From 1977 through 1981, Muraco shuttled several more times between Florida, San Francisco and his native Hawaii. In Florida, he was involved in two high-profile angles. In 1979, a masked villain called "The Magnificent M" appeared in the territory. Though it came as little surprise when he was eventually unmasked as Muraco, his bald head shocked the audience.[10] Then, in 1980, he feuded with Barry Windham, in which the bigger and more experienced Muraco piledrove the rookie on the concrete floor.[9] Windham eventually got his revenge, in the process becoming a credible wrestler in the eyes of the fans.[11]
During his two Intercontinental title reigns, Muraco had bloody feuds with Bob Backlund, Tony Atlas and Rocky Johnson. He portrayed an arrogant villain who angrily demanded respect, while engaging in disrespectful behavior himself; in one match, he brought a submarine sandwich to the ring and ate it while dominating his outmatched opponent. Later, he would preface his matches by dedicating his impending finishing move, the piledriver, to either the heel commentator or whomever he was feuding with at the time. Audiences regularly mocked Muraco and his Hawaiian origins with derisive chants of "beach bum". On February 11, 1984, Muraco lost the Intercontinental title to Tito Santana.[18] After a series of unsuccessful rematches, Muraco took a hiatus from WWF in August 1984. He went to NWA Polynesian for a short stint, and also wrestled in Japan.
Alliance with Mr. Fuji (1985–1987)
Muraco returned to the WWF in 1985, managed by Mr. Fuji. After not wrestling on the card of the first WrestleMania, Muraco headlined three consecutive Madison Square Garden cards against WWF World Heavyweight Champion Hulk Hogan, climaxing in a bloody steel cage match on June 21, which Hogan won. On July 8, Muraco won the firstKing of the Ring tournament when he pinned The Iron Sheik in the Final. Before defeating the Sheik, Muraco had defeated the Junkyard Dog, Les Thornton and Pedro Morales to reach the Final.[19]
In addition to feuding with Ricky Steamboat for much of the remainder of the year which included hanging Steamboat from the top rope with Steamboat's own karate belt on an episode of WWF Championship Wrestling, Fuji and Muraco debuted Fuji Vice, a series of skits parodying Miami Vice, on Tuesday Night Titans (Fuji General, a parody of the ABC soap General Hospital, followed soon after). In 1986, Muraco allied with Adrian Adonis and Bob Orton Jr. in their feud with Roddy Piper. This led to Orton and Muraco becoming a regular tag team. On March 29, 1987, they lost to the Can-Am Connection (Tom Zenk and Rick Martel) in the opening match of Wrestlemania III in front of a reported 93,173 fans at the Pontiac Silverdome.[20] In July 1987, a falling out between Muraco and Orton led to a feud between them and a face turn for Muraco. Muraco won almost every match in the feud, on TV and at house shows, until Orton left the WWF that year.
"The Rock" (1987–1988)
In a TV taping aired in November 1987, Muraco solidified his face status by saving Superstar Billy Graham from a three-on-one beating by Butch Reed, One Man Gang and Slick, and taking Graham as his new manager. Muraco adopted Graham's tie-dye attire and changed his nickname from "Magnificent Muraco" to "The Rock" (although announcer Gorilla Monsoon continued to refer to Muraco by his previous nickname). Muraco replaced Graham on the team led by his former rival Hulk Hogan at the first Survivor Series,[21] and had a good showing at the first Royal Rumble, where he eliminated three wrestlers (tied for second most with "Hacksaw" Jim Duggan) and was one of the final four competitors.[22] He later reached the quarterfinals of the WWF World Heavyweight Championship tournament at WrestleMania IV.[23] In his final months with the WWF, he feuded with Greg Valentine and lost to Dino Bravo at the inaugural SummerSlam.[24] Muraco had his last match in the WWF against Barry Horowitz in October 1988 on a tour of Italy, but was then fired.
Muraco made his first appearance in Stampede on December 3, 1988, defeating Vokhan Singh (Gary Albright) at a television taping in Calgary.[25] He was immediately thrust into the North American title picture, and after two unsuccessful attempts in the coming days he defeated Makhan Singh to win the championship on December 9, 1988. For the remainder of the month he successfully defended the title, and while champion then traveled to the American Wrestling Association where he defeated Colonel Debeers on December 26 in Manitoba.[26]
He opened 1989 by traveling to All Japan, and in his first match on January 2 in Korakuen Hall in Tokyo was placed in a battle royal with Davey Boy Smith, John Tenta, Dynamite Kid, Giant Baba, and others. Muraco would team with Goro Tsurumi, Leo Burke, and Brian Adams during the AJPW Giant Series 1989 tour.[27] He then returned to North America, wrestling Larry Zybysko to a double disqualification at an AWA TV taping in Milwaukee on January 20, 1989.[28]
Returning to Stampede, he faced Davey Boy Smith on March 24, 1989, and was defeated for the North American championship. Following an unsuccessful attempt to regain the title the following day, Muraco returned to All Japan in May 1989 to participate in the AJPW Super Power Series 1989 tag-team tour, which saw him partner with Mitch Snow, Dick Slater, and Dan Spivey. He also defeated Isamu Teranishi, Isao Takagi, Goro Tsurumi, and Motoshi Okuma in singles competition.
Following an eleven-month sabbatical, Muraco returned to action in New Zealand for a joint World Wrestling Federation / Arena Wrestling Alliance promotion that saw him face and defeat Haku on three separate nights, the first coming on April 7, 1990, in Christchurch, Canterbury.[29] On June 9, 1990, he appeared in the Tri-State Wrestling Alliance's TWA Summer Sizzler event, where he was defeated by his old partner, "Cowboy" Bob Orton.[30]
On December 6, 1990, he made his debut for Herb Abram's growing Universal Wrestling Federation, defeating Terry Cooley on the UWF Fury Hour. Muraco would defeat Cactus Jack, The Intern (Johnny Rich), and Chris Michaels before suffering his first loss of his UWF run on January 12, 1991, when he was defeated by Steve Williams at a house show in West Islip, NY. This was Muraco's only UWF defeat, and he ended his tenure with a double-disqualification loss with Terry Gordy in the quarter finals for the UWF Sportschannel Television title on May 10, 1991.[31]
Following a lengthy sabbatical, Muraco returned to action in the new Eastern Championship Wrestling promotion, which would eventually become ECW. His first match was a double disqualification loss with King Kaluha on June 23, 1992, in Philadelphia, PA. Three months later Muraco defeated ECW Heavyweight Champion Jimmy Snuka at a card on September 30, 1992, in Philadelphia. Muraco successfully defended the ECW championship against Nikolai Volkoff, as well as Snuka in a rematch, while at the same time also venturing that November into the Universal Wrestling Superstars promotion in New York City.[32] Muraco was defeated for the ECW championship on November 16, 1992, by Mr. Sandman (The Sandman).[27]
Muraco then toured Australia with the Wrestling in Australia promotion in March 1993, losing to The Junkyard Dog in multiple encounters and being defeated by Jake Roberts for the vacated AWF title.[33] He returned to Eastern Championship Wrestling a month later, joining then-booker Eddie Gilbert's Hot Stuff International and forming a tag-team with former rival Jimmy Snuka. On April 3, 1993, he defeated The Sandman to regain the ECW Heavyweight Championship.[34] Muraco successfully retained the title against Tommy Cairo, The Metal Maniac, as well as The Sandman in a rematch.
Muraco joined Wrestle Association-R and made his debut on August 25, 1994, defeating Takashi Ishikawa in Tokyo, Japan. He would frequently team with Kendo Nagasaki on this WAR Revolutionary Ignition '94 tour. He returned later in the fall to participate in the WAR WAR-ISM tour, defeating Masanobu Kurisu on November 2, 1994. He again teamed with Nagasaki, but also faced Hiromichi Fuyuki and Nobukazu Hirai in singles matches. Muraco had thirteen matches with the promotion, culminating in a tag loss (with Ai Oni) to Animal Hamaguchi and Ryuma Go on December 4, at WAR Mega Power in Sumo Hall.[37]
Muraco then appeared in the All-Star Wrestling Federation, defeating Greg Valentine at events in May 1995.
Retirement (1995–present)
After retiring from the ring in 1995, Muraco returned to Hawaii. In 2003, he co-founded Hawai'i Championship Wrestling with local TV producer Linda Bade, which ran from 2003 to 2008. He was the storyline commissioner of Hawai'i Championship Wrestling until 2006. He also worked as a longshoreman.[38] On May 22, 1998, he returned to wrestling for one night where he lost to The Honky Tonk Man at Northern Wrestling States Wrestler Alliance. He also returned to wrestling in Hawaii where he defeated the Kodiak Bear at Hawaiian Islands Wrestling Federation on January 9, 1999.
As of 2019, Muraco resides in Hawaii with his wife Sharon.[41] He has three children, one of whom being his son Joe, would follow in his footsteps as a professional wrestler.[40]