a flashy, pyrotechnics-heavy entrance; blatantly cheat; and use banned moves like headshots and mixing rock into water.
206* In WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes' ProWrestlingEpisode "WesternAnimation/BunnyHugged", WesternAnimation/BugsBunny faces off against a scary, intimidating heel called The Crusher. Bugs, of course, defeats The Crusher by going into his bag of tricks. Interestingly, the babyface for that match before Bugs stepped in was clearly based on Gorgeous George (who, as noted above, was himself a heel).
207* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' had a ProWrestlingEpisode where it's revealed that Abe Simpson was once a Gorgeous George-type wrestler calling himself "Glamorous Godfrey" but retired after the hatred from the wrestling community started to be too much for him. [[CorruptCorporateExecutive Mr. Burns]] who was a fan of his back in the day convinces him to come out of retirement (with a great VillainSong), but Abe retires once more after seeing that he's become a bad influence on Bart.
208* In one episode of ''WesternAnimation/StevenUniverse'', Amethyst secretly joins a wrestling club under the guise of an overly aggressive cat-themed wrestler known as the Purple Puma. When Steven finds out, he keeps her secret in exchange for joining her as her tag team partner, the obnoxious Tiger Millionaire. He quickly gains the admiration of the crowd, but loses it after he gets carried away and acts mean to Lars when he tries to get an autograph. Later on, when Garnet and Pearl try to stop both from wrestling, but relent when they see how much it means to Amethyst, they start acting like they are from a "federation that wants to ban wrestling" so that the show can go on. "Defeating" them makes Purple Puma and Tiger Millionaire popular again.
209[[/folder]]
210
211[[folder:Real Life]]
212* UsefulNotes/MuhammadAli based his entire public persona on pro wrestling heels, especially George Wagner, reasoning that the trick of "get the audience so pissed off they'll pay to see someone beat you up" would work just as well in a real sport as a staged one. He was right.
213* Jack Johnson was incredibly arrogant and would often gloat over his fallen opponents. Justified because he was a black fighter in the early 20th century, and would have been considered a heel regardless of how he acted. He chose to act in a way which showed [[ThenLetMeBeEvil he wasn't a pushover.]]
214* OlderThanTheyThink: The Retiarii, the FragileSpeedster class of Roman {{gladiator|Games}}s, were generally booed and despised. The fact that their equipment often necessitated BullfightBoss tactics didn't win them any love.
215* In the NFL, no one fits the description better than Cam Newton. He backs up his scores with showy celebrations and gloats at opponents to try to stop him.
216** However, he toned this down quite a bit after Super Bowl 50, when the Denver Broncos defense force-fed him a large slice of humble pie.[[note]] As a so called "mobile quarterback," he could often be treated as a "rusher" rather than a "passer", which meant that savage hits that would never have been tolerated against more traditional quarterbacks [[CoughSnarkCough (cough Tom Brady cough)]] were ignored by the refs. The following season, all the opponents for the Carolina Panthers played "Slam Cam" on him as well; the Panthers went 6-10, and Newton hasn't been the same player since.[[/note]]
217* UsefulNotes/{{NASCAR}} has been described as pro wrestling with cars (though that's usually not said in a complimentary manner), and there is some truth to that. There's definitely babyface drivers like Dale Earnhardt Jr., Bill Elliott[[note]]Those two men won a combined ''31'' [=NASCAR=] Most Popular Driver awards[[/note]], and his son Chase Elliott[[note]]Won his 5th award in 2022[[/note]]... and then there's the heels:
218** Kyle Busch seems to embrace being [=NASCAR's=] most hated driver, and in all honesty it's pretty easy to hate the guy. He's been known to cut pro wrestling heel promos on the fans (especially after he wins a race and gets booed), has a ''very'' hostile relationship with the media, and has been involved in more than his share of ugly on-track incidents ([[https://youtu.be/MDZ_xwJR6b4?t=27 this one]] being the most egregious.) Despite all this [[Main/EvilIsCool he still has quite a few fans]].
219** Apparently it runs in the family because most of everything above can also be said about his older brother, Kurt.
220** Brad Keselowski. Basically Kyle Busch with even more wrecks, but much nicer to reporters.
221** Dale Earnhardt Sr. was the Wrestling/RicFlair of [=NASCAR=], in that he started off as a heel and was turned babyface by the fans, and went on to become one of the most beloved figures in the sport.
222** Jeff Gordon, the rich kid interloper from California who was viewed as only being in [=NASCAR=] because it paid better than [=CART=] or the [=IRL=] (in fairness [[Main/MoneyDearBoy that was 100% true]].) Eventually he decided to run with it, though not nearly to the degree as the Busch brothers. Eventually the fans came around, helped by the fact that unlike his teammate Jimmie Johnson he at least had some sort of personality to speak of.
223** If Kyle Busch isn't [=NASCAR's=] most hated driver then that honor has to go to Joey Logano, another kid from a wealthy family and a liberal state (in this case Connecticut), who was given a Cup Series ride at only '''18''' and fans believed he got that ride solely because [[Main/EstrogenBrigade all the female fans]] [[Main/MrFanService think he's adorable.]] Logano hasn't really played into it too much, making this a bit of a case of Main/XPacHeat.
224* Chris Morgan is infamous for a video of him ranting at customers and female workers in a Bagel Shop about how women on dating sites rejected him because of his height of 5'. The video ended with a customer tackling him and pulling his shirt over his head after Chris challenged another customer to a fight. The video caused him to receive much backlash and mockery across the internet. Chris used his publicity to sign a deal offered to him to fight other internet celebrities and even train with UFC fighters to prepare. You could say this uniquely made Chris transition from a heel in the original bagel shop video and for all the internet into an actual heel within the world of professional fighting.
225* UsefulNotes/LeBronJames played up a heel image during his first few years with the Miami Heat, coinciding with a time his public image was at its lowest as he was seen as a villain for abandoning his hometown team in pursuit of a championship. He even made an infamous Nike commercial talking about it.
226* Pro footballers with a reputation for robust or even dirty play were not above playing the Heel card, in a spirit of warped showmanship. Creator/VinnieJones shamelessly played up his reputation as the hardest man on and off the field, even once, quite deliberately, bullying and beasting a newspaper sports reporter in a bar, knowing this would enhance his reputation.[[note]]He practically bit the hapless hack's nose off.[[/note]] It worked: when his playing days were over, he made a second career playing hard men and gangsters in movies.
227** Back in TheSeventies, the rivalry between Leeds United and Chelsea, two teams that seemed to go out of their way to sign up football-playing Heels, had something of the aura of an all-in wrestling/bare-knuckle bout on the football pitch. This aura of violence was something that caused the football authorities to regularly discipline both sides for "bringing the game into disrepute", and matches between Leeds and Chelsea were renowned for the on-field violence rather than the football. Sure enough, the management of both sides took care to hype up the rivalries and the feuds beforehand, which temded to maximise match attendance. Players such as [[ViolentGlaswegian Billy Bremner]], Jackie Charlton, Norman Hunter and Ron Harris were big-name football playing Heels in their time. Other sides such as Manchester City were not far behind: Francis Lee had a reputation as City's resident hardest man in a hard-man side.
228[[/folder]]
229
230----
231->See you in the ring, sucker! Bring a towel to throw in!
232

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