- — Plutor
Motor City Massacre
From The Great Outdoor Fight
1969 Champion. Rufus "Motor City Massacre" Elder was only the second black man to win the fight, after Winston Werry in 1870. Having grown up on the mean streets of Detroit fighting for his life practically every day, Motor City Massacre gained an army and his nickname by actively participating in, and surviving the initial scrum that usually takes out half of the participants in the Fight. His army was perhaps the smallest in history, consisting only of Paul Judas, whom he had saved from certain death in the opening scrum when an unidentified competitor attempted to take the unaware Judas out from behind. The attacker remains unidentified due to the Massacre's shockingly violent response.
After his dominating first day, the rest of the Fight decided to save the Massacre for the final showdown in the tradition of all the great Champions, most recently Son of Rodney.
[edit] The First Judas Incident
As the Massacre and the last remaining member of the opposing armies met in combat, Fight observers were sure that this would be a fight for the ages. Massacre's adversary was talented enough to contain the Massacre's initial onslaught, and the ensuing battle was locked in a draw. Neither man gave up any ground, and the fight looked likely to go down in history as a matchup as great as the legendary Sunset Duel. Unfortunately, this epic battle was interrupted by Paul Judas. Having survived the entire fight on the Massacre's coattails, Judas ambushed both men with a surprise double chop block in an attempt to cripple both combatants and claim victory. Massacre did not take kindly to this betrayal, and won the fight by using his opponent's skull as a battering ram to beat his former teammate senseless.
Motor City Massacre was then lost to history, as he walked off into the sunset muttering about "Goddamn Judases everywhere I look."
