Glasgow-born wrestling great Clayton Thomson becomes the latest member of The Professional Wrestling Hall of Fame for Scotland, with his induction announced on Monday 22nd December 2025.

Born in Glasgow on 27th December 1931, Clayton Howard Thomson joined the LMS Rovers Club wrestling team and went on to compete in the Labinjoh Cup tournament at the Leith Health and Strength Club, before facing internal competition at the World Youth Games in Moscow in 1954. While Thomson had found success in the amateur ranks, he realised that there was greater opportunity by making a transition towards the more entertainment-based form of professional wrestling. He was trained for the professional wrestling circuit by former Olympic wrestler-turned-wrestling promoter Norman Morrell, who had also trained World Lightweight Champion George Kidd.

Initially maintaining a competitive weight of 12 ½ stones to around 13 stones, Thomson would generally work as a professional in the middleweight ranks after his 1959 debut, but he also had a long reign as the Scottish light heavyweight champion. As the Scottish titlist, Clayton would face British champion Ernest Riley in ‘champion versus champion’ bouts, including a famous contest in March 1961 at Hamilton Town Hall. He also defeated the British Heavy Middleweight champion Eric Taylor in a thrilling non-title bout at Aberdeen’s Music Hall on 13th June 1961, leading to a series of rematches.

But Thomson’s most celebrated accomplishments were his lauded reigns with the British Middleweight title. He first defeated Bert Royal on 28th November 1966 at the Ice Stadium in Nottingham. After losing the belt to television wrestling’s most famous villain Mick McManus a year later, Clay would quickly go on to regain the title from McManus in 1968. Thomson’s second reign lasted three years, as he headlined shows across the United Kingdom as one of the most in-demand performers of his era. It was this demand which led Thomson to relocate to England, as the location was better suited for travelling to the venues where the sport was flourishing.

Bradley Craig, founder of The Professional Wrestling Hall of Fame for Scotland noted, “Clay Thomson was the antithesis of some of the most memorable stars of his era. He wrestled as a highly focused, driven athlete, and rarely strayed from this persona. He also crafted a style of chain wrestling and escapes from seemingly-unbreakable holds which had earned him comparisons to George Kidd, with numerous publications hailing him as the new ‘Houdini of the Ring’. But his induction also celebrates the international influence he had on the art form of pro wrestling, when he presented a uniquely Scottish style of grappling into Japanese arenas.”

Thomson was the most televised Scottish star during the golden age of British wrestling, and he made around sixty appearances on ITV’s coverage of the sport between 1960 and 1972. While Clayton was a much-loved hero, he also attempted a brief career as a mysterious masked villain called The Exorcist, a name inspired by the 1971 horror movie. It was not long before he returned as the unmasked chain wrestling innovator. He found success overseas, securing bookings for fledgling company New Japan Pro Wrestling. It was here that Thomson frequently worked with several of its rookie talent, most notably a series with young lion Tatsumi Fujinami, who would go on to be arguably the finest in-ring performer of the 1980s. A proponent of chain wrestling and escapes, elements of Thomson’s influential repertoire can still be seen within Japanese rings to this day, with headlining British-born wrestler Zack Sabre Jr possessing a similar style to the innovative Glaswegian.

Thomson would continue to wrestle until 1977, before quietly retiring. He passed away on 28th November 2008.